Pickering Book Tree
Community Creations:
An Autumnal Poem
Autumn: a collaborative poem created by visitors to Pickering Book Tree bookshop or website
​To celebrate National Poetry Day in October 2022, soon after Pickering Book Tree first opened, we invited visitors to the bookshop and website to contribute a line of poetry on the theme of Autumn.
We compiled the lines into a collective poem and accompanying video, which can be read and watched below.
Thank you so much to everyone who joined our poetry experiment!
Watch the Video
Read the Poem
Sun shining, silver sands
parched of colour across windswept beaches.
Lonely walkers hunched against the bite
while grey waves crash to shore.
Bracken fronds turn gently
brown as hazelnuts
and crunch with the rustle of autumn.
A time to sit back, observe…and sigh!
​
Here’s the Harvest Moon
a wondrous golden glow in the sky.
A raft of dew-drenched spiders’ webs sparkle
across the sea of ripened barley.
​
Leaves turn russet, glistening gold
alive with the rustle of foragers
while boughs droop with autumn fruit,
Earth’s nourished treasure.
Conkers nestled in their spiky beds
promise of festivals, long nights, winter rest.
Lined up pumpkins on the wall
ready to be gloriously transformed.
Here’s the Northern wind of change.
Wrap up while smoke-tinged cold stings noses —
or shelter warm, lights on, curtains drawn,
to hear the gentle dance of teardrops upon the red rooftops.
Slow-clearing mists creep the fields of stubble,
and spider’s webs glisten with diamond dew.
The eerie shroud mutes the golden hues and burnished bronzes
as death transitions leaves into beauty on the bending boughs of the trees.
Green turns slowly
into yellow and brown.
The burnished leaves float silently to the ground
and crunch under feet while sleepy mammals burrow deep.
Hedgehogs snuffle and snuggle in the crisp stack of golden leaves
Earth rich haven from winter’s storm.
Ghosts of summer past chestnut ripe
on ground no longer bathed in sunlight.
Breath misting, each step releasing
damp bursts from pine dense forest floor.
Crow cawed echo.
Centred by quiet.
Sinking sun casts shadows long
across fields once ripe with golden corn.
Here’s the first frost.
A pause.
​
With thanks to:
Andy Radka
Christine Gant
Diana
High Mires
Lisa Henson
and 17 anonymous poets
​
for contributing lines of poetry
If you'd like to join in with future projects like this (we plan to organise a new collaborative poem in the near future), sign up to our newsletter to stay in the loop.