You
Charles Bukowski
you’re a beast, she said
your big white belly
and those hairy feet
you never cut your nails
and you have fat hands
paws like a cat
your bright red nose
and the biggest balls I’ve ever seen
you shoot sperm like a
whale shoots water out of the
hole in its back.
beast, beast, beast,
she kissed me,
what do you want for
breakfast?
(from
Love is a Dog from Hell – Black Sparrow Press).
I interpret this poem as being about religiousness and asceticism with particular reference to Christian mysticism. The symbolism is clear: the beast (the devil to be conquered by religious contemplation) is repeatedly mentioned and accurately described (hairy feet, big white belly, long nails, half animal). There are Biblical references regarding Jonas and the whale, and the practice of going into the desert for prolonged fasts (“What do you want for break
fast?).
Also the symbology of “water” (“shoots water out of the hole in his back”), frequently used to describe a flexible attitude to life in contrast to “stone” which is a rigid, literal understanding. Above that we also have “wine” meaning mystical understanding (hence Jesus transforms “water” contained in “stone” jars into "wine"). In other poems Bukowsky makes frequent references to being inebriated with “wine” (mystical understanding) and being “stoned” senseless (filled with inferior literal and rigid understanding). Hence Jesus being portrayed as the “fish” (who lives in “water”, that is, real understanding) and Jonas being swallowed by a big “fish”. Hence again Jesus being able to walk on “water”, while Peter sinks like a “stone”.
I must say that I am baffled by the hermetic reference to “balls”. Some ancient ritual game (the ancestor of football) perhaps?
What leads me to question why poets like Blake have to use dirty language and imagery when they could write nice, clean and spiritually uplifting poetry like Bukowsky.

Best wishes,
Bernhard.