Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
I suppose Jr. High was the worst.
my friend Teddy began going to
various dances
and talking about it all.
his father loaned him the car
for these
functions.
he also had a new wrist watch.
it was still the depression
era and few of us boys
had wrist
watches.
Teddy kept lifting up his wrist
and looking at his
watch.
he did it 3 or 4 times
within a ten minute
period.
“why the hell do you keep
looking at the time?
you going
somewhere?”
“maybe, maybe…”
“well, go on then…”
“she kissed me at the
doorway, I can still feel her
lips!”
“whose lips?”
“Annabell’s, she kissed me
at her door after the
dance!”
“listen, Teddy, let’s go down to the
lot and get up a
baseball game.”
“I can’t get her out of my mind.
her lips were soft,
warm…”
“Christ, man, who
cares?”
“I bought her a corsage for
the dance, she looked so
beautiful…”
“didn’t you slip her any
turkey neck?”
“what?
listen, I’m in love!”
“well, that’s what you do
then before somebody
else slams her.”
“don’t talk that way, I’m
warning you!”
“I can take you, Teddy,
with one ball tied behind
my back.”
he looked at his watch:
“I gotta go now…”
“gonna go play with yourself,
Teddy?”
“look who’s talking!
you don’t even have a
girl!”
“you don’t know what I
have.”
“you’ve got nothing but
your hand.”
“I’ve got two hands, Teddy.”
I grabbed him by the shirt and
pulled him in
close.
“and just for laughs I just might
kick your ass, real
good.”
“you’re just pissed because
you’ve got
nobody!”
I let him go.
“get out of here…”
Teddy turned and
walked off.
he’d gotten off easy that
time.
next time I’d kick his ass
from stem to
stern.
it was 1935.
I was standing in my parents’
back yard.
it was a Saturday
afternoon.
my father was in the house
listening to the radio,
the Trojans were playing
Notre Dame.
my mother was in there
doing something and
nothing.
I walked in through the back
door.
my mother was in the
kitchen.
“Henry, I saw Teddy
leaving.
he’s a nice
boy.”
“yeah…”
“I saw Teddy
all dressed up to go to
the dance.
he looked so
nice!”
“yeah…”
“Henry, when are you going
to get a nice girl to take to
a dance?”
“I only dance with them in
bed!”
“YOU DON’T TALK THAT WAY
TO YOUR MOTHER!”
it was my father.
he had been standing there.
it must have been half
time.
“don’t bother me,” I
said.
“I’LL BOTHER YOU, I’LL BOTHER
YOU SO YOU’LL NEVER TALK THAT
WAY AGAIN!”
“is that right, old man?
come on then, bother
me!”
he stood there.
I stood there.
nothing happened.
“ALL RIGHT,” he screamed,
“GO TO YOUR ROOM!
NOW!”
I walked past him, on through
the house and out the
door.
I walked down the street.
I had no money, I had nowhere to
go.
I just kept
walking.
it was a hot summer day
and I just kept walking,
3 blocks, 4 blocks, 5
blocks…
then I passed a mongrel dog
going the other
way.
his fur was matted and dirty
and his tongue hung out of
one side of his
mouth.
I stopped, turned and watched
him trot
off.
then I faced the other way and
continued my
journey.
I have no idea how it began.
as a boy I believed that classical music was
for sissies and as a teenager I felt this even
more strongly.
yes, I think it began in this record
store.
I was in my booth listening to whatever I
listened to
at that time.
then I heard some music in the next
booth.
the sounds seemed very strange and
unusual.
I saw the man leave his booth and
return the record to the clerk.
I went to the clerk and asked for that
record.
she handed it to me.
I looked at the cover.
“but,” I said, “this is symphony
music.”
“yes,” said the clerk.
I took the record to my booth
and played it.
never had I heard such
music.
unfortunately, I no longer
remember what that
piece of marvelous
music was.
I purchased the record.
I had a record player in my
room.
I listened to the record
over and over
again.
I was hooked.
soon I found a 2nd hand
record store.
there I found that you could
turn in 3 record albums and
get two back.
I was fairly poor
but most of my money went
for wine and
classical music.
I loved to mix the two
together.
I went through that entire
2nd hand record
store.
my tastes were strange.
I liked Beethoven but
preferred Brahms and
Tchaikovsky.
Borodin didn’t work.
Chopin was only good
at moments.
Mozart was only good
when I was feeling
good and I seldom
felt that
way.
Smetana I found
obvious and Sibelius
awesome.
Ives was too self-comfortable.
Goldmark, I felt, was very
underrated.
Wagner was a roaring miracle
of dark energy.
Haydn was love turned loose
into sound.
Handel created things that
took your head and lifted it
to the ceiling.
Eric Coates was unbelievably
cute and astute.
and if you listened to Bach
long enough
you didn’t want to listen to
anybody else.
there were dozens
more….
I was on the move from
city to city
and carrying a record player
and records along was
impossible
so I began listening to the
radio
and picking up what I
could.
the problem with the radio
was
that there were a few standard
works they played over and
over.
I heard them too often
and could anticipate each note
before it
arrived.
but the good part was
that, at times, I heard new
music that I had never heard
before by composers I had
never heard of, read about.
I was surprised at the many
composers, fairly unknown,
at least to me, who could
produce these wondrous
and stirring
works.
works that I would never
hear again.
I have continued to listen to
classical music via the radio
for decades.
I am listening as I write
this to Mahler’s 9th.
Mahler was always one
of my favorites.
it’s possible to listen to
his works again and
again without
tiring of
them.
through the women, through
the jobs, through the horrible
times and the good times,
through deaths, through everything,
in and out of hospitals,
in and out of love, through the
decades that have gone so
swiftly
there have been so many
nights of listening
to classical music on the
radio.
almost every
night.
I wish I could remember the name of
the piece I first heard in that
record booth
but it evades me.
for some odd reason I do
remember the conductor:
Eugene Ormandy.
one of the
finest.
now Mahler is in the room
with me
and the chills run up my
arms, reach the back
of my neck…
it’s all so unbelievably
splendid,
splendid!
and I can’t read a note of
music.
But I have found a part of
the world
like no other part of the
world.
it gave heart to my
life, helped me get
to
here.