Poetry International Poetry International
Poem

Samuel Wagan Watson

The Night We Lost Charles Bukowski’s Voice

The Night We Lost Charles Bukowski’s Voice

The Night We Lost Charles Bukowski’s Voice

It was a dark and stormy night of clichés! The rain coming down, drowning the shadows, and my motley crew, well, that hotel room just couldn’t hold us. We threw everything into a black sports-bag; cigarettes, hotel stationery, the little shampoo bottles, an expensive bottle of malt whisky and a cassette of Charles Bukowski reading his poetry at UCLA . . . Off we went into the dampness of the streets, looking for a party. It all went pear-shaped though in a cab on George Street . . . We witnessed the filth chasing a black man I knew . . . We ushered him into the cab, only to be surrounded by imposing uniforms as the windows of the vehicle growing foggy, like a ‘greenhouse’ effect; the winter of our discontent . . . Is this how a goldfish views our world?

Anyway,  the cabby ‘hated coppers!’ he said, flew through traffic and a red light . . . And that black-fella, he jumped us all eventually, owing the $20 he pledged to ferry us across the River Styx of our evening . . . How black the night looked when that taxi-driver cut us loose . . . We death-marched backed into town, and with our last few dollars howled vodka, deep throat echoes into shot glasses . . . But the bartender could smell the whisky in the bag . . . We didn’t screw the lid on tight enough?! He quickly asked us to leave; the ol’ 86er!  Whisky leaking all over the Charles Bukowski cassette and drowning his voice forever . . . how ironic? 

I eventually had to crawl home through the soppy train yards and weeds . . . Falling into an open sewer, ripping my shirt on bits of exposed metal shards . . . Stared up at the lights of the city and smiled, thirsty . . . thirsty . . . thirsty!

Empty vodka glass
In the 3am city
Alley cat meow!
Close

The Night We Lost Charles Bukowski’s Voice

It was a dark and stormy night of clichés! The rain coming down, drowning the shadows, and my motley crew, well, that hotel room just couldn’t hold us. We threw everything into a black sports-bag; cigarettes, hotel stationery, the little shampoo bottles, an expensive bottle of malt whisky and a cassette of Charles Bukowski reading his poetry at UCLA . . . Off we went into the dampness of the streets, looking for a party. It all went pear-shaped though in a cab on George Street . . . We witnessed the filth chasing a black man I knew . . . We ushered him into the cab, only to be surrounded by imposing uniforms as the windows of the vehicle growing foggy, like a ‘greenhouse’ effect; the winter of our discontent . . . Is this how a goldfish views our world?

Anyway,  the cabby ‘hated coppers!’ he said, flew through traffic and a red light . . . And that black-fella, he jumped us all eventually, owing the $20 he pledged to ferry us across the River Styx of our evening . . . How black the night looked when that taxi-driver cut us loose . . . We death-marched backed into town, and with our last few dollars howled vodka, deep throat echoes into shot glasses . . . But the bartender could smell the whisky in the bag . . . We didn’t screw the lid on tight enough?! He quickly asked us to leave; the ol’ 86er!  Whisky leaking all over the Charles Bukowski cassette and drowning his voice forever . . . how ironic? 

I eventually had to crawl home through the soppy train yards and weeds . . . Falling into an open sewer, ripping my shirt on bits of exposed metal shards . . . Stared up at the lights of the city and smiled, thirsty . . . thirsty . . . thirsty!

Empty vodka glass
In the 3am city
Alley cat meow!

The Night We Lost Charles Bukowski’s Voice

Sponsors
Gemeente Rotterdam
Nederlands Letterenfonds
Stichting Van Beuningen Peterich-fonds
Ludo Pieters Gastschrijver Fonds
Lira fonds
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère