Not the break, but the breath before the break. Not the silence, but the listening it invites.
A caesura is not absence, it is presence held still. A hush with its hands open. A comma that prays.
It lives in the gasp between heartbeat and echo, in the moment the dancer hovers mid-turn, in the glance that says more than the line ever could.
It is the ache that punctuation cannot name. The pause where grief gathers its syllables. The space where longing loops back to begin again.
We write it with white space, with hesitation, with the courage to not fill every line.
We live it in hospital waiting rooms, in the hush before “I love you,” in the breath between diagnosis and reply.
Caesura – the sacred seam where poetry listens to the body.
A caesura is a metrical pause or break in a verse where one phrase ends and another begins. It can occur in the middle of a line of poetry and is often marked by punctuation such as a comma or a dash. The term originates from the Latin word meaning "cutting" and serves to create rhythm and meaning in literary works.