Confessions of a Former Scarecrow

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Nineteen: I wear the hat, work
my body down to straw, and move
into place over the fields. Crows pipe
to me: I do not dance. Instead,
I listen close. When the owls cry,
I know darkness. Crows come, and go
without. I take after them: turn,
harden, and let the others hang.

                                                    I like the cling of my old clothes,
                                                    and like the mountain range of muscles,
                                                    my shoulders flexed before a mirror,
                                                    like a Greek sculpture, a god,
                                                    a woman whispers, and we stare
                                                    together, my body turned, seeming
                                                    to walk away, my face wrenched,
                                                    not believing what it beholds.

At my thinnest, I think about
the one before me, the boy I was
who at the table is told to stop,
others knowing what I do not
know to admit: the food grows cold
on our plates—one, too old to play,
sits silent; the other, too young to sulk,
watches as I close my eyes and wait.

                                                    I’m not a man but a wariness,
                                                    a warning to keep clear of the field.
                                                    I stand, friendless—what friends, tell me,
                                                    are apple trees, a trail of leaves,
                                                    the wasted weather, these apples worn
                                                    to a sun-brown, and then just brown,
                                                    a rot and musk—everyone reeks
                                                    to me, no man, half-made of air.

When each fall comes, I fall in lines
across the field. Crows pick me out
of food for weeks. Photographs
of then are lost (I tell myself
they’re lost). Bare, at the mirror,
I still don’t see a man, I see
what could still be lost, what kept.
Owls cry, leave darkness on my tongue.

José Angel Araguz, Ph.D. (he/him/él) is the author most recently of the lyric memoir Ruin & Want (Sundress Publications) as well as the poetry collections Rotura (Black Lawrence Press) and La esperanza espera (Valparaiso Ediciones). His poetry and prose have appeared in Prairie Schooner, Poetry International, The Acentos Review, and Oxidant | Engine among other places. He is an Associate Professor at Suffolk University and a faculty-at-large member of the Solstice Low-Residency MFA Program at Lasell University. He blogs and reviews books at The Influence.