Monday, August 29, 2005

Dostoevsky

A moment of beauty, courtesy of Joseph Lavy.
Dostoevsky

against the wall, the firing squad ready.
then he got a reprieve.
suppose they had shot Dostoevsky?
before he wrote all that?
I suppose it wouldn't have
mattered
not directly.
there are billions of people who have
never read him and never
will.
but as a young man I know that he
got me through the factories,
past the whores,
lifted me high through the night
and put me down
in a better
place.
even while in the bar
drinking with the other
derelicts,
I was glad they gave Dostoevsky a
reprieve,
it gave me one,
allowed me to look directly at those
rancid faces
in my world,
death pointing its finger,
I held fast,
an immaculate drunk
sharing the stinking dark with
my
brothers.

-- Charles Bukowski, from Bone Palace Ballet, Black Sparrow Press
Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts.

-- Albert Einstein

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

All things can matter or nothing can matter, it all depends on who you ask and how you think. I love the poem, it's peaceful, sad. It shows something. I'm not quite sure what, though.

-T