way to the crapper
   and then you would curse him good, set him straight, so that
   he would know enough to either be more careful or to
   just lay there and hold it.
   there was a large hill in back dense with foliage
   you could see it through the barred window
   and a few of the guys after being released would not go back to
   skid row, they’d just walk up into that green hill where
   they lived like animals.
   part of it was a campground and some lived out of the
   trash cans while others trekked back to skid row for meals but then
   returned
   and they all sold their blood each week for
   wine.
   there must have been 18 or 20 of them up there and
   they were more or less just as happy as corporate lawyers
   stockbrokers or airline
   pi lots.
   civilization is divided into parts, like an orange, and when you
   peel the skin off, pull the sections apart, chew it, the
   final result is a mouthful of pale pulp which you can either
   swallow or spit
   out.
   some just swallow it
   like the guys down at North Avenue
   21.
   the wrong way
   luxury ocean liners
   crossing the water
   full of the indolent
   and rich
   passing from this place to that
   with their hearts gone
   and their guts empty
   like Xmas turkeys
   the great blue sky above
   wasted
   all that water
   wasted
   all those
   fingers, heads, toes, buttocks,
   eyes, ears, legs, feet
   asleep in
   their American Express Card
   staterooms.
   it’s like a floating tomb
   going nowhere.
   these are the floating dead.
   yet the dead are not ugly
   but the near-dead surely
   are
   most
   surely are.
   when do they laugh?
   what do they think about
   love?
   what are they
   doing
   midst all that water?
   and where do they seek
   to go?
   no wonder
   Tony phoned and told me that
   Jan had left him but that he was all right;
   it helped him he said to think about other great men
   like D. H. Lawrence
   pissed off with life in general but still
   milking his cow;
   or to think about
   T. Dreiser with his masses of copious
   notes
   painfully constructing his novels which then made
   the very walls applaud;
   or I think about van Gogh, Tony continued, a madman
   who continued to make great paintings as the
   village children threw rocks at his
   window;
   or, there was Harry Crosby and his mistress
   in that fancy hotel room, dying together, swallowed by
   the Black Sun;
   or, take Tchaikovsky, that homo, marrying a
   female opera singer and then standing in a freezing
   river hoping to catch pneumonia while she went mad;
   or Dos Passos, after all those left-wing books,
   putting on a suit and a necktie and voting Republican;
   or that homo Lorca, shot dead in the road, supposedly
   for his politics but really because the mayor of that
   town thought his wife had the hots for the poet;
   or that other homo Crane, jumping over the rail of the boat
   and into the propellor because while drunk he had
   promised to marry some woman;
   or Dostoyevsky crucified on the roulette wheel with
   Christ on his mind;
   or Hemingway, getting his ass kicked by Callaghan
   (but Hem was correct in maintaining that F.
   Scott couldn’t write);
   or sometimes, Tony continued, I remember that guy
   with syphilis who went mad and just kept rowing in
   circles on some lake—a Frenchman—anyhow, he
   wrote great short stories…
   listen, I asked, you gonna be all
   right?
   sure, sure, he answered, just thought I’d phone, good
   night.
   and he hung up
   and I hung up, thinking Jesus
   Christ no wonder Jan left
   him.
   a threat to my immortality
   she undressed in front of me
   keeping her pussy to the front
   while I lay in bed with a bottle of
   beer.
   where’d you get that wart on
   your ass? I asked.
   that’s no wart, she said,
   that’s a mole, a kind of
   birthmark.
   that thing scares me, I said,
   let’s call
   it off.
   I got out of bed and
   walked into the other room and
   sat on the rocker
   and rocked.
   she walked out. now, listen, you
   old fart. you’ve got warts and scars and
   all kinds of things all over
   you. I do believe you’re the ugliest
   old man
   I’ve ever seen.
   forget that, I said, tell me some more
   about that
   mole on your butt.
   she walked into the other room
   and got dressed and then ran past me
   slammed the door
   and was
   gone.
   and to think,
   she’d read all my books of
   poetry too.
   I just hoped she wouldn’t tell
   anybody that
   I wasn’t pretty.
   my telephone
   the telephone has not been kind of late,
   of late there have been more and more calls
   from people who want to come over and talk
   from people who are depressed
   from people who are lonely
   from people who just don’t know what to do
   with their time;
   I’m no snob, I try to help, try to suggest something that
   might be of assistance
   but there have been more calls
   more and more calls
   and what the callers don’t realize is that
   I too have
   problems
   and even when I don’t
   it’s
   necessary for me
   sometimes
   just to be alone and quiet and
   doing nothing.
   so the other day
   after many days of listening to depressed and lonely people
   wanting me to assuage their grief,
   I was lying there
   enjoying looking at the ceiling
   when the phone rang
   and I picked it up and said,
   “listen, what ever your problem is or what ever it is you want,
   I can’t help you.”
   after a moment of silence
   whoever it was hung up
   and I felt like a man who had escaped.
   I napped then, perhaps an hour, when the phone rang
   again and I picked it up:
   “what ever your problem is
   I can’t help you!”
   “is this Mr. Chinaski?”
   “yes.”
   “this is Helen at your dentist’s
   office to remind you
   that you have an appointment at
   3:30 tomorrow
   afternoon.”
   I told her 
					     					 			 I’d be
   there for her.
   Carson McCullers
   she died of alcoholism
   wrapped in a blanket
   on a deck chair
   on an ocean
   steamer.
   all her books of
   terrified loneliness
   all her books about
   the cruelty
   of loveless love
   were all that was left
   of her
   as the strolling vacationer
   discovered her body
   notified the captain
   and she was quickly dispatched
   to somewhere else
   on the ship
   as everything
   continued just
   as
   she had written it.
   Mongolian coasts shining in light
   Mongolian coasts shining in light,
   I listen to the pulse of the sun,
   the tiger is the same to all of us
   and high oh
   so high on the branch
   our oriole
   sings.
   putrefaction
   of late
   I’ve had this thought
   that this country
   has gone backwards
   4 or 5 de cades
   and that all the
   social advancement
   the good feeling of
   person toward
   person
   has been washed
   away
   and replaced by the same
   old
   bigotries.
   we have
   more than ever
   the selfish wants of power
   the disregard for the
   weak
   the old
   the impoverished
   the
   helpless.
   we are replacing want with
   war
   salvation with
   slavery.
   we have wasted the
   gains
   we have become
   rapidly
   less.
   we have our Bomb
   it is our fear
   our damnation
   and our
   shame.
   now
   something so sad
   has hold of us
   that
   the breath
   leaves
   and we can’t even
   cry.
   where was Jane?
   one of the first actors to play Tarzan was living at the
   Motion Picture Home.
   he’d been there for years waiting to die.
   he spent much of his time
   running in and out of the wards
   into the cafeteria and out into the yard where he’d yell,
   “ME TARZAN!”
   he never spoke to anyone or said anything else, it was always just
   “ME TARZAN!”
   everybody liked him: the old actors, the retired directors,
   the ancient script writers, the aged cameramen, the prop men, stunt men, the old
   actresses, all of whom were also there
   waiting to die; they enjoyed his verve,
   his antics, he was harmless and he took them back to the time when they
   were still in the business.
   then the doctors in authority decided that Tarzan was possibly dangerous
   and one day he was shipped off to a mental institution.
   he vanished as suddenly as if he’d been eaten by a
   lion.
   and the other patients were outraged, they instituted legal proceedings
   to have him returned at once but
   it took some months.
   when Tarzan returned he was changed.
   he would not leave his room.
   he just sat by the window as if he had
   forgotten
   his old role
   and the other patients missed
   his antics, his verve, and
   they too felt somehow defeated and
   diminished.
   they complained about the change in Tarzan
   doped and drugged in his room
   and they knew he would soon die like that
   and then he did
   and then he was back in that other jungle
   (to where we will all someday retire)
   unleashing the joyful primal call they could no longer
   hear.
   there were some small notices in the
   newspapers
   and the paint continued to chip from the hospital
   walls,
   many plants died, there was an unfortunate
   suicide,
   a growing lack of trust and
   hope, and
   a pervasive sadness:
   it wasn’t so much Tarzan’s death the others mourned,
   it was the cold, willful attitude of the
   young and powerful doctors
   despite the wishes of the
   helpless old.
   and finally they knew the truth
   while sitting in their rooms
   that it wasn’t only the attitude of the doctors
   they had to fear,
   and that as silly as all those Tarzan films had been,
   and as much as they would miss their own lost
   Tarzan,
   that all that was much kinder than the final vigil
   they would now have to sit and patiently endure
   alone.
   something about a woman
   ah, Merryman,
   a fighter on the docks,
   killed a man while they were unloading
   bananas.
   I mean the man he killed
   clubbed him first
   from behind
   with an anchor chain
   (something about a woman)
   and we all circled around
   while
   Merryman
   did him in
   under a hard-on sun,
   finally strangling him to death
   throwing him into the
   ocean.
   Merryman leaped to the dock
   and walked
   away, nobody tried to stop
   him.
   then we went back to work and
   unloaded the rest of the bananas.
   nothing was ever said about the murder
   between any of us
   and I never saw anything about it
   in the papers.
   although I saw some of the bananas
   later in the
   markets:
   2 lbs. for a quarter
   they seemed a
   bargain.
   (uncollected)
   Sunday lunch at the Holy Mission
   he got knifed in broad daylight, came up the street
   holding his hands over his gut, dripping red
   on the pavement.
   nobody waiting in line left their place to help him.
   he made it to the Mission doorway, collapsed in the
   lobby where the desk clerk screamed, “hey, you
   son-of-a-bitch, what are you doing?”
   then he called an ambulance but the man was dead
   when they got there.
   the police came and circled the spots of blood
   on the pavement
   with white chalk
   photographed everything
   then asked the men waiting for their Sunday meal
   if they had seen anything
   if they knew anything.
   they all said “no” to both.
   while the police strutted in their uniforms
   the others finally loaded the body into an ambulance.
   afterwards the homeless men rolled cigarettes
   as they waited for their meal
   talking about the action
   blowing farts and smoke
   enjoying the sun
   feeling quite like
   celebrities.
   trashcan lives
 &nbs 
					     					 			p; the wind blows hard to night
   and it’s a cold wind
   and I think about
   the boys on the row.
   I hope some of them have a bottle
   of red.
   it’s when you’re on the row
   that you notice that
   everything
   is owned
   and that there are locks on
   everything.
   this is the way a democracy
   works:
   you get what you can,
   try to keep that
   and add to it
   if possible.
   this is the way a dictatorship
   works too
   only they either enslave or
   destroy their
   derelicts.
   we just forget
   ours.
   in either case
   it’s a hard
   cold
   wind.
   school days
   I’m in bed.
   it’s morning
   and I hear:
   where are your socks?