Autumn Gathering
This one appeared to me
in a dream, was forgotten,
only to reveal itself
on the shower wall
this morning.
It must have been the water.
•
That one was on the full moon
last night, clear as a bell.
Someone projected it there.
•
This one was on the ground,
on crunchy pine needles.
The moon projected it there.
•
I forgot about that one . . .
How was I to know
it would be significant?
•
Every time I see this one,
I'm angry. It doesn't diminish,
either, from that first time.
•
Oh, that one!
To tell you the truth,
I never actually
saw it, but I could
feel it as it was
described to me
by a blind person
over the phone.
•
This one I spotted
on the back
of someone's shirt
in a crowd
before she disappeared.
•
That one evolved,
and is still evolving,
on that big, flat rock
over there; something
scraped it, scratched it,
the heat cracked it,
the frost coated it,
tiny plants took root,
sheltering insects,
and it rained,
and it rained,
and by the time
I showed up,
a butterfly had just flown off.
•
Not this one again.
It makes me so sad . . .
•
I was glad to receive
that one as a gift.
So glad, in fact,
that I went and had
some copies made.
•
Believe it or not,
this one has a sound.
Just listen.
•
Oh, boy—that one!
I'll never go there again.
•
This one often arrives
in the smoke of incense.
•
I tried to turn
that one over—
it burned my hand.
•
This one I tried
to discard—
unsuccessfully, obviously.
•
That one speaks to me
of space, and negative space,
of open and filled spaces,
and the among
that comes between.
•
Whereas this one
is the opposite—
you get the picture.
•
Oh, my goodness—
I've never seen
that one before!
•
This one, from what
I gather,
is an accident.
•
That one, however,
is intended.
•
This one took some
getting to—
waiting for the thaw,
for instance—
but it was
well worth it.
•
That one, well,
you can have it.
•
Whenever this one
comes my way,
it's déjà vu,
but I'm ready for it.
•
That one is owned
by the dentist.
•
This one has been
proven to be a fake,
but I still like it.
•
Alas, I lost
that one once,
in childhood,
and it took me
until now to find it.
•
If you can only have
one, choose this one.
This One, That One, by Lawson Fusao Inada
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