Read Mockingbird Wish Me Luck Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
what is it?
an old woman, fat, yellow dress,
torn stockings
sitting on the curbing
with a little boy.
98 degrees at 3 in the afternoon
it seems
obscene.
but look, they are calm,
almost happy,
they eat the green jello
and the red roses shine.
to be eaten by a hog with
bad breath
as the lemons swing in the wind
yellow and ours.
lovers everywhere
clutch like asparagus
leaves
of course, he still gets his choice
after the bullfights,
but like with any other man
the special one comes along.
you can feel it in the stomach
when they get you there,
and the girl said,
“It’s either bullfighting or me.”
he turned on love
to look at the face of death.
you can see him at Tijuana
working close to the horn
taking chance after
chance. he’s been gored
a number of times.
and you wonder if the thing is
working at his stomach
as he fights
getting him in closer
than he should
the sword is pointed
in the sunlight,
it goes in:
love.
at the Thrifty drugstore
buying a 5th of gin and a 5th of vodka
she was a dyed blond
and she was relaxed in a black and white striped dress
that fell just below knee-length
and her breasts were large
and she was a little bit fat
and the salesgirl who served her showed disgust
but the whore was used to all that
and waited for her change
and for the bottles to be bagged
and when the whore walked out
she walked out easily
and people looked up from their magazines
and the boys around the newsstand looked
and the people parking their cars looked
and I walked behind her
and I looked
and she got into a green car
pooltable green
lit a cigarette,
and I’m sure she drove off to someplace
magic
where people were always laughing and
the music was always playing
and the drinks were good
and the furniture and rugs were nice
and the mountains were tall
and there were 3 German shepherds on the lawn,
and when she made love you knew it
and the price was not a lifetime,
the blue cigarette smoke curling in the black
ashtray a little wet with beer and mix,
she’d roll you with the security of a leopard
getting a deer,
and you ought to see her in the bathtub
singing an aria from one of those
Italian operas.
the fish ate the flower
and the tombs whistled
Dixie
as you told me you didn’t care
anymore
old men in the pawnshops of the world
looked around and killed themselves in my mind
when you said you
didn’t care
anymore
the day I saw you with your new
lover
you and your new lover
walking down my boulevards
past the butcher shop
past the liquor store
past the real estate
agency
ha ha
suddenly I didn’t care
anymore
I went into the store and I bought
a figurine of a fawn
a small cactus
a box of shrimp
a pair of green gloves
a paring knife
some incense
pepper milk eggs
a fifth of
whiskey
and a roadmap of lower
Texas
the clerk put it all in a bag
it bulged and was heavy and
at last I knew that I had
something.
I took my girlfriend to your last poetry reading,
she said.
yes, yes? I asked.
she’s young and pretty, she said.
and? I asked.
she hated your
guts.
then she stretched out on the couch
and pulled off her
boots.
I don’t have very good legs,
she said.
all right, I thought, I don’t have very good
poetry; she doesn’t have very good
legs.
scramble two.
we’d had our icecream cones
been scared by a dog
picked flowers
held hands in the sunlight.
my little girl is 6
and as good a girl as can
be.
we walked back to my place
where two ladies were moving
out of the apartment
next door.
one was a dwarf,
quite squat
with short trunk-like
legs.
“Hank, what’s wrong with that
woman?”
I’m sorry, little lady,
that my child didn’t know
that there wasn’t anything
wrong with you.
There I am
hungover, I’ve just made it in
and sit next to the mother of my child;
she sits there old and grey,
I sit there old and greying…
there’s a 6 year old daughter,
it’s Christmas at Edison Grammar School,
December 17th,
1 p.m.
I sit mostly with women.
ah, there’s a guy, and there’s a guy…
what’s the matter with those bums?
no jobs? too
bad.
first there’s something…
they need 5 nominations for the
P.T.A. board.
4 old dames nominate each other,
like sneaky Hitlers.
nobody wants the 5th nomination…
“Will everybody in favor of the nominations
being closed, please Yea in the
affirmative?”
there’s a dog in there…somebody
steps on his
tail:
“YEA-IKE!” he goes…
everybody laughs, the nominations are closed.
Jesus Christ,
by a dog…
o.k., trot them on.
no wait. the orchestra. tiny little people with
tiny little violins, most serious little
people. they are the string section.
they play “Christmas Songs” under the direction
of Mr. Plepler and Mr. Mettler.
Mettler? oh well, it’s not
very good.
“Five Little Christmas Bells,” courtesy A.M. & P.M. Kindergarten,
has been changed to “Rocking The Child.”
no reason is
given.
the dog has been
kicked out. I am still there
with hangover.
next the Kindergartens sing
“Jingle Bells.” they’ve been taught by
Mrs. Bowers, Miss Lemon, Miss Lieberman.
I check my program…
how much longer?
I notice that the children are black, white,
oriental, brown…it’s integration
but it’s easy, they show us how easy.
2nd, 3rd, 4th grades…
“Twelve Days of Christmas,” they hold up paintings,
take them down; up down, up down, and back to
the Partridge in the Pear Tree.
they’ve done it. perfect. even with the
mistakes. courtesy Mrs. La Brache, Mrs. Bitticks.
next comes
“Pine Cones and Holly Berries,” not so
good.
now here are the 5th and 6th graders…
“Santa and the Mouse”…
it’s garbled, nobody can hear what they are
saying. it’s under the direction of
Mr. Doerflinger. and he flings ’em.
he sits them down and sits right down with them
and all you can hear is
Mr. Doerflinger’s beautiful voice.
Doerflinger seems everywhere. there he is in the center.
there he is showing his
buttocks. he likes to leap and run
about. he sings and sings and gives his 5th and 6th
graders the minor parts to back his
singular chorus. I try to force myself to get jealous
of Doerflinger but I
can’t. I’m very happy that I am not
Mr. Doerflinger. a woman across the aisle turns to me:
“He has a beautiful voice,” she says.
“Yes,” I smile back,
“he has.”
“Christmas Tree,” 3rd, 4th, 5th graders.
then, of course, we have
“Deck the Halls.”
courtesy of Mrs. Homes.
o, my god, it’s the 1st and 2nd graders
now! I’m nervous as shit.
I’m sick, I
don’t know what to
do. I’ve done time, lain in alleys drunk,
slept with 50 women, I can’t take
it…the mother of my child seems
quite calm. I’m the
coward…where
is
she?all of a sudden they bring them through the
back door—
they’ve been bringing them
through the front.
what’s going on?
there’s my kid, she’s walking
past. “hi!” I say, “hi!”
she smiles and puts a finger to her
lips. “shhh…”
they file onto the
platform. 1st and 2nd graders,
c/o Mr. Garnes, Miss McCormick, Mrs. Nagata, Mrs.
Samarge. o.k.
“Too Fat for the Chimney”…
not too good,
but she keeps looking at me and grinning,
singing, waving;
I smile back, wave, all
grins…the old jailbird…
then “Toy Trains.”
much better. we applaud. they file out in order,
each waiting their
turn.
she’s gone…
somewhere.
the remainder of the program loses
some meaning,
except a very sexy young
chicano teacher
in a yellow dress
comes out and sings
“Silent Night”
in Spanish.
meanwhile Mr. Doerflinger is seen running about,
in this door, out that
one, showing his buttocks,
racing across the stage in some
great
urgency…
“Doerflinger,” says somebody.
he will not be forgotten by
anybody. he will not allow himself to be,
especially by the ladies.
it goes on.
“
Let There Be Peace On Earth
”we all sing together. the last number on the
program.
taxpayers forget Christmas, remember instead how nice your
children are.
we get back to the mother’s apartment
and there is a notice that they will shut off
the gas that
day. the mother claims no previous
notice has been
received.
I drive them down to 5th street
in Santa Monica
to the gas co.
I wave
goodbye. they stand on the corner.
my daughter has a hole
in her black
tights,
right
knee…
“Let there be peace on earth
And let it begin with me.
Let there be peace on earth,
The peace that was meant to be.
With God as our Father,
Brothers all are we—
Let me walk with my brother
In perfect harmony.”