passing over my own Grand Canyon
   on schedule
   no seat belt
   no stewardess and
   no lost luggage.
   they arrived in time
   I like to think about writers like James Joyce
   Hemingway, Ambrose Bierce, Faulkner, Sherwood
   Anderson, Jeffers, D.H. Lawrence, A. Huxley,
   John Fante, Gorki, Turgenev, Dostoevsky, Saroyan,
   Villon, even Sinclair Lewis, and Hamsun, even T.S.
   Eliot and Auden, William Carlos Williams and
   Stephen Spender and gutsy Ezra Pound.
   they taught me so many things that my parents
   never taught me, and
   I also like to think of Carson McCullers
   with her Sad Cafe and Golden Eye.
   she too taught me much that my parents
   never knew.
   I liked to read the hardcover library books
   in their simple library bindings
   blue and green and brown and light red
   I liked the older librarians (male and female)
   who stared seriously at one
   if you coughed or laughed too loudly,
   and even though they looked like my parents
   there was no real resemblance.
   now I no longer read those authors I once read
   with such pleasure,
   but it’s good to think about them,
   and I also
   like to look again at photographs of Hart Crane and
   Caresse Crosby at Chantilly, 1929
   or at photographs of D.H. Lawrence and Frieda
   sunning at Le Moulin, 1928.
   I like to see André Malraux in his flying outfit
   with a kitten on his chest and
   I like photos of Artaud in the madhouse
   Picasso at the beach with his strong legs
   and his hairless head, and then there’s
   D.H. Lawrence milking that cow
   and Aldous at Saltwood Castle, Kent, August
   1963.
   I like to think about these people
   they taught me so many things that I
   never dreamed of before.
   and they taught me well,
   very well
   when it was so much needed
   they showed me so many things
   that I never knew were possible.
   those friends
   deep in my blood
   who
   when there was no chance
   gave me one.
   odd
   some nights
   like this night
   seem to crawl down the back of one’s
   neck and settle at the base of the skull,
   stay there
   like that
   like this.
   it is probably a little prelude to
   death,
   a warm-up.
   I accept.
   then the mind becomes like a
   movie:
   I watch Dostoevsky in a small room
   and he is drinking a glass of
   milk.
   it is not a long movie:
   he puts the glass down and it
   ends.
   then I am back
   here.
   an air purifier
   makes its soft sound behind me.
   I smoke too much, the whole room
   often turns blue
   so now my wife has put in the
   air purifier.
   now the night has left the back
   of my skull.
   I lean back in the swivel
   chair
   pick up a bottle opener shaped
   like a horse.
   it’s like I’m holding the whole world
   here
   shaped like a horse.
   I put the world down,
   open a paper clip and begin to clean
   my fingernails.
   waiting on death can be perfectly
   peaceful.
   an interlude
   it was on Western Avenue
   last night
   about 7:30 p.m.
   I was walking south
   toward Sunset
   and on the 2nd floor of
   a motel across the street
   in the apartment in front
   the lights were on
   and there was this young man
   he must have weighed 400 pounds
   he looked 7 feet tall
   and 4 feet wide
   as he reached over
   and rather lazily punched
   a naked woman in the face.
   another woman jumped up
   (this woman was fully clothed)
   and he gave her a whack across
   the back of the head before he
   turned and punched the naked one
   in the face again.
   there was no screaming and
   he seemed almost bored by it all.
   then he walked over to the window
   and opened it.
   he had what looked like
   a small roasted chicken in his
   hand.
   he put it to his mouth
   bit nearly half of it away
   and began chewing.
   he chewed for a moment or
   two
   then spit the bones carefully
   out the window
   (I could hear them
   fall on the
   sidewalk).
   good god jesus christ almighty,
   have mercy on us all!
   then he looked down at me
   and smiled
   as I quickly moved away
   ducking my head down
   into the night.
   anonymity
   I never got to where I was
   driving that night after
   I exhaled two 15’s on the breath
   meter.
   they put the cuffs
   on me
   and I climbed into the back seat
   of their squad car
   for a ride to the drunk tank at
   150 N. Los Angeles Street,
   Parker Center.
   “what’s your occupation?”
   the one not driving asked
   me.
   “I’m a writer,” I answered.
   “you sure don’t look like a
   writer to me,” said the
   cop.
   “oh, I’m famous,” I
   said.
   “I never heard of you,”
   he said.
   “I never heard of you either,”
   I replied.
   they parked, got me out and
   walked me up the ramp.
   “you sure don’t look like a
   writer,” the cop said
   again.
   inside they took the cuffs
   off.
   I guess they were right:
   I wasn’t famous
   and they weren’t sure
   what a writer should
   look like.
   but I knew what cops
   looked like.
   these were cops
   and they were famous
   and looked the same
   all over the
   world.
   in a crowded drunk tank
   everything was as per usual:
   one toilet without a lid
   and one pay
   telephone, both
   being used.
   what’s it all mean?
   o yes Huxley motorcaded through southern Europe
   and wrote a marvelous book about it and Lawrence
   made that great painting of a man pissing
   and Huxley did the peyote thing and Frieda really
   gave Lawrence a base and Huxley said, “it’s up here!”
   touching his head and Lawrence said, “it’s down here!”
   touching his gut.
   Huxley went blind you know and Lawrence had a
   sixth sense when it came
					     					 			r />
   to animals and
   sometimes I think of Lawrence sometimes I think of
   Huxley and sometimes I think of Charo with all that
   hair on her head so chi-chi sexy and
   then sometimes I think of 2 Mexican boys punching it
   out down at the Olympic auditorium o yes
   we’ve got a world full of dreams and sometimes
   when I can’t sleep
   and my mind won’t think of anything at all then I
   spend the night
   looking up at the dark ceiling.
   one-to-five
   I know horse racing.
   I was there when Porterhouse beat Swaps and
   that’s a while back and
   I’ve seen some more since.
   so there I was in the stands
   when the 8th race opened with a one-to-2 favorite on
   the program.
   “a lock,” the boys liked to call it
   but the boys all had rundown heels on their
   shoes.
   the favorite was a horse they fondly called
   Big Cat. actually its name was Cougar II.
   he had beaten the same horses while carrying high
   weight
   had beaten them easily
   and now in this race
   each horse was to carry 126 pounds.
   Cougar read one-to-2 on the program and one-to-5 on
   the board.
   they applauded him as he walked in the post parade.
   I put a deuce on the 2nd favorite who read
   8-to-one and waited on the
   race.
   it was a mile-and-one-half on the grass.
   the gate opened and they came down the hill with
   Big Cat laying up near the pace—3rd or 4th—
   he looked in good position until after they
   went down the backstretch and got near the final curve.
   Big Cat began falling back.
   what the hell was Pincay doing?
   cries went up from the stands:
   “he isn’t going to make it!”
   “my god, he isn’t going to make it!”
   then Big Cat seemed to come on again
   he had the only red silks in the race
   he was very visible out there.
   maybe Pincay knew what he was doing:
   he was the #1 jock on the #1
   horse
   but by then
   Big Spruce
   (at 13-to-one off a morning line of 6)
   had run past the early pace setters and
   was opening up
   12 lengths
   halfway down the stretch.
   no chance for Big Cat.
   Big Spruce won
   easily
   while Big Cat
   had to wait out the photo for
   3rd money.
   I checked the total on Big Cat off the tote:
   over one-half million dollars.
   Pincay got sick and scratched out of the
   9th race.
   Eddie Arcaro
   who carried one of the meanest whips in racing
   and had ridden them all
   once said:
   “there’s no such thing as a sure thing.”
   (as the history of the world will tell you—
   the easier it looks
   the harder it gets).
   Big Cat lost.
   nobody applauded his walk back to the
   barn.
   in this world
   you just can’t lose at
   one-to-5
   anyhow
   not with grace
   no matter how many
   you’ve won before
   that
   especially not in
   America
   nor in Paris or
   Spain
   nor in Munich or
   Japan
   nor anywhere else where
   humans
   dwell.
   insanity
   sometimes there’s a crazy one in the street.
   he lifts his feet carefully as he walks.
   he ponders the mystery
   of his own anus.
   while the American dollar collapses
   against the German mark
   he’s thinking of Bette Davis and her old movies.
   it’s good to bring thought to bear on things
   arcane and forbidden.
   if only we were crazy enough
   to be willing to ignore our
   mechanical and static perceptions
   we’d know that a half-filled coffee cup
   holds more secrets
   than, say,
   the Grand Canyon.
   sometimes there’s a crazy one walking
   in the street.
   he slips past
   walks with a black crow on his shoulder
   is not worried about alarm clocks or
   approval.
   however, almost everybody else is sane, knows the
   answers to all the unanswerable questions.
   we can park our automobiles
   carve a turkey with style and
   can laugh at every feeble joke.
   the crazy ones only laugh when there is
   no reason to
   laugh.
   in our world
   the sane are too numerous,
   too submissive.
   we are instructed to live lives of boredom.
   no matter what we are doing—
   screwing or eating or playing or
   talking or climbing mountains or
   taking baths or flying to India
   we are numbed,
   sadly sane.
   when you see a crazy one walking
   in the street
   honor him but
   leave him alone.
   stand out of the way.
   there’s no luck like that luck
   nothing else so perfect in the world
   let him walk untouched
   remember that Christ also was insane.
   farewell my lovely
   she keeps coming back
   with different men
   I am introduced
   and I feel sorry for them
   sitting there in their pants and
   shirts and stockings and shoes
   looking out of their heads with
   their eyes
   hearing with their ears
   speaking out of their mouths
   I feel sorry for them
   for she is finally going to do to
   them
   just what she did to me.
   she hates men but captures and tortures them
   with her beautiful, youthful body.
   the last time she was over
   she followed me
   into the kitchen
   leaving him sitting alone out there.
   “I miss you,” she said, “I really
   do. I mean it.”
   I knew what she missed. she missed
   having a man securely caught in her
   net. I stepped around her with
   the drinks and walked back into the
   other room.
   she watched me with her eyes
   as she continued to talk.
   she had watched me go crazy with the
   agony of losing her
   so many times before.
   now she knew I was free
   and when the victim escapes the
   executioner
   it is hell for the
   executioner.
   she felt it. she said to him,
   “let’s get out of here.”
   they left and began to walk away
   toward the street.
   I noticed she had left her coat, the
   one with the dark
   hood.
   “hey!” I shouted, “you left your
   coat!”
   she ran back to the door:
   “oh, thank you!” she said
   taking the coat with  
					     					 			one
   hand
   and with the other hand
   behind the door
   where he couldn’t see
   she gave me the
   finger,
   vigorously.
   I closed the door.
   it hadn’t been too
   bad
   they hadn’t used up much of
   my time
   at most
   maybe fifteen
   minutes.
   comments upon my last book of poesy:
   you’re better than ever.
   you’ve sold out.
   you suck.
   my mother hates you.
   you’re rich.
   you’re the best writer in the English language.
   can I come see you?
   I write just like you do, only better.
   why do you drive a BMW?
   why don’t you give more readings?
   can you still get it up?
   do you know Allen Ginsberg?
   what do you think of Henry Miller?
   will you write a foreword to my next book?
   I enclose a photograph of Céline.
   I enclose my grandfather’s pocket watch.
   the enclosed jacket was knitted by my wife in Bavarian style.
   have you been drunk with Mickey Rourke?
   I am a young girl 19 years old and I will come and clean your house.
   you are a stinking bastard to tell people that Shakespeare is not readable.
   what do you think of Norman Mailer?
   why do you steal from Hemingway?
   why do you knock Tolstoy?
   I’m doing hard time and when I get out I’m coming to see you.
   I think you suck ass.
   you’ve saved my god-damned life.
   why do you hate women?
   I love you.
   I read your poems at parties.
   did all those things really happen to you?
   why do you drink?
   I saw you at the racetrack but I didn’t bother you.