the swans drown in bilge water,
   take down the signs,
   test the poisons,
   barricade the cow
   from the bull,
   the peony from the sun,
   take the lavender kisses from my night,
   put the symphonies out on the streets
   like beggars,
   get the nails ready,
   flog the backs of the saints,
   stun frogs and mice for the cat,
   burn the enthralling paintings,
   piss on the dawn,
   my love
   is dead.
   for Jane
   225 days under grass
   and you know more than I.
   they have long taken your blood,
   you are a dry stick in a basket.
   is this how it works?
   in this room
   the hours of love
   still make shadows.
   when you left
   you took almost
   everything.
   I kneel in the nights
   before tigers
   that will not let me be.
   what you were
   will not happen again.
   the tigers have found me
   and I do not care.
   eulogy to a hell of a dame
   dame
   some dogs who sleep at night
   must dream of bones
   and I remember your bones
   in flesh
   and best
   in that dark green dress
   and those high-heeled bright
   black shoes,
   you always cursed when you
   drank,
   your hair coming down you
   wanted to explode out of
   what was holding you:
   rotten memories of a
   rotten
   past, and
   you finally got
   out
   by dying,
   leaving me with the
   rotten
   present;
   you’ve been dead
   28 years
   yet I remember you
   better than any of
   the rest;
   you were the only one
   who understood
   the futility of the
   arrangement of
   all the others were only
   displeased with
   trivial segments,
   carped
   nonsensically about
   nonsense;
   Jane, you were
   killed by
   knowing too much.
   here’s a drink
   to your bones
   that
   this dog
   still
   dreams about.
   barfly
   Jane, who has been dead for 31 years,
   never could have
   imagined that I would write a screenplay of our drinking
   days together
   and
   that it would be made into a movie
   and
   that a beautiful movie star would play her
   part.
   I can hear Jane now: “A beautiful movie star? oh,
   for Christ’s sake!”
   Jane, that’s show biz, so go back to sleep, dear, because
   no matter how hard they tried they
   just couldn’t find anybody exactly like
   you.
   and neither can
   I.
   was Li Po wrong?
   you know what Li Po said when asked if he’d rather be an
   Artist or Rich?
   “I’d rather be Rich,” he replied, “for Artists can usually be found
   sitting on the doorsteps of the
   Rich.”
   I’ve sat on the doorsteps of some expensive and
   unbelievable homes
   myself
   but somehow I always managed to disgrace myself and / or insult
   my Rich hosts
   (mostly after drinking large quantities of their fine
   liquor).
   perhaps I was afraid of the Rich?
   all I knew then was poverty and the very poor,
   and I felt instinctively that the Rich shouldn’t be so
   Rich,
   that it was some kind of clever
   twist of fate
   based on something rotten and
   unfair.
   of course, one could say the same thing
   about being poor,
   only there were so many poor, it all seemed completely
   out of proportion.
   and so when I, as an Artist, visited the
   homes of the Rich, I felt ashamed to be
   there, and I drank too much of their fine wines,
   broke their expensive glassware and antique dishes,
   burned cigarette holes in their Persian rugs and
   mauled their wives,
   reacting badly to the whole damned
   situation.
   yet I had no political or social solution.
   I was just a lousy house guest,
   I guess,
   and after a while
   I protected both myself and the Rich
   by rejecting their
   invitations
   and everybody felt much better after
   that.
   I went back to
   drinking alone,
   breaking my own cheap glassware,
   filling the room with cigar
   smoke and feeling
   wonderful
   instead of feeling trapped,
   used,
   pissed on,
   fucked.
   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 Chekhov 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,
   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, somebody
   drops a glove and the place, the whole place, goes up in smoke.
   we walk back t 
					     					 			o the car and fall asleep.
   I am eaten by butterflies
   maybe I’ll win the Irish Sweepstakes
   maybe I’ll go nuts
   maybe Harcourt Brace will call
   or maybe unemployment insurance or
   a rich lesbian at the top of a hill.
   maybe reincarnation as a frog…
   or $70,000 found floating in a plastic sack
   in the bathtub.
   I need help
   I am a thin man being eaten by
   green trees
   butterflies and
   you.
   turn turn
   light the lamp
   my teeth ache the teeth of my soul ache
   I can’t sleep I
   pray for the dead
   the white mice
   engines on fire
   blood on a green gown in an operating room
   and I am caught
   ow ow
   wild: my body being there filled with nothing but
   me
   me caught halfway between suicide and
   old age
   hustling in factories next to the
   young boys
   keeping pace
   burning my blood like gasoline and
   making the foreman
   grin.
   my poems are only bits of scratchings
   on the floor of a
   cage.
   (uncollected)
   the veryest
   here comes the fishhead singing
   here comes the baked potato in drag
   here comes nothing to do all day long
   here comes another night of no sleep
   here comes the phone ringing the wrong voice
   here comes a termite with a banjo
   here comes a flagpole with blank eyes
   here comes a cat and a dog wearing nylons
   here comes a machine gun singing
   here comes bacon burning in the pan
   here comes a voice saying something dull with authority
   here comes a newspaper stuffed with small red birds
   with flat brown beaks
   here comes a woman carrying a torch
   a grenade
   a deathly love
   here comes victory carrying one bucket of guts
   and one bucket of blood
   while stumbling over the berry bush
   and here comes a little lamb
   and here comes Mary at last
   and the sheet hangs out the window
   and the bombers head east west north south
   get lost
   get tossed like salad
   all the fish in the sea line up and form
   one line
   one long line
   one very long long line
   the veryest longest line you could ever imagine
   and we get lost
   walking past purple mountains.
   we walk lost
   bare at last like the knife blade
   or the electric shock
   having given
   having spit it out like an unexpected olive seed
   as the girl at the call ser vice
   screams over the phone:
   “don’t call back! you sound like a jerk!”
   (uncollected)
   man mowing the lawn across the way from me
   I watch you walking with your machine.
   ah, you’re too stupid to be cut like grass,
   you’re too stupid to let anything violate you—
   the girls won’t use their knives on you
   they don’t want to
   their sharp edge is wasted on you,
   you are interested only in baseball games and
   western movies and grass blades.
   can’t you take just one of my knives?
   here’s an old one—stuck into me in 1955,
   she’s dead now, it wouldn’t hurt much.
   I can’t give you this last one—
   I can’t pull it out yet,
   but here’s one from 1964, how about taking
   this 1964 one from me?
   man mowing the lawn across the way from me
   don’t you have a knife somewhere in your gut
   where love left?
   man mowing the lawn across the way from me
   don’t you have a knife somewhere deep in your heart
   where love left?
   man mowing the lawn across the way from me
   don’t you see the young girls walking down the sidewalks now
   with knives in their purses?
   don’t you see their beautiful eyes and dresses and
   hair?
   don’t you see their beautiful asses and knees and
   ankles?
   man mowing the lawn across the way from me
   is that all you see—those grass blades?
   is that all you hear—the drone of the mower?
   I can see all the way to Italy
   to Japan
   to the Honduras
   I can see the young girls sharpening their knives
   in the morning and at noon and at night, and
   especially at night, o,
   especially at night.
   oh, yes
   there are worse things than
   being alone
   but it often takes de cades
   to realize this
   and most often
   when you do
   it’s too late
   and there’s nothing worse
   than
   too late.
   poop
   I remember, he told me, that when I was 6 or
   7 years old my mother was always taking me
   to the doctor and saying, “he hasn’t pooped.”
   she was always asking me, “have you
   pooped?”
   it seemed to be her favorite question.
   and, of course, I couldn’t lie, I had real problems
   pooping.
   I was all knotted up inside.
   my parents did that to me.
   I looked at those huge beings, my father,
   my mother, and they seemed really stupid.
   sometimes I thought they were just pretending
   to be stupid because nobody could really be that
   stupid.
   but they weren’t pretending.
   they had me all knotted up inside like a pretzel.
   I mean, I had to live with them, they told
   me what to do and how to do it and when.
   they fed, housed and clothed me.
   and worst of all, there was no other place for
   me to go, no other choice:
   I had to stay with them.
   I mean, I didn’t know much at that age
   but I could sense that they were lumps
   of flesh and little else.
   dinnertime was the worst, a nightmare
   of slurps, spittle and idiotic conversation.
   I looked straight down at my plate and tried
   to swallow my food but
   it all turned to glue inside.
   I couldn’t digest my parents or the food.
   that must have been it, for it was hell for me
   to poop.
   “have you pooped?”
   and there I’d be in the doctor’s office once again.
   he had a little more sense than my parents but
   not much.
   “well, well, my little man, so you haven’t pooped?”
   he was fat with bad breath and body odor and
   had a pocket watch with a large gold chain
   that dangled across his gut.
   I thought, I bet he poops a load.
   and I looked at my mother.
   she had large buttocks,
   I could picture her on the toilet,
   sitting there a little cross-eyed, pooping.
   she was so placid, so
   like a pigeon.
   poopers both, I knew it in my heart.
   disgusting people.					     					 			br />
   “well, little man, you just can’t poop,
   huh?”
   he made a little joke of it: he could,
   she could, the world could.
   I couldn’t.
   “well, now, we’re going to give you
   these pills.
   and if they don’t work, then guess
   what?”
   I didn’t answer.
   “come on, little man, tell me.”
   all right, I decided to say it.
   I wanted to get out of there:
   “an enema.”
   “an enema,” he smiled.
   then he turned to my mother.
   “and are you all right, dear?”
   “oh, I’m fine, doctor!”
   sure she was.
   she pooped whenever she wanted.
   then we would leave the office.
   “isn’t the doctor a nice man?”