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    Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame

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    but not so very much

      poetry.

      the state of world affairs

      from a 3rd floor window

      I am watching a girl dressed in a

      light green sweater, blue shorts, long black stockings;

      there is a necklace of some sort

      but her breasts are small, poor thing,

      and she watches her nails

      as her dirty white dog sniffs the grass

      in erratic circles;

      a pigeon is there too, circling,

      half dead with a tick of a brain

      and I am upstairs in my underwear,

      3 day beard, pouring a beer and waiting

      for something literary or symphonic to happen;

      but they keep circling, circling, and a thin old man

      in his last winter rolls by pushed by a girl

      in a catholic school dress;

      somewhere there are the Alps, and ships

      are now crossing the sea;

      there are piles and piles of H- and A-bombs,

      enough to blow up fifty worlds and Mars thrown in,

      but they keep circling,

      the girl shifts buttocks,

      and the Hollywood Hills stand there, stand there

      full of drunks and insane people and

      much kissing in automobiles,

      but it’s no good: che sera, sera:

      her dirty white dog simply will not shit,

      and with a last look at her nails

      she, with much whirling of buttocks

      walks to her downstairs court

      trailed by her constipated dog (simply not worried),

      leaving me looking at a most unsymphonic pigeon.

      well, from the looks of things, relax:

      the bombs will never go off.

      for marilyn m.

      slipping keenly into bright ashes,

      target of vanilla tears

      your sure body lit candles for men

      on dark nights,

      and now your night is darker

      than the candle’s reach

      and we will forget you, somewhat,

      and it is not kind

      but real bodies are nearer

      and as the worms pant for your bones,

      I would so like to tell you

      that this happens to bears and elephants

      to tyrants and heroes and ants

      and frogs,

      still, you brought us something,

      some type of small victory,

      and for this I say: good

      and let us grieve no more;

      like a flower dried and thrown away,

      we forget, we remember,

      we wait. child, child, child,

      I raise my drink a full minute

      and smile.

      the life of borodin

      the next time you listen to Borodin

      remember he was just a chemist

      who wrote music to relax;

      his house was jammed with peor e:

      students, artists, drunkards, bur s,

      and he never knew how to say: no.

      the next time you listen to Borodin

      remember his wife used his compositions

      to line the cat boxes with

      or to cover jars of sour milk;

      she had asthma and insomnia

      and fed him soft-boiled eggs

      and when he wanted to cover his head

      to shut out the sounds of the house

      she only allowed him to use the sheet;

      besides there was usually somebody

      in his bed

      (they slept separately when they slept

      at all)

      and since all the chairs

      were usually taken

      he often slept on the stairway

      wrapped in an old shawl;

      she told him when to cut his nails,

      not to sing or whistle

      or put too much lemon in his tea

      or press it with a spoon;

      Symphony #2, in B Minor

      Prince Igor

      On the Steppes of Central Asia

      he could sleep only by putting a piece

      of dark cloth over his eyes;

      in 1887 he attended a dance

      at the Medical Academy

      dressed in a merrymaking national costume;

      at last he seemed exceptionally gay

      and when he fell to the floor,

      they thought he was clowning.

      the next time you listen to Borodin,

      remember…

      no charge

      this babe in the grandstand

      with dyed red hair

      kept leaning her breasts against me

      and talking about Gardena

      poker parlors

      but I blew smoke into

      her face

      and told her about a Van Gogh

      exhibition

      I’d seen up on the hill

      and that night

      when I took her home

      she said

      Big Red was the best horse

      she’d ever seen—

      until I stripped down. Though I

      think on the Van Gogh thing

      they charged

      50 cents.

      a literary romance

      I met her somehow through correspondence or poetry or magazines

      and she began sending me very sexy poems about rape and lust,

      and this being mixed in with a minor intellectualism

      confused me somewhat and I got in my car and drove North

      through the mountains and valleys and freeways

      without sleep, coming off a drunk, just divorced,

      jobless, aging, tired, wanting mostly to sleep

      for five or ten years, I finally found the motel

      in a small sunny town by a dirt road,

      and I sat there smoking a cigarette

      thinking, you must really be insane,

      and then I got out an hour late

      to meet my date; she was pretty damned old,

      almost as old as I, not very sexy

      and she gave me a very hard raw apple

      which I chewed on with my remaining teeth;

      she was dying of some unnamed disease

      something like asthma, and she said,

      I want to tell you a secret, and I said,

      I know: you are a virgin, 35 years old.

      and she got out a notebook, ten or twelve poems:

      a life’s work and I had to read them

      and I tried to be kind

      but they were very bad.

      and I took her somewhere, the boxing matches,

      and she coughed in the smoke

      and kept looking around and around

      at all the people

      and then at the fighters

      clenching her hands.

      you never get excited, do you? she asked.

      but I got pretty excited in the hills that night,

      and met her three or four more times

      helped her with some of her poems

      and she rammed her tongue halfway down my throat

      but when I left her

      she was still a virgin

      and a very bad poetess.

      I think that when a woman has kept her legs closed

      for 35 years

      it’s too late

      either for love

      or for

      poetry.

      the twins

      he hinted at times that I was a bastard and I told him to listen

      to Brahms, and I told him to learn to paint and drink and not be

      dominated by women and dollars

      but he screamed at me, For Christ’s Sake remember your mother,

      remember your country,

      you’ll kill us all!…

      I move through my father’s house (on which he owed $8,000 after 20

      years on the same job) and look at his dead shoes

      the way his feet curled the leather, as if he was angrily plan
    ting roses,

      and he was, and I look at his dead cigarette, his last cigarette

      and the last bed he slept in that night, and I feel I should remake it

      but I can’t, for a father is always your master even when he’s gone;

      I guess these things have happened time and again but I can’t help

      thinking

      to die on a kitchen floor at 7 o’clock in the morning

      while other people are frying eggs

      is not so rough

      unless it happens to you.

      I go outside and pick an orange and peel back the bright skin;

      things are still living: the grass is growing quite well,

      the sun sends down its rays circled by a Russian satellite,

      a dog barks senselessly somewhere, the neighbors peek behind blinds.

      I am a stranger here, and have been (I suppose) somewhat the rogue,

      and I have no doubt he painted me quite well (the old boy and I

      fought like mountain lions) and they say he left it all to some woman

      in Duarte but I don’t give a damn—she can have it: he was my old

      man

      and he died.

      inside, I try on a light blue suit

      much better than anything I have ever worn

      and I flap the arms like a scarecrow in the wind

      but it’s no good:

      I can’t keep him alive

      no matter how much we hated each other.

      we looked exactly alike, we could have been twins

      the old man and I: that’s what they

      said. he had his bulbs on the screen

      ready for planting

      while I was lying with a whore from 3rd street.

      very well. grant us this moment: standing before a mirror

      in my dead father’s suit

      waiting also

      to die.

      the day it rained

      at the los angeles

      county museum

      the jew bent over and

      died. 99 machine guns

      were shipped to France. somebody won the 3rd race

      while I inspected

      the propeller of an old monoplane

      a man came by with a patch over his eye. it began to

      rain, it rained and it rained and the ambulances ran

      together

      in the streets, and although

      everything was properly dull

      I enjoyed the moment

      like the time in New Orleans

      living on candy bars

      and watching the pigeons

      in a back alley with a French name

      as behind me the river became

      a gulf

      and the clouds moved sickly through

      a sky that had died

      about the time Caesar was knifed,

      and I promised myself then

      that someday I’d remember it

      as it was.

      a man came by and coughed.

      think it’ll stop raining? he said.

      I didn’t answer. I touched the

      old propeller and listened to the

      ants on the roof rushing over

      the edge of the world, go away, I said,

      go away or I’ll call

      the guard.

      2 p.m. beer

      nothing matters

      but flopping on a mattress

      with cheap dreams and a beer

      as the leaves die and the horses die

      and the landladies stare in the halls;

      brisk the music of pulled shades,

      a last man’s cave

      in an eternity of swarm

      and explosion;

      nothing but the dripping sink,

      the empty bottle,

      euphoria,

      youth fenced in,

      stabbed and shaven,

      taught words

      propped up

      to die.

      hooray say the roses

      hooray say the roses, today is blamesday

      and we are red as blood.

      hooray say the roses, today is Wednesday

      and we bloom where soldiers fell,

      and lovers too,

      and the snake ate the word.

      hooray say the roses, darkness comes

      all at once, like lights gone out,

      the sun leaves dark continents

      and rows of stone.

      hooray say the roses, cannons and spires,

      birds, bees, bombers, today is Friday

      the hand holding a medal out the window,

      a moth going by, half a mile an hour,

      hooray hooray

      hooray say the roses

      we wave empires on our stems,

      the sun moves the mouth:

      hooray hooray hooray

      and that is why you like us.

      the sunday artist

      I have been painting these last two Sundays;

      it’s not much, you’re correct,

      but in this tournament great dreams break:

      history removes her dress and becomes a harlot,

      and I have awakened in the morning

      to see eagles flapping their wings like shades;

      I have met Montaigne and Phidias

      in the flames of my wastebasket,

      I have met barbarians on the streets

      their heads rocking with rodents;

      I have seen wicked infants in blue tubs

      wanting stems as beautiful as flowers,

      and I have seen the barfly sick

      over his last dead penny;

      I have heard Domenico Theotocopoulos

      on nights of frost, cough in his grave;

      and God, no taller than a landlady,

      hair dyed red, has asked me the time;

      I have seen grey grass of lovers in my mirror

      while lighting a cigarette to a maniac’s applause;

      Cadillacs have crawled my walls like roaches,

      goldfish whirl my bowl, hand-tamed tigers;

      yes, I have been painting these Sundays—

      the grey mill, the new rebel; it’s terrible really:

      I must ram my fist through cleanser and chlorine,

      through Andernach and apples and acid,

      but, then, I really should tell you that I have a

      woman around mixing waffle flour and singing,

      and the paint sticks to my plan like candy.

      old poet

      I would, of course, prefer to be with the fox in the ferns

      instead of with a photograph of an old Spad in my pocket

      to the sound of the anvil chorus and legs legs legs

      girls kicking high, showing everything but the pisser,

      but I might as well be dead right now

      everywhere the ill wind blows

      and Keats is dead

      and I am dying too.

      for there is nothing as crappy dissolute

      as an old poet gone sour

      in body and mind

      and luck, the horses running nothing but out,

      the Vegas dice cancer to the thin green wallet,

      Shostakovich heard too often

      and cans of beer sucked through a straw,

      with mouth and mind broken in

      young men’s alleys.

      in the hot noon window

      I swing and miss a razzing fly,

      and ho, I fall heavy as thunder

      but downstairs they’ll understand:

      he’s either drunk or dying,

      an old poet nodding vaguely in halls,

      cracking his stick across the backs

      of innocent dogs

      and spitting out

      what’s left of his sun.

      the mailman has some little thing for him

      which he takes to his room

      and opens like a rose,

      only to scream loudly and vainly,

      and his coffin is filled

      with notes from hell.

      but
    in the morning you’ll see him

      packing off little envelopes,

      still worried about

      rent

      cigarettes

      wine

      women

      horses,

      still worried about

      Eric Coates, Beethoven’s 3rd and

      something Chicago has held for three months

      and his paper bag of wine

      and Pall Malls.

      42 in August, 42,

      the rats walking his brain

      eating up the thoughts before they

      can make the keys.

      old poets are as bad as old queers:

      there’s something quite unacceptable:

      the editors wish to thank you for

      submitting but

      regret…

      down

      down

      down

      the dark hall

      into a womanless hall

      to peel a last egg

      and sit down to the keys:

      click click a click,

      over the television sounds

      over the sounds of springs,

      click clack a clack:

      another old poet

      going off.

      the race

      it is like this

      when you slip down,

      done like a wound-up victrola

      (you remember those?)

      and you go downtown

      and watch the boys punch

      but the big blondes sit with

      someone else

      and you’ve aged like a punk in a movie:

      cigar in skull, fat gut,

      but only no money,

      no wiseness of way, no worldliness,

      but as usual

      most of the fights are bad,

      and afterwards

      back in the parking lot

      you sit and watch them go,

      light the last cigar,

      and then start the old car,

      old car, not so young man

      going down the street

      stopped by a red light

     

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