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    The Night Torn Mad with Footsteps

    The Night Torn Mad with Footsteps

    5.0 2

    by Charles Bukowski


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      ISBN-13: 9780061875854
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Publication date: 03/17/2009
    • Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 360
    • File size: 429 KB

    Charles Bukowski is one of America’s best-known contemporary writers of poetry and prose and, many would claim, its most influential and imitated poet. He was born in 1920 in Andernach, Germany, to an American soldier father and a German mother, and brought to the United States at the age of two. He was raised in Los Angeles and lived there for more than fifty years. He died in San Pedro, California, on March 9, 1994, at the age of seventy-three, shortly after completing his last novel, Pulp.

    Brief Biography

    Date of Birth:
    August 16, 1920
    Date of Death:
    March 9, 1994
    Place of Birth:
    Andernach, Germany
    Place of Death:
    San Pedro, California
    Education:
    Los Angeles City College, 2 years

    Read an Excerpt

    Chapter One


    one writer's funeral


    there was a rock-and-mud slide
    on the Pacific Coast Highway and we had to take a
    detour and they directed us up into the Malibu hills
    and traffic was slow and it was hot, and then
    we were lost.
    but I spotted a hearse and said, "there's the
    hearse, we'll follow it," and my woman said
    "that's not the hearse," and I said, "yes, that's the
    hearse."

    the hearse took a left and I followed
    it as it went up
    a narrow dirt road and then pulled over and I
    thought, "he's lost too." there was a truck and a man
    selling strawberries parked there
    and I pulled over
    and asked
    where the church was and he gave me directions and
    my woman told the strawberry man, "we'll buy some
    strawberries on the way back." then I swung
    onto the road and the hearse started up again
    and we continued to drive along
    until we reached that
    church.

    we were going
    to the funeral of a great man
    but
    the crowd was very sparse: the
    family, a couple of old screenwriter friends,
    two or three others, we
    spoke to the family and to the wife of the deceased
    and then we went in and the service began and the
    priest wasn't so good but one of the great man's
    sons gave a fine eulogy, and then it was over

    and we were outside again, in our car,
    following the hearse again, back down the steep
    road
    passing thestrawberry truck again and my
    woman said, "let's not stop for strawberries,"
    and as we continued to the graveyard, I thought,
    Fante, you were one of the best writers ever
    and this is one sad day.
    finally we were at the graveside, the priest
    said a few words and then it was over.
    I walked up to the widow who sat very pale and
    beautiful and quite alone on a folding metal chair.
    "Hank," she said, "it's hard," and I tried in vain
    to say something that might comfort her.

    we walked away then, leaving her there, and
    I felt terrible.

    I got a friend to drive my girlfriend back to
    town while I drove to the racetrack, made it
    just in time for the first race, got my bet
    down as the mutuel clerk looked at me in wonder and
    said, "Jesus Christ, how come you're wearing a
    necktie?"


    beagle


    do not bother the beagle lying there
    away from grass and flowers and paths,
    dreaming dogdreams, or perhaps dreaming
    nothing, as men do awake;
    yes, leave him be, in that simple juxtaposition,
    out of the maelstrom, lucifugous as a bat,
    searching bat-inward
    for a state of grace.

    it's good. we'll not ransom our fate
    or his for door knobs or rasps.
    the east wind whirls the blinds,
    our beagle snuffles in his sleep as
    outside, outside,
    hedges break, the night torn mad
    with footsteps.

    our beagle spreads a paw,
    the lamp burns warm
    bathed in the life of his
    size.


    a smile to remember


    we had goldfish and they circled around and around
    in the bowl on the table near the heavy drapes
    covering the picture window and
    my mother, always smiling, wanting us all
    to be happy, told me, "be happy, Henry!"
    and she was right: it's better to be happy if you
    can
    but my father continued to beat her and me several times a week
          while
    raging inside his 6-foot-two frame because he couldn't
    understand what was attacking him from within.

    my mother, poor fish,
    wanting to be happy, beaten two or three times a
    week, telling me to be happy: "Henry, smile!
    why don't you ever smile?"

    and then she would smile, to show me how, and it was the
    saddest smile I ever saw.

    one day the goldfish died, all five of them,
    they floated on the water, on their sides, their
    eyes still open,
    and when my father got home he threw them to the cat
    there on the kitchen floor and we watched as my mother
    smiled.


    where was Jane?


    one of the first actors to play Tarzan was living at the
    Motion Picture Home.
    he'd been there for years waiting to die.
    he spent much of his time
    running in and out of the wards
    into the cafeteria and out into the yard where he'd yell,
    "ME TARZAN!"
    he never spoke to anyone or said anything else, it was always just
    "ME TARZAN!"
    everybody liked him: the old actors, the retired directors,
    the ancient script writers, the aged cameramen, the prop men,
          stunt men, the old
    actresses, all of whom were also there
    waiting to die; they enjoyed his verve,
    his antics, he was harmless and he took them back to the time
          when they
    were still in the business.

    then the doctors in authority decided that Tarzan was possibly
          dangerous
    and one day he was shipped off to a mental institution.
    he vanished as suddenly as if he'd been eaten by a
    lion.
    and the other patients were outraged, they instituted legal
          proceedings
    to have him returned at once but
    it took some months.

    when Tarzan returned he was changed.
    he would not leave his room.
    he just sat by the window as if he had
    forgotten
    his old role
    and the other patients missed
    his antics, his verve, and

    they too felt somehow defeated and
    diminished.
    they complained about the change in Tarzan
    doped and drugged in his room
    and they knew he would soon die like that
    and then he did
    and then he was back in that other jungle
    (to where we will all someday retire)
    unleashing the joyful primal call they could no longer
    hear.

    there were some small notices in the
    newspapers
    and the paint continued to chip from the hospital
    walls,
    many plants died, there was an unfortunate
    suicide,
    a growing lack of trust and
    hope, and
    a pervasive sadness:
    it wasn't so much Tarzan's death the others mourned,
    it was the cold, willful attitude of the
    young and powerful doctors
    despite the wishes of the
    helpless old.

    and finally they knew the truth
    while sitting in their rooms
    that it wasn't only the attitude of the doctors
    they had to fear,
    and that as silly as all those Tarzan films had been,
    and as much as they would miss their own lost
    Tarzan,
    that all that was much kinder than the final vigil
    they would now have to sit and patiently endure
    alone.

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    This collection of previously unpublished poems offers the author's take on squabbling neighbours, off-kilter lovers, would-be hangers-on, and the loneliness of a man afflicted with acute powers of observation. The tone is gritty and amusing, spiralling out towards a cock-eyed wisdom.

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    Publishers Weekly
    Charles Bukowski (1920-1994) remains as prolific and belligerent in death as he did in life. In classic Bukowski fashion, the pieces in The Night Torn with Footsteps: New Poems deploy the line-as-phrase as a primary formal constraint, and a hackneyed, boastful misogyny as a major rhetorical gesture. If continually found "sitting/ in my cheesebox room/ closer to suicide than/ salvation," readers will still be right there with Buk. ( Dec. 11) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
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