Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
It’s never quite right, he said, the way the people look,
the way the music sounds, the way the words are
written.
it’s never quite right, he said, all the things we are
taught, all the loves we chase, all the deaths we
die, all the lives we live,
they are never quite right,
they are hardly close to right,
these lives we live
one after the other,
piled there as history,
the waste of the species,
the crushing of the light and the way,
it’s not quite right,
it’s hardly right at all
he said.
don’t I know it? I
answered.
I walked away from the mirror.
it was morning, it was afternoon, it was
night
nothing changed
it was locked in place.
something flashed, something broke, something
remained.
I walked down the stairway and
into it.
some jobs you like,
there is a clean gentle
feel to some of them,
like the one I had
unloading boxcars
of frozen
fish.
the fish came packed
in coffin-sized boxes,
beautifully
heavy and
almost
unyielding.
you had thick gloves
and a hook
and you gaffed the
damned thing
and pulled it along
the floor and slid it
outside and onto the
waiting
truck.
and strangely there
was no foreman,
they just turned us
loose in there
knowing we’d get
it done.
we were always
sending out one of
the fellows for another
bottle of
wine.
it was slippery and
cold in those
boxcars
we yanked out those
iced fish,
drank the wine
and the bullshit
flew.
there was a
fight or two
but nothing really
violent.
I was the peacemaker.
“come on, fuck
that stuff!
let’s get these
fish out of
here!
yeah!”
then we’d be
laughing and
bullshitting
again.
toward evening
we all got quiet.
the fish seemed to
get heavier and
heavier.
shins got cracked,
knees
bruised
and the wine
settled heavily
into our
guts.
by the time you
got to your last box
you bullied it
out of there
strictly on nerve
alone.
when you punched
out
even the timecard
seemed
heavy.
and then you were
in your old car
moving toward
your place,
your shackjob,
wondering
whether good times
or hell
awaited
you.
but the frozen fish
you had
worked,
that thought was
pleasant and
soothing,
and you’d be back
for more,
hooking the wood
and dragging.
the night came
on and you flicked
the headlights
on
and the world was
good enough,
right
then.
I was always studying the wood of the
bar, the grains, the scratches, the
cigarette burns.
there was something there but I
couldn’t quite figure what it
was
and that kept me going.
another one was to look at my
hand around the
glass.
there is something about
one’s hand about a
glass that is gently
fascinating.
and, of course, there is this one:
all drunks do it:
taking your thumbnail and slowly
ripping off the label
on a bottle of beer that has been
soaking in the icewater.
smoking cigarettes is a good show
too, especially in the early morning
hours with the Venetian blinds at
your back,
the smoke curls up and forms its
divergent patterns.
this gives one the feeling of
peace
and really so, more so,
if there is one of your favorite
old songs
emanating from the
juke.
and if the bartender was old
and a little tired and a little bit
wise
it was good to see where he
was or what he was doing—
washing glasses or leaning
against the counter or
sneaking a quick
shot
or whatever he was doing
it was always nice to just
see a bit of him,
to take note of the white
shirt.
the white shirt was an
important backdrop to
drink to and
with.
also you listened to the
traffic going by,
car by car.
it was not a deliberate
listening—more an offhand
one.
and it was best when
it had rained
and you could hear the
tires on the
wet street.
the bar was the best
place to hide in.
time came under your
control, time to wade
in, time to do nothing
in.
no guru was needed,
no god.
nothing expected but
yourself
and nothing lost
to the
unexpected.
my uncle Jack
is a mouse
is a house on fire
is a war about to begin
is a man running down the street with a knife in his back.
my uncle Jack
is the Santa Monica pier
is a dusty blue pillow
is a scratching black-and-white dog
is a man with one arm lighting a cigarette with one hand.
my uncle Jack
is a slice of burnt toast
is the place you forgot to look for the key
is the pleasure of finding 3 rolls of toilet paper in the closet
is the worst dream you’ve ever had that you can’t remember.
my uncle Jack
is the firecracker that went off in your hand
is your run-over cat dead outside your driveway at 10:30 a.m.
is the crap game you won in the Santa Anita parking lot
is the man your woman left you for that night in the cheap hotel room.
my uncle Jack
is your uncle Jack
is death coming like a freight train
is a clown with weeping eyes
is your car jack and your fingernails and the scream of the biggest mountain now.
you have to have it or the walls will close
in.
you have to give everything up, throw it
away, everything away.
you have to look at what you look at
or think what you think
or do what you do
or
don’t do
without considering personal
advantage
without accepting guidance.
people are worn away with
striving,
they hide in common
habits.
their concerns are herd
concerns.
few have the ability to stare
at an old shoe for
ten minutes
or to think of odd things
like who invented the
doorknob?
they become unalive
because they are unable to
pause
undo themselves
unkink
unsee
unlearn
roll clear.
listen to their untrue
laughter, then
walk
away.
have I gone the way of the deathly death?
will this machine finish me
where booze and women and poverty
have not?
is Whitman laughing at me from his grave?
does Creeley care?
is this properly spaced?
am I?
will Ginsberg howl?
soothe me!
get me lucky!
get me good!
get me going!
I am a virgin again.
a 70 year old virgin.
don’t fuck me, machine
do.
who cares?
talk to me, machine!
we can drink together.
we can have fun.
think of all the people who will hate me at this
computer.
we’ll add them to the others
and continue right
on.
so this is the beginning
not the
end.
are who I will hear tonight
after reading about the death of Red Grange.
my wife and I ate at a Japanese restaurant tonight
and I told her that Red Grange had died.
I had red bean ice cream for dessert.
my wife declined.
the war was still on in the Gulf.
we got into the car and I drove us back here.
now I am listening to Rossini
who died before Red Grange.
now the audience is applauding.
now the players are readying for Mozart.
Red Grange got a hell of a write-up in the papers.
now Mozart is beginning.
I am smoking a small cigarette imported from India.
4 of my 6 cats are asleep in the next room.
my wife is downstairs.
outside it is a cold, still winter night.
I blow smoke into the desk lamp and watch it curl.
Mozart is doing very well.
Shostakovich is getting ready.
it is a late Tuesday evening.
and Red Grange is dead.