Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
after 9 long races among greedy faces
on a hot Sunday that hardly rhymes with
reason
I have murdered another day,
come out with shoelaces flopping (while
secretly craving to be in a moss-lined
cave, say,
watching black and white cartoons
while wanton simplicity soothes the
muddled brain)
as my buddy the valet races the
machine up, revving the 8-year-old
engine, he leaps
out:
“how ya doin’, baby?”
“things have me by the jugular, Frank,
I’m ready to run up the white
flag.”
“not
you
, baby, you’re myleader!
”“you can do better than that,
Frank…”
I get in, hook the seat belt, put on
the driving glasses, put it in first…
“hey, man,” he sticks his head into the
window, “let’s go out and get drunk and
kick some ass and find some
pussy!”
I tell him, “I’ll consider that.”
as I pull out I can see him in the rearview mirror: he’s giving me the
finger.
I smile for the first time in 7 or
8 hours.
blazing bastard fools
poets
with your
idiot scrolls
you are so
pompous
in your
knowledge
so
assured
that you are
on a hot roll
to
nirvana
you
soft lumps of
humanity
you
imitators of
other
pretenders
you are still
in
the shadow of
the
Mother
you
have never
bargained with
the
Beast
you have never
tasted
the full flavor of
Hell
you have never
seen
the Edge of
yourself
you have never
been alone
with the
razor-sharp
walls
you
blazing bastard fools
with your
idiot scrolls
there is nothing
to
know
no place
to
travel
your
lives
your
deaths
your
idiot
scrolls
useless
disgusting
and
not as real
as
the
wart
on the ass
of
a
hog.
you
are rejected by
circumstance.
good
bye.
I always resented all the years, the hours, the
minutes I gave them as a working stiff, it
actually hurt my head, my insides, it made me
dizzy and a bit crazy—I couldn’t understand the
murdering of my years
yet my fellow workers gave no signs of
agony, many of them even seemed satisfied, and
seeing them that way drove me almost as crazy as
the dull and senseless work.
the workers submitted.
the work pounded them to nothingness, they were
scooped-out and thrown away.
I resented each minute, every minute as it was
mutilated
and nothing relieved the monotony.
I considered suicide.
I drank away my few leisure hours.
I worked for decades.
I lived with the worst kind of women, they killed what
the job failed to kill.
I knew that I was dying.
something in me said, go ahead, die, sleep, become as
them, accept.
then something else in me said, no, save the tiniest
bit.
it needn’t be much, just a spark.
a spark can set a whole forest on
fire.
just a spark.
save it.
I think I did.
I’m glad I did.
what a lucky god damned
thing.
long gone along the way, faces
grey and white and black and brown, and
eyes, all color of eyes.
eyes are odd, I have lived with a woman,
at least one, where the sex was fair, the
conversation passable and sometimes there was
even a seeming love
but then I suddenly noticed the eyes, saw there
the dark smeared walls of a stinking
hell.
(of course, I am pleased that I do not often have to
see my own eyes, lips, hair, ears, so
forth—
I avoid the mirror with a studied
regularity.)
long gone along the way, he had a face like a
mole pie, fat and unshivering and he walked up to
me in the railroad yards, I was beastly sick
and that flesh plate shook my innards, my psycho-kid
insides as he said, “I’m waiting on my pay-check,
I been squeezing this nickel so hard that the
buffalo is screaming.” he showed me the
nickel.
tough, but no beer, I walked away from him,
my face white like a bright headlight, I walked
away from him and toward the faces of the nonwhites
who
hated me with a natural
ease.
long gone along the way, the landladies’ faces,
doomed, powdered, old lilac faces, old lovely dolls
with husbands so long gone, the agony diminished but
still there as I followed them up stairways nearly a
century old to some cubicle of a room and I always
told them, “ah, a very nice room…”; to pay
then, close the door, undress, lay upon that
bed and turn out the light (it was always early
evening) and then soon to hear the same sound:
the scurry of my old friends: either the roaches or
the mice or the rats.
long gone along the way, now I wonder about Inez
and Irene and their sky-blue eyes and their wonderful
legs and breasts
but mostly
their faces, faces carved out of a marble that
sometimes the gods
bestow and
Inez and Irene sat in front of me in class and learned about
algebra, the shortest distance between two points, the
Treaty of Versailles, about Attila the Hun and
etc.
and I watched them and
wondered
what they werethinking?
nothing much,
probably.
and I wonder where they are tonight
with their faces these 5 decades and 2 years
later?
the skin which covers the bone, the eyes that
smile; quick, turn out the light, let the dark
dance…
the most beautiful face I ever saw was that of a
paperman, a newsboy, the old fellow so long gone
down the way
who sat at a stand at Beverly and Vermont,
his head, his face looked like what they
called him: The Frog Man. I saw him
often but we seldom spoke and
The Frog Man died suddenly
and was gone
but I will always remember him
and one night
I came out of a nearby bar,
he was there at his stand and
he looked at me and said, “you and I, we know the same
things.”
I nodded, put both thumbs up, and that big Frog
face, the big Frog head lifted in the moonlight
and began laughing the most terrible and real
laughter I have ever
heard.
long gone along the way
what bargains we have made
we have
kept
and
as the dogs of the hours
close in
nothing
can be taken
from us
but
our lives.
puffing on tiny cigarette butts as the world washes to the
shore I
burn my
dumb lips
think of
Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen
und sein
Fliegerzirkus
.
as my cat sits in the bathroom window I
light a new
stub
as Norway winks and the dogs of hell pray for
me
downstairs my wife studies the
Italian
language.
up here
I would give half my ass for a
decent
smoke…
I
sneeze
then
jump: a little red coal of ash has dropped onto my
white white
belly—I
dig the fiery bit out with my
fingers:
a bit of minor
pain
I type naked: see my sulking soul
now
with a little pink
dot.
you see, I have my own show going on up
here, I don’t need Vegas or cable
tv,
the label on my wine bottle states
in part:
“…
our winemaker, Edward Sbragia, has retained thefresh, fruity character of the Pinot Noir and Napa
Gamay grapes
…”
the dogs of hell pray for me as the
world washes to the
shore.
languid conjecture during hours of moil, trapped in the shadows
of the father.
sidewalks outside of cafes are lonely
through the day.
my cat looks at me and is not sure what I am and
I look back and am pleased to feel
the same
about him…
reading 2 issues of a famous magazine of 40 years
ago, the writing that I felt was bad then,
I still feel
is
that way
and none of the writers have lasted.
sometimes there is a strange justice
working
somewhere.
sometimes
not…
grammar school was the first awakening of a long hell
to come:
meeting other beings as horrible as my
parents.
something I never thought
possible…
when I won the medal for Manual of Arms in the
R.O.T.C.
I wasn’t interested in
winning.
I wasn’t much interested in anything, even the
girls seemed a bad game
to chase: all too much for all too
little
at night before sleeping I often considered what I
would do, what I would be:
bank robber, drunk, beggar, idiot, common
laborer.
I settled on idiot and common laborer, it
seemed more comfortable than any of the
alternatives…
the best thing about near-starvation and hunger is
that when you finally
eat
it is such a beautiful and delicious and
magical thing.
people who eat 3 meals a day throughout life
have never really
tasted
food…
people are strange: they are constantly angered by
trivial things,
but on a major matter
like
totally wasting their lives,
they hardly seem to
notice…
on writers: I found out that most of them
swam together.
there were schools, establishments,
theories.
groups gathered and fought each
other.
there was literary politics.
there was game-playing and
bitterness.
I always thought writing was a
solitary profession.
still do…
animals never worry about
Heaven or Hell.
neither do
I.
maybe that’s why
we
get along…
when lonely people come around
I soon can understand why
other people leave them
alone.
and that which would be a
blessing to
me
is a horror to
them…
poor poor Celine.
he only wrote one book.
forget the others.
but what a book it was:
Voyage au bout de la nuit
.it took everything out of
him.
it left him a hopscotch
odd-ball
skittering through the
fog of
eventuality…
the United States is a very strange
place: it reached its apex in
1970
and since then
for every year
it has regressed
3 years,
until now
in 1989
it is 1930
in the way of
doing things.
you don’t have to go to the movies
to see a horror
show.
there is a madhouse near the post office
where I mail my works
out.
I never park in front of the post office,
I park in front of the madhouse
and walk down.
I walk past the madhouse.
some of the lesser mad are allowed
out on the porch.
they sit like
pigeons.
I feel a brotherhood with
them.
but I don’t sit with them.
I walk down and drop my works
in the first class slot.
I am supposed to know what I am
doing.
I walk back, look at them and
don’t look at
them.
I get in my car and drive
off.
I am allowed to drive a
car.
I drive it all the way back to my
house.
I drive my car up the driveway,
thinking,
what am I doing?
I get out of my car
and one of my 5 cats walks up to
me, he is a very fine
fellow.
I reach down and touch
him.
then I feel all right.
I am exactly what I am supposed to
be.