Read New Poems Book Three Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
THE WAVERING LINE
I don’t know where they come from,
the veterans’ home probably.
they’re old, mostly bald, tanned, macho but
somehow sexless.
the sex drive is no longer a part
of the equation as
they sit at the track in the sun,
arguing about their bets, talking and
laughing.
sometimes between races they
discuss sports: which is the best?
the best baseball team? the best
hockey team? the best basketball or
football team? amateurs and
professionals are discussed, and then
who’s the best player at each
position?
they often become angry and shout
at one another.
they wear tired clothing, greys and
browns, they wear heavy shoes and
each sports a large wristwatch,
and while other men only
slightly younger than themselves still must
fight for survival
in the arena of daily existence
they sit about and argue
whether the screen pass is still
an effective offensive weapon in professional
football.
they bet, first gathering in front of the
window, arguing, making last minute
adjustments, then one of them bets for
all of them.
after the races end each
evening they leave,
a wavering line,
some stumbling a bit as if
they were tripping over their own
feet.
now they look worn and done,
defeated.
“shit, this god-damned place, catch
me here again and you can belt-whip me
until I sing Dixie!”
“yeah, sure, Marty, you’ll be back tomorrow.”
“naw. fuck this place!”
the next afternoon they are all back,
somehow they’ve found a small supply of
new money—they will pool it and their brains
and do it all over again today.
they are suddenly serious, studying their
Racing Forms
.
they bet the first two races and things go
wrong. the conversation jumps angrily from
horses to sports and the screaming
begins:
“
YEAH, YOU KNOW WHAT? I’LL BET YOU
NEVER HEARD OF CRAZYLEGS
HIRSCH
!”
“
I SAW HIM, MAN! I SAW HIM PLAY
!”
“
YEAH? WELL, I SAW JIM THORPE
!”
“
YEAH? YOU SAW JIM THORPE JUST LIKE YOU
GOT LAID LAST NIGHT
!”
“
YEAH, I NOTICE
YOU
CAN HARDLY SIT DOWN TODAY
!
DID YOU GET LAID LAST NIGHT
?”
“I’LL KNOCK YOUR GOD-DAMNED HEAD OFF
!”
the combat never evolves and that’s all well
and good, for they are fine fellows, we
need them like we need the Sierra Madre mountains
choking behind us in the smog, like we need
Willie Shoemaker legging it up on just
one more winner, and we need them to help us
forget all the things that haven’t worked out for us
in the past, especially all the bad bets
what counts is to endure, what counts
is not to remember that the whole western slope
of the U.S.A. is going to fall into the Pacific Ocean
one day soon
and that there was never any real need to cultivate your
garden or to send your daughter to
Radcliffe.
I like to watch those fellows, they are
like a Broadway musical, only it’s not
Guys and Dolls
it’s
Guys and Guys
, they
are all fine fellows, the wavering line of
them, and even the most beautiful woman in the
world would mean nothing to them
because they have learned the hard way
that that kind of thing only
exists for other people, and there’s
just no use wondering how things got that way or
why.
I watch the best Broadway musical
every day from the best seat in the
house and I am the author and the critic and the
audience and sometimes I’m on stage
too.
THE ROAD TO HELL
if only there were more magic people
to help us get through
this strange life.
surprisingly there are a few.
the problem being that often
their magic doesn’t hold up
for long
mainly
because they begin to
think it’s because
they are special
when really
it’s almost an off-hand thing
like some damned crazy unearned
gift.
and when the magic people
begin to misuse their
prowess
begin to use it
in the wrong ways
then
it
vanishes
and
that’s a
LAW
and
it’s one of the most
unalterable laws
of the gods and the
universe
and there is
nothing sadder
or more
frightening
than the once-gifted ones
still trying to work their
magic
for the
crowd
which never offers,
but only
accepts,
mercy.
CRUCIFIXION
now we must select with extreme caution our lovers,
water, foodstuffs and even our invisible
air.
it is a very careful time.
our politicians consider ways to dismantle
the worldwide stockpile of bombs
all too late, of course, since it only takes one fool to
push one button
somewhere.
we draw close together, frightened, searching for a return
to a safe
womb.
but we must have been wrong for too long. the asylums overflow and spill their
detritus into our streets
and where our leaders once spoke wisely
they now speak gibberish—
they stop, then continue, look about, addled,
substituting insane slogans for real
speech.
this is the price we now pay: we can’t go
back, we can’t go forward and we hang helpless, nailed to a
world
of our own
making.
BARFLY
Jane, who has been dead for 31 years,
never could have
imagined that I would write a screenplay of our drinking
days together
and
that it would be made into a movie
and
that a beautiful movie star would play her
part.
I can hear Jane now: “A beautiful movie star? oh,
for Christ’s sake!”
Jane, that’s show biz, so go back to sleep, dear, because
no matter how hard they tried they
just
couldn’t
find anybody exactly like
you.
and neither can
I.
PART 2.
bone-dead sorrows
like starfish washed ashore.
THOUGHTS WHILE EATING A SANDWICH
we demand that our leaders possess
a certain clever charm, a certain mild wisdom, but no madness,
at least not madness at its
best.
maybe the energy is just not there anymore, maybe
not only is the air polluted, maybe the brain has been
poisoned, maybe the human spirit has been
diluted down to a dim imitation of
itself
until anybody who appears half-right half-the-time is
almost always accepted as our new
hero-leader.
it is more and more difficult—no, it’s just damned
impossible—to accept and admire those who are
deemed great in our time.
they all
are suspect
they all seem to lack:
nobility
originality
intelligence
honesty
and especially that which is most needed:
a simple, good heart.
just bones and more bones
bleaching in the sun.
they say that nothing is wasted:
either that
or
it all is.
NOTHING’S FREE
got this letter
where she wrote:
I’m not going to do the obvious and
throw in a photo
but don’t worry
I’ve got a
BODY
and the face
is not so bad
either.
anyhow, I really admire
your books although
I just discovered them
recently.
you see I am
only 18 years old but
I’d like to be your
secretary
kind of keep house for you
answer the phone
all that
and just room and board
would do—
no salary
and
I wouldn’t ask you
for sex
unless you asked me
first …
you can be sure
I tossed that letter
into the
trash can
right away.
WHAT BOTHERS THEM MOST
Sandra used to phone me almost
nightly.
“what are you doing?”
“nothing.”
“you mean, you aren’t
with
anybody yet?”
“no.”
“why not?”
“who needs it?”
(I hang up)
they simply never understand,
do they,
that sometimes solitude is
one of the most beautiful things
on earth?
(then the phone rings again,
a few nights later)
“well, are you
with
anybody yet?”
“no.”
“why don’t you ask me if I’m
with somebody?”
“are you with somebody?”
“not now, but I’ve been going out
with Tim.”
“Tim’s a good guy, tell him
I said ‘hello’.”
(I hang up)
I found my nights to be perfectly
pleasant and the day as pleasant
too.
I typed and laughed my ass
off
then strapped it back on and
typed some
more.
one night
while I was
typing and
laughing my ass off
I heard high heels
coming
up the walk.
then there was only silence
so I took a hit of my
drink and typed
some more.
suddenly there was a
crash and
the breaking of
glass
and
a large rock
rolled
across the rug
and stopped
just next to
where I was
sitting.
I heard high heels
running back
down the walk,
then
the sound
of a car
starting,
then
driving off with
a
roar.
a pane of glass was
missing
from the
front door.
Sandra phoned
two nights later.
“how are you doing?”
“fine.”
“why don’t you ask me
how
I’m
doing?”
“o.k., all right, how
are
you
doing?”
“YOU ROTTEN SON OF
A BITCH
!” she
screamed and
hung up.
however
this time
there was somebody
there with me.
“who was that?”
she asked.
“a voice from the
past.”
“oh, well,
may we continue with
our
interview?
what is the principal
inspiration for your
poetry?”
“fucking.”
“
what
?”
“
FUCKING
,” I repeated
loudly,
then walked over
and
refilled her shaking
drink.
INTO THE WASTEBASKET
my father liked to pretend he
would some day be wealthy,
he always voted Republican
and he told me that
if I worked hard
every day of my life that
I would be amply
rewarded.
on those occasions
when my father
had
a
job he worked hard, he
worked so hard that nobody
could stand him.
“what’s the matter with that
man? is he crazy?”
my father was a sweating
red-faced
angry
man
and it seemed that the
harder he tried
the poorer he
became.
his blood pressure
rose
and his heartbeat was
irregular.
he smoked Camels and
Pall Malls and
half-full packs were scattered
everywhere.
he was asleep by
8 p.m. and up at
5 a.m. and
he tended to scream at and
beat his wife and
child.
he died early.
and after his funeral
I sat in the bedroom of his empty
house
smoking his last pack of
Pall Malls.
he believed that there was
only one formula, one way:
his.
it wasn’t shameful for him to
die, it was his unbending attitude
toward life
that bothered me
and I spoke to him
about it once
and told him
that life was just
rather sad and
empty
and all we could hope
for
was to enjoy a few moments
of peace and quiet
amidst the
turmoil.
“you just sit on your
ass,” he replied, “you and
your mouth!
well,
I
say the answer is
‘a good day’s
work for a good day’s
pay!’”
come to think of it,
if I was unhappy
it wasn’t completely
my father’s fault
and after I smoked the last
Pall Mall cigarette
in that last pack
I threw it away
and then
he too was finally
gone
for
good.