On Love

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On Love Page 7

by Charles Bukowski


  one night,

  the last night of the week:

  it went down while I was in action.

  she took it personally.

  I am now down to one woman

  and I don’t cheat on her.

  when you find you can get fucked

  easily

  you find you don’t need to go

  about

  simply fucking women

  and using their toilets and their

  showers and their towels

  and their insides,

  their thoughts, their

  feelings.

  I now have a nice garden outside.

  she planted it.

  I water it daily.

  potted plants hang from ropes.

  I am at peace.

  she stays 3 days a week

  then goes back to her house.

  the mailman asks me, “hey, what

  happened to all your women? you

  used to have a couple of them

  sitting on your porch when I came

  by . . .”

  “Sam,” I tell him, “I was beginning

  to feel like a dildo . . .”

  the liquor delivery man comes by:

  “hey, man! where are all the broads?

  you’re alone tonight . . .”

  “all the more to drink,

  Ernie . . .”

  I’ve done the town, I’ve drunk the

  city, I’ve fucked the country, I’ve

  pissed on the universe.

  there’s little left to do but

  consolidate and ease out.

  I have a nice garden.

  I have a lovely woman.

  I no longer feel like a

  dildo.

  I feel like a man.

  it feels much

  better, it

  does. don’t worry

  about me.

  a place to relax

  to be a young fool and poor and ugly

  doesn’t make the walls look so good.

  so many evenings, examining walls

  with nothing to drink

  nothing to smoke

  nothing to eat

  (we drank my paychecks fast).

  she always knew when to leave.

  she put me through her college—

  she gave me my masters and my Ph.D.,

  and she always came back,

  she wanted a place to relax

  somewhere to hang her clothes.

  she claimed I was very funny,

  I made her laugh

  but I was not trying to be

  funny.

  she had beautiful legs and she was

  intelligent but she just didn’t care,

  and all my fury and all my humor and

  all my madness only entertained

  her: I was performing for her

  like some puppet in some hell of my own.

  a few times when she left I had enough

  cheap wine and enough cigarettes

  to listen to the radio and look at the

  walls and get drunk enough to get away

  from her.

  but she always came back to try me

  again.

  I do remember her especially.

  other better women have made me feel as

  bad

  as those evenings

  taking that two mile walk home from work

  turning up the alley

  looking up at the window

  and finding the shades dark.

  she taught me the agony of the damned and

  the useless.

  one wants good weather, good luck, good

  dreams.

  for me it was a long chance in a big field,

  the time was cold and the longshot didn’t

  come in.

  I buried her five years after I met her,

  seldom seeing her in the last three.

  there were only four at the grave:

  the priest

  her landlady

  her son and myself.

  it didn’t matter:

  all those walks up the alley

  hoping for a light behind the shade.

  all those dozens of men who had fucked her

  were not there

  and one of the men who had loved her

  was: “My crazy stockroom boy from the

  department store,” she called me.

  snap snap

  oh, the ladies can get snappish

  sticking their hands into the sink

  yanking at sheets

  working their trowels through the earth

  near the radish patch

  sitting in the auto with you

  as you drive along.

  oh, the ladies can get snappish

  discussing

  God and the movies

  music and works of art

  or what to do about the cat’s

  infection.

  the snappishness spreads to

  every area of conversation

  the voice-pitch remains at

  high-trill.

  what happened to the nights

  before the fire

  when they were all sweetness

  of ankle and knee

  pure of eye

  long hair combed out?

  of course, we knew that wasn’t

  real

  but the snappishness is.

  love is too

  but it’s stuck somewhere

  between the crab apple tree

  and the sewer.

  the judge is asleep in his

  chambers and

  nobody’s guilty.

  for the little one

  she’s downstairs singing, playing her

  guitar, I think she’s happier than

  usual and I’m glad. sometimes my

  mind gets sick and I’m cruel to her.

  she weighs one hundred and one

  pounds

  has small wrists and

  her eyes

  are often purely sad.

  sometimes my needs

  make me selfish

  a backwash takes my

  mind

  and I’ve never been

  good

  with apology.

  I hear her singing

  now it’s

  very late night

  and from here

  I can see the

  lights of the city

  and they are sweet as

  ripe garden fruits

  and this room is

  calm

  so strange

  as if magic had

  become normal.

  hello, Barbara

  25 years ago

  in Las Vegas

  I got married

  the only time.

  we were only

  there an hour.

  I drove all the

  way up and all

  the way back

  to L.A.

  and I still

  didn’t feel

  married and

  I continued

  to feel that

  way for 2 and

  ½ years until

  she divorced

  me.

  then I found

  a woman

  who had ants

  for pets and

  fed them

  sugar.

  I got her

  pregnant.

  after that

  there were

  many other

  women.

  but the

  other day

  this man

  who has been

  looking into

  my past

  said, “I’ve

  got the

  phone number

  of your

  x-wife.”

  I put it

  in my

  dresser drawer.

  then I got

  drunk one

&n
bsp; night

  pulled the

  number out

  and

  phoned her.

  “hey, baby,

  it’s me!”

  “I know it’s

  you,” she said

  in that same

  chilly voice.

  “how ya

  doin’?”

  “all right,”

  she answered.

  “you still

  livin’ on that

  chicken ranch?”

  “yes,” she

  said.

  “well, I’m

  drunk.

  I just thought

  I’d give you

  a little

  call.”

  “so you’re

  drunk again,”

  she said in

  that same

  chilly voice.

  “yes. well,

  all right,

  I’m saying

  goodbye now . . .”

  “goodbye,” she

  said and hung

  up.

  I walked over

  and poured a

  new drink.

  after 25 years

  she still

  hated me.

  I didn’t think

  I was that

  bad.

  of course,

  guys like me

  seldom

  do.

  Carson McCullers

  she died of alcoholism

  wrapped in the blanket

  of a deck chair

  on an overseas

  steamer

  all her books of

  terrified loneliness

  all her books about

  the cruelty

  of the loveless lover

  were all that were left

  of her

  as the strolling vacationer

  discovered her body

  notified the captain

  and she was dispatched

  somewhere else

  upon the ship

  as everything else

  continued

  as

  she had written it.

  Jane and Droll

  we were in a small shack in

  central L.A.

  there was a woman in bed

  with me

  and there was a very large

  dog

  at the foot of the bed

  and as they slept

  I listened to them

  breathe

  and I thought, they depend

  upon me.

  how very curious.

  I still had that thought

  in the morning

  after our breakfast

  while backing the car

  out of the drive

  the woman and the dog

  on the front step

  sitting and watching

  me

  as I laughed and waved

  and as she smiled and

  waved

  and the dog looked

  as I backed into the

  street and disappeared

  into the city.

  now tonight

  I still think of them

  sitting on that

  front step

  it’s like an old

  movie—35 years

  old—that nobody ever

  saw or understood

  but me

  and even though the

  critics would dub it

  ordinary

  I like it

  very much.

  we get along

  the various women I have lived with have attended

  rock concerts, reggae festivals, love-ins, peace

  marches, movies, garage sales, fairs, protests,

  weddings, funerals, poetry readings, Spanish classes,

  spas, parties, bars and so forth

  and I have lived with this

  machine.

  while the ladies attended affairs, saved the whales,

  the seals, the dolphins, the great white shark,

  while the ladies talked on the telephone

  this machine and I lived

  together.

  as we live together tonight: this machine, the 3

  cats, the radio and the wine.

  after I die the ladies will say (if asked): “he

  liked to sleep, to drink; he never wanted to go

  anywhere . . . well, the racetrack, that stupid

  place!”

  the ladies I have known and lived with have been

  very social, jumping into the car, waving, going

  out there as if some treasure of great import

  awaited them . . .

  “it’s a new punk group, they’re great!”

  “Allen Ginsberg’s reading!”

  “I’m late for my dance class!”

  “I’m going to play scrabble with Rita!”

  “it’s a surprise birthday for Fran!”

  I have this machine.

  this machine and I live together.

  Olympia, that’s her name.

  a good girl.

  almost always

  faithful.

  it was all right

  she’s a good old girl now.

  she’s fattened and grayed.

  we were lovers many years

  ago,

  there was a child,

  there is a child,

  now a woman.

  this woman gave me

  a tape

  of her mother

  talking about poetry

  and her life and

  reading her

  poems.

  an hour-long tape.

  I listened to it.

  unfortunately

  the poetry wasn’t

  very good

  but most poetry

  isn’t.

  she went on talking

  about

  poetry workshops,

  various influences—

  family, friends, her

  husband (I

  wasn’t) who didn’t

  seem to like her

  writing poetry.

  she kept a notebook

  near her bed

  and one in her

  purse.

  she talked about

  this and that.

  I was happy for her

  that they allowed her

  on a radio station

  for an hour.

  I’d heard worse

  from professors who

  had made

  literature

  their trade.

  and as I listened

  to her voice

  it was the

  same voice

  I’d heard

  20 years ago

  when I dropped in

  on her place

  on Vermont Avenue

  and found her

  feeding sugar

  to the ants

  in her room

  and there were

  many ants

  there

  but she had

  a great body

  then

  and I was

  hard-up as

  hell.

  it was a

  good hour,

  Fran.

  my walls of love

  it’s on nights like this, I get back what I

  can.

  the living is hard, the writing is free.

  were that the women were as easy

  but they wore always much the same:

  they liked my writing in finished book-

  form

  but there was always something about the

  actual typing

  working toward the new

  which bothered them . . .

  I wasn’t competing with them

  but they got competitive with me

  in forms and styles which I didn’t consider

  either original or creative
r />   although to me

  they were certainly

  astonishing enough.

  now they are set loose

  with themselves and the others

  and have new problems

  in another way.

  all those lovelies:

  I’m glad I’m with them in spirit

  rather than in the flesh

  as now I can bang this fucking machine

  without concern.

  eulogy to a hell of a dame

  some dogs who sleep at night

  must dream of bones

  and I remember your bones

  in flesh

  and best

  in that dark green dress

  and those high-heeled bright

  black shoes,

  you always cursed when you

  drank,

  your hair coming down, you

  wanted to explode out of

  what was holding you:

  rotten memories of a

  rotten

  past, and

  you finally got

  out

  by dying,

  leaving me with the

  rotten

  present;

  you’ve been dead

  28 years

  yet I remember you

  better than any of

  them;

  you were the only one

  who understood

  the futility of the

  arrangement of

  life;

  all the others were

  displeased with

  trivial segments,

  carped

  nonsensically about

  nonsense;

  Jane, you were

  killed by

  knowing too much.

  here’s a drink

  to your bones

  that

  this dog

  still

  dreams about.

  love

  I’ve seen old pairs

  sitting in rockers

  across from each other

  being congratulated and celebrated

 

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