Read The Roominghouse Madrigals Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
I have refused the discipline
of Art and Government and
God and all that which
destroys my seeming
and lifting my beer now
frothy
in the golden afternoon
light
I have it:
plateaus of softness, wire
leaves, spirit of the sidewalks
walls that weep like old paintings
everything real, not bent,
and as a brown sparrow
drops across my window’s sight
and the planes graze Africa again
in fire-lit nightmare
I have all I need on this tablecloth:
sunflower seeds, can opener
razor, 2 pencils, bent paper clip
memory of sparrow, angular sidewalk—
this under my fingers
myself myself myself.
they get up on their garage roof
both of them 80 or 90 years old
standing on the slant
she wanting to fall really
all the way
but hacking at the old roofing
with a hoe
and he
more coward
on his knees praying for more days
gluing chunks of tar
his ear listening
for more green rain
more green rain
and he says
mama be careful
and she says nothing
and hacks a hole
where a tulip
never grew.
no more stalling,
the war torch is lit
and all over the neighborhood
men rattle in their irons,
flares kite the sky
somebody rushes past,
a confused cock crows
and I strike up
a cigarette.
it is difficult to decide
where the enemy is:
I go inside
to wife and hound
both fat and soft
as peaches
under the
sun.
I shave by candlefat and lightning,
I shave by their holy silence
in a shattered mirror.
I put on my hat
and hug them both
like two jellychildren
lost in smoke;
then outside I go,
searching the West
(dim and hilly
I’m told)
with bright
mean eyes.
You smoke a cigarette in fury and fall into
neutral slumber, to awaken to a dawn of
windows and grieving, without trumpets; and
somewhere, say, is a fish—all eye and movement—
wiggling in water; you could be that
fish, you could be there, held in water,
you could be the eye, cool and hung,
non-human; put on your shoes, put on
your pants, boy; not a chance, boy—
the fury of the absent air, the scorn of those alike
as dead violets; scream, scream, scream
like a trumpet, put on your shirt, your
tie, boy: grieve is a pretty word like
mandolin, and strange like artichoke; grieve is
a word and grieve is a way; open the door,
boy; go away.
Go to Tibet.
Ride a camel.
Read the bible.
Dye your shoes blue.
Grow a beard.
Circle the world in a paper canoe.
Subscribe to
The Saturday Evening Post
.Chew on the left side of your mouth only.
Marry a woman with one leg and shave with a
straight razor.
And carve your name in her arm.
Brush your teeth with gasoline.
Sleep all day and climb trees at night.
Be a monk and drink buckshot and beer.
Hold your head under water and play the violin.
Do a belly dance before pink candles.
Kill your dog.
Run for Mayor.
Live in a barrel.
Break your head with a hatchet.
Plant tulips in the rain.
But don’t write poetry.
the dead do not need
aspirin or
sorrow,
I suppose.
but they might need
rain.
not shoes
but a place to
walk.
not cigarettes,
they tell us,
but a place to
burn.
or we’re told:
space and a place to
fly
might be the
same.
the dead don’t need
me.
nor do the
living.
but the dead might need
each
other.
in fact, the dead might need
everything we
need
and
we need so much,
if we only knew.
what it
was.
it is
probably
everything
and we will all
probably die
trying to get
it
or die
because we
don’t get
it.
I hope
you will understand
when I am dead
I got
as much
as
possible.
fucker, you might at least send me a couple of your
books
I don’t read anymore unless
I get them free
you write a good letter but then
a lot of them write good
letters
but when it comes to writing the poem
they dry up and die like a
wax museum.
and, baby, I see you’ve been around:
Evergreen Review, Poetry
etc.I cannot
make these golden outhouses of
culture and have long since
given up.
I will never have a house in the valley with
little stone men to water my
lawn.
as I get older
(and I am getting older)
I can look at a green gardenhouse
(not mine)
for hours or I can look at
these swinging elephant ears outside the
window
they are caught between the wind and me and
the sinking sun
and the sea is 20 miles west and
I have not seen the sea for maybe 3
years and
maybe it’s not there anymore and maybe I’m
not here, anymore.
and the only time I begin to feel
is when I drink the yellow beer down so fast and so
long that the electric light bulb glows like the
sun and my woman looks like a highschool girl with
schoolbooks and
there is not a dent in the world and
Pound has shaved and
the bulldog smiles.
now,
for a cigarette. cancer and I
have an understanding like a
whore paid for. I haven’t been to a
charity ward and been slugged to my knees for some
time
all the stale blood everywhere like
puke
and I keep thinking that there have been men who
died for something or
thought they did
and so
there’s this sense of waste
just dying for yourself with
nobody around
not even a nurse
just
this
old man of 80
yelling at you down on the floor while you are
hemorrhaging,
yelling from his bed:
“shut up! I want to SLEEP!”
well, he’ll get his
sleep.
the chain is on the door
the naked women shut out
the naked power on as I
bend over turbine-powered
sun-powered jets
knowing that I am not very good at
going on—
I’d rather watch a beetle crawl the sick
powdered dust of
earth—
while you are aware of my
cold handshake and
my cigar more alive than my
eyes, my
wit dimmer than
last Fall’s sunlight.
but, Christ, friends—
the luger, the mortar, the patchwork
as I gape out at you from a
porkchop mouth—
take me as Caesar was taken
or
Joan of Arc
or
the man who fell off the fire escape drunk
or
the suicide at Bellevue
or Van Gogh confused with
ravens
and the atomic yellow.
I hold everything away from myself
so that you may become
real and shaking and stemmed
and ascending and blue and buttermilk
as the chorus girls kick out,
flags wave,
the eagle sinks into the sea,
as
our dirty time is just about
served and done.
grief-tailed fish,
Sunday-eye in walking shorts
with staff,
motorcades in honor of the roots
of trees,
the rain like a young girl
walking toward me,
the houses waving like flags
filled with drunken hymns,
the bulls of Spain
the bulls of Spain
winning
unpracticed as leaves
as alone as shrimp upon a sea-bottom
or if this is wrong
as alone as what is there,
as my love
an old woman with rouged cheeks
skips rope again
as Hemingway’s fingers live again
tough and terrible and good,
as Kid Gavilan once again flurries
like hyacinths into Spring,
I am sad I am sad I am sad
that the tongue and teeth will eat us
must choose so many good
like these fingers of lilies into the brain
sock out light
to those of us who sit in dark rooms alone
on Monday mornings
while presidents speak of honor and culture
and dedication;
or orange moon of moaning
that my voice speaks like slivers through a broken
face,
all this time I’ve seen through the bottoms of bottles
and black oil wells pumping their stinking arms
ramming home to the core of a rose
split into shares split into dividends
that tinkle less than the grunt of a frog,
I am hammered home not upon wisdom
but upon defamation:
old cars in junk yards,
old men playing checkers in the park,
women putting a price upon the curve of leg and breast,
men going to education like a bank account
or a high-priced whore to accompany them to a symphony,
one-third of the world starving while
I am indecent enough to worry about my own death
like some monkey engrossed with his flea,
I am sad because my manliness chokes me down
to the nakedness of revulsion
when there is so little time to understand,
I am sad because my drink is running low
and I must either visit people who drink
or go to storekeepers
with a poem they will never print,
strings of an avant-garde symphony
upon my radio,
somebody driving a knife through the everywhere cotton
but only meaning
that he protests dying,
and I have seen the dead
like figs upon a board
and my heart gone bad
breaking from the brain and reason
left with only
the season of
love
and
the question:
why
?that Wagner is dead say
is bad enough
to me
only
or that Van Gogh
does not see the strings and puddles
of this day,
this is not so good,
or the fact that
those I have known to touch
I am no longer able to touch;
I am a madman who sits in the front row
of burlesque shows and musical comedies
sucking up the light and song and dance
like a child
upon the straw of an icecream soda,
but I walk outside
and the heinous men
the steel men
who believe in the privacy of a wallet
and cement
and chosen occasions only
Christmas New Year’s the 4th of July
to attempt to manifest a life
that has lain in a drawer like a single glove
that is brought out like a fist:
too much and too late.
I have seen men in North Carolina mountains
posing as priests when they had not even
become men yet
and I have seen men in odd places
like bars and jails
good men who posed nothing
because they knew that posing was false
that the blackbird the carnation the dollar bill in the palm
the poem for rested people with 30 dollar curtains plus
time for flat and meaningless puzzles,
they knew the poem the knife
the curving blueing cock of Summer
that all the love that hands could hold
would go would go
and that the needs for knicknacks and gestures
was done
o fire hold me in these rooms
o copper kettle boil,
the small dogs run the streets,
carpenters sneeze,
the barber’s pole itches
to melt in the sun,
come o kind wind of black car
as I cross Normandy Avenue
in a sun gone blue
like ruptured filaments of a battered suitcase,
to see where you are to see where you have gone
I enter the store of a knowing Jew, my friend,
and argue for another bottle
for him
and
for me
for
all
of
us.