Tag: 3

  • Still She Sits

    Still She Sits

    And still she sits in waiting,
    Deep within her shell.
    No point in contemplating,
    As to when she might expel.
    She’s not driven by a calendar,
    Nor woken by the sun.
    She’s not a starlit wanderer
    On her monthly run.
    No bolt of electricity
    Will generate her storm.
    Naked with simplicity
    It’s so she finds her form.
    . She’s the fickle child of a wondrous thought,
    . She’s a child, a brain child, that won’t be caught.

    © Tim Grace, April 2010


    To the reader: There are so many aspects to life that just can’t be chased down or forced into submission. We gain nothing from bullying a butterfly. Simple pleasures are attracted to those who appreciate and nurture the quality of relationships. It’s through patience, not cajoling, that pleasures are expressed … good things come to those who wait.

    To the poet: The rhythmic structure of this sonnet is more lyric than poetic. The line lengths are variable and do little to help the reader establish a comfortable meter. Nonetheless, it does move along in three blocks of four-lined stanzas. Each block of thought reads like a statement; but true to the theme of the poem, the statement fails to capture the essence of this illusive female form.


    Crisilis crisilis