Online Book Reader

Home Category

The Pleasures of the Damned - Charles Bukowski [16]

By Root 735 0
and demented

I was glad to have my passbook and stand in line

I watched the buses run up Vermont

I was too crazy to get a job as a driver of buses

and I didn’t even look at the young girls

I got dizzy standing in line but I

just kept thinking I have money in this building

Friday afternoon hungover

I didn’t know how to play the piano

or even hustle a damnfool job in a carwash

I was glad I had money in the Savings and Loan

finally I was at the window

it was my Japanese girl

she smiled at me as if I were some amazing god

back again, eh? she said and laughed

as I showed her my withdrawal slip and my passbook

as the buses ran up and down Vermont

the camels trotted across the Sahara

she gave me the money and I took the money

Friday afternoon hungover

I walked into the market and got a cart

and I threw sausages and eggs and bacon and bread in there

I threw beer and salami and relish and pickles and mustard in there

I looked at the young house wives wiggling casually

I threw t-bone steaks and porter house and cube steaks in my cart

and tomatoes and cucumbers and oranges in my cart

Friday afternoon hungover

split with my girlfriend and blue and demented

I was glad I had money in the Savings and Loan.

the angel who pushed his wheelchair

long ago he edited a little magazine

it was up in San Francisco

during the beat era

during the reading-poetry-with-jazz experiments

and I remember him because he never returned my manuscripts

even though I wrote him many letters,

humble letters, sane letters, and, at last, violent letters;

I’m told he jumped off a roof

because a woman wouldn’t love him.

no matter. when I saw him again

he was in a wheelchair and carried a wine bottle to piss in;

he wrote very delicate poetry

that I, naturally, couldn’t understand;

he autographed his book for me

(which he said I wouldn’t like)

and once at a party I threatened to punch him and

I was drunk and he wept and

I took pity and instead hit the next poet who walked by

on the head with his piss bottle; so,

we had an understanding after all.

he had this very thin and intense woman

pushing him about, she was his arms and legs and

maybe for a while

his heart.

it was almost commonplace

at poetry readings where he was scheduled to read

to see her swiftly rolling him in,

sometimes stopping by me, saying,

“I don’t see how we are going to get him up on the stage!”

sometimes she did. often she did.

then she began writing poetry, I didn’t see much of it,

but, somehow, I was glad for her.

then she injured her neck while doing her yoga

and she went on disability, and again I was glad for her,

all the poets wanted to get disability insurance

it was better than immortality.

I met her in the market one day

in the bread section, and she held my hands and

trembled all over

and I wondered if they ever had sex

those two. well, they had the muse anyhow

and she told me she was writing poetry and articles

but really more poetry, she was really writing a lot,

and that’s the last I saw of her

until one night somebody told me she’d o.d.’d

and I said, no, not her

and they said, yes, her.

it was a day or so later

sometime in the afternoon

I had to go to the Los Feliz post office

to mail some dirty stories to a sex mag.

coming back

outside a church

I saw these smiling creatures

so many of them smiling

the men with beards and long hair and wearing

blue jeans

and most of the women blonde

with sunken cheeks and tiny grins,

and I thought, ah, a wedding,

a nice old-fashioned wedding,

and then I saw him on the sidewalk

in his wheelchair

tragic yet somehow calm

looking grayer, a profile like a tamed hawk,

and I knew it was her funeral,

she had really o.d.’d

and he did look tragic out there.

I do have feelings, you know.

maybe to night I’ll try to read his book.

a time to remember

at North Avenue 21 drunk tank you slept on the floor and at night

there was always some guy who would step on your face on his

way to the

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader