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Column 588

Passing a Truck Full of Chickens at Night on Highway Eighty

Intro by Ted Kooser
06.26.2016

There’s an old joke about a truck with a five-ton license and ten tons of canaries on board. The dri­ver had to keep get­ting out and bang­ing his fist on the side to keep half the canaries fly­ing. Here Jane Mead, who lives in north­ern Cal­i­for­nia, gives us anoth­er truck full of birds. This keen­ly observed poem appeared in The Autumn House Anthol­o­gy of Con­tem­po­rary Amer­i­can Poet­ry, 2015. Mead­’s most recent book is Mon­ey Mon­ey Money/​Water Water Water (Alice James Books, 2013). 

Passing a Truck Full of Chickens at Night on Highway Eighty

What struck me first was their panic.

Some were pulled by the wind from moving
to the ends of the stacked cages,
some had their heads blown through the bars—

and could not get them in again.
Some hung there like that—dead—
their own feathers blowing, clotting

in their faces. Then
I saw the one that made me slow some—
I lingered there beside her for five miles.

She had pushed her head through the space
between bars—to get a better view.
She had the look of a dog in the back

of a pickup, that eager look of a dog
who knows she's being taken along.
She craned her neck.

She looked around, watched me, then
strained to see over the car—strained
to see what happened beyond.

That is the chicken I want to be.


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We do not accept unsolicited submissions. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2015 by Autumn House Press, “Passing a Truck Full of Chickens/at Night on Highway Eighty,” (Autumn House Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry, 2015). Poem reprinted by permission of Jane Mead and the publisher. Introduction copyright © 2024 by The Poetry Foundation.