CHARLES BUKOWSKI
   MOCKINGBIRD WISH ME LUCK
   for Linda King
   for all the good reasons
   Table of Contents
   I.
   a free 25 page booklet
   the smoking car
   the world’s greatest loser
   the garbageman
   girl in a miniskirt reading the bible
   moyamensing prison:
   notes upon the flaxen aspect:
   funhouse
   another academy
   a day at the oak tree meet
   rain
   the colored birds
   another lousy 10 percenter
   making it
   drunk ol’ bukowski drunk
   the poetry reading
   slim killers
   the last days of the suicide kid
   bang bang
   5 men in black passing my window
   the poet’s muse
   somebody
   story and poem
   and the moon and the stars and the world
   get the nose
   my landlady and my landlord
   bad night
   hogs in the sky
   the white poets
   the black poets
   millionaires
   poetry
   the painter
   the inquisitor
   my friend william
   300 poems
   lifting weights at 2 a.m.
   reality
   earthquake
   the good life at o’hare airport
   the golfers
   II.
   the mockingbird
   ha ha ha ha ha, ha ha
   a fine day and the world looks good
   vacancy
   3:16 and one half…
   the rat
   hot
   radio
   ariel
   the passing of a dark gray moment
   consummation of grief
   those sons of bitches
   the hunt
   the big fire
   ww 2
   ants
   he wrote in lonely blood
   six chink fishermen
   burning
   a sound in the brush
   the wild
   4th of july
   carnival
   99 degrees
   happy new year
   the shoelace
   chilled green
   life
   III.
   american matador
   I saw an old-fashioned whore today
   poem for barbara, poem for jane
   short order
   the dwarf
   merry christmas
   marina
   one with dante
   an interesting night
   a threat to my immortality
   climax
   a man’s woman
   tight pink dress
   more or less, for julie
   this is the way it goes and goes and goes
   left with the dog
   praying for a best seller
   that one
   have you ever kissed a panther?
   2 carnations
   man and woman in bed at ten p.m.
   the answer
   a split
   power failure
   snake in the watermelon
   style
   the shower
   if we take—
   About the Author
   Other Books by Charles Bukowski
   Cover
   Copyright
   About the Publisher
   I
   the world is full of shipping clerks
   who have read
   the Harvard Classics
   a free 25 page booklet
   dying for a beer dying
   for and of life
   on a windy afternoon in Hollywood
   listening to symphony music from my little red radio
   on the floor.
   a friend said,
   “all ya gotta do is go out on the sidewalk
   and lay down
   somebody will pick you up
   somebody will take care of you.”
   I look out the window at the sidewalk
   I see something walking on the sidewalk
   she wouldn’t lay down there,
   only in special places for special people with special $$$$
   and
   special ways
   while I am dying for a beer on a windy afternoon in
   Hollywood,
   nothing like a beautiful broad dragging it past you on the
   sidewalk
   moving it past your famished window
   she’s dressed in the finest cloth
   she doesn’t care what you say
   how you look what you do
   as long as you do not get in her
   way, and it must be that she doesn’t shit or
   have blood
   she must be a cloud, friend, the way she floats past us.
   I am too sick to lay down
   the sidewalks frighten me
   the whole damned city frightens me,
   what I will become
   what I have become
   frightens me.
   ah, the bravado is gone
   the big run through center is gone
   on a windy afternoon in Hollywood
   my radio cracks and spits its dirty music
   through a floor full of empty beerbottles.
   now I hear a siren
   it comes closer
   the music stops
   the man on the radio says,
   “we will send you a free 25 page booklet:
   FACE THE FACTS ABOUT COLLEGE COSTS.”
   the siren fades into the cardboard mountains
   and I look out the window again as the clasped fist of
   boiling cloud comes down—
   the wind shakes the plants outside
   I wait for evening I wait for night I wait sitting in a chair
   by the window—
   the cook drops in the live
   red-pink salty
   rough-tit crab and
   the game works
   on
   come get me.
   the smoking car
   they stop out front here
   it looks as if the car is on fire
   the smoke blazes blue from the hood and exhaust
   the motor sounds like cannon shots
   the car humps wildly
   one guy gets out,
   Jesus, he says, he takes a long drink from a
   canvas water bag
   and gives the car an eerie look.
   the other guy gets out and looks at the car,
   Jesus, he says,
   and he takes a drink from a pint of whiskey,
   then passes the bottle to his
   friend.
   they both stand and look at the car,
   one holding the whiskey, the other the water bag.
   they are not dressed in conventional hippie garb
   but in natural old clothes
   faded, dirty and torn.
   a butterfly goes past my window
   and they get back in the
   car
   and it bucks off in low
   like a rodeo bronc
   they are both laughing
   and one has the bottle
   tilted…
   the butterfly is gone
   and outside there is a globe of smoke
   40 feet in circumference.
   first human beings I’ve seen in Los Angeles
   in 15 years.
   the world’s greatest loser
   he used to sell papers in front:
   “Get your winners! Get rich on a dime!”
   and about the 3rd or 4th race
					     					 			>   you’d see him rolling in on his rotten board
   with roller skates underneath.
   he’d propel himself along on his hands;
   he just had small stumps for legs
   and the rims of the skate wheels were worn off.
   you could see inside the wheels and they would wobble
   something awful
   shooting and flashing
   imperialistic sparks!
   he moved faster than anybody, rolled cigarette dangling,
   you could hear him coming
   “god o mighty, what was that?” the new ones asked.
   he was the world’s greatest loser
   but he never gave up
   wheeling toward the 2 dollar window screaming:
   “IT’S THE 4 HORSE, YOU FOOLS! HOW THE HELL YA
   GONNA BEAT THE
   4?”
   up on the board the 4 would be reading
   60 to one.
   I never heard him pick a winner.
   they say he slept in the bushes. I guess that’s where he
   died. he’s not around any
   more.
   there was the big fat blonde whore
   who kept touching him for luck, and
   laughing.
   nobody had any luck. the whore is gone
   too.
   I guess nothing ever works for us. we’re fools, of course—
   bucking the inside plus a 15 percent take,
   but how are you going to tell a dreamer
   there’s a 15 percent take on the
   dream? he’ll just laugh and say,
   is that all?
   I miss those
   sparks.
   the garbageman
   we do not accept unsolicited manuscripts
   the garbageman said
   dropping to one knee
   and blowing the head away from the priest’s
   neck
   and as the green bus stopped at the corner
   a cripple got out and a witch and a little girl
   with a flower.
   we do not accept unsolicited manuscripts
   the garbageman said
   and he shot the cripple and the witch
   but did not fire at the little girl,
   then he ran down an alley
   and climbed up on the roof of a garage,
   reloaded
   as the Goodyear Blimp sailed overhead
   he pumped 6 shots, saying,
   here are some unsolicited manuscripts,
   and the blimp wavered, paused,
   then began to nose down as 2 men parachuted
   out
   saying Hail Marys.
   8 squad cars entered the area
   and began to surround the garage
   and the garbageman said,
   we do not accept unsolicited manuscripts
   and he got one cop,
   and then they really began firing.
   the garbageman stood up in the center of the sky,
   threw his loaded rifle at them
   and all the shells
   and he said,
   we do not accept unsolicited manuscripts,
   and the first bullet got him in the chest,
   spun him,
   another in the back, one in the neck, and
   he fell on top of the garage roof,
   the blood rolling out on the tarpaper,
   blood like syrup blood like honey blood like blood,
   he said,
   Holy Mary, we do not accept…
   girl in a miniskirt reading the bible outside my window
   Sunday. I am eating a
   grapefruit. church is over at the Russian
   Orthodox to the
   west.
   she is dark
   of Eastern descent,
   large brown eyes look up from the Bible
   then down. a small red and black
   Bible, and as she reads
   her legs keep moving, moving,
   she is doing a slow rhythmic dance
   reading the Bible…
   long gold earrings;
   2 gold bracelets on each arm,
   and it’s a mini-suit, I suppose,
   the cloth hugs her body,
   the lightest of tans is that cloth,
   she twists this way and that,
   long young legs warm in the sun…
   there is no escaping her being
   there is no desire to…
   my radio is playing symphonic music
   that she cannot hear
   but her movements coincide exactly
   to the rhythms of the
   symphony…
   she is dark, she is dark
   she is reading about God.
   I am God.
   moyamensing prison:
   we shot craps in the exercise yard while the
   dummies played ball with a torn-up shirt
   wound into a ball
   once or twice a day we had to break it up
   under a tommy gun from the tower—
   some blank-faced screw pointing it at
   us, but,
   by god, through it we somehow played
   and through some skill and
   luck
   I soon had all the money in the yard.
   and in the morning and in the days that followed—
   the screws, the sparrows, the shivs, the dips, the
   strongarms, the looneys, the hustlers, the freaks,
   the discarded dream-presidents of America, the cook,
   in fact, all my critics, they all called me
   “Mr. Bukowski,” a kind of fleeting immortality
   I guess,
   but real as hogs’ heads or dead flowers,
   and the force of it
   got to me there:
   “Mr. Bukowski,” ace-crapshooter,
   money-man in a world of almost no
   money.
   immortality.
   I didn’t recite them Shelley, no,
   and everything came to me after lights out:
   slim-hipped boys I didn’t want
   steaks and ice cream and cigars which I did
   want, and
   shaving cream, new razorblades, the latest copy of the
   New Yorker.
   what greater immortality than Heaven in Hell,
   and I continued to enjoy it until they
   threw me out on the streets
   back to my typewriter,
   innocent, lazy, frightened and mortal
   again.
   notes upon the flaxen aspect:
   a John F. Kennedy flower knocks upon my door and is
   shot through the neck;
   the gladiolas gather by the dozens around the tip of
   India
   dripping into Ceylon;
   dozens of oysters read Germaine Greer.
   meanwhile, I itch from the slush of the Philippines
   to the eye of the minnow
   the minnow being eaten by the cumulative dreams of
   Simon Bolivar. O,
   freedom from the limitation of angular distance would be