I’d like to renew our relationship.
   do you really stay up all night?
   I can out-drink you.
   you stole it from Sherwood Anderson.
   did you ever meet Ezra?
   I am alone and I think of you every night.
   who the hell do you think you’re fooling?
   my tits aren’t much but I’ve got great legs.
   fuck you, man.
   my wife hates you.
   will you please read the enclosed poems and comment?
   I am going to publish all those letters you wrote me.
   you jack-off motherfuck, you’re not fooling anybody.
   a correction to a lady of poesy:
   “I think all life is a matter of luck—good and bad.” —Diane Wakoski
   any ballplayer can tell you, Diane:
   in games like baseball where luck is just a percentage,
   even
   there it evens
   out—
   dribble one through the shortpatch for a single and your next one
   might be a line drive into the 2nd baseman’s mitt.
   in games unlike baseball
   in games like life
   one good man might survive while another dies
   but this isn’t luck
   this is making a connection
   hitting the ball solidly on the nose.
   (but even the good man making the connection seldom remains the good
   man—he often softens in time and finally
   fails).
   if you consider yourself lucky,
   don’t,
   for whatever you’ve gained you’ve gained by
   doing something a little differently or
   with a little more magic than
   somebody else.
   but when the magic goes or
   lessens, and it usually
   does, and
   when the poetry readings drop off
   and the publishers stop inquiring as to your next
   manuscript, will you then consider your luck
   bad?
   will you then start bitching about
   the unfairness of the game
   like some untalented scribblers (not you)
   who I know?
   see the old ladies in the supermarkets
   angry and lonely
   pushing their carts—
   that they were once given young bodies was not luck
   or that they lost them was not,
   or that they did not build a life on something firmer
   was not.
   I am for the survival of all people until
   natural age takes
   them. but they’ll need something more than luck, and a cunning better than
   poetry.
   it’s hardly luck when the spider takes a fly or bad luck when the fly
   enters the web.
   I could go on
   but I feel by now
   I’ve made the point,
   and as the people come home this evening
   from the war
   and sit at their tables to eat and
   talk, and perhaps later to make
   love
   (if they are not too tired)
   don’t tell them that all life is a matter of luck—
   good and bad.
   they know it’s a matter of
   doing or dying.
   Hitler, Ty Cobb, the man at the vegetable stand—
   they knew it and they know it.
   save the bad luck fairy tale for small
   children. they’ll learn the real story
   soon enough.
   Beethoven conducted his last symphony while totally deaf
   his paintings would not be as valuable
   now
   if he hadn’t
   sliced off his ear
   worn that rag around his head
   and then done it to himself
   among the cornstalks.
   and would that one’s poems be
   so famous if he hadn’t
   faded at 19,
   given it all up to
   go gun running and gold hunting
   in Africa only to
   die of syphilis?
   what about the one who was
   murdered in the road
   by Spanish fascists?
   did that
   give his words more
   meaning?
   or take the one who was a
   national hero
   those iceberg symphonies soaring
   cutting that particular sky
   in half
   he had it all working for him
   then he got worried about old age
   saved his head
   went into his house
   vanished and was never seen
   again.
   such strange behavior, didn’t somebody
   once say?
   that the man should be as durable as his
   art, that’s what they want, they want the
   impossible: creation and creator to be as
   one. this is the dirty trick
   of the ages.
   on the sidewalk and in the sun
   I have seen an old man around town recently
   carrying an enormous pack.
   he uses a walking stick
   and moves up and down the streets
   with this pack strapped to his back.
   I keep seeing him.
   if he’d only throw that pack away, I think,
   he’d have a chance, not much of a chance
   but a chance.
   and he’s in a tough district—east Hollywood.
   they aren’t going to give him a
   dry bone in east Hollywood.
   he is lost. with that pack.
   on the sidewalk and in the sun.
   god almighty, old man, I think, throw away that
   pack.
   then I drive on, thinking of my own
   problems.
   the last time I saw him he was not walking.
   it was ten thirty a.m. on north Bronson and
   hot, very hot, and he sat on a little ledge, bent,
   the pack still strapped to his back.
   I slowed down to look at his face.
   I had seen one or two other men in my life
   with looks on their faces like
   that.
   I speeded up and turned on the
   radio.
   I knew that look.
   I would never see him again.
   what do they want?
   there are times when those eyes inside your
   brain stare back at
   you;
   it is always sudden.
   sometimes when you come in
   and lie down on the bed
   it happens—
   2 eyes that have nothing to do with
   you
   stare back at you from inside your
   brain.
   you sit up
   until they go away.
   or say you scream at a child
   or slap a woman—
   as you walk into the kitchen
   the eyes appear in the back of your brain
   hang there
   as you drink
   water.
   or sometimes you are at peace
   sitting on a park bench
   reading a newspaper—
   here come the
   eyes:
   fat red golden eyes,
   a pair.
   you get up and
   walk
   away.
   or the phone rings and as you answer the
   phone
   the eyes arrive again—
   “yes, of course. no, I’m not doing
   anything. yeh, I feel
   o.k.”
   then you hang up, go to the bathroom and
   throw water on
   your face.
   I would gladly give these eyes to the
   blind or to anybody who
   would take them.
   
					     					 			; o, o, there they are
   again.
   I don’t understand it.
   what do they
   want?
   I hear all the latest hit tunes
   somewhere in whatever neighborhood
   there’s
   some guy
   at 10:30 in the morning
   sunday morning
   monday morning
   any morning
   washing and polishing his
   car
   with the radio on
   LOUD
   so that the entire neighborhood
   is compelled
   to listen to the music
   that he is
   listening to
   but it’s all right
   because we surely don’t
   want him to be bored out
   there;
   it’s going to take him
   hours.
   they’d arrest a drunk or a
   panhandler
   as a
   public nuisance
   but this boy is a
   respectable citizen
   and it’s the respectable
   citizens
   that our culture is built
   upon
   and whom
   the music is written
   for.
   if I murdered him
   no court in America would
   forgive
   my courage.
   meanwhile
   he circles his car
   with the
   hose plus
   a bucket of
   suds.
   he’s safe
   he’s fearless
   look at him there
   almost as handsome as that twittering
   bluejay
   and at least 4 women are
   in love with
   him and he
   deserves them all
   and I hope he
   gets them all.
   it’s the only way we can
   teach that
   son-of-a-bitch what
   suffering is.
   am I the only one who suffers thus?
   took me 45 minutes to find my glasses,
   and I lost a credit card mailed to me today,
   then I sat down at this machine and it wouldn’t
   function,
   took me 15 minutes to put it back in
   order.
   yes, I am constantly losing things and
   the fault is mine,
   I sit in this room and it is a collection of
   trash—
   papers, wine bottle corks, scotch tape,
   magazines, letters, bills, old wrist
   watches and sundry other items
   which rest one upon the
   other:
   paint tubes, toothpicks,
   non-functioning cigarette lighters,
   liquid paper, pens, address labels,
   boxes of light bulbs, a red toy devil,
   a wall socket (for 3 prongs), matchbooks,
   lens cleaning tissue, 25 cent stamps (they
   are now 29 cents and rising),
   bottle openers, band-aids, well, I just don’t
   know what else.
   I suppose the saddest of all are the letters
   from lonely people
   (and look, here are two pocket combs
   resting side by side)
   and then there’s the telephone and
   the answering machine taking the
   messages:
   more lonely people, more frustrated
   people, more eager people,
   more people wanting to come by,
   wanting to talk…
   how can they find TIME to talk?
   I don’t have time to do the simplest
   things.
   in my wallet there is a piece of paper:
   IN CASE OF ACCIDENT OR DEATH,
   PLEASE INFORM, ETC.
   for 3 years now I have been wanting
   to take this piece of paper out of my
   wallet and update it,
   because all the phone numbers and
   addresses except one
   have changed
   yet I haven’t been able to attend to
   this matter.
   also, I know that the spare tire
   in my car needs a bit of
   air.
   but when?
   when will I do it?
   when will I get my teeth cleaned?
   when will I cut my toenails?
   when will I get a haircut?
   there are countless other untended
   matters
   while the IRS and the California Franchise Tax Board
   loom…
   and still there are people who come by here
   and plant themselves upon the couch
   and they seem to have absolutely
   NOTHING to do
   but
   chat away.
   chat, chat, chat about absolutely
   nothing.
   or they want to play GAMES or watch the
   damnedest garbage on TV
   (I’ve been waiting to shine my shoes
   for a year now)
   or they work crossword puzzles
   or tell jokes.
   every time there is a knock at the
   door
   a deathly chill runs up my
   back:
   it will be one of them,
   it is always one of them
   and when they come in and ease
   down on that couch
   I am truly in hell.
   I do all that I can to keep
   them away
   but through one guise or
   another
   or through some affiliation,
   they slip
   through.
   and they are aware of it,
   they are very aware of
   it
   and then they begin…
   my life, at that moment,
   becomes only a process of
   waiting for them to
   leave
   and their life becomes
   a process of staying
   as long as
   possible.
   and one must not hurt
   their feelings
   for they would not
   understand!
   on lighting a cigar
   we ask for no mercy and no
   miracles;
   (if only there were fewer flies around
   as we ponder our imbecilities and losses!)
   I light a cigar, lean back
   remember
   dead friends dead days dead loves;
   so much has gone by for most of us,
   even the young, especially the young
   for they have lost the beginning and have
   the rest of the way to go;
   but isn’t it strange, all I can think of now are
   cucumbers, oranges, junk yards, the
   old Lincoln Heights jail and
   the lost loves that went so hard
   and almost brought us to the edge,
   the faces now without features,
   the love beds forgotten.
   the mind is kind: it retains the
   important things:
   cucumbers
   oranges
   junk yards
   jails.
   I have killed a fly
   that tiny piece of life
   dead like dead love.
   there used to be over 100 of us in that big room
   in that jail
   I was in there many
   times.
   you slept on the floor
   men stepped on your face on the way to piss.
   always a shortage of cigarettes.
   names called out during the night
   (the few lucky ones who were bailed out)
   never you.
   we asked for no mercy or miracles
   and we ask for none
   now;
   we paid our way, laugh if you will,
					     					 			 />
   we walked the only paths there were to walk.
   and when love came to us twice
   and lied to us twice
   we decided to never love again
   that was fair
   fair to us
   and fair to love itself.
   we ask for no mercy or no
   miracles;
   we are strong enough to live
   and to die and to
   kill flies,
   attend the boxing matches, go to the racetrack,
   live on luck and skill,
   get alone, get alone often,
   and if you can’t sleep alone
   be careful of the words you speak in your sleep; and
   ask for no mercy
   no miracles;
   and don’t forget:
   time is meant to be wasted,
   love fails
   and death is useless.
   the cigarette of the sun
   the headless dog snaps,
   the half melon drips, there’s blood under the
   fingernails,
   the yawweed cries and
   Tacitus hops like a frog.
   destitution everywhere,
   the manacled in rusted armor walk through
   crippled dreams,
   one more dead. one more dying. one more to die.
   they lied to themselves and then to us and then to the stinking wind.
   bargain basement heroes erected for elucidation.
   poison music stuffs the brain,
   the roses yell for mercy,
   mouse chases cat,
   elephants carry the gray bad news,
   infinity is split and nothing happens
   and
   one more dead. one more dying. one more to die.
   the engine is stuffed with peat moss.
   the schoolboys eat gravel.
   space mutilates space.
   the pin worms dance with the collared peccary.
   throats are cut like bread.
   flags are covered with custard.
   the knife chases the gun.
   and
   one more
   dead.
   dying.
   to die.
   one more dead
   rose
   dog
   flea
   hyena,
   as the spoon and the feather