else
   and I was young and mean and
   lean
   and I would never be that way
   again
   as it rushed toward
   us.
   scene from 1940:
   “I knew you were a bad-ass,” he said.
   “you sat in the back of Art class and
   you never said anything.
   then I saw you in that brutal fight
   with the guy with the dirty yellow
   hair.
   I like guys like you, you’re rare, you’re
   raw, you make your own rules!”
   “get your fucking face out of mine!”
   I told him.
   “you see?” he said. “you see?”
   he disgusted me.
   I turned and walked off.
   he had outwitted me:
   praise was the only thing I couldn’t
   handle.
   my big moment
   I was a packer in a factory east of
   Alameda street
   and I was living with a bad-assed
   woman.
   she fucked everybody and anybody
   even me.
   and I didn’t have the sense to
   leave.
   anyhow, I worked all day and we
   drank all night
   and when I arrived every morning
   at Sunbeam Lighting Co.
   I always growled the
   same thing:
   “don’t anybody fuck with me
   I’m not in the mood for it.”
   this one morning
   sitting on the floor in the shop
   there was a large triangle of steel
   with a little hand grip on top of it.
   I didn’t know what it was.
   I’d never seen anything like it before.
   it didn’t matter.
   all the killers and bullies and
   musclemen were trying to lift it.
   it wouldn’t move.
   “hey, Hank, baby!” a worker hollered,
   “try it!”
   “all right,” I said.
   I came around my bench, walked up
   to the steel triangle, stuck my hand into the
   grip and yanked. nothing. it must have
   weighed at least 300 pounds.
   I walked back to my bench.
   “whatsa matter, Hank baby?”
   “been beatin’ your meat, Hank baby?”
   “ah shit,” I said, “for CHRIST’S SAKE!”
   I walked back around my bench and swooped
   down on the
   object, grabbed it, lifted it a good foot,
   put it down and went back to my bench
   and continued packing a light fixture into a
   box.
   “jesus! did you see that, man?”
   “I saw it! he did it!”
   “let me lift that son of a bitch!”
   he couldn’t do it. they all came and
   tried again. the heavy steel object wouldn’t
   move.
   they went back to their various jobs.
   at about noon a truck came in
   with a crane in the back. the
   crane reached down, grabbed the steel triangle
   and lifted it, with much grinding, into
   the truck.
   for about a week after that the
   blacks and Mexicans who had
   never spoken to me
   tried to make friends.
   I was looked upon with much new
   respect.
   then not long after that
   everybody seemed to forget
   and
   I began to get verbally
   sliced again
   challenged again
   mocked again
   it was the same old
   bullshit.
   they knew what I knew:
   that I’d never be able to do anything
   like that again.
   daylight saving time
   I came in and all the timecards were pulled so I had to go to Spindle in personnel and he said, what happened, Chinaski? and I said, hell, all the timecards are pulled, I couldn’t punch in, and he said, you’re an hour late, and I said, hell, I have 6 p.m. right here on my watch, and he said, it’s Daylight Saving Time today, and I said, oh, and he said, how come you didn’t know it was Daylight Saving? and I said, well, I don’t have a TV and I don’t read the newspapers and I only listen to symphony music on the radio, and Spindle turned to the others in the office and he said, look here, Chinaski says he doesn’t have a TV and he doesn’t read newspapers and he only listens to symphony music on the radio, should I really believe that? and somebody said, o, yes, you better believe it, that cat’s crazy, that cat’s crazy as they come, and Spindle got out my timecard and handed it to me and said, all right, punch in, you’ll be docked for the missing time, and I took my card out to the clock and hit it and then I walked to the work area, all the workers snickering at me and making sly remarks, and I handed my card to supervisor Wilkins in row 88 and I sat down and went to work.
   the railroad yard
   the feelings I get
   driving past the railroad yard
   (never on purpose but on my way to somewhere)
   are the feelings other men have for other things.
   I see the tracks and all the boxcars
   the tank cars the flat cars
   all of them motionless and so many of them
   perfectly lined up and not an engine anywhere
   (where are all the engines?).
   I drive past looking sideways at it all
   a wide, still railroad yard
   not a human in sight
   then I am past the yard
   and it wasn’t just the romance of it all
   that gives me what I get
   but something back there nameless
   always making me feel better
   as some men feel better looking at the open sea
   or the mountains or at wild animals
   or at a woman
   I like those things too
   especially the wild animals and the woman
   but when I see those lovely old boxcars
   with their faded painted lettering
   and those flat cars and those fat round tankers
   all lined up and waiting
   I get quiet inside
   I get what other men get from other things
   I just feel better and it’s good to feel better
   whenever you can
   not needing a reason.
   horseshit
   the horse stood in the yard and
   the women went out to see the horse
   and one of the women got on the horse and
   rode around and almost had her head knocked off by a
   tree limb and
   I stood in the kitchen
   measuring sunlight and wall slant and
   what was willing to be measured
   and one of the women was big and white and fat and
   aching to be fucked
   but it would take a month of talking and a year’s worth of
   money and I didn’t have either
   so I put it aside
   and soon they all came back inside
   and the big fat white one who was aching
   sat there talking about the horse
   and one of the others leaned toward me and said,
   “she iss not available, dear!”
   iss not, iss not. hell,
   I knew that.
   the light shined in and we sat there talking about
   horses and waiting for her availability
   and then the big fat aching one got up and walked out
   and I followed and watched her mount her safe
   mare
   switch it—thapp!—
   and my little switch went
   thapp!
   thapp!
   and I walked back inside.
   it looked like 
					     					 			 snow, damn, it looked like snow, so early,
   only some of the ladies wanted it
   and the others didn’t want it. you know the ladies.
   I went over and threw a couple of logs in the fire
   and the whole thing flupped up red and
   warm and we all felt
   better, ready and not ready. it was Santa Fe in
   October and all the poor had left town except
   me.
   man’s best friend
   I told the guy—he was watering his lawn—
   you ever squirt my dog
   again and you’ll have to deal with me.
   he just kept on watering, looking straight ahead,
   and he said, I ain’t worried, you punks talk about
   doing it but you never do it.
   he was an old white-haired guy, kind of dumb. I could
   feel the dullness radiating off him.
   I yanked the hose from his hand, turned him around and
   sank a hard right to his gut.
   he dropped like a stone and just lay on his
   back on the lawn, holding his stomach and breathing
   hard.
   he looked pitiful.
   I picked up the hose and watered him down good,
   soaked his clothes, then gave him a good dose
   in the face and walked off.
   I went down to the store and got a fifth of scotch
   and a six-pack.
   when I came back he was gone.
   I went up to my apartment and told Marie that I
   had taken care of the matter with the guy who
   squirted our dog.
   she asked me, what did you do, kill him?
   and I told her, no, I just explained things to him.
   and she wanted to know, what did I mean, I
   explained things to him?
   and I told her, never mind, where are some clean
   glasses?
   and then the dog came walking in.
   Koko.
   you gotta know I liked him
   plenty.
   the sensitive, young poet
   I never realized then what a good time I was
   having
   smoking cheap cigars,
   in my shorts and undershirt.
   proud of my barrel chest
   and my biceps
   and my youth, my legs,
   “baby, look at my legs! ever seen legs like
   that?”
   prancing up and down in that hotel
   room.
   I was giving her a show and she just sat
   there smoking
   cigarettes.
   she was nasty, a looker but a nasty
   looker.
   I knew that she would say something
   vicious
   but I would laugh at her.
   she had seen me make a whole barfull
   of men back down one
   night.
   each night was about the same, I’d put on
   my show for her,
   I’d tell her what a great brain I had.
   “you’re so fucking smart, what’re you
   doing living in a hole like this?”
   “I’m just resting up, baby, I haven’t
   made my move yet…”
   “bullshit! you’re an asshole!”
   “what?”
   “you’re an asshole!”
   “why, you wasted whore, I’ll rip you in half!”
   then we’d go at it, swearing loudly, throwing
   things, breaking things,
   the phone ringing from the desk downstairs,
   the other roomers banging on the walls
   and me laughing, loving it,
   picking up the phone, “all right, all right,
   I’ll keep her quiet…”
   putting the phone down, looking at
   her, “all right, baby, come on over here!”
   “go to hell! you’re disgusting!”
   and I was, red-faced, cigarette
   holes burnt in my undershirt,
   4-day beard, yellow teeth, broken toenails,
   grinning madly I’d move toward
   her, glancing at the pull-down bed, I’d move
   toward her saying, “hike your skirt up!
   I want to see more leg!”
   I was one bad dude.
   she stayed 3 years then I moved on to the
   next
   one.
   the first one never lived with another
   man again.
   I cured her of
   that.
   hunger
   I have been hungry many times
   but the particular time that I
   think of now
   was in New York City,
   the night was beginning
   and I was standing before the
   plate glass window of a
   restaurant.
   and in that window
   was a roasted pig,
   eyeless,
   with an apple in its mouth.
   poor damned pig.
   poor damned me.
   beyond the pig
   inside there
   were people
   sitting at tables
   talking, eating, drinking.
   I was not one of those people.
   I felt a kinship with the pig.
   we had been caught in the wrong
   place
   at the wrong
   time.
   I imagined myself in the window,
   eyeless, roasted, the apple in my
   mouth.
   that would bring a crowd.
   “hey, not much rump on him!”
   “his arms are too thin!”
   “I can see his ribs!”
   I walked away from the window.
   I walked to my room.
   I still had a room.
   as I walked to my room
   I began to conjecture:
   could I eat some paper?
   some newspaper?
   roaches?
   maybe I could catch a rat?
   a raw rat.
   peel off the fur,
   remove the intestines.
   remove the eyes.
   forego the head, the tail.
   no, I’d die of
   some horrible rat disease!
   I walked along.
   I was so hungry that everything
   looked eatable:
   people, fireplugs, asphalt,
   wristwatches…
   my belt, my shirt.
   I entered the building and
   walked up the stairway to my
   room.
   I sat in a chair.
   I didn’t turn on the light.
   I sat there and wondered if I
   was crazy
   because I wasn’t doing anything
   to help myself.
   the hunger stopped then
   and I just sat there.
   then I heard it:
   two people in the next room,
   copulating.
   I could hear the bedsprings
   and the moans.
   I got up, walked out of the
   room and back into the
   street.
   but I walked in a different
   direction this time,
   I walked away from the pig
   in the window.
   but I thought about the pig
   and I decided that I’d die first
   rather than eat that
   pig.
   it began to rain.
   I looked up.
   I opened my mouth and let in the rain
   drops…soup from the sky…
   “hey, look at that guy!”
   I heard someone say.
   stupid sons-of-bitches, I thought,
   stupid sons-of-
   bitches!
   I closed my mouth and kept
   walking.
   the first one
   after she died
   I met her son in her room
					     					 			/>
   a very small room without sink or toilet
   in a flophouse at Beverly and Vermont.
   he was thinking what kind of boyfriend are you
   to let her die in a place like this?
   and I was thinking, what kind of a son are you?
   he asked me, do you want any of her things?
   no, I said.
   well, he said, we’ll give them to Goodwill.
   he left.
   there was a large bloodstain on the bottom
   sheet.
   the owner of the hotel walked in. she said,
   I’ll have to change that sheet before I can rent this
   room to
   somebody else.
   o.k., I said.
   I left.
   I walked down to the florist
   and ordered a heart-shaped arrangement, large,
   for the funeral.
   just say on the card, I told the lady,
   from your lover. no name.
   no name?
   no name.
   cash or credit card?
   cash.
   I paid and walked out on the
   boulevard and
   never looked
   back.
   the night I saw George Raft in Vegas
   I bet on #6, I try red, I stare at the women’s legs and breasts,
   I wonder what Chekov would do, and over in the corner three men with
   blue plates sit eating the carnage of my youth, they have beards
   and look very much like Russians and I pat an imaginary pistol
   over
   my left tit and try to smile like George Raft sizing up a French tart. I play
   the field, I pull out dollars like turnips from the good earth, the lights
   blaze and nobody says stop.
   Hank, says my whore, for Christ’s sake you’re losing everything except me,