after all the threats to do so
   somebody else has committed suicide for me
   at last.
   the nurse stops the wheelchair, breaks a rose from a nearby bush,
   puts it in my hand.
   I don’t even know
   what it is. it might as well be my pecker
   for all the good
   it does.
   bang bang
   absolutely sesamoid
   said the skeleton
   shoving his chalky foot
   upon my desk,
   and that was it,
   bang bang,
   he looked at me,
   and it was my bone body
   and I was what remained,
   and there was a newspaper
   on my desk
   and somebody folded the newspaper
   and I folded,
   I was the newspaper
   under somebody’s arm
   and the sheet of me
   had eyes
   and I saw the skeleton
   watching
   and just before the door closed
   I saw a man who looked
   partly like Napoleon,
   partly like Hitler,
   fighting with my skeleton,
   then the door closed
   and we went down the steps
   and outside
   and I was under
   the arm
   of a fat little man
   who knew nothing
   and I hated him
   for his indifference
   to fact, how I hated him
   as he unfolded me
   in the subway
   and I fell against the back
   of an old woman.
   5 men in black passing my window
   5 men in black passing my window
   it’s Sunday
   they’ve been to church.
   5 men in black passing my window;
   they’re between 40 and 60
   each with a little smile on his face
   like a tarantula.
   they’re without women;
   I am too.
   look at them,
   it’s the way they walk by fives—
   no two together,
   not speaking,
   just the little smiles.
   each has done his horrible thing
   during the week—
   fired a stockboy, stolen from a partner;
   cowardly horrible little men
   passing my window.
   5 men in black with little
   smiles.
   I could machinegun them
   without feeling
   banal
   bury them without a tear:
   death of all these things
   Springtime.
   the poet’s muse
   there was one
   made a thousand dollars
   one day
   in a town no larger than
   El Paso
   jumping taxies between
   universities and ladies’
   clubs.
   hell, you can’t blame him;
   I’ve worked for $16 a week,
   quit, and lived a month on
   that.
   his wife is suing for divorce
   and wants $200 a week
   alimony.
   he has to stay famous and
   keep
   talking.
   I see his work
   everywhere.
   somebody
   god I got the sad blue blues,
   this woman sat there and she
   said
   are you really Charles
   Bukowski?
   and I said
   forget that
   I do not feel good
   I’ve got the sad sads
   all I want to do is
   fuck you
   and she laughed
   she thought I was being
   clever
   and O I just looked up her long slim legs of heaven
   I saw her liver and her quivering intestine
   I saw Christ in there
   jumping to a folk-rock
   all the long lines of starvation within me
   rose
   and I walked over
   and grabbed her on the couch
   ripped her dress up around her face
   and I didn’t care
   rape or the end of the earth
   one more time
   to be there
   anywhere
   real
   yes
   her panties were on the
   floor
   and my cock went in
   my cock my god my cock went in
   I was Charles
   Somebody.
   story and poem
   look, he said, that story,
   everybody knew it was me.
   by god, I said, are you still
   hacking at that?
   I thought you were going to write a
   story exposing me?
   what happened to that?
   you didn’t have to write that
   story about me!
   forget it, I said, it’s not
   important.
   he leaped and slammed the door;
   the glass didn’t break
   but the curtain rod and curtain
   fell.
   I tried to finish a one-act play
   gave up
   and went to bed.
   the phone rang.
   listen, he said, when I came over
   I had no idea I’d act like
   that.
   it’s o.k., I said.
   relax.
   I leaned back to sleep and I
   thought,
   now I’ll probably write a poem about
   him.
   there seems to be no way out, I thought,
   everybody is always angry about the truth
   even though they claim to
   believe in it.
   I slept and wrote the poem
   in the morning.
   and the moon and the stars and the world:
   long walks at
   night—
   that’s what’s good
   for the
   soul:
   peeking into windows
   watching tired
   housewives
   trying to fight
   off
   their beer-maddened
   husbands.
   get the nose
   comfrock, you motherfuck
   get up off your crazy knees
   and I’ll belt you down
   again—
   what’s that?
   you say I eat stem pipes?
   I’ll kill you!
   stop crying. god damn.
   all right, we dumped your car into the sea
   and raped your daughter
   but we are only extending the possibilities of a working
   realism, shut up!, I said
   any man must be ready for anything and
   if he isn’t then he isn’t a
   man a goat a note or a plantleaf,
   you shoulda known the entirety of the trap, asshole,
   love means eventual pain
   victory means eventual defeat
   grace means eventual slovenliness,
   there’s no way
   out…you see, you
   understand?
   hey, Mickey, hold his head up
   want to break his nose with this pipe…
   god damn, I almost forgot the
   nose!
   death is every second, punk.
   the calendar is death. the sheets are death. you put on your
   stockings: death. buttons on your shirt are death.
   lace sportshirts are death. don’t you smell it? temperature is
   death. little girls are death. free coupons are death. carrots are
   death. didn’t you
   know?
   o.k., Mack, we got the nose.
   no, not the balls, too much bleeding.
					     					 			/>   what was he when? oh, yeah, he used to be a cabby
   we snatched him from his cab
   right off Madison, destroyed his home, his car, raped his
   12 year old daughter, it was beautiful, burned his wife with
   gasoline.
   look at his eyes
   begging mercy…
   my landlady and my landlord
   56, she leans
   forward
   in the kitchen
   2:25 a.
   m.
   same red
   sweater
   holes in
   elbows
   cook him something to
   EAT
   he says
   from the
   same red
   face
   3 years ago
   we broke down a tree
   fighting
   after he caught me
   kissing
   her.
   beer by the
   quarts
   we drink
   bad beer
   by the
   quarts
   she gets up
   and
   begins to
   fry
   something
   all night
   we sings songs
   songs from 1925 a.
   d. to
   1939 a.
   d.
   we talk about
   short skirts
   Cadillacs the
   Republican Administration
   the depression
   taxes
   horses
   Oklahoma
   here
   you son of a bitch,
   she says.
   drunk
   I lean forward and
   eat.
   bad night
   Bartenders are human too
   and when he reached for the baseball bat
   the little Italian hit him in the face
   with a bottle
   and several whores screamed.
   I was just coming out
   of the men’s room
   when I saw the bartender
   get off the floor
   and open the cigar box
   to get the gun,
   and I turned around
   and went out back,
   and the Italian
   must have argued poorly
   because I heard the shot
   just as I got
   the car door open.
   I drove down the alley
   and turned East on 7th st.,
   and I hadn’t gone a block
   before a cop pulled me over.
   You trying to get killed?
   he asked. Turn your lights
   on.
   He was a big fat one and he
   kept pushing his helmet
   further and further
   on the back of his head.
   I took the ticket and then
   drove down to Union. I
   parked outside the Reno Hotel
   and went downstairs
   to Harry’s.
   It was quiet there, only
   a big redhead, bigger
   than the cop.
   She called me Honey
   and I ordered 2.
   hogs in the sky
   the territory of the diamond and the territory of the
   cross and the territory of the spider and the territory of
   the butcher
   divided by the territory of you and me
   subtracted from the territory of mathematical
   reality
   multiplied by those tombstones in the
   moonlight
   just going on
   is a greater gut-miracle than the life-death cycle
   itself, I mean
   going on against uselessness—
   that’s different than living,
   say, the way a fly lives;
   the brain gives us enough light to know
   that living is only an artful sacrifice
   at best. at worst, it’s
   hogs in the sky.
   the territory of the darning needle
   the territory of the mustard jar
   the territory of mad dogs and love gone stale
   the territory of you and me
   each evening bent like the point of a thumb tack
   that will no longer stick
   in
   each kiss a hope of returning to the first kiss
   each fuck the same
   each person nailed against diminishing
   returns
   we are slaves to hopes that have run to
   garbage
   as old age
   arrives on schedule.
   the territory of meeting and leaving
   the territory of you and me
   death arrived on schedule on a
   Sunday afternoon, and,
   as always,
   it was easier than we thought
   it would be.
   the white poets
   the white poets usually knock quite early
   and keep knocking and ringing
   ringing and knocking
   even though all the shades are down;
   finally I arise with my hangover
   figuring such persistency
   must mean good fortune, a prize of some
   sort—female or monetary,
   “aw right! aw right!” I shout
   looking for something to cover my ugly
   naked body. sometimes I must vomit first,
   then gargle; the gargle only makes me vomit again.
   I forget it—go to the door—
   “hello?”
   “you Bukowski?”
   “yeh. come in.”
   we sit and look at each other—
   he very vigorous and young—
   latest blooming clothes—
   all colors and silk—
   face like a weasel—
   “you don’t remember me?” he
   asks.
   “no.”
   “I was here before. you were rather short. you didn’t like my
   poems.”
   “there are plenty of reasons for not liking
   poems.”
   “try these.”
   he put them on me. they were flatter than the paper they were typed
   upon. there wasn’t a tick or a
   flare. not a sound. I’d never read
   less.
   “uh,” I said, “uh-uh.”
   “you mean you don’t LIKE
   them?”
   “there’s nothing there—it’s like a pot of evaporated piss.”
   he took the papers, stood up and walked
   around. “look, Bukowski. I’ll put some broads from Malibu on
   you, broads like you’ve never
   seen.”
   “oh yeah, baby?” I asked.
   “yeah, yeah,” he
   said.
   and ran out the
   door.
   his Malibu broads were like his
   poems: they
   never arrived.
   the black poets
   the black poets
   young
   come to my door—
   “you Bukowski?”
   “yeh. come in.”
   they sit and look around at the
   destroyed room
   and at
   me.
   they hand me their poems.
   I read
   them.
   “no,” I say and hand them
   back.
   “you don’t like
   them?”
   “no.”
   “’roi Jones came down to see us at our
   workshop…”
   “I hate,” I say,
   “workshops.”
   “…Leroi Jones, Ray Bradbury, lots of big
   boys…they said this stuff was
   good…”
   “it’s bad poetry, man. they are powdering your
   ass.”
   “there’s this big film-writer too. he started the 
					     					 			 whole
   idea: Watts Writers’ Workshop.”
   “ah, god, don’t you see? they are tickling your