Thursday, August 28, 2025

SHANE McCRAE ~

 




After My Grandparents

Kidnap Me They Move

To A New Development


    

    The only scenes I know are Scenes

    My mother's parents thought to take

Pictures of. Me in the ditch,     my mother's father

        In the yard before the fence


    Was built, before the lawn was fit

    -ted to the Earth's     face like a face

After a mauling.    He is posing like

        A hunter in the dirt


    He grips a hoe and kneels in the corpse

    Called Everywhere.     A neighborhood

Is coming.    Where an armed man kneels and grins

        That man will build a house




In the House From Which

I Was Kidnapped



The pale blinds rise and fall, a gif forever

The blinds move   on their own.   At first my father

Stands with the string between his fingers, first

And middle, pulling, even   after it tears

Into his fingers, tears the first and mid-

dle skin,   him pulling, letting go, his blood

Staining the length of the looped string near-

est him.   He pulls the string for years


Eventually he backs   away from the window

Into the room.   He doesn't turn.   Now

He watches from a shadow in the room

For a small child to be returned to him

I see him watching from  deeper in the shadow

Whenever I look   into his eyes.   The shadow grows the way a

    child grows



I Have Mixed My Labor With the Soil



Back at the old house, the woods, no entry now

How much remains if any of my blood

And skin in the forest up the hill?   Unend-

ing the humiliations so small you

Can't talk about them or they stop being true

Such as sound loyal in your head

And do betray you on your tongue.   It is my bod-

y still,   more mine than when how long ago

I bled at war in the woods with boys I wanted

To like me so I let them hurt me there

I wore a helmet from the army surplus store

Hoping I would be hunted

And shot in the head, hoping I'd hear the BB strike

To squeeze through brambles my own blood made thick



My Mother Was A Dancer



I danced with the boy in the yard, my mother watching us

    He held his left hand high, but too far back

    As if it had been photographed mid-wave

        And frozen by the attentive flash


As if he once had   meant to swing it down, and now

    Couldn't, a fear   I knew and couldn't name

    For years, but bodied by my mother's gaze

        Gripped it, and wouldn't let it go


He turned to her,   and, crying, shouted wasn't she

    Going to do anything? My mother's   teeth

    Parted. But what she said I didn't hear

        Again I struck his bleeding eye

____________________

Shane McCrae

The Many Hundreds of the Scent

Farrar, Straus, Giroux 2023