Dwellers in the House of the Lord. Wesley McNair
ion>
Also by Wesley McNair
poetry
The Faces of Americans in 1853 (1984)
The Town of No (1989)
My Brother Running (1993)
Talking in the Dark (1997)
Fire (2002)
The Ghosts of You and Me (2006)
Lovers of the Lost: New & Selected Poems (2010)
The Lost Child: Ozark Poems (2014)
The Unfastening (2017)
poetry – limited editions
Twelve Journeys in Maine (1992)
The Dissonant Heart (1995)
nonfiction
Mapping the Heart: Reflections on Place and Poetry (2003)
A Place on Water (with Robert Kimber and Bill Roorbach) (2004)
The Words I Chose: A Memoir of Family and Poetry (2012)
Published in 2020 by
david r. godine, publisher
15 Court Square, Suite 320
Boston, Massachusetts 02108
Copyright 2020 © by Wesley McNair
All Rights Reserved.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For more information, please write to the address above.
library of congress cataloging-in-publication data
Names: McNair, Wesley, author.
Title: Dwellers in the house of the Lord : a poem / Wesley McNair.
Description: Boston : David R. Godine, Publisher, 2020. | Summary: “In this book-length narrative poem, award-winning poet Wesley McNair takes us to rural Virginia, where his younger sister Aimee is adrift in a difficult marriage to Mike, an off-the-grid gun shop owner. As Aimee grapples with self-doubt and searches for solace in a vacuous megachurch, Mike’s misunderstandings are magnified by the self-first ideology and fear-of-others philosophy swirling around him. McNair casts this intimate family struggle against Trump’s noisy public race to the White House”-- Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: lccn 2019051065 | isbn 9781567926637 (paperback) | isbn 9781567926705 (ebook)
Subjects: lcgft: Poetry.
Classification: lcc pc3563.c388 d84 2020 | ddc 811/.54--dc23
lc record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019051065
For my sister
Part I
1 •
Inside the box she sent is bubble wrap
folded over and over around
a thick envelope, awkwardly folded,
and deeper down, wrapped
in Christmas paper with my name
on top in a blur of letters
handwritten over and over,
my younger sister Aimee’s late gift,
sealed in an old plastic bag
like a secret she wants only me
to know: a silver charm bracelet,
which in the winter light of my kitchen,
dangles a palace, a running horse,
a heart with a key, and a clock.
Once, after returning from a long visit
with our mother, Aimee, married
with two daughters, hid under her bed,
keeping herself a secret. Mike searched
and called for hours before she called back
at last and he found her, discovering also
his unshakable, lifelong anger at the woman
my sister had tried to put out of her mind.
But Mike was her replacement
for my mother.
A mind has so much to keep track of:
which secrets to share,
which to guard from others,
and now, who and where anyone
is anymore. In Aimee’s letter—
creased and re-creased from
her underlining and afterthoughts
in the margins—she asks me to mail
her Christmas cards for my children,
having forgotten their addresses
and their names. They can’t hear
my chattering, she writes,
but can read of several things
I wanted to write inside the card itself.
The Lord loves you, she remembers
on the back, where a single heart
floats in a blank sky.
2 •
In the famous family photograph,
Aimee sits on the couch beside Mike
in his Navy uniform, holding his hand
and looking up at him with the defenseless
wonder she wore all though girlhood.
Eight years old, she has just asked him