Sophocles | David Moolten

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1 min read

They bounced quarters in the bars of Brittany

and old Spain, and before them Greeks

flung the lees from their cups, accuracy

portending intimacy with whomever

the victor was besotted. But with the object

of your affection, it was the opposite,

the thought of kissing a boy made him sick

until after a few drinks. He aimed

to disavow his self-denial somewhere

between dancing by stumbling and comatose

in the leaves behind the party house.

Even if he puked like he was getting you

out of his system, it was none other

who held his head that night of abandon,

of him prostrated like a baby, like a king

left on a mountain, impotent

against the fate of who he really was.

He was just the kind of pretty delusion

Sophocles wouldn’t have bothered with

even if he did brag about symposia

famous for pitchers not papers. Maybe it’s you

damned to blindness, letting it preside

over a life you know is small change,

refundable, that if that boy ever saw you

naked in his arms, he can’t remember:

if he loved you, he loved you,

then pressed on into the dark.


David Moolten’s last book, Primitive Mood, won the T. S. Eliot Prize (Truman State University Press, 2009). His chapbook The Moirologist won the 2023 Poetry International Winter Chapbook Competition and is forthcoming. He lives in Philadelphia.