Read New Poems Book Three Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
THE SIXTIES?
I don’t remember
much
about the sixties
I was working
12 hours a night
in the post office
but I do remember
one day
a friend of mine
took me to his friend’s
house.
it was a strange-
looking house—
they had
painted it
red yellow green
and blue.
the colors
ran in every
direction and also
ran together—
very
psychedelic.
inside there were
many people
lying around.
they didn’t move
much.
they appeared to
be asleep
although
it was only
one p.m.
“these are the
beautiful people,”
my friend told
me.
“yeah,” I said,
“some of the women
look
pretty good.”
I was feeling
smart and walked
over to the
best looker.
she had long
blonde hair
and an
almost perfect
body.
she was
stretched out
on a couch
near the
fireplace.
I shook
her.
“come on,
baby, let’s
fuck!”
“peace, brother,”
she said,
“some other
time.”
we walked on
through
the house.
I asked my
friend,
“how can all
these people
sleep
with all that
loud music
playing?”
he laughed,
“you’re a real
cube
.”
we left and
went back to
his house.
we sat and
talked
while his
wife created
ceramic art
in the
kitchen.
I slept on
their couch
that night
and left
in
the morning.
I saw
my friend
again
about
three weeks
later.
driving over
I passed
the house
where
I had seen
the blonde
on
the couch.
now the
house was painted
grey,
grey and
white.
I went
to
my friend’s
house.
his wife was
in the kitchen
working
on collages.
after
a few drinks
I asked
him,
“what happened
to the house
down
the street?”
“they were
too obvious,”
he said,
“they got
busted.”
“that grey
and white
paint job,”
I said,
“it’s hardly
as nice.”
“that’s true,”
he said.
we looked at
each other.
“they should
have painted
it
grey and
blue,”
I told
him.
EXPERIENCE
she claimed to be
worldly
to have traveled
everywhere
was said to have known
many famous men and even
slept with some of
them.
really she had
(she said)
done it
all.
after dinner
at a neighborhood Japanese restaurant
I asked her
if she would care for a
drink.
she ran her eyes
over the menu
then said she guessed
she’d have the
sake
which I
ordered.
and when the drink
arrived
she picked it
up
sipped
then quickly set it
down
looking disgusted.
“what’s the matter?”
I asked.
she replied,
“why is this
stuff
hot
?”
FAME AT LAST
I turn on the landing lights and head for the
runway where the crowd waits.
what a fucking farce
but I’ve got to play it out.
the plane rolls to a stop.
I step down into the crowd,
mikes in face, cameras on.
I answer questions
on the run.
really can’t be bothered, you know.
I shove through.
they make you feel important.
Jesus, don’t they have anything else to do?
a young girl screams my name.
I give her the finger.
there, that’ll hold her.
where was that whore when I was
living on boiled weenies?
I finally fight my way to the limo.
couple of babes in there.
well, what the hell.
somebody else in there.
forget his name.
he hands me a drink.
now, that’s better.
I tell the driver, “get the fuck out
of here!”
we move out.
the guy who handed me the drink
says, “we got you booked on Letterman
tomorrow night.”
I drain my drink.
“fuck that, I’m not going!”
“but it’s national tv!”
“fuck ’em! fix me another drink!”
we are on the freeway then,
going somewhere.
my place? a hotel? I don’t know.
one of the babes asks me a
stupid question.
I don’t bother to answer.
everybody’s stupid, it’s a stupid, stupid
world.
I’m all alone.
I get the second drink, slam it down.
“stop the car!” I yell at the
chauffeur, “I want to drive!”
“but, sir, we’re on the freeway!”
“stop the fucking car!”
nobody says anything,
the babes or the guy talking about
national tv.
the chauffeur works his way to
the shoulder, parks it, gets out,
opens the door.
I climb out.
“you,” I tell him, “sit between the
whores!”
he does as I say.
I get in front, put it in drive and
slide into traffic.
it’s been a long hard month.
I open the limo up, real power, it’s
cool.
“somebody fix me another
drink!” I yell back at them.
it’s been a long month, a long
one.
I’ve got to
unwind!
doesn’t anybody else realize what it’s like to
be alone at the
top?
PARTY OF NINE
“Hitchcock, party of nine!”
someone shouted.
and here they came, my god,
some with zippers open, others
with their shirts hanging out,
coats flung over their shoulders,
grinning and belching, nine fellows
out for a good time!
they sat down and began
beating on the table demanding
drinks and while the pounding
was going on, one of the men
made a crude remark
to the waitress, must
have been funny for they all started
LAUGHING
, a couple of them nearly falling
off their chairs.
then some of them got up,
began grabbing drinks from nearby tables
to the astonishment of
the other patrons,
gulped the drinks down,
and then one of them began a striptease;
disrobing as the others
applauded
he stripped quickly to his
red and blue shorts.
I mean, these fellows were determined to have
a
GOOD TIME
!
some of the other
diners began shouting at
them:
“
ASSHOLES
!”
“
SIT DOWN AND SHUT UP
!”
“
GO SOME PLACE ELSE
!”
but they didn’t seem to hear as
their drinks arrived.
then they started yelling their
orders at the waiter:
“
I’LL HAVE ROAST LAMB AND
APPLESAUCE!
”
“
I’LL HAVE THE GRILLED TROUT!
”
“
I’LL HAVE YOUR ASS ON A PLATTER!
”
“
I’LL HAVE
…”
as the police suddenly arrived the fellow in
red and blue shorts rose and said,
“what’s the matter, officer?
we’re only having fun!
what the hell’s wrong?”
“yeah,” said one of the others, “what the
hell’s wrong?
we’re only having fun.”
then the lights went out.
a woman screamed.
chairs scraped on the floor
as people began to leave their tables.
outside, sirens were approaching.
the party of nine
ran back outside to the parking lot,
jumped into their cars and gunned them to
the exits.
the police couldn’t tell who was who,
who was in what car.
red and blue shorts
was one of the first out in a yellow
convertible.
the officers managed to stop a few cars, all the wrong
ones.
the restaurant, one of the very best in town, took
a huge financial and public relations hit.
it was one of those special places
in the better part of town
where the famous, the talented and the rich
preferred to dine
and where they could
on occasion
let off a little
steam.
HE SHOWED ME HIS BACK
I had worked there 14 years, mostly
on the night shift, eleven-and-one-half
hours a night.
one day out at the track this fellow
walked up to me.
“hey, man,” he said to me, “how are you?”
“hello,” I answered.
I didn’t remember him,
there had been 3 or 4 thousand of us working
together in that building.
“I wondered what happened to you,”
he went on, “did you retire?”
“no, I quit,” I told him.
“you quit? then what’d you
do?”
“I wrote some books.
I got lucky.”
without a further word he turned
and walked off
he thought it was bullshit.
well, maybe it was,
but at least it was my bullshit, not
his.
THE UNFOLDING
I don’t know
but I think sometimes that fellows like
Ezra and Céline and Ernie, Babe Ruth, Dillinger,
DiMaggio, Joe Louis, Kennedy, LaMotta,
Graziano, Willie Pep and Roosevelt
just had a little more than the
rest of us.
or is it just ballyhoo and nostalgia
which seems to separate them from
us?
actually, there are probably others
here among us
who are better at what they do
(or at least just as good)
as our heroes of the past
but
for us now
they are too close—
we pass them in the hall
see them waiting at stop lights
or buying
Xmas trees and windshield wipers
or we see them
standing quietly in line at the
post office.
one of the few grand things
in this life
are the brave and talented people
living
among
us
unnoticed.
life has both kind
and unkind
ways.
DRUNK BEFORE NOON
she knew Hemingway in Cuba
and she took a photo of him one day
drunk before noon—
stretched out on the floor
face puffed with drink
gut hanging out
hardly looking
macho
at all.
he heard the click of the camera,
lifted his head a bit from the
floor and
said, “honey,
please
don’t ever publish that
photo!”
I have the photo framed now
on the south wall
facing the door.
the lady gifted me
this.
now her book has just been
published in Italy and is
called
Hemingway
.
there are many photos:
Hemingway with the lady and her
dog.
Hemingway’s work
room.
Hemingway’s library with mounted water buffalo
head.
Hemingway feeding a
cat.
Hemingway’s bed.
Hemingway and Mary, Venezia, 31
Ottobre 1948.
Hemingway, Venezia, Marzo
1954.
but
no photo
of Hemingway
soused before
noon.
for a man who was very good
with the word
the lady kept
hers.
THUMBS UP, THUMBS DOWN
“the acting was really good, wasn’t
it?” she asks.
“no,” I answer, “I didn’t like it.”
“oh?” she says.
I didn’t know what else to say.
once again we have disagreed on
a performance.
this time it was on tv.
I rise from the couch.
“please let the cat in,” she says.
I let the cat in.
then I walk up the stairway.
I won’t see my wife again until bedtime.
I sit here, light a cigar.
I can’t help it, it’s difficult for me to
like much of what is being currently
written and performed.
my wife tends to blame my
childhood, a certainly restricted and
loveless
upbringing.
yet I tend to believe, that in spite of
this, I still have the ability to make good
judgments.
well, things could be worse:
earthquake, a 6-day rain, a run-
over
cat.
I lean back, draw deeply on the
cigar, then let it all out:
a wondrous cloud of blue-gray
smoke
as my insufficient critical soul winks at
eternity and then
yawns.