arquious

before the quill falls silent

 

Some words live best

in the weight of paper

and the scent of ink.

 

This piece remembers

the feel of writing

before the world went weightless.

 

I wrote when ink could smudge,

when paper drank each word like rain,

and margins bloomed with afterthoughts

in the tilt of a hurried hand.

 

Now letters glow in silent rows—

no scent of pulp, no weight of page—

only the pause of a waiting pen

and the arc of an unseen cloud.

 

Still I dream of the press’s breath,

of type that bites and leaves its mark,

of holding something warm and real

before the quill falls silent.