Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
I can’t have it
and you can’t have it
and we won’t
get it
so don’t bet on it
or even think about
it
just get out of bed
each morning
wash
shave
clothe
yourself
and go out into
it
because
outside of that
all that’s left is
suicide and
madness
so you just
can’t
expect too much
you can’t even
expect
so what you do
is
work from a modest
minimal
base
like when you
walk outside
be glad your car
might possibly
be there
and if it is—
that the tires
aren’t
flat
then you get
in
and if it
starts—you
start.
and
it’s the damndest
movie
you’ve ever
seen
because
you’re
in it—
low budget
and
4 billion
critics
and the longest
run
you ever hope
for
is
one
day.
I am spooked by the bluebells and the silent harp while
passing down Western Avenue and seeing the tombstones
placed flat instead of upright upon the cemetery lawn: our decent
modernity not wanting to upset us with Finalities while we
pay 22% interest on our credit cards.
I follow the street on down
feeling wonderful that I do not appear to be lost.
we need our landmarks (like cemeteries), we need our
liquor and our liabilities.
we need so many things we think we do not
need.
strangely then, as I drive south, I begin thinking about
THE WORLD IS SQUARE, INC., an institution which meets and
discusses the fact that: the world is square and the North Pole is at
the
CENTER
of the
SQUARE
and holds everything from slidingover the edge and that the
EDGE
is really a
WALL OFDARKNESS AND ICE
and that nothing or nobody can go
throughand that
when we
THINK
we are circling the globe we are onlyCIRCLING
the
SQUARE
, finally arriving backwhere we began.
I wait at a signal, the light turns green and I move on
thinking, well, maybe the planets we believe are round are
illusions, and the moon and the sun, they are really square
too.
well, you can’t rule anything out; I vote for round
but I still realize that it wasn’t too long ago when
EVERYBODY
thought the answer was
SQUARE
.
I stop at another signal, wait, while being held from falling
over the
EDGE OF DARKNESS AND ICE
by the North Pole standing in theCENTER
of the
SQUARE
.the light changes, I drive on, turn left, go a few blocks, turn
right, go a block or so, turn left, go a block, turn right, then
a left and I am at my driveway, turn in, drive slowly up to
the garage
past the tangerine tree and the tangerines are round but
the garage door is square and I am still spooked by the
bluebells and the silent harp
cut the engine
get out
stand up
still alive.
I move along the walk.
god, things are getting interesting again: they say there are
bottomless craters at the North Pole and deep in the earth live
Creatures from Outer Space
down there
in a marvelous, beautiful and peaceful Kingdom, I move toward the
door, make ready to open it, not at all sure of what will be
waiting on the other side—there is always this gnarling
apprehension
generally but not always warranted, and as the North Pole holds me
from falling off either the Curve or the
Edge
I push open the wooden wall and enter, ready and not ready
enough.
all right,
some day you’ll see me in a plastic
helmet, long stockings,
double-lens goggles;
I’ll be tooling along on my 10-speed
bike on the promenade,
my face will be as intense
as a canteloupe and
in my knapsack
there could be a
bible, along with the
liverwurst sandwich and
the red red
apple.
off to one side the
sea will break and
break
and I will
pump along—a
well-lived
man,
lived a little, perhaps,
beyond his
sensibilities: too
much hair in the
ears, and face
badly shaven;
there, my lips
never again to
kiss a
virgin; I gulp in
the salty air
while being
unsure of the
time
but almost sure
of the
place.
all right, gliding
along
girding up for the
casket,
the sun like a
yellow glove to
grab me
I pass a group of
young ones
sitting in their
convertible.
“Jesus Christ,” I hear
a voice, “do you
know who that
was?
”
was?
was?
why, you little
fart bells!
you bits of
bunny
droppings!
I kick it
into high, I
rise over a
hill
into a patch
of fog,
my legs
pump and
the
sea
breaks.
you take a stool, unfold the paper, the waitress brings the
java, you order bacon and
everybody in there is old and bent and poor, they are like
the oldest people in the universe
having breakfast
and it’s dark in there like the inside of a glove
and some of the patrons speak to each other,
only their voices are broken and scratched and they speak
of simple things,
so simple
you think that they are joking but
they hulk over their food, unsmiling…
“Casmir died, he wore his green shoes…”
“yeh.”
strange place there, no sadness, no rancor, an overhead
fan turns slowly, one of the blades bent a bit, it
clicks against the grate: “a-flick, a-flick, a-flick…”
nobody
notices.
my food arrives, it is hot and clean, but never coffee
like that (the worst), it is like drinking the water left in muddy
footprints.
the old waitress is a dear, dressed in faded pink, she can
hardly walk, she’s
sans everything
.
“do you really love me?” she asks the young Mexican fry
cook. “why?”
“because I can’t help it,” he says, running the spatula
under a mass of hash browns, turning
them.
I eat, peruse the newspaper, general idea I get is
that the world is not yet about to end but a
recession is to come creeping in wearing
faded tennis
shoes.
an old man looms in the doorway, he’s big in all the
wrong ways and shuts out what little light there
is.
“hey, anybody seen Vern?”
there is no answer, the old man
waits, he waits a good minute and a half, then he lets out a
little fart.
I can hear it, everybody can. uh
huh.
he reaches up, scratches behind his left ear, then backs out of
the doorway and is
gone.
“that ratfucker,” somebody says, “zinched little Laura out of
her dowry.”
the last bit of toast sogs down my throat, I wipe my mouth, leave
the tip, rise to pay the
bill.
the cash register is the old fashioned kind where the
drawer jumps out when you hit the
keys.
I was the last person to sit down to eat, I am the first to
leave, the others still sit
fiddling with their food, fighting the coffee
down
as I get to my car I start the engine, think,
nice place, rather like an accidental
love, maybe I’ll go back there
once or
twice.
then I back out, swing around and enter the
real world
again.
leaving for the track in the morning
my wife asks me,
“did you wring out your washrag
properly?”
“yes,” I say.
“you never do,” she says,
“it’s important that you wring out
your washrag
properly.”
I get into my car,
start it,
back out the drive.
of course, she’s right, it is
important.
on the other hand
I don’t want to get into an
argument over
washrags.
she waves goodbye,
I wave back,
then I turn left,
go down the hill.
it is a fine sunny
day
and great matters loom
across the horizon
of
history.
Carthage in my rearview
mirror,
I blend into
Time.