by Amy Clampitt

While you walk the water's edge,

turning over concepts

I can't envision, the honking1 buoy2

serves notice that at any time

the wind may change,

the reef-bell clatters3

its treble monotone, deaf as Cassandra

to any note but warning. The ocean,

cumbered by no business more urgent

than keeping open old accounts

that never balanced,

goes on shuffling4 its millenniums

of quartz5, granite6, and basalt.

It behaves

toward the permutations of novelty

driftwood and shipwreck7, last night's

beer cans, spilt oil, the coughed-up

residue8 of plasticwith random9

impartiality10, playing catch or tag

or touch-last like a terrier,

turning the same thing over and over,

over and over. For the ocean, nothing

is beneath consideration.

The houses

of so many mussels and periwinkles

have been abandoned here, it's hopeless

to know which to salvage11. Instead

I keep a lookout12 for beach glass

amber13 of Budweiser, chrysoprase

of Almadn and Gallo, lapis

by way of (no getting around it,

I'm afraid) Phillips'

Milk of Magnesia, with now and then a rare

translucent14 turquoise15 or blurred16 amethyst17

of no known origin.

The process

goes on forever: they came from sand,

they go back to gravel18,

along with treasuries19

of Murano, the buttressed20

astonishments of Chartres,

which even now are readying

for being turned over and over as gravely

and gradually as an intellect

engaged in the hazardous21

redefinition of structures

no one has yet looked at.