courteous without being prompted,
   you even read the classics at an early age,
   you were not what we would call selfish or debased,
   you were even likeable most of the time,
   but now—bang!—
   you’re dead, you’re dead, and
   you must leave because
   there is
   no room
   left here
   for
   you
   now.
   ALONE IN THIS ROOM
   I am alone in this room as the world
   washes over me.
   I sit and wait and wonder.
   I have a terrible taste in my mouth
   as I sit and wait in this room.
   I can no longer see the walls.
   everything has changed into something else.
   I cannot joke about this,
   I cannot explain this as
   the world washes over me.
   I don’t care if you believe me because
   I’ve lost all interest in that too.
   I am in a place where I have never been before.
   I am alone in a different place that
   does not include other faces,
   other human beings.
   it is happening to me now
   in a space within a space as
   I sit and wait alone in this room.
   FAREWELL, FAREWELL
   the blade cuts down and through,
   pulls out, enters again, twists.
   this is the test so
   spit it out, sucker, you’ve long ago
   demonstrated your valor
   in the face of this unhappy world, in the
   face of this
   bitterly unhappy world,
   and who but a fool would want to
   linger?
   your little supply of good luck has been
   used up so
   spit it out, sucker:
   the last goodbye is always the
   sweetest.
   ABOUT THE MAIL LATELY
   I keep getting letters, more and more of
   them wondering if I am really dead, they have
   heard that I am dead.
   well, I suppose that it’s my age and all
   the drinking that I have done, still
   do.
   I should be dead.
   I will be dead.
   and I have never been too interested in
   living, it has been hard work, slave
   labor, still is.
   I’ve been doing some thinking about
   death of late and have come up with
   one disturbing thought:
   that death could be hard work too,
   that maybe it’s another kind of trap.
   it probably is.
   meanwhile, like everybody else,
   I do the things I do and I wait around.
   I could use this poem as a reply letter
   and mail out copies to those who write
   me because they’ve heard that I am dead.
   I will sign them to
   give them legitimacy so that
   the receivers can sell them to
   collectors who can then resell them for
   an even higher price to each other.
   which reminds me that I no longer
   receive letters from young ladies who
   include nude photos and tell me that
   they would love to come around and do
   housework and lick my stamps.
   they probably hope that I can’t get it up
   any more.
   in any event,
   I’ll just continue to answer the death letters,
   have another drink, smoke these
   Jamaican cigars and hustle for my
   rightful place in Classic American Literature
   before I
   stiffen up
   kick the bucket
   swallow the 8 ball
   send up my last rocket
   hustle into the dark
   get the hell out
   hang it up
   and say my last goodbye while
   clutching my
   last uncashed
   ticket.
   LIFE ON THE HALF SHELL
   the obvious is going to kill us,
   the obvious is killing us.
   our luck is used up.
   as always, we regroup
   and wait.
   we haven’t forgotten how to
   fight
   but the long battle has made us
   weary.
   the obvious is going to kill us,
   we are engulfed by the
   obvious.
   we allowed it.
   we deserve it.
   a hand moves in the
   sky.
   a freight train passes in the night.
   the fences are broken.
   the heart sits alone.
   the obvious is going to kill us.
   we wait, dreamless.
   THE HARDEST
   birthday for me was my 30th.
   I didn’t want anybody to know.
   I’d been sitting in the same bar
   night and day
   and I thought, how long am I going
   to be
   able to keep up this
   bluff?
   when am I going to give it up and
   start acting like everybody
   else?
   I ordered another drink and
   thought about it
   and then the answer came to
   me:
   when you’re dead, baby, when
   you’re dead like the rest of
   them.
   A TERRIBLE NEED
   some people simply need to
   be unhappy, they’ll scrounge it out
   of any given situation
   taking every opportunity
   to point out
   every simple error
   or oversight
   and then become
   hateful
   dissatisfied
   vengeful.
   don’t they realize that
   there’s so little
   time
   for each of us
   in this strange
   life to make things
   whole?
   and to squander
   our lives living
   like that
   is nearly
   unforgiveable?
   and that
   there’s never
   ever
   any way
   then
   to recover
   all that which will be
   thus lost
   forever?
   BODY SLAM
   Andre the Giant dead in his Paris
   hotel room.
   7 feet and 550 pounds, dead.
   he used to wrestle.
   he was a champion.
   a week earlier he had attended
   his father’s funeral.
   Andre had been a kind soul who
   liked to send flowers to people.
   but dead he was a problem.
   they had to carry him out of
   there
   and no casket would hold him.
   now maybe he’d get some
   flowers?
   Andre the Giant
   in Paris
   wrestling with the Angel of
   Death.
   and the fix wasn’t in,
   this
   time.
   THE GODS ARE GOOD
   the poems keep getting better and
   better
   and I keep winning at the race
   track
   and even when the bad moments
   arrive
   I handle them
   better.
   it’s as if there was a rocket
   inside of me
   getting ready to shoot out of
   the top of my
   head
   and when it does
   what’s left behind I
   w 
					     					 			on’t regret.
   THE SOUND OF TYPEWRITERS
   we were both starving writers, Hatcher and I;
   he lived on the 2nd floor of the apartment
   house, right below me, and a young lady,
   Cissy, she lived on the first floor. she had just
   a fair mind but a great body and flowing blond hair and
   if you could ignore her unkind city face
   she was most of anyone’s good dream; anyhow,
   I suppose the sound of the typewriters
   ignited her curiosity or stirred
   something in her—she knocked at my door one
   day, we shared some wine and then she nodded
   at the bed and that was that.
   she knocked at my door, sporadically, after
   that
   but then sometimes I heard her knocking on
   Hatcher’s door
   and as I listened from above to their voices, the laughter,
   I had trouble typing, especially after it
   became silent down there.
   to keep myself typing, as if I was unconcerned,
   I copied items from the daily
   newspaper.
   Hatcher and I used to discuss Cissy.
   “you in love with her?” he’d ask.
   “fuck no! how about you?”
   “no way!” he’d answer. “look, if you’re
   in love with her, I’ll tell her not to
   come around my place
   anymore.”
   “hey, baby, I’ll do the same for you,”
   I said.
   “forget it,” he’d respond.
   I don’t know who got the most visits, I
   think it was just about
   even
   but we each realized after a while
   that Cissy liked to knock
   while the typewriter was working
   so both Hatcher and I did a great deal of extra
   typing.
   Hatcher got lucky with his writing first
   so he moved out of that dive and
   Cissy went with him; they moved
   into his new apartment
   together.
   after that I began getting phone calls
   from Hatcher:
   “Jesus, that whore has no class! she’s never
   home!”
   “are you in love with her?”
   “hell no, man, you think I’d get hooked
   on trash like her?”
   Cissy would be listening on the extension
   and then she’d give Hatcher an explicit verbal
   retort.
   after a while Cissy moved out of Hatcher’s
   place;
   she still came around to see me occasionally
   but she was always with some different
   guy, all of them
   real low-life
   subnormals.
   I couldn’t understand the why of those visits;
   but no matter—I had somehow lost all
   interest.
   then I too got a little lucky and
   was able to move from the
   slums; I left the ex-landlord my
   new phone number
   in case of
   emergency.
   some time went by, then the ex-landlord
   phoned: “there’s a woman been coming
   by. her name is
   Cissy.
   she wants your new phone number and
   address, she’s very
   insistent.
   should I give it to
   her?”
   “no, please don’t.”
   “man, she’s a number! you mind if I
   date her?”
   “not at all, help
   yourself.”
   it’s strange how things like that
   are good and interesting
   for a while
   and it’s o.k. when they end and
   you can simply walk
   away.
   but the good parts were
   great and I’ll
   also always remember Cissy downstairs
   there at Hatcher’s
   and me up there madly
   typing
   weather reports,
   political columns
   and
   obituaries—
   I wore out many a good ribbon and
   worried myself
   stupid, so
   Cissy was memorable after
   all
   and that can’t be said
   about just
   anybody, you
   know?
   or
   don’t
   you
   know?
   A FIGHT
   pretty boy was tiring
   his punches were wild
   his arms were weary
   and the old wino closed in and
   it became ugly,
   pretty boy dropped to his knees
   and the wino had him by the
   throat
   banging his head against the brick
   wall,
   pretty boy fell over
   as the wino paused
   landed a swift kick
   to the gential area
   then turned and walked back up
   the dark alley
   to where we stood watching.
   we parted to let him
   through
   and he walked past us
   turned
   looked back
   lit a cigarette
   and then moved on.
   when I got back in
   she was raging:
   “where the hell have you been?”
   pink-eyed she was
   sitting up against the pillows
   just her slippers on.
   “stop for a quickie?
   no wonder you haven’t looked
   at me for a week!”
   “I saw a good fight. free.
   better than anything at the
   Olympic. I saw a good ass-
   kicking alley fight.”
   “you expect me to believe
   that?”
   “christ, don’t you ever wash
   the glasses? well, we’ll use
   these two.”
   I poured two. she knocked hers
   off. well, she needed it
   and I needed mine.
   “it was really brutal. I hate
   to see such things but I can’t
   help watching.”
   “pour me another drink.”
   I poured two more, she needed
   hers because she lived with me.
   I needed mine because I worked
   as a stockroom boy
   for the May Co.
   “you stopped for a quickie!”
   “no, I watched a fight.”
   she tossed off her second drink.
   she was trying to decide
   whether I had had a quickie or
   whether I had watched a fight.
   “pour us another drink, is that
   the only bottle we’ve got?”
   I winked at her and pulled
   another bottle from a paper sack.
   we seldom ate. we drank
   and I worked as a
   stockroom boy for the May Co. and
   she had a pair of the
   most beautiful legs I had
   ever seen.
   as I poured the third drink
   she got up, smiled, kicked off the
   slippers and put her high heels
   on.
   “we need some god-damned
   ice,” she said as I watched
   her ass wobble into the
   kitchen.
   then she vanished in there
   and I thought about that
   fight again.
   SUNBEAM
   sometimes when you are in hell
   and it is continuous
   you get a bit giddy
   and then when you are tired beyond being
   tired
					     					 			br />   sometimes a crazy feeling gets a hold of
   you.
   the factory was in east L.A.
   and of the 150 workers
   I was one of only two white men
   there.
   the other had a soft job.
   mine was to wrap and tape
   the light fixtures
   as they came off the assembly line and
   as I tried
   to keep pace the
   sharp edges of the tape
   cut through my gloves and into my
   hands.
   finally
   the gloves had to be thrown
   away
   because
   they were cut to shreds
   and then my hands were completely exposed
   each new slice like an electric
   shock.
   I was the big dumb white boy
   and as the others
   worked to keep pace
   all eyes were watching to see
   if I would
   fall behind.
   I gave up on my hands
   but I didn’t give up.
   the pace seemed impossible
   and then something snapped in my
   brain and I screamed
   out the name of the firm we were all slaving
   for, “SUNBEAM!”
   at once
   everybody laughed
   all the girls on the assembly line and
   all the guys too although
   we all still had to struggle to keep up with
   the work flow.
   then I yelled it
   again:
   “SUNBEAM!”
   it was a total release for me.
   then one of the girls on the
   assembly line yelled back,
   “SUNBEAM!”
   and we all
   laughed
   together.
   and then as we continued
   to work
   a new voice
   would suddenly call out from
   somewhere,
   “SUNBEAM!”
   and each time we
   laughed until
   we were all drunk with
   laughter.
   then the foreman,
   Morry,
   came in from the other
   room.
   “WHAT THE HELL’S GOING ON IN
   HERE? THAT SCREAMING HAS GOT
   TO STOP!”
   so then, we stopped.
   and as Morry turned away we saw that the
   seat of his pants was jammed up in the crack of
   his ass, that fool in control of
   our universe!
   I lasted about 4 months there
   and I will always remember that day,
   that joy, the madness, the mutual
   magic of our
   many voices
   one at a time
   screaming
   “SUNBEAM!”
   sometimes when you are in
   a living hell
   long enough
   things like that sometimes happen
   and then
   you’re in a kind of heaven
   a heaven which might not seem to be
   very much at all
   to most folks