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On Love

Page 5

by Charles Bukowski

your sadness and loss and warmth

  also mine,

  I have memorized you

  each shape of you

  the feel of your cunt-hairs in my teeth

  gently-pulling, and

  you

  who made me laugh at the

  appropriate times

  always.

  little dark girl of kindness

  you have no

  knife. it’s

  mine and I don’t want to use it

  yet.

  a love poem for all the women I have known

  all the women

  all their kisses the

  different ways they love and

  talk and need.

  their ears they all have

  ears and

  throats and dresses

  and shoes and

  automobiles and ex-

  husbands.

  mostly

  the women are very

  warm they remind me of

  buttered toast with the butter

  melted

  in.

  there is a look in the

  eye: they have been

  taken they have been

  fooled. I don’t know quite what to

  do for

  them.

  I am

  a fair cook a good

  listener

  but I never learned to

  dance—I was busy

  then with larger things.

  but I’ve enjoyed their different

  beds

  smoking cigarettes

  staring at the

  ceilings. I was neither vicious nor

  unfair. only

  a student.

  I know they all have these

  feet and barefoot they go across the floor as

  I watch their bashful buttocks in the

  dark. I know that they like me, some even

  love me

  but I love very

  few.

  some give me oranges and pills;

  others talk quietly of

  childhood and fathers and

  landscapes; some are almost

  crazy but none of them are without

  meaning; some love

  well, others not

  so; the best at sex are not always the

  best in other

  ways; each has limits as I have

  limits and we learn

  each other

  quickly.

  all the women all the

  women all the

  bedrooms

  the rugs the

  photos the

  curtains, it’s

  something like a church only

  at times there’s

  laughter.

  those ears those

  arms those

  elbows those eyes

  looking the fondness and

  the waiting I have been

  held I have been

  held.

  fax

  it beats love because

  there aren’t any wounds

  flopping about. in the

  morning she turns on the

  radio to Brahms or Ives

  or Stravinsky or Mozart.

  she boils the eggs count-

  ing the seconds out loud:

  56, 57, 58. she peels

  the eggs, brings them to

  me in bed. after break-

  fast it’s the couch, we

  put our feet on the same

  chair and listen to the

  classical music. she’s

  on her first glass of

  scotch and her third

  cigarette. I tell her

  I must go to the race-

  track. she’s been about

  2 nights and 2 days.

  “when will I see you

  again?” I ask. she suggests

  that might be up to me.

  I nod and Mozart plays.

  one for the shoeshine man

  the balance is in the snails climbing the

  Santa Monica cliffs;

  the luck is in walking down Western Avenue

  and having one of the girls from a massage

  parlor holler at you, “Hello, Sweetie!”

  the miracle is in having five women in love

  with you at the age of 55,

  and the goodness is that you are only able

  to love one of them.

  the gift is in having a daughter more gentle

  than you are, whose laughter is finer

  than yours.

  the placidity is in being able to drive a

  blue 67 Volks through the streets like a

  teenager, the radio on to The Host Who Loves You

  Most, feeling the sun, feeling the solid hum

  of the rebuilt motor

  as you needle through traffic

  pissing-off the dead.

  the grace is in being able to like rock music,

  symphony music, jazz . . .

  anything that contains the joy of original

  energy.

  and the mathematic that returns

  is the deep blue low

  yourself flat upon yourself

  within the guillotine walls—

  angry at the sound of the phone

  or anybody’s footsteps passing;

  and the other mathematic:

  the imminent lilting high that follows

  making the guys who sit on the benches

  outside the taco stands

  look like gurus

  making the girl at the checkstand in the

  supermarket look like

  Marilyn

  like Zsa Zsa

  like Jackie before they got her Harvard lover

  like the girl in high school that

  all us boys followed home.

  and the neatness which makes you believe

  in something else besides death

  is Sandy Hawley bringing in

  five winners at Hollywood Park on off-form horses,

  none of them favorites,

  or somebody in a car approaching you

  on a street too narrow,

  and he or she pulls aside to let you

  by, or the old fighter Beau Jack

  shining shoes

  after blowing the entire bankroll

  on parties

  on women

  on parasites,

  humming, blowing on the leather,

  working the rag,

  looking up and saying:

  “What the hell, I had it for a

  while. that beats the

  other.”

  I act very bitter sometimes

  but the taste has often been

  sweet, it’s only that I’ve

  feared to say it. it’s like

  when your woman says,

  “tell me you love me,” and

  you can’t say it.

  if you ever see me grinning from

  my blue Volks

  running a yellow light

  driving straight into the sun

  without dark shades

  I will only be locked into the

  afternoon of a

  crazy life

  thinking of trapeze artists

  of midgets with big cigars

  of a Russian winter in the early forties

  of Chopin with his bag of Polish soil

  or an old waitress bringing me an extra

  cup of coffee and seeming to laugh at me

  as she does so.

  the best of you

  I like more than you think.

  the others don’t count

  except that they have fingers and heads

  and some of them eyes

  and most of them legs

  and all of them

  good and bad dreams

  and a way to go.

  the balance is everywhere and it’s working

  and the machineguns and the frogs


  and the hedges will tell you

  so.

  who in the hell is Tom Jones?

  I was shacked

  with a 24 year old

  girl from New York

  City for two weeks,

  along about the time

  of the garbage strike

  out there, and one night

  this 34 year old woman

  arrived and she said,

  “I want to see my rival,”

  and she did and then

  she said, “o, you’re a

  cute little thing!”

  next I knew there was a

  whirling of wildcats—

  such screaming and scratching,

  wounded animal moans,

  blood and piss . . .

  I was drunk and in my

  shorts. I tried to

  separate them and fell,

  wrenched my knee. then

  they were through the

  door and down the walk

  and out in the street.

  squadcars full of cops

  arrived. a police helicopter

  circled overhead.

  I stood in the bathroom

  and grinned in the mirror.

  it’s not often at the

  age of 55

  that such splendid

  action occurs.

  it was better than the

  Watts riots.

  then the 34 year old

  came back in. she had pissed

  all over herself and her

  clothing was torn and

  she was followed by 2 cops

  who wanted to know

  why.

  pulling up my shorts

  I tried to explain.

  sitting in a sandwich joint just off the freeway

  my daughter is most

  glorious.

  we are eating in my

  car in Santa Monica.

  I say, “Hey, kid,

  my life has been

  good, so good.”

  she looks at me.

  I put my head down

  lean over the steering

  wheel, then I kick

  the door open, “I’m a

  GENIUS!”

  then I put on a mock-

  puke.

  she laughs, biting

  into her sandwich.

  I straighten up,

  pick up 4 french fries,

  put them into my mouth,

  chew them.

  it is 5:30 p.m.

  and the cars run up

  and down past

  us.

  I sneak a look.

  she’s grinning,

  her eyes bright with

  the remainder of the

  world.

  we’ve got all the luck

  we need.

  a definition

  love is nothing but headlights at

  night running through the fog

  love is nothing but a beercap

  that you step on while on the way

  to the bathroom

  love is a lost key to your door

  when you’re drunk

  love is what happens one day a

  year

  one year in ten

  love is the crushed cats

  of the universe

  love is an old newsboy on the

  corner who has

  given it up

  love is the first 3 rows of

  potential killers at the

  Olympic Auditorium

  love is what you think the other

  person has destroyed

  love is what vanished with the

  age of battleships

  love is the phone ringing

  and the same voice or another

  voice but never the right

  voice

  love is betrayal

  love is the burning of the

  wino in the alley

  love is steel

  love is the cockroach

  love is a mailbox

  love is rain upon the roof

  of the cheapest hotel

  in Los Angeles

  love is your father in a coffin

  who hated you

  love is a horse with the

  broken leg

  trying to stand on it

  while 55,000 people

  watch

  love is the way we boil

  like the lobster

  love is a filter cigarette

  stuck in your mouth and

  lighted the wrong way

  love is everything we said

  it wasn’t

  love is the Hunchback of

  Notre Dame

  love is the flea you can’t

  find

  love is the mosquito

  love is 50 grenadiers

  love is the emptier of

  bedpans

  love is a riot at Quentin

  love is a madhouse full

  love is a donkey shitting in a

  street of flies

  love is a barstool when there is

  nobody sitting on it

  love is a film of the Hindenburg

  curling to pieces

  in years that still scream

  love is Dostoyevsky at the

  roulette wheel

  love is what crawls along

  the ground

  love is your woman dancing

  pressed against a stranger

  love is an old woman

  pinching a loaf of bread

  love is a word used

  constantly

  ever most constantly

  love is red roofs and green

  roofs and blue roofs

  and flying in jet airliners

  that’s all.

  an acceptance slip

  16 years old

  during the Depression

  I’d come home drunk

  and all my clothing—

  shorts, shirts, stockings,

  suitcase, and pages of

  short stories

  would be thrown on the

  front lawn and about the

  street.

  my mother would be waiting

  behind a tree:

  “Henry, Henry, don’t

  go in . . . he’ll

  kill you, he’s read

  your stories . . .”

  “I can whip his

  ass . . .”

  “Henry, please take

  this . . . and

  find yourself a room.”

  but it worried him

  that I might not

  finish high school

  so I’d be back

  again.

  one evening he walked in

  with the pages of

  one of my short stories

  (which I had never submitted

  to him)

  and he said, “this is

  a great short story,”

  and I said, “o.k.,”

  and he handed it to me

  and I read it.

  it was a story about

  a rich man

  who had a fight with

  his wife and had

  gone out into the night

  for a cup of coffee

  and had noticed

  the waitress and the spoons

  and forks and the

  salt and pepper shakers

  and the neon sign

  in the window

  and then had gone back

  to his stable

  to see and touch his

  favorite horse

  who then

  kicked him in the head

  and killed him.

  somehow

  the story held

  meaning for him

  though

  when I had written it

  I had no idea

  of what I was

  writing about.

  so I told him,

  “o.k., old man, you
can

  have it.”

  and he took it

  and walked out

  and closed the door.

  I guess that’s

  as close

  as we ever got.

  the end of a short affair

  I tried it standing up

  this time.

  it usually doesn’t

  work

  this time it seemed

  to be . . .

  she kept saying,

  “oh my god, you’ve got

  beautiful legs!”

  it was all right

  until she took her feet off the

  ground

  and wrapped her legs

  around my center.

  “oh my god, you’ve got

  beautiful legs!”

  she weighed about 138

  pounds and hung there as I

  worked.

  it was when I climaxed

  that I felt the pain

  fly straight up my

  spine.

  I dropped her on the

  couch and walked around

  the room.

  the pain remained.

  “look,” I told her,

  “you’d better go. I’ve got

  to develop some film

  in my dark room.”

  she dressed and left

  and I walked into the

  kitchen for a glass of

  water. I got a glass full

  in my left hand.

  the pain ran up behind my

  ears and

  I dropped the glass

  which broke on the floor.

  I got into a tub full of

  hot water and Epsom salts.

  I just got stretched out

  when the phone rang.

  as I tried to straighten

  my back

  the pain extended to my

  neck and arms.

  I flopped about,

  gripped the sides of the tub,

  got out

  with shots of green and yellow

  and red light

  whirling in my head.

  the phone kept ringing.

  I picked it up.

  “hello?”

  “I LOVE YOU!” she said.

  “thanks,” I said.

 

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