Poem: The chicken in autumn
October 8, 2021
The chicken in autumn No spring chicken, she fluffs up her hair. Neck is turkeying, becoming its own scarf of bumpy, gobbling skin. She pushes at the strange, frill neck, loose Elizabethan collar, gravity's triumph, and remembers, stroking, the departed flesh of spring. Pink buds looked upwards, as if watching clouds, Her body watered itself, moistly rippled, Holding itself tightly in an embrace assumed to be everlasting, but like any flower wind caressed too hard, and the petals fell. Autumn, they say, is fruitful, mellow, wiser, tasting winter on the air, beyond mere promise of that which can not last, of fairies or of flowers. A graceful pause, equilibrium. But falls of leaves speak of falls of snow, of skin, of flesh, of life. But still leaves may be kicked upwards, fluttering, rudely resurrected out of dignified piles, decorum shed like a lizard's skin, unwanted. Half of life has been spent, but the legs still swing, lovingly, the lungs embrace air. The tough bird sings. PS Cottier

That’s a very old poem, published in my first book, The Glass Violin, in 2008. It’s becoming more relevant every year! You know you’re getting a bit older when you forget the dates that you got various degrees, which is the over-educated version of where did I put my keys? Rereading the poem now, there are more flower images than I’d probably use now, but I quite like it.