All Nonfiction
- Bullying
 - Books
 - Academic
 - Author Interviews
 - Celebrity interviews
 - College Articles
 - College Essays
 - Educator of the Year
 - Heroes
 - Interviews
 - Memoir
 - Personal Experience
 - Sports
 - Travel & Culture
 All Opinions
- Bullying
 - Current Events / Politics
 - Discrimination
 - Drugs / Alcohol / Smoking
 - Entertainment / Celebrities
 - Environment
 - Love / Relationships
 - Movies / Music / TV
 - Pop Culture / Trends
 - School / College
 - Social Issues / Civics
 - Spirituality / Religion
 - Sports / Hobbies
 All Hot Topics
- Bullying
 - Community Service
 - Environment
 - Health
 - Letters to the Editor
 - Pride & Prejudice
 - What Matters
 - Back
 
Summer Guide
- Program Links
 - Program Reviews
 - Back
 
College Guide
- College Links
 - College Reviews
 - College Essays
 - College Articles
 - Back
 
Stillness at Last
The last rays of sunlight had vanished behind the hills, cloaking the land in a shroud of darkness. Nighthawks and owls awoke from their daytime sleep, descending from the treetops like clouds of falling leaves. On the nearby road, a night bus glided past. Calm blue light shone through its window glass. I watched until it vanished, glad to've seen it pass. Then all was dark and quiet. Stillness... At last.

Similar Articles
JOIN THE DISCUSSION
This article has 0 comments.
This poem symbolizes one of my fundemental life-ideals: In my preferred (and rather idealistic) residential location, I would live close enough to a bus line to have access to a nearby town, yet far enough from the urban center that I can't see the city lights at night. This could apply to any location, in almost any country.
When I first wrote "Stillness at Last", I'd planned to use it as the starting paragraph of a short story project I'd been working on. However, the end result sounded too poetic to fit in with the more objective tone used in the rest of the story, so I created a standalone poem based off of that one paragraph.