Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
another still, hot summer night,
the small insects circle my wineglass, my
winebottle.
I once again consider my death
as a Brahms symphony ends upon the
radio.
the horses didn’t run today (not
here) but there was gunfire, murder,
bombings in many parts of the
earth.
there is always a contest
of sorts
at hand.
and the years move slow and the years
move fast and the years move
past.
it seems not so long ago that
old Henry Miller was still
alive,
always finding new young girls to dust
his lampshades, pose for him, and make him
nice little meals.
what a ladies’ man, he could never get
enough of them.
anyhow, my 5 cats dislike the heat, they
sit outside under the cool juniper bushes
listening to me
type.
sometimes they bring me presents:
birds or mice.
then we have a little misunderstanding.
and they back off
looking at me
and their eyes say: this guy’s nuts,
he doesn’t know that this is the way
it works.
another hot summer night as I sit here
and play at being a writer
again.
and the worst thing
of course
is that the words will never
truly break through for any of
us.
some nights I have taken the sheet
out of the typer and
held it over the cigarette
lighter, flicked
it and waited for the
result.
“Hank, are you burning things again?”
my wife will ask.
anyhow, there’s another composer on the
radio now
and there is only so much he can do
with his notes.
I am proud for him and yet
sad for him too.
the radio is old and dusty
and through
the speaker
he talks to me.
it’s as if he were hiding in there
and I want to console him, say:
“I am sorry, poor fellow, but
creation has its
limits.”
another hot summer night
another sheet of paper in this machine,
more insects, more cigarettes in
this place, this time, hurrah hurrah, lost
in the grisly multitude of days
the speaker in the radio vibrates, trembles
as the composer swells out at me, the
son of a bitch is good
so brave despite his limitations
as the cats wait under the juniper
bushes and I pour more wine, more wine,
more wine.
I must wash this buddha that sits on my desk—
dust and grime all over him
mostly on his chest and belly; ah,
we have endured many long nights together; we have
endured trivia and horror; at unseemly times we
have laughed
cleanly—now
the least he deserves is a good
going over
with a wet rag;
truly terrible have been
some long nights but
the buddha has been good, quiet
company; he never quite looks at me but
he seems to be forever laughing—he’s
laughing at this muck of
existence: there’s nothing to be done.
“why clean me?” he now asks, “I will only dirty
again.”
“I am only pretending at some dumb sanity,” I
answer.
“drink your wine,” he responds, “that’s what
you’re good at.”
“and,” I ask, “what are you good
at?”
he returns: “I am good at almost watching
you.”
then he becomes silent.
he holds a circle of beads with a
tassel.
how did he get in
here?
the interviewers come around
and there is nothing that you can
really
tell them.
it’s
embarrassing
and the easiest way out
is to get yourself
and them
drunk.
sometimes there is also a
camera man and a sound
man
and so it becomes a
party with
many bottles
needed.
I don’t think they want to
hear the literary crap
either.
it seems to work out all
right:
I get letters
later:
“I really had a good
time…”
or: “it was the best time
I
ever
had.”
how strange, when all I
remember
of any particular night is
saying goodbye at the
door
with: “don’t leave
anything behind so you
have to
come back.”
the lady down at the end of the bar keeps looking at
me, I put my head down, I look away, I light
a cigarette, glance again: she’s still staring at me, she’s
charmingly dressed and she, herself, well, you might
say she’s beautiful.
her eyes meld with mine; I am
elated and nervous, then
she gets up, goes to the ladies’ room:
such a behind!
such grace!
what a gazelle!
I glance at my face in the bar mirror, look
away.
she’s back; then the barkeep comes down: “a drink
from the lady at the end of the bar.”
I nod thanks to her, lift my drink, smile, have a
hit.
she is looking again, what a strange and pleasurable
experience.
I look forward, examine the backs of my hands—not
bad hands as far as hands go.
then, at once, it occurs to me:
she has mistaken me for somebody
else.
I leave my stool and slowly walk to the exit,
and out into the night; I walk half a block down the
boulevard, feel the need for a smoke, slip the
pack of cigarettes out of my coat pocket, look
curiously at the brand name (I did
not
purchasethese): DEATH, it
says.
I curse, hurl the pack into the street, move toward
the next bar: knew it all along: she was a
whore.
you may not believe it
but there are people
who go through life with
very little
friction or
distress.
they dress well, eat
well, sleep well.
they are contented with
their family
life.
they have moments of
grief
but all in all
they are undisturbed
and often feel
very good.
and when they die
it is an easy
death, usually in their
sleep.
you may not believe
it
but such people do
exist.
but I am not one of
them.
oh no, I am not one
of them,
I am not even near
to being
one of
them
but they are
there
and I am
here.
the fight I saw,
after the tv cameras were
shut off,
a fighter in green
trunks and
a fighter in blue,
only 50 to 75
absolutely silent
people
remaining,
you heard each
blow
land
crushingly
amid
sweat, saliva
blood,
gasps of
agony,
drinks no longer
served,
all the lights
on,
thousands of
empty
seats,
the bell rang
to end the
round,
it clanged
right through
you
as the boxers
went back
sat on their
stools
and were
swabbed by
listless
cornermen.
we were all
in hell
all of us
and I
got up
and left
that time.
I know that I’m not supposed to bother
you, he said.
you’ve got that right, I
answered.
but, he went on, I want to tell you
that I was up all night
reading your
latest book.
I’ve read all your
books.
I work in the
post office.
oh, I said.
and I want to interview you for
our newspaper.
no, I said, no
interview.
why? he asked.
I’m tired of interviews, they have
nothing to do with
anything.
listen, he went on, I’ll make it
easy for you, I’ll come to your
house or I’ll buy you dinner at
Musso’s.
no, thank you, I said.
look, the interview isn’t really for
our paper, it’s for
me, I’m a writer and I want to get
out of the post
office.
listen, I said, just pull up a chair
and sit down at your
typewriter.
no interview? he asked.
no, I answered.
he walked
off.
they were coming out on the track
for the next race.
talking to the young man had
made me feel
bad.
they thought that writing had
something to do with
the politics of the
thing.
they were simply not
crazy enough
in the head
to sit down to a
typer
and let the words bang
out.
they didn’t want to
write
they wanted to
succeed at
writing.
I got up to make
my bet.
no use letting a little
conversation
ruin your
day.