The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Pleasures of the Damned

    Previous Page Next Page
    he does not reveal it.

      perhaps there isn’t any

      reason?

      strange and disturbing arrangements are

      made; his books and paintings are quietly

      auctioned off;

      no new work has appeared now for

      years.

      yet his public won’t accept his

      silence—

      if he is dead

      they want to know; if he is

      insane they want to know; if he has a

      reason, please tell us!

      they walk past his house

      write letters

      ring the bell

      they cannot understand and will not

      accept

      the way things are.

      I rather like

      it.

      the smoking car

      they stop out front here

      it looks as if the car is on fire

      the smoke blazes blue from the hood and exhaust

      the motor sounds like cannon shots

      the car humps wildly

      one guy gets out,

      Jesus, he says, he takes a long drink from a

      canvas water bag

      and gives the car an eerie look.

      the other guy gets out and looks at the car,

      Jesus, he says,

      and he takes a drink from a pint of whiskey,

      then passes the bottle to his

      friend.

      they both stand and look at the car,

      one holding the whiskey, the other the water bag.

      they are not dressed in conventional hippie garb

      but in natural old clothes

      faded, dirty and torn.

      a butterfly goes past my window

      and they get back in the

      car

      and it bucks off in low

      like a rodeo bronc

      they are both laughing

      and one has the bottle

      tilted…

      the butterfly is gone

      and outside there is a globe of smoke

      40 feet in circumference.

      first human beings I’ve seen in Los Angeles

      in 15 years.

      the shoelace

      a woman, a

      tire that’s flat, a

      disease, a

      desire; fears in front of you,

      fears that hold so still

      you can study them

      like pieces on a

      chessboard…

      it’s not the large things that

      send a man to the

      mad house. death he’s ready for, or

      murder, incest, robbery, fire, flood…

      no, it’s the continuing series of small tragedies

      that send a man to the

      mad house…

      not the death of his love

      but a shoelace that snaps

      with no time left…

      the dread of life

      is that swarm of trivialities

      that can kill quicker than cancer

      and which are always there—

      license plates or taxes

      or expired driver’s license,

      or hiring or firing,

      doing it or having it done to you, or

      constipation

      speeding tickets

      rickets or crickets or mice or termites or

      roaches or flies or a

      broken hook on a

      screen, or out of gas

      or too much gas,

      the sink’s stopped up, the landlord’s drunk,

      the president doesn’t care and the governor’s

      crazy.

      lightswitch broken, mattress like a

      porcupine;

      $105 for a tune-up, carburetor and fuel pump at

      Sears Roebuck;

      and the phone bill’s up and the market’s

      down

      and the toilet chain is

      broken,

      and the light has burned out—

      the hall light, the front light, the back light,

      the inner light; it’s

      darker than hell

      and twice as

      expensive.

      then there’s always crabs and ingrown toenails

      and people who insist they’re

      your friends;

      there’s always that and worse;

      leaky faucet, Christ and Christmas;

      blue salami, 9 day rains,

      50 cent avocados

      and purple

      liverwurst.

      or making it

      as a waitress at Norm’s on the split shift,

      or as an emptier of

      bedpans,

      or as a carwash or a busboy

      or a stealer of old lady’s purses

      leaving them screaming on the sidewalks

      with broken arms at the age of

      80.

      suddenly

      2 red lights in your rearview mirror

      and blood in your

      underwear;

      toothache, and $979 for a bridge

      $300 for a gold

      tooth,

      and China and Russia and America, and

      long hair and short hair and no

      hair, and beards and no

      faces, and plenty of zigzag but no

      pot, except maybe one to piss in and

      the other one around your

      gut.

      with each broken shoelace

      out of one hundred broken shoelaces,

      one man, one woman, one

      thing

      enters a

      mad house.

      so be careful

      when you

      bend over.

      self-inflicted wounds

      he talked about Steinbeck and Thomas Wolfe and he

      wrote like a cross between the two of them

      and I lived in a hotel on Figueroa Street

      close to the bars

      and he lived further uptown in a small room

      and we both wanted to be writers

      and we’d meet at the public library, sit on the stone

      benches and talk about that.

      he showed me his short stories and he wrote well, he

      wrote better than I did, there was a calm and a

      strength in his work that mine did not have.

      my stories were jagged, harsh, with self-inflicted wounds.

      I showed him all my work but he was more impressed with

      my drinking prowess and my worldly attitude

      after talking a bit we would go to Clifton’s Cafeteria

      for our only meal of the day

      (for less than a dollar in 1941)

      yet

      we were in great health.

      we lost jobs, found jobs, lost jobs.

      mostly we didn’t work, we always envisioned we soon

      would be receiving regular checks from

      The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly and

      Harper’s.

      we ran with a gang of young men who didn’t envision

      anything at all

      but they had a gallant lawless charm

      and we drank with them and fought with them and

      had a hell of a wild good time.

      then just like that he joined the Marine Corps.

      “I want to prove something to myself” was what he told

      me.

      he did: right after boot camp the war came and in 3 months

      he was dead.

      and I promised myself that some day I would write a novel and that

      I would dedicate it to him.

      I have now written 5 novels, all dedicated to others.

      you know, you were right, Robert Baun, when you once told

      me, “Bukowski, about half of what you say is

      bullshit.”

      Verdi

      and

      so

      we suck on a cigar

      and a beer

      attempting to mend the love

      wounds of the soul.
    />
      a beer.

      a cigar.

      I listen to Verdi

      scratch my hindquarters

      and

      stare out of

      a cloud of

      blue

      smoke.

      have you ever been to

      Venice?

      Madrid?

      the stress of continually facing the

      lowered

      horn

      is wearing.

      then too

      I sometimes think of a

      less stressful kind of

      love—

      it can and should be so

      easy

      like falling asleep

      in a chair or

      like a church full of

      windows.

      sad enough,

      I wish only for that careless love

      which is sweet

      gentle

      and which is

      now

      (like

      this light

      over my head)

      there only to serve me

      while I

      smoke smoke smoke

      out of a certain center dressed

      in an old brown shirt.

      but I am caught under a pile of

      bricks;

      poetry is shot in the head

      and walks down the alley

      pissing on its legs.

      friends, stop writing of

      breathing

      in this sky of fire.

      small children,

      walk well behind us.

      but now Verdi

      abides with the

      wallpaper

      with beerlove,

      with the taste of wet gold as

      my fingers dabble in ashes

      as strange young ladies walk outside

      my window

      dreaming of broomsticks,

      palaces

      and

      blueberry pie.

      (uncollected)

      the young lady who lives in Canoga Park

      she only fucks the ones she doesn’t want

      to marry.

      to the others she says

      you’ve got to marry me.

      or maybe she just fucks the ones she wants

      to fuck?

      she talks about it freely

      and lives in the apartment at the end

      with a 9-year-old red-haired boy

      and a 7-month-old baby.

      she gets child support

      and when she works

      she works in the factories or as a

      cocktail waitress.

      she has a boyfriend 60 years old

      who drinks a jug of wine a day

      has a bad leg

      and lives at the YMCA.

      she smokes dope, mostly grass,

      takes pills

      wears large dark glasses

      and talks talks talks

      while not looking at you and

      twisting a long beaded necklace with her thin

      nervous fingers.

      she has a neck like a swan,

      could be a movie star,

      twice in the mad house,

      a mother in the mad house,

      and a sister in prison.

      you never know when she is going to

      go mad again and

      throw tiny fits

      and 3 a.m. phone calls at you.

      the kids trundle about the apartment

      and she fucks and doesn’t fuck,

      has an exercise chart on her wall

      bends this way and that

      touches her toes

      leaps

      stretches and so

      forth. she goes from dope to religion

      and from religion back to dope and

      from black guys to white guys and from white to

      black again.

      when she takes off those dark glasses

      her eyes are blue

      and she tries to smile

      as she twists that necklace

      around and around.

      there are 3 keys on the end of it:

      her car key

      her apartment key

      and one that I’ve never

      asked her about.

      she’s not given up,

      she’s not dead yet,

      she’s hardly even old,

      her air conditioner doesn’t

      work and that’s really all I know

      about her because I’m one of those

      she wants to

      marry.

      (uncollected)

      life of the king

      I awaken at 11:30 a.m.

      get into my chinos and a clean green shirt

      open a Miller’s,

      and nothing in the mailbox but the

      Berkeley Tribe

      which I don’t subscribe to,

      and on KUSC there is organ music

      something by Bach

      and I leave the door open

      stand on the porch

      walk out front

      hot damn

      that air is good

      and the sun like golden butter on my

      body. no racetrack today, nothing but this

      beastly and magic

      leisure, rolled cigarette dangling

      I scratch my belly in the sun

      as Paul Hindemith

      rides by on a bicycle,

      and down the street a lady in a

      very red dress

      bends down into a laundry basket

      rises

      hangs a sheet on a line,

      bends again, rises, in all that red,

      that red like snake skin

      clinging moving flashing

      hot damn

      I keep looking, and

      she sees me

      pauses bent over basket

      clothespin in mouth

      she rises with a pair of pink

      pan ties

      smiles around the

      clothespin

      waves to me.

      what’s next? rape in the streets?

      I wave back,

      go in,

      sit down at the machine

      by the window, and now it’s someone’s

      violin concerto in D,

      and a pretty black girl in very tight pants

      walking a hound,

      they stop outside my window,

      look in;

      she has on dark shades

      and her mouth opens a little, then she and the dog

      move on.

      someone might have bombed cities for this or

      sold apples in the

      rain.

      but whoever is responsible, today I wish to

      thank him

      all the

      way.

      my failure

      I think of de vils in hell

      and stare at a

      beautiful vase of

      flowers

      as the woman in my bedroom

      angrily switches the light

      on and off.

      we have had a very bad

      argument

      and I sit in here smoking

      cigarettes from

      India

      as on the radio an

      opera singer’s prayers are

      not in my

      language.

      outside, the window to

      my left reveals the night

      lights of the

      city and I only wish

      I had the courage to

      break through this simple horror

      and make things well

      again

      but my petty anger

      prevents

      me.

      I realize hell is only what we

      create,

      smoking these cigarettes,

      waiting here,

      wondering here,

      while in the other room

      she continues to

      sit and

      switch the light

      on and off,

      on and

     
    off.

      a boy and his dog

      there’s Barry in his ripped walking shorts

      he’s on Thorazine

      is 24

      looks 38

      lives with his mother in the same

      apartment building

      and they fight like married folk.

      he wears dirty white t-shirts

      and every time he gets a new dog

      he names him “Brownie.”

      he’s like an old woman really.

      he’ll see me getting into my Volks.

      “hey, ya goin’ ta work?”

      “oh, no Barry, I don’t work. I’m going to

      the racetrack.”

      “yeah?”

      he walks over to the car window.

      “ya heard them last night?”

      “who?”

      “them! they were playin’ that shit all night!

      I couldn’t sleep! they played until one-thirty!

      didn’t cha hear ’em?”

      “no, but I’m in the back, Barry, you’re up

      front.”

      we live in east Hollywood among the massage parlors,

      adult bookstores and the sex film theatres.

      “yeah,” says Barry. “I don’t know what this neighborhood

      is comin’ to! ya know those other people in

      the front

      unit?”

      “yes.”

      “well, I saw through their curtains! and ya know what

      they were doin’?”

      “no, Barry.”

      “this!” he says and then takes his right forefinger and

      pokes it against a vein in his left arm.

      “really?”

      “yeah! and if it ain’t that, now we got all these

      drunks in the neighborhood!”

      “look, Barry, I’ve got to get to the racetrack.”

     
    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2025