Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
the dogs are at it again; they leap and
tear, back off, circle, then
attack again.
and I had thought this was over, I had
thought that they had
forgotten; now there are only
more of them.
and I am older,
now
but the dogs are
ageless
and as always they tear not only at
the flesh but also at
the mind and the spirit.
now
they are circling me
in this room.
they are not
beautiful; they are the dogs
from hell
and they will find you
too
even though you are one
of them
now.
he sat naked and drunk in a room of summer
night, running the blade of the knife
under his fingernails, smiling, thinking
of all the letters he had received
telling him that
the way he lived and wrote about
that—
it had kept them going when
all seemed
truly
hopeless.
putting the blade on the table, he
flicked it with a finger
and it whirled
in a flashing circle
under the light.
who the hell is going to save
me? he
thought.
as the knife stopped spinning
the answer came:
you’re going to have to
save yourself.
still smiling,
a: he lit a
cigarette
b: he poured
another
drink
c: gave the blade
another
spin.
I been readin’ you for a long time now,
I just put Billy Boy to bed,
he got 7 mean ticks from somewhere,
I got 2,
my husband, Benny, he got 3.
some of us love bugs, others hate
them.
Benny writes poems.
he was in the same magazine as you
once.
Benny is the world’s greatest writer
but he got this temper.
he gave a readin’ once and somebody
laughed at one of his serious poems
and Benny took his thing out right
there
and pissed on stage.
he says you write good but that you
couldn’t carry his balls in a paper
bag.
anyhow, I made a BIG POT OF MARMALADE
tonight,
we all just LOVE marmalade here.
Benny lost his job yesterday, he told his
boss to stick it up his ass
but I still got my job down at the
manicure shop.
you know fags come in to get their nails
done?
you aren’t a fag, are you, Mr.
Chinaski?
anyhow, I just felt like writing you.
your books are read and read around
here.
Benny says you’re an old fart, you
write pretty good but that you
couldn’t carry his balls in a
paper sack.
do you like bugs, Mr. Chinaski?
I think the marmalade is cool enough to
eat now.
so goodbye.
Dora
it would be good to get
out of here,
just go,
pop off, get away from
memories of this
and all
that,
but staying has its
flavor too:
all those babes who
thought they were
hot numbers
now living in dirty
flats
while looking forward
to the next
episode on
some Soap Opera,
and all those guys,
those who really
thought
they were going to
make it,
grinning in the
Year Book with their
tight-skinned
mugs,
now they are
cops,
clerk typists,
operators of
sandwich stands,
horse grooms,
plops
in the dust.
it’s good to stay
around
to see what
happened to
all the
others-only
when you go to
the bathroom,
avoid the
mirror
and
don’t look
at
what you
flush
away.
the ball comes up to the
plate and I can’t
see
it.
my batting average has dropped to
.231
small things constantly
irritate me
and I can’t sleep
nights.
“you’ll come back,
Harry,” my teammates
tell me.
then they grin and are
secretly
pleased.
I’ve been benched for a
22 year old
kid.
he looks good up there:
power, lots of line
drives.
“ever thought of coaching?”
the manager asks.
“no,” I tell him, “how about
you?”
when I get home my wife
asks, “you get in the lineup
tonight?”
“nope.”
“don’t worry, he’ll put you
in.”
“no, he won’t. I’m gonna
pinch hit the rest of the
season.”
I go into the bathroom and
look into the
mirror.
I’m no 22 year old
kid.
what gets me is that it
seemed to happen
overnight.
one night I was good.
the next night, it
seemed, I was
finished.
I come out of the bathroom
and my wife says,
“don’t worry, all you need
is a little
rest.”
“I been thinking about going
into coaching,” I tell
her.
“sure,” she says, “and after
that I’ll bet you’ll be a
good manager.”
“hell yes,” I say, “anything
on tv?”
dark taste in mouth, my neck is stiff, I am looking for
my sonic vibrator, the music on my radio is diseased,
the winds of death seep through my slippers, and a
terrible letter in the mail today from a pale non-soul
who requests that he may come by to see me
in repayment, he says, for a ride he gave me home
from a drunken Pasadena party
20 years ago.
also, one of the cats shit on the rug this
morning
and in the first race I bet this afternoon
the horse tossed the jock
coming out of the gate.
downstairs
I have a large photo of Hemingway
drunk before noon in Havana, he’s on the floor
mouth open, his big belly trying to flop
out of his shirt.
I feel like that photo and I’m not even drunk.
maybe
that’s the problem.
whatever the problem is, it’s there, and worse, it
shouldn’t be
for I have been a lucky man, I shouldn’t even
be here
after all I have done to myself
and after all they have done
to me
I ought to be kneeling to the gods and giving
thanks.
instead, I deride their kindness by being
impatient
with the world.
maybe a damned good night’s sleep will bring me back
to a gentle sanity.
but at the moment, I look about this room and, like
myself, it’s all in disarray: things fallen
out of place, cluttered, jumbled, lost, knocked
over, and I can’t put it straight, don’t
want to.
perhaps living through these petty days will get us ready
for the dangerous ones.
it’s no longer any good, sucker, they’ve
turned out the lights, they’ve
blocked the rear entrance
and
the front’s on fire;
nobody knows your name;
down at the opera they play
checkers;
the city fountains piss
blood;
the extremities are reamed
and
they’ve hung the best
barber;
the dim souls have ascended;
the cardboard souls smile;
the love of dung is unanimous;
it’s no longer any good, sucker, the
graves have emptied out onto the
living;
last is first,
lost is everything;
the giant dogs mourn through dandelion
dreams;
the panthers welcome cages;
the onion heart is frosted,
destiny is destitute,
the horns of reason are muted as
the laughter of fools blockades the air;
the champions are dead
and
the newly born are smitten;
the jetliners vomit the eyeless through
space;
it’s no longer any good, sucker, it’s been
getting to that
right along
and now
it’s here
and you can’t touch it smell it see it
because it’s nothing everywhere as
you look up or down or turn or sit or stand
or sleep or run,
it’s no longer any good, sucker.
it’s no longer any good
sucker sucker sucker
and
if you don’t already know
I’m not surprised
and
if you do, sucker, good
luck
in the dark
going nowhere.
not much chance in
Amsterdam;
cheese dislikes the
flea;
the center fielder
turns
runs back
in his stupid
uniform,
times it all
perfectly:
ball and man
arriving as
one
he
gloves it
precisely
in tune with the
universe;
not much chance in
east
Kansas City;
and
have you noticed
how
men stand
side by side
in urinals,
trained in the
act,
looking straight
ahead;
the center fielder
wings it
into the
cut-off
man
who eyes the
runners;
the sun plunges
down
as somewhere
an old
woman
opens a window
looks at a
geranium,
goes for a cup of
water;
not much chance in
New York City
or
in the look
of the eye
of
the man
who sits in a
chair
across from
you
he is
going
to ask you
certain
questions about
certain
things
especially
about
what to
do
without
much chance.