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    dream.

      she looked at me and asked,

      did you?

      did you?

      did you?

      on the cuff

      Jane would awaken early

      (and 8:30 a.m. is early

      when you go to bed at

      dawn).

      she would awaken crying and bitching

      for a drink.

      she’d keep at it, bitching and wailing,

      just laying there flat on her back

      and running all that noise

      through my

      hangover.

      until finally, I’d leap out of bed

      landing hard on my feet. “ALL RIGHT,

      ALL RIGHT, GOD DAMN IT, SHUT UP!”

      and I’d climb into the same pants, the

      same shirt, the same dirty socks, I was

      unshaven, unbrushed, young and mad—

      mad, yes, to be shacked with a woman

      ten years older than

      I.

      no job, behind in the rent, the same tired old

      script.

      down three flights of stairs and out

      the back way

      (the apartment house manager hung out

      by the front entrance,

      Mr. Notes-under-the-door, Mr.

      Cop-caller, Mr. Listen-we-have-only-nice-

      tenants-here).

      then down the hill to the liquor

      store around the corner, old Don Kaufman

      who wired all the bottles

      to the counter, even the cheap

      stuff.

      and Don would see me coming, “no, no,

      not today!”

      he meant no booze without

      cash, I was into him pretty deep

      but each time I looked at all

      those bottles

      I got angry because

      he didn’t need all those

      bottles.

      “Don, I want 3 bottles of cheap

      wine.”

      “oh no, Hank.”

      he was an old man, I terrorized

      him and part of me felt bad

      doing it.

      the old fart should have

      blown me away

      with his handgun.

      “Hank, you used to be such a nice

      man, such a gentleman.

      what’s happened?”

      “look, Don, I don’t want a character

      analysis, I want 3 bottles of cheap

      wine.”

      “when are you going to pay?”

      “Don, I’m going to get an income tax

      refund any day

      now.”

      “I can’t let you have anything,

      Hank.”

      then I’d take hold of the counter

      and begin rocking it, ripping at it,

      the bottles rattling, joints and seams

      giving way

      all the while

      cussing my ass

      off.

      “all right, Hank, all

      right!”

      then

      back up the hill, back through

      the rear entrance, up the three

      flights of stairs

      and there she’d be, still in bed.

      she was getting fatter and

      fatter, although we seldom

      ate.

      “3 bottles,” I said, “of

      port.”

      “thank god!”

      “no, thank me. I work the

      miracles around

      here.”

      then

      I’d pour the port into

      two tall water

      glasses

      another day

      begun.

      alone again

      I think of each of

      them

      living somewhere else

      sitting somewhere else

      standing somewhere else

      sleeping somewhere else

      or maybe feeding a

      child

      or

      reading a

      newspaper or screaming

      at their

      new man …

      but thankfully

      my female past

      (for me)

      has concluded

      peacefully.

      yet most others seem to

      believe that a

      new relationship will certainly

      work.

      that the last one

      was simply the

      error of

      choosing a bad

      mate.

      just

      bad taste

      bad luck

      bad fate.

      and then there are some who

      believe that old

      relationships can be

      revived and made new

      again.

      but please

      if you feel that way

      don’t phone

      don’t write

      don’t arrive

      and meanwhile,

      don’t

      feel bruised because this

      poem will last much

      longer than we

      did.

      it deserves to:

      you see

      its strength is

      that it seeks

      no

      mate at

      all.

      fooling Marie (the poem)

      he met her at the racetrack, a strawberry

      blonde with round hips, well-bosomed, long legs,

      turned-up nose, flower mouth, in a pink dress,

      wearing white high-heeled shoes.

      she began asking him questions about various

      horses while looking up at him with her pale blue

      eyes.

      he suggested the bar and they had a drink, then

      watched the next race together.

      he hit fifty-win on a sixty-to-one shot and she

      jumped up and down.

      then she whispered in his ear,

      “you’re the magic man! I want to fuck you!”

      he grinned and said, “I’d like to, but

      Marie … my wife …”

      she laughed, “we’ll go to a motel!”

      so they cashed the ticket, went to the parking lot,

      got into her car. “I’ll drive you back when

      we’re finished,” she smiled.

      they found a motel about a mile

      west. she parked, they got out, checked in, went to

      room 302.

      they had stopped for a bottle of Jack Daniel’s

      on the way. he stood and took the glasses out of the

      cellophane. as she undressed he poured two.

      she had a marvelous young body. she sat on the edge of

      the bed sipping at the Jack Daniel’s as he

      undressed. he felt awkward, fat and old

      but knew he was lucky: it promised to be his best day

      ever.

      then he too sat on the edge of the bed with her and

      his Jack Daniel’s. she reached over

      and grabbed him between the legs, bent over

      and went down on him.

      he pulled her under the covers and they played some more.

      finally, he mounted her and it was great, it was a

      miracle, but soon it ended, and when she

      went to the bathroom he poured two more drinks

      thinking, I’ll shower real good, Marie will never

      know.

      she came out and they sat in bed

      making small talk.

      “I’m going to shower now,” he told her,

      “I’ll be out soon.”

      “o.k., cutie,” she said.

      he soaped good in the shower, washing away all the

      perfume, the woman-smell.

      “hurry up, daddy!” he heard her say.

      “I won’t be long, ba
    by!” he yelled from the

      shower.

      he got out, toweled off, then opened the bathroom

      door and stepped out.

      the motel room was empty.

      she was gone.

      on some impulse he ran to the closet, pulled the door

      open: nothing there but coat hangers.

      then he noticed that his clothes were gone, his underwear,

      his shirt, his pants with the car keys and his wallet,

      all the money, his shoes, his stockings, everything.

      on another impulse he looked under the bed.

      nothing.

      then he saw the bottle of Jack Daniel’s, half full,

      standing on the dresser.

      he walked over and poured a drink.

      as he did he saw the word scrawled on the dresser

      mirror in pink lipstick: SUCKER.

      he drank the whiskey, put the glass down and watched himself

      in the mirror, very fat, very tired, very old.

      he had no idea what to do next.

      he carried the whiskey back to the bed, sat down,

      lifted the bottle and sucked at it as the light from the

      boulevard came in through the dusty blinds. then he just sat

      and looked out and watched the cars, passing back and

      forth.

      the copulation blues

      fuck

      the phone rings once

      stops

      fuck

      I am on top

      we roll off to the side

      fuck

      she throws one leg over

      and plays with her clit

      while I harpoon her

      fuck

      the dog scratches on the door

      won’t stop

      I get up and let him in

      then it’s time to

      suck

      she’s got it in her mouth

      not the dog

      me

      suck suck

      the doorbell rings

      a man selling mops made by the blind

      we buy a mop for eleven dollars with a little gadget

      that squeezes out the water

      fuck

      now it’s up again

      I’m on top again

      the phone rings

      a girlfriend of hers from Stockton

      they talk for ten minutes

      finish

      I am reading the sports section when

      she comes back with a bowl of grapes and

      I hand her the woman’s page

      no fuck.

      the faithful wife

      she was a married woman

      and she wrote sad

      and futile poems

      about her married life.

      her many letters to me

      were the same: sad

      and repetitive and

      futile.

      we exchanged letters for

      some years.

      I was depressed and suicidal

      and had had nothing but

      bad luck

      with women

      so I continued to write

      her

      thinking, well, maybe

      this way

      no ill will come to

      either one of us.

      but

      one night suddenly

      she was in town, she

      phoned me:

      “I’m at a meeting of

      The Chaparral Poets of

      California!”

      “o.k.,” I said, “good

      luck.”

      “I mean,” she asked,

      “don’t you want to

      see me?”

      “oh, yeah …”

      she told me she would be

      waiting at a certain bar

      in Pasadena.

      I had half a glass of

      whiskey, 2 cans of beer

      and

      set out.

      I found the bar, went

      in.

      there she was (she had

      sent photos) the little

      housewife giddy on

      martinis.

      I sat down beside

      her.

      “oh my god,” she said, “it’s you!

      I just can’t believe it!”

      I ordered a couple of drinks from

      the barkeep.

      she kissed me right there, tongue

      and all.

      we had a couple more drinks

      then got into my car

      and with her

      holding my cock

      I drove the freeway

      back to my place

      where I sat her down.

      she began talking about

      poetry

      but I got her back

      into the bedroom

      got her down onto the bed

      and stripped down

      except for the

      panties.

      I had never seen

      such a

      beautiful body.

      I began to slip the

      panties off but she

      said, “no, no, I can TELL

      you’re very POTENT, you’ll make

      me PREGNANT!”

      “well,” I said, “what the hell!”

      I rolled over then and went to

      sleep.

      the next morning

      I drove her back to her

      Chaparral Poets of

      California.

      as the weeks and months

      went on

      her letters kept arriving.

      I answered some, then

      stopped.

      but her letters kept coming.

      there wasn’t much news

      but many photos: photos of

      her children, photos of her,

      there was one photo of her

      sitting alone on a rock

      by the seashore.

      then the letters were fewer and

      fewer and then they stopped.

      add some years

      some other women

      many changes of address

      and one day

      a new letter found

      its way to

      me:

      the children were grown

      and gone.

      her husband had lost his

      part of the business, his

      partners had knifed

      him,

      they were going to have to

      sell the house.

      I answered that

      letter.

      two or three weeks

      passed.

      her next letter said

      that there was a divorce and

      it was final.

      she enclosed a photo.

      I didn’t know who it

      was at first.

      182 pounds. she said

      she’d been living on

      submarine sandwiches and

      refried beans and was

      looking for a job.

      never had a job.

      she could only type

      23 w.p.m.

      she enclosed a small

      chapbook of her poems

      inscribed “Love.”

      I should have fucked her that

      long-ago night.

      I should have been a

      dog.

      it would have been one good

      night for each of us, especially

      for me

      stuck between suicide and

      insanity

      in bed with the beautiful

      housewife.

      I had never seen a body like

      hers before.

      now I don’t even have

      her letters.

      there are nearly a hundred

      of them

      somewhere

     
    ; and this is

      a sad futile poem

      about it

      all.

      once in a while

      it is only

      once in a while

      that you see

      someone whose

      electricity

      and presence

      matches yours

      at that

      moment

      and then

      usually it’s

      a stranger.

      it was 3 or 4

      years ago

      I was walking on

      Sunset Boulevard

      toward Vermont

      when

      a block away

      I noticed a

      figure moving

      toward me.

      there was something

      in her carriage

      and in her walk

      which

      attracted

      me.

      as we came

      closer

      the intensity

      increased.

      suddenly

      I knew her

      entire history:

      she had lived

      all her life

      with men

      who had never really

      known her.

      as she approached

      I became almost

      dizzy.

      I could hear her

      footsteps as

      she approached.

      I looked into

      her face.

      she was as

      beautiful

      as I had

      imagined she

      would be.

     


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