Read The Roominghouse Madrigals Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
the love of the bone
where the earth chewed it down, that’s
what lasts,
and I remember sitting on the grass
with the negro boy,
we were sketching housetops and
he said,
you’re leaving some out,
you’re cheating,
and I walked across the street
to the bar
and
then he came in—
you are due back in class
at 2, he told me,
then he left.
class doesn’t matter, I thought,
nothing matters that we’re told,
and if I am a fly I’ll never know
what a lion really is.
I sat there until 4:30
and when I came out,
there he was.
Mr. Hutchins liked my
sketch, he told me.
that was over 20 years
ago.
I think
I saw him the other night.
he was a cop in the city jail
and he pushed me into
a cell.
I’m told
he doesn’t paint
any
more.
I tried all night to sleep
but I couldn’t sleep
and I began drinking
around 5:30
and reading about Delius
and Stravinsky,
and soon I heard them getting up
all over the building,
putting on coffee,
flushing toilets,
and then the phone rang
and she said,
“Sam, you haven’t been in jail?”
“not lately,”
I told her,
and then she asked where the hell
I had been and all that,
and finally I got rid of her
and pulled up the shades
and put my clothes on,
and I went down to the coffeeshop
and they were all sitting there
with bacon and eggs.
I had a coffee and went on in.
I emptied the baskets and
ashtrays, put toilet paper
in the women’s john
and then scattered the compound
to sweep. the old man came in
and eyed me riding the broom.
“you look like hell,” he said, and
“did you
put paper in the ladies’ room?”
I spit into the compound and
nodded. “that package to
McGerney’s,” he said. “12 pints
of floor wax…”
“yeah?” I asked.
“he says 7 of them pints
were broken. did you pack them right?”
“yeah.”
“did you put FRAGILE labels
on them.”
“yeah.”
“if you run out of FRAGILE
labels, let me know.”
“O.K.”
“…and be more careful
from now on.”
he went into the office and
I swept on toward the back.
a few minutes later
I heard him laughing with
the secretaries.
I unlocked the back door, brought in
the empty trashcans, sat down and
smokeda cigarette. I began to get sleepy
at last.
one of the secretaries came back
rotating her can,
pounding her spikes
on the cement floor.
she handed me a stack of orders
to pick and pack, and this look, this
smileon her face saying—
I don’t have to do much work,
but you do.
then she walked away wobbling,
wobbling meat.
I put some water in the tape machine
and stood there
waiting
waiting for 5:30.
Here without question is the bird-torn design,
drunk here in this cellar
amongst the flabby washing machines
and last year’s rusty newspapers;
the ages like stone
whirl above my head
as spiders spin sick webs;
I can leech here for years
undetected
sleeping against the belly of a boiler
like some growthless
hot yet dead
foetus;
I lift my bottle like a coronet
and sing songs and fables
to wash away
the fantastic darkness
of my breathing;
oh, coronet, coronet:
sing me no bitterness
for I have tasted stone,
sing me no child’s pouting and hate
for I am too old for night;
I am with the roots
of flowers
entwined, entombed
sending up my passionate blossoms
as a flight of rockets
and argument;
wine churls my throat,
above me
feet walk upon my brain,
monkies fall from the sky
clutching photographs
of the planets,
but I seek only music
and the leisure
of my pain; oh, damned coronet:
you are running dry
!…I fall beneath the spiders,
the girders move like threads,
and feet come down the stairs,
feet come down the stairs, I think,
belonging to the golden men
who push the buttons
of our burning universe.
bluewhite bird-light
nothing but the motor of sand
noticing bits of life:
I and fleas and chips of wood,
wind sounds, sounds of paper
caught with its life flapping,
deserted dogs
as content as rock,
facing rump to sea
furred against sun and sensibility,
snouting against dead crabs
and last night’s bottles…
everything dirty, really,
really dirty,
like back at the hotel,
the white jackets and 15
c
tips,the old girls skipping rope
not like young neighborhood girls
but for room, bottle and trinket,
and the hotel sits behind you
like grammar school and old wars
and you simply roll upon your stomach,
skin against warm dirty sand
and a dog comes up with his ice-nose
against the bottoms of your feet
and you howl angry laughter
through hangover and forty-year old kisses,
through guilty sun and tired wave,
through cheap memories that can never be
transformed by either literature or love,
and the dog pulls back
looking upon this stick of a white man
with red coal eyes
through filtered smoke,
and he makes for the shore, the sea,
and I get up and chase after him,
another hound, I am,
and he looks over a round shoulder,
frightened, demolished,
as our feet cut patterns of life,
dog-life, man-life,
lazy indolent life, gull-life
and running, and the sharks
out beyond the rocks
thrashing for our silly blood.
it is an orange
animal
with
hand grenades
fire power
big teeth and
a horn of smoke
a colored man
with cigar
yanks at
gears and the damn thing never gets
tired
my neighbor
…an old man in blue
bathing trunks
…an old man
a fetid white obscene
thing—
the old man
lifts apart some purple flowers
and peeks through the fence at the
orange animal
and like a horror movie
I see the orange animal open its
mouth—
it belches it has teeth fastened onto a giraffe’s
neck—
and it reached over the fence and it gets the
old man in his blue
bathing trunks
neatly
it gets him
from behind the fence of purple flowers
and his whiteness is like
garbage in the air
and then
he’s dumped into a
shock of lumber
and then the orange animal
backs off
spins
turns
runs off into the Hollywood Hills
the palm trees the
boulevards as
the colored man
sucks red steam
from his
cigar
I’ll be glad when it’s all
over
the noise is
terrible and I’m afraid to go and
buy a
paper.
they live down by the sea…these men
and you see them going to the gray public bath
like colonels on parade;
they have trailers and dogs and wives and children
in that importance; they crawl upon the rocks
as turtles do and dream sun-dreams
turtle-dreams
that do not hurt;
—or you see them singly…standing with their poles
the sea climbing their ankles and ignored like some
useless oil
and their long lines search and wait beyond the breakers,
a vein from life to life and calm brisk death.
I have never seen their fish, or their gods
or the color of their eyes—though I imagine
the palest shade of pink,
like small-sweet pickled onions, and their bellies
like the bellies of jellyfish hiding in flowers
beneath the rock.
they are there all year, I’m told…these same men
with their rusty lives. when it rains the sand gets wet,
not as bad as mud, and they never die: you see
their fires at night as you drive back from the track,
nothing moving except the flame a little and the sea
changing shape, and you can see the threads of smoke
easing into the sky;
and as their camp goes by, leaving you vacant
you stare again into a world of red tail lights
and turn on the radio
and through the glass like the hand of some
forgotten god
you watch
a gull dip over your car
and then rise and fly out toward the sea.
naked
unarmored
before the open window
sitting at the table
drinking tomato juice
the publicly unpardonable part
of my body
below the table
I watch
a man in an orange robe
and bedroom slippers
shit his dog upon the lawn
both of them
tempered by sparrows.
we are losers; even at high noon
or late evening
none of us dresses well
in this neighborhood
none of us studies the grace of high
finance
successfully enough
to shake
ugly things away
(like needing the rent or
drinking 59 cent wine).
yet now
the wind comes through the window
cool,
as pure as a cobra;
it is a sensible time
undivided
either by
explanation
deepeyed cats
life insurance or
Danish kings.
I finish the
tomato
juice and
go to
bed.