and I say don’t forget, baby, I’m a shipping clerk. what’ve I got to lose
   but a ball of string?
   the gentlemen in the corner who look like Russians get up, knock
   their plates and cups on the floor and wipe their mouths on the tablecloth.
   some belch (and one farts). they laugh evilly and leave without anyone bothering them. a ribbed and moiled cat comes out of somewhere,
   begins licking the plates on the floor and then jumps up on the
   table and walks around like his feet are wet.
   I try black. the croupier’s eyes dart like beetles. he makes futile
   almost habitual movements to brush them away.
   I switch back to red. I look around for George Raft and spill my drink
   against my chest. Hank, says my whore, let’s get out of here! well, at least,
   I say, I ought to get a blow-job out of this. you needn’t get filthy, the whore
   says. I say, baby, I was born filthy. I try #14.
   DEATH COMES SLOWLY LIKE ANTS TO A FALLEN FIG.
   mirrors enclose us, I say to the croupier, ignoring the scenery of our despair.
   I slap away a filthy thing that runs across my mouth. the cat
   leaps and snatches it up as it spins upon its back kicking its
   thousand legs.
   then George Raft walks in. hello kid, he says, back again? I place
   my last few coins on the chest of a dead elephant.
   the lightning flares, they are stabbing grapefruit in the backroom, some-
   body drops a glove and the place, the whole place, goes up in smoke.
   we walk back to the car and fall asleep.
   no title
   all theories
   like clichés
   shot to hell,
   all these small faces
   looking up
   beautiful and believing;
   I wish to weep
   but sorrow is
   stupid.
   I wish to believe
   but belief is a
   graveyard.
   we have narrowed it down to
   the butcherknife and the
   mockingbird.
   wish us
   luck.
   too many blacks
   my first wife was from Texas and we came back
   to L.A. to live
   she came from oil money and I came from
   someplace else.
   our 2nd day in town
   we drove down Vermont Avenue
   to get her some art supplies
   and as I was tooling my eleven-year-old
   Plymouth south
   a black man rolled past in a nine-year-old
   green Dodge:
   “hey, baby,” he hollered out the window,
   “what’s happening?”
   “nothing much happenin’,” I hollered
   back, “I’m just trying to make
   it!”
   as we stopped for a signal at
   Beverly Blvd.
   a black man on the corner saw me
   he was standing in a broad-brimmed
   Stetson pulled down in front
   and wearing white leather boots
   and lots of gold:
   “Hank, baby, where’d you find the
   blonde gash?”
   “she’s my mark, man,” I replied,
   “you know how it is.”
   I put it into low and pulled
   away.
   “listen,” my first wife said
   nasally,
   “how come you know all these black
   guys?”
   “it’s easy, baby, I’ve worked with them
   on all the gigs. like it’s
   natural.”
   she didn’t answer and when we got
   to the art store
   she was very upset
   about the brushes
   the quality of the paper
   the paints weren’t what she
   wanted
   and the total selection was
   unsatisfactory.
   she was very unhappy
   about everything.
   I stood there and watched her
   beautiful ass and her very long
   blonde hair
   then I walked over to the picture frame
   section
   picked up an 8-and-one-half by
   eleven
   stared through the space of
   it
   and let her
   work it
   out.
   white dog
   I went for a walk on Hollywood Boulevard.
   I looked down and there was a large white dog
   walking beside me.
   his pace was exactly the same as mine.
   we stopped at traffic signals together.
   we crossed the side streets together.
   a woman smiled at us.
   he must have walked 8 blocks with me.
   then I went into a grocery store and
   when I came out he was gone.
   or she was gone.
   the wonderful white dog
   with a trace of yellow in its fur.
   the large blue eyes were gone.
   the grinning mouth was gone.
   the lolling tongue was gone.
   things are so easily lost.
   things just can’t be kept forever.
   I got the blues.
   I got the blues.
   that dog loved and
   trusted me and
   I let it walk away.
   blue beads and bones
   as the orchid dies
   and the grass goes
   insane, let’s have one for the lost:
   I met an old man
   and a tired whore
   in a bar
   at 8:00 in the morning
   across from MacArthur Park—
   we were sitting over our beers
   he and I and the old whore
   who had slept in an unlocked car
   the night before
   and wore a blue necklace.
   the old guy said to me:
   “look at my arms. I’m all bone.
   no meat on me.”
   and he pulled back his sleeves
   and he was right—
   bone with just a layer of skin
   hanging like paper.
   he said, “I don’t eat
   nothin’.”
   I bought him a beer and the
   whore a beer.
   now there, I thought, is a man
   who doesn’t eat
   meat, he doesn’t eat
   vegetables. kind of a saint.
   it was like a church in there
   as only the truly lost
   sit in bars on Tuesday mornings
   at 8:00 a.m.
   then the whore said, “Jesus,
   if I don’t score tonight I’m
   finished. I’m scared, I’m really
   scared. you guys can go to skid row
   when things get bad. but where can a
   woman go?”
   we couldn’t answer her.
   she picked up her beer with one hand
   and played with her blue beads with the
   other.
   I finished my beer, went to the
   corner and got a Racing Form from Teddy the
   newsboy—age 61.
   “you got a hot one today?”
   “no, Teddy, I gotta see the board; money
   makes them run.”
   “I’ll give you 4 bucks. bet one for
   me.”
   I took his 4 bucks. that would buy a sandwich,
   pay parking, plus 2
   coffees. I got into my car, drove
   off. too early for the
   track. blue beads and bones. the
   universe was
   bent. a cop rode his bike right up
   behind me. the day had really
   begun.
   ax and blade
   arriving to applaus 
					     					 			e
   through Spanish doorways
   hardly ever
   works. eating an apple
   sometimes
   works.
   the ax misses by a hair’s breadth
   and breaks the chimney of a
   lady’s house.
   then it swings back,
   cleaves you
   again, there it is,
   yes, there it
   is
   again.
   how to break clear?
   a .44 magnum?
   a can of ale?
   the museum of pain
   doesn’t charge admission,
   it’s free as skunkshit.
   from the brothels of Paris
   to the hardware stores of Pasadena
   from balloons
   to diamond mines,
   from screaming to singing
   from blood to paint
   from paint to miracle
   from miracle to damnation.
   the people walk and talk
   cut to pieces
   pieces of people sliced like
   pie
   knifed and forked and
   gulped
   away.
   I sit in a small room
   listening to classical piano on the radio.
   each note bites,
   nips; you fall into the mirror,
   come through the other
   side
   staring at a lightbulb.
   God sits in Munich
   drinking green beer. we’ve got to find
   Him and ask Him
   why.
   some notes on Bach and Haydn
   it is quite something to turn your radio on
   low
   at 4:30 in the morning
   in an apartment house
   and hear Haydn
   while through the blinds
   you can see only the black night
   as beautiful and quiet
   as a flower.
   and with that
   something to drink,
   of course,
   a cigarette,
   and the heater going,
   and Haydn going.
   maybe just 35 people
   in a city of millions listening
   as you are listening now,
   looking at the walls,
   smoking quietly,
   not hating anything,
   not wanting anything.
   existing like mercury
   you listen to a dead man’s music
   at 4:30 in the morning,
   only he is not really dead
   as the smoke from your cigarette curls up,
   is not really dead,
   and all is magic,
   this good sound
   in Los Angeles.
   but now a siren takes the air,
   some trouble, murder, robbery, death…
   but Haydn goes on
   and you listen,
   one of the finest mornings of your life
   like some of those when you were very young
   with stupid lunch pail
   and sleepy eyes
   riding the early bus to the railroad yards
   to scrub the windows and sides of trains
   with a brush and oakite
   but knowing
   all the while
   you would take the longest gamble,
   and now having taken it,
   still alive,
   poor but strong,
   knowing Haydn at 4:30 a.m.,
   the only way to know him,
   the blinds down
   and the black night
   the cigarette
   and in my hands this pen
   writing in a notebook
   (my typewriter at this hour would
   scream like a raped bear)
   and
   now
   somehow
   knowing the way
   warmly and gently
   finally
   as Haydn ends.
   and then a voice tells me
   where I can get bacon and eggs,
   orange juice, toast, coffee
   this very morning
   for a pleasant price
   and I like this man
   for telling me this
   after Haydn
   and I want to get dressed
   and go out and find the waitress
   and eat bacon and eggs
   and lift the coffee cup to my mouth,
   but I am distracted:
   the voice tells me that Bach
   will be next: “Brandenburg Concerto No. 2
   in F major,”
   so I go into the kitchen for a
   new can of beer.
   may this night never see morning
   as finally one night will not,
   but I do suppose morning will come this day
   asking its hard way—
   the cars jammed on freeways,
   faces as horrible as unflushed excreta,
   trapped lives less than beautiful love,
   and I walk out
   knowing the way
   cold beer can in hand
   as Bach begins
   and
   this good night
   is still everywhere.
   born to lose
   I was sitting in my cell
   and all the guys were tattooed
   BORN TO LOSE
   BORN TO DIE
   all of them were able to roll a cigarette
   with one hand
   if I mentioned Wallace Stevens or
   even Pablo Neruda to them
   they’d think me crazy.
   I named my cellmates in my mind:
   that one was Kafka
   that one was Dostoevsky
   that one was Blake
   that one was Céline
   and that one was
   Mickey Spillane.
   I didn’t like Mickey Spillane.
   sure enough that night at lights out
   Mickey and I had a fight over who got the
   top bunk
   the way it ended neither of us got the top bunk
   we both got the hole.
   after I got out of solitary I made
   an appointment with the warden.
   I told him I was a writer
   a sensitive and gifted soul
   and that I wanted to work in the library.
   he gave me two more days in the hole.
   when I got out I worked in the shoe factory.
   I worked with Van Gogh, Schopenhauer, Dante, Robert Frost
   and Karl Marx.
   they put Spillane in license plates.
   Phillipe’s 1950
   Phillipe’s is an old time
   cafe off Alameda street
   just a little north and east of
   the main post office.
   Phillipe’s opens at 5 a.m.
   and serves a cup of coffee
   with cream and sugar
   for a nickel.
   in the early mornings
   the bums come down off Bunker Hill,
   as they say,
   “with our butts wrapped
   around our ears.”
   Los Angeles nights have a way
   of getting very
   cold.
   “Phillipe’s,” they say,
   “is the only place that doesn’t
   hassle us.”
   the waitresses are old
   and most of the bums are
   too.
   come down there some
   early morning.
   for a nickel
   you can see the most beautiful faces
   in town.
   in the lobby
   I saw him sitting in a lobby chair
   in the Patrick Hotel
   dreaming of flying fish
   and he said “hello friend
   you’re looking good.
   me, I’m not so well,
   they’ve plucked out my hair
   taken my bowels
   and the color in my eyes
					     					 			>
   has gone back into the sea.”
   I sat down and listened
   to him breathe
   his last.
   a bit later the clerk came over
   with his green eyeshade on
   and then the clerk saw what I knew
   but neither of us knew
   what the old man knew.
   the clerk stood there
   almost surprised,
   taken,
   wondering where the old man had gone.
   he began to shake like an ape
   who’d had a banana taken from his hand.
   and then there was a crowd
   and the crowd looked at the old man
   as if he were a freak
   as if there was something wrong with him.
   I got up and walked out of the lobby
   I went outside on the sidewalk
   and I walked along with the rest of them
   bellies, feet, hair, eyes
   everything moving and going
   getting ready to go back to the beginning
   or light a cigar.
   and then somebody stepped on
   the back of my heel
   and I was angry enough to swear.
   he knows us all
   hell crawls through the window
   without a sound
   enters my room
   takes off his hat
   and sits down on the couch across from me.
   I laugh.
   then my lamp drops off the table,
   I catch it just before it hits the
   floor, and in doing so,
   I spill my
   beer. “oh shit!” I say;
   when I look up again
   the son-of-a-bitch
   is gone—
   off looking for you,
   my friend?
   victory!
   we struck in the middle of a
   simple dawn
   all their ships were in the harbor
   and we torched them and created a giant
   sunrise
   we turned our cannon on the cathedral
   cut the legs off the cavalry
   found the army hung-over in the barracks