assholes! you should have burned the whole town
   down! I’m sick of it!”
   “you just don’t understand
   the poems…”
   “I do, they are rhymers, full of
   platitudes. you write bad
   poetry.”
   “look muthafucka, I been on the radio, I been printed in the L.A.
   Times!”
   “oh?”
   “well, that happened to
   you?”
   “no.”
   “o.k., muthafucka, you ain’t seen the last of
   me!”
   I suppose I haven’t. and it’s useless to tell you that I am not
   anti-black
   because
   somehow
   that’s when the whole subject becomes
   sickening.
   millionaires
   you
   no faces
   no faces
   at all
   laughing at nothing—
   let me tell you
   I have drunk in skidrow rooms with
   imbecile winos
   whose cause was better
   whose eyes still held some light
   whose voices retained some sensibility,
   and when the morning came
   we were sick but not ill,
   poor but not deluded,
   and we stretched in our beds and rose
   in the late afternoons
   like millionaires.
   poetry
   the bus driver grins while sweating in the heat
   of the plateglass windshield,
   he doesn’t have a chance—
   only Hollywood Boulevard, an impossible sun
   and an impossible timetable,
   there are so many without a chance.
   I realize that there is very little chance
   for any of
   us. poetry won’t save us or a job won’t save us,
   a good job or a bad
   job.
   we take a little bit and hang onto that until it is
   gone.
   gongs ring, dances begin, there are holidays and
   celebrations…
   we try to cheat the bad dream…
   poetry, you whore, who will go to any man and then
   leave him…
   the bus driver has Hollywood Boulevard
   I sit next to a fat lady who lays her dead thigh
   against me.
   there is a tiny roll of sweat behind one of the bus driver’s
   ears. he is ashamed to brush it
   away.
   the people look ahead or read or look out their
   windows.
   the tiny roll of sweat begins to roll
   it rolls along behind the ear
   then down the neck,
   then it’s
   gone.
   Vine street, says the bus driver,
   this is Vine
   street.
   he’s right, at last. what a marvelous thing.
   I get off at Vine Street. I need a drink or something
   to eat. I don’t care about the bus
   anymore. it is a
   rejected poem. I don’t need it
   anymore.
   there will be more busses.
   I decide upon something to eat
   with a drink as
   openers.
   I walk out of the dark and into the dark
   and sit down and
   wait.
   the painter
   he came up on the porch
   with a grinning subnormal type
   and they stood there
   drunk on wine.
   the painter had his coat wrapped around something,
   then pulled the coat away—
   it was a policeman’s helmet
   complete with badge.
   “gimme 20 bucks for this,” he said.
   “fuck off, man,” I said, “what do I want with a
   cop’s derby?”
   “ten bucks,” he said.
   “did you kill him?”
   “5 bucks…”
   “what happened to that 6 grand you made
   at your art show last month?”
   “I drank it. all in the same bar.”
   “and I never got a beer,” I said.
   “2 bucks…”
   “did you kill him?”
   “we ganged him, punched him around a bit…”
   “that’s chickenshit. I don’t want the headpiece.”
   “we’re 18 cents short of a bottle, man…”
   I gave the painter 35 cents
   keeping the chain on the door, slipping it to him
   with my fingers. he lived with his mother,
   beat his girlfriend regularly
   and really didn’t paint that
   well. but I suppose a lot of obnoxious characters
   work their way into
   immortality.
   I’m working on it myself.
   the inquisitor
   in the bathtub rereading Céline’s
   Journey to the End of the Night
   the phone rings
   and I get out
   grab a towel.
   some guy from SMART SET,
   he wants to know what’s in my mailbox
   how my life has been
   going.
   I tell him there isn’t anything in the
   mailbox or the
   life.
   he thinks that I’m holding
   back. I hope that
   I am.
   my friend william
   my friend William is a fortunate man:
   he lacks the imagination to suffer
   he kept his first job
   his first wife
   can drive a car 50,000 miles
   without a brake job
   he dances like a swan
   and has the prettiest blankest eyes
   this side of El Paso
   his garden is a paradise
   the heels of his shoes are always level
   and his handshake is firm
   people love him
   when my friend William dies
   it will hardly be from madness or cancer
   he’ll walk right past the devil
   and into heaven
   you’ll see him at the party tonight
   grinning
   over his martini
   blissful and delightful
   as some guy
   fucks his wife in the
   bathroom.
   300 poems
   look, he said, I’ve written
   300 poems in 2
   months,
   and he handed me the
   stack and I
   thought
   oo oo.
   a young girl
   walked up
   and handed him a plate of
   corn and meat
   in his cottage
   by the beach
   and the sea rolled in
   and I turned the
   white
   pages.
   I’ve been drinking
   he said
   and writing
   and the young girl said
   is there anything else
   I can get
   you?
   he was rich and I was poor
   and the sea rolled in
   and I turned the
   white
   pages.
   what do you think?
   he asked?
   and I said,
   well, some of
   these…
   but I didn’t
   finish.
   later I walked
   outside. I walked down
   the sand to where the sand got
   wet and I looked at the water and
   the moon
   and then I turned around
   and I walked up to the
   boardwalk and I thought,
   oo oo.
   lifting weights at 2 a.m.
   queers do this
    
					     					 			or is it that you’re
   afraid to die?
   biceps, triceps, forceps,
   what are you going to do
   with muscles?
   well, muscles please the ladies
   and keep the bullies
   at bay—
   so
   what?
   is it worth it?
   is it worth the collected works
   of Balzac?
   or a 3 week vacation
   in Spain?
   or, is it another way of
   suffering?
   if you got paid to do it,
   you’d hate it.
   if a man got paid to make love,
   he’d hate it.
   still, one needs the
   exercise—
   this writing game:
   only the brain and soul get
   worked-out.
   quit your bitching and
   do it.
   while other people are
   sleeping
   you’re lifting a mountain
   with rivers of poems
   running off.
   reality
   my little famous bleeding elbows
   my knotty knees (especially) and
   even my balls
   hairy and wasted.
   these blue evenings of walking past buildings
   where Jews pray beautifully about seasons I
   know nothing of
   and would leave me alone
   with the roaches and ants climbing my dying body
   in some place
   too real to touch.
   earthquake
   Americans don’t know what tragedy is—
   a little 6.5 earthquake can set them to chattering
   like monkeys—
   a piece of chinaware broken,
   the Union Rescue Mission falls down—
   6 a.m.
   they sit in their cars
   they’re all driving around—
   where are they going?
   a little excitement has broken into their
   canned lives
   stranger stands next to stranger
   chattering gibberish fear
   anxious fear
   anxious laughter…
   my baby, my flowerpots, my ceiling
   my bank account
   this is just a tickler
   a feather
   and they can’t bear it…
   suppose they bombed the city
   as other cities have been bombed
   not with an a-bomb
   but with ordinary blockbusters
   day after day,
   every day
   as has happened
   in other cities of the world?
   if the rest of the world could see you today
   their laughter would bring the sun to its knees
   and even the flowers would leap from the ground
   like bulldogs
   and chase you away to where you belong
   wherever that is,
   and who cares where it is
   as long as it’s somewhere away from
   here.
   the good life at o’hare airport
   3 hour wait at the airport in
   Chicago, surrounded by killers
   I found a table alone
   and had a scotch and water
   when 4 preachers sat down,
   and look here, said one of them,
   looking at a newspaper,
   here’s a guy drunk, ran through a
   wall, killed one person, injured 4.
   if I was him, said another,
   I’d commit suicide.
   I ordered a large beer
   and sat there reading my own novel.
   look here, said the one with the paper,
   here’s a guy, no, two guys,
   tried to hijack a liquor truck,
   they were so dumb they didn’t even know
   it was only carrying wine. didn’t even
   break the seal. bound the driver
   and then stopped for coffee. the driver
   leaned on the horn and a cop car came by
   and that was it. they went in and got
   those 2 guys.
   any 2 guys that dumb, said another,
   they sure have it coming.
   look sweetie, said another to the waitress,
   we don’t want anything to drink, we don’t drink,
   but we could sure use 4
   coffees, and haven’t I seen you someplace before,
   hee hee hee?
   give me another beer, I told the
   waitress. I drink, and I’ve never seen you anyplace
   before.
   the waitress came back with 4 cups of coffee
   and the beer, and I sat there reading my own novel
   as the 4 preachers sat there
   whirling their spoons around their cups,
   clink clink clink
   and I thought, this isn’t a bad novel
   this isn’t a bad novel
   at all, but the next one is going to be
   better, and I lifted my old beer and finished it,
   and then drank some of the new
   one, and clink clink clink
   went the spoons against the cups
   and one of the preachers coughed
   and everybody was unhappy but
   me.
   the golfers
   driving through the park
   I notice men and women playing golf
   driving in their powered carts
   over billiard table lawns,
   they are my age
   but their bodies are fat
   their hair grey
   their faces waffle batter,
   and I remember being startled by my own face
   scarred, and mean as red ants
   looking at me from a department store mirror
   and the eyes mad mad mad
   I drive on and start singing
   making up the sound
   a war chant
   and there is the sun
   and the sun says, good, I know you,
   and the steering wheel is humorous
   and the dashboard laughs,
   see, the whole sky knows
   I have not lied to anything
   even death will have exits
   like a dark theatre.
   I stop at a stop sign and
   as fire burns the trees and the people and the city
   I know that there will be a place to go
   and a way to go
   and nothing need ever be
   lost.
   II
   spider on the wall:
   why do you take
   so long?
   the mockingbird
   the mockingbird had been following the cat
   all summer
   mocking mocking mocking
   teasing and cocksure;
   the cat crawled under rockers on porches
   tail flashing
   and said something angry to the mockingbird
   which I didn’t understand.
   yesterday the cat walked calmly up the driveway
   with the mockingbird alive in its mouth,
   wings fanned, beautiful wings fanned and flopping,
   feathers parted like a woman’s legs,
   and the bird was no longer mocking,
   it was asking, it was praying
   but the cat
   striding down through centuries
   would not listen.
   I saw it crawl under a yellow car
   with the bird
   to bargain it to another place.
   summer was over.
   ha ha ha ha ha, ha ha
   monkey feet
   small and blue
   walking toward you
   as the back of a building falls off
   and an airplane chews the white sky,
   doom is like the handle of a pot,
   it’s there,
   know it,
   have ice in your tea,
 & 
					     					 			nbsp; marry,
   have children, visit your
   dentist,
   do not scream at night
   even if you feel like screaming,
   count ten
   make love to your wife,
   or if your wife isn’t there
   if there isn’t anybody there
   count 20,
   get up and walk to the kitchen
   if you have a kitchen
   and sit there sweating
   at 3 a.m. in the morning
   monkey feet
   small and blue
   walking toward you.
   a fine day and the world looks good
   someday the lion will
   walk in
   he’ll grab an arm
   just above the elbow
   my old arm
   my wrinkled dice-shooting arm
   and
   I’ll scream
   in my bedroom
   I won’t understand at all
   and he’ll be
   too strong for me,
   and people will walk in—
   a wife, a girlfriend, a bastard son,
   a stranger from down the street
   and a
   doctor
   and
   they will
   watch
   and the lion won’t bother them
   yet,
   and then my arm will be
   gone
   the doctor will put the
   stethoscope to my chest
   ask me to cough
   then
   he will turn to the others and
   say
   there’s a chance
   but I think he’s going