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I watched my very own Charles Bukowski eat a tangerine outside of   the arthouse   where we were reading. His name is not really Bukowski, but he has told tales in the same   vein as the Laureate of Drunkards for longer than I have been alive. I have listened to that same back alley patois, and barroom wisdom for long enough that I feel a certain level   of comfort in calling the old gizzard   this municipality's own   Charles Bukowski. The grizzled old poet   is telling wanton tales   of love and honeydew. He goes on and on, recounting the times   that he's drunk   strong potato liquor with Bengal tigers   in the backseats   of roaring taxis on his way to parties   hosted by zebras and   gazelles. We each light a cigarette, pausing to smoke for a while. Seeking to continue   the conversation with   my salty comrade,   yet knowing my own   stories cannot compete, I surge onward nonetheless. His interruptions jam my   traffic before I can even make   it onto the onramp of his   particular, peculiar highway. His mouth is already working, though his tangerine consumed. He's chewing his next story into digestible, deliverable bits. And, now he's chewing the rind. His mouth, his words, his life, and my own for all of it, is full of   zest. *** -JBClaywell ©P&ZPublications 2017
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Dec 3, 2017
Dec 3, 2017 at 7:52 PM UTC
Chewing The Rind
I watched my very own Charles Bukowski eat a tangerine outside of   the arthouse   where we were reading. His name is not really Bukowski, but he has told tales in the same   vein as the Laureate of Drunkards for longer than I have been alive. I have listened to that same back alley patois, and barroom wisdom for long enough that I feel a certain level   of comfort in calling the old gizzard   this municipality's own   Charles Bukowski. The grizzled old poet   is telling wanton tales   of love and honeydew. He goes on and on, recounting the times   that he's drunk   strong potato liquor with Bengal tigers   in the backseats   of roaring taxis on his way to parties   hosted by zebras and   gazelles. We each light a cigarette, pausing to smoke for a while. Seeking to continue   the conversation with   my salty comrade,   yet knowing my own   stories cannot compete, I surge onward nonetheless. His interruptions jam my   traffic before I can even make   it onto the onramp of his   particular, peculiar highway. His mouth is already working, though his tangerine consumed. He's chewing his next story into digestible, deliverable bits. And, now he's chewing the rind. His mouth, his words, his life, and my own for all of it, is full of   zest. *** -JBClaywell ©P&ZPublications 2017
for David, the tiger.
jay-claywell
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Dec 3, 2017
Dec 3, 2017 at 7:52 PM UTC
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