Literature at a university in Oregon,
   I’ve been drunk with him and his wife, several times,
   so he teaches me,
   that’s nice.
   99 degrees in Burbank
   and as I sit here
   any number of things are happening,
   mostly unhappy things
   like swearing mechanics with hangovers climbing under cars
   and drunken dentists pulling teeth and cursing
   and bald-headed surgeons making too much of a mess,
   and the editor of Time magazine backing his car out of the
   driveway
   after an argument with his wife;
   it’s 99 degrees in Burbank
   and there’s a jet overhead,
   I don’t think it will bomb me,
   those Asians don’t have enough tax money,
   the only clever Asians are the ones who claim they are
   Supremely Blessed, speak good English,
   grow grey thick beards plus a heavenly smile topped by
   shining eyes and
   charge $4 admit at the Shrine to
   teach placidity and non-ambition
   and screw half the intellectual girls in the city.
   it’s 99 degrees in Burbank
   and those who will survive will survive
   and those who will die will die,
   and most will dry up and look like toads eating hamburger
   sandwiches at noon,
   I don’t know what to do—
   send money and the way,
   be kind to me,
   I like it
   effortless, sweet and easy, remember,
   I never bombed
   anybody, I
   can’t even kill this
   fly.
   happy new year
   I have them timed—
   first the nurse will arrive in her nice
   yellow automobile—4:10 p.m.—
   she always shows me a lot of
   leg—and I always look—
   then think—
   keep your leg, baby.
   then, after that,
   there’s the man who arrives
   and takes his bulldog
   out to crap
   about the time I’m out to mail
   my letters. We test each other,
   never speak—I live without working,
   he works without
   living;
   I can see us some day
   battling on his front lawn—
   he screaming, “you bum!”
   and myself screaming back:
   “lackey! slave!”
   as his bulldog chews my leg
   and the neighbors pelt me
   with stones.
   I guess I better get interested in
   Mexican jumping beans
   and the Rose Bowl
   Parade.
   the shoelace
   a woman, a
   tire that’s flat, a
   disease, a
   desire; fears in front of you,
   fears that hold so still
   you can study them
   like pieces on a
   chessboard…
   it’s not the large things that
   send a man to the
   madhouse. death he’s ready for, or
   murder, incest, robbery, fire, flood…
   no, it’s the continuing series of small tragedies
   that send a man to the
   madhouse…
   not the death of his love
   but a shoelace that snaps
   with no time left…
   the dread of life
   is that swarm of trivialities
   that can kill quicker than cancer
   and which are always there—
   license plates or taxes
   or expired driver’s license,
   or hiring or firing,
   doing it or having it done to you, or
   constipation
   speeding tickets
   rickets or crickets or mice or termites or
   roaches or flies or a
   broken hook on a
   screen, or out of gas
   or too much gas,
   the sink’s stopped-up, the landlord’s drunk,
   the president doesn’t care and the governor’s
   crazy.
   lightswitch broken, mattress like a
   porcupine;
   $105 for a tune-up, carburetor and fuel pump at
   Sears Roebuck;
   and the phone bill’s up and the market’s
   down
   and the toilet chain is
   broken,
   and the light has burned out—
   the hall light, the front light, the back light,
   the inner light; it’s
   darker than hell
   and twice as
   expensive.
   then there’s always crabs and ingrown toenails
   and people who insist they’re
   your friends;
   there’s always that and worse;
   leaky faucet, Christ and Christmas;
   blue salami, 9 day rains,
   50 cent avocados
   and purple
   liverwurst.
   or making it
   as a waitress at Norm’s on the split shift,
   or as an emptier of
   bedpans,
   or as a carwash or a busboy
   or a stealer of old lady’s purses
   leaving them screaming on the sidewalks
   with broken arms at the age of
   80.
   suddenly
   2 red lights in your rear view mirror
   and blood in your
   underwear;
   toothache, and $979 for a bridge
   $300 for a gold
   tooth,
   and China and Russia and America, and
   long hair and short hair and no
   hair, and beards and no
   faces, and plenty of zigzag but no
   pot, except maybe one to piss in and
   the other one around your
   gut.
   with each broken shoelace
   out of one hundred broken shoelaces,
   one man, one woman, one
   thing
   enters a
   madhouse.
   so be careful
   when you
   bend over.
   chilled green
   what is it?
   an old woman, fat, yellow dress,
   torn stockings
   sitting on the curbing
   with a little boy.
   98 degrees at 3 in the afternoon
   it seems
   obscene.
   but look, they are calm,
   almost happy,
   they eat the green jello
   and the red roses shine.
   life
   to be eaten by a hog with
   bad breath
   as the lemons swing in the wind
   yellow and ours.
   III
   lovers everywhere
   clutch like asparagus
   leaves
   american matador
   of course, he still gets his choice
   after the bullfights,
   but like with any other man
   the special one comes along.
   you can feel it in the stomach
   when they get you there,
   and the girl said,
   “It’s either bullfighting or me.”
   he turned on love
   to look at the face of death.
   you can see him at Tijuana
   working close to the horn
   taking chance after
   chance. he’s been gored
   a number of times.
   and you wonder if the thing is
   working at his stomach
   as he fights
   getting him in closer
   than he should
   the sword is pointed
   in the sunlight,
 
					     					 			
   it goes in:
   love.
   i saw an old-fashioned whore today
   at the Thrifty drugstore
   buying a 5th of gin and a 5th of vodka
   she was a dyed blond
   and she was relaxed in a black and white striped dress
   that fell just below knee-length
   and her breasts were large
   and she was a little bit fat
   and the salesgirl who served her showed disgust
   but the whore was used to all that
   and waited for her change
   and for the bottles to be bagged
   and when the whore walked out
   she walked out easily
   and people looked up from their magazines
   and the boys around the newsstand looked
   and the people parking their cars looked
   and I walked behind her
   and I looked
   and she got into a green car
   pooltable green
   lit a cigarette,
   and I’m sure she drove off to someplace
   magic
   where people were always laughing and
   the music was always playing
   and the drinks were good
   and the furniture and rugs were nice
   and the mountains were tall
   and there were 3 German shepherds on the lawn,
   and when she made love you knew it
   and the price was not a lifetime,
   the blue cigarette smoke curling in the black
   ashtray a little wet with beer and mix,
   she’d roll you with the security of a leopard
   getting a deer,
   and you ought to see her in the bathtub
   singing an aria from one of those
   Italian operas.
   poem for barbara, poem for jane, poem for frances, poem for all or any of them
   the fish ate the flower
   and the tombs whistled
   Dixie
   as you told me you didn’t care
   anymore
   old men in the pawnshops of the world
   looked around and killed themselves in my mind
   when you said you
   didn’t care
   anymore
   the day I saw you with your new
   lover
   you and your new lover
   walking down my boulevards
   past the butcher shop
   past the liquor store
   past the real estate
   agency
   ha ha
   suddenly I didn’t care
   anymore
   I went into the store and I bought
   a figurine of a fawn
   a small cactus
   a box of shrimp
   a pair of green gloves
   a paring knife
   some incense
   pepper milk eggs
   a fifth of
   whiskey
   and a roadmap of lower
   Texas
   the clerk put it all in a bag
   it bulged and was heavy and
   at last I knew that I had
   something.
   short order
   I took my girlfriend to your last poetry reading,
   she said.
   yes, yes? I asked.
   she’s young and pretty, she said.
   and? I asked.
   she hated your
   guts.
   then she stretched out on the couch
   and pulled off her
   boots.
   I don’t have very good legs,
   she said.
   all right, I thought, I don’t have very good
   poetry; she doesn’t have very good
   legs.
   scramble two.
   the dwarf
   we’d had our icecream cones
   been scared by a dog
   picked flowers
   held hands in the sunlight.
   my little girl is 6
   and as good a girl as can
   be.
   we walked back to my place
   where two ladies were moving
   out of the apartment
   next door.
   one was a dwarf,
   quite squat
   with short trunk-like
   legs.
   “Hank, what’s wrong with that
   woman?”
   I’m sorry, little lady,
   that my child didn’t know
   that there wasn’t anything
   wrong with you.
   merry christmas
   There I am
   hungover, I’ve just made it in
   and sit next to the mother of my child;
   she sits there old and grey,
   I sit there old and greying…
   there’s a 6 year old daughter,
   it’s Christmas at Edison Grammar School,
   December 17th,
   1 p.m.
   I sit mostly with women.
   ah, there’s a guy, and there’s a guy…
   what’s the matter with those bums?
   no jobs? too
   bad.
   first there’s something…
   they need 5 nominations for the
   P.T.A. board.
   4 old dames nominate each other,
   like sneaky Hitlers.
   nobody wants the 5th nomination…
   “Will everybody in favor of the nominations
   being closed, please Yea in the
   affirmative?”
   there’s a dog in there…somebody
   steps on his
   tail:
   “YEA-IKE!” he goes…
   everybody laughs, the nominations are closed.
   Jesus Christ,
   by a dog…
   o.k., trot them on.
   no wait. the orchestra. tiny little people with
   tiny little violins, most serious little
   people. they are the string section.
   they play “Christmas Songs” under the direction
   of Mr. Plepler and Mr. Mettler.
   Mettler? oh well, it’s not
   very good.
   “Five Little Christmas Bells,” courtesy A.M. & P.M. Kindergarten,
   has been changed to “Rocking The Child.”
   no reason is
   given.
   the dog has been
   kicked out. I am still there
   with hangover.
   next the Kindergartens sing
   “Jingle Bells.” they’ve been taught by
   Mrs. Bowers, Miss Lemon, Miss Lieberman.
   I check my program…
   how much longer?
   I notice that the children are black, white,
   oriental, brown…it’s integration
   but it’s easy, they show us how easy.
   2nd, 3rd, 4th grades…
   “Twelve Days of Christmas,” they hold up paintings,
   take them down; up down, up down, and back to
   the Partridge in the Pear Tree.
   they’ve done it. perfect. even with the
   mistakes. courtesy Mrs. La Brache, Mrs. Bitticks.
   next comes
   “Pine Cones and Holly Berries,” not so
   good.
   now here are the 5th and 6th graders…
   “Santa and the Mouse”…
   it’s garbled, nobody can hear what they are
   saying. it’s under the direction of
   Mr. Doerflinger. and he flings ’em.
   he sits them down and sits right down with them
   and all you can hear is
   Mr. Doerflinger’s beautiful voice.
   Doerflinger seems everywhere. there he is in the center.
   there he is showing his
   buttocks. he likes to leap and run
   about. he sings and sings and gives his 5th and 6th
   graders the minor parts to back his
   singular chorus. I try to force myself to get jealous
   of Doerflinge 
					     					 			r but I
   can’t. I’m very happy that I am not
   Mr. Doerflinger. a woman across the aisle turns to me:
   “He has a beautiful voice,” she says.
   “Yes,” I smile back,
   “he has.”
   “Christmas Tree,” 3rd, 4th, 5th graders.
   then, of course, we have
   “Deck the Halls.”
   courtesy of Mrs. Homes.
   o, my god, it’s the 1st and 2nd graders
   now! I’m nervous as shit.
   I’m sick, I
   don’t know what to
   do. I’ve done time, lain in alleys drunk,
   slept with 50 women, I can’t take
   it…the mother of my child seems
   quite calm. I’m the
   coward…where is she?
   all of a sudden they bring them through the
   back door—
   they’ve been bringing them
   through the front.
   what’s going on?
   there’s my kid, she’s walking
   past. “hi!” I say, “hi!”
   she smiles and puts a finger to her
   lips. “shhh…”
   they file onto the
   platform. 1st and 2nd graders,
   c/o Mr. Garnes, Miss McCormick, Mrs. Nagata, Mrs.
   Samarge. o.k.
   “Too Fat for the Chimney”…
   not too good,
   but she keeps looking at me and grinning,
   singing, waving;
   I smile back, wave, all
   grins…the old jailbird…
   then “Toy Trains.”
   much better. we applaud. they file out in order,