The Crow
This poem was written in October 2025, and was inspired by a few things all coming together at the same time.
It started by seeing a crow literally steal a baby starling from the road in front of me as I was walking, something that I can’t get out of my head even now.
A few other strands lent themselves to the conniving folk-lore image of The Crow, resulting in this piece.
Sitting beady eyed,
Watching the world around you pass,
Furtive side eyes take in everything,
Assessing surroundings amass.
Sometimes hidden in amongst the flock
You fly your own path,
Waiting for opportunity,
Swooping in to take your mark.
Stealthily cunning,
Persuasive entrapment until
The time is right to pounce,
And unexpectedly steal.
Magpie like behaviour
Looking for new and shiny,
But packing a nest with feather debris
Disregarding attractive finery.
Cleverly honing your skill,
Practice to test the water,
Unwittingly small trails of misjudgement
And common threads thereafter.
Briefly observed as you steal one from another,
Confidence never wavering,
Swagger, assumption, confidence,
Every morsel savouring.
But behind those dead eyes
A more sinister story is held.
Intelligent manipulation to coerce your prey,
Experience and successes meld.
Conniving, collaboration with other minds,
Years between existence,
Devour traits and tips for gain,
Delivered with persistence.
Never disheartened by continued search,
Hunting grounds fresh and new,
For once or twice strategies are tried
The veil of disillusionment falls through.
Gnarly claws grasp their hold,
Slow and deep they settle in,
Picking off your next morsel
Feeding on what’s within.
Your reinforced rookery
Sits amid crowded communes,
Deceiving habits of tidiness and quiet
Carry an alternative tune.
More solitude preferred
Than perhaps other nesting crows,
But to reach what is needed, craved, desired
Communal discomfort is allowed.
Once replete with what’s on offer
Or attempts result in fail,
It’s time to move to treetops new,
Attempt renewed skills with self permission to prevail.