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 Consummation Of Grief by Charles Bukowski 
						I even hear the mountainsthe way they laugh
 up and down their blue sides
 and down in the water
 the fish cry
 and the water
 is their tears.
 I listen to the water
 on nights I drink away
 and the sadness becomes so great
 I hear it in my clock
 it becomes knobs upon my dresser
 it becomes paper on the floor
 it becomes a shoehorn
 a laundry ticket
 it becomes
 cigarette smoke
 climbing a chapel of dark vines. . .
 it matters little
 very little love is not so bad
 or very little life
 what counts
 is waiting on walls
 I was born for this
 I was born to hustle roses down the avenues of the dead.
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