Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
a great mind and a good body seldom go
together.
or a great body and a good
mind.
or a great body and a great
mind.
but worse, a not so good mind and a
not so good body often go
together.
in fact, that’s almost the entire
populace.
and all these
reproducing more of
themselves.
is there any wonder why the world
is where it’s at
now?
just notice the creature sitting near you
in a movie house
or standing ahead of you in a
supermarket line.
or giving a State of the Union
Address.
that the gods have let us go on
this long
this badly.
as the snail comes crawling home
to manna.
what I liked about e. e. cummings
was that he cut away from
the holiness of the
word
and with charm
and gamble
gave us lines
that sliced through the
dung.
how it was needed!
how we were withering
away
in the old
tired
manner.
of course, then came all
the
e. e. cummings
copyists.
they copied him then
as the others had
copied Keats, Shelley,
Swinburne, Byron, et
al.
but there was only
one
e. e. cummings.
of course.
one sun.
one moon.
one poet,
like
that.
I’ve probably had about more of them
than any person alive
and they haven’t killed me
yet
but some of those mornings felt
awfully near
death.
as you know, the worst drinking is done
on an empty stomach, while smoking
heavily and downing many different
types of
libations.
and the worst hangovers are when you
awaken in your car or in a strange room
or in an alley or in jail.
the worst hangovers are when you
awaken to realize that you have done
something absolutely vile, ignorant and
possibly dangerous the night before
but
you can’t quite remember what it
was.
and you awaken in various states of
disorder—parts of your body
damaged, your money missing
and/or possibly and often your
car, if you had one.
you might place a telephone call to
a lady, if you were with one, most
often to have her slam the phone
down on you.
or, if she is next to you then,
to feel her bristling and outrageous
anger.
drunks are never forgiven.
but drunks will forgive themselves
because they need to drink
again.
it takes an ungodly durability to
be a drinking person for many
decades.
your drinking companions are
killed by it.
you yourself are in and out of
hospitals
where the warning often is:
“One more drink will kill
you.”
but
you beat that
by taking more than one more
drink.
and as you near three quarters of
a century in age
you find that it takes more and more
booze to get you
drunk.
and the hangovers are worse,
the recovery stage is
longer.
and the most remarkably stupid
thing is
that you are not unpleased that
you have done it
all
and that you are still
doing it.
I am typing this now
under the yoke of one of my
worst hangovers
while downstairs now
sit various and sundry
bottles of
alcohol.
it’s all been so beastly
lovely,
this mad river,
this gouging
plundering
madness
that I would wish upon
nobody
but myself,
amen.
the tragedy-sniffers are all
about.
they get up in the morning
and begin to find things
wrong
and they fling themselves
into a rage about
it,
a rage that lasts until
bedtime,
where even there
they twist in their
insomnia,
not able to rid their
minds
of the petty obstacles
they have
encountered.
they feel set against,
it’s a plot.
and by being constantly
angry they feel that
they are constantly
right.
you see them in traffic
honking wildly
at the slightest
infraction,
cursing,
spewing their
invectives.
you feel them
in lines
at banks
at supermarkets
at movies,
they are pressing
at your back
walking on your
heels,
they are impatient to
a fury.
they are everywhere
and into
everything,
these violently
unhappy
souls.
actually they are
frightened,
never wanting to be
wrong
they lash out
incessantly…
it is a malady
an illness of
that
breed.
the first one
I saw like that
was my
father
and since then
I have seen a
thousand
fathers,
ten thousand
fathers
wasting their lives
in hatred,
tossing their lives
into the
cesspool
and
ranting
on.
war, war, war,
the yellow monster,
the eater of mind
and body.
war,
the indescribable,
the pleasure of
the mad,
the final argument
of
ungrown men.
does it belong?
do we?
as we approach
the last flash of
our chance.
one flower left.
one second.
breathing like this.
I believe the thought came to me
when I was about eleven years
old:
I’ll become an idiot.
I had noticed some in the neighborhood,
those who the people called
“idiots.”
although looked down upon,
the idiots seemed to have the
more peaceful lives:
nothing was expected of
them.
I imagined myself standing upon
streetcorners, hands in pockets,
and drooling a bit at the
mouth.
nobody would bother
me.
I began to put my plan into
effect.
I was first noticed in the
school yards.
my mates jibed at me,
taunted me.
even my father noticed:
“you act like a god damned
idiot!”
one of my teachers noticed,
Mrs. Gredis of the long silken
legs.
she kept me after
class.
“what is it, Henry?
you can tell me…”
she put her arms
about me
and I rested myself
against
her.
“tell me, Henry, don’t
be afraid…”
I didn’t say
anything.
“you can stay here
as long as you
want, Henry.
you don’t have to
talk…”
she kissed me on the
forehead
and I reached down
and lightly touched
one of her silken
legs.
Mrs. Gredis was a
hot number.
she kept me after
school almost every
day.
and everybody hated
me
but I believe that I
had the most wonderful
hard-ons
of any eleven year old
boy
in the city of
Los Angeles
the people survive to come up with flat fists full
of nothing.
I remember Carl Sandburg’s poem, “The
People, Yes.”
nice thought but completely inaccurate:
the people did not survive through a noble
strength but through lie, compromise and
guile.
I lived with these people, I am not so sure
what people Sandburg lived
with.
but his poem always pissed me off.
it was a poem that lied.
it is “The People, No.”
then and now.
and it doesn’t take a misanthrope to
say this.
let us hope that future famous poems
such as Mr. Sandburg’s
make more
sense.