St. Hubert's Stag

St. Hubert’s Stag

Poetry

In the Ardennes forest the hunter
pauses, seeing by glint or trick a crucifix

among the bramble of antlers
just as he draws the bow, ravening

for the twang and thump of arrow
into hart—his wife dead, his wife destroyed

by childbirth—a wounded viciousness
in him to gore tenderness, annihilate

perfection, to bloody a body
on that Good Friday: but now the signal

pierces him, borne to him by his intended
victim. He newly apprehends

his own crucifying hands, brutish heart,
dazedly numbers the points

as the stag spins and springs away, grace
into dappled green.


This poem also appears in the June 2026 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 91, No. 6, page 49). Click here to subscribe to the magazine.

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About the author

Laura Reece Hogan

Laura Reece Hogan is the author of Butterfly Nebula (Backwaters, University of Nebraska Press), Litany of Flights (Paraclete Press), the chapbook O Garden-Dweller (Finishing Line Press), and the nonfiction I Live, No Longer I (Wipf & Stock), as well as the winner of the Backwaters Prize in Poetry and the Paraclete Poetry Prize. Her poems have appeared in Crab Creek Review, America magazine, Presence: A Journal of Catholic Poetry, The Christian Century, Verse Daily and elsewhere. She can be found online at laurareecehogan.com.