[Wallowing]
by Nancy Huggett
While I was distracted by delible woes,
wallowing next door to my life,
it caught fire. Five-alarm flames billowed
the sky with soot as if to answer the question—
could it get worse? Neighbours offered
their own phoenixes, brightly plumed birds
whose beady eyes darted as they preened
their feathers of the falling ash that marred
their iridescence. How do they rise
above it all? I nest like a leveret in the hollow
under the barberry bush, my crown of thorns
spattered with red. Berries for the birds—
cathartic, but lacking any real sustenance
for this obstinate winter.
Nancy Huggett is a settler descendant who writes and caregives on the unceded Territory of the Anishinaabe Algonquin Nation (Ottawa, Canada). Published in Event, Poetry Northwest, SWIMM, and Whale Road Review, she’s won some awards (RBC PEN Canada 2024 New Voices Award) and a gazillion rejections. She keeps writing. Nancy is on Instagram: @nanhug, Bluesky: @nancyhuggett.bsky.social, and Facebook: @nancy.huggett.35.
