Read The Last Night of the Earth Poems Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
that Harbor Freeway south through the downtown
area—I mean, it can simply become
unbelievable
.
last Friday evening I was sitting there
motionless behind a wall of red taillights,
there wasn’t even first gear movement
as masses of exhaust fumes
greyed the evening air, engines overheated
and there was the smell of a clutch
burning out
somewhere—
it seemed to come from ahead of me—
from that long slow rise of freeway where
the cars were working
from first gear to neutral
again and again
and from neutral back to
first gear.
on the radio I heard the news
of that day
at least 6 times, I was
well versed in world
affairs.
the remainder of the stations played a
thin, sick music.
the classical stations refused to come in
clearly
and when they did
it was a stale repetition of standard and
tiresome works.
I turned the radio off.
a strange whirling began in my
head—it circled behind the forehead, clock
wise, went past the ears and around to theback of the head, then back to the forehead
and around
again.
I began to wonder, is this what happens
when one goes
mad?
I considered getting out of my car.
I was in the so-called fast
lane.
I could see myself out there
out of my car
leaning against the freeway divider,
arms folded.
then I would slide down to a sitting
position, putting my head between
my legs.
I stayed in the car, bit my tongue, turned
the radio back on,
willed
the whirling tostop
as I wondered if any of the others had to
battled against their
compulsions
as I did?
then the car ahead of me
MOVED
a foot, 2 feet, 3 feet!
I shifted to first gear…
there was MOVEMENT!
then I was back in neutral
BUT
we
had moved
from 7 toten feet.
hearing the world news for the
7th time,
it was still all bad
but all of us listening,
we could handle that too
because we knew
that there was nothing worse than
looking at
that same license plate
that same dumb head sticking up
from behind the headrest
in the car ahead of you
as time dissolved
as the temperature gauge leaned
more to the right
as the gas gauge leaned
more to the left
as we wondered
whose
clutch was burningout?
we were like some last, vast
final dinosaur
crawling feebly home somewhere,
somehow, maybe
to
die.
at L.A. City College there were two toughs, me and Jed Anderson.
Anderson was one of the best running backs in the
history of the school, a real breakaway threat
anytime he got the football.
I was pretty tough physically but looked at sports
as a game for freaks.
I thought a bigger game was challenging those
who attempted to teach
us.
anyhow, Jed and I were the two biggest lights on
campus, he piled up his 60, 70 and 80 yard
runs in the night games
and during the days
slouched in my seat
I made up what I didn’t know
and what I did know
was so bad
many a teacher was made to
dance to it.
and one grand day
Jed and I
finally met.
it was at a little jukebox place
across from campus and
he was sitting with his
pals
and I was sitting with
mine.
“go on! go on! talk to him!”
my pals
urged.
I said, “fuck that gym
boy. I am one with
Nietzsche, let him come
over here!”
finally Jed got up to get a
pack of smokes from the
machine and one of my
friends asked,
“are you afraid of that
man?”
I got up and walked behind
Jed as he was reaching into the
machine
for his pack.
“hello, Jed,” I
said.
he turned: “hello,
Hank.”
then he reached into his
rear pocket,
pulled out a pint of
whiskey, handed it to
me.
I took a mighty hit,
handed it
back.
“Jed, what are you
going to do
after
L.A.C.C.?”
“I’m going to play
for Notre Dame.”
then he walked back
to his table
and I walked back
to mine.
“what’d he say? what’d
he say?”
“nothing much.”
anyhow, Jed never made it
to Notre Dame
and I never made it
anywhere
either—
the years just swept us
away
but there were others
who went
on, including one fellow
who became a famous
sports columnist
and I had to look at his
photo
for decades
in the newspaper
as I inherited those
cheap rooms
and those roaches
and those airless
dreary
nights.
but
I was still proud of that moment
back then
when Jed handed me
that pint
and
I drained
a third of it
with all the disciples
watching.
damn, there was no way
it seemed
we could ever
lose
but we did.
and it took me
3 or 4 decades to
move on just a
little.
and Jed,
if you are still here
tonight,
(I forgot to tell you
then)
here’s a thanks
for that drink.