strength.

  can you buy a melon? she asked.

  have you ever been chased across the Mojave and

  raped?

  no, she said.

  I pulled out my last 20 and with an old man’s

  virile abandon ordered

  four drinks.

  both girls smiled and pulled their dresses

  higher, if that was possible.

  who’s your friend? they asked.

  this is Lord Chesterfield, I told them.

  pleased ta meetcha, they

  said.

  hello, bitches, he answered.

  we walked through the 3rd street tunnel

  to a green hotel. the girls had a

  key.

  there was one bed and we all got

  in. I don’t know who got

  who.

  the next morning my friend and

  I were down at the Farm Labor Market

  on San Pedro Street

  holding up and waving our social

  security cards.

  they couldn’t see

  his.

  I was the last one on the truck out. a big woman stood

  up against me. she smelled like

  port wine.

  honey, she asked, what ever happened to your

  face?

  fair grounds, a dancing bear who

  didn’t.

  bullshit, she said.

  maybe so, I said, but get your hand out

  from around my

  balls. everybody’s looking.

  when we got to the

  fields the sun was

  really up

  and the world

  looked

  terrible.

  about pain

  my first and only wife

  painted

  and she talked to me

  about it:

  “it’s all so painful

  for me, each stroke is

  pain…

  one mistake and

  the whole painting is

  ruined…

  you will never understand the

  pain…”

  “look, baby,” I

  said, “why doncha do something easy—

  something ya like ta

  do?”

  she just looked at me

  and I think it was her

  first understanding of

  the tragedy of our being

  together.

  such things usually

  begin

  somewhere.

  hot

  she was hot, she was so hot

  I didn’t want anybody else to have her,

  and if I didn’t get home on time

  she’d be gone, and I couldn’t bear that—

  I’d go mad…

  it was foolish I know, childish,

  but I was caught in it, I was caught.

  I delivered all the mail

  and then Henderson put me on the night pickup run

  in an old army truck,

  the damn thing began to heat halfway through the run

  and the night went on

  me thinking about my hot Miriam

  and jumping in and out of the truck

  filling mailsacks

  the engine continuing to heat up

  the temperature needle was at the top

  HOT HOT

  like Miriam.

  I leaped in and out

  3 more pickups and into the station

  I’d be, my car

  waiting to get me to Miriam who sat on my blue couch

  with scotch on the rocks

  crossing her legs and swinging her ankles

  like she did,

  2 more stops…

  the truck stalled at a traffic light, it was hell

  kicking it over

  again…

  I had to be home by 8, 8 was the deadline for Miriam.

  I made the last pickup and the truck stalled at a signal

  1/2 block from the station…

  it wouldn’t start, it couldn’t start…

  I locked the doors, pulled the key and ran down to the

  station…

  I threw the keys down…. signed out…

  your goddamned truck is stalled at the signal,

  I shouted,

  Pico and Western…

  …I ran down the hall, put the key into the door,

  opened it…. her drinking glass was there, and a note:

  sun of a bitch:

  I wated until 5 after ate

  you don’t love me

  you sun of a bitch

  somebody will love me

  I been wateing all day

  Miriam

  I poured a drink and let the water run into the tub

  there were 5,000 bars in town

  and I’d make 25 of them

  looking for Miriam

  her purple teddy bear held the note

  as he leaned against a pillow

  I gave the bear a drink, myself a drink

  and got into the hot

  water.

  who in the hell is Tom Jones?

  I was shacked with a

  24-year-old girl from

  New York City for

  two weeks—about

  the time of the garbage

  strike out there, and

  one night my 34-year-

  old woman arrived and

  she said, “I want to see

  my rival.” she did

  and then she said, “o,

  you’re a cute little thing!”

  next I knew there was a

  screech of wildcats—

  such screaming and scratching, wounded animal moans,

  blood and piss…

  I was drunk and in my

  shorts. I tried to

  separate them and fell,

  wrenched my knee. then

  they were through the screen

  door and down the walk

  and out in the street.

  squad cars full of cops

  arrived. a police helicopter circled overhead.

  I stood in the bathroom

  and grinned in the mirror.

  it’s not often at the age

  of 55 that such splendid

  things occur.

  better than the Watts

  riots.

  the 34-year-old

  came back in. she had

  pissed all over her-

  self and her clothing

  was torn and she was

  followed by 2 cops who

  wanted to know why.

  pulling up my shorts

  I tried to explain.

  the price

  drinking 15-dollar champagne—

  Cordon Rouge—with the hookers.

  one is named Georgia and she

  doesn’t like pantyhose:

  I keep helping her pull up

  her long dark stockings.

  the other is Pam—prettier

  but not much soul, and

  we smoke and talk and I

  play with their legs and

  stick my bare foot into

  Georgia’s open purse.

  it’s filled with

  bottles of pills. I

  take some of the pills.

  “listen,” I say, “one of

  you has soul, the other

  looks. can’t I combine

  the 2 of you? take the soul

  and stick it into the looks?”

  “you want me,” says Pam, “it

  will cost you a hundred.”

  we drink some more and Georgia

  falls to the floor and can’t

  get up.

  I tell Pam that I like her

  earrings very much. her

  hair is long and a natural

  red.

  “I was only kidding about the

  hundred,” she says.

  “oh,” I say, “what will it cost
r />
  me?”

  she lights her cigarette with

  my lighter and looks at me

  through the flame:

  her eyes tell me.

  “look,” I say, “I don’t think I

  can ever pay that price again.”

  she crosses her legs

  inhales on her cigarette

  as she exhales she smiles

  and says, “sure you can.”

  I’m in love

  she’s young, she said,

  but look at me, I have pretty ankles,

  and look at my wrists, I have pretty

  wrists

  o my god,

  I thought it was all working,

  and now it’s her again,

  every time she phones you go crazy,

  you told me it was over

  you told me it was finished,

  listen, I’ve lived long enough to become a

  good woman,

  why do you need a bad woman?

  you need to be tortured, don’t you?

  you think life is rotten if somebody treats you

  rotten it all fits,

  doesn’t it?

  tell me, is that it? do you want to be treated like a

  piece of shit?

  and my son, my son was going to meet you.

  I told my son

  and I dropped all my lovers.

  I stood up in a cafe and screamed

  I’M IN LOVE,

  and now you’ve made a fool of me…

  I’m sorry, I said, I’m really sorry.

  hold me, she said, will you please hold me?

  I’ve never been in one of these things before, I said,

  these triangles…

  she got up and lit a cigarette, she was trembling all

  over. she paced up and down, wild and crazy. she had

  a small body. her arms were thin, very thin and when

  she screamed and started beating me I held her

  wrists and then I got it through the eyes: hatred,

  centuries deep and true. I was wrong and graceless and

  sick. all the things I had learned had been wasted.

  there was no living creature as foul as I

  and all my poems were

  false.

  the girls

  I have been looking at

  the same

  lampshade

  for

  5 years

  and it has gathered

  a bachelor’s dust

  and

  the girls who enter here

  are too

  busy

  to clean it

  but I don’t mind

  I have been too

  busy

  to notice

  until now

  that the light

  shines

  badly

  through

  5 years’

  worth.

  the ladies of summer

  the ladies of summer will die like the rose

  and the lie

  the ladies of summer will love

  so long as the price is not

  forever

  the ladies of summer

  might love anybody;

  they might even love you

  as long as summer

  lasts

  yet winter will come to them

  too

  white snow and

  a cold freezing

  and faces so ugly

  that even death

  will turn away—

  wince—

  before taking them.

  tonight

  “your poems about the girls will still be around

  50 years from now when the girls are gone,”

  my editor phones me.

  dear editor:

  the girls appear to be gone

  already.

  I know what you mean

  but give me one truly alive woman

  to night

  walking across the floor toward me

  and you can have all the poems

  the good ones

  the bad ones

  or any that I might write

  after this one.

  I know what you mean.

  do you know what I mean?

  shoes

  when you’re young

  a pair of

  female

  high-heeled shoes

  just sitting

  alone

  in the closet

  can fire your

  bones;

  when you’re old

  it’s just

  a pair of shoes

  without

  anybody

  in them

  and

  just as

  well.

  hug the dark

  turmoil is the god

  madness is the god

  permanent living peace is

  permanent living death.

  agony can kill

  or agony can sustain life

  but peace is always horrifying

  peace is the worst thing

  walking

  talking

  smiling,

  seeming to be.

  don’t forget the sidewalks

  the whores,

  betrayal,

  the worm in the apple,

  the bars, the jails,

  the suicides of lovers.

  here in America

  we have assassinated a president and his brother,

  another president has quit office.

  people who believe in politics

  are like people who believe in god:

  they are sucking wind through bent

  straws.

  there is no god

  there are no politics

  there is no peace

  there is no love

  there is no control

  there is no plan

  stay away from god

  remain disturbed

  slide.

  face of a political candidate on a street billboard

  there he is:

  not too many hangovers

  not too many fights with women

  not too many flat tires

  never a thought of suicide

  not more than three toothaches

  never missed a meal

  never in jail

  never in love

  7 pairs of shoes

  a son in college

  a car one year old

  insurance policies

  a very green lawn

  garbage cans with tight lids

  he’ll be elected.

  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.

  on going out to get the mail

  the droll noon

  where squadrons of worms creep up like

  stripteasers

  to be raped by blackbirds.

  I go outside

  and all up and down the street

  the green armies shoot color