sometimes you die
   sometimes you don’t.
   as I drive past
   the young man on the bus stop bench
   I am comfortable in my automobile
   I have money in two different banks
   I own my own home
   but he reminds me of my young self
   and I want to help him
   but I don’t know what to do.
   today when I drove past again
   he was gone
   I suppose finally the world wasn’t
   pleased with him being there.
   the bench still sits there on the corner
   advertising something.
   computer class
   sitting in a computer class,
   first of two three-hour
   sessions.
   I am being sucked into the New
   Age.
   my wife is there too.
   there are three others.
   the computer-whiz-boy
   whisks us through
   our paces.
   we each sit in front of
   a computer
   working our mouse,
   not wanting to be
   left out,
   not wanting to seem
   dumb,
   not wanting to be
   found out.
   there is a desperation
   in that room.
   and besides, we’ve
   paid for all
   this.
   “what!” says a nervous
   blonde lady,
   “how can I take notes?
   I can’t keep up!”
   “take mental
   notes,” says
   the computer-whiz-
   boy.
   he smiles.
   the night envelops us as
   we work
   on.
   once an impulse struck
   me,
   to leap up and
   scream:
   “shit! that’s enough!
   I can’t handle
   this!”
   what stopped me
   was that I knew that
   it was all simple
   enough,
   it was only a matter
   of learning the
   routine.
   the class actually
   rolled on for an
   extra hour.
   at one rest break
   everybody started
   talking about
   old television
   programs which
   pissed
   me
   off
   but that finally
   abated.
   afterwards,
   driving away in the
   car
   my wife asked me,
   “well, did you
   learn anything?”
   “god, I don’t know,”
   I answered.
   “you hungry?” she
   asked.
   “yeah,” I said,
   “we’ll eat
   out.”
   and I drove toward
   the Chinese
   place
   and all about us
   in traffic
   were people who
   knew about
   computers or who
   would soon know about
   computers
   and some who were
   already
   computed
   themselves.
   control panel.
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   how ya gonna keep us
   down on the
   farm
   if
   we can’t find it on the
   menu?
   image
   he sits in the chair across from me.
   “you look healthy,” he says in a voice that is
   almost disappointed.
   “I’ve given up beer and I drink only
   3 bottles of white German wine each night,”
   I tell him.
   “are you going to let your readers know
   you’ve reformed?” he
   asks. he walks to the refrigerator and opens
   the door. “all these vitamins!”
   “thiamine-hcl,” I say, “b-2, choline, b-6, folic
   acid, zinc, e, b-12, niacin, calcium magnesium,
   a-e complex, papa…and 3 bottles of white
   German wine each night.”
   “what’s this stuff in the jars on the sink?” he
   asks.
   “herbs,” I tell him, “goldenseal, sweet basil, alfalfa
   mind, mu, lemongrass, rose hips, papaya, gotu kola, clover,
   comfrey, fenugreek, sassafras and chamomile…and I drink only
   spring water, mineral water and my 3 bottles of white
   German
   wine.”
   “are you going to tell your readers
   about all this?”
   he asks again.
   “should I tell them?” I ask.
   “should I tell them that I no longer
   eat anything that walks on
   4 legs?”
   “that’s what I mean,” he says. “people think you are a
   tough guy!”
   “oh?” I say.
   “and what about your image?” he asks. “people don’t expect
   you to live like this.”
   “I know,” I say, “I’ve lost my beer-gut. I’ve come down
   from a size 44 to a size 38, and I’ve lost 31 pounds.”
   “I mean,” he continues, “we all thought you were a man
   walking carelessly and bravely to his death, foolishly but
   with style, like Don Quixote and the windmills…all that.”
   “we just won’t tell anybody,” I answer, “and maybe
   we can save my
   image or at least prolong it.”
   “you’ll be turning to God next,” he says.
   “my god,” I say, “is those 3 bottles of white German wine.”
   “I’m disappointed in you,” he says.
   “I still fuck,” I reply, “and I still play the horses and I
   go to the boxing matches and I still love my daughter
   and I even love my present girlfriend. not that much has
   changed.”
   “all right,” he says, “we’ll keep it quiet.
   can you give me a ride back to my place?
   my car is in the shop.”
   “all right,” I say. “I also still drive my car.”
   I lock the door and we walk up the street to where
   I’m parked now.
   the crunch (2)
   too much
   too little
   or too late
   too fat
   too thin
   or too bad
   laughter or
   tears
   or immaculate
   unconcern
   haters
   lovers
   armies running through streets of pain
   waving wine bottles
   bayoneting and fucking everyone
   or an old guy in a cheap quiet room
   with a photograph of Marilyn Monroe.
   there is a loneliness in this world so great
   that you can see it in the slow movement of
   a clock’s hands.
   there is a loneliness in this world so great
   that you can see it in blinking neon
   in Vegas, in Baltimore, in Munich.
   people are tired
   strafed by life
   mutilated either by love or no
   love.
   we don’t need new governments
   new revolutions
   we don’t need new men
   new women
   we don’t need n 
					     					 			ew ways
   we just need to care.
   people are not good to each other
   one on one.
   people are just not good to each other.
   we are afraid.
   we think that hatred signifies
   strength.
   that punishment is
   love.
   what we need is less false education
   what we need are fewer rules
   fewer police
   and more good teachers.
   we forget the terror of one person
   aching in one room
   alone
   unkissed
   untouched
   cut off
   watering a plant alone
   without a telephone that would never
   ring
   anyway.
   people are not good to each other
   people are not good to each other
   people are not good to each other
   and the beads swing and the clouds obscure
   and dogs piss upon rose bushes
   the killer beheads the child like taking a bite
   out of an ice cream cone
   while the ocean comes in and goes out
   in and out
   in the thrall of a senseless moon.
   and people are not good to each other.
   I’ll send you a postcard
   this guy says that for $845 I can
   go to Europe and
   see all the
   plays and
   hear all the
   operas.
   there’s drinks on
   the plane across
   and good conversation
   with knowledgeable
   people.
   I get one free
   meal a day and
   guided tours to
   places of inter-
   est.
   there’s even a pass
   to a ski resort
   and a chauffeur
   is available
   plus
   free maps and
   hand-rolled
   cigars. it lasts
   2 weeks.
   they don’t
   say
   anything about
   getting fucked
   but you get the
   idea that every-
   body who goes
   will be.
   bravo!
   they applaud each work
   without fail or thought
   and four or five voices respond
   with the same ringing
   “BRAVO!” BRAVO!”
   as if they had heard a fresh
   and vital creative
   breakthrough.
   where have the audiences gone
   that were able to select and
   discriminate?
   now the thought in the collective mind of
   the audience is:
   we understand
   we know
   therefore we
   respond
   as one.
   and afterwards
   at the wheels of their automobiles
   they dash out of the underground
   parking lot
   more rude and crass
   than any boxing match crowd
   than any horse race crowd
   cutting off others
   swerving
   cursing.
   the March to the Gallows, indeed
   Pictures at an Exhibition, of course
   the Bolero, yes
   The Afternoon of a Faun?
   honking
   zooming toward the freeways
   BRAVO west L.A.
   BRAVO Westwood Village
   BRAVO the Hollywood Hills
   BRAVO Beverly Hills.
   Symphonie Pathétique, indeed.
   downtown
   nobody goes downtown anymore
   the plants and trees have been cut away around
   Pershing Square
   the grass is brown
   and the street preachers are not as good
   as they used to be
   and down on Broadway
   the Latinos stand in long colorful lines
   waiting to see Latino action movies.
   I walk down to Clifton’s cafeteria
   it’s still there
   the waterfall is still there
   the few white faces are old and poor
   dignified
   dressed in 1950s clothing
   sitting at small tables on the first
   floor.
   I take my food upstairs to the
   third floor—
   all Latinos at the tables there
   faces more tired than hostile
   the men at rest from their factory jobs
   their once beautiful wives now
   heavy and satisfied
   the men wanting badly to go out and raise hell
   but now the money is needed for
   clothing, tires, toys, TV sets
   children’s shoes, the rent.
   I finish eating
   walk down to the first floor and out,
   and nearby is a penny arcade.
   I remember it from the 1940s.
   I walk in.
   it is full of young Latinos and Blacks
   between the ages of six and
   fifteen
   and they shoot machine guns
   play mechanical soccer
   and the piped-in salsa music is very
   loud.
   they fly spacecraft
   test their strength
   fight in the ring
   have horse races
   auto races
   but none of them want their fortunes told.
   I lean against a wall and
   watch them.
   I go outside again.
   I walk down and across from the Herald-Examiner
   building
   where my car is parked.
   I get in. then I drive away.
   it’s Sunday. and it’s true
   like they say: the old gang never
   goes downtown anymore.
   the blue pigeon
   getting a car wash today
   about 1:30 p.m.
   I saw this blue pigeon
   come floating through the
   air awkwardly
   it hit the asphalt
   wings spread wide
   and lay there shivering
   one eye open
   it was dying
   and I walked away
   and stood by my car
   where
   the fellows were wiping
   the windows
   and then a Camaro
   came fast and
   got the pigeon.
   turned it into a red stain
   and one of the fellows
   said, “Christ.”
   I couldn’t have expressed
   it
   any better.
   I tipped him a quarter
   and drove off
   east on Hollywood Boulevard
   and then I
   took a right at
   Vermont.
   combat primer
   they called Céline a Nazi
   they called Pound a fascist
   they called Hamsun a Nazi and a fascist.
   they put Dostoevsky in front of a firing
   squad
   and they shot Lorca
   gave Hemingway electric shock treatments
   (and you know he shot himself)
   and they ran Villon out of town (Paris)
   and Mayakovsky
   disillusioned with the regime
   and after a lovers’ quarrel,
   well,
   he shot himself too.
   Chatterton took rat poison
   and it worked.
   and some say Malcolm Lowry died
   choking on his own vomit
   while drunk.
   Crane went the way of the boat
   propellor or the sharks.
   Harry Crosby’s sun was black.
    
					     					 			Berryman preferred the bridge.
   Plath didn’t light the oven.
   Seneca cut his wrists in the
   bathtub (it’s best that way:
   in warm water).
   Thomas and Behan drank themselves
   to death and
   there are many others.
   and you want to be a
   writer?
   it’s that kind of war:
   creation kills,
   many go mad,
   some lose their way and
   can’t do it
   anymore.
   a few make it to old age.
   a few make money.
   some starve (like Vallejo).
   it’s that kind of war:
   casualties everywhere.
   all right, go ahead
   do it
   but when they sandbag you
   from the blind side
   don’t come to me with your
   regrets.
   now I’m going to smoke a cigarette
   in the bathtub
   and then I’m going to
   sleep.
   thanks for that
   at this time
   I no longer have to work
   the nightclubs and the universities
   the bookstores
   for tiny checks.
   I no longer have to tell the freshman English class
   at the U. of Nebraska (Omaha)
   while sitting with my hangover at 11 a.m.
   at a brown elevated desk
   why I did it
   how I did it
   and what they might do in order to do
   it too.
   but I didn’t mind the plane flights back home
   with the businessmen
   all of us drinking doubles
   and trying not to look out past the wing
   trying to relax
   each happy that we were not on skid row
   knowing we each had a certain talent
   (so far)
   which had saved us from that
   (so far).
   I may have to do it again some day but
   right now I am where I belong:
   flying over my own Mississippi River