A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 20,000 daily subscribers and over 8,000 archived posts.
I remember best the Oxford shoes, the three-piece suits,
How he always sat in the back row of our summer class,
Striped tie, maroon and gold, if I recall that one day right.
He was 10 years older than the rest of us who Heartlanded
Whitman, Dickinson that July. Iowa City, 1983, no A.C.,
Landlocked in that humidity, except in groceries,
Theaters, maybe the rare café, a hamburger
And milkshake town in those days, 90 degrees forcing us
Out to Dingleberry’s Quarry, where we swam
Without our skivvies, cows wandering into the opposite
Mucky end. We dodged their pies, occasional
Water moccasins, perched on rocks, dove in the deep spots.
But it was coffee after class when Craig joined our jeans
And T’s. When he packed a pipe and lit it, we broached
The subject: “What’s with the suit? I mean, really?”
“The distillation of evil from the claims of innocence is ironic,”
Reinhold Niebuhr said. I’m broke, said Craig, a victim
Of circumstance. He was rich, once, so the story went.
Now he had nothing but old fancy suits his parents
Once bought him. I didn’t like to doubt ew
Another man’s story, didn’t know him, glad to share
A cup of coffee, talk about my pending trip.
My girlfriend and I would eat nothing but oysters
And bluefish. But what about the apartment, he asked?
He needed two weeks to get back on his feet.
I don’t remember the entire circumstance
That led to yes, or the exact chain of events that never
Consulted my lover, but he moved in the day we left,
Ours a two-bedroom second story, nothing fancy.
One window was broken when we came back.
Glass shards littered the nook we squeezed
Into our galley kitchen. Yes, he slept in our double bed
Just as he said he wouldn’t. “What’d you expect?”
My girlfriend asked. The Wild Turkey gone, a couple
Hairs still glued to the empty bottle, our double Dutch
Porcelain stuccoed all over, egg yolk, spaghetti hardened
In its dead sauce, dried mint chocolate chip, the package
Gracing the garbage. Two weeks’ worth of God knows what.
I reached him by phone in our favorite watering hole
Where each night T.A.’s held prisms to the human
Stars again, glinted also against a sign that flashed
The clarity of the Rockies and everything we drank,
Artists, writers, a couple historians, one crazed evening
A theologian, all of us ganging on my lovely girlfriend
Who refused the earth would go to the tern
Of an intercontinental missile, and then the flock
Would follow… In so many words
God so loved the world… Whenever she left
To pee or fill her glass, we laughed in a wisdom
Beyond our drafts, jeered about unschooled
Peasants, plebians. Craig asked did I find
The check he left? “Must have blown out
The blown-out window…” Stay right there, I said,
We can talk it over a glass. “Tell you what,”
He said, “Lend me your car, I’ll drive to Davenport,
Pick up everything to make amends.” Two weeks later
He hit me again: AT&T billed for long-distance,
Numbers that offered nothing when I called them.
Then finally his grandmother: “Happened like this
Many times before. We’ve washed our hands of him.”
My girlfriend left me shortly after. I wondered
What it meant to be a good partner, or if Niebuhr
Was too hard on his fellow citizens, spent one long
Lonely night with my girlfriend’s ex-bosom friend.
I remember best the cartography of each failed kindness,
At 4 her Irish daily milk and tea, smooth as Wild Turkey.
Copyright 2023 Stephen Haven
Stephen Haven is a professor of English at Lesley University. His books include a memoir, The River Lock (Syracuse, 2008) and The Last Sacred Place in North America (New American Press, 2012).

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
That’s why I love VOX POPULI — I so enjoyed the lyrical, sonorous, concise & precise “A Similar While” by Robert Wrigley — then this long & flowing & fascinating narrative by Stephen Haven! Two completely different ways of writing — two poets I equally love!
LikeLike
Yes, Stephen Haven’s poem reminds me of the work of my mentor Stephen Dobyns.
>
LikeLike