Read The Days Run Away Like Wild Horses Over the Hills Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
I have practiced death for so long
and still I have not learned it,
and tonight I came in
and my goldfish was not in his bowl,
he had leaped
for reasons of his own
(I had changed the water; it might have been
a fly…)
and he was now on the rug
with black spots upon his golden body,
and he was still and he was stiff
but I put him back in the water
(some sound told me to do this)
and I seemed to see the gills move,
a large air bubble formed
but the body was still stiff
but miraculously
it did not float flat—
the tail part was down in the water,
and I thought of ships, of armies,
hanging on,
and then I saw the small fins
near the underside of the head
move
and I sat down on the couch
and tried to read,
tried not to think
that the woman who had given me these fish
was now dead 6 months,
the world going on past living things
now no longer living,
and the other fish had died.
he had overeaten, he had eaten his meal
and most of the meal of the small one,
and now the woman was gone
and the small one was stiff,
and an hour later
when I got up
he floated flat and finished;
his eyes looking up at me did not look at me
but into places I could not see,
and the slave carried the master,
this goldfish with black spots
and dumped him into the toilet
and flushed him away.
I put the bowl in the corner
and thought, I really cannot stand
much more of this.
dead fish, dead ladies, dead wars.
it does seem a miracle to see anybody alive
and now somebody on the radio is playing
a guitar very slowly and I think, yes,
he too: his fingers, his hands, his mind,
and his music goes on but it is very still
it is very quiet, and I am tired.
all the efforts of the Spanish to effect peace
were in vain and Domenico came over the hill
and shot the white chicken and raped the woman
in the hut, and then he rode up the road
noticing the pink anemones, the lazy toads,
and when he got to town he ate a hot tamale,
and through the window he saw the fleet
and the fleet put its guns even with the town,
he saw that, and in came a wind of fire,
and in the smoke he grabbed the cigarette girl
and raped her, then he got back on his mule
which stepped carefully over the dead
and he rode back to the village where his own hut
still stood, and the old lady was outside
rubbing clothes on rocks by the stream,
and in the air came the planes
looking them over
banking their wings
and finally deciding
that they were not worth the bombs,
they left
like large undecided butterflies,
and Domenico went inside and fell
upon the floor
and the old lady came in
wiggling what was left,
and he said,
war is a horrible thing,and he wondered if anybody would ever bother to rape her,
he would not stop them, they
could have it, not much there, nothing,
and he decided that sleep was better than nothing
and he went to sleep.
driving in from the track
I saw a woman in green
all rump and breast and dizziness running
across the street.
she was as sexy as a
green and drunken antelope and
when she got to the curbing she
tripped and fell
down and
sat in the gutter and
I sat there in my car
looking at her and
oddly
I felt most impassive as if
nothing had happened and
I sat there looking at this
green creature until
a moving van 60 feet long came
to a stop and
helped the
lady
up.
a young man in white overalls
flushed red and the girl was built
all around all around and
stupid with falling and stupid with life and
swaying on the tower stilts of her
heels
she stood there rubbing her
white knees and
the young man kept talking to
her
he was big dumb blond pink and lonely
but then
the woman asked him
where the nearest bar was and
he grinned and pointed down the street and
gave it
up
he got back into the truck and
60 feet full of
furniture and blanket and stove
pulled on down the street
and the green antelope
crossed the street
toward the bar
wobbling and shaking
shaking and wobbling
everything and
we sat transfixed and
watching
until
in the backed-up traffic
behind me
a man of strength
honked
and I put the thing in drive
slowing for the big dip
by the market
that could tear your car in
half
and they all followed me
slowing for the dip
too:
18 cars full of men thinking of
what could have been—
about the one who
got away and
it was about sunset and
heavy traffic and heavy
life.
one of the terrible things is
really
being in bed
night after night
with a woman you no longer
want to screw.
they get old, they don’t look very good
anymore—they even tend to
snore, lose
spirit.
so, in bed, you turn sometimes,
your foot touches hers—
god,
awful!—and the night is out there
beyond the curtains
sealing you together
in the
tomb.
and in the morning you go to the
bathroom, pass in the hall, talk,
say odd things; eggs fry, motors
start.
but sitting across
you have 2 strangers
jamming toast into mouths
burning the sullen head and gut with
coffee.
in 10 million places in America
it is the same—
stale lives propped against each
other
and no place to
go.
you get in the car
and you drive to work
and there are more strangers there, most of them
wives and husbands of somebody
else, and besides the guillotine of work, they
flirt and joke and pinch, sometimes tend to
work off a quick screw somewhere—
they can’t do it at home—
and then
the drive back home
waiting for Christmas or Labor Day or
Sunday or
something.
They slit his pockets and shot him in his car,
eighteen hundred dollars split four ways,
and I used to see him at the track
watching the tote
and going the last-flick bullrush toward the window;
he never took a drink
and he never took a woman home with him,
and he never spoke to anyone,
and I never spoke to anyone either
except to order a drink
or if a hustler had good legs and ass
to let her know
over a scotch and water
that later would be o.k.;
what I am getting at is
that this guy was a pro,
it was a business with him,
he didn’t come out to holler and get drunk
and get fucked—
he came out to
make it,
which is betterthan punching another man’s timeclock;
when I saw him bullrushing the $50 window
late in the year
I knew he was making it much better than I;
the board had showed a lot of false flashes,
some nut with a roll was dropping in one or two grand
at the last minute, but this guy was just that,
a nut with money, and we finally had to go through
the routine of finding out what he was betting
and flushing the horse out
before we got our bets down; this made one sweaty
late bullrush…anyhow, the quiet one didn’t
worry about this and always laid his bet a little ahead
of time and walked off; he kept getting better,
his clothes looked better, he looked calmer,
and you could see him off to the side,
after most races, shoving bills into his wallet,
and Jeanette, one of the better hustlers, said,
“I’d start him off with a blow-job and then twist
his nuts until he told me how he did it…”
“Would you do that to me, baby?” I asked.
“With your method of play you’re lucky to have
admission,” she said downing a drink that had cost me
85¢. “Do you still have a collection of Mozart?”
I asked her. “What’s that got to do with it?” she asked.
I walked off.
I read about it in the papers next day. Witnesses
said there were 3 of them and a woman at the wheel.
I saw Jeanette at the bar. “Hello, Mozart,” she said.
She looked a little nervous and at the same time she
seemed to feel pretty good. “I’ll take a double
shot right now,” I said. “And after the next race,
I think I’ll have a vodka. I’m going to mix them all day.
Haven’t
been real drunk in a couple of years.”
She watched me lighting a cigarette, then I told her, “Also, I
want a pack of smokes, and you are going home with me tonight and
we are going to listen to Mozart all night. You are going to
like it. You are going to have to like it.”
She paid for the drink. “You’re looking for trouble,” she told
me. “Bitch,” I said, “I have been trying to commit suicide for
years.”
I had a good day. We went home and listened to Mozart for hours.
She was as good as ever on the springs. Only this time there was
no charge. Then she cried half the night and said she loved me.
I knew what that was for.
The next afternoon at the track I didn’t speak to her, and I won
one hundred and twelve dollars, not counting drinks and admission,
and I kept looking back through the rearview window as I drove,
bigtime, and then I began to laugh, shit, they knew I was nothing,
I was safe; I should tell the screws but when a man is dead
the screws can’t bring him back.
I got home and opened a fifth of scotch, tired of Mozart
I tried
The Rake’s Progress
by Strav.I read the Racing Form for about 30 minutes, put in a long distance
call to some woman in Sacramento, drank a little more and went to
bed, alone, about 11:30.
I sit up in bed at night and listen to you
snore
I met you in a bus station
and now I wonder at your back
sick white and stained with
children’s freckles
as the lamp divests the unsolvable
sorrow of the world
upon your sleep.
I cannot see your feet
but I must guess that they are
most charming feet.
who do you belong to?
are you real?
I think of flowers, animals, birds
they all seem more than good
and so clearly
real.
yet you cannot help being a
woman. we are each selected to be
something. the spider, the cook.
the elephant. it is as if we were each
a painting and hung on some
gallery wall.
—and now the painting turns
upon its back, and over a curving elbow
I can see ½ a mouth, one eye and
almost a nose.
the rest of you is hidden
out of sight
but I know that you are a
contemporary, a modern living
work
perhaps not immortal
but we have
loved.
please continue to
snore.