Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
there was Auden, I don’t remember
which small room I first read him
in
and there was Spender and I don’t
know which small room
either
and then there was Ezra
and I remember that room,
there was a torn screen
that the flies came through
and it was Los Angeles
and the woman said to me,
“Jesus Christ, you reading those
Cantos
again!”she liked e. e. cummings, though,
she thought he was really
good and she was
right.
I remember when I read Turgenev,
though, I had just come out of the
drunk tank and I was living
alone
and I thought he was really a
subtle and funny son of a
bitch.
Hemingway I read everywhere,
sometimes a few times over
and he made me feel brave
and tough
until one day
it all just stopped cold for me
and worse than that,
Ernie became an
irritant.
my Jeffers period was sometime
in Los Angeles, some room, some
job,
the same woman was back
and she said,
“Jesus, how can you read this
crap?”
one time when she was gone
I found many magazines
under the bed.
I pulled them out
and found that the contents were
all about murder
and it was all about women
who were tortured, killed,
dismembered and so
forth with the
lurid photos
in black and
white.
that stuff wasn’t for
me.
my first encounter with Henry
Miller was via paperback
on a bus through Arizona.
he was great when he stuck
to reality
but when he got ethereal
when he got to philosophizing
he got as dry and boring as
the passing
landscape.
I left him in the men’s crapper
at a hamburger
stop.
I got hold of Celine’s
Journeyand read it straight through
while in bed eating crackers.
I kept reading, eating the
crackers and reading, reading,
laughing out loud,
thinking, at last I’ve met a man
who writes better than
I.
I finished the book and then
drank much water.
the crackers swelled up
inside of me
and I got the worst
god damned stomach
ache of my
life.
I was living with my first
wife.
she worked for the L.A.
Sheriff’s Dept.
and she came in to
find me doubled up
and moaning.
“Oh, what happened?”
“I’ve just read the world’s
greatest
writer!”
“But you said
you
were.”
“I’m second, baby…”
I read F. D.’s
Notes from theUnderground
in a small El Paso
library
after sleeping the night
on a park bench
during a sand
storm.
after reading that book
I knew I had a long way
to go as a
writer.
I don’t know where I read
T. S. Eliot.
he made a small dent
which soon ironed
out.
there were many rooms,
many books,
D. H. Lawrence, Gorky,
A. Huxley, Sherwood
Anderson, Sinclair Lewis,
James Thurber, Dos Passos,
etc
Kafka.
Schopenhauer, Nietzsche,
Rabelais.
Hamsun.
as a very young man
I worked as a shipping clerk,
made the bars at
night,
came into the roominghouse,
went to bed
and read the
books.
I had 3 or 4 of them in
bed with me (what a
man!) and then I would
sleep.
my landlady finally told
me, “You know, you read those
books in bed and about every
hour or so one of them will
fall to the floor.
You are keeping everybody
awake!”
(I was on the 3rd floor.)
what days and nights those
were.
now I can’t read anything,
not even the newspaper.
and, of course, I can’t watch
tv except for the boxing
matches.
I do hear some news
on the car radio
while driving the freeway
and waiting for the
traffic
reports.
but you know, my former
life as a bibliophile, it
possibly kept me from
murdering somebody,
myself
included.
it kept me from being an
industrialist.
it allowed me to endure
some women
that most men would never
be able to live
with.
it gave me space, a
pause.
it helped me to write
this
(in this room,
like the other rooms)
perhaps for some young man
now
needing
to laugh at the
impossibilities
which are here
always
after we are
not.
it was just a small room, no bathroom,
hot plate, bed, 2 chairs, a bed, sink,
phone in hall.
I was on the 2nd floor of a hotel.
I had a job.
I got in about 6:30 p.m.
and by 8 p.m.
there would be 4 or 5 people
in the room,
all drunks,
all drinking wine.
sometimes there would be
6 or 7.
most of them sat on the
bed.
oh, there was a radio,
we played the radio,
drank and
talked.
it was strange, there was
always a sense of
excitement there,
some laughter and
sometimes serious
arguments that were
somewhat
stupid.
we were never asked
to be quiet,
the manager never
bothered us,
or the
police.
with an exception
or two,
there were no
physical
confrontations.
I’d always call an
end to the parties
around 3 a.m.
“ah, come on Hank!
we’re just getting
started!”
“come on, come
on, everybody
out!”
and,
with an exception
or two,
I always slept
without a
lady.
we called
that place,
the Hotel from
Hell.
I had no idea
what we were
trying to
do.
I think we were
just celebrating
being
alive.
that small room
full of smoke and
music and
voices,
night after night
after
night.
the poor, the mad,
the lost.
we lit up that hotel
with our twisted
souls
and it loved
us.
not much chance,
completely cut loose from
purpose,
he was a young man
riding a bus
through North Carolina
on the way to
somewhere
and it began to snow
and the bus stopped
at a little cafe
in the hills
and the passengers
entered.
he sat at the counter
with the others,
he ordered and the
food arrived.
the meal was
particularly
good
and the
coffee.
the waitress was
unlike the women
he had
known.
she was unaffected,
there was a natural
humor which came
from her.
the fry cook said
crazy things.
the dishwasher,
in back,
laughed, a good
clean
pleasant
laugh.
the young man watched
the snow through the
windows.
he wanted to stay
in that cafe
forever.
the curious feeling
swam through him
that everything
was
beautiful
there,
that it would always
stay beautiful
there.
then the bus driver
told the passengers
that it was time
to board.
the young man
thought, I’ll just sit
here, I’ll just stay
here.
but then
he rose and followed
the others into the
bus.
he found his seat
and looked at the cafe
through the bus
window.
then the bus moved
off, down a curve,
downward, out of
the hills.
the young man
looked straight
forward.
he heard the other
passengers
speaking
of other things,
or they were
reading
or
attempting to
sleep.
they had not
noticed
the
magic.
the young man
put his head to
one side,
closed his
eyes,
pretended to
sleep.
there was nothing
else to do—
just listen to the
sound of the
engine,
the sound of the
tires
in the
snow.
hey Chinaski:
I am a filmmaker in the Hollywood area and
I am currently making a movie in which I
would like to include you.
The nature of the movie is about an
alcoholic Satan who decides to leave hell
for a while and have a vacation in
Hollywood.
This particular version of Satan is a fun
guy who can’t get enough booze, SLUTS,
or adventure.
Satan, while in Hollywood looks up his
old buddies (Ghosts) Richard Burton,
Errol Flynn and Idi Amin (still alive).
He proceeds to get smashed with these
guys and they all pass out on him so
he needs to look up a mortal worthy of
drinking with him (YOU).
The scene I have envisioned with you
would be to be sitting around a crummy
joint, drinking Mezcal and playing Russian
Roulette with Satan while 2 big fat chicks
are slapping each other with Salamis.
I would want everybody in the scene to be
SMASHED.
I can tell you now that I couldn’t pay you
anything up front xcept Booze and
adventure.
—However—
I am going to hopefully be able to release
this movie one day and would be happy to
work out a contractual agreement that
would arrange a royalty rate—(if you are
interested.)
And thanks for mentioning in your
writing, KNUT HAMSUN.
he has turned out to be one of my
faves.
And just remember,
WHEN IN DOUBT,
PASS OUT!