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The Days Run Away Like Wild Horses

Page 7

by Charles Bukowski


  virgins before young boys in dementia, & it’s

  too much hair on the neck and flowers dying in a

  bowl. my wife comes out of the

  can.

  are you all right? she

  asks. yeah, I

  say.

  down by the wings

  they speak of angels or she

  speaks of angels

  from a plateglass window overlooking the

  Sunset Strip

  (she has these visions)

  (I don’t have these visions)

  but maybe angels prefer people with

  money

  daughters of rich farmers who are dying of

  throat cancer in Brazil.

  myself—I keep seeing these

  wingless creatures of mean story and dismal

  intent

  and she says

  when I defame her

  dream:

  you are trying to

  pull me down

  by the wings.

  she’s going to Europe in the summer—

  Greece, Italy, most probably

  Paris and she’s

  taking some of her angels with

  her.

  not all

  but some.

  now there’s this half-Chinese boy who used to

  sleep on fire escapes

  the Negro homosexual who plays chess and

  recited Shelley at the Sensualist

  then there’s the one who has real talent with the

  brush (Nickey) but who simply can’t get

  started

  somehow and

  there’s also Sieberling who cries because he

  loves his mother (actually).

  many of these

  angels

  will leave town and

  flow around the

  Arch of Triumph

  to be photographed or

  to chase beetles at

  9 rue Git-le-Coeur, and

  it’s going to be a hot and

  lonesome summer

  for many of us when

  the devil walks in and retakes Hollywood

  once more.

  fire

  schoolgirls in tight skirts and first heels

  came

  sparrows flew away and fat landlords parted from their

  electric mirrors

  skinny housewives with runny noses and dirty aprons

  came

  and the fire engine: polished wailing disorder spilling

  intestines of water

  came

  firemen in helmets

  firemen with axes

  came

  god, a tree 90 feet high

  BURNING

  A HOUSE BURNING RED

  tolling

  lordward

  the grass melting and yelling on the top of the

  ground and

  those smokesweet pictures of bluegray putting the

  whole sky out of

  place

  and all the while nobody saying anything just

  watching

  what the flames did

  like something busted out

  finally and having its

  say

  we all came

  together.

  one for the old man

  standing in the plaza I can hear speeches about a new

  world—

  men asking for their kind of love

  while mine is a kind of pinch-eyed drag of

  going on, for that which seems so important to them

  seems worthless to me.

  so

  I go back to the hotel room

  and look at the pitcher of water on the dresser

  and the bits of glass hung on string

  left in the window by a Mexican whore

  to reflect what’s left of me

  and this seems

  sensible

  as sensible as reading the history of the

  Crimean War

  as sensible as wax and women and

  dogs.

  I watch a fly and read the newspaper

  then eat sausage and bananas

  and an orange.

  then I pull the shade on the speechmakers.

  over the back of a chair are my

  belt and necktie,

  necktie knotted

  for my throat

  which is like a flower 80 feet high and

  pumping out phrases of

  bedlam.

  mutilated forever at the age of

  46. our dear sweet father said we’d come to

  this.

  a drawer of fish

  he kept drawing fish

  on sheets of paper

  and I said,

  Jack, what’s wrong?

  but he wouldn’t answer

  and his wife said

  he won’t look for a job

  that’s what’s wrong,

  and I gotta stay with

  the kids; I don’t know

  how in the hell we’re

  going to make it.

  he kept drawing fish

  on sheets of paper

  and he wasn’t even drunk.

  I went down and got 2

  bottles of wine

  and the old lady poured

  them around.

  and Jack drank his,

  then cursed: this g.d.

  ballpoint pen always runs

  out of blood

  just when I’m at the point,

  the crux, just when I’m

  finally burning

  in the imbecile wax of fire…

  he threw the pen

  into a papersack full of empty bottles,

  empty sardine and

  bean cans, put on his coat

  and walked out.

  where’s he going?

  I asked.

  I don’t give a damn

  where’s he’s going,

  his old lady said.

  then she pulled her dress back

  and showed me a lot of leg;

  it looked pretty good, I

  have always been a leg man

  but I walked over to the closet

  and put on my coat.

  where you going? she asked.

  I’m going to look for a job,

  I told her,

  there’s an ad in the Times,

  they need janitors for the

  new Fleischman building.

  I walked down the steps

  and half a block North

  to the nearest bar.

  Jack was sitting there.

  I don’t know, he said,

  I think I’m going

  to kill myself.

  it doesn’t matter, I said,

  it’s going to happen

  anyhow.

  we sat there the rest of the afternoon

  drinking

  and about 7 p.m. we left,

  he with one with fire in her hair

  and I with one with a limp

  a reader of Henry James

  who laughed out of the side

  of her mouth.

  it was 63 degrees

  and not much left

  of the world.

  L. Beethoven, half-back

  he came out for the team;

  Ludwig V. Beethoven, blocking

  half-back. he really knocked

  them down. but he drank beer

  and played the piano all night.

  Schiller, you’re a freak, he

  said. leave the ladies alone.

  the ladies will always be the

  same. don’t fret, when you

  need one, she’ll be there.

  and Tchaikovsky, he said,

  take some vitamins. I don’t

  mind that you’re a homo:

  just stay away

  from me. that’s the trouble

  with all you guys:

  you’re too

  pale!


  I took a lateral from G. B. Shaw

  and ducked around the end;

  Beethoven blocked out 3 men,

  and as I went past

  he said, I got a couple of

  babes lined up for tonight;

  don’t injure

  anything

  you might need

  later…

  I shot up the field

  evading tacklers

  like a madman. B. was

  studying harmony, but

  I doubted if he could

  ever

  make it. he was just

  a fat

  beer-drinking

  German.

  self-destruction

  my snake’s red fingers

  he said

  and they took him off the couch

  and put him on the stretcher

  and carried him down

  25 steps

  and his woman crossed her legs

  (I could almost see her beautiful crotch)

  and lit a cigarette

  and said

  I just

  can’t kaant see what possessed him,

  and I slapped her across the face

  flying the cigarette to the rug

  like some Mars thing

  and followed the stretcher

  on down.

  these mad windows that taste life and cut me if I go through them

  I’ve always lived on second and third floors or higher

  all my life

  but I got some woman pregnant

  and since she wasn’t my wife

  we moved over here—

  we were in the back at first

  2nd floor rear

  as Mr. and Mrs.—

  a new start—

  and there was a madwoman in this

  place and she kept the shades drawn

  and hollered obscenities in the dark

  (I thought she was pretty sharp)

  but they took her away one day

  and we moved in here and had the baby,

  a beautiful skunk of a child with pale blue eyes

  who made me swallow my heart like a cherry in a chilled drink,

  but the woman decided I was insane too

  and moved the child and herself to Hollywood

  and I give them what money I can—

  but most of the time I lay around all day

  sweating in bed

  wondering how much longer I can fool them

  listening to my landlord outside

  watering his lawn

  46 years hanging on my bones

  and big green tears cascade ha, ha,

  down my face and are tabulated by my dirty pillow:

  all those years shot through the head

  assassinated forever

  drunk senseless

  hobbled and slugged in factories

  poked with bad dreams

  dripping away in mouse- and ghost-infested rooms

  across an America without meaning,

  boy o boy.

  about 3 p.m. I get up

  having failed to sleep but more than a few minutes

  anyhow

  and then I put on an old undershirt

  crisp fresh torn shorts

  and a pair of stolen army pants

  and I pull up the shades

  and sit a little back in a hard folding chair

  near a window on the streetside

  and then they come by,

  young girls

  fresh fluid divine intelligent

  drinks of orange juice

  rides in air-conditioned elevators,

  in blue and green and yellow in motion

  in red in waves

  in squads and battalions of laughter

  they laugh at me and for me,

  old 46, at attention, pig green eyes

  like a Van Gogh bursting and breaking

  the trachea and tits of the earth and the sun,

  my god, look, here I am

  and no matter what I said to them

  they would run away

  I would be reported as an old goof

  babbling in the marketplace for hard pennies—

  they expect me to use the bathroom,

  a shadow-picture for their singing flesh

  and the pliers of my hand—

  a good citizen jacksoff, votes, and looks at Bob Hope—

  and even old maids

  with husbands killed

  making swivel chairs in industry

  they walk by

  in green in yellow in red

  and they have bodies like high-school girls

  they perch on their stilts and dare me to break

  custom

  but to have any of these would take weeks and months

  of torture—introduction, niceties, conversation that

  cleaves the soul like a rusty axe—

  no, no, god damn it! no more!

  a man who cannot adjust to society is called a

  psychotic, and the boy in the Texas tower

  who shot 49 and killed 15 was one,

  although in the Marine Corps he got the o.k.

  to go ahead—it’s all in the way you’re dressed

  and if the beehive says the project

  protects the Queen and Goodyear Rubber and so

  forth,

  but the way I see it from this window

  his action was nothing extraordinary or

  unexpected and psychiatrists are just paid liars

  of a continuing social

  disorder.

  and soon I get up from the window

  and move around

  and if I turn on the radio

  and luck on Shostakovich or Mahler

  or sit down to type a letter to the president,

  the voices begin all around me—

  “HEY! KNOCK IT OFF!”

  “YOU SON OF A BITCH! WE’LL CALL THE LAW!”

  on each side of me are two high-rise apartments

  things lit at night with blue and green lights

  and they have swimming pools that everybody has

  too much class to get into

  but the rent is very high

  and they sit looking at their walls

  decorated with pictures of people with chopped-off

  heads

  and wait to go back to

  WORK,

  meanwhile, they sense that my sounds are not

  their sounds—

  66 people on each side of my head

  in love with Green Berets and piranhas—

  “GOD DAMN YOU, COOL IT!”

  these I cannot see through my window

  and for this I am glad

  my stomach is in bad shape from drinking cheap wine,

  and so for them

  I become quiet

  I listen to their sounds—

  their baseball games, their comedies, their quiz shows,

  their dry kisses, their kindling safety,

  their hard bodies stuffed into the walls and murdered,

  and I go to the table

  take my madman’s crayons

  and begin drawing them on my walls

  all of them—

  loving, fucking, eating, shitting,

  frightened of Christ, frightened of poverty,

  frightened of life

  they crawl my walls like roaches

  and I draw suns between them

  and axes and guns and towers and babies

  and dogs, cats, animals, and it becomes

  difficult to distinguish the animal from the

  other, and my whole body sweats, stinks,

  as I tremble like a liar from the truth of things,

  and then I drink some water, take off my clothing and

  go to bed

  where I will not sleep

  first pulling down all the shades

  and then waiting for 3 p.m.

  my girls my lad
ies my way

  with nothing going through and nothing coming in and

  nothing going out, Cathedrals and Art Museums and

  mountains wasted, only the salt of myself, some ants,

  old newspapers, my shame, my shame

  at not having

  killed

  (razor, carcrash, turpentine, gaspipe)

  (good job, marriage, investments in the market)

  what is left of

  myself.

  birth

  I.

  reading the Dialogues of Plato when the

  doctor walks up and says

  do you still read that highbrow

  stuff? last time I read that I

  was in

  high school.

  I read it, I tell

  him.

  well, it’s a girl, 9#, 3 oz. no trouble at

  all.

  shit. great. when can I see

  them?

  they’ll let you know. good

  night.

  II.

  I sit down to Plato again. there are 4 people playing

  cards. one woman has beautiful legs that she doesn’t hide

  and I keep looking at her legs until she covers them with a

  blue sweater.

  III.

  I am called upstairs. they show me the thing through glass.

  it’s red as a boiled crab and tough. it will make

  it. it will see it through.

  hey, look at this, Plato: another broad!

  I can see her now on some Sunday afternoon

  shaking it in a tight skirt

  making boulevards of young men warble in their

 

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