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    The People Look Like Flowers at Last: New Poems

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      drunk and they hit him with the rock,

      knocked out his brains.”

      “you saw it?”

      “I saw it. the next time the train stopped

      they dumped him out, they dumped him in some

      high grass. then the train started up

      again.”

      I gave the kid another beer.

      “when the police find those guys in rags, no

      identification, wine-faced, they say ‘just another wino,’

      they don’t even follow up, they just

      forget it.”

      we talked most of the night

      about the road. I told him a few stories of my

      own. then I went to bed. he slept on the

      couch. I went into the bedroom with the woman and

      kid. slept.

      when I got up to piss in the morning

      Red was sitting in a chair

      reading yesterday’s paper.

      “I gotta go,” he said, “I can’t sleep

      anymore, but I had a good night, some good

      talk. thanks.”

      “me too, Red. easy now.”

      “sure.”

      then he was out the door and down the street,

      gone.

      back in the bedroom she asked, “is Red gone?”

      “yeah.”

      “where’d he go?”

      “I don’t know. Texas. Hell. Boston. anywhere.”

      the little girl woke

      up: “I wanna bottle!”

      “can you get her a bottle? you’re up.”

      “sure.”

      I went into the kitchen and mixed some

      milk. and everywhere things were working out there,

      cruel and not cruel, spiders and bums

      and soldiers and gamblers and madmen and

      factotums and fags and firemen, like that,

      and I went back in and handed the girl the bottle

      got back into bed

      and listened to the kid sucking on the thing—

      suck suck suck,

      and soon we’d have our own

      breakfast.

      it is not much

      I suppose like others

      I have come through fire and sword,

      love gone wrong,

      head-on crashes, drunk at sea,

      and I have listened to the simple sound of water running

      in tubs

      and wished to drown

      but simply couldn’t bear the others

      carrying my body down three flights of stairs

      to the round mouths of curious biddies;

      the psyche has been burned

      and left us senseless,

      the world has been darker than lights-out

      in a closet full of hungry bats,

      and the whiskey and wine entered our veins

      when blood was too weak to carry on;

      and it will happen to others,

      and our few good times will be rare

      because we have a critical sense

      and are not easy to fool with laughter;

      small gnats crawl our screen

      but we see through

      to a wasted landscape

      and let them have their moment;

      we only asked for leopards to guard

      our thinning dreams.

      I once lay in a

      white hospital

      for the dying and the dying

      self, where some god pissed a rain of

      reason to make things grow

      only to die, where on my knees

      I prayed for LIGHT,

      I prayed for l*i*g*h*t,

      and praying

      crawled like a blind slug into the

      web

      where threads of wind stuck against my mind

      and I died of pity

      for Man, for myself,

      on a cross without nails,

      watching in fear as

      the pig belches in his sty, farts,

      blinks and eats.

      the bull

      I did not know

      that the Mexicans

      did this:

      the bull

      had been brave

      and now

      they dragged him

      dead

      around the ring

      by his

      tail,

      a brave bull

      dead,

      but not just any bull,

      this was a special

      bull,

      and to me

      a special

      lesson learned…

      and although Brahms

      stole his First from Beethoven’s

      9th

      and although

      the bull

      was dead,

      his head and his horns and

      his intestines dead,

      he had been better than

      Brahms,

      as good as

      Beethoven,

      and

      as we walked out

      the sound and meaning

      of him

      kept crawling up my arms

      and although people jostled me and

      stepped on my toes

      the bull burned within me

      my candle of

      light;

      dragged by his tail

      he had nothing to do with anything

      now having escaped it all,

      and down through the long tunnel, surrounded by

      elbows and feet and eyes, I prayed for Tijuana

      and for the dead bull

      and man

      and me,

      the blue kissing waters

      enjoying the knot of pain,

      and I clenched my hands

      deep within my

      pockets, seized darkness

      and moved on.

      the people, no

      startling! such determination in the

      dull and uninspired

      and the copyists.

      they never lose the fierce gratitude

      for their uneventfulness,

      nor do they forget to laugh

      at the wit of slugs;

      as a study in diluted senses

      they’d make any pharaoh

      cough up his beans;

      in music they prefer the monotony of

      dripping faucets;

      in love and sex they prefer each other

      and therefore compound the

      problem;

      the energy with which they propel their

      uselessness

      (without any self-doubt)

      toward worthless goals

      is as magnificent as

      cow shit.

      they produce novels, children, death,

      freeways, cities, wars, wealth, poverty, politicians

      and total areas of grandiose waste;

      it’s as if the whole world is wrapped in dirty

      bandages.

      it’s best to take walks late at

      night.

      it’s best to do your business only on

      Mondays and

      Tuesdays.

      it’s best to sit in a small room

      with the shades down

      and

      wait.

      the strongest men are the fewest

      and the strongest women die alone

      too.

      you might as well kiss your ass goodbye

      I fin
    ally met him. he sat in an old robe

      and bitched for 5 hours.

      “look,” he said, “don’t trust Krause,

      Krause will rob you. he owes me 10,000 dollars

      and there’s no way I can get it out

      of him. a real bastard.”

      “Sir,” I said, “when you wrote that first novel,

      it was so humorous, the truth is always so funny,

      you know, the way people act, like blind mechanical things,

      killing without reason, marvelous how you got it all

      down.”

      an old woman came in and set a pot of tea in front of

      him. “they smashed my motorcycle, stole my manuscripts,

      cleaned me out. they would have killed me but I wasn’t

      here. they called me a fascist, claimed I sold the plans

      to the Maginot Line to the Krauts. now where the hell would I ever

      get the plans to the Maginot

      Line?”

      he poured his tea. lifted the cup. it was too hot

      or something. he spit it out on the rug, some of it

      on my shoes and pants.

      “Sir,” I asked, “that first novel, did you really eat your own

      flesh as a young writer? were you that

      hungry? by god, that was some novel, I’ll never

      forget it!”

      “Martha!” he called. “Martha!”

      the old woman came in.

      “you forgot the lemon and sugar, you old hag!”

      the old woman ran out

      for the lemon and sugar.

      “the government claims I owe them 70,000 dollars! they don’t bother Krause. the son-of

      a-bitch rides around in a Cadillac and owns a twelve

      acre estate. don’t ever trust Krause. he’s a bloodsucker. he’s sucked

      the bodies and talents of at least 3 dozen writers dry. he’s like a giant

      spider, a tarantula!”

      “Krause has never asked me for anything…”

      “if he does, you might as well kiss your ass

      goodbye!”

      Martha ran in with the lemon and sugar.

      “you damned washed-up whore! I oughta whip your ass!”

      “Sir,” I said, “you’re looked up to

      as one of the strongest writers since 1900.”

      “don’t trust Krause! a bloodsucker!”

      he bitched for 5 hours. and I listened. then his head fell back,

      across the top of his rocker, and I saw that

      famous hawk profile. then he began

      to snore.

      he was just an old man in an old

      bathrobe.

      I stood up. Martha came in.

      “I’m glad I had a chance to meet him,”

      I told her.

      “I try to remember he was once a great writer,”

      she told me.

      “he’s still kind of humorous,”

      I told her.

      “I don’t think so,” she said,

      “you see, I’m his

      wife.”

      “goodnight,” I

      said.

      “goodnight,” she

      replied.

      purple glow

      I see the high-heeled

      shoes and a dried white rose

      lying on the bar

      like a clenched

      fist.

      whiskey makes the heart beat faster

      but it sure doesn’t help the

      mind and isn’t it funny how you can ache just

      from the deadly drone of

      existence?

      I see this

      nudie dancer running along the top of

      the bar

      shaking what she thinks is

      magic

      with all those faces staring

      up from overpriced

      drinks.

      and me? being there? no shit,

      I really didn’t care about

      her but I love the pulse of

      the loud flat music thumping

      in the purple glow, something

      about it all: I hardly

      ever felt better.

      I watch her, the purple

      doll so

      sad so cheap so

      sad, you would never want to

      bed down with her or even hear her

      speak, yet in that drunken place

      you would

      like to hand your heart to her

      and say

      touch it

      but then

      give it back.

      she dances so fiercely now in

      the purple glow,

      purple does something strange to me:

      there was a night

      30 years ago

      I was drunk, true, and there was

      a purple Christ in a glass box

      outside a little church and I

      smashed the glass, I broke

      the glass, and then I reached in and touched

      Christ but

      He was only a dummy and I heard the

      sirens then and started

      running.

      well, my mind has never been the same

      since and the typing helps but you can’t

      type all the time, so the nudie dancer now

      breaks what heart I have left and I

      don’t know why but I start giving money

      to everybody in the bar, I give a five to this

      guy, a ten to that, I think maybe it might

      wake them to the wisdom

      of it all

      but they don’t even say

      “thanks,” they just think I’m a

      fool.

      the manager comes up and tells me

      I’m 86’d, I hand him a

      twenty, he takes

      it.

      two friends

      have been sitting at a back

      table, they help me up and out of the

      bar.

      I think the situation is very

      funny but they are

      angry:

      where’s your car?

      where’s your fucking

      car?

      I say, I

      dunno.

      too fucking bad, they

      say and

      leave me sitting alone on an

      apartment house

      step.

      I light up and smoke a cigarette,

      then get up and begin the long

      walk, a walk I know will

      entail at least a couple of

      hours

      to find my car (past experience)

      but I know that when I

      find it, the rush of

      happiness will be

      all I need

      and that I will then be able to

      begin my life all over

      again.

      one thousand dollars

      all of my knowledge about horse racing

      told me that this was a sure bet.

      I bet one thousand to win.

      the horse had post one

      at 6 furlongs.

      the bell rang and they came

      out of the gate.

      my horse turned left

      ran through the fence

      fell down and

      died

      right there

      at 7/5.

      when I tell people this story

      they don
    ’t say

      anything.

      sometimes there’s nothing to say

      about

      death.

      grip the dark

      I sit here

      drunk now

      listening to the

      same symphonies

      that gave me

      the will to go on

      when I was 22.

      40 years later

      they and I are not quite so

      magical.

      you should have

      seen me then

      so

      lean

      no

      gut

      I was

      a gaunt string of a

      man:

      blazing, strong,

      insane.

      say one wrong

      word

      to me

      and I’d crack you right

      there.

      I didn’t want to be

      bothered with

      anything or

      anyone.

      I seemed to be

      always on my way to some

      cell

      after being booked for

      doing things

      on or off the

      avenue.

      I sit here

      drunk now.

      I am

      a series of

      small victories

      and large defeats

      and I am as

      amazed

      as any other

      that

      I have gotten

      from there to

      here

      without committing murder

      or being

      murdered;

      without

      having ended up in the

      madhouse.

      as I drink alone

      again tonight

      my soul despite all the past

      agony

      thanks all the gods

      who were not

      there

      for me

      then.

      the dwarf with a punch

     

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