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    Play the Piano

    Page 3
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    him.

      I had run my 43 cents up to a

      dollar ninety

      when I saw her going upstairs with

      her fireman.

      “he’s gonna show me their sleeping

      quarters,” she told

      me.

      “I understand,” I told

      her.

      when her fireman slid down the pole

      ten minutes later

      I nodded him

      over.

      “that’ll be 5

      dollars.”

      “5 dollars for

      that?”

      “we wouldn’t want a scandal, would

      we? we both might lose our

      jobs. of course, I’m not

      working.”

      he gave me the

      5.

      “sit down, you might get it

      back.”

      “whatcha playing?”

      “blackjack.”

      “gambling’s against the

      law.”

      “anything interesting is. besides,

      you see any money on the

      table?”

      he sat down.

      that made 5 of

      us.

      “how was it Harry?” somebody asked

      him.

      “not bad, not

      bad.”

      the other guy went on

      upstairs.

      they were bad players really.

      they didn’t bother to memorize the

      deck. they didn’t know whether the

      high numbers or low numbers were left. and basically they hit too

      high,

      didn’t hold low

      enough.

      when the other guy came down

      he gave me a

      five.

      “how was it, Marty?”

      “not bad. she’s got…some fine

      movements.”

      “hit me!” I said. “nice clean girl. I

      ride it myself.”

      nobody said

      anything.

      “any big fires lately?” I

      asked.

      “naw. nothin’

      much.”

      “you guys need

      exercise. hit me

      again!”

      a big red-headed kid who had been shining an

      engine

      threw down his rag and

      went upstairs.

      when he came down he threw me a

      five.

      when the 4th guy came down I gave him

      3 fives for a

      twenty.

      I don’t know how many firemen

      were in the building or where they

      were. I figured a few had slipped by me

      but I was a good

      sport.

      it was getting dark outside

      when the alarm

      rang.

      they started running around.

      guys came sliding down the

      pole.

      then she came sliding down the

      pole. she was good with the

      pole. a real woman. nothing but guts

      and

      ass.

      “let’s go,” I told

      her.

      she stood there waving goodbye to the

      firemen but they didn’t seem

      much interested

      any more.

      “let’s go back to the

      bar,” I told

      her.

      “ooh, you got

      money?”

      “I found some I didn’t know I

      had…”

      we sat at the end of the bar

      with whiskey and beer

      chaser.

      “I sure got a good

      sleep.”

      “sure, baby, you need your

      sleep.”

      “look at that sailor looking at me!

      he must think I’m a…a…”

      “naw, he don’t think that. relax, you’ve got

      class, real class. sometimes you remind me of an

      opera singer. you know, one of those prima d’s.

      your class shows all over

      you. drink

      up.”

      I ordered 2

      more.

      “you know, daddy, you’re the only man I

      LOVE! I mean, really…LOVE! ya

      know?”

      “sure I know. sometimes I think I am a king

      in spite of myself.”

      “yeah. yeah. that’s what I mean, somethin’ like

      that.”

      I had to go to the urinal. when I came back

      the sailor was sitting in my

      seat. she had her leg up against his and

      he was talking.

      I walked over and got in a dart game with

      Harry the Horse and the corner

      newsboy.

      an argument over Marshal Foch

      Foch was a great soldier, he said, Marshal Foch;

      listen, I said, if you don’t keep it clean

      I’ll have to slap you across the face with

      a wet towel.

      I’ll write the governor, he said.

      the governor is my uncle, I said.

      Marshal Foch was my

      grandfather, he said.

      I warned you, I said. I’m a

      gentleman.

      And I’m a Foch, he said.

      that did it. I slapped him with a wet towel.

      he grabbed the phone.

      governor’s mansion, he said.

      I slapped a wet rubber glove down

      his mouth and cut the wire.

      outside the crickets were chirping like

      mad: Foch, Foch, Foch, Foch!

      they chirped.

      I got out my sub-machine gun and blasted

      the devils

      but there were so many of them

      I had to give up.

      I pulled the wet rubber glove out.

      I surrender, I said, it’s too much:

      I can’t change the world.

      all the so-called ladies in the room

      applauded.

      he stood up and bowed gallantly as

      outside the crickets chirped.

      I put on my hat

      and stalked out. I still maintain

      the French are weak

      and no

      wonder.

      40 cigarettes

      I smoked 2 packs of cigarettes today and

      my tongue feels like a

      caterpillar trying to get out for

      rainwater

      somebody is working over

      Pictures at an Exhibition

      while tiny pimples of sweat

      work their way down my

      fat sides.

      too sick today and told the man

      over the phone

      it was stomach pains.

      the pains in the ass too and

      the soul?

      the gophers are underground

      staring at pictures on mudwalls

      machineguns are mounted in the

      windows.

      40 cigarettes.

      what’s walking around

      chewing grass,

      4 legs, no

      hands?

      it’s not the

      politburo.

      it could be a

      donkey. how’d you like to be in a

      donkey’s head for a

      while? your body in a donkey’s

      body? you’d only last

      ten minutes

      they’d have to let you

      out

      you’d be so

      scared

      but who’s going to

      let you out of that

      dismal bluepurple notion

      of what you are

      now? and I’m the one who’s

      scared.

      a killer gets ready

      he was a good one

      say 18, 19,

      a marine

      and everytime

      a woman came down the train
    aisle

      he seemed to stand up

      so I couldn’t see

      her

      and the woman smiled at him

      but I didn’t smile

      at him

      he kept looking at himself in the

      train window

      and standing up and taking off his

      coat and then standing up

      and putting it back

      on

      he polished his belt buckle with a

      delighted vigor

      and his neck was red and

      his face was red and his eyes were a

      pretty blue

      but I didn’t like

      him

      and everytime I went to the can

      he was either in one of the cans

      or he was in front of one of the mirrors

      combing his hair or

      shaving

      and he was always walking up and down the

      aisles

      or drinking water

      I watched his Adam’s apple juggle the water

      down

      he was always in my

      eyes

      but we never spoke

      and I remembered all the other trains

      all the other buses

      all the other wars

      he got off at Pasadena

      vainer than any woman

      he got off at Pasadena

      proud and

      dead

      the rest of the trainride—

      8 or 10 miles—

      was perfect.

      I love you

      I opened the door of this shanty and there she lay

      there she lay

      my love

      across the back of a man in a dirty undershirt.

      I was rough tough easy-with-money-Charley (that’s me)

      and I awakened both of them

      like God

      and when she was awake

      she started screaming, “Hank, Hank!” (that’s my other name)

      “take me away from this son of a bitch!

      I hate him I love you!”

      of course, I was wise enough not to believe any of

      this and I sat down and said,

      “I need a drink, my head hurts and I need a

      drink.”

      this is the way love works, you see, and then we all sat there

      drinking the whiskey and I was

      perfectly satisfied

      and then he reached over and handed me a five,

      “that’s all that’s left of what she took, that’s all that’s left

      of what she took from you.”

      I was no golden-winged angel ripped up through

      boxtops

      I took the five and left them in there

      and I walked up the alley

      to Alvarado street

      and I turned in left

      at the first

      bar.

      a little atomic bomb

      o, just give me a little atomic bomb

      not too much

      just a little

      enough to kill a horse in the street

      but there aren’t any horses in the street

      well, enough to knock the flowers from a bowl

      but I don’t see any

      flowers in a

      bowl

      enough then

      to frighten my love

      but I don’t have any

      love

      well

      give me an atomic bomb then

      to scrub in my bathtub

      like a dirty and lovable child

      (I’ve got a bathtub)

      just a little atomic bomb, general,

      with pugnose

      pink ears

      smelling like underclothes in

      July

      do you think I’m crazy?

      I think you’re crazy

      too

      so the way you think:

      send me one before somebody else

      does.

      the egg

      he’s 17.

      mother, he said, how do I crack an

      egg?

      all right, she said to me, you don’t have to

      sit there looking like that.

      oh, mother, he said, you broke the yoke.

      I can’t eat a broken yoke.

      all right, she said to me, you’re so tough,

      you’ve been in the slaughterhouses, factories,

      the jails, you’re so god damned tough,

      but all people don’t have to be like you,

      that doesn’t make everybody else wrong and you

      right.

      mother, he said, can you bring me some cokes

      when you come home from work?

      look, Raleigh, she said, can’t you get the cokes

      on your bike, I’m tired after

      work.

      but, mama, there’s a hill.

      what hill, Raleigh?

      there’s a hill,

      it’s there and I have to peddle over

      it.

      all right, she said to me, you think you’re so

      god damned tough. you worked on a railroad track

      gang, I hear about it every time you get drunk:

      “I worked on a railroad track gang.”

      well, I said, I did.

      I mean, what difference does it make?

      everybody has to work somewhere.

      mama, said the kid, will you bring me those

      cokes?

      I really like the kid. I think he’s very

      gentle. and once he learns how to crack an

      egg he may do some

      unusual things. meanwhile

      I sleep with his mother

      and try to stay out of

      arguments.

      the knifer

      you knifed me, he said, you told Pink Eagle

      not to publish me.

      oh hell, Manny, I said, get off it.

      these poets are very sensitive

      they have more sensitivity than talent,

      I don’t know what to do with them.

      just tonight the phone rang and

      it was Bagatelli and Bagatelli said

      Clarsten phoned and Clarsten was pissed

      because we hadn’t mailed him the

      anthology, and Clarsten blamed me

      for not mailing the anthology

      and furthermore Clarsten

      claimed I was trying to do him

      in, and he was very

      angry. so said

      Bagatelli.

      you know, I’m really beginning to feel like

      a literary power

      I just lean back in my chair and roll cigarettes

      and stare at the walls

      and I am given credit for the life and death of

      poetic careers.

      at least I’m given credit for the

      death part.

      actually these boys are dying off without my

      help. The sun has gone behind the cloud.

      I have nothing to do with the workings.

      I smoke Prince Albert, drink Schlitz

      and copulate whenever possible. believe in my

      innocence and I might consider

      yours.

      the ladies of summer

      the ladies of summer will die like the rose

      and the lie

      the ladies of summer will love

      so long as the price is not

      forever

      the ladies of summer

      might love anybody;

      they might even love you

      as long as summer

      lasts

      yet winter will come to them

      too

      white snow and

      a cold freezing

      and faces so ugly

      that even death

      will turn away—

      wince—

      before taking

      them.

      I’m in love

      she’s young, she said,

      but look at me,

    &nb
    sp; I have pretty ankles,

      and look at my wrists, I have pretty

      wrists

      o my god,

      I thought it was all working,

     


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