Sonnet for the Chickens

By Tom Healy

The picture of elegance, my grandfather.
I wanted his photograph in the dictionary.
Alone of the men I knew as a kid,
he always wore a shirt with a collar,
always shined his shoes. Equanimity
in a family on the run from itself.
He amazed me once with a cardboard box
of baby chicks, each in a small square as if
he’d waved a wand over a carton of eggs.
A fuzz of feathers, beaks and fragile lives.
No more afraid than all of us, he said.
Just sit with them, tell them apart, listen.
Only if you see someone, can you become
someone. Long gone, he still is and we are.

Credits

Directed by Eric Felipe-Barkin.

Part of Read By Miami, a 2026 series produced in collaboration with O, Miami Poetry Festival featuring poets and actors of Miami.

Reproduced with kind permission of the poet.