Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
I was a scraggly bum most of my
life
and to get from one city to another
I took the buses.
I don’t know how many times I
saw the Grand Canyon,
going east to west
and west to east.
it was just dusty windows,
the backs of necks, stop-offs at
intolerable eating places
and always the old
constipation
blues.
and once, a half-assed romance
with no socially redeeming
value.
then I found myself riding the
trains.
the food was beautiful
and the restrooms were
lovely
and I stayed in the bar
cars.
some of them were
so grand:
round curving picture
windows
and large overhead
domes,
the sun shone right on
down through your
glass
and at night you could
get
stinko
and watch the stars and
the moon ride
right along with
you.
and the best, since there was more
space
people weren’t forced
to speak to
you.
then after the trains I found
myself on the
jetliners,
quick trips to cities and
back.
I was like many of the
others:
I had a briefcase
and was writing on pieces
of paper.
I was on the hustle.
and I hustled and hounded the
stewardesses for drink after
drink.
the food and the view were
bad.
and the people tended to
talk to you
but there were ways to
discourage
that.
the worst about flying was that
there were people waiting for
you at the airports.
baggage was no problem:
you had your carry-on bag,
change of underwear, socks,
one shirt, toothbrush, razor,
liquor.
then the jetliners stopped.
you stayed in the city,
you shacked with unsavory
ladies and you purchased a
series of old cars.
you were much luckier with the
cars than with the
ladies.
you bought the cars for a
song
and drove them with a classic
abandon.
they never needed an oil
change and they lasted and
lasted.
on one the springs were
broken.
on another they stuck up
out of the seat and into your
ass.
one had no reverse
gear.
this was good for me,
it was like playing a game of
chess—
keeping your King from getting
checkmated.
another would only start
when parked on a
hill.
there was one where the
lights wouldn’t go on until you
hit a bump
HARD.
of course, they all died
finally.
and it was always a true
heartbreaker for me when
I had to watch them towed off
to the junkyard.
another I lost when it was impounded
on a drunk driving
rap.
they sent me an impound bill that was
four times larger than the purchase
price
so I let them keep
it.
the best car I ever had was the one
my first wife gave me when divorcing
me.
it was two years old,
as old as our marriage.
but the last car was (and is)
the very best, purchased new for
$30,000 cash. (well, I wrote
them a check).
it has everything: air bag,
anti-lock brakes, everything.
also, 2 or 3 times a year
people send a limousine
so we can attend various
functions.
these are very nice
because you can drink like
hell and not worry about the
drunk tank.
but I’m going to bypass that
private plane, that private
boat.
upkeep and rental space
can be a real pain in the
butt.
I’ll tell you one thing, though,
one night not so long
ago
I had a dream that I
could fly.
I mean, just by working
my arms and my legs
I could fly through the
air
and I did.
there were all these people
on the ground,
they were reaching up their
arms and trying to pull me
down
but
they couldn’t do
it.
I felt like pissing on
them.
they were so
jealous.
all they had to do was
to work their way
slowly up to it
as I had
done.
such people think
success grows on
trees.
you and I,
we know
better.
the big thrill
was being quite young and
reading
Of Time and theRiver
by Thomas Wolfe.
what a fat and wondrous
book!
I read it again and
again.
then a couple of decades
went by
and I read the book
again.
I disliked the poetic prose
right off.
I put the book down and
looked about the
room.
I felt cheated.
the thrill was gone.
I decided to leave town.
I was in Los Angeles.
two days later I was sitting on a
Greyhound bus
going to Miami.
and I had a pint of whiskey
in one pocket
and a paperback copy of
Fathers and Sons
in the
other.
the worst was closing the bars at
2 a.m.
with my lady.
going home to get a couple hours
sleep,
then as a substitute postal carrier
to be on call at
5:30 a.m.
sitting there with the other
subs
along the little ledge
outside the magazine
cases.
too often given a route to
case and carry,
starting 15 or 20 minutes
late,
the sweat pouring down
your face,
gathering under the
armpits.
you’re dizzy, sick,
trying to get the case
up, pull it down and
sack it for the truck to
pick up.
you worked on sheer
nerve,
reaching down into the
gut,
flailing, fighting
as the last minutes,
the last
seconds
rushed toward
you.
then to get on the
route with the people
and the dogs,
to make the rounds
on a new
route,
making your legs
go,
making your feet
walk
as the sun baked
you alive,
you fought through
your first
round
with 6 or 7 more to
go.
never time for lunch,
you’d get a write-up
if you were 5 minutes
late.
a few too many writeups
and you were
finished,
they moved you
out.
it was a living, a
deathly
living, to somehow
finish your route,
come in and often
be told
you were assigned
to the night pickup
run, another
ball-buster.
or
if you got out of that
to drive on in
to your place
to find your lady
already drunk,
dirty dishes in the
sink,
the dog unfed,
the flowers unwatered,
the bed
unmade,
the ashtrays full of
punched-out
lipstick-smeared
cigarettes.
then to get in the tub
with a beer.
you were no longer
young,
you were no longer
anything,
just worn down and
out
with your lady in the
other room
lisping inanities and
insanities,
pouring her glasses
of cheap
wine.
you were always going
to get rid of her,
you were working on
that,
you were caught between
the post office and
her,
it was the vise of
death,
each side crushing in
upon you.
“Jesus, baby, please,
please, just shut up for
a little while…”
“ah, you asshole!
what’re you doing in
there, playing with
yourself?”
to come roaring out
of that tub, all the impossibilities
of that day and that life
corkscrewing through you
ripping away
everything.
out of that tub,
a naked, roaring rocket
of battered body and
mind:
“YOU GOD DAMNED WHORE,
WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT
ANYTHING?
SITTING THERE ON YOUR
DEAD ASS AND
SUCKING AT THE VINO!”
to rush into the other room,
looking all about,
the walls whirling,
the entire world tilting in
against you.
“DON’T HIT ME! DON’T HIT
ME!
YOU’D HIT ME BUT YOU
WOULDN’T HIT A
MAN!”
“HELL NO, I WOULDN’T
HIT A MAN, YOU THINK
I’M CRAZY?”
to grab the bottle from
her,
to drain damn near
half of it.
to find another bottle,
open it,
pour a tall waterglass
full,
then to smash the glass
against a
wall,
to explode it like
that
in purple glory.
to find a new glass,
sit down and pour a
full one.
she’d be quiet
then.
we’d drink an
hour or so
like that.
then, to get
dressed,
cigarette dangling,
you are feeling somewhat
better.
then you are moving
toward the
door.
“hey! where the hell
you going?”
“I’m going to the fucking
bar!”
“not without me!
not without me, buster!”
“all right, get your ass
into gear!”
to walk there together.
to get our stools.
to sit before the long mirror.
the mirror you always hated to
look into.
to tell the bartender,
“vodka 7.”
to have her tell the bartender,
“scotch and water.”
everything was far away
then,
the post office, the world,
the past and the
future.
to have our drinks arrive.
to take the first hit in the
dark bar.
life couldn’t get any
better.