Hot Tub

A tryst.

That ends

in a nightly dose.

A contradiction,

emptiness

refused by starlight,

the dark

enflamed with error.

Tell me again

what crime you are

so guilty of?

The hot tub,

26 Seconal—

the moon

like ejaculate.

Delicate.

Poor

Barlow,

you felt

so alone;

you were

the only queer.

January 1, 1951.

In the semantics of

your translation

you intend, in Náhuatl

a long while,

to abandon

your cadaver.

There.

Credit

Copyright © 2019 by Miguel Murphy. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on August 15, 2019, by the Academy of American Poets.

About this Poem

“Robert Barlow, aged 16, was either the 43-year old H. P. Lovecraft’s lover for a summer in 1934, or just his disappointed protégé, who in his own middle years would overdose on Seconal after a student threatened to expose him for being that medical monster of the age, a homosexual. The diagnosis, the name of the disease. In 2019, I sit in my hot tub, but the freedoms of this era feel illusory. A single pill a night makes a frightening plague a kind of historical footnote. Such starlight. The backside of the century.”

Miguel Murphy