Sea and sky, a meld of grays
before a retiring north wind. 
An ebb tide leaves behind
those worthless passengers
of storm-tossed waves: 
sinewy strands of seaweed, 
shells and bits of driftwood.
I think of all I’ve left behind.
A stone, face smooth from millennia
of the sea’s caress, catches my eye.
I skip it across her shallows, 
continue my search for something
I won’t know until I see it.
That’s the way of beachcombing
                     —and love.                
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem