the leader of that gang came up and
   said: “listen, man, we’re going to get you.”
   “maybe,” I said, “but it won’t be easy.”
   it wasn’t bad work
   the hangover had worn off
   and I liked the way the oakite brush dissolved the grime;
   also the cheap bars of the coming night beckoned to me
   and there was always a bottle of wine waiting in my room.
   at noon in the mess hall
   when I got up to put a coin in the soft drink machine
   all 3 stopped talking and watched.
   but as days and weeks went on
   nothing ever happened.
   I gave that job six weeks then took a Trailways bus to New Orleans
   and looking out the window at all that empty, wasted land
   while sucking at a pint of
   Cutty Sark
   I wondered when and where
   I might finally come to rest and then
   fit in.
   CLEOPATRA NOW
   she was one of the most beautiful actresses
   of our time
   once married to a series of
   rich and famous men
   and now she is in traction, in hospital, a fractured
   back, the painkillers at work.
   she is now 60
   and only a few years ago
   her room would have been bursting with flowers,
   the phone ringing, many visitors on the waiting
   list.
   now, the phone seldom rings, there
   are only a few obligatory flowers,
   and visitors are at a
   minimum.
   yet, with age the lady has matured, she knows more now, understands
   more, feels more deeply, relates to life much more
   kindly.
   all to no avail: if you are no longer a good young
   fuck, if you can’t play the
   temptress with
   legs crossed high and
   violet eyes glowing
   behind
   long dark lashes,
   if you’re not still beautiful
   if you ain’t in movies any longer
   if you aren’t photographed drunk and obnoxious
   in the best
   restaurants with new young
   lovers:
   it’s all to no
   avail.
   now she sits forgotten
   in hospital
   straddling a bedpan
   as new horizons open up for
   the new generation.
   in traction you’re pathetic at 60
   and
   nobody wants to sit in a room with
   you.
   it’s too
   depressing.
   this world wants only the young and the strong and the
   still beautiful.
   as this once-famous actress
   lies forgotten in hospital
   I wonder what thoughts she
   has
   about her x-lovers
   about her x-public
   about her vanished youth
   as the hours and the days
   crawl
   by.
   I truly wonder what thoughts she
   has.
   possibly she has discovered her real self,
   achieved real wisdom.
   but has it come too late?
   and when late wisdom
   finally arrives
   is that better than none at
   all?
   PLEASE
   in the night now thinking of the years and the
   women gone and lost forever
   not minding the women gone, not even minding the years
   lost forever
   if
   we could just have some peace now—a year of peace, a month of
   peace, a week of peace—
   not peace for the world—just a selfish bit of peace
   for me
   to loll in like in green warm
   water, just a bit of it, just an hour of it, some
   peace, yes, in the night in the night while thinking of
   the years lost and the women gone in this night in this very long
   dark and lonely
   night.
   THE BAROMETER
   your critics are always going to be
   there
   and the more successful you become
   the more criticism you’ll
   receive
   especially from those
   who are most desperate
   for a taste of the same success
   you have
   achieved.
   but the thing you must always remember
   regardless of the criticism
   is to try to continue to get
   better at whatever it is that
   you do.
   I think what bothers the critics the most
   however
   is to see someone succeed
   after coming out of
   nowhere
   instead of from their very
   special circle of the waiting-to-be-
   annointed.
   critics and failed creators
   dominate the landscape
   and the more you successfully harness
   the natural power of your
   art
   the more they are going to
   insist
   through intrigue and
   through their rankling
   pitiful
   malice
   that
   you were never very much
   to begin with
   and that now, of course, you’re even
   less than
   that.
   the critics are always going to be
   there and
   when they stop, if ever, then
   you will know
   that your own brief day in the sun
   is over.
   ENEMY OF THE KING, 1935
   I kept looking at him and thinking,
   the ears don’t fit and the mouth
   is foolish and the eyes are wrong.
   his shoes don’t look right and his tone of
   voice is an insult.
   his shirt hangs from his shoulders
   as if it dislikes him.
   he chews his food like a dog
   and look at that Adam’s apple!
   and why are his favorite subjects
   “money” and “work”?
   why does he splash angrily
   in the bathtub
   when he bathes?
   and why does he hate me?
   and why do I hate him?
   why are we enemies?
   why does he look like a fool?
   how can I get away from him?
   “WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU LOOKING
   AT?” he screams.
   “GO TO YOUR ROOM!
   I’LL DEAL WITH YOU LATER!”
   “have it your way.”
   “WHAT?”
   “have it your way.”
   “YOU CAN’T TALK TO ME LIKE
   THAT!
   GO TO YOUR ROOM!”
   the room was beautiful.
   I couldn’t see him anymore.
   I couldn’t hear his voice.
   I looked at the dresser.
   the dresser was beautiful.
   I looked at the rug.
   the rug was beautiful.
   I sat in a chair and waited.
   hours passed.
   it was dark.
   now he was listening to the
   radio
   in the living room.
   I kicked the screen open and
   dropped out the window.
   then I was out in the cool night,
   walking.
   I was 15 years old,
   looking for something,
   anything.
   it wasn’t there.
   NIGHTS OF VANILLA MICE
   unshaven, yellow-toothed, sweating in my only shorts
 &nb 
					     					 			sp; and undershirt (full of cigarette holes),
   I was sure that I was better than F. Scott or Faulkner or
   even my buddy, Turgenev.
   ah, not as good as Céline or Li Po
   but, man, I had faith, felt I was more on fire
   than
   any 3 dozen mortals.
   and I typed and lived with women that you
   would shrink from, I
   brought love back to those faded eyes as vanilla mice
   slept below our bed.
   I starved and starved and typed and
   loved it, I
   reached into my mouth and plucked rotten teeth
   out of my gums
   and laughed
   as the rejections came back as fast as I could send my stories
   out, I
   felt marvelous, I felt like I owned a piece of the
   sun, I listened to all the crazy classical music from previous
   centuries, I sympathized with those who had suffered
   in the past like
   Mozart, Verdi, others,
   and when things got really bad
   I thought of Van Gogh and his ear and even
   sometimes
   his shotgun, I
   jollied myself along as best I could, and Jesus I
   got very thin
   and still during the sleepless nights I would
   tell my ladies about how I was
   going to make it as a writer some day
   and from all of them (as if with one voice) they would complain:
   “shit, are you going to talk about that
   again?”
   (my voice): “you saw how I punched that guy out
   in the alley the other night?”
   (again, as with one voice): “what has that to do with
   writing?”
   (my voice): “I don’t know …”
   of course, there were many nights with no voices,
   there were many nights alone and those were fine
   too, of course, but the worst nights were the nights
   without a room and that hurt because a writer needed
   an address in order to receive those rejection
   slips.
   but the ladies (bless them!)
   always told me, “you’re crazy but you’re
   nice.”
   being a starving writer is
   treacherous
   great
   fun.
   LARK IN THE DARK
   all teeth, big nose
   coming directly at me
   in the middle of the night.
   I am frozen in the bed
   as it comes roaring down at me
   from the ceiling.
   I roll away at the last
   moment
   and it hits the bed
   between me and my white
   cat.
   the cat jumps straight up,
   hits the ceiling,
   bounces back, hits the
   bed, leaps off, jumps through
   the screen and lands two floors
   below in the Jacuzzi.
   I get up, watch it swim to the
   edge, crawl out.
   it sits there licking itself in the
   moonlight.
   “whatcha doin’?” I hear my wife
   say.
   “gotta go to the bathroom,”
   I tell her.
   I walk to the bathroom,
   come back,
   climb under the
   covers.
   “don’t snore,” says my wife.
   I stare at the spot in the ceiling
   from where the apparition first
   appeared.
   for two hours I do this.
   then I am asleep again.
   I am dreaming.
   I am naked and driving one of
   those old-fashioned steam locomotives
   through a shopping
   mall.
   I smile and wave
   to the crowds but
   nobody seems to notice
   me.
   LONELY HEARTS
   when you start boring yourself
   you know damn well
   you’re going to start
   boring other people;
   in fact, all the people you come
   into contact with:
   on the telephone, in the post
   office, over a bowl of
   spaghetti.
   oh, all the tiresome people with their
   tiresome stories:
   like how they got screwed by life’s
   Unkind Forces, how they are fucked
   and there isn’t much they can do
   now
   except tell you all about it.
   then they step back and wait for
   you to console them
   but what you really feel like doing
   is
   piss all over them,
   which might stop them from
   inviting themselves over for
   dinner
   and then telling you more about
   their tragic
   lives.
   there are more and more of
   them,
   they line up outside in the gloom
   waiting for you.
   nobody else will listen to
   them.
   they’ve alienated
   hundreds of former
   friends, lovers and acquaintances
   but they still need to whine and
   complain.
   I’m sending them all over to
   see you
   starting today.
   get your compassion and
   understanding
   ready.
   I might be there at the end of that
   line
   myself.
   B AS IN BULLSHIT
   B kind
   B a good listener
   B able to engage in physical combat
   B a lover of classical music
   B a tolerator of children
   B a good horseplayer
   B an agnostic
   B generous on the freeways of the world
   B a good sleeper
   B not fearful of death
   B unable to beg
   B able to love
   B able to feel superior
   B able to understand that too much education is a fart in the dark
   B able to dislike poets and poetry
   B able to understand that the rich can be poor in spirit
   B able to understand that the poor live better than the rich
   B able to understand that shit is necessary
   B aware that in every life a little bit of shit must fall B aware that a hell of a lot more shit falls on some more than on others
   B aware that many dumb bastards crawl the earth
   B aware that the human heart cannot be broken
   B able to stay away from movies
   B able to sit alone in a room and feel good
   B able to watch your cat cross the floor like a miracle
   B able to recognize bullshit even when you hear it from
   B ukowski.
   A RIOT IN THE STREETS
   it’s a good day, a good time, anybody can
   blow a hole through you at any minute.
   they are shooting from the rooftops now
   and the night sky is smoking,
   red.
   what more could you want?
   you can watch it on your tv or you
   can look outside, it’s the same
   thing.
   they are letting it all out again.
   airing it out.
   it’s healthy.
   the cops are hiding.
   nobody is bored tonight.
   the safest people are already in jail.
   everybody feels curiously alive,
   at last.
   it’s party time!
   this city is the whole world
   and it’s running right at you.
   it’s a good day,  
					     					 			a good time!
   hell is coming out to play
   with you.
   INTERLUDE
   it’s been raining forever
   and I haven’t had a drink in
   a week-and-a-half.
   I must be going crazy.
   I just sit in these green pajamas
   smoke cigars and stare at the walls.
   I try to read the newspapers but
   the print blurs and I can’t
   make sense out of any of
   it.
   I watch the second hand
   go around and around on my
   watch.
   I am waiting for the ghosts
   of tomorrow.
   I look at the telephone and
   thank it for not
   ringing.
   my life has been lived
   in vain;
   I should have been a
   shortstop, a race car driver,
   a matador.
   I sit in this room, I wait in this
   room.
   I rub my left hand over my
   face.
   my whiskers are sharp,
   they feel good.
   I think tomorrow I’ll get
   dressed, go outside,
   I’ll go to Thrifty’s,
   buy a roll of Scotch tape,
   a bag of orange slices,
   a flashlight and a
   pocket comb.
   then I’ll snap out of it,
   maybe.
   D.N.F.
   they shot the horse.
   he kicked 4 times
   with the bullet in his
   brain.
   his skin shone.
   his skin sweated.
   they pushed him into a green trailer
   pulled by a yellow tractor
   driven by a man in a grey
   felt hat.
   I walked back inside
   and looked up the legs of a young woman
   sitting and
   reading the Racing Form.
   she made me hot.
   the dead horse had been my last
   bet.
   my handicapping was gone sour.
   then she saw me looking.
   I turned around,
   walked away.
   walked to a white water fountain,
   bent and drank.
   READING LITTLE POEMS IN LITTLE MAGAZINES
   you get so sick finally of the personal,
   the relaxed and little personal
   things like a visit to mother
   or getting your car stolen
   or masturbating in a mortuary
   the personal, the personal things:
   like how big your breasts are
   or how you used to be a go-go
   dancer;
   or how you worked the night shift
   at your machine and got
   slivers of hot metal under your
   fingernails.
   personal, personal things:
   like how many wives or husbands
   you’ve had;
   or how your students ask
   questions and you answer them
   wrong and only realize that two weeks