Matthew Lippman

The Fraternity

 

All the crazy fucking college kids have come back to Boston

after summers in New York and brothels,

Paris and Washington,

getting their kicks out on Pennsylvania Avenue

so they can return to the Back Bay, Cambridge,

and tell their dorm room, sorority, wanker college friends

how much money they spent on beer and tonsil surgery,

the last night on the big boat and the twelve hundred times

they got laid

even if they never took off their clothes. 

 

They’re insane in spandex and tank tops,

on bicycles that mean nothing

even though Heidegger is right around the corner

and Abnormal Psych

with the lithe professor

from Madagascar

who likes his fast cars because he knows

the truth about acceleration

under mamma’s skirt. 

 

It’s enough to make me a fucking crazy college kid myself. 

But I did that already,

cocaine filled shampoo bottles and that night

we slashed the Iranian Prince’s tires

because my roommate didn’t like the way the guy looked

at his Christian girlfriend, who,

Christmas break,

went to the basement

where her father kept the shotguns

and messed up her face.

 

We sobered up for fifteen minutes after that,

then the Space Shuttle blew up.

 

I knew a girl named Chloe.  I knew a girl named Christine. 

I didn’t know enough ways to stop smoking dope

and no one taught me. 

 

Kids tossed empty kegs at moving cars. 

We shot bottle rockets in the dorm room showers. 

It made me think, Heidegger, you fucking idiot, save us!

Now, when I drive my kid from one end of Newton to the other,

packs of eighteen year olds from Boston College and MIT,

Lesley and Northeastern,

roam the streets in packs.

The young women are giraffes, the boys,

hyenas and thieves. 

 

Honey, I turn around to say,

snap the tendons in my neck,

don’t look. 

The kids shitting on lawns,

eating ferns and flower beds,

mounting one another

by stop signs.

 

Stop, I scream, but no one can hear me,

my kid in the back, saying Daddy, check that out. 

 

That’s when I close my eyes,

push, pray,

my foot

all the way down on the gas.

 

 

 

 

 

Above Ground and Below
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Matthew Lippman: Bio

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