The Pleasures of the Damned. Charles Bukowski

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gray.

       good days too of wine and shouting, fights

       in alleys, fat legs of women striving around

       your bowels buried in moans,

       the signs in bullrings like diamonds hollering

       Mother Capri, violets coming out of the ground

       telling you to forget the dead armies and the loves

       that robbed you.

       days when children say funny and brilliant things

       like savages trying to send you a message through

       their bodies while their bodies are still

       alive enough to transmit and feel and run up

       and down without locks and paychecks and

       ideals and possessions and beetle-like

       opinions.

       days when you can cry all day long in

       a green room with the door locked, days

       when you can laugh at the breadman

       because his legs are too long, days

       of looking at hedges …

      and nothing, and nothing. the days of

       the bosses, yellow men

       with bad breath and big feet, men

       who look like frogs, hyenas, men who walk

       as if melody had never been invented, men

       who think it is intelligent to hire and fire and

       profit, men with expensive wives they possess

       like 60 acres of ground to be drilled

       or shown off or to be walled away from

       the incompetent, men who’d kill you

       because they’re crazy and justify it because

       it’s the law, men who stand in front of

       windows 30 feet wide and see nothing,

       men with luxury yachts who can sail around

       the world and yet never get out of their vest

       pockets, men like snails, men like eels, men

       like slugs, and not as good …

      and nothing. getting your last paycheck

       at a harbor, at a factory, at a hospital, at an

       aircraft plant, at a penny arcade, at a

       barbershop, at a job you didn’t want

       anyway.

       income tax, sickness, servility, broken

       arms, broken heads—all the stuffing

       come out like an old pillow.

       we have everything and we have nothing.

       some do it well enough for a while and

       then give way. fame gets them or disgust

       or age or lack of proper diet or ink

       across the eyes or children in college

       or new cars or broken backs while skiing

       in Switzerland or new politics or new wives

       or just natural change and decay—

       the man you knew yesterday hooking

       for ten rounds or drinking for three days and

       three nights by the Sawtooth mountains now

       just something under a sheet or a cross

       or a stone or under an easy delusion,

       or packing a bible or a golf bag or a

       briefcase: how they go, how they go!—all

       the ones you thought would never go.

      days like this. like your day today.

       maybe the rain on the window trying to

       get through to you. what do you see today?

       what is it? where are you? the best

       days are sometimes the first, sometimes

       the middle and even sometimes the last.

       the vacant lots are not bad, churches in

       Eu rope on postcards are not bad. people in

       wax museums frozen into their best sterility

       are not bad, horrible but not bad. the

       cannon, think of the cannon. and toast for

       breakfast the coffee hot enough you

       know your tongue is still there. three

       geraniums outside a window, trying to be

       red and trying to be pink and trying to be

       geraniums. no wonder sometimes the women

       cry, no wonder the mules don’t want

       to go up the hill. are you in a hotel room

       in Detroit looking for a cigarette? one more

       good day. a little bit of it. and as

       the nurses come out of the building after

       their shift, having had enough, eight nurses

       with different names and different places

       to go—walking across the lawn, some of them

       want cocoa and a paper, some of them want a

       hot bath, some of them want a man, some

       of them are hardly thinking at all. enough

       and not enough. arcs and pilgrims, oranges,

       gutters, ferns, antibodies, boxes of

       tissue paper.

      in the most decent sometimes sun

       there is the softsmoke feeling from urns

       and the canned sound of old battleplanes

      

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