Read Run With the Hunted: A Charles Bukowski Reader Page 7


  but realizing that I wasn’t

  an intellectual or a political

  idealist

  I backed off on that

  one

  later.

  I was a reader

  then

  going from room to

  room: literature, philosophy,

  religion, even medicine

  and geology.

  early on

  I decided to be a writer,

  I thought it might be the easy

  way

  out

  and the big boy novelists didn’t look

  too tough to

  me.

  I had more trouble with

  Hegel and Kant.

  the thing that bothered

  me

  about everybody

  is that they took so long

  to finally say

  something lively and/

  or

  interesting.

  I thought I had it

  over everybody

  then.

  I was to discover two

  things:

  a) most publishers thought that anything

  boring had something to do with things

  profound.

  b) that it would take decades of

  living and writing

  before I would be able to

  put down

  a sentence that was

  anywhere near

  what I wanted it to

  be.

  meanwhile

  while other young men chased the

  ladies

  I chased the old

  books.

  I was a bibliophile, albeit a

  disenchanted

  one

  and this

  and the world

  shaped me.

  I lived in a plywood hut

  behind a roominghouse

  for $3.50 a

  week

  feeling like a

  Chatterton

  stuffed inside of some

  Thomas

  Wolfe.

  my greatest problem was

  stamps, envelopes, paper

  and

  wine,

  with the world on the edge

  of World War II.

  I hadn’t yet been

  confused by the

  female, I was a virgin

  and I wrote from 3 to

  5 short stories a week

  and they all came

  back

  from The New Yorker, Harper’s,

  The Atlantic Monthly.

  I had read where

  Ford Madox Ford used to paper

  his bathroom with his

  rejection slips

  but I didn’t have a

  bathroom so I stuck them

  into a drawer

  and when it got so stuffed with them

  I could barely

  open it

  I took all the rejects out

  and threw them

  away along with the

  stories.

  still

  the old L.A. Public Library remained

  my home

  and the home of many other

  bums.

  we discreetly used the

  restrooms

  and the only ones of

  us

  to be evicted were those

  who fell asleep at the

  library

  tables—nobody snores like a

  bum

  unless it’s somebody you’re married

  to.

  well, I wasn’t quite a

  bum. I had a library card

  and I checked books in and

  out

  large

  stacks of them

  always taking the

  limit

  allowed:

  Aldous Huxley, D. H. Lawrence,

  e.e. cummings, Conrad Aiken, Fyodor

  Dos, Dos Passos, Turgenev, Gorky,

  H.D., Freddie Nietzsche,

  Schopenhauer,

  Steinbeck,

  Hemingway,

  and so

  forth …

  I always expected the librarian

  to say, “you have good taste, young

  man …”

  but the old fried and wasted

  bitch didn’t even know who she

  was

  let alone

  me.

  but those shelves held

  tremendous grace: they allowed

  me to discover

  the early Chinese poets

  like Tu Fu and Li

  Po

  who could say more in one

  line than most could say in

  thirty or

  a hundred.

  Sherwood Anderson must have

  read

  these

  too.

  I also carried the Cantos

  in and out

  and Ezra helped me

  strengthen my arms if not

  my brain.

  that wondrous place

  the L.A. Public Library

  it was a home for a person who had had

  a

  home of

  hell

  BROOKS TOO BROAD FOR LEAPING

  FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD

  POINT COUNTER POINT

  THE HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER

  James Thurber

  John Fante

  Rabelais

  de Maupassant

  some didn’t work for

  me: Shakespeare, G. B. Shaw,

  Tolstoy, Robert Frost, F. Scott

  Fitzgerald

  Upton Sinclair worked better for

  me

  than Sinclair Lewis

  and I considered Gogol and

  Dreiser complete

  fools

  but such judgments come more

  from a man’s

  forced manner of living than from

  his reason.

  the old L.A. Public

  most probably kept me from

  becoming a

  suicide

  a bank

  robber

  a

  wife-

  beater

  a butcher or a

  motorcycle policeman

  and even though some of these

  might be fine

  it is

  thanks

  to my luck

  and my way

  that this library was

  there when I was

  young and looking to

  hold on to

  something

  when there seemed very

  little

  about.

  and when I opened the

  newspaper

  and read of the fire

  which

  destroyed the

  library and most of

  its contents

  I said to my

  wife: “I used to spend my

  time

  there …”

  THE PRUSSIAN OFFICER

  THE DARING YOUNG MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE

  TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT

  YOU CAN’T GO HOME AGAIN.

  I made practice runs down to skid row to get ready for my future. I didn’t like what I saw down there. Those men and women had no special daring or brilliance. They wanted what everybody else wanted. There were also some obvious mental cases down there who were allowed to walk the streets undisturbed. I had noticed that both in the very poor and very rich extremes of society the mad were often allowed to mingle freely. I knew that I wasn’t entirely sane. I still knew, as I had as a child, that there was something strange about myself. I felt as if I were destined to be a murderer, a bank robber, a saint, a rapist, a monk, a hermit. I needed an isolated place to hide. Skid row was disgusting. The life of the sane, average man was dull, worse than death. There seemed to be no possible alternative. Education also seemed to be a trap. The
little education I had allowed myself had made me more suspicious. What were doctors, lawyers, scientists? They were just men who allowed themselves to be deprived of their freedom to think and act as individuals. I went back to my shack and drank …

  Sitting there drinking, I considered suicide, but I felt a strange fondness for my body, my life. Scarred as they were, they were mine. I would look into the dresser mirror and grin: if you’re going to go, you might as well take eight, or ten or twenty of them with you …

  It was a Saturday night in December. I was in my room and I drank much more than usual, lighting cigarette after cigarette, thinking of girls and the city and jobs, and of the years ahead. Looking ahead I liked very little of what I saw. I wasn’t a misanthrope and I wasn’t a misogynist but I liked being alone. It felt good to sit alone in a small space and smoke and drink. I had always been good company for myself.

  Then I heard the radio in the next room. The guy had it on too loud. It was a sickening love song.

  “Hey, buddy!” I hollered, “turn that thing down!”

  There was no response.

  I walked to the wall and pounded on it.

  “I SAID, ‘TURN THAT FUCKING THING DOWN!’”

  The volume remained the same.

  I walked outside to his door. I was in my shorts. I raised my leg and jammed my foot into the door. It burst open. There were two people on the cot, an old fat guy and an old fat woman. They were fucking. There was a small candle burning. The old guy was on top. He stopped and turned his head and looked. She looked up from underneath him. The place was very nicely fixed-up with curtains and a little rug.

  “Oh, I’m sorry …”

  I closed their door and went back to my place. I felt terrible. The poor had a right to fuck their way through their bad dreams. Sex and drink, and maybe love, was all they had.

  I sat back down and poured a glass of wine. I left my door open. The moonlight came in with the sounds of the city: juke boxes, automobiles, curses, dogs barking, radios … We were all in it together. We were all in one big shit pot together. There was no escape. We were all going to be flushed away.

  A small cat walked by, stopped at my door and looked in. The eyes were lit by the moon: pure red like fire. Such wonderful eyes.

  “Come on, kitty …” I held my hand out as if there were food in it. “Kitty, kitty …”

  The cat walked on by.

  I heard the radio in the next room shut off.

  I finished my wine and went outside. I was in my shorts as before. I pulled them up and tucked in my parts. I stood before the other door. I had broken the lock. I could see the light from the candle inside. They had the door wedged closed with something, probably a chair.

  I knocked quietly.

  There was no answer.

  I knocked again.

  I heard something. Then the door opened.

  The old fat guy stood there. His face was hung with great folds of sorrow. He was all eyebrows and mustache and two sad eyes.

  “Listen,” I said, “I’m very sorry for what I did. Won’t you and your girl come over to my place for a drink?”

  “No.”

  “Or maybe I can bring you both something to drink?”

  “No,” he said, “please leave us alone.”

  He closed the door.

  I awakened with one of my worst hangovers. I usually slept until noon. This day I couldn’t. I dressed and went to the bathroom in the main house and made my toilet. I came back out, went up the alley and then down the stairway, down the cliff and into the street below.

  Sunday, the worst god-damned day of them all.

  I walked over to Main Street, past the bars. The B-girls sat near the doorways, their skirts pulled high, swinging their legs, wearing high heels.

  “Hey, honey, come on in!”

  Main Street, East 5th, Bunker Hill. Shitholes of America.

  There was no place to go. I walked into a Penny Arcade. I walked around looking at the games but had no desire to play any of them. Then I saw a Marine at a pinball machine. Both his hands gripped the sides of the machine, as he tried to guide the ball with body-English. I walked up and grabbed him by the back of his collar and his belt.

  “Becker, I demand a god-damned rematch!”

  I let go of him and he turned.

  “No, nothing doing,” he said.

  “Two out of three.”

  “Balls,” he said, “I’ll buy you a drink.”

  We walked out of the Penny Arcade and down Main Street. A B-girl hollered out from one of the bars, “Hey, Marine, come on in!”

  Becker stopped. “I’m going in,” he said.

  “Don’t,” I said, “they are human roaches.”

  “I just got paid.”

  “The girls drink tea and they water your drinks. The prices are double and you never see the girl afterward.”

  “I’m going in.”

  Becker walked in. One of the best unpublished writers in America, dressed to kill and to die. I followed him. He walked up to one of the girls and spoke to her. She pulled her skirt up, swung her high heels and laughed. They walked over to a booth in a corner. The bartender came around the bar to take their order. The other girl at the bar looked at me.

  “Hey, honey, don’t you wanna play?”

  “Yeah, but only when it’s my game.”

  “You scared or queer?”

  “Both,” I said, sitting at the far end of the bar.

  There was a guy between us, his head on the bar. His wallet was gone. When he awakened and complained, he’d either be thrown out by the bartender or handed over to the police.

  After serving Becker and the B-girl the bartender came back behind the bar and walked over to me.

  “Yeh?”

  “Nothing.”

  “Yeh? What ya want in here?”

  “I’m waiting for my friend,” I nodded at the corner booth.

  “You sit here, you gotta drink.”

  “O.K. Water.”

  The bartender went off, came back, set down a glass of water.

  “Two bits.”

  I paid him.

  The girl at the bar said to the bartender, “He’s queer or scared.”

  The bartender didn’t say anything. Then Becker waved to him and he went to take their order.

  The girl looked at me. “How come you ain’t in uniform?”

  “I don’t like to dress like everybody else.”

  “Are there any other reasons?”

  “The other reasons are my own business.”

  “Fuck you,” she said.

  The bartender came back. “You need another drink.”

  “O.K.,” I said, slipping another quarter toward him.

  We found another bar near the bus depot. It wasn’t a hustle joint. There was just a barkeep and five or six travelers, all men. Becker and I sat down.

  “It’s on me,” said Becker.

  “Eastside in the bottle.”

  Becker ordered two. He looked at me.

  “Come on, be a man, join up. Be a Marine.”

  “I don’t get any thrill trying to be a man.”

  “Seems to me you’re always beating up on somebody.”

  “That’s just for entertainment.”

  “Join up. It’ll give you something to write about.”

  “Becker, there’s always something to write about.”

  “What are you gonna do, then?”

  I pointed at my bottle, picked it up.

  “How are ya gonna make it?” Becker asked.

  “Seems like I’ve heard that question all my life.”

  “Well, I don’t know about you but I’m going to try everything! War, women, travel, marriage, children, the works. The first car I own I’m going to take it completely apart! Then I’m going to put it back together again! I want to know about things, what makes them work! I’d like to be a correspondent in Washington, D.C. I’d like to be where big things are happening.”

  “Washington?
??s crap, Becker.”

  “And women? Marriage? Children?”

  “Crap.”

  “Yeah? Well, what do you want?”

  “To hide.”

  “You poor fuck. You need another beer.”

  “All right.”

  The beer arrived.

  We sat quietly. I could sense that Becker was off on his own, thinking about being a Marine, about being a writer, about getting laid. He’d probably make a good writer. He was bursting with enthusiasms. He probably loved many things: the hawk in flight, the god-damned ocean, full moon, Balzac, bridges, stage plays, the Pulitzer Prize, the piano, the god-damned Bible.

  There was a small radio in the bar. There was a popular song playing. Then in the middle of the song there was an interruption. The announcer said, “A bulletin has just come in. The Japanese have bombed Pearl Harbor. I repeat: The Japanese have just bombed Pearl Harbor. All military personnel are requested to return immediately to their bases!”

  We looked at each other, hardly able to understand what we’d just heard.

  “Well,” said Becker quietly, “that’s it.”

  “Finish your beer,” I told him.

  Becker took a hit.

  “Jesus, suppose some stupid son-of-a-bitch points a machine gun at me and pulls the trigger?”

  “That could well happen.”

  “Hank …”

  “What?”

  “Will you ride back to the base with me on the bus?”

  “I can’t do that.”

  The bartender, a man about 45 with a watermelon gut and fuzzy eyes, walked over to us. He looked at Becker. “Well, Marine, it looks like you gotta go back to your base, huh?”

  That pissed me. “Hey, fat boy, let him finish his drink, O.K.?”

  “Sure, sure … Want a drink on the house, Marine? How about a shot of good whiskey?”

  “No,” said Becker, “it’s all right.”

  “Go ahead,” I told Becker, “take the drink. He figures you’re going to die to save his bar.”

  “All right,” said Becker, “I’ll take the drink.”

  The barkeep looked at Becker.

  “You got a nasty friend …”

  “Just give him his drink,” I said.

  The other few customers were babbling wildly about Pearl Harbor. Before, they wouldn’t speak to each other. Now they were mobilized. The Tribe was in danger.

  Becker got his drink. It was a double shot of whiskey. He drank it down.

  “I never told you this,” he said, “but I’m an orphan.”

  “God damn,” I said.

  “Will you at least come to the bus depot with me?”

  “Sure.”

  We got up and walked toward the door.

  The barkeep was rubbing his hands all over his apron. He had his apron all bunched up and was excitedly rubbing his hand on it.