Read Mockingbird Wish Me Luck Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
the territory of the diamond and the territory of the
cross and the territory of the spider and the territory of
the butcher
divided by the territory of you and me
subtracted from the territory of mathematical
reality
multiplied by those tombstones in the
moonlight
just going on
is a greater gut-miracle than the life-death cycle
itself, I mean
going on against uselessness—
that’s different than living,
say, the way a fly lives;
the brain gives us enough light to know
that living is only an artful sacrifice
at best. at worst, it’s
hogs in the sky.
the territory of the darning needle
the territory of the mustard jar
the territory of mad dogs and love gone stale
the territory of you and me
each evening bent like the point of a thumb tack
that will no longer stick
in
each kiss a hope of returning to the first kiss
each fuck the same
each person nailed against diminishing
returns
we are slaves to hopes that have run to
garbage
as old age
arrives on schedule.
the territory of meeting and leaving
the territory of you and me
death arrived on schedule on a
Sunday afternoon, and,
as always,
it was easier than we thought
it would be.
the white poets usually knock quite early
and keep knocking and ringing
ringing and knocking
even though all the shades are down;
finally I arise with my hangover
figuring such persistency
must mean good fortune, a prize of some
sort—female or monetary,
“aw right! aw right!” I shout
looking for something to cover my ugly
naked body. sometimes I must vomit first,
then gargle; the gargle only makes me vomit again.
I forget it—go to the door—
“hello?”
“you Bukowski?”
“yeh. come in.”
we sit and look at each other—
he very vigorous and young—
latest blooming clothes—
all colors and silk—
face like a weasel—
“you don’t remember me?” he
asks.
“no.”
“I was here before. you were rather short. you didn’t like my
poems.”
“there are plenty of reasons for not liking
poems.”
“try these.”
he put them on me. they were flatter than the paper they were typed
upon. there wasn’t a tick or a
flare. not a sound. I’d never read
less.
“uh,” I said, “uh-uh.”
“you mean you don’t LIKE
them?”
“there’s nothing there—it’s like a pot of evaporated piss.”
he took the papers, stood up and walked
around. “look, Bukowski. I’ll put some broads from Malibu on
you, broads like you’ve never
seen.”
“oh yeah, baby?” I asked.
“yeah, yeah,” he
said.
and ran out the
door.
his Malibu broads were like his
poems: they
never arrived.
the black poets
young
come to my door—
“you Bukowski?”
“yeh. come in.”
they sit and look around at the
destroyed room
and at
me.
they hand me their poems.
I read
them.
“no,” I say and hand them
back.
“you don’t like
them?”
“no.”
“’roi Jones came down to see us at our
workshop…”
“I hate,” I say,
“workshops.”
“…Leroi Jones, Ray Bradbury, lots of big
boys…they said this stuff was
good…”
“it’s bad poetry, man. they are powdering your
ass.”
“there’s this big film-writer too. he started the whole
idea: Watts Writers’ Workshop.”
“ah, god, don’t you
see
? they are tickling yourassholes! you should have burned the whole town
down! I’m sick of it!”
“you just don’t understand
the poems…”
“I do, they are rhymers, full of
platitudes. you write bad
poetry.”
“look muthafucka, I been on the radio, I been printed in the
L.A.Times
!”
“oh?”
“well, that happened to
you?”
“no.”
“o.k., muthafucka, you ain’t seen the
last
ofme!”
I suppose I haven’t. and it’s useless to tell you that I am not
anti-black
because
somehow
that’s when the whole subject becomes
sickening.
you
no faces
no faces
at all
laughing at nothing—
let me tell you
I have drunk in skidrow rooms with
imbecile winos
whose cause was better
whose eyes still held some light
whose voices retained some sensibility,
and when the morning came
we were sick but not ill,
poor but not deluded,
and we stretched in our beds and rose
in the late afternoons
like millionaires.
the bus driver grins while sweating in the heat
of the plateglass windshield,
he doesn’t have a chance—
only Hollywood Boulevard, an impossible sun
and an impossible timetable,
there are so many without a chance.
I realize that there is very little chance
for any of
us. poetry won’t save us or a job won’t save us,
a good job or a bad
job.
we take a little bit and hang onto that until it is
gone.
gongs ring, dances begin, there are holidays and
celebrations…
we try to cheat the bad dream…
poetry, you whore, who will go to any man and then
leave him…
the bus driver has Hollywood Boulevard
I sit next to a fat lady who lays her dead thigh
against me.
there is a tiny roll of sweat behind one of the bus driver’s
ears. he is ashamed to brush it
away.
the people look ahead or read or look out their
windows.
the tiny roll of sweat begins to roll
it rolls along behind the ear
then down the neck,
then it’s
gone.
Vine street, says the bus driver,
this is Vine
street.
he’s right, at last. what a marvelous thing.
I get off at Vine Street. I need a drink or something
to eat. I don’t care about the bus
anymore. it is a
rejected poem. I don’t need it
anymore.
there will be more busses.
I decide upon something to eat
with a drink as
openers.
I walk out of the dark and into the dark
and sit down and
wait.
he came up on the porch
with a grinning subnormal type
and they stood there
drunk on wine.
the painter had his coat wrapped around something,
then pulled the coat away—
it was a policeman’s helmet
complete with badge.
“gimme 20 bucks for this,” he said.
“fuck off, man,” I said, “what do I want with a
cop’s derby?”
“ten bucks,” he said.
“did you kill him?”
“5 bucks…”
“what happened to that 6 grand you made
at your art show last month?”
“I drank it. all in the same bar.”
“and I never got a beer,” I said.
“2 bucks…”
“did you kill him?”
“we ganged him, punched him around a bit…”
“that’s chickenshit. I don’t want the headpiece.”
“we’re 18 cents short of a bottle, man…”
I gave the painter 35 cents
keeping the chain on the door, slipping it to him
with my fingers. he lived with his mother,
beat his girlfriend regularly
and really didn’t paint that
well. but I suppose a lot of obnoxious characters
work their way into
immortality.
I’m working on it myself.
in the bathtub rereading Céline’s
Journey to the End of the Night
the phone rings
and I get out
grab a towel.
some guy from
SMART SET
,he wants to know what’s in my mailbox
how my life has been
going.
I tell him there isn’t anything in the
mailbox or the
life.
he thinks that I’m holding
back. I hope that
I am.
my friend William is a fortunate man:
he lacks the imagination to suffer
he kept his first job
his first wife
can drive a car 50,000 miles
without a brake job
he dances like a swan
and has the prettiest blankest eyes
this side of El Paso
his garden is a paradise
the heels of his shoes are always level
and his handshake is firm
people love him
when my friend William dies
it will hardly be from madness or cancer
he’ll walk right past the devil
and into heaven
you’ll see him at the party tonight
grinning
over his martini
blissful and delightful
as some guy
fucks his wife in the
bathroom.