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    New Poems Book Three

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      coming

      up the walk.

      then there was only silence

      so I took a hit of my

      drink and typed

      some more.

      suddenly there was a

      crash and

      the breaking of

      glass

      and

      a large rock

      rolled

      across the rug

      and stopped

      just next to

      where I was

      sitting.

      I heard high heels

      running back

      down the walk,

      then

      the sound

      of a car

      starting,

      then

      driving off with

      a

      roar.

      a pane of glass was

      missing

      from the

      front door.

      Sandra phoned

      two nights later.

      “how are you doing?”

      “fine.”

      “why don’t you ask me

      how I’m

      doing?”

      “o.k., all right, how

      are you

      doing?”

      “YOU ROTTEN SON OF

      A BITCH!” she

      screamed and

      hung up.

      however

      this time

      there was somebody

      there with me.

      “who was that?”

      she asked.

      “a voice from the

      past.”

      “oh, well,

      may we continue with

      our

      interview?

      what is the principal

      inspiration for your

      poetry?”

      “fucking.”

      “what?”

      “FUCKING,” I repeated

      loudly,

      then walked over

      and

      refilled her shaking

      drink.

      INTO THE WASTEBASKET

      my father liked to pretend he

      would some day be wealthy,

      he always voted Republican

      and he told me that

      if I worked hard

      every day of my life that

      I would be amply

      rewarded.

      on those occasions

      when my father had a

      job he worked hard, he

      worked so hard that nobody

      could stand him.

      “what’s the matter with that

      man? is he crazy?”

      my father was a sweating

      red-faced

      angry

      man

      and it seemed that the

      harder he tried

      the poorer he

      became.

      his blood pressure

      rose

      and his heartbeat was

      irregular.

      he smoked Camels and

      Pall Malls and

      half-full packs were scattered

      everywhere.

      he was asleep by

      8 p.m. and up at

      5 a.m. and

      he tended to scream at and

      beat his wife and

      child.

      he died early.

      and after his funeral

      I sat in the bedroom of his empty

      house

      smoking his last pack of

      Pall Malls.

      he believed that there was

      only one formula, one way:

      his.

      it wasn’t shameful for him to

      die, it was his unbending attitude

      toward life

      that bothered me

      and I spoke to him

      about it once

      and told him

      that life was just

      rather sad and

      empty

      and all we could hope

      for

      was to enjoy a few moments

      of peace and quiet

      amidst the

      turmoil.

      “you just sit on your

      ass,” he replied, “you and

      your mouth!

      well, I say the answer is

      ‘a good day’s

      work for a good day’s

      pay!’”

      come to think of it,

      if I was unhappy

      it wasn’t completely

      my father’s fault

      and after I smoked the last

      Pall Mall cigarette

      in that last pack

      I threw it away

      and then

      he too was finally

      gone

      for

      good.

      IT’S OVER AND DONE

      sensibly adorned with its iron cross

      the red fokker sails my brain

      and

      as my father opens a door from hell and screams my name

      up from below

      I know that it is time to

      accept what is true:

      while there can be no reconciliation

      between us

      to carp about old wounds is a stupid waste of the heart.

      sensibly adorned with its iron cross

      the red fokker flies away

      and disappears over Brazil

      and I close my eyes

      as

      the light fails in the eye of the falcon,

      and the useless anger of the living

      for the dead

      is

      lost

      forever.

      NICE GUY

      I broke his bank, totaled his car and slept with

      his wife.

      of course, everybody was sleeping with his

      wife but a nicer guy you never

      met.

      T.K. Kemper played a couple of years with

      the Green Bay Packers

      then a bad knee got him.

      he went into automotive repair,

      did very good work.

      he was a

      lousy card player though; we’d get him

      drunk and take it all from

      him,

      his wife lurking in the background, her tits

      hanging out.

      T.K. Kemper.

      big, big guy.

      hands like hams.

      honest blue eyes.

      give you the shirt off his back.

      give you his back if he could.

      one night after work he saw two punks

      snatch a purse from an old

      lady.

      he ran after them trying to get that purse

      back.

      he was gaining on them when

      one of the punks turned, had a gun, fired

      5 shots.

      he was a big, big guy.

      he caught all 5 shots, hit the pavement

      hard, didn’t move.

      there was a good crowd at the funeral.

      his wife cried.

      my friend Eddie consoled her,

      then took her home and fucked

      her.

      T.K. Kemper.

      bad knee.

      good heart.

      he was not meant for this indifferent world.

      only with supreme luck did he last

      29 years.

      FEET TO THE FIRE

      June, late night, common pain like a rat trapped in

      the gut, how brave we are to continue walking through this terrible

      flame

      as

      the sun stuns us

      as a dark flood envelops us as

      we go on our way—

      filling the gas tank, flushing toilets, paying bills—as we

      float in our pain

      kick our feet

      wiggle our toes

      while listening to inept melodies

      that float in the air

      as the agony now eats the soul.

      yes, I think we’re admirable and brave but we should ha
    ve

      quit

      long ago, don’tcha

      think?

      yet

      here we sit

      uncorking a new

      bottle and listening to

      Shostakovitch.

      we’ve died so many times now that we can only wonder why we still

      care.

      so

      I pour this drink for

      all of us

      and

      pour another

      for

      myself.

      THE POETRY GAME

      the boys

      are playing the poetry game

      again

      putting down

      meaningless lines

      and

      passing them off as art

      again.

      the boys

      are on the telephone

      again

      writing letters

      again

      to the publishers and

      editors

      telling them

      who to edit and who to

      publish.

      the boys

      know that either you

      belong or you

      don’t.

      there’s a way to do it

      you see

      and

      only a few know how to

      do it

      the right way.

      all the others

      are out

      and

      if you don’t know

      who’s out

      or

      who’s in

      well

      the boys

      will tell you

      again.

      the boys

      have been around a

      long time:

      for a couple of

      centuries

      at least.

      and before some of

      the old boys

      die

      they pass their wisdom on

      to the younger

      boys

      so they can put down

      meaningless lines

      and

      pass them off as art

      again.

      THE FIX IS IN

      children in the school yard, the horrors they must

      endure as they are first shaped for life to come and then

      handed a hopeless future consisting of:

      false hope

      cheap patriotism

      minimum-wage jobs

      (or no

      job at all)

      mortgages and car payments

      an indifferent government—

      the days, nights, years all finally pointing to the

      dissolution of any possible

      chance.

      as I wait in the car wash for my automobile

      I watch the children in the school yard to the west

      playing at recess.

      then a little old man waves a

      rag and whistles.

      my car is

      ready.

      I walk to my car, tip the old

      fellow: “how’s it

      going?”

      “o.k.,” he answers, “I’m hoping for it to

      rain.”

      just then the school bell rings and the children stop

      playing and troop into the large brick

      building.

      “I hope it rains too,”

      I say as I climb in and drive

      away.

      PHOTOS

      I have a photo of Baron Manfred Von Richthofen

      standing with his buddies

      and there’s his fighter plane in the background

      and further down on the wall

      there’s a photo of a red

      three-winged fokker in

      flight.

      the few people who come into this

      room (where I

      work at night)

      have seen these things

      but don’t say

      anything.

      that’s o.k.

      but between you and me

      things like that

      got me through a childhood

      that was less than

      pleasant.

      after that, it was then up to

      me.

      but I still don’t mind having old

      friends

      like this

      still hanging around.

      TONIGHT

      so many of my brain cells eaten away by

      alcohol

      I sit here drinking now

      all of my drinking partners dead,

      I scratch my belly and dream of the

      albatross.

      I drink alone now.

      I drink with myself and to myself.

      I drink to my life and to my death.

      my thirst is still not satisfied.

      I light another cigarette, turn the

      bottle slowly, admire

      it.

      a fine companion.

      years like this.

      what else could I have done

      and done so well?

      I have drunk more than the first

      one hundred men you will pass

      on the street

      or see in the madhouse.

      I scratch my belly and dream of the

      albatross.

      I have joined the great drunks of

      the centuries.

      I have been selected.

      I stop now, lift the bottle, swallow a

      mighty mouthful.

      impossible for me to think that

      some have actually stopped and

      become sober

      citizens.

      it saddens me.

      they are dry, dull, safe.

      I scratch my belly and dream of the

      albatross.

      this room is full of me and I am

      full.

      I drink this one to all of you

      and to me.

      it is past midnight now and a lone

      dog howls in the

      night.

      and I am as young as the fire that still

      burns

      now.

      A VISITOR COMPLAINS

      I

      “hey, man,” he said, “I liked your poems better when you were

      puking and living with whores and hitting the bars and ending

      up in the drunk tank and getting into alley fights.”

      then

      he went on to talk about and read his own down-to-earth

      poems.

      II

      what some poets and pundits don’t realize is how ridiculous it is

      to cling forever to the same subject

      matter.

      in time the whores wear thin: their hard

      vision, their curses, their tiny endearments become more than

      deadly.

      and as for puking you can soon get too much of

      that

      especially when it leads to a stinking bed in the

      charity ward.

      and as for alley fights I was never too good a

      warrior, I was only seeing if I had a touch of courage—

      I found some, and finding that, there was no further need to

      explore.

      I mean, you can describe a harsh lifestyle in your poems but sooner

      or later you will find it’s time to move on. if you hang on

      too long the subject matter gets thin and tiresome and, yes,

      I still love my booze but

      I can pass on the whores, the bars and the drunk tanks without feeling that

      I have sold my god-damned soul down the bloody dung-filled

      river.

      some pundits would be delighted if my poems again found me

      in some skid row alley with

      face bashed in and the flies swarming the emptiness of me.

      some pundits

      need Van Gogh madness and Mozart suffering to feed on

      or

      Dostoevsky with his back to the firing wall.

      some pundits consider misfortune t
    o be the

      only viable art –

      form.

      as for Van Gogh, Mozart, Dostoevsky, etc.

      I say that they did neither choose nor welcome their

      pain and suffering.

      III

      of course, I didn’t tell this to my poet-visitor

      he was too busy

      belching and farting and woofing and poofing

      gurgling the libations I offered him

      as he read me his own exploits in the almighty

      gutter

      which were hardly believable

      and bordered on farce.

      that loud voice

      those hairy eyebrows

      that delight in personal misfortune—

      as if living badly was a triumph and

      a very proud

      accomplishment.

      his feet planted flat upon my floor

      he gave me the gut-pain he claimed was so very

      necessary and

      grand.

      BESIEGED

      you see, this wall is green and that wall is

      blue and the 3rd wall has eyes and

      the last wall is crawling with angry famished

      spiders.

      no, that wall is a sheet of frozen water

      and the other is one of melting wax

      and the 3rd frames my grandmother’s face

      and from the 4th spills the bones of my father.

      outside is the city, the city outside, a thing that

      creeps to the call of bells and lights,

      the city is an open grave,

      so I never dare to venture forth but

      rather remain and hide within

      disconnect the phone

      lower the shades and

      cut the

      lights.

      the city is more cruel than the walls

      and finally the walls are all we have

      and

      almost nothing is

      far better than

      nothing at

      all.

      THE NOVICE

      early one morning, during the Depression,

      in the railroad yard, when I was 20 years old,

      I walked alone along the Union Pacific tracks.

      I was apprehensive as

      on the first day on that job

      I walked to where we all checked in.

      3 dark figures stood in the way

      expressionless faces

      legs spread a bit;

      as I got closer one of them grabbed his crotch

      the other 2 leered;

      I walked quickly up to them and

      at the last moment they parted.

      I walked past them

      stopped and

      turned: “I’ll take on any one of you

      one at a time.

      anybody

      want to try it now?”

      nobody moved

      nobody spoke

      I walked over

      found my timecard in the rack and

      punched in.

      the foreman came over

      his face even uglier than mine.

      he said: “listen, we do our work around here

      we don’t want any trouble-makers.”

      I went to work.

      later while I was scrubbing down a boxcar

      with water and an oakite brush

     

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