Authors: Charles Bukowski
the male reviewer writes that he
misses the poems about
the drinking bouts and the hard
women and the low
life.
the female reviewer says that
all I write about
is drinking and puking and bad
women
and a life nobody could
ever care
about.
their reviews are
on the same page
and are about
the same book
and
this is a poem
about
book reviewers.
as a young man
he went skinny-dipping with
Kafka
but it was too much
for him:
the sun burned him badly
and he was in bed
for two days
with a high
fever.
he was fat
and in great pain
as he twisted in the
sheets.
now Kafka didn’t get burned
and he visited the fat
boy
and the fat boy’s
mother
gave Kafka
hell.
and life continued.
and the fat boy
went on to write many
books and he became
famous in his own
time
while Kafka only wrote
a few books and remained
unknown.
the fat boy
even went on to live
comfortably in Paris
with a wife of some
importance
and they mixed with
many of the
great artists of their
day
while Kafka remained
unknown
and life continued.
pushing my cart through the supermarket
today
the thought crossed my mind
that I could start
knocking cans from the shelves and swiping
at rolls of towels, toilet paper and
silver foil,
I could throw oranges, bananas, tomatoes
into the air, I could take cans of
beer from the refrigerator and roll
them down the aisle, I could pull up
women’s skirts and grab their asses,
I could ram my shopping cart through
the plate glass window.
then another thought occurred to me:
people generally consider the consequences
before they do something
like that.
I pushed my cart along.
a young woman in a checkered skirt was
bending over in the pet food section.
I seriously considered grabbing her
ass
but I didn’t, I rolled on
by.
I had the items I needed and I pushed
my cart up to the checkout stand.
a lady in a red smock with a nameplate
waited on me.
the nameplate indicated her name was
“Robin.”
Robin looked at me: “how you doing?”
she asked.
“fine,” I told her.
and then she began tabulating and
bagging my purchases
with no idea that
the fellow standing there before her
had just two minutes ago been
one small step away from the
madhouse.
through early evening
I
sit alone
listening to the sound of
the heater;
I fall into myself
like a rock dropped into some
ungrand canyon.
it hits bottom. I
lift my drink.
unfortunately
my hell is not any more hell
than the hell of a
fly.
that’s what makes it
difficult. and
nothing is less
profound than a
melancholy
drunk.
I must remember:
the death or the murder of a
drunk matters
less
than
nothing.
spider, on the wall:
why do you take
so long?
is young, quite young,
and the boys are lined up on the bench
waiting for a table
as she waits on customers.
the boys say sly and
daring things to her
in very low voices.
they all want to
bed down with her
or
at least
get her
attention.
she hears the
whispered remarks,
really likes hearing them
but says,
again and again,
“shut up! oh, you shut up!”
it goes on and
on:
the boys continue and
she continues:
“oh, shut up!”
in a voice without
grace or melody
in a voice
without warmth or humor
in a voice
remarkably
ugly:
“
oh, shut up now!”
but the eager boys
are not aware of her
tone of
voice
and the one who will
finally live with that
voice
is probably not yet sitting
there.
her husband of the
future
will finally understand
the horrible reality of
that voice
(remember,
the voice is the window
to the soul)
and he will think:
oh my god
oh my god
oh my god
what have I
done?
won’t
she
ever
shut up?
men on 2nd and 3rd.
first base was open.
one out.
we gave Parker an
intentional walk.
we had a 3- to- 2
lead.
last half of the
9th, Simpson on the
mound.
Tanner up.
Simpson let it go.
it was low and
inside.
Tanner tapped it
to our shortstop,
DeMarco.
perfect double play
ball.
DeMarco gloved it,
flipped it to Johnson
our 2b man.
Johnson touched 2nd
then stood there
holding the ball as
the runners were
steaming around
the bases.
I screamed at Johnson
from the dugout:
“DO SOMETHING WITH THE
GODDAMNED BALL!”
the whole stadium was
screaming.
Johnson just stood there
a funny look on his face
with the ball.
then
he fell forward
still holding the ball.
he was
stretched out there as
the winning run
scored.
the dugout emptied
as we ran
to Johnson.
we turned him
over.
he wasn’t moving.
he looked
dead.
the trainer took
his pulse and
looked at me.
then he started
mouth-to-mouth.
the announcer asked
if there was a
doctor in the
stands.
two of them came
down.
one of them
was drunk.
the tiny crowd started
coming
out on the field.
the ushers pushed
them back.
somebody took the
ball out of Johnson’s
hand.
they worked on him
for a long time.
there was a
camera flash.
then another.
then the doctor
stood up:
“it’s no good.
he’s gone.”
the stretcher
came out and
we loaded Johnson
onto the stretcher.
somebody threw a
warm-up
jacket
over his face.
the stadium was
almost deserted as
they carried Johnson
off the field
through
the dugout
and into
the locker room.
I didn’t go
in.
I took a cup of water
from the cooler
and
sat alone on the bench.
Toby the batboy
came over.
“what’s going to happen now, Mr.
Quinn?” he asked.
“our 2nd baseman is
dead, Toby.”
“who you going to play
there now?”
“I don’t think that’s
important right now,” I
told him.
“yes, it is, Mr. Quinn!
we’re 2 games out of
first place
going into September!”
“I’ll think of something,
Toby …”
then I got up and went
through the door
to the locker room,
Toby following right
behind.
since my last name was Fuch, he said to Raymond, you can
believe the school yard was tough: they put itching
powder down my neck, threw gravel at me, stung me
with rubber bands in class, and outside they called
me names, well, one name mainly, over and over,
and on top of all that my parents were poor, I wore
cardboard in my shoes to fill in the holes in the
soles, my pants were patched, my shirts thread-
bare; and even my teachers ganged up
on me, they slammed my
palm with rulers and sent me to the principal’s office as
if I was really guilty of something;
and, of course, the abuse kept coming from my classmates;
I was stoned, beaten, pissed on;
the little girls hissed and stuck their tongues out
at me …
Fuch’s wife smiled sadly at Raymond: my poor darling husband had such
a
terrible
childhood!
(she was so beautiful it almost stunned one to look at
her.)
Fuch looked at Raymond: hey, your glass is empty.
yeah, said Raymond.
Fuch touched a button and the English butler silently
glided in. he nodded respectfully to Raymond and in his
beautiful accent asked, another drink, sir?
yes, please, Raymond answered.
the butler went off to prepare the drink.
what hurt most, of course, continued Fuch, was the name-
calling.
Raymond asked, have you never forgotten it?
I did for a while, but then strangely I began to
miss the abuse …
the butler returned carrying Raymond’s
drink on a silver tray.
here is your drink, sir, said the butler.
thank you, said Raymond, taking it off the tray.
o.k., Paul, Fuch said to the butler, you can
start now.
now? asked the butler.
now, came the answer.
the butler stood in front of Fuch and screamed:
fucky-
boy! fucky-
baby! fuck-
face! fuck-
brain!
where did your name come from, fuck-
head?
how come you’re such a fuck-
up?
etc….
they all started laughing uncontrollably
as the butler delivered his tirade in that
beautiful British accent.
they couldn’t stop laughing, they fell out of their
chairs and got down on the rug, pounding it and
laughing, Fuch, his lovely young wife and Raymond
in that sprawling mansion overlooking the shining sea.
that I was
in my room
having been
shot in the belly
by some tart.
snakes crawled the
floor
while outside
a schoolmaster
sang
an old school
song
then
the curtains
went up in
flame
the phone
rang
everything
seemed
in a hurry
to die
so I
decided to
die
which made all the
bad poets
happy
and all the good poets
glad
as they
rushed in
to fill
the vacancy
then the dream
was
over
I awakened
and I was
the Bad Boy
of poetry
all over
again.
they were an old couple
and she slept with her
head at one end of the
bed
and he with his head
at the other
end.
they explained that
in case somebody
came in to murder
them
at least one of them
would have a
better chance to
escape.
when he died
she had a stuffed replica
made of his
body
and she slept with
her head at one end
of the bed
and the replica’s
head was down at the
other.
and just like in the
past,
at least once every
night,
she would awaken
in a fury and
scream,
“STOP
THAT
GODDAMNED
SNORING!”