Read Mockingbird Wish Me Luck Page 9


  each waiting their

  turn.

  she’s gone…

  somewhere.

  the remainder of the program loses

  some meaning,

  except a very sexy young

  chicano teacher

  in a yellow dress

  comes out and sings

  “Silent Night”

  in Spanish.

  meanwhile Mr. Doerflinger is seen running about,

  in this door, out that

  one, showing his buttocks,

  racing across the stage in some

  great

  urgency…

  “Doerflinger,” says somebody.

  he will not be forgotten by

  anybody. he will not allow himself to be,

  especially by the ladies.

  it goes on.

  “Let There Be Peace On Earth”

  we all sing together. the last number on the

  program.

  taxpayers forget Christmas, remember instead how nice your

  children are.

  we get back to the mother’s apartment

  and there is a notice that they will shut off

  the gas that

  day. the mother claims no previous

  notice has been

  received.

  I drive them down to 5th street

  in Santa Monica

  to the gas co.

  I wave

  goodbye. they stand on the corner.

  my daughter has a hole

  in her black

  tights,

  right

  knee…

  “Let there be peace on earth

  And let it begin with me.

  Let there be peace on earth,

  The peace that was meant to be.

  With God as our Father,

  Brothers all are we—

  Let me walk with my brother

  In perfect harmony.”

  marina:

  majestic, magic

  infinite

  my little girl is

  sun

  on the carpet—

  out the door

  picking a

  flower, ha!,

  an old man,

  battle-wrecked,

  emerges from his

  chair

  and she looks at me

  but only sees

  love,

  ha!, and I become

  quick with the world

  and love right back

  just like I was meant

  to do.

  one with dante

  I have lost it in Paradise Valley

  with 4 women sitting in a kitchen

  talking and laughing about men and love and life and

  sex,

  I have lost it in Paradise Valley

  I have lost the word and the way and the light,

  4 women sitting in the kitchen

  drinking gallons of

  coffee, and now

  I sit in front of a window

  looking at the desert,

  one with Dante,

  I wonder what the Paradise Valley ladies want.

  these 3 sisters and a friend.

  through this small window,

  I see children dogs cattle horses flies sand

  chickens ducks,

  I hear the names of men now from the kitchen

  and the girls laugh, and

  I wonder, what am I

  doing here?

  these girls…this continual examination of the senses

  and the ideas and the reasons and the facts and the

  moods

  destroys, destroys…

  I have lost it in Paradise Valley.

  you have to lose it somewhere:

  I chose Arizona; although the love

  last night was

  good, I am lost in the desert

  I have given it up.

  an interesting night

  my girlfriend

  she started smashing

  all my bottles

  my whiskey bottle and my

  beer bottles,

  meanwhile

  yelling and screaming,

  then she ran

  out the door.

  3 police arrived 5 minutes

  later,

  one holding shotgun,

  and they asked

  various questions,

  one of them being:

  what do you

  do?

  I’m a writer,

  I said.

  the cop smirked at

  me, walked over to the

  typewriter,

  picked up some papers

  and started

  reading.

  it was my 2,000 word essay

  on the meaning of

  suicide.

  he didn’t seem much

  interested.

  after they left

  I went all the way to

  Altadena

  and slept with a fine

  22 year old girl

  some pot

  3 cats

  3 homosexuals

  a 7 year old boy

  a dog, and

  a 24 by 20 photo

  of me

  hanging over the fireplace,

  looking

  wise.

  a threat to my immortality

  she undressed in front of me

  keeping her pussy to the front

  while I layed in bed with a bottle of

  beer.

  where’d you get that wart on

  your ass? I asked.

  that’s no wart, she said,

  that’s a mole, a kind of

  birthmark.

  that thing scares me, I said,

  let’s call

  it off.

  I got out of bed and

  walked into the other room and

  sat on the rocker

  and rocked.

  she walked out. now, listen, you

  old fart. you’ve got warts and scars and

  all kinds of things all over

  you. I do believe you’re the ugliest

  old man

  I’ve ever seen.

  forget that, I said, tell me some more

  about that

  mole on your butt.

  she walked into the other room

  and got dressed and then ran past me

  slammed the door

  and was

  gone.

  and to think,

  she’d read all my books of

  poetry too.

  I just hoped she wouldn’t tell

  anybody that

  I wasn’t pretty.

  climax

  I was somewhere…somewhere in Europe

  act II, scene II

  Siegfried…

  the whole building shook

  there was flame

  world ending,

  bodies hurled through air

  like mad

  clowns…

  the orchestra quit

  playing.

  “It’s the BOMB! THE

  BOMB!” somebody

  screamed. the bomb the bomb the bomb

  the bomb.

  I grabbed a fat blonde

  tore her dress away,

  gotterdammerung!

  “I don’t want to

  die!” said the

  blonde. the whole opera house was

  coming down. blood on the

  floor. more flame.

  smoke. smoke. screaming. it was

  terrible. I stuck it

  in.

  a man’s woman

  the dream of a man

  is a whore with a gold tooth

  and a garter belt,

  perfumed

  with false eyebrows

  mascara

  earrings

  light pink panties

  salami breath

  high heels

  long stockings with a ve
ry slight

  run on back of left stocking,

  a little bit fat,

  a little bit drunk,

  a little bit silly and a little bit crazy

  who doesn’t tell dirty jokes

  and has 3 warts on her back

  and pretends to enjoy symphony music

  and who will stay a week

  just one week

  and wash the dishes and cook and fuck and suck

  and scrub the kitchen floor

  and not show any photos of her children

  or talk about her x-husband or husband

  or where she went to school or where she was born

  or why she went to jail last time

  or who she’s in love with,

  just stay one week

  just one week

  and do the thing and go and never come

  back

  for that one earring on the dresser.

  tight pink dress

  I read where this 44 year old soprano of some fame

  fell out of a 4 story window

  and killed herself, well, I suppose this is all right

  for sopranos of some fame, but

  I think that 8 stories is more

  reasonable.

  I know this woman, a sister of the mother of my

  child, some years back

  her husband divorced her

  and she jumped out of a 4 story window

  and broke both legs

  and other assorted parts.

  maybe that soprano just wasn’t as tough as she was;

  well, Helen got over the broken leg and parts,

  and she came around one day to my place in a nice tight

  pink dress, and we were alone but

  nothing happened, I didn’t want it to,

  and we talked

  and now she is really married to something,

  one of the most obnoxious souls

  that I know…

  “he plays the flute,” says the mother of my child,

  “they get along…”

  he came to see me one time and I ran him out the door:

  he packed death around with him like breath chasers.

  I’ve advised her to go 12 stories high

  when this one fails…

  I should have taken her the day she arrived in her

  tight pink dress…

  this guy and his flute…

  he probably shits flutes…

  and Helen with all that money, you think she might have

  done better.

  more or less, for julie:

  on the Hammond or through the bomb-shadowed window,

  through steak turned blue with the rot of drunken days,

  through signature and saliva

  through Savannah,

  dark running streets like veins

  caught in a juniper brush, through love spilled

  behind a broken shade on an October day;

  through forms and windows and lines,

  through a book by Kafka stained with wine,

  through wives and friends and jails,

  standing young once

  hearing Beethoven or Bruckner,

  or even riding a bicycle,

  young as that,

  impossible,

  coming across the bridge

  in Philadelphia

  and meeting your first whore,

  falling on the ice, drunk and numbed,

  you picking up she, she picking up he,

  until at last, laughing across all barriers,

  no marriage was ever more innocent or blessed,

  and I remember her name and yes her eyes,

  and a small mole on her left shoulder,

  and so we go down, down in sadness, sadness,

  sitting in a grease-stained room

  listening to the corn boil.

  this is the way it goes and goes and goes

  “All your writing about pain and suffering is a bunch of bullshit.”—

  just because I told you that rock music

  hurts my head

  just because we have slept and awakened and

  eaten together

  just because we’ve been in cars and at racetracks

  together

  in parks in bathtubs in rooms

  together

  just because we’ve seen the same swan and the same

  dog at the same time

  just because we’ve seen the same wind blow the same

  curtain

  you have suddenly become a literary critic

  just because you have sculpted my head

  and read my books

  and told me of your loves and your flirtations and

  your travels

  just because I know the name of your daughter

  and have changed a flat tire for you

  you have suddenly become a literary critic

  just because you’ve had 3 poems accepted by a mimeo mag

  just because you’re writing a novel about your own madness

  just because you shake your ass and have long brown hair

  you have suddenly become a literary critic

  just because I have fucked you 144 times

  you have suddenly become a literary critic

  well, then, tell me,

  of all these writers…who’s pain is real?

  what? yes, I might have

  guessed—your pain is

  real. so, in the best interest of us all

  wave goodbye to the living who have lost the strength

  to weep, and

  as white ladies in pink rooms put on

  blue and green earrings,

  wave goodbye to me.

  left with the dog

  men in white t-shirts (unbothered

  by life) are walking their

  dogs

  outside

  as I watch a professional basketball

  game on

  t.v. and

  I have no interest

  in who will win but I do notice

  a lady in the grandstand crossing

  her legs (my editor phoned me last night at 10:15 p.m. and

  found me asleep—

  maybe that’s why he has to

  print the unpublished works of

  Gertrude Stein).

  very bad

  symphony music now

  (I mean bad for me)

  the violin sings of dank life and the

  grave and I am a student of

  both.

  here now

  my love has gone looking

  for an apartment in Venice,

  California and

  she has left me with her

  dog (a not quite immaculate creature named

  Stubby

  who sits behind my chair listening to a violin and

  a typewriter).

  they say

  fire-eaters, traffic cops, boxers and

  clerks in department stores

  sometimes know the

  truth. (I do what I

  can.)

  the best one can settle for

  is an afternoon

  with the rent paid, some food in the refrigerator,

  and death something like

  a bad painting by a bad painter

  (that you finally buy because there’s not

  anything else

  around).

  my love has gone looking for an apartment

  in Venice, California across the top of the sky

  something marches upsidedown;

  praying for a best seller

  waiting for my novelist friend to put the

  word down

  she sits in the kitchen

  thinking about the madhouse

  thinking about her x-husband

  while I entertain her 3 year old child

  who is now in the bathtub;

  well, listen, I guess after a madhouse or

  2 you need a f
ew breaks…

  my novelist friend may be crazy now

  or she wouldn’t be in the same house

  with me,

  or maybe I’m the one who’s crazy:

  she’s told me a couple of times she’s going to

  cut off my balls if I do this thing or

  that thing.

  well, taking a chance with my balls on the line

  that way

  it had better be a good novel

  or at least a bad one that is a best seller.

  I sit here rolling cigarette after cigarette

  while listening to her

  type.

  I suppose that for each genius launched

  5 or 6 people must suffer for

  it

  them

  him

  her.

  very well.

  that one

  your child has no name

  your hair has no color

  your face has no flesh

  your feet have no toes

  your country has ten flags

  your voice has no tongue

  your ideas slide like snakes

  your eyes do not match

  you eat bouquets of flowers

  throw poisoned meat to the dogs

  I see you linger in alleys with a club

  I see you with a knife for anybody

  I see you peddling a fishhead for a heart

  and when the sun comes churning down

  you’ll come walking in from the kitchen