Read What Matters Most is How Well You Walk Through the Fire Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
we ask for no mercy and no
miracles;
(if only there were fewer flies around
as we ponder our imbecilities and losses!)
I light a cigar, lean back
remember
dead friends dead days dead loves;
so much has gone by for most of us,
even the young, especially the young
for they have lost the beginning and have
the rest of the way to go;
but isn't it strange, all I can think of now are
cucumbers, oranges, junk yards, the
old Lincoln Heights jail and
the lost loves that went so hard
and almost brought us to the edge,
the faces now without features,
the love beds forgotten.
the mind is kind: it retains the
important things:
cucumbers
oranges
junk yards
jails.
I have killed a fly
that tiny piece of life
dead like dead love.
there used to be over 100 of us in that big room
in that jail
I was in there many
times.
you slept on the floor
men stepped on your face on the way to piss.
always a shortage of cigarettes.
names called out during the night
(the few lucky ones who were bailed out)
never you.
we asked for no mercy or miracles
and we ask for none
now;
we paid our way, laugh if you will,
we walked the only paths there were to walk.
and when love came to us twice
and lied to us twice
we decided to never love again
that was fair
fair to us
and fair to love itself.
we ask for no mercy or no
miracles;
we are strong enough to live
and to die and to
kill flies,
attend the boxing matches, go to the racetrack,
live on luck and skill,
get alone, get alone often,
and if you can't sleep alone
be careful of the words you speak in your sleep; and
ask for no mercy
no miracles;
and don't forget:
time is meant to be wasted,
love fails
and death is useless.
the headless dog snaps,
the half melon drips, there's blood under the
fingernails,
the yawweed cries and
Tacitus hops like a frog.
destitution everywhere,
the manacled in rusted armor walk through
crippled dreams,
one more dead. one more dying. one more to die.
they lied to themselves and then to us and then to the stinking wind.
bargain basement heroes erected for elucidation.
poison music stuffs the brain,
the roses yell for mercy,
mouse chases cat,
elephants carry the gray bad news,
infinity is split and nothing happens
and
one more dead. one more dying. one more to die.
the engine is stuffed with peat moss.
the schoolboys eat gravel.
space mutilates space.
the pin worms dance with the collared peccary.
throats are cut like bread.
flags are covered with custard.
the knife chases the gun.
and
one more
dead.
dying.
to die.
one more dead
rose
dog
flea
hyena,
as the spoon and the feather
dance in the night,
as the sheet pulls up the hand,
as the twilight laughs for its pill.
one more sister cut in half.
one more brother stuffed in the
bin.
the shoes put on you.
you, you, you,
no más
, no more.
like in a chair the color of the sun
as you listen to lazy piano music
and the aircraft overhead are not
at war.
where the last drink is as good as
the first
and you realized that the promises
you made yourself were
kept.
that's plenty.
that last: about the promises:
what's not so good is that the few
friends you had are
dead and they seem
irreplaceable.
as for women, you didn't know enough
early enough
and you knew enough
too late.
and if more self-analysis is allowed: it's
nice that you turned out well-
honed,
that you arrived late
and remained generally
capable.
outside of that, not much to say
except you can leave without
regret.
until then, a bit more amusement,
a bit more endurance,
leaning back
into it.
like the dog who got across
the busy street:
not all of it was good
luck.
he draws up to my rear bumper in the fast lane.
I can see his face in the rear view mirror, his eyes
are blue and he sucks on a dead cigar.
I pull over. he passes, then slows. I don't like
this.
I pull into the fast lane, ride
his rear bumper. we are as a team passing through
Compton.
I turn the radio on and light a cigarette.
he ups it 5 mph, I do likewise. we are as a team
entering Inglewood.
he pulls out of the fast lane and I drive past.
then I slow. when I check the rear view mirror he is
on my bumper again.
he has almost made me miss my turnoff at Century Blvd.
I hit the blinker and fire across 3 lanes of
traffic, just make the off-ramp,
cutting in front of an inflammable tanker.
blue eyes comes from behind the tanker and
we veer down the ramp in separate lanes to the signal.
we sit there side by side, not looking at each
other.
I am caught behind an empty school bus as he idles
behind a Mercedes.
the signal switches and he is gone. I cut to the
inside lane behind him. then I see the parking
lane open and I flash by to the right of him and the
Mercedes, turn up the radio, make the green light as the
Mercedes and blue eyes run the yellow turning into red.
they make it as I switch back ahead of
them in order to miss a parked vegetable
truck.
now we are running 1-2-3, not a cop in sight. we are
moving through a 1990 California July.
we are driving with skillful nonchalance.
we are moving in perfect formation.
we are as a team
approaching L.A. airport.
1-2-3
2-3-1
3-2-1.
when he got old he stopped writing, dabbled with
paints and put ads in the UCLA paper for
secretarial help.
Henry preferred Oriental ladies, young
ones
and they came by and did little things for
him
and he fell in love with them,
even though there was no sex.
he wrote them letters, all his writing went into
love letters.
and the ladies were flattered but simply went
on
teasing him.
he liked having them around.
maybe he felt that they held death back a
little
or maybe they stopped him from thinking
about it too much
or maybe the old boy was simply
horny.
I remember a young lady who came to
see me who said,
“I was going to fuck Henry Miller before he
died but now it's too late so I came to see
you.”
“forget it, baby,” I told her.
I liked the way Henry Miller looked in his
last years, like a wise Buddha
but he didn't act like one.
I only wish he had gone out in a
different way,
not begging for it,
using his name.
I would have preferred to see him
continue to write books
until the end,
right into the face
of death.
but since he couldn't do it
well, maybe somebody else
can.
there's some old fart
somewhere,
I'm sure
who can.
if he doesn't diddle his brains
away at the
racetrack.
morning,
it touches the nerves
quickly
as if we were already in
the hunter's sights.
the body yawns and stretches in the
light.
the pilgrimage
is about to
begin.
padding to the bathroom
to eliminate the
poisons.
behind the curtains is
their world.
wash hands, neck, face,
brush the remaining teeth
for the remaining
days.
clothe thyself.
not
that
shirt!
it's depressingâ¦
get something green, something
yellow.
there, look.
smile.
shoes, damned shoes.
shoes look so sad.
you can't hide facts from
shoes.
forget the shoes,
put on your stupid shorts.
your fat buttery pants.
now, the shoes.
you forgot your hair.
comb your hair.
you look crazy with your hair
uncombed.
you're not crazy, are
you?
your wife is still asleep.
you're lucky.
she's lucky.
smile.
you're not crazy, are
you?
you go downstairs.
the animals wait for you.
the plants look at you
while the termites eat the wood.
the ant army beneath,
the poisoned air above.
your car outside.
your intestines, your belly,
your heart, your brain, your
etc.
inside.
you're sane,
you're normal.
you make sensible
decisions?
only there's a limit.
that's the catch.
you're the catch.
caught.
is it better to be a termite?
an ocelot?
a metronome?
a park bench?
or East Kansas City?
I feed the animals.
for that moment, that is what
I do.
I feed the animals.
it's
easy.
too often the people complain that they have
done nothing with their
lives
and then they wait for somebody to tell them
that this isn't so.
look, you've done this and that and you've
done that and that's
something.
you really think so?
of course.
but
they had it right.
they've done nothing.
shown no courage.
no inventiveness.
they did what they were taught to
do.
they did what they were told to
do.
they had no resistance, no thoughts
of their own.
they were pushed and shoved
and went obediently.
they had no heart.
they were cowardly.
they stank in life.
they stank up life.
and now they want to be told that
they didn't fail.
you've met them.
they're everywhere.
the spiritless.
the dead-before-death gang.
be kind?
lie to them?
tell them what they want to hear?
tell them anything they want to hear?
people with courage made them what they
aren't.
and if they ask me, I'll tell them what they
don't want to hear.
it's better you
keep them away from me, or
they'll tell you I'm a cruel man.
it's better that they confer
with you.
I want to be free of
that.
he got knifed in broad daylight, came up the street
holding his hands over his gut, dripping red
on the pavement.
nobody waiting in line left their place to help him.
he made it to the Mission doorway, collapsed in the
lobby where the desk clerk screamed, “hey, you
son-of-a-bitch, what are you doing?”
then he called an ambulance but the man was dead
when they got there.
the police came and circled the spots of blood
on the pavement
with white chalk
photographed everything
then asked the men waiting for their Sunday meal
if they had seen anything
if they knew anything.
they all said “no” to both.
while the police strutted in their uniforms
the others finally loaded the body into an ambulance.
afterwards the homeless men rolled cigarettes
as they waited for their meal
talking about the action
blowing farts and smoke
enjoying the sun
feeling quite like
celebrities.