Gather the eggs, and don’t forget to close the gate.
Finding the right words is akin to gathering eggs. I grew up on a farm and ranch, and have always raised chickens.
Free-range hens lay their eggs just about anywhere. Bucket in hand, I climbed up haystacks, under farm equipment, and behind the feed barrels. If I was lucky, I collected an egg for every hen. Sometimes, though, one or more eluded my search. Just like words. How to phrase a sentence with just enough words, but not too many? What if I didn’t find enough eggs for my family’s breakfast or Mama’s sponge cake?
Reaching under a hen in her nest is risky. She might peck. If she is a setting hen, there’s a pretty good chance that one day when you gently slide your hand under her fluff, you’ll feel the tiny warm fuzziness of baby chicks. Luck. Maybe I’ll get a list sentence, in which every word fits. A nest-full of beautiful words.
It’s best to carry a flashlight into the hen house. Sometimes bull snakes, or even worse-rattlers, slither in to enjoy the all-you-can-eat buffet of multicolored orbs. I hate touching reptiles. A dictionary is a kind of literary lamp. It can’t prevent every writing disaster, but it can shed a light.
Carrying a pail of warm brown, white, and green eggs into the house at sundown on a chilly January day is my idea of perfection. Feeling their smoothness, I placed each one into its hollow of a gray cardboard crate. A perfect dozen. They fit, just like well-written sentences on a page.
You can’t forget to close the gate. The hens might get out, or a fox might get in.
The same goes for writing. Too many words, and your thoughts just run away.
Looks like I just had the perfect day then!
LikeLike
Great image. I’m following your blog. Thanks BEV
LikeLike