Megaloceros
big brute clubmoss god. dark echo
of roamable loam & leaf-fat trees.
looming ungulate, polished
& moonstone old, i linger
at your dais, awed as any
small-called thing. you:
wide warden
in a skinfilled room,
unseeingly keen, each antler
an open hand of bone. you sock
the brass out of me, & the two
gasping quebecois standing nearby,
the sticky-fisted child
gathering grapestems in his jeans.
we wait—little bugs on a sill—
for permission to look away, to
murmur over any of the other
pickled and polished things
posed in this room, but you grant
nothing. Watch Me Until I Become
Sublime, Dusk & Shining, you
do not say, but i hear, somehow,
over my rowdy blood, my
clobbering heart, over all this
wet business. something about
death’s dry science. something
about pop zoologists wagering
your crown your undoing:
ice grayed the grass faster
than you could find it
& so your greedy horns
drank you dry. it’s not true,
probably. i’ll die too,
probably. will the world outpace
my feeding? i won’t lie—
i’d like to be looked-at, after.
some unfamiliar animal
at my knees, awed by an
omnivorous bigness.
Copyright © 2025 by J. Bailey Hutchinson. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on January 2, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.