I liked reading that leaves don't fall in autumn;
they're pushed. It captures nature's cold practicality,
and the human tendency to fall
for appearances, illusions.
When light and warmth dwindle,
a layer of cells starts to spread where leaf stalk
meets twig, like cauterization.
The death-pitted dormant tree looks ahead
without a flicker in its heartwood.
Marcescence
Everything is mostly gray,
sleeping or decayed.
A few brittle curls cling
to the willow's bones—dead
but life won't let go of them,
as though their shreds
still have something to give.
They seem both abandoned
and noble in their outstaying.
Edited by Dava Sobel
This article was originally published with the title "Diptych" in Scientific American 327, 4, 24 (October 2022)
Nicola Healey lives in Buckinghamshire in England, and her poems have been published widely in U.K. journals, including The Poetry Review, Poetry Ireland Review, The London Magazine and Wild Court.