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Column 706

Undergrads

Intro by Ted Kooser
09.30.2018

I love this short poem, which col­lects a fried chick­en buck­et of all too many drea­ry details and dress­es them out in grace­ful for­mal rhyme. It’s by Matthew Buck­ley Smith, who lives in North Car­oli­na, and is from the Fall, 2017, issue of Rat­tle, one of the best of the con­tem­po­rary lit­er­ary jour­nals. His most recent book of poems is Dirge for an Imag­i­nary World, pub­lished by Able Muse Press. 

Undergrads

The place we lived was only an idea,
Nothing to do with the failed cotton mill town
Where a record shop, some bars, and a pizzeria
Were all we ever cared to call our own.
 
From nightmares of a happy life with kids
We'd wake in boozy sweat to find the floor
Still cobbled with bottle caps and take-out lids,
Our twenties crumpled safely in a drawer,
 
Unspent like all the hours ahead that night
We met each other in the common room
And found somehow without the help of light
Our way across the river by the time
 
Dawn spilled down from the campus to the banks
We'd come to, single, sobered-up again,
To see the morning glories give their thanks
For things we had, and hardly noticed, then.
 

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We do not accept unsolicited submissions

We do not accept unsolicited submissions. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2017 by Matthew Buckley Smith, "Undergrads," from Rattle, (No. 57, Fall, 2017). Poem reprinted by permission of Matthew Buckley Smith and the publisher. Introduction copyright © 2024 by The Poetry Foundation.