will you please go out for a walk and
   get run over by a train?
   my few friends think I’m a very funny fellow.
   tell me about Chinaski, they ask my girlfriend.
   oh, she says, he just sits in this big chair
   and moans.
   they laugh.
   I make people laugh.
   Assault, I say, do you want something to eat?
   were you once a racehorse?
   why don’t you
   sleep?
   take a rest?
   die?
   Assault follows me across the room
   he leaps on my shoulders and shakes me.
   Lorca was shot down in the road but here
   in America the poets never anger anybody.
   the poets don’t gamble.
   their poetry has the smell of clinics.
   their poetry has the smell of clinics
   where people die rather than live.
   here they don’t assassinate the poets
   they don’t even notice the poets.
   I walk out on the street to buy a
   newspaper.
   Assault follows me.
   we pass a beautiful young girl on the sidewalk.
   I look into her eyes, she stares
   back.
   you can’t have her, says Assault, you are an old man,
   you are a crazy old man.
   I’m aware of my age, I say with some dignity.
   yes, and aware of death too.
   you’re going to die and
   you don’t know where you’re going
   but I’m coming along with you.
   you rotten bastard, I say, why are you
   so fond of me?
   I get a newspaper and come back.
   we read it together.
   ah, my companion!
   we bathe together, sleep together, eat
   together, we
   open letters together.
   we write poems together.
   we read poems together.
   I don’t know if I am Chinaski or
   Assault.
   some say I love my pain.
   yes, I love it so much I’d like to give it to you
   wrapped in a red ribbon
   wrapped in a bloody red ribbon
   you can have it
   you can have it all.
   I’ll never miss it.
   I’m working on getting rid of it, believe me.
   I might jam it into your mailbox
   or throw it into the back seat of your car.
   but now
   here on DeLongpre Ave.
   we have just
   each other.
   raw with love
   little dark girl with
   kind eyes
   when it comes time to
   use the knife
   I won’t flinch and
   I won’t blame
   you,
   as I drive along the shore alone
   as the palms wave,
   the ugly heavy palms,
   as the living do not arrive
   as the dead do not leave,
   I won’t blame you,
   instead
   I will remember the kisses
   our lips raw with love
   and how you gave me
   everything you had
   and how I
   offered you what was left of
   me,
   and I will remember your small room
   the feel of you
   the light in the window
   your records
   your books
   our morning coffee
   our noons our nights
   our bodies spilled together
   sleeping
   the tiny flowing currents
   immediate and forever
   your leg my leg
   your arm my arm
   your smile and the warmth
   of you
   who made me laugh
   again.
   little dark girl with kind eyes
   you have no
   knife. the knife is
   mine and I won’t use it
   yet.
   wide and moving
   it is 98 degrees and I am standing in the center
   of the room in my shorts.
   it is the beginning of September
   and I hear the sound of high heels biting
   into the pavement outside.
   I walk to the window
   as she comes by
   in a knitted see-through pink dress,
   long legs in nylon,
   and the behind is
   wide and moving and grand
   as I stand there watching the sun run through
   all that movement
   and then she is gone.
   all I can see is brush and lawn and pavement.
   where did she come from?
   and what can one do when it comes and leaves
   like that?
   it seems immensely unfair.
   I turn around, roll myself a cigarette,
   light it,
   stand in front of my air cooler
   and feel unjustifiably
   cheated.
   but I suppose she gives that same feeling to a
   hundred men a day.
   I decide not to mourn
   and remain at the window to
   watch a white pigeon
   peck in the dirt
   outside.
   demise
   the son-of-a-bitch
   was one of those soft liberal guys
   belly like butter who
   lived in a big house, he
   was a professor
   and he told
   her:
   “he’ll be your
   demise.”
   imagine anybody saying
   that: “demise”!
   we drove in from the track,
   she’d lost $57 and she said:
   “we better stop for something to
   drink.”
   she wore an old army jacket
   a baseball cap
   hiking boots
   and when I came out with the bottle
   she twisted the top off
   and took a long straight swallow
   a longshoreman’s suicide gulp
   tilting her head back behind those dark glasses.
   my god, I thought.
   a nice country girl like that
   who loves to dance.
   her 4 mad sisters will never forgive me
   and that soft left-wing son-of-a-bitch
   with a belly like butter (in that big
   house) was
   right.
   the pact
   “I called up Harry and his girlfriend
   answered,” she said. “so I asked her,
   ‘can I speak to Harry?’
   and she said, ‘Harry’s not here right
   now.’
   and I said, ‘all right,
   I’ll phone him back.’
   and Harry’s girlfriend said,
   ‘listen, I think I’d better tell you.
   Harry’s
   dead.’”
   my girlfriend and Harry used to be
   lovers. Harry had a bad heart
   and he couldn’t get it up
   anymore.
   then she told me:
   “Harry and I made a pact:
   he said
   when he died he would
   come back from the dead and
   let me know that there’s
   life after death.
   I think I ought to tell you
   what he’s going to
   try to do.”
   “oh really?” I said.
   so each morning now when we
   wake up I ask her, “well, did
   Harry make it back?”
   I only get worried at night.
   I can see Harry’s ghost bigger
   than the Himalayas ripping the
   bedspread off us and
   sta 
					     					 			nding there
   with his heart and
   everything else in good
   order.
   I’ve always had terrible insomnia but
   at least now I have something
   to wait for
   besides
   morning.
   75 million dollars
   there’s Picasso
   and now he’s gone.
   I know, it’s in the papers.
   there has been much about Picasso
   in the papers.
   we know he painted.
   now there’s the division of the estate.
   there seem to be many little Picassos.
   it will go to court, probably.
   75 million dollars.
   instead,
   I like to think of how he worked with the brush,
   doing it. wet paint, canvas, whatever.
   the light. him standing there.
   the process unwinding and smoking.
   there’s light and air and smell and the
   idea, the smell of the
   idea. and something to
   eat. and there’s a clock there.
   eat the clock, Pablo. don’t let the clock
   eat
   you.
   the man leaves and his work
   remains.
   but to me
   it’s much more splendid when both
   the man and the work are
   here. yes, I know, I
   know. 75 million dollars.
   well, Picasso’s gone.
   immortality and fame are not always
   different things. Pablo had fame,
   now he has the other.
   I think of old Henry Miller walking up and down
   the floor in Pacific Palisades and waiting,
   waiting.
   we’re all such good tough creative boys,
   why do they let us
   die?
   75 million dollars.
   butterflies
   I believe in earning one’s own way
   but I also believe in the unexpected
   gift
   and it is a wondrous thing
   when a woman who has read your works
   (or parts of them, anyhow)
   offers her self to you
   out of the blue
   a total
   stranger.
   such an offer
   such a communion
   must be taken as
   holy.
   the hands
   the fingers
   the hair
   the smell
   the light.
   one would like to be strong enough
   to turn them away
   those butterflies.
   I believe in earning one’s own way
   but I also believe in the unexpected gift.
   I have no shame.
   we deserve one
   another
   those butterflies
   who flutter to my tiny
   flame
   and
   me.
   4 Christs
   when I went up to Santa Cruz to read
   they had the four of us
   in the restaurant first
   at an elevated table
   with placards:
   Ginsbing, Beerlinghetti, G. Cider and Chinaski.
   it wasn’t even the reading yet.
   it was dinner first.
   it looked like the Last Supper to me.
   I arrived late
   sat down
   a thin man
   with a scarf around his throat
   got up and stood over me:
   “guess you can’t guess who I am?”
   I looked.
   “no.”
   “I’m G. Cider.”
   “ah, hello, Garry, I’m Chinaski.”
   he went back and sat
   down.
   Ginsbing and Beerlinghetti looked like they
   were used to all the attention
   we were getting.
   they sat
   impervious.
   Jack Bitchelene hollered from the scumbag
   crowd of minor poets also eating there
   that night:
   “hey, Chinaski, start some shit!”
   “you are shit, Jack!” I hollered back,
   “eat yourself and die!”
   Jack loved it. he opened his dirty Brooklyn
   mouth and laughed all over Santa
   Cruz
   his filthy grey uncombed hair
   hanging in his face.
   “look” I asked Beerlinghetti, “don’t they
   serve drinks up here
   in the stratosphere?”
   “we’re waiting for dinner,” he informed
   me politely.
   I got up from the table and went
   over to the bar.
   “give me a vodka-7,” I told the
   barkeep.
   I got it down fast, ordered
   a beer
   and went back to the Last
   Supper.
   on the way a guy grabbed my arm:
   “Ginsbing says he doesn’t know how to
   relate to you,” he said.
   I sat down at the table.
   dinner came.
   we ate it.
   then before our transportation to the reading
   arrived
   we were given orders:
   each was to read
   20 minutes.
   I read 15 minutes.
   Beerlinghetti read 25 minutes.
   Ginsbing read 30 minutes.
   G. Cider read one hour and
   12 minutes.
   then it was
   over.
   and now the others say
   I am the
   Judas
   among us.
   $180 gone
   lost my ass at the races
   now sitting with the flu
   listening to Wagner on the radio
   I’ve got this small heater humming.
   I’m not dead yet
   yet not dead
   I want to see more kneecaps under
   tight nylon hose.
   I’m re-grouping,
   I’m dreaming up the counter-attack.
   lost my ass at the races
   the Sierra Madre smiling at me
   lost my ass at the races
   walked through a wall of defeat.
   I saw a dead cat this morning
   both front legs sheared off
   he was lying by the garbage can
   as I walked by.
   this is the hardest game
   defeat grows like flowers
   the whores sit in chairs before their doorways
   Attila the Hun sleeps in a rubber mask at night.
   Wagner died, Rimbaud quit writing, Christ spit it out.
   I lost my ass at the races today
   and was reminded of history
   of waste and of error
   and of strangled dreams.
   we want it too easy
   and this is the hardest game.
   the small heater hums
   as I smoke
   looking at the walls.
   blue head of death
   listening to Richard Strauss
   is most pleasant
   when you are blindfolded and up
   against the wall again
   facing old Spanish muskets and the
   heat and the dust, the
   blue head of death.
   listening to Richard Strauss
   reveals flashes of orange, grey and white
   light,
   lemonade, and cats crouched in the shade
   in polarized
   afternoons.
   things get bad for all of
   us, almost continually,
   and what we do under the constant
   stress
   reveals
   who/what we are.
   Richard Strauss
   is a colorful rush of craft and feeling,
   he’s like a  
					     					 			loaf of french bread
   cut the long way
   and then loaded with all the ingredients.
   it’s just
   right.
   I leave my door open and the cats of the
   neighborhood all come in. they walk over to me
   and across the top of my couch
   and into the bathroom, and one of them goes to
   sleep on my
   bed. one other sits by me and we listen
   to Richard Strauss.
   we’re in trouble but we don’t
   know what to do.
   young men
   again and again
   young men write me
   the same letter:
   “I can’t write, but I
   want to write. I
   read your stuff
   and I want to
   write just like you.
   can you
   please tell me something
   that will help?”
   all around me the
   hills are on fire,
   floodwaters run
   through here
   swarming with
   rats.
   the streets roar
   and yawn to
   swallow me.
   I’m choking
   and can’t breathe.
   they want to write?
   like me?
   what do they mean?
   what’s writing?
   I only want to go to
   bed
   close my eyes
   and sleep
   forever.
   the meaning of it all
   born next to cold dogs and
   railroad tracks.
   born to live with the
   lost.
   born among faces
   uglier than anything
   life could
   devise.
   born to see the 7
   horse break its