My Pebbles
Pebbles: eggs of a babbling stream,
laid in the summer wind.
I picked them up,
and carried them home,
stowed in the jacket pockets,
so my father knew them not.
Pebble shape: the lips of an open mouth,
the doors of a hidden house.
It’s buried deep in the sand,
caressed by a gentle hand.
The edge of a snowflake,
dangling on the window’s front.
Pebble smell: the mint of spring
—fresh from morning’s bath.
The whispering of the wind:
A thunderstorm is coming.
Clouds opening up the veils
of heaven—a divinely waterfall.
Pebble color: a collage of the season’s greens,
a mosaic of the fallen leaves.
A colorful quilt,
covering a child asleep.
Mother shook him awake:
It is a sunny day.
Pebble: a world itself.
Each crack a river,
tracing its cratered terrains.
It’s the map of a tiny Earth,
on which the seasons rolled
and where my mind could romp.
Michael Huang
edited: Catherine Kazmer