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    Betting on the Muse

    Page 7
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      and a boy born without eyes

      and a kitten without a bird,

      nothing but twine

      and waiting

      and whores dipping hearts in poison,

      and exhaust and exhaustion

      and the bliss and the kiss of syphilis,

      drag down the vines

      the broken-foot bottles,

      I keep saying

      ha ha ha the giants

      the giant sun

      am I, the giant. our sun

      tonight

      without sun

      your shoes alone without you in them

      and I alone frying steaks and drinking beer

      and listening to Wagner

      the price of the sun,

      the price of the sun,

      and I don’t give a damn if you never come back.

      you don’t know

      you don’t know how good it

      can get

      being in a strange city,

      nobody knowing who you

      are,

      coming in from the low-paying

      job,

      forgetting dinner,

      taking off your shoes,

      climbing onto the bed,

      lights out

      in that cheap dark

      room

      living with the roaches

      or the mice,

      hearing the crackling of

      the wallpaper

      or the rush of small

      feet darting

      across the floor.

      lifting the wine bottle

      there in the moonlight

      or in the light of the

      street lamps and the

      neon signs,

      the wine entering your

      body,

      the flare of your match

      lighting a

      cigarette.

      you don’t know how good

      it can get

      without women,

      without a telephone,

      without a tv set,

      without a car.

      with the bathroom down

      the hall.

      relaxed in the dark

      hearing the voices of the

      other roomers,

      hearing pans rattling,

      food frying,

      toilets flushing,

      arguments,

      occasional

      laughter.

      you don’t know

      the names of the

      streets,

      who the mayor is

      or how long you

      will remain.

      you will remain

      until the next city,

      the next room,

      the next low-paying

      job.

      the mice will become

      bolder.

      one will come up on

      the dresser,

      climb up on the handle

      of the coffee cup,

      hang there,

      looking at you.

      you will get up and

      approach the mouse.

      you are the

      intruder.

      as you get closer

      he still will not

      move.

      his eyes and your eyes

      will intermix.

      it is the clash of

      centuries.

      then he will leap

      through the air

      in the darkness and

      be gone.

      you will return to

      the bed, smiling,

      thinking, he’s lucky,

      he doesn’t have to

      pay the rent.

      you will drink some more

      from the wine

      bottle,

      then rise, take off your

      clothing, stack it on

      the chair.

      you will sit up against

      the pillow,

      listening to the cars

      passing below.

      you will get up,

      check the alarm clock,

      see that it is set for

      7:30 a.m.

      then, foolishly, you’ll

      have to put your pants

      on again

      to make a bathroom

      run.

      the hall will be quiet

      and empty,

      the lights will be out,

      there will only be

      darkness under each

      doorway.

      the roomers are

      sleeping.

      your face

      in the bathroom mirror

      will grin at

      you.

      then you will walk

      back to your room,

      get the pants off

      again, hang them over

      the back of the

      chair that is possibly

      older than

      you.

      the last drink is

      best, the last flare of

      the match

      lighting the last

      cigarette.

      you hold the match,

      still burning,

      up against the palm

      of your right

      hand.

      long life line.

      too bad.

      then to stretch out,

      the covers up

      against your

      neck.

      warm covers.

      rented covers.

      covers of love.

      the day seeps slowly

      back through your

      consciousness.

      not much.

      then, like the other

      roomers, you are

      asleep.

      you are equal to the

      side of a

      triangle,

      to a mountain in

      Peru,

      to a tiger

      licking its

      paw.

      you don’t know

      how good it can be

      until you’ve been

      there.

      let not

      let not the people be your

      foundation,

      not the young girls,

      not the old girls,

      not the young men,

      not the old men,

      not those in-between,

      not any of these,

      let not the people be your

      foundation.

      rather

      build on sand

      build on landfills,

      build over cesspools,

      build over graveyards,

      build even over water,

      but don’t build on the

      people.

      they are a bad bet,

      the worst bet you can make.

      build it elsewhere,

      anywhere else,

      anywhere

      but on the people,

      the headless, heartless

      mass

      mucking up the

      centuries,

      the days,

      the nights,

      the towns, the cities, the

      nations,

      the earth,

      the stratosphere,

      mucking up the

      light,

      mucking up

      all chance,

      here,

      totally mucking

      it up

      then

      now

      tomorrow.

      anything,

      compared to the people,

      is a foundation worth

      searching for.

      anything.

      the death of a roach

      …when the last fig falls and we are pruned from light,

      our golden ladies gleaned of love—

      infest us with the mercy

      of stone.

      calisthenic tempest, kingly pain

      the flowers held kisses and blossoms

      crackling with lightning power against our

      pinioned brain; I watch the roach

      as prophets of exile drink

      and break their cups.

      the gr
    asses held long and green their secrets.

      now, old ladies cassocked like monks

      treadmill the slow poor stairs

      bumping their angry canes: solatium! solatium!

      and they close themselves in shawls

      as the sun rallies new buds to color,

      and they think…of onions and biscuits

      (beautiful day, isn’t it?)

      (did you hear Father Francis? Sunday?)

      the roach climbs

      (the mirrors of love are broken)

      blind yet begotten with life, a dedicated wraith

      of pus and antennae.

      I take him from his task

      with a stab of a finger that wretches

      like a stomach against the sick black twisted

      death; no bandores here, or philosophical canvas to color

      with tantamounts.

      I hide him in some hasty packet and flush his ugliness away,

      and above me in the mirror, consumed and listening there:

      a crevice, a demon declaring his hand:—

      all about me the old ladies cackle enraged, infirm

      and bleeding

      violate,

      lepisma,

      they attack my tired guts with

      canes and pins,

      with scrolls and bibles,

      with celebrations of

      witchcraft

      they maim my brain with mercy until I fall witless and ill,

      shouting

      shouting roominghouses and grass,

      shouting apes and horses,

      shouting

      flowers and kisses: the insects are

      suspect—

      man can only destroy himself.

      the unwritten

      it’s been months now: the most

      horrible thing I have ever

      felt.

      and I might have avoided

      it.

      might have.

      maybe not.

      but I didn’t and in a way I

      couldn’t.

      it occurred more quickly than

      I could respond.

      I should have been more

      able,

      more ready.

      and for some

      what was a horror for me

      might have been

      trivial to them.

      but I have never been

      “them.”

      it’s over now.

      the pain of that should be

      finished.

      but it stays with me.

      and that I did not act in

      time to prevent it—

      but that moment is

      gone.

      and

      I truly hate myself

      for the first

      time.

      I will never recover.

      it comes back to me

      again and

      again.

      and in its aftermath,

      nothing will ever be

      quite right

      again—

      walking down a

      hill,

      getting out of

      bed,

      common tasks,

      celebrations,

      just

      happenings

      are

      reshaped

      by that occurrence.

      I was gored

      by my own

      stupidity.

      it was an animal.

      it was an animal,

      caused by some

      human

      thing?

      would that it was

      human.

      so I could have

      considered it

      trivial.

      right now

      the party’s over, the rooster is

      crowing and they’ve called in

      the dice, the dancing girls are

      snoring, the mice are crawling

      in the paper cups, the donkey is

      pinned to the tail, the fable has

      crawled away to die, love is

      covered with dust, the temples

      are empty, the bird has flown

      the cage, the cage encloses a

      midget heart weeping, the dream

      has taken a dive and I sit

      looking at my hands, looking at

      my hands

      empty of the sound of the

      moment.

      the sheep

      in centuries past

      audiences at symphony concerts

      were not afraid to act out their

      displeasure at works which

      offended

      them.

      in our time

      I have either attended or

      listened to

      hundreds of concerts

      and never have I heard an

      audience

      express even the mildest displeasure

      with any

      work.

      have our musical artists improved

      to such an

      extent?

      or is it the decay of courage,

      the inability of the

      mass mind to

      reach its own

      decisions?

      not only in the world of

      music

      but in the other

      world?

      the next time you hear

      a symphony concert

      note

      the obedient applause,

      the death of the bluebird,

      the shading of the sun;

      the hooves of the horses from

      hell

      pounding on the barren

      ground

      of the human

      spirit.

      piss

      remember once I was sitting in this hotel

      room when my woman came in drunk and said,

      “Christ, I couldn’t hold it, I had to piss in the

      elevator!”

      I was drunk too, I was barefoot and in

      my shorts.

      I got up and walked out the door and down

      the hall and pushed the elevator

      button.

      it came up.

      the door opened.

      the elevator was empty but sure enough

      there in the corner was the

      puddle.

      as I was standing there a man and a

      woman came out of their place

      and walked toward the

      elevator.

      the door was beginning to close

      so I held it open with my hand

      so they could get

      on.

      as the door began to close I heard the

      woman say,

      “that man was in his shorts.”

      and just as it closed I heard the man say,

      “and he pissed in the elevator.”

      I went back to the room and told her,

      “they think I pissed in the elevator.”

      “who?” she asked.

      “people.”

      “what people?”

      “the people who saw me standing

      in my shorts.”

      “well, screw them,” she said.

      she was sitting there drinking a glass

      of wine.

      “take a bath,” I said.

      “you take a bath,” she said.

      “at least take a shower,” I said.

      “you take a shower,” she said.

      I sat down and poured a glass of

      wine.

      we were always arguing about

      something.

      last fight

      he’s just a handler

      now.

      he’s in the gym

      watching the young

      boxers spar.

      he knows all the

      moves,

      watches the footwork,

      the counter-

      punching, the leads,

      the hooks, the

      timing, the

      will.

      he was a fighter

      once,

      went a num
    ber of

      ten rounders.

      now he watches

      the action,

      squinting,

      analyzing.

      he’s got a gut

      now

      it bulges out

      under his old

      sweat shirt.

      it’s an afternoon

      in the gym.

      he can hear them

      grunt,

      he can hear the

      shots, the

      big gloves

      landing.

      inside his head

      he can see

      himself in the

      ring,

      he can hear the

      screams of the

      young girls

      again,

      the yelling of

      the men,

      he can feel the

      lights,

      the canvas

      under his feet,

      the ropes

      squaring him

      into

      battle.

      son-of-a-bitch,

      what a

      time,

      son-of-a-bitch,

      what a

      life!

     


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