The Paddock Review

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A Poem by Carol Lynn Stevenson Grellas

Aunt Susan

Today, when her cuckoo clock strikes

the hour, it reminds me of being with

her again, back in the garden where 

dandelions grew with a hint of yellow 

streaming through the air, where she 

still waits, lounging in her old plastic 

chair, a cigarette in her right hand. 

And the clappers dangle and clang 

from the golden chain counting hours

with a pause in eternity and the time before

she left. When we’d walk to the river, 

our feet wet over the smooth pebbles,

both of us reaching below the coolness

of ripples as we’d hollow the waves for toads, 

tipping our glass jars into the water. 

We’d watch them swim in, only for us 

to free them again, where she taught 

me, there is joy in the act of letting go. 

This poem is from the book Handful of Stallions at Twilight (Finishing Line Press). Available now at https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/handful-of-stallions-at-twilight-by-carol-lynn-stevenson-grellas/

Carol Lynn Stevenson Grellas recently graduated from Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA in Writing program, where she received a Merit Scholarship. She is a twelve-time Pushcart Prize nominee and a seven-time Best of the Net nominee. She has served as the Editor-in-Chief for the Orchards Poetry and Tule Review, and according to family lore, she is a direct descendant of Robert Louis Stevenson.

Carol Lynn Stevenson Grellas