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    The Pleasures of the Damned

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      “aw’ right. but ya know what happened?”

      “no, Barry.”

      “a cop stopped me on my Moped. and guess why?”

      “speeding?”

      “no! he claimed I had to have a license to drive a Moped!

      that’s stupid! he gave me a ticket! I almost smashed him

      in the face!”

      “oh yeah?”

      “yeah! I almost smashed him!”

      “Barry, I’ve got to make the first race.”

      “how much does it cost you to get in?”

      “four dollars and twenty-five cents.”

      “I got into the Pomona County Fair for a dollar.”

      “all right, Barry.”

      the motor has been running. I put it into first and pull

      out. in the rearview mirror I see him walk

      back across the lawn.

      Brownie is waiting for him,

      wagging his tail.

      his mother is inside waiting.

      maybe Barry will slam her against the refrigerator

      thinking about that cop.

      or maybe they’ll play checkers.

      I find the Hollywood freeway

      then the Pasadena freeway.

      life has been tough on Barry:

      he’s 24

      looks 38

      but it all evens out finally:

      he’s aged a good many other people

      too.

      liberated woman and liberated man

      look there.

      the one you considered killing yourself

      for.

      you saw her the other day

      getting out of her car

      in the Safeway parking lot.

      she was wearing a torn green

      dress and old dirty

      boots

      her face raw with living.

      she saw you

      so you walked over

      and spoke and then

      listened.

      her hair did not glisten

      her eyes and her conversation were

      dull.

      where was she?

      where had she gone?

      the one you were going to kill yourself

      for?

      the conversation finished

      she walked into the store

      and you looked at her automobile

      and even that

      which used to drive up and park

      in front of your door

      with such verve and in a spirit of

      adventure

      now looked

      like a junkyard

      joke.

      you decide not to shop at

      Safeway

      you’ll drive 6 blocks

      east and buy what you need

      at Ralphs.

      getting into your car

      you are quite pleased that

      you didn’t

      kill yourself;

      everything is delightful and

      the air is clear.

      your hands on the wheel,

      you grin as you check for traffic in

      the rearview mirror.

      my man, you think,

      you’ve saved yourself

      for somebody else, but

      who?

      a slim young creature walks by

      in a mini skirt and sandals

      showing a marvelous leg.

      she’s going in to shop at Safeway

      too.

      you turn off the engine and

      follow her in.

      small talk

      all right, while we are gently celebrating to night

      and while crazy classical music leaps at me from

      my small radio, I light a fresh cigar

      and realize that I am still very much alive and that

      the 21st century is almost upon me!

      I walk softly now toward 5 a.m. this dark night.

      my 5 cats have been in and out, looking after

      me, I have petted them, spoken to them, they

      are full of their own private fears wrought by previous

      centuries of cruelty and abuse

      but I think that they love me as much as they

      can, anyhow, what I am trying to say here

      is that writing is just as exciting and mad and

      just as big a gamble for me as it ever was, because Death

      after all these years

      walks around in the room with me now and speaks softly,

      asking, do you still think that you are a genuine

      writer? are you pleased with what you’ve done?

      listen, let me have one of those

      cigars.

      help yourself, motherfucker, I say.

      Death lights up and we sit quietly for a time.

      I can feel him here with me.

      don’t you long for the ferocity

      of youth? He finally asks.

      not so much, I say.

      but don’t you regret those things

      that have been lost?

      not at all, I say.

      don’t you miss, He asks slyly, the young girls

      climbing through your window?

      all they brought was bad news, I tell him.

      but the illusion, He says, don’t you miss the

      illusion?

      hell yes, don’t you? I ask.

      I have no illusions, He says sadly.

      sorry, I forgot about that, I say, then walk

      to the window

      unafraid and strangely satisfied

      to watch the warm dawn

      unfold.

      the crunch

      too much

      too little

      too fat

      too thin

      or nobody.

      laughter or

      tears

      haters

      lovers

      strangers with faces like

      the backs of

      thumb tacks

      armies running through

      streets of blood

      waving winebottles

      bayoneting and fucking

      virgins.

      or an old guy in a cheap room

      with a photograph of M. Monroe.

      there is a loneliness in this world so great

      that you can see it in the slow movement of

      the hands of a clock.

      people so tired

      mutilated

      either by love or no love.

      people just are not good to each other

      one on one

      the rich are not good to the rich

      the poor are not good to the poor.

      we are afraid.

      our educational system tells us

      that we can all be

      big-ass winners.

      it hasn’t told us

      about the gutters

      or the suicides.

      or the terror of one person

      aching in one place

      alone

      untouched

      unspoken to

      watering a plant.

      people are not good to each other.

      people are not good to each other.

      people are not good to each other.

      I suppose they never will be.

      I don’t ask them to be.

      but sometimes I think about

      it.

      the beads will swing

      the clouds will cloud

      and the killer will behead the child

      like taking a bite out of an ice cream cone.

      too much

      too little

      too fat

      too thin

      or nobody

      more haters than lovers.

      people are not good to each other.

      perhaps if they were

      our deaths would not be so sad.

      meanwhile I look at young girls

      stems

      flowers of chance.

      there must be a way.

      surely there must be a way we have not yet

      thought of.

      who p
    ut this brain inside of me?

      it cries

      it demands

      it says that there is a chance.

      it will not say

      “no.”

      funhouse

      I drive to the beach at night

      in the winter

      and sit and look at the burned-down amusement pier

      wonder why they just let it sit there

      in the water.

      I want it out of there,

      blown up,

      vanished,

      erased;

      that pier should no longer sit there

      with madmen sleeping inside

      the burned-out guts of the fun house…

      it’s awful, I say, blow the damn thing up,

      get it out of my eyes,

      that tombstone in the sea.

      the madmen can find other holes

      to crawl into.

      I used to walk that pier when I was 8

      years old.

      the poetry reading

      at high noon

      at a small college near the beach

      sober

      the sweat running down my arms

      a spot of sweat on the table

      I flatten it with my finger

      blood money blood money

      my god they must think I love this like the others

      but it’s for bread and beer and rent

      blood money

      I’m tense lousy feel bad

      poor people I’m failing I’m failing

      a woman gets up

      walks out

      slams the door

      a dirty poem

      somebody told me not to read dirty poems

      here

      it’s too late.

      my eyes can’t see some lines

      I read it

      out—

      desperate trembling

      lousy

      they can’t hear my voice

      and I say,

      I quit, that’s it, I’m

      finished.

      and later in my room

      there’s scotch and beer:

      the blood of a coward.

      this then

      will be my destiny:

      scrabbling for pennies in dark tiny halls

      reading poems I have long since become tired

      of.

      and I used to think

      that men who drove buses

      or cleaned out latrines

      or murdered men in alleys were

      fools.

      somebody

      god I got the sad blue blues,

      this woman sat there and she

      said

      are you really Charles

      Bukowski?

      and I said

      forget that

      I do not feel good

      I’ve got the sad sads

      all I want to do is

      fuck you

      and she laughed

      she thought I was being

      clever

      and…ust looked up her long slim legs of heaven

      I saw her liver and her quivering intestine

      I saw Christ in there

      jumping to a folk-rock

      all the long lines of starvation within me

      rose

      and I walked over

      and grabbed her on the couch

      ripped her dress up around her face

      and I didn’t care

      rape or the end of the earth

      one more time

      to be there

      anywhere

      real

      yes

      her pan ties were on the

      floor

      and my cock went in

      my cock my god my cock went in

      I was Charles

      Somebody.

      the colored birds

      it is a highrise apt. next door

      and he beats her at night and she screams and nobody stops it

      and I see her the next day

      standing in the driveway with curlers in her hair

      and she has her huge buttocks jammed into black

      slacks and she says, standing in the sun,

      “god damn it, 24 hours a day in this place, I never go anywhere!”

      then he comes out, proud, the little matador,

      a pail of shit, his belly hanging over his bathing trunks—

      he might have been a handsome man once, might have,

      now they both stand there and he says,

      “I think I’m goin’ for a swim.”

      she doesn’t answer and he goes to the pool and

      jumps into the fishless, sandless water, the peroxide-codeine water,

      and I stand by the kitchen window drinking coffee

      trying to unboil the fuzzy, stinking picture—

      after all, you can’t live elbow to elbow to people without wanting to

      draw a number on them.

      every time my toilet flushes they can hear it. every time they

      go to bed I can hear them.

      soon she goes inside and then comes out with 2 colored birds

      in a cage. I don’t know what they are. they don’t talk. they

      just move a little, seeming to twitch their tail-feathers and

      shit. that’s all they do.

      she stands there looking at them.

      he comes out: the little tuna, the little matador, out of the pool,

      a dripping unbeautiful white, the cloth of his wet suit gripping.

      “get those birds in the house!”

      “but the birds need sun!”

      “I said, get those birds in the house!”

      “the birds are gonna die!”

      “you listen to me, I said, GET THOSE BIRDS IN THE HOUSE!”

      she bends and lifts them, her huge buttocks in the black slacks

      looking so sad.

      he slams the door behind them. then I hear it.

      BAM!

      she screams

      BAM! BAM!

      she screams

      then: BAM!

      and she screams.

      I pour another coffee and decide that that’s a new

      one: he usually only beats her at

      night. it takes a man to beat his wife night and

      day. although he doesn’t look like much

      he’s one of the few real men around

      here.

      poem for personnel managers:

      An old man asked me for a cigarette

      and I carefully dealt out two.

      “Been lookin’ for job. Gonna stand

      in the sun and smoke.”

      He was close to rags and rage

      and he leaned against death.

      It was a cold day, indeed, and trucks

      loaded and heavy as old whores

      banged and tangled on the streets…

      We drop like planks from a rotting floor

      as the world strives to unlock the bone

      that weights its brain.

      (God is a lonely place without steak.)

      We are dying birds

      we are sinking ships—

      the world rocks down against us

      and we

      throw out our arms

      and we

      throw out our legs

      like the death kiss of the centipede:

      but they kindly snap our backs

      and call our poison “politics.”

      Well, we smoked, he and I—little men

      nibbling fish-head thoughts…

      All the horses do not come in,

      and as you watch the lights of the jails

      and hospitals wink on and out,

      and men handle flags as carefully as babies,

      remember this:

      you are a great-gutted instrument of

      heart and belly, carefully planned—

      so if you take a plane for Savannah,

      take the best plane;

      or if you eat chicken on a rock,

      make it a very special animal.

      (You call it a bird; I c
    all birds

      flowers.)

      And if you decide to kill somebody,

      make it anybody and not somebody:

      some men are made of more special, precious

      parts: do not kill

      if you will

      a president or a King

      or a man

      behind a desk—

      these have heavenly longitudes

      enlightened attitudes.

      If you decide,

      take us

      who stand and smoke and glower;

     


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