Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
I still remember those New Orleans rats
out on the balcony railings
in the dark of early morning
as I stood waiting my turn at the
crapper.
there were always two or three
big ones
just sitting there—sometimes they’d
move quickly then
stop and sit there.
I looked at them and they looked at
me.
they showed no fear.
at last the crapper door would open
and out would walk
one of the tenants
and he always looked worse than
the rats
and then he’d be gone
down the hallway
and I’d go into the still-stinking
crapper
with my hangover.
and almost always
when I came out
the rats would be gone.
as soon as it got a little light
they would
vanish.
and then
the world would be
mine,
I’d walk down the stairway
and into it
and my low-wage
pitiful
job
while remembering the
rats,
how it was better for them
than for
me.
I walked to work as the sun
came up hot
and the whores slept
like
babies.
putting on your torn clothes in an old New Orleans roominghouse,
you and your stockboy soul,
then rolling your little green wagon past the salesgirls who
took no notice of you, those girls dreaming of bigger
game with their tiny rectangular
brains.
or in Los Angeles, coming in from your shipping clerk job at
an auto parts warehouse, taking the elevator up to 319 to find
your woman sprawled out on the bed, drunk at
6 p.m.
you were never any good at picking them, you always got the
leftovers, the crazies, the alkies, the pill-freaks.
maybe that was all you could get and maybe you were all they
could get.
you went to the bars and found more alkies, pill-freaks, crazies.
all they had to show you were a pair of well-turned ankles in
spike-heeled shoes.
you thumped up and down on beds with them as if you had discovered
the meaning of
existence.
then there was this day at work when Larry the salesman came down the
aisle with his big belly and his little button eyes, Larry always
walked loudly on leather-soled shoes and he was almost always
whistling.
he stopped whistling and stood at your shipping table as you
worked.
then he began rocking back and forth, he had this habit and
he stood there rocking, observing you, he was one of those jokers, you
know, and then he began laughing, you were sick from a long crazy
night, needed a shave, you were dressed in a torn shirt.
“what is it, Larry?” you asked.
and then he said, “Hank, everything you touch turns to shit!”
you couldn’t argue with him about that.
got out, fellow said, “hey!” walked toward
me, we shook hands, he slipped me 2 red
tickets for free car washes, “find you later,”
I told him, walked on through to waiting
area with wife, we sat on outside bench.
black fellow with a limp came up, said,
“hey, man, how’s it going?”
I answered, “fine, bro, you makin’ it?”
“no problem,” he said, then walked off to
dry down a Caddy.
“these people know you?” my wife asked.
“no.”
“how come they talk to you?”
“they like me, people have always liked me,
it’s my cross.”
then our car was finished, fellow flipped
his rag at me, we got up, got to the
car, I slipped him a buck, we got in, I
started the engine, the foreman walked
up, big guy with dark shades, huge guy,
he smiled a big one, “good to see you,
man!”
I smiled back, “thanks, but it’s your party,
man!”
I pulled out into traffic, “they know you,”
said my wife.
“sure,” I said, “I’ve been there.”
parking lot attendant, Bobby, was funny,
wise-cracking, laughing, was
good at it, he was an original,
sometimes when I was down
listening to Bobby brought me back
up.
didn’t see him for 3 weeks, asked the
other attendants but they didn’t know
or made things up.
drove in today and there was
Bobby, his uniform wrinkled, he was just
standing there while the others
worked.
approached him and he seemed to
recognize me, then spoke: “got all
stressed out driving here, it took me
3 hours!”
he wasn’t laughing, had grown suddenly
fat, his belt buckle was
unfastened, I buckled him up, he
had a 3 day beard,
his
hair was grey, his face wrinkled, his
eyes stuck in a backwash, 20 years
lost in 3 weeks.
“good to see you, Bobby.”
“yeah, sure, when you going to buy
this place?”
he was talking about the
racetrack.
I walked across the lot and into
the track, took the escalator
up, reached the top floor, walked
toward the service stand.
Betty saw me and got my coffee
poured.
“you ready for a big day?”
she asked.
“I’m ready for any kind of
day.”
“you come here to win, don’t
you?”
“I come here not to
lose.”
I took my coffee to a seat
facing the toteboard.
the odds flashed, I sat down
spilling hot coffee
on my
hand.
“shit,” I said.
and the day went
on.
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The Place Where Winter
Died
.
near the corner table in the
cafe
a middle-aged couple
sit.
they have finished their
meal
and they are each drinking a
beer.
it is 9 in the evening.
she is smoking a
cigarette.
then he says something.
she nods.
then she speaks.
he grins, moves his
hand.
then they are
quiet.
through the blinds next to
their table
flashing red neon
blinks on and
off.
there is no war.
there is no hell.
then he raises his beer
bottle.
it is green.
he lifts it to his lips,
tilts it.
it is a coronet.
her right elbow is
on the table
and in her hand
she holds the
cigarette
between her thumb and
forefinger
and
as she watches
him
the streets outside
flower
in the
night.
there’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I’m too tough for him,
I say, stay in there, I’m not going
to let anybody see
you.
there’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I pour whiskey on him and inhale
cigarette smoke
and the whores and the bartenders
and the grocery clerks
never know that
he’s
in there.
there’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I’m too tough for him,
I say,
stay down, do you want to mess
me up?
you want to screw up the
works?
you want to blow my book sales in
Europe?
there’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I’m too clever, I only let him out
at night sometimes
when everybody’s asleep.
I say, I know that you’re there,
so don’t be
sad.
then I put him back,
but he’s singing a little
in there, I haven’t quite let him
die
and we sleep together like
that
with our
secret pact
and it’s nice enough to
make a man
weep, but I don’t
weep, do
you?
the sweet slide of the luger
toward your temple,
a flight of birds winging
northward,
the clicking sound of the
safety catch being
released,
the eclipse of the
sun,
the sound of something being
shut
hard,
pal.