Джек Керуак. Биг Сир (engl)

Big Sur, Unmistakably Autobiographical, Big Sur, Jack Kerouac's Ninth
Novel, Was Written As The "king Of The Beats" Was Ap-, Proaching Middle-age
And Re­ flects His Struggle To Come To Terms With His Own Myth. The
Magnificent And Moving Story. Of jack duluoz, a man blessed by great talent
and cursed with an urge towards self-destruction, big sur is at once ker
Unmistakably autobiographical, Big Sur, Jack Kerouac's ninth novel, was
written as the "King of the beats" was approaching middle-age and reflects
his struggle to come to terms with his own myth. The magnificent and moving
story. Of jack duluoz, a man blessed by great talent and cursed with an urge
towards self-destruction, big sur is at once kerouac's toughest and his most
humane work. JACK KEROUAC was born in 1922 in Lowell, Massachusetts, the
youngest of three children in a French-Canadian family. In high school he
was a star player on the local football team, and went on to win football
scholarships to Horace Mann (a New York prep school) and Columbia College.
He left Columbia and football in his sophomore year, joined the Merchant
Marines and began the restless wanderings that were to continue for the
greater part of his life. His first novel, The Town and the City, was
published in 1950. On the Road, although written in 1951 (in a few hectic
days on a scroll of newsprint), was not published until 1957 — it made him
one of the most controversial and bestknown writers of his time. Publication
of his many other books, among them The Subterraneans, Doctor Sax and
Desolation Angels, followed.
Jack Kerouac died in 1969, in St Petersburg, Florida, at the age of
forty-seven.
My work comprises one vast book like Proust's except that my
remembrances are written on the run instead of afterwards in a sick bed.
Because of the objections of my early publishers I was not allowed to use
the same personae names in each work. On the Road, The Subterraneans, The
Dharma Bums, Doctor Sax, Maggie Cassidy, Tristessa, Desolation Angels,
Visions of Cody and the others including this book Big Sur are just chapters
in the whole work which I call The Duluoz Legend. In my old age I intend to
collect all my work and re-insert my pantheon of uniform names, leave the
long shelf full of books there, and die happy. The whole thing forms one
enormous comedy, seen through the eyes of poor Ti Jean (me), otherwise known
as Jack Duluoz, the world of raging action and folly and also of gentle
sweetness seen through the keyhole of his eye. JACK KEROUAC

1

The church is blowing a sad windblown "Kathleen" on the bells in the
skid row slums as I wake up all woebegone and goopy, groaning from another
drinking bout and groaning most of all because I'd ruined my "secret return"
to San Francisco by getting silly drunk while hiding in the alleys with bums
and then marching forth into North Beach to see everybody altho Lorenz
Monsanto and I'd exchanged huge letters outlining how I would sneak in
quietly, call him on the phone using a code name like Adam Yulch or Lalagy
Pulvertaft (also writers) and then he would secretly drive me to his cabin
in the Big Sur woods where I would be alone and undisturbed for six weeks
just chopping wood, drawing water, writing, sleeping, hiking, etc., etc. —
But instead I've bounced drunk into his City Lights bookshop at the height
of Saturday night business, everyone recognized me (even tho" I was wearing
my disguise-like fisherman's hat and fishermen coat and pants waterproof)
and "t'all ends up a roaring drunk in all the famous bars the bloody "King
of the Beatniks" is back in town buying drinks for everyone — Two days of
that, including Sunday the day Lorenzo is supposed to pick me up at my
"secret" skid row hotel (the Mars on 4th and Howard) but when he calls for
me there's no answer, he has the clerk open the door and what does he see
but me out on the floor among bottles, Ben Fagan stretched out partly
beneath the bed, and Robert Browning the beatnik painter out on the bed,
snoring... So says to himself "I'll pick him up next weekend, I guess he
wants to drink for a week in the city (like he always does, I guess)" so off
he drives to his Big Sur cabin without me thinking he's doing the right
thing but my God when I wake up, and Ben and Browning are gone, they've
somehow dumped me on the bed, and I hear "I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen"
being bellroped so sad in the fog winds out there that blow across the
rooftops of eerie old hangover Frisco, wow, I've hit the end of the trail
and cant even drag my body any more even to a refuge in the woods let alone
stay upright in the city a minute — It's the first trip I've taken away
from home (my mother's house) since the publication of "Road" the book that
"made me famous" and in fact so much so I've been driven mad for three years
by endless telegrams, phonecalls, requests, mail, visitors, reporters,
snoopers (a big voice saying in my basemerit window as I prepare to write a
story: ARE YOU BUSY? ) or the time the reporter ran upstairs to my bedroom
as I sat there in my pajamas trying to write down a dream — Teenagers
jumping the six-foot fence I'd had built around my yard for privacy —
Parties with bottles yelling at my study window "Come on out and get drunk,
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy! "... A woman coming to my door
and saying "I'm not going to ask you if you're Jack Duluoz because I know he
wears a beard, can you tell me where I can find him, I want a real beatnik
at my annual Shindig party" — Drunken visitors puking in my study, stealing
books and even pencils... Uninvited acquaintances staying for days because
of the clean beds and good food my mother provided... Me drunk practically
all the time to put on a jovial cap to keep up with all this but finally
realizing I was surrounded and outnumbered and had to get away to solitude
again or die — So Lorenzo Monsanto wrote and said "Come to my cabin, no
one'll know, " etc., so I had sneaked into San Francisco as I say, coming
3000 miles from my home in Long Island (Northport) in a pleasant roomette on
the California Zephyr train watching America roll by outside my private
picture window, really happy for the first time in three years, staying in
the roomette all three days and three nights with my instant coffee and
sandwiches — Up the Hudson Valley and over across New York State to Chicago
and then the Plains, the mountains, the desert, the final mountains of
California, all so easy and dreamlike compared to my old harsh hitch hikings
before I made enough money to take transcontinental trains (all over America
high school and college kids thinking "Jack Duluoz is 26 years old and on
the road all the time hitch hiking" while there I am almost 40 years old,
bored and jaded in a roomette bunk crashin across that Salt Flat) — But in
any case a wonderful start towards my retreat so generously offered by sweet
old Monsanto and instead of going thru smooth and easy I wake up drunk,
sick, disgusted, frightened, in fact terrified by that sad song across the
roofs mingling with the lachrymose cries of a Salvation Army meeting on the
corner below "Satan is the cause of your alcoholism, Satan is the cause of
your immorality, Satan is everywhere workin to destroy you unless you repent
now" and worse than that the sound of old drunks throwing up in rooms next
to mine, the creak of hall steps, the moans everywhere Including the moan
that had awakened me, my own moan in the lumpy bed, a moan caused by a big
roaring Whoo Whoo in my head that had shot me out of my pillow like a ghost.
2
And I look around the dismal cell, there's my hopeful rucksack all
neatly packed with everything necessary to live in the woods, even unto the
minutest first aid kit and diet details and even a neat little sewing kit
cleverly reinforced by my good mother (like extra safety pins, buttons,
special sewing needles, little aluminum scissors)... The hopeful medal of St
Christopher even which she'd sewn on the flap... The survival kit all in
there down to the last little survival sweater and handkerchief and tennis
sneakers (for hiking) — But the rucksack sits hopefully in a strewn mess of
bottles all empty, empty poor boys of white port, butts, junk, horror...
"One fast move or I'm gone, " I realize, gone the way of the last three
years of drunken hopelessness which is a physical and spiritual and
metaphysical hopelessness you cant learn in school no matter how many books
on existentialism or pessimism you read, or how many jugs of vision
producing Ayahuasca you drink, or Mescaline take, or Peyote goop up with —
That feeling when you wake up with the delirium tremens with the fear of
eerie death dripping from your ears like those special heavy cobwebs spiders
weave in the hot countries, the feeling of being a bent back mudman monster
groaning underground in hot steaming mud pulling a long hot burden nowhere,
the feeling of standing ankledeep in hot boiled pork blood, ugh, of being up
to your waist in a giant pan of greasy brown dishwater not a trace of suds
left in it... The face of yourself you see in the mirror with its expression
of unbearable anguish so haggard and awful with sorrow you cant even cry for
a thing so ugly, so lost, no connection whatever with early perfection and
therefore nothing to connect with tears or anything: it's like William
Seward Burroughs" "Stranger" suddenly appearing in your place in the mirror
— Enough! "One fast move or I'm gone" so I jump up, do my headstand first
to pump blood back into the hairy brain, take a shower in the hall, new
T-shirt and socks and underwear, pack vigorously, hoist the rucksack and run
out throwing the key on the desk and hit the cold street and walk fast to
the nearest little grocery store to buy two days of food, stick it in the
rucksack, hike thru lost alleys of Russian sorrow where bums sit head on
knees in foggy doorways in the goopy eerie city night I've got to escape or
die, and into the bus station In a half hour into a bus seat, the bus says
"Monterey" and off we go down the clean neon hiway and I sleep all the way,
waking up amazed and well again smelling sea air the bus driver shaking me
"End of the line, Monterey. " — And by God it is Monterey, I stand sleepy
in the 2 A. M. seeing vague little fishing masts across the street from the
bus driveway. Now all I've got to do to complete my escape is get 14 miles
down the coast to the Raton Canyon bridge and hike in.
3
"One fast move or I'm gone" so I blow $8 on a cab to drive me down that
coast, it's foggy night tho sometimes you can see stars in the sky to the
right where the sea is, tho you cant see the sea you can only hear about it
from the cabdriver — "What kinda country is it around here? I've never seen
it. " 'Well, you cant see it tonight — Raton Canyon you say, you better be
careful walkin around there in the dark. " 'Why? "
"Well, just use your lamp like you say... "
And sure enough when he lets me off at the Raton Canyon bridge and
counts the money I sense something wrong somehow, there's an awful roar of
surf but it isnt coming from the right place, like you'd expect it to come
from "over there" but it's coming from "under there" — I can see the bridge
but I can see nothing below it — The bridge continues the coast highway
from one bluff to another, it's a nice white bridge with white rails and
there's a white line runnin down the middle familiar and highway like but
something's wrong — Besides the headlights of the cab just shoot out over a
few bushes into empty space in the direction where the canyon's supposed to
be, it feels like being up in the air somewhere tho I can see the dirt road
at our feet and the dirt overhang on the side
"What in the hell is this? " — I've got the directions all memorized
from a little map Monsanto's mailed me but in my imagination dreaming about
this big retreat back home there'd been something larkish, bucolic, all
homely woods and gladness instead of all this aerial roaring mystery in the
dark — When the cab leaves I therefore turn on my railroad lantern for a
timid peek but its beam gets lost just like the car lights in a void and in
fact the battery is fairly weak and I can hardly see the bluff at my left —
As for the bridge I cant see it anymore except for graduating series of
luminous shoulder buttons going off further into the low sea roar... The sea
roar is bad enough except it keeps bashing and barking at me like a dog in
the fog down there, sometimes it booms the earth but my God where is the
earth and how can the sea be underground! — "The only thing to do, " I
gulp, "is to put this lantern shinin right in front of your feet, kiddo, and
follow that lantern and make sure it's shinin on the road rut and hope and
pray it's shinin on the ground that's gonna be there when it's shinin, " in
other words I actually fear that even my lamp will carry me astray if I dare
to raise it for a minute from the ruts in the dirt road — The only
satisfaction I can glean from this roaring high horror of darkness is that
the lamp wobbles huge dark shadows of its little rim stays on the
overhanging bluff at the left of the road, because to the right (where the
bushes are wiggling in the wind from the sea) there aint no shadows because
there aint no light can take hold — So I start my trudge, pack aback, just
head down following my lamp spot, head down but eyes suspiciously peering a
little up, like a man in the presence of a dangerous idiot he doesn't want
to annoy The dirt road starts up a little, curves to the right, starts down
a little, then suddenly up again, and up By now the sea roar is further back
and at one point I even stop and look back to see nothing — "I'm gonna put
out my light and see what I can see" I stay rooted to my feet where they're
rooted to that road Fat lotta good, when I put out the light I see nothing
but the dim sand at my feet. Trudging up and getting further away from the
sea roar I get to feel more confident but suddenly I come to a frightening
thing in the road, I stop and hold out my hand, edge forward, it's only a
cattle crossing (iron bars imbedded across the road) but at the same time a
big blast of wind comes from the left where the bluff should be and I spot
that way and see nothing. "What the hell's going on! " "Fol-low the road, "
says the other voice trying to be calm so I do but the next instant I hear a
rattling to my right, throw my light there, see nothing but bushes wiggling
dry and mean and just the proper high canyonwall kind of bushes fit for
rattlesnakes too — (which it was, a rattlesnake doesnt like to be awakened
in the middle of the night by a trudging humpback monster with a lamp). But
now the road's going down again, the reassuring bluff reappears on my left,
and pretty soon according to my memory of Lorry's map there she is, the
creek, I can hear her lappling and gabbing down there at the bottom of the
dark where at least I'll be on level ground and done with booming airs
somewhere above — But the closer I get to the creek as the road dips
steeply, suddenly, almost making me trot forward, the louder it roars, I
begin to think I'll fall right into it before I can notice it... It's
screaming like a raging flooded river right below me — Besides it's even
darker down there than anywhere! There are glades down there, ferns of
horror and slippery logs, mosses, dangerous plashings, humid mists rise
coldly like the breath of death, big dangerous trees are beginning to bend
over my head and brush my pack — There's a noise I know can only grow
louder as I sink down and for fear how loud it can grow I stop and listen,
it rises up crashing mysteriously at me from a raging battle among dark
things, wood or rock or something cracked, all smashed, all wet black sunken
earth danger — I'm afraid to go down there — I am affrayed in the old
Edmund Spenser sense of being frayed by a whip, and a wet one at that — A
slimy green dragon racket in the bush — An angry war that doesnt want me
pokin around — It's been there a million years and it doesnt want me
clashing darkness with it — It comes snarling from a thousand crevasses and
monster redwood roots all over the map of creation — It is a dark clangoror
in the rain forest and doesnt want no skid row bum to carry to the sea which
is bad enough and waitin back there — I can almost feel the sea pulling at
that racket in the trees but there's my spotlamp so all I gotta do is follow
the lovely sand road which dips and dips in rising carnage and suddenly a
flattening, a sight of bridge logs, there's the bridge rail, there's the
creek just four feet below, cross the bridge you woken bum and see what's on
the other shore. Take one quick peek at the water as you cross, just water
over rocks, a small creek at that.
And now before me is a dreamy meadowland with a good old corral gate
and a barbed wire fence the road running right on left but this where I get
off at last. Then I crawl thru the barbed wire and find myself trudging a
sweet little sand road winding right thru fragrant dry heathers as tho I'd
just popped thru from hell into familiar old Heaven on Earth, yair and Thank
God (tho a minute later my heart's in my mouth again because I see black
things in the white sand ahead but it's only piles of good old mule dung in
Heaven).
4
And in the morning (after sleeping by the creek in the white sand) I do
see what was so scary about my canyon road walk — The road's up there on
the wall a thousand feet with a sheer drop sometimes, especially at the
cattle crossing, way up highest, where a break in the bluff shows fog
pouring through from another bend of the sea beyond, scary enough in itself
anyway as tho one hole wasnt enough to open into the sea... And worst of all
is the bridge! I go ambling seaward along the path by the creek and see this
awful thin white line of bridge a thousand unbridgeable sighs of height
above the little woods I'm walking in, you just cant believe it, and to make
things heart-thumpingly horrible you come to a little bend in what is now
just a trail and there's the booming surf coming at you whitecapped crashing
down on sand as tho it was higher than where you stand, like a sudden tidal
wave world enough to make you step back or run back to the hills — And not
only that, the blue sea behind the crashing high waves is full of huge black
rocks rising like old ogresome castles dripping wet slime, a billion years
of woe right there, the moogrus big clunk of it right there with its
slaverous lips of foam at the base — So that you emerge from pleasant
little wood paths with a stem of grass in your teeth and drop it to see
doom... And you look up at that unbelievably high bridge and feel death and
for a good reason: because underneath the bridge, in the sand right beside
the sea cliff, hump, your heart sinks to see it: the automobile that crashed
thru the bridge rail a decade ago and fell 1000 feet straight down and
landed upside-down, is still there now, an upside-down chassis of rust in a
strewn skitter of sea-eaten tires, old spokes, old car seats sprung with
straw, one sad fuel pump and no more people...
Big elbows of Rock rising everywhere, sea caves within them, seas
plollocking all around inside them crashing out foams, the boom and pound on
the sand, the sand dipping quick (no Malibu Beach here) — Yet you turn and
see the pleasant woods winding upcreek like a picture in Vermont — But you
look up into the sky, bend way back, my God you're standing directly under
the aerial bridge with its thin white line running from rock to rock and
witless cars racing across it like dreams! From rock to rock! All the way
down the raging coast! So that when later I heard people say "Oh Big Sur
must be beautiful! " I gulp to wonder why it has the reputation of being
beautiful above and beyond its fearfulness, its Blakean groaning roughrock
Creation throes, those vistas when you drive the coast highway on a sunny
day opening up the eye for miles of horrible washing sawing.
5
It was even frightening at the other peaceful end of Raton Canyon, the
east end, where Alf the pet mule of local settlers slept at night such
sleepfull sleeps under a few weird trees and then got up in the morning to
graze in the grass then negotiated the whole distance slowly to the sea
shore where you saw him standing by the waves like an ancient sacred myth
character motionless in the sand — Alf the Sacred Burro" I later called him
— The thing that was frightening was the mountain that rose up at the east
end, a strange Burmese like mountain with levels and moody terraces and a
strange ricepaddy hat on top that I kept staring at with a sinking heart
even at first when I was healthy and feeling good (and I would be going mad
in this canyon in six weeks on the fullmoon night of 3 September) — The
mountain reminded me of my recent recurrent nightmares in New York about the
"Mountain of Mien Mo" with the swarms of moony flying horses lyrically
sweeping capes over their shoulders as they circled the peak a "thousand
miles high" (in the dream it said) and on top of the mountain in one haunted
nightmare I'd seen the giant empty stone benches so silent in the topworld
moonlight as tho once inhabited by Gods or giants of some kind but long ago
vacated so that they were all dusty and cobwebby now and the evil lurked
somewhere inside the pyramid nearby where there was a monster with a big
thumping heart but also, even more sinister, just ordinary seedy but muddy
janitors cooking over small woodfires... Narrow dusty holes through which
I'd tried to crawl with a bunch of tomato plants tied around my neck —
Dreams — Drinking nightmares — A recurrent series of them all swirling
around that mountain, seen the very first time as a beautiful but somehow
horribly green verdant mist enshrouded jungle peak rising out of green
tropical country in 'Mexico" so called but beyond which were pyramids, dry
rivers, other countries full of infantry enemy and yet the biggest danger
being just hoodlums out throwing rocks on Sundays — So that the sight of
that simple sad mountain, together with the bridge and that car that had
flipped over twice or so and landed flump in the sand with no more sign of
human elbows or shred neckties (like a terrifying poem about America you
could write), agh, HOO HOO of Owls living in old evil hollow trees in that
misty tangled further part of the canyon where I was always afraid to go
anyhow — That unclimbably tangled steep cliff at the base of Mien Mo rising
to gawky dead trees among bushes so dense and up to heathers God knows how
deep with hidden caves no one not even I spose the Indians of the roth
century had ever explored — And those big gooky rainforest ferns among
lightningstruck conifers right beside sudden black vine cliff faces rising
right at your side as you walk the peaceful path... And as I say that ocean
coming at you higher than you are like the harbors of old woodcuts always
higher than the towns (as Rimbaud pointed out shuddering) — So many evil
combinations even unto the bat who would come at me later while I slept on
the outdoor cot on the porch of Lorenzo's cabin, come circle my head coming
real low sometimes filling me with the traditional fear it'll get tangled in
my hair, and such silent wings, how would you like to wake up in the middle
of the night and see silent wings beating over you and you ask yourself "Do
I really believe in Vampires? "... In fact, flying silently around my
lamplit cabin at 3 o'clock in the morning as I'm reading (of all things)
(shudder) Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde — Small wonder maybe that I myself
turned from serene Jekyll to hysterical Hyde in the short space of six
weeks, losing absolute control of the peace mechanisms of my mind for the
first time in my life.
But Ah, at first there were fine days and nights, right after Monsanto
drove me to Monterey and back with two boxes of a full grub list and left me
there alone for three weeks of solitude, as we'd agreed — So fearless and
happy I even spotted his powerful flashlight up at the bridge the first
night, right thru the fog the eerie finger reaching the pale bottom of that
high monstrosity, and even spotted it out over the farmless sea as I sat by
caves in the crashing dark in my fisherman's outfit writing down what the
sea was saying — Worst of all spotting it up at those tangled mad
cliffsides 'where owls hooted ooraloo — becoming acquainted and swallowing
fears and settling down to life in the little cabin with its warm glow of
woodstove and kerosene lamp and let the ghosts fly their asses off... The
Bhikku's home in his woods, he only wants peace, peace he will get — Tho
why after three weeks of perfect happy peace and adjustment in these strange
woods my soul so went down the drain when I came back with Dave Wain and
Romana and my girl Billie and her kid, I'll never know — Worth the telling
only if I dig deep into everything.
Because it was so beautiful at first, even the circumstance of my
sleeping bag suddenly erupting feathers in the middle of the night as I
turned over to sleep on, so I curse and have to get up and sew it by
lamplight or in the morning it might be empty of feathers... And as I bend
poor mother head over my needle and thread in the cabin, by the fresh fire
and in the light of the kerosene lamp, here come those damned silent black
wings flapping and throwing shadows all over my little home, the bloody
bat's come in my house — Trying to sew a poor patch on my old crumbly
sleepingbag (mostly ruined by my having to sweat out a fever inside of it in
a hotel room in Mexico City in 1957 right after the gigantic earthquake
there), the nylon all rotten almost from all that old sweat, but still soft,
tho so soft I had to cut out a piece of old shirt flap and patch over the
rip — I remember looking up from my middle of the night chore and saying
bleakly "They, yes, have bats in Mien Mo valley'... But the fire crackles,
the patch gets sewn, the creek gurgles and thumps outside — A creek having
so many voices it's amazing, from the kettledrum basin deep bumpbumps to the
little gurgly feminine crickles over shallow rocks, sudden choruses of other
singers and voices from the log dam, dibble dabble all night long and all
day long the voices of the creek amusing me so much at first but in the
later horror of that madness night becoming the babble and rave of evil
angels in my head — So not minding the bat or the rip finally, ending up
cant sleep because too awake now and it's 3 A. M. so the fire I stoke and I
settle down and read the entire Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde novel in the
wonderful little handsized leather book left there by smart Monsanto who
also must've read it with wide eyes on a night like that — Ending the last
elegant sentences at dawn, time to get up and fetch water from gurgly creek
and start breakfast of pancakes and syrup And saying to myself "So why fret
when something goes wrong like your sleepingbag breaking in the night, use
self reliance'... "Screw the bats" I add. Marvelous opening moment in fact
of the first afternoon I'm left alone in the cabin and I make my first meal,
wash my first dishes, nap, and wake up to hear the rapturous ring of silence
or Heaven even within and throughout the gurgle of the creek — When you say
AM ALONE and the cabin is suddenly home only because you made one meal and
washed your firstmeal dishes — Then nightfall, the religious vestal
lighting of the beautiful kerosene lamp after careful washing of the mantle
in the creek and carefuldrying with toilet paper, which spoils it by
specking it so you again wash it in the creek this time just let the mantle
drip dry in the sun, the late afternoon sun that disappears so quickly
behind those giant high steep canyon walls... Nightfall, the kerosene lamp
casts a glow in the cabin, I go out and pick some ferns like the ferns of
the Lankavatara Scripture, those hairnet ferns, "Look sirs, a beautiful
hairnet! " — Late afternoon fog pours in over the canyon walls, sweep,
cover the sun, it gets cold, even the flies on the porch are as so sad as
the fog on the peaks — As daylight retreats the flies retreat like polite
Emily Dickinson flies and when it's dark they're all asleep in trees or
someplace — At high noon they're in the cabin with you but edging further
towards the open doorsill as the afternoon lengthens, how. "strangely
gracious — There's the hum of the bee drone two blocks away the racket of
it you'd think it was right over the roof, when the bee drone swirls nearer
and nearer (gulp again) you retreat into the cabin and wait, maybe they got
a message to come and see you all two thousand of em — But getting used to
the bee drone finally which seems to happen like a big party once a week...
And so everything eventually marvelous.
Even the first frightening night on the beach in the fog with my
notebook and pencil, sitting there crosslegged in the sand facing all the
Pacific fury flashing on rocks that rise like gloomy sea shroud towers out
of the cove, the bingbang cove with its seas booming inside caves and
slapping out, the cities of seaweed floating up and down you can even see
their dark leer in the phosphorescent seabeach nightlight... That first
night I sit there and all I know, as I look up, is the kitchen light is on,
on the cliff, to the right, where somebody's just built a cabin overlooking
all the horrible Sur, somebody up there's having a mild and tender supper
that's all I know... The lights from the cabin kitchen up there go out like
a little weak lighthouse beacon and ends suspended a thousand feet over the
crashing shore — Who would build a cabin up there but some bored but hoary
old adventurous architect maybe got sick of running for congress and one of
these days a big Orson Welles tragedy with screaming ghosts a woman in a
white nightgown'll go flying down that sheer cliff — But actually in my
mind what I really see is the kitchen lights of that mild and tender maybe
even romantic supper up there, in all that howling fog, and here I am way
below in the Vulcan's Forge itself looking up with sad eyes — Blanking my
little Camel cigarette on a billion year old rock that rises behind my head
to a height unbelievable — The little kitchen light on the cliff is only on
the end of it, behind it the shoulders of the great sea hound cliff go
rising up and back and seeping inland higher and higher till I gasp to think
"Looks like a reclining dog, big friggin shoulders on that sonofabitch" —
Riseth and sweepeth and scareth men to death but what is death anyway in all
this water and rock. I fix up my sleeping bag on the porch of the cabin but
at 2 A. M. the fog starts dripping all wet so I have to go indoors with wet
sleepingbag and make new arrangements but who cant sleep like a log in a
solitary cabin in the woods, you wake up in the late morning so refreshed
and realizing the universe namelessly: the universe is an Angel — But easy
enough to say when you've had your escape from the gooky city turn into a
success — And it's finally only in the woods you get that nostalgia for
"cities" at last, you dream of long gray journeys to cities where soft
evenings'll unfold like Paris but never seeing how sickening it will be
because of the primordial innocence of health and stillness in the wilds
... So I tell myself "Be Wise. "
6
Though there are faults to Monsanto's cabin like no screened windows to
keep the flies out in the daytime just big board windows, so that also on
foggy days when it's damp if you leave them open it's too cold, if you leave
them closed you cant see anything and have to light the lamp at noon — And
but for that no other faults — It's all marvelous — And at first it's so
amazing to be able to enjoy dreamy afternoon meadows of heather up the other
end of the canyon and just by walking less than a half mile you can suddenly
also enjoy wild gloomy sea coast, or if you're sick of either of these just
sit by the creek in a gladey spot and dream over snags — So easy in the
woods to daydream and pray to the local spirits and say "Allow me to stay
here, I only want peace" and those foggy peaks answer back mutely Yes... And
to say to yourself (if you're like me with theological preoccupations) (at
least at that time, before I went mad I still had such preoccupations) "God
who is everything possesses the eye of awakening, like dreaming a long dream
of an impossible task and you wake up in a flash, oops, No Task, it's done
and gone'... And in the flush of the first few days of joy I confidently
tell myself (not expecting what I'll do in three weeks only) "no more
dissipation, it's time for me to quietly watch the world and even enjoy it,
first in woods like these, then just calmly walk and talk among people of
the world, no booze, no drugs, no binges, no bouts with beatniks and drunks
and junkies and everybody, no more I ask myself the question O why is God
torturing me, that's it, be a loner, travel, talk to waiters only, in fact,
in Milan, Paris, just talk to waiters, walk around, no more self-imposed
agony... it's time to think and watch and keep concentrated on the fact that
after all this whole surface of the world as we know it now will be covered
with the silt of a billion years in time.. . Yay, for this, more aloneness"
— "Go back to childhood, just eat apples and read your Cathechism — sit on
curbstones, the hell with the hot lights of Hollywood" (remembering that
awful time only a year earlier when I had to rehearse my reading of prose a
third time under the hot lights of the Steve Alien Show in the Burbank
studio, one hundred technicians waiting for me to start reading, Steve Alien
watching me expectant as he plunks the piano, I sit there on the dunce's
stool and refuse to read a word or open my mouth, "I dont have to R E H E A
R S E for God's sake Steve! " — "But go ahead, we just wanta get the tone
of your voice, just this last time, I'll let you off the dress rehearsal"
and I sit there sweating not saying a word for a whole minute as everybody
watches, finally I say, "No I cant do it, " and I go across the street to
get drunk) (but surprising everybody the night of the show by doing my job
of reading just fine, which surprises the producers and so they take me out
with a Hollywood starlet who turns out to be a big bore trying to read me
her poetry and wont talk love because in Hollywood man love is for sale)...
So even that marvelous, long remembrances of life all the time in the world
to just sit there or lie there or walk about slowly remembering all the
details of life which now because a million lightyears away have taken on
the aspect (as they must've for Proust in his sealed room) of pleasant
movies brought up at will and projected for further study — And pleasure —
As I imagine God to be doing this very minute, watching his own movie, which
is us.
Even when one night I'm so happy sighin to turn over to resume my sleep
but a rat suddenly runs over my head, it's marvelous because I then take the
folding cot and put a big wide board on it that covers both sides, so I wont
sink into the canvas confines there, and place two old sleepingbags over the
board, then my own on top, I have the most marvelous and rat free and in
fact healthy-for-theback bed in the world.
I also take long curious hikes to see what's what in the other
direction inland, going up a few miles along the dirt road that leads to
isolated ranches and logging camps — I come to giant sad quiet valleys
where you see 150 foot tall redwood trees with sometimes one little bird
right on the topmost peaktwig sticking straight up — The bird balances up
there surveying the fog and the great trees — You see one single flower
nodding on a cliff side far across the canyon, or a huge knot in a redwood
tree looking like Zeus" face, or some of God's little crazy creations
goofing around in creek pools (zigzag bugs), or a sign on a lonely fence
saying "M. P. Passey. No Trespassing', or terraces of fern in the dripping
redwood shade, and you think "A long way from the beat generation, in this
rain forest'... So I angle back down to the home canyon and down the path
past the cabin and out to the sea where the mule is on the sea shore,
nibbling under that one thousand foot bridge or sometimes just standing
staring at me with big brown Garden of Eden eyes — The mule being a pet of
one of the families who have a cabin in the canyon and it, as I say Alf by
name, just wanders from one end of the canyon where the corral fence stops
him, to the wild seashore where the sea stops him but a strange Gauguinesque
mule when you first see him, leaving his black dung on the perfect white
sand, an immortal and primordial mule owning a whole valley — I even
finally later find out where Alf sleeps which is like a sacred grove of
trees in that dreaming meadow of heather — So I feed Alf the last of my
apples which he receives with big faroff teeth inside his soft hairy muzzle,
never biting, just muffing up my apple from my outstretched palm, and
chomping away sadly, turning to scratch his behind against a tree with a big
erotic motion that gets worse and worse till finally he's standing there
with erectile dong that would scare the Whore of Babylon let alone me.
All kinds of strange and marvelous things like the weird Ripley
situation of a huge tree that's fallen across a creek maybe 500 years ago
and's made a bridge thereby, the other end of its trunk is now buried in ten
feet of silt and foliage, strange enough but out of the middle trunk over
the water rises straight another redwood tree looking like it's been planted
in the treetrunk, or stuck down into it by a God hand, I cant figure it out
and stare at this chewing furiously on big choking handfulls of peanuts like
a college boy — (and only weeks before falling on my head in the Bowery) —
Even when a rancher car goes by I daydream mad ideas like, here comes Farmer
Jones and his two daughters and here I am with a 6o-foot redwood tree under
my arm walking slowly pulling it along, they are amazed and scared, "Are we
dreaming? can anybody be that strong? " they even ask me and my big Zen
answer is "You only think I'm strong" and I go on down the road carrying my
tree — This has me laughing in clover fields for hours... I pass a cow
which turns to look at me as it takes a big dreamy crap — Back in the cabin
I light the fire and sit sighing and there are leaves skittering on the tin
roof, it's August in Big Sur — I fall asleep in the chair and when I wake
up I'm facing the thick little tangled woods outside the door and I suddenly
remember them from long ago, even to the particular clumpness of the
thickets, stem by stem, the twist of them, like an old home place, but just
as I'm wondering what all this mess is, bang, the wind closes the cabin door
on my sight of it! So I conclude "I see as much as doors'll allow, open or
shut" — Adding, as I get up, in a loud English Lord voice nobody can hear
anyway, "An issue broached is an issue smote, Sire, " pronouncing 'issue"
like "iss-yew" — And this has me laughing all through supper — Which is
potatoes wrapped in foil and thrown on the fire, and coffee, and hunks of
Spam roasted on a spit, and applesauce and cheese — And when I light the
lamp of after-supper reading, here comes the nightly moth to his nightly
death at my lamp... After I put out the lamp temporarily, there's the moth
sleeping on the wall not realizing I've put it on again. Meanwhile by the
way and however, every day is cold and cloudy, or damp, not cold in the
eastern sense, and every night is absolutely fog: no stars whatever to be
seen... But this too turns out to be a marvelous circumstance as I find out
later, it's the "damp season" and the other dwellers (weekenders) of the
canyon don't come out on weekends, I'm absolutely alone for weeks on end
(because later in August when the sun conquered the fog suddenly I was
amazed to hear laughing and scratching all up and down the valley which had
been mine only mine, and when I tried to go to the beach to squat and write
there were whole families having outings, some of them younger people who'd
simply parked their cars up on the high bridge bluff and climbed down) (some
of them in fact gangs of yelling hoodlums)... So the rainforest summer fog
was grand and besides when the sun prevailed in August a horrible
development took place, huge blasts of frightening gale like wind came
pouring into the canyon making all the trees roar with a really frightening
intensity that sometimes built up to a booming war of trees that shook the
cabin and woke you up — And was in fact one of the things that contributed
to my mad fit.
But the most marvelous day of all when I completely forgot who I was
where I was or the time of day just with my pants rolled up above my knees
wading in the creek rearranging the rocks and some of the snags so that the
water where I stooped (near the sandy shore) to get jugfuls would, instead
of just sluggishly passing by shallow over mud, with bugs in it, now come
rushing in a pure gurgly clear stream and deep too — I dug into the white
sand and arranged underground rocks so now I could stick a jug in there and
tilt the opening to the stream and it would fill up instantly with clear
rushing unstagnated bugless drinking water — Making a mill race, is what
it's called — And because now the water rushed so fast and deep right by
the sandy stooping place I had to build a kind of seawall of rocks against
that rush so that the shore would not be silted away by the race — Doing
that, fortifying the outside of the seawall with smaller rocks and finally
at sundown with bent head over my sniffling endeavors (the way a kid
sniffles when he's been playing all day) I start inserting tiny pebbles in
the spaces between the stones so that no water can sneak over to wash away
the shore, even down to the tiniest sand, a perfect sea wall, which I top
with a wood plank for everybody to kneel on when they come there to fetch
their holy water — Looking up from this work of an entire day, from noon
till sundown, amazed to see where I was, who I was, what I'd done — The
absolute innocence like of Indian fashioning a canoe all alone in the woods
— And as I say only weeks earlier I'd fallen flat on my head in the Bowery
and everybody thought I'd hurt myself- So I make supper with a happy song
and go out in the foggy moonlight (the moon sent its white luminescence
through) and marveled to watch the new swift gurgling clear water run with
its pretty flashes of light — 'And when the fog's over and the stars and
the moon come out at night it'll be a beautiful sight. "
And such things — A whole mess of little joys like that amazing me
when I came back in the horror of later to see how they'd all changed and
become sinister, even my poor little wooden platform and mill race when my
eyes and stomach nauseous and my soul screaming a thousand babbling words,
oh — It's hard to explain and best thing to do is not be false.

7

Because on the fourth day I began to get bored and noted it in my diary
with amazement, "Already bored? " — Even tho the handsome words of Emerson
would shake me out of that where he says (in one of those little redleather
books, in the essay on "Self Reliance" a man "is relieved and gay when he
has put his heart into his work and done his best') (applicable both to
building simple silly little millraces and writing big stupid stories like
this) Words from the trumpet of the morning in America, Emerson, he who
announced Whitman and also said "Infancy conforms to nobody" — The infancy
of the simplicity of just being happy in the woods, conforming to nobody's
idea about what to do, what should be done — "Life is not an apology" —
And when a vain and malicious philanthropic abolitionist accused him of
being blind to the issues of slavery he said "Thy love afar is spite at
home" (maybe the philanthropist had Negro help anyway) — So once again I'm
Ti Jean the Child, playing, sewing patches, cooking suppers, washing dishes
(always kept the kettle boiling on the fire and anytime dishes needed to be
washed I just pour hot hot water into pan with Tide soap and soak them good
and then wipe them clean after scouring with little 5-&-10 wire scourer) —
Long nights simply thinking about the usefulness of that little wire
scourer, those little yellow copper things you buy in supermarkets for 10
cents, all to me infinitely more interesting than the stupid and senseless
"Steppenwolf novel in the shack which I read with a shrug, this old fart
reflecting the "conformity" of today and all the while he thought he was a
big Nietzsche, old imitator of Dostoevsky fifty years too late (he feels
tormented in a "personal hell" he calls it because he doesnt like what other
people like! )
— Better at noon to watch the orange and black Princeton colors on the
wings of a butterfly — Best to go hear the sound of the sea at night on the
shore.
Maybe I shouldna gone out and scared or bored or belabored myself so
much, tho, on that beach at night which would scare any ordinary mortal —
Every night around eight after supper I'd put on my big fisherman coat and
take the notebook, pencil and lamp and start down the trail (sometimes
passing ghostly Alf on the way) and go under that frightful high bridge and
see through the dark fog ahead the white mouths of ocean coming high at me
— But knowing the terrain I'd walk right on, jump the beach creek, and go
to my corner by the cliff not far from one of the caves and sit there like
an idiot in the dark writing down the sound of the waves in the notebook
page (secretarial notebook) which I could see white in the darkness and
therefore without benefit of lamp scrawl on — I was afraid to light my lamp
for fear I'd scare the people way up there on the cliff eating their nightly
tender supper — (later found out there was nobody up there eating tender
suppers, they were overtime carpenters finishing the place in bright lights)
— And I'd get scared of the rising tide with its 15 foot waves yet sit
there hoping in faith that Hawaii warnt sending no tidal wave I might miss
seeing in the dark coming from miles away high as Groomus — One night I got
scared anyway so sat on top of 10-foot cliff at the foot of the big cliff
and the waves are going "Rare, he rammed the gate rare" — "Raw roo roar" —
"Crowsh'- the way waves sound especially at night — The sea not speaking in
sentences so much as in short lines: "Which one?... the one ploshed?... the
same, ah Boom'... Writing down these fantastic inanities actually but yet I
felt I had to do it because James Joyce wasn't about to do it now he was
dead (and figuring "Next year I'll write the different sound of the Atlantic
crashing say on the night shores of Cornwall, or the soft sound of the
Indian Ocean crashing at the mouth of the Ganges maybe') — And I just sit
there listening to the waves talk all up and down the sand in different
tones of voice 'Ka bloom, kerplosh, ah ropey otter barnacled be crowsh, are
rope the angels in all the sea? " and such — Looking up occasionally to see
rare cars crossing the high bridge and wondering what they'd see on this
drear foggy night if they knew a madman was down there a thousand feet below
in all that windy fury sitting in the dark writing in the dark — Some sort
of sea beatnik, tho anybody wants to call me a beatnik for THIS better try
it if they dare — The huge black rocks seem to move — The bleak awful
roaring isolateness, no ordinary man could do it I'm telling you — / am a
Breton! I cry and the blackness speaks back "Les poissons de la mer parlent
Breton" (the fishes of the sea speak Breton) — Nevertheless I go there
every night even tho I dont feel like it, it's my duty (and probably drove
me mad), and write these sea sounds, and all the whole insane poem "Sea'.
Always so wonderful in fact to get away from that and back to the more
human woods and come to the cabin where the fire's still red and you can see
the Bodhisattva's lamp, the glass of ferns on the table, the box of Jasmine
tea nearby, all so gentle and human after that rocky deluge out there — So
I make an excellent pan of muffins and tell myself 'Blessed is the man can
make his own bread" — Like that, the whole three weeks, happiness — And
I'm rolling my own cigarettes, too — And as I say sometimes I meditate how
wonderful the fantastic use I've gotten out of cheap little articles like
the scourer, but in this instance I think of the marvelous belongings in my
rucksack like my 25-cent plastic shaker with which I've just made the muffin
batter but also I've used it in the past to drink hot tea, wine, coffee,
whiskey and even stored clean handkerchiefs in it when I traveled — The top
part of the shaker, my holy cup, and had it for five years now — And other
belongings so valuable compared to the worthlessness of expensive things I'd
bought and never used — Like my black soft sleeping sweater also five years
which I was now wearing in the damp Sur summer night and day, over a flannel
shirt in the cold, and just the sweater for the night's sleep in the bag —
Endless use and virtue of it! — And because the expensive things were of
ill use, like the fancy pants I'd bought for recent recording dates in New
York and other television appearances and never even wore again, useless
things like a $40 raincoat I never wore because it didn't have slits in the
side pockets (you pay for the label and the so called "tailoring') — Also
an expensive tweed jacket bought for TV and never worn again — Two silly
sports shirts bought for Hollywood never worn again and were 9 bucks each!
— And it's almost tearful to realize and remember the old green T-shirt I'd
found, mind you, eight years ago, mind you, on the DUMP in Watsonville
California mind you, and got fantastic use and comfort from it — Like
working to fix that new stream in the creek to flow through the convenient
deep new waterhole near the wood platform on the bank, and losing myself in
this like a kid playing, it's the little things that count (cliches are
truisms and all truisms are true) — On my deathbed I could be remembering
that creek day and forgetting the day MGM bought my book, I could be
remembering the old lost green dump T-shirt and forgetting the sapphired
robes — Mebbe the best way to get into Heaven.
I go back to the beach in the daytime to write my "Sea', I stand there
barefoot by the sea stopping to scratch one ankle with one toe, I hear the
rhythm of those waves, and they're saying suddenly "Is Virgin you trying to
fathom me" — I go back to make a pot of tea.
Summer afternoon...
Impatiently chewing
The Jasmine leaf
At high noon the sun always coming out at last, strong, beating down on
my nice high porch where I sit with books and coffee and the noon I thought
about the ancient Indians who must have inhabited this canyon for thousands
of years, how even as far back as the loth century this valley must have
looked the same, just different trees: these ancient Indians simply the
ancestors of the Indians of only recently say 1860... How they've all died
and quietly buried their grievances and excitements How the creek may have
been an inch deeper since logging operations of the last sixty years have
removed some of the watershed in the hills back there... How the women
pounded the local acorns, acorns or shmacorns, I finally found the natural
nuts of the valley and they were sweet tasting — And men hunted deer — In
fact God knows what they did because I wasn't here — But the same valley, a
thousand years of dust more or less over their footsteps of A. D. 960 — And
as far as I can see the world is too old for us to talk about it with our
new words — We will pass just as quietly through life (passing through,
passing through) as the 10th century people of this valley only with a
little more noise and a few bridges and dams and bombs that wont even last a
million years — The world being just what it is, moving and passing
through, actually alright in the long view and nothing to complain about —
Even the rocksof the valley had earlier rock ancestors, a billion billion
years ago, have left no howl of complaint — Neither the bee, or the first
sea urchins, or the clam, or the severed paw — All said So-Is sight of the
world, right there in front of my nose as I look, — And looking at that
valley in fact I also realize I have to make lunch and it wont be any
different than the lunch of those olden men and besides it'll taste good —
Everything is the same, the fog says "We are fog and we fly by dissolving
like ephemera, " and the leaves say "We are leaves and we jiggle in the
wind, that's all, we come and go, grow and fall" — Even the paper bags in
my garbage pit say "We are man transformed paper bags made out of wood pulp,
we are kinda proud of being paper bags as long as that will be possible, but
we'll be mush again with our sisters the leaves come rainy season" — The
tree stumps say "We are tree stumps torn out of the ground by men, sometimes
by wind, we have big tendrils full of earth that drink out of the earth'...
Men say "We are men, we pull out tree stumps, we make paper bags, we think
wise thoughts, we make lunch, we look around, we make a great effort to
realize everything is the same" — While the sand says "We are sand, we
already know, " and the sea says "We are always come and go, fall and plosh.
" — The empty blue sky of space says "All this comes back to me, then goes
again, and comes back again, then goes again, and I don't care, it still
belongs to me" — The blue sky adds "Dont call me eternity, call me God if
you like, all of you talkers are in paradise: the leaf is paradise, the tree
stump is paradise, the paper bag is paradise, the man is paradise, the fog
is paradise" — Can you imagine a man with mar-velous insights like these
can go mad within a month? (because you must admit all those talking paper
bags and sands were telling the truth) — But I remember seeing a mess of
leaves suddenly go skittering in the wind and into the creek, then floating
rapidly down the creek toward the sea, making me feel a nameless horror even
then of "Oh my God, we're all being swept away to sea no matter what we know
or say or do" — And a bird who was on a crooked branch is suddenly gone
without my even hearing him.
8
But there's moonlit fognight, the blossoms of the fire flames in the
stove — There's giving an apple to the mule, the big lips taking hold...
There's the bluejay drinking my canned milk by throwing his head back with a
miffle of milk on his beak — There's the scratching of the raccoon or of
the rat out there, at night — There's the poor little mouse eating her
nightly supper in the humble corner where I've put out a little
delight-plate full of cheese and chocolate candy (for my days of killing
mice are over) — There's the raccoon in his fog, there the man to his
fireside, and both are lonesome for God — There's me coming back from
seaside night sittings like a muttering old Bhikku stumbling down the path
— There's me throwing my spotlight on a sudden raccoon who clambers up a
tree his little heart beating with fear but I yell in French "Hello there
little man" (allo ti bon-homme) — There's the bottle of olives, 4gc,
imported, pimentos, I eat them one by one wondering about the late afternoon
hillsides of Greece — And there's my spaghetti... with tomato sauce and my
oil and vinegar salad and my applesauce relishe my dear, and my black coffee
and Roquefort cheese and after-dinner nuts, my dear, all in the woods —
(Ten delicate olives slowly chewed at midnight is something no one's ever
done in luxurious restaurants) — There's the present moment fraught with
tangled woods — There's the bird suddenly quiet on his branch while his
wife glances at him... There's the grace of an axe handle as good as an
Eglevsky ballet... There's 'Mien Mo Mountain" in the fog illumined August
moon mist among other heights gorgeous and misty rising in dimmer tiers
somehow rosy in the night like the classic silk paintings of China and Japan
— There's a bug, a helpless little wingless crawler, drowning in a water
can, I get it out and it wanders and goofs on the porch till I get sick of
watching — There's the spider in the outhouse minding his own business...
There's my side of bacon hanging from a hook on the ceiling of the shack —
There's the laughter of the loon in the shadow of the moon-There's an owl
hooting in weird Bodhidharma trees — There's flowers and redwood logs —
There's the simple woodfire and the careful yet absent-minded feeding of it
which is an activity that like all activities is no-activity (Wu Wei) yet it
is a meditation in itself especially because all woodfires, like snowflakes,
are different every time... Yes, there's the resinous purge of a
flame-enveloped redwood log — Yes the cross-sawed redwood log turns into a
coal and looks like a City of the Gandharvas or like a western butte at
sunset — There's the bhikku's broom, the kettle — There's the laced soft
fud over the sand, the sea — There's all these avid preparations for decent
sleep like the night I'm looking for my sleeping socks (so's not to dirty
the sleepingbag inside) and find myself singing "A donde es me sockiboos? "
— Yes, and down in the valley there's my burro, Alf, the only living being
in sight — There's in mid of sleep the moon appearing — There's universal
substance which is divine substance because where else can it be? — There's
the family of deer on the dirt road at dusk... There's the creek coughing
down the glade — There's the fly on my thumb rubbing its nose then stepping
to the page of my book-There's the hummingbird swinging his head from side
to side like a hoodlum — There's all that, and all my fine thoughts, even
unto my ditty written to the sea "I took a pee, into the sea, acid to acid,
and me to ye" yet I went crazy inside three weeks.
For who could go crazy that could be so relaxed as that: but wait:
there are the signposts of something wrong.
9
The first signpost came after that marvelous day I went hiking, up the
canyon road again to the highway at the bridge where there was a rancher
mailbox where I could dump mail (a letter to my mother and saying in it give
a kiss to Tyke, my cat, and a letter to old buddy Julien addressed to Coaly
Rustnut from Runty Onenut) and as I walked way up there I could see the
peaceful roof of my cabin way below and half mile away in the old trees,
could see the porch, the cot where I slept, and my red handkerchief on the
bench beside the cot (a simple little sight: of my handkerchief a half mile
away making me unaccountably happy) — And on the way back pausing to
meditate in the grove of trees where Alf the Sacred Burro slept and seeing
the roses of the unborn in my closed eyelids just as clearly as I had seen
the red handkerchief and also my own footsteps in the seaside sand from way
up on the bridge, saw, or heard, the words "Roses of the Unborn" as I sat
crosslegged in soft meadow sand, heard that awful stillness at the heart of
life, but felt strangely low, as tho premonition of the next day... When I
went to the sea in the afternoon and suddenly took a huge deep Yogic breath
to get all that good sea air in me but somehow just got an overdose of
iodine, or of evil, maybe the sea caves, maybe the seaweed cities,
something, my heart suddenly beating — Thinking I'm gonna get the local
vibrations instead here I am almost fainting only it isn't an ecstatic swoon
by St Francis, it comes over me in the form of horror of an eternal
condition of sick mortality in me — In me and in everyone... I felt
completely nude of all poor protective devices like thoughts about life or
meditations under trees and the "ultimate" and all that shit, in fact the
other pitiful devices of making supper or saying "What I do now next? chop
wood? " — I see myself as just doomed, pitiful — An awful realization that
I have been fooling myself all my life thinking there was a next thing to do
to keep the show going and actually I'm just a sick clown and so is
everybody else... All all of it, pitiful as it is, not even really any kind
of commonsense animate effort to ease the soul in this horrible sinister
condition (of mortal hopelessness) so I'm left sitting there in the sand
after having almost fainted and stare at the waves which suddenly are not
waves at all, with I guess what must have been the goopiest downtrodden
expression God if He exists must've ever seen in His movie career — Eh
vache, I hate to write — All my tricks laid bare, even the realization that
they're laid bare itself laid bare as a lotta bunk — The sea seems to yell
to me GO TO YOUR DESIRE DONT HANG AROUND HERE — For after all the sea must
be like God, God isn't asking us to mope and suffer and sit by the sea in
the cold at midnight for the sake of writing down useless sounds, he gave us
the tools of self reliance after all to make it straight thru bad life
mortality towards Paradise maybe I hope... But some miserables like me don't
even know it, when it comes to us we're amazed — Ah, life is a gate, a way,
a path to Paradise anyway, why not live for fun and joy and love or some
sort of girl by a fireside, why not go to your desire and LAUGH... but I ran
away from the seashore and never came back again without that secret
knowledge: that it didnt want me there, that I was a fool to sit there in
the first place, the sea has its waves, the man has his fireside, period.
That being the first indication of my later flip — But also on the day
of leaving the cabin to hitch hike back to Friscoand see everybody and by
now I'm tired of my food (forgot to bring jello, you need jello after all
that bacon fat and cornmeal in the woods, every woodsman needs jello) (or
cokes) (or something) But it's time to leave, I'm now so scared by that
iodine blast by the sea and by the boredom of the cabin I take 20 dollars
worth of perishable food left and spread it out on a big board below the
cabin porch for the bluejays and the raccoon and the mouse and the whole
lot, pack up, and go — But before I go I realize this isn't my own cabin
(here's the second signpost of my madness), I have no right to hide
Monsanto's rat poison, as I've been doing, feeding the mouse instead, as I
said — So like a dutiful guest in another man's cabin I take the cover off
the rat poison but compromise by simply leaving the box on the top shelf, so
nobody can complain — And go off like that — But during my absence, but —
You'll see.
10
With my mind even and upright and abiding nowhere, as Hui Neng would
say, I go dancing off like a fool from my sweet retreat, rucksack on back,
after only three weeks and really after only three or four days of boredom,
and go hankering back for the city — "You go out in joy and in sadness you
return, " says Thomas a Kempis talking about all the fools who go forth for
pleasure like high schoolboys on Saturday night hurrying clacking down the
sidewalk to the car adjusting their ties and rubbing their hands with
anticipatory zeal, only to end up Sunday morning groaning in blearly beds
that Mother has to make anyway — It's a beautiful day as I come out of that
ghostly canyon road and step out on the coast highway, just this side of
Raton Canyon bridge, and there they are, thousands and thousands of tourists
driving by slowly on the high curves all oo ing and aa ing at all that vast
blue panorama of sea washing and raiding at the coast of California — I
figure I'll get a ride into Monterey real easy and take the bus there and be
in Frisco by nightfall for a big ball of wino yelling with the gang, I feel
in fact Dave Wain oughta be back by now, or Cody will be ready for a ball,
and there'll be girls, and such and such, forgetting entirely that only
three weeks previous I'd been sent fleeing from that gooky city by the
horrors — But hadn't the sea told me to flee back to my own reality?
But it is beautiful especially to see up ahead north a vast expanse of
curving seacoast with inland mountains dreaming under slow clouds, like a
scene of ancient Spain, or properly really like a scene of the real
essentially Spanish California, the old Monterey pirate coast right there,
you can see what the Spaniards must've thought when they came around the
bend in their magnificent sloopies and saw all that dreaming fatland beyond
the seashore whitecap doormat — Like the land of gold — The old Monterey
and Big Sur and Santa Cruz magic — So I confidently adjust my pack straps
and start trudging down the road looking back over my shoulder to thumb.
This is the first time I've hitch hiked in years and I soon begin to
see things have changed in America, you cant get a ride any more (but of
course especially on a strictly tourist road like this coast highway with no
trucks or business)... Sleek long stationwagon after wagon comes sleering by
smoothly, all colors of the rainbow and pastel at that, pink, blue, white,
the husband is in the driver's seat with a long ridiculous vacationist hat
with a long baseball visor making him look witless and idiot — Besides him
sits wifey, the boss of America, wearing dark glasses and sneering, even if
he wanted to pick me up or anybody up she wouldn't let him — But in the two
deep backseats are children, children, millions of children, all ages,
they're fighting and screaming over ice cream, they're spilling vanilla all
over the Tartan seatcovers — There's no room anymore anyway for a hitch
hiker, tho conceivably the poor bastard might be allowed to ride like a meek
gunman or silent murderer in the very back platform of the wagon, but here
no, alas! here is ten thousand racks of drycleaned and perfectly pressed
suits and dresses of all sizes for the family to look like millionaires
every time they stop at a roadside dive for bacon and eggs — Every time the
old man's trousers start to get creased a little in the front he's made to
take down a fresh pair of slacks from the back rack and go on, like that,
bleakly, tho he might have secretly wished just a good oldtime fishing trip
alone or with his buddies for this year's vacation — But the PTA has
prevailed over every one of his desires by now, 1960s, it's no time for him
to yearn for Big Two Hearted River and the old sloppy pants and string of
fish in the tent, or the woodfire with Bourbon at night — It's time for
motels, roadside driveins, bringing napkins to the gang in the car, having
the car washed before the return trip — And if he thinks he wants to
explore any of the silent secret roads of America it's no go, the lady in
the sneering dark glasses has now become the navigator and sits there
sneering over her previously printed blue-lined roadmap distributed by happy
executives in neckties to the vacationists of America who would also wear
neckties (after having come along so far) but the vacation fashion is sports
shirts, long visored hats, dark glasses, pressed slacks and baby's first
shoes dipped in gold oil dangling from the dashboard — So here I am
standing in that road with that big woeful rucksack but also probably with
that expression of horror on my face after all those nights sitting in the
seashore under giant black cliffs, they see in me the very apotheosical
opposite of their every vacation dream and of course drive on — That
afternoon I say about five thousand cars or probably three thousand passed
me not one of them ever dreamed of stopping — Which didnt bother me anyway
because at first seeing that gorgeous long coast up to Monterey I thought
"Well I'll just hike right in, it's only fourteen miles, I oughta do that
easy" — And on the way there's all kindsa interesting things to see anyway
like the seals barking on rocks below, or quiet old farms made of logs on
the hills across the highway, or sudden upstretches that go along dreamy
seaside meadows where cows grace and graze in full sight of endless blue
Pacific — But because I'm wearing desert boots with their fairly thin
soles, and the sun is beating hot on the tar road, the heat finally gets
through the soles and I begin to deliver heat blisters inmy sockiboos — I'm
limping along wondering what's the matter with me when I realize I've got
blisters — I sit by the side of the road and look — I take out my first
aid kit from the pack and apply unguents and put on cornpads and carry on —
But the combination of the heavy pack and the heat of the road increases the
pain of the blisters until finally I realize I've got to hitch hike a ride
or never make it to Monterey at all. But the tourists bless their hearts
after all, they couldnt know, only think I'm having a big happy hike with my
rucksack and they drive on, even tho I stick out my thumb
— I'm in despair because I'm really stranded now, and by the time I've
walked seven miles I still have seven to go but I cant go on another step —
I'm also thirsty and there are absolutely no filling stations or anything
along the way
— My feet are ruined and burned, it develops now into a day of
complete torture, from nine o'clock in the morning till four in the
afternoon I negotiate those nine or so miles when I finally have to stop and
sit down and wipe the blood off my feet — And then when I fix the feet and
put the shoes on again, to hike on, I can only do it mincingly with little
twinkletoe steps like Babe Ruth, twisting footsteps every way I can think of
not to press too hard on any particular blister — So that the tourists
(lessening now as the sun starts to go down) can now plainly see that
there's a man on the highway limping under a huge pack and asking for a
ride, but still they're afraid he may be the Hollywood hitch hiker with the
hidden gun and besides he's got a rucksack on his back as tho he'd just
escaped from the war in Cuba... Or's got dismembered bodies in the bag
anyway — But as I say I dont blame them.
The only car that passes that might have given me a ride is going in
the wrong direction, down to Sur, and it's a rattly old car of some kind
with a big bearded "South Coast Is the Lonely Coast" folksinger in it waving
at me but finally a little truck pulls up and waits for me 50 yards ahead
and I limprun that distance on daggers in my feet — It's a guy with a dog
— He'll drive me to the next gas station, then he turns off — But when he
learns about my feet he takes me clear to the bus station in Monterey —
Just as a gesture of kindness — No particular reason, and I've made no
particular plea about my feet, just mentioned it.
I offer to buy him a beer but he's going on home for supper so I go
into the bus station and clean up and change and pack things away, stow the
bag in the locker, buy the bus ticket, and go limping quietly in the blue
fog streets of Monterey evening feeling lights as feather and happy as a
millionaire — The last time I ever hitch hiked — And NO RIDES a sign.

11

The next sign is in Frisco itself where after a night of perfect sleep
in an old skid row hotel room I go to see Monsanto at his City Lights
bookstore and he's smiling and glad to see me, says "We were coming out to
see you next weekend you should have waited, " but there's something else in
his expression — When we're alone he says "Your mother wrote and said your
cat is dead. "
Ordinarily the death of a cat means little to most men, a lot to fewer
men, but to me, and that cat, it was exactly and no lie and sincerely like
the death of my little brother — I loved Tyke with all my heart, he was my
baby who as a kitten just slept in the palm of my hand with his little head
hanging down, or just purring, for hours, just as long as I held him that
way, walking or sitting — He was like a floppy fur wrap around my wrist, I
just twist him around my wrist or drape him and he just purred and purred
and even when he got big I still held him that way, I could even hold this
big cat in both hands with my arms outstretched right over my head and he'd
just purr, he had complete confidence in me — And when I'd left New York to
come to my retreat in the woods I'd carefully kissed him and instructed him
to wait for me, 'Attends pour mue kitigingoo" — But my mother said in the
letter he had died the NIGHT AFTER I LEFT! — But maybe you'll understand me
by seeing for yourself by reading the letter:
"Sunday 20 July 1960, Dear Son, I'm afraid you wont like my letter
because I only have sad news for you right now. I really dont know how to
tell you this but Brace up Honey. I'm going through hell myself. Little Tyke
is gone. Saturday all day he was fine and seemed to pick up strength, but
late at night I was watching TV a late movie. Just about 1: 30 A. M. when he
started belching and throwing up. I went to him and tried to fix him up but
to no availe. He was shivering like he was cold so I rapped him up in a
Blanket then he started to throw up all over me. And that was the last of
him. Needless to say how I feel and what I went through. I stayed up till
"day Break" and did all I could to revive him but it was useless. I realized
at 4 A. M. he was gone so at six I wrapped him up good in a clean blanket —
and at 7 A. M. went out to dig his grave. I never did anything in my whole
life so heart breaking as to bury my beloved little Tyke who was as human as
you and I. I buried him under the Honeysuckle vines, the corner, of the
fence. I just cant sleep or eat. I keep looking and hoping to see him come
through the cellar door calling Ma Wow. I'm just plain sick and the weirdest
thing happened when I buried Tyke, all the black Birds I fed all Winter
seemed to have known what was going on. Honest Son this is no lies. There
was lots and lots of em flying over my head and chirping, and settling on
the fence, for a whole hour after Tyke was laid to rest — that's something
I'll never forget — I wish I had a camera at the time but God and Me knows
it and saw it. Now Honey I know this is going to hurt you but I had to tell
you somehow... I'm so sick not physically but heart sick... I just cant
believe or realize that my Beautiful little Tyke is no more — and that I
wont be seeing him come through his little "Shanty" or Walking through the
green grass
... PS. I've got to dismantle Tyke's shanty, I just cant go out there
and see it empty — as is. Well Honey, write soon again and be kind to
yourself. Pray the real "God" — Your old Mom XXXXXX. "
So when Monsanto told me the news and I was sitting there smiling with
happiness the way all people feel when they come out of a long solitude
either in the woods or in a hospital bed, bang, my heart sank, it sank in
fact with the same strange idiotic helplessness as when I took the
unfortunate deep breath on the seashore — All the premonitions tying in
together.
Monsanto sees that I'm terribly sad, he sees my little smile (the smile
that came over me in Monterey just so glad to be back in the world after the
solitudes and I'd walked around the streets just bemusedly Mona Lisa'ing at
the sight of everything) — He sees now how that smile has slowly melted
away into a mawk of chagrin — Of course he cant know since I didn't tell
him and hardly wanta tell it now, that my relationship with my cat and the
other previous cats has always been a little dotty: some kind of
psychological identification of the cats with my dead brother Gerard who'd
taught me to love cats when I was 3 and 4 and we used to lie on the floor on
our bellies and watch them lap up milk — The death of "little brother" Tyke
indeed — Monsanto seeing me so downcast says "Maybe you oughta go back to
the cabin for a few more weeks — or are you just gonna get drunk again" —
"I'm gonna get drunk yes" — Because anyway there are so many things
brewing, everybody's waiting, I've been daydreaming a thousand wild parties
in the woods — In fact it's fortunate I've heard of the death of Tyke in my
favorite exciting city of San Francisco, if I had been home when he died I
might have gone mad in a different way but tho I now ran out to get drunk
with the boys and still once in a while that funny little smile of joy came
back as I drank, and melted away again because now the smile itself was a
reminder of death, the news made me go mad anyway at the end of the three
week binge, creeping up on me finally on that terrible day of St Carolyn By
The Sea as I can also call it — All, all confusing till I explain.
Meanwhile anyway poor Monsanto a man of letters wants to enjoy big new
swappings with me about writing and what everybody's doing, and then Fagan
comes into the store (downstairs to Monsanto's old rolltop desk making me
also feel chagrin because it always was the ambition of my youth to end up a
kind of literary businessman with a rolltop desk, combining my father's
image with the image of myself as a writer, which Monsanto without even
thinking about it has accomplished at the drop of a hat) — Monsanto with
his husky shoulders, big blue eyes, twinkling rosy skin, that perpetual
smile of his that earned him the name Smiler in college and a smile you
often wondered "Is it real? " until you realized if Monsanto should ever
stop using that smile how could the world go on anyway — It was that kind
of smile too inseparable from him to be believably allowed to disappear —
Words words words but he is a grand guy as I'll show and now with real manly
sympathy he really felt I should not go on big binges if I felt so bad, "At
any rate, " sez he, "you can go back a little later huh" — "Okay Lorry" —
"Did you write anything? " — "I wrote the sounds of the sea, I'll tell you
all about it — It was the most happy three weeks of my life dammit and now
this has to happen, poor little Tyke — You should have seen him a big
beautiful yellow Persian the kind they call calico" — "Well you still have
my dog Homer, and how was Alf out there? " — "Alf the Sacred Burro, he ha,
he stands in groves of trees in the afternoon suddenly you see him it's
almost scarey, but I fed himapples and shredded wheat and everything" (and
animals are so sad and patient I thought as I remembered Tyke's eyes and
Alf's eyes, ah death, and to think this strange scandalous death comes also
to human beings, yea to Smiler even, poor Smiler, and poor Homer his dog,
and all of us) — I'm also depressed because I know how horrible my mother
now feels all alone without her little chum in the house back there three
thousand miles (and indeed by Jesus it turns out later some silly beatniks
trying to see me broke the windowpane in the front door trying to get in and
scared her so much she barricaded the door with furniture all the rest of
that summer).
But there's old Ben Fagan puffing and chuckling over his pipe so what
the hell, why bother grownup men and poets at that with your own troubles —
So Ben and I and his chum Jonesy also a chuckly pipesmoker go out to the bar
(Mike's Place) and sip a few beers, at first I vow I'm not going to get
drunk after all, we even go out to the park to have a long talk in the warm
sun that always turns to delightful cool foggy dusk in that town of towns —
We're sitting in the park of the big Italian white church watching kids play
and people go by, for some reason I'm bemused by the sight of a blonde woman
hurrying somewhere "Where's she going? does she have a secret sailor lover?
is she only going to finish her typing afterhours in the office? what if we
knew Ben what every one of these people goin by is headed for, some door,
some restaurant, some secret romance" — "You sound like you stored up a lot
of energy and innerest in life in those woods" — And Ben knows that for
sure because he's been months in the wilderness too, alone — Old Ben, much
thinner than he used to be in our madder Dharma Bum days of five years ago,
a little gaunt in fact, but still the same old Ben who stays up late at
night chuckling over the Lankavatara Scripture and writing poems about
raindrops — And he knows me very well, he knows I'll get drunk tonight and
for weeks on end just on general principles and that a day will come in a
few weeks when I'll be so exhausted I wont be able to talk to anybody and
he'll come and visit me and just silently at my side be puffing his pipe, as
I sleep — The kind of guy he is — I trying to explain about Tyke to him
but some people are cat lovers and some ain't, tho Ben always has a little
kitty around his pad — His pad usually has a straw rug on the floor, with a
pillow "pon which he sits crosslegged by a smoking teapot, his bookshelves
full of Stein and Pound and Wallace Stevens — A strange quiet poet who was
only beginning to be recognized as a big rosy secret sage (one of his lines
"When I leave town all my friends go back on the sauce') — And I'm on my
way to the sauce right now. Because anyway old Dave Wain is back and Dave I
can see him rubbing his hands in anticipation of another big wild binge with
me like we had the year before when he drove me back to New York from the
west coast, with George Baso the little Japanese Zen master hepcat sitting
crosslegged on the back mattress of Dave's jeepster (Willie the Jeep), a
terrific trip through Las Vegas, St Louis, stopping off at expensive motels
and drinking nothing but the best Scotch out of the bottle all the way —
And what better way to go back to New York, I could have blown 190 dollars
on an airplane — And Dave's never met the great Cody and will be looking
forward to that — So me and Ben leave the park and slowly walk to the bar
on Columbus Street and I order my first double bourbon and gingerale. The
lights are twinkling on outside in that fantastic toy street, I can feel the
joy rise in my soul — I now remember
Big Sur with a clear piercing love and agony and even the death of Tyke
fits in with everything but I don't realize the enormity of what's yet to
come — We call up Dave Wain who's back from Reno and he comes blattin
downto the bar in his jeepster driving that marvelous way he does (once he
was a cab-driver) talking all the time and never making a mistake, in fact
as good a driver as Cody altho I cant imagine anybody being that good and
asked Cody about it the next day — But old jealous drivers always point out
faults and complain, "Ah well that Dave Wain of yours doesnt take his curves
right, he eases up and sometimes even pokes the brake a little instead of
just ridin that old curve around on increased power, man you gotta work
those curves" — Obvious at this time now, by the way and parenthetically,
that there's so much to tell about the fateful following three weeks it's
hardly possible to find anyplace to begin. Like life, actually — And how
multiple it all is! — "And what happened to little old George Baso, boy? "
— "Little old George Baso is probably dyin of TB in a hospital outside
Tulare" — "Gee, Dave, we gotta go see him" — "Yessir, let's do that
tomorrow" — As usual Dave has no money whatever but that doesn't bother me
at all, I've got plenty, I go out the following day and cash 500 dollars
worth of travelers checks just so's me and old Dave can really have a good
time... Dave likes good food and drink and so do I... But he's got this
young kid he brought back from Reno called Ron Blake who is a goodlooking
teenager with blond hair who wants to be a sensational new Chet Baker singer
and comes on with that tiresome hipster approach that was natural five or
ten and even twenty five years ago but now in 1960 is a pose, in fact I dug
him as a con man conning Dave (tho for what, I don't know) — But Dave Wain
that lean rangy red head Welchman with his penchant for going off in Willie
to fish in the Rogue River up in Oregon where he knows an abandoned mining
camp, or for blattin around the desert roads, for suddenly reappearing in
town to get drunk, and a marvelous poet himself, has that certain something
that young hip teenagers probably wanta imitate — For one thing is one of
the world's best talkers, and funny too — As I'll show — It was he and
George Baso who hit on the fantastically simple truth that everybody in
America was walking around with a dirty behind, but everybody, because the
ancient ritual of washing with water after the toilet had not occurred in
all the modern antisepticism — Says Dave "People in America have all these
racks of dry-cleaned clothes like you say on their trips, they spatter Eau
de Cologne all over themselves, they wear Ban and Aid or whatever it is
under their armpits, they get aghast to see a spot on a shirt or a dress,
they probably change underwear and socks maybe even twice a day, they go
around all puffed up and insolent thinking themselves the cleanest people on
earth and they're walkin around with dirty azzoles — Isnt that amazing?
give me a little nip on that tit" he says reaching for my drink so I order
two more, I've been engrossed, Dave can order all the drinks he wants
anytime, "The President of the United States, the big ministers of state,
the great bishops and shmishops and big shots everywhere, down to the lowest
factory worker with all his fierce pride, movie stars, executives and great
engineers and presidents of law firms and advertising firms with silk shirts
and neckties and great expensive traveling cases in which they place these
various expensive English imported hair brushes and shaving gear and pomades
and perfumes are all walking around with dirty azzoles! All you gotta do is
simply wash yourself with soap and water! it hasnt occurred to anybody in
America at all! it's one of the funniest things I've ever heard of! dont you
think it's marvelous that we're being called filthy unwashed beatniks but
we're the only ones walkin around with clean azzoles? " — The whole azzole
shot in fact had spread swiftly and everybody I knew and Dave knew from
coast to coast had embarked on this great crusade which I must say is a good
one — In fact in Big Sur I'd instituted a shelf in Monsanto's outhouse
where the soap must be kept and everyone had to bring a can of water there
on each trip — Monsanto hadn't heard about it yet, "Do you realize that
until we tell poor Lorenzo Monsanto the famous writer that he is walking
around with a dirty azzole he will be doing just that? " — "Let's go tell
him right now! " — "Why of course if we wait another minute
... and besides do you know what it does to people to walk around with
a dirty azzole? it leaves a great yawning guilt that they cant understand
all day, they go to work all cleaned up in the morning and you can smell all
that freshly laundered clothes and Eau de Cologne in the commute train yet
there's something gnawing at them, something's wrong, they know something's
wrong they don't know just what! " — We rush to tell Monsanto at once in
the book store around the corner. By now we're beginning to feel great...
Fagan has retired saying typically "Okay you guys go ahead and get drunk,
I'm goin home and spend a quiet evening in a hot bath with a book" "Home" is
also where Dave Wain and Ron Blake live — It's an old rooming house of four
stories on the edge of the Negro district of San Francisco where Dave, Ben,
Jonesy, a painter called Lanny Meadows, a mad French Canadian drinker called
Pascal and a Negro called Johnson all live in different rooms with their
clutter of rucksacks and floor mattresses and books and gear, each one
taking turns one day a week to go out and do all the shopping and come back
and cook up a big communal dinner in the kitchen — All ten or twelve of
them sharing the rent, and with that rotation of dinner, they end up living
comfortable lives with wild parties and girls rushing in, people bringing
bottles, all at about a minimum of seven dollars a week say
— It's a wonderful place but at the same time a little maddening, in
fact a whole lot maddening because the painter Lanny Meadows loves music and
has installed his Hi Fi speaker in the kitchen altho he applies the records
in a back room so the daily cook may be concentrating on his Mulligan stew
and all of a sudden Stravinsky's dinosaurs start dining overhead And at
night there are bottlecrashing parties usually supervised by wild Pascal who
is a sweet kid but crazy when he drinks A regular nuthouse actually and just
exactly the image of what the journalists want to say about the Beat
Generation nevertheless a harmless and pleasant agreement for young
bachelors and a good idea in the long run — Because you can rush into any
room and find the expert, like say Ben's room and ask "Hey what did
Bodhidharma say to the Second Patriarch? " — "He said go fuck yourself,
make your mind like a wall, dont pant after outside activities and dont bug
me with your outside plans" — "So the guy goes out and stands on his head
in the snow? " "No that was Fubar" — Or you go runnin into Dave Wain's room
and there he is sitting crosslegged on his mattress on the floor reading
Jane Austen, you ask "What's the best way to make beef Stroganoff? "...
"Beef Stroganoff is very simple, "t'aint nothin but a good well cooked beef
and onion stew that you let cool afterwards then you throw in mushrooms and
lotsa sour cream, I'll come down and show way soon's I finish this chapter
in this marvelous novel, I wanta find out what happens next" — Or you go
into the Negro's room and ask if you can borrow his tape recorder because
right at the moment some funny things are being said in the kitchen by
Duluoz and McLear and Monsanto and some newspaperman — Because the kitchen
was also the main talking room where everybody sat in a cluster of dishes
and ashtrays and all kinds of visitors came... The year before a beautiful
16 year old Japanese girl had come there just to interview me, for instance,
but chaperoned by a Chinese painter The phone rang consistently — Even wild
Negro hepcats from around the corner came in with bottles (Edward Kool and
several others) — There was Zen, jazz, booze, pot and all the works but it
was somehow obviated (as a supposedly degenerate idea) by the sight of a
"beatnik" carefully painting the wall of his room and clean white with nice
little red borders around the door and windowframes — Or someone is
sweeping out the livingroom. Itinerant visitors like me or Ron Blake always
had an extra mattress to sleep on.

12

But Dave is anxious and so am I to see great Cody who is always the
major part of my reason for journeying to the west coast so we call him up
to Los Gatos fifty miles away down the Santa Clara Valley and I hear his
dear sad voice saying "Been waitin for ya old buddy, come on down right
away, but I'll be goin to work at midnight so hurry up and you can visit me
at work soon's the boss leaves round two and I'll show you my new job of
tire recappin and see if you cant bring a little somethin like a girl or
sumptin, just kiddin, come on down pal... "
So there's old Willie waiting for us down on the street parked across
from the little pleasant Japanese liquor store where as usual, according to
our ritual, I run and get Pernod or Scotch or anything good while Dave
wheels around to pick me up at the store door, and I get in the front seat
at Dave's right where I belong all the time like old Honored Samuel Johnson
while everybody else that wants to come along has to scramble back there on
the mattress (a full mattress, the seats are out) and squat there or lie
down there and also generally keep silent because when Dave's got the wheel
of Willie in his hand and I've got the bottle in mine and we're off on a
trip the talking all comes from the front seat... "By God" yells Dave all
glad again, "it's just like old times Jack, gee old Willie's been sad for
ya, waiting for ya to come back — So now I'm gonna show ya how old Willie's
even improved with age, had him reconditioned in Reno last month, here he
goes, are you ready Willie? " and off we go and the beauty of it allthis
particular summer is that the front right seat is broken and just rocks back
and forth gently to every one of Dave's driving moves — It's like sitting
in a rocking chair on a porch only this is a moving porch and a porch to
talk on at that — And insteada watching old men pitch horseshoes from this
here talking porch it's all that fine white clean line in the middle of the
road as we go flying like birds over the Harrison ramps and whatnot Dave
always uses to sneak out of Frisco real fast and avoid all the traffic...
Soon we're set straight and pointed head on down beautiful fourlane Bayshore
Highway to that lovely Santa Clara Valley... But I'm amazed that after only
a few years the damn thing no longer has prune fields and vast beet fields
like at Lawrence when I was a brakeman on the Southern Pacific and even
after) it's one long row of houses right down the line fifty miles to San
Jose like a great monstrous Los Angeles beginning to grow south of Frisco.
At first it's beautiful to just watch that white line reel in to
Willie's snout but when I start looking around out the window there's just
endless housing tracts and new blue factories everywhere — Sez Dave "Yes
that's right, the population explosion is gonna cover every bit of backyard
dirt in America someday in fact they'll even have to start piling up friggin
levels of houses and others over that like your city City CITY till the
houses reach a hundred miles in the air in all directions of the map and
people looking at the earth from another planet with super telescopes will
see a prickly ball hanging in space — It's like real horrible when you come
to think of it, even us with our fancy talks, shit man it's all millions of
people and events piling up almost unimaginable now, like raving baboons
we'll all be piled on top of each other or one another or whatever you're
sposed to say — Hundreds of millions of hungry mouths raving for more more
more — And the sadness of it all is that the world hasn't any chance to
produce say a writer whose life could really actually touch all this life in
every detail like you always say, some writers could bring you sobbing thru
the bed fuckin bedcribs of the moon to see it all even unto the goddamned
last gory detail of some dismal robbery of the heart at dawn when no one
cares like Sinatra sings" ('When no one cares, " he sings in his low
baritone but resumes): "Some strict sweeper sweeping it all up. I mean the
incredible helplessness I felt Jack when Celine ended his Journey To The End
Of The Night by pissing in the Seine River at dawn there I am thinkin my God
there's probably somebody pissing in the Trenton River at dawn right now,
the Danube, the Ganges, the frozen Obi, the Yellow, the Parana, the
Willamette, the Merrimac in Missouri too, the Missouri itself, the Yuma, the
Amazon, the Thames, the Po, and so and so, it's so friggin endless it's like
poems endless everywhere and no one knows any bettern old Buddha you know
where he says it's like "There are immeasurable star misty aeons of
universes more numerous than the sands in all the galaxies, multiplied by a
billion lightyears of multiplication, in fact if I were to go on you'd be
scared and couldn't comprehend and you'd despair so much you'd drop dead, "
that's what he just about said in one of those sutras — Macrocosms and
microcosms and chillicosms and microbes and finally you get all these
marvelous books a man aint even got time to read em all, what you gonna do
in this already piled up multiple world when you have to think of the Book
of Songs, Faulkner, Cesar Birotteau, Shakespeare, Satyricons, Dantes, in
fact long stories guys tell you in bars, in fact the sutras themselves, Sir
Philip Sidney, Sterne, Ibn El Arabi, the copious Lope de Vega and the
uncopious goddamn Cervantes, shoo, then there's all those Catulluses and
Davids and radio listening skid row sages to contend with because they've
all got a million stories too and you too Ron Blake in the backseat shut up!
down to everything which is so much that it is of necessity dont you think
Nothing anyway, huh? " (expressing exactly the way I feel, of course).
And to corroborate all that about the too-much-ness of the world, in
fact, there's Stanley Popovich also in the back mattress next to Ron,
Stanley Popovich of New York suddenly arrived in San Francisco with Jamie
his Italian beauty girl but's going to leave her in a few days to go work
for the circus, a big tough Yugoslav kid who ran the Seven Arts Gallery in
New York with big bearded beatnik readings but now comes the circus and a
whole big on-the-road of his own — It's too much, in fact right this minute
he's started telling us about circus work — On top of all that old Cody is
up ahead with HIS thousand stories — We all agree it's1 too big to keep up
with, that we're surrounded by life, that we'll never understand it, so we
center it all in by swigging Scotch from the bottle and when it's empty I
run out of the car and buy another one, period.
13
But on the way to Cody's my madness already began to manifest itself in
a stranger way, another one of those signposts of something wrong I
mentioned a ways back: I thought I saw a flying saucer in the sky over Los
Gatos — From five miles away — I look and I see this thing flying along
and mention it to Dave who takes one brief look and says 'Ah it's only the
top of a radio tower" — It reminds me of the time I took a mescaline pill
and thought an airplane was a flying saucer (a strange story this, a man has
to be crazy to write it anyway).
But there's old Cody in the livingroom of his fine ranchito home sittin
over his chess set pondering a problem and right by the fresh woodfire in
the fireplace his wife's set out because she knows I love fireplaces — She
a good friend of mine too... The kids are sleeping in the back, it's about
eleven, and good old Cody shakes my hand again — Havent seen him for
several years because mainly he's just spent two years in San Quentin on a
stupid charge of possession of marijuana... He was on his way to work on the
railroad one night and was short on time and his driving license had been
already revoked for speeding so he saw two bearded bluejeaned beatniks
parked, asked them to trade a quick ride to work at the railroad station for
two sticks of tea, they complied and arrested him — They were disguised
policemen... For this great crime he spent two years in San Quentin in the
same cell with a murderous gunman — His job was sweeping out the cotton
mill room — I expect him to be all bitter and out of his head because of
this but strangely and magnificently he's become quieter, more radiant, more
patient, manly, more friendly even — And tho the wild frenzies of his old
road days with me have banked down he still has the same taut eager face and
supple muscles and looks like he's ready to go anytime — But actually loves
his home (paid for by railroad insurance when he broke his leg trying to
stop a boxcar from crashing), loves his wife in a way tho they fight some,
loves his kids and especially his little son Timmy John partly named after
me — Poor old, good old Cody sitting there with his chess set, wants
immediately to challenge somebody to a chess game but only has an hour to
talk to us before he goes to work supporting the family by rushing out and
pushing his Nash Rambler down the quiet Los Gatos suburb street, jumping in,
starting the motor, in fact his only complaint is that the Nash wont start
without a push — No bitter complaints about society whatever from this
grand and ideal man who really loves me moreover as if I deserved it, but
I'm bursting to explain everything to him, not even Big Sur but the past
several years, but there's no chance with everybody yakking — And in fact I
can see in Cody's eyes that he can see in my own eyes the regret we both
feel that recently we haven't had chances to talk whatever, like we used to
do driving across America and back in the old road days, too many people now
want to talk to us and tell us their stories, we've been hemmed in and
surrounded and outnumbered — The circle's closed in on the old heroes of
the night — But he says "However you guys, come on down round "bout one
when the boss leaves and watch me work and keep me company awhile before you
go back to the City" — I can see Dave Wain really loves him at once, and
Stanley Popovich too who's come along on this trip just to meet the fabled
"Dean Moriarty" — The name I give Cody in "On the Road" — But O, it breaks
my heart to see he's lost his beloved job on the railroad and after all the
seniority he'd piled up since 1948 and now is reduced to tire recapping and
dreary parole visits — All for two stick of wild loco weed that grows by
itself in Texas because God wanted it — And there over the bookshelf is the
old photo of me and Cody arm in arm in the early days on a sunny street — I
rush to explain to Cody what happened the year before when his religious
advisor at the prison had invited me to come to San Quentin to lecture the
religious class — Dave Wain was supposed to drive me and wait outside the
prison walls as I'd go in there alone, probably with a pepup nip bottle
hidden in my coat (I hoped) and I'd be led by big guards to the lecture room
of the prison and there would be sitting a hundred or so cons including Cody
probably all proud in the front row — And I would begin by telling them I
had been in jail myself once and that I had no right nevertheless to lecture
them on religion — But they're all lonely prisoners and dont care what I
talk about — The whole thing arranged, in any case, and on the big morning
I wake up instead dead drunk on a floor, it's already noon and too late,
Dave Wain is on the floor also, Willie's parked outside to take us to
Quentin for the lecture but it's too late — But now Cody says "It's alright
old buddy I understand" — Altho our friend Irwin had done it, lectured
there, but Irwin can do all sorta things like that being more social than I
am and capable of going in there as he did and reading his wildest poems
which set the prison yard humming with excitement tho I think he shouldna
done it after all because I say just to show up for any reason except
visiting inside a prison is still SIGNIFYING — And I tell this to Cody who
ponders a chess problem and says "Drinkin again, hey? " (if there's anything
he hates is to see me drink).
We help him push his Nash down the street, then drink awhile and talk
with Evelyn a beautiful blonde woman that young Ron Blake wants and even
Dave Wain wants but she's got her mind on other things and taking care of
the children who have to go to school and dancing classes in the morning and
hardly gets a word in edgewise anyway as we all yak and yell like fools to
impress her tho all she really wants is to be alone with me to talk about
Cody and his latest soul.
Which includes the fact of Billie Dabney his mistress who has
threatened to take Cody away completely from Evelyn, as I'll show later.
So we do go out to the San Jose highway to watch Cody recap tires —
There he is wearing goggles working like Vulcan at his forge, throwing tires
all over the place with fantastic strength, the good ones high up on a pile,
"This one's no good" down on another, bing, bang, talking all the time a
long fantastic lecture on tire recapping which has Dave Wain marvel with
amazement — ('My God he can do all that and even explain while he's doing
it') — But I just mention in connection with the fact that Dave Wain now
realizes why I've always loved Cody... Expecting to see a bitter ex con he
sees instead a martyr of the American Night in goggles in some dreary tire
shop at 2 A. M. making fellows laugh with joy with his funny explanations
yet at the same time to a T performing every bit of the work he's being paid
for — Rushing up and ripping tires off car wheels with a jicklo, clang,
throwing it on the machine, starting up big roaring steams but yelling
explanations over that, darting, bending, flinging, flaying, till Dave Wain
said he thought he was going to die laughing or cry right there on the spot.
So we drive back to town and go to the mad boarding-house to drink some
more and I pass out dead drunk on the floor as usual in that house, waking
up in the morning groaning far from my clean cot on the porch in Big Sur No
bluejays yakking for me to wake up any more, no gurgling creek, I'm back in
the grooky city and I'm trapped.

14

Instead there's the sound of bottles crashing in the living-room where
poor Lex Pascal is holding forth yelling, it reminds of the time a year ago
when Jarry Wagner's future wife got sore at Lex and threw a half gallonfull
of tokay across the room and hooked him right across the eye, thereupon
sailing to Japan to marry Jarry in a big Zen ceremony that made coast to
coast papers but all old Lex's got is a cut which I try to fix in the
bathroom upstairs saying "Hey, that cut's already stopped bleeding, you'll
be alright Lex" — "I'm French Canadian too" he says proudly and when Dave
and I and George Baso get ready to drive back to New York he gives me a St
Christopher medal as a goingaway gift — Lex the kind of guy shouldnt really
be living in this wild beat boardinghouse, should hide on a ranch somewhere,
powerful, goodlooking, full of crazy desire for women and booze and never
enough of either — So as the bottles crash again and the Hi Fi's playing
Beethoven's Solemn Mass I fall asleep on the floor.
Waking up the next morning groaning of course, but this is the big day
when we're going to go visit poor George Baso at the TB hospital in the
Valley — Dave perks me up right away bringing coffee or wine optional...
I'm on Ben Fagan's floor somehow, apparently I've harangued him till dawn
about Buddhism some Buddhist.
Complicated already but now suddenly appears Joey Rosenberg a strange
young kid from Oregon with a full beard and his hair growing right down to
his neck like Raul Castro, once the California High School high jump champ
who was only about five foot six but had made the incredible leap of six
foot nine over the bar! and shows his highjump ability too by the way he
dances around on light feet — A strange athlete who's suddenly decided
instead to become some sort of beat Jesus and in fact you see perfect purity
and sincerity in his young blue eyes — In fact his eyes are so pure you
don't notice the crazy hair and beard, and also he's wearing ragged but
strangely elegant clothing ('One of the first of the new Beat Dandies, "
McLear told me a few days later, "did you hear about that? there's a new
strange underground group of beatniks or whatever who wear special smooth
dandy clothes even tho it may just be a jean jacket with shino slacks
they'll always have strange beautiful shoes or shirts, or turn around and
wear fancy pants unpressed acourse but with torn sneakers') — Joey is
wearing something like brown soft garments like a tunic or something and his
shoes look like Las Vegas sports shoes — The moment he sees my battered
blue little sneakers that I'd used at Big Sur when my feet go sore, that is
in case my feet got sore on a rocky hike, he wants them for himself, he
wants to swap the snazzy Las Vegas sports shoes (pale leather, untooled) for
my silly little tightfitting tho perfect sneakers that in fact I was wearing
because the Monterey hike blisters were still hurting me — So we swap —
And I ask Dave Wain about him: Dave says: "He's one of the really strangest
sweetest guys I've ever known, showed up about a week ago I hear tell, they
asked him what he wanted to do and never answers, just smiles — He just
sorta wants to dig everything and just watch and enjoy and say nothing
particular about it... If someone's to ask him "Let's drive to New York"
he'd jump right for it without a word — On a sort of a pilgrimage, see,
with all that youth, us old fucks oughta take a lesson from him, in faith
too, he has faith, I can see it in his eyes, he has faith in any direction
he may take with anyone just like Christ I guess. "
It's strange that in a later revery I imagined myself walking across a
field to find the strange gang of pilgrims in Arkansas and Dave Wain was
sitting there saying "Shhh, He's sleeping, " "He" being Joey and all the
disciples are following him on a march to New York after which they expect
to keep going walking on water to the other shore — But of course (in my
revery even) I scoff and don't believe it (a kind of story daydreaming I
often do) but in the morning when I look into Joey Rosenberg's eyes I
instantly realize it IS Him, Jesus, because anyone (according to the rules
of my revery) who looks into those eyes is instantly convinced and converted
— So the revery continues into a long farfetched story ending with thinking
IBM machines trying to destroy this "Second Coming" etc. (but also, in
reality, a few months later I threw away his shoes in the ashcan back home
because I felt they had brought me bad luck and wishing I'd kept my blue
sneakers with the little holes in the toes! ) So anyway we get Joey and Ron
Blake who's always following Dave and go off to see Monsanto at the store,
our usual ritual, then across the corner to Mike's Place where we start off
the 10 A. M. with food, drink and a few games of pool at the tables along
the bar — Joey winning the game and a stranger poolshark you never saw with
his long Biblical hair bending to slide the cue stick smoothly through
completely professionally competent fingerstance and smashing home long
straight drives, like seeing Jesus shoot pool of course — And meanwhile all
the food these poor starved kids all three of them do pack in and eat! —
It's not every day they're with a drunken novelist with hundreds of dollars
to splurge on them, they order everything, spaghetti, follow that up with
Jumbo Hamburgers, follow that up with ice cream and pie and puddings, Dave
Wain has a huge appetite anyway but adds Manhattans and Martinis to the side
of his plate — I'm just wailing away on my old fatal double bourbons and
gingerale and I'll be sorry in a few days. Any drinker knows how the process
works: the first day you get drunk is okay, the morning after means a big
head but so you can kill that easy with a few more drinks and a meal, but if
you pass up the meal and go on to another night's drunk, and wake up to keep
the toot going, and continue on to the fourth day, there'll come one day
when the drinks wont take effect because you're chemically overloaded and
you'll have to sleep it off but cant sleep any more because it was alcohol
itself that made you sleep those last five nights, so delirium sets in —
Sleeplessness, sweat, trembling, a groaning feeling of weakness where your
arms are numb and useless, nightmares, (nightmares of death)... well,
there's more of that up later.
About noon which is now the peak of a golden blurry new day for me we
pick up Dave's girl Romana Swartz a big Rumanian monster beauty of some kind
(I mean with big purple eyes and very tall and big but Mae West big), Dave
whispers in my ear "You oughta see her walking around that Zen-East House in
those purple panties of hers, nothing else on, there's one married guy lives
there who goes crazy every time she goes down the hall tho I dont blame him,
would you? she's not trying to entice him or anybody she's just a nudist,
she believe in nudism and bygod she's going to practice it! " (the Zen-East
house being another sort of boardinghouse but this one for all kinds of
married people and single and some small bohemian type families all races
studying Subud or something, I never was there) — She's a big beautiful
brunette anyway in the line of taste you might attribute to every slaky
hungry sex slave in the world but also intelligent, well read, writes
poetry, is a Zen student, knows everything, is in fact just simply a big
healthy Rumanian Jewess who wants to marry a good hardy man and go live on a
farm in the valley, that's it...
The TB hospital is about two hours away through Trac and down the San
Joaquin Valley, Dave drives beautiful with Romana between us and me holding
the bottle again, it's bright beautiful California sunshine and prune
orchards out there zipping by... It's always fun to have a good driver and a
bottle and dark glasses on a fine sunny afternoon going somewhere
interesting, and all the good conversation as I said — Ron and Joey are on
the back mattress sitting crosslegged just like poor George Baso had sat on
that trip last year from Frisco to New York.
But the main thing I'd liked at once about that Japanese kid was what
he told me the first night I met him in that crazy kitchen of the Buchanan
Street house: from midnight to 6 A. M. in his slow methodical voice he gave
me his own tremendous version of the Life of Buddha beginning with infancy
and right down to the end... George's theory (he has many theories and has
actually run meditation classes with bells, just really a serious young lay
priest of Japanese Buddhism when all is said and done) is that Buddha did
not reject amorous love life with his wife and with his harem girls because
he was sexually disinterested but on the contrary had been taught in the
highest arts of lovemaking and eroticism possible in the India of that time,
when great tomes like the Kama Sutra were in the process of being developed,
tomes that give you instructions on every act, facet, approach, moment,
trick, lick, lock, bing and bang and slurp of how to make love with another
human being "male or female" insisted George: "He knew everything there is
to know about all kinds of sex so that when he abandoned the world of
pleasure to go be an ascetic in the forest everybody of course knew that he
wasn't putting it all down out of ignorance... It served to make people of
those times feel a marvelous respect for all his words — And he was just no
simple Casanova with a few frigid affairs across the years, man he went all
the way, he had ministers and special eunuchs and special women who taught
him love, special virgins were brought to him, he was acquainted with every
aspect of perversity and non perversity and as you know he was also a great
archer, horseman, he was just completely trained in all the arts of living
by his father's orders because his father wanted to make sure he'd NEVER
leave the palace — They used every trick in the books to entice him to a
life of pleasure and as you know they even had him happily married to a
beautiful girl called Yasodhara and he had a son with her Rahula and he also
had his harem which included dancing boys and everything in the books" then
George would go into every detail of this knowledge, like "He knew that the
phallus is held with the hand and moved inside the vagina with a rotary
movement, but this was only the first of several variations where there is
also the lowering down of the gal's hips so that the vulva you see recedes
and the phallus is introduced with a fast quick movement like stinging of a
wasp, or else the vulva is protruded by means of lifting up the hips high so
that the member is buried with a sudden rush right to the basis, or then he
can withdraw real teasing like, or concentrate on right or left side — And
then he knew all the gestures, words, expressions, what to do with a flower,
what not to do with a flower, how to drink the lip in all kinds of kissing
or how to crush kiss or soft kiss, man he was a genius in the beginning'...
and so on, George went all the way telling me this till 6 A. M. it being one
of the most fantastic Buddha Charitas I'd ever heard ending with George's
own perfect enunciation of the law of the Twelve Nirdanas whereby Buddha
just logically disconnected all creation and laid it bare for what it was,
under the Bo Tree, a chain of illusions — And on the trip to New York with
Dave and me up front talking all the way poor George just sat there on the
mattress for the most part very quiet and told us he was taking this trip to
find out if HE was traveling to New York or just the CAR (Willie the Jeep)
was traveling to New York or was it just the WHEELS were colling, or the
tires, or what — A Zen problem of some kind — So that when we'd see grain
elevators on the Plains of Oklahoma George would say quietly "Well it seems
to me that grain elevator is sorta waitin for the road to approach it" or
he'd say suddenly "While you guys was talkin just then about how to mix a
good Pernod Martini I just saw a white horse standing in an abandoned
storefront" — In Las Vegas we'd taken a good motel room and gone out to
play a little roulette, in St Louis we'd gone to see the great bellies of
the East St Louis hootchy kootchy joints where three of the most marvelous
young girls performed smiling directly at us as tho they knew all about
George and his theories about erogenous Buddha (there sits the monarch
observing the donzinggerls) and as tho they knew anyway all about Dave Wain
who whenever he see a beautiful girl says licking his lips "Yum Yum'...
But now George has TB and they tell me he may even die... Which adds to
that darkness in my mind, all these DEATH things piling up suddenly — But I
cant believe old Zen Master George is going to allow his body to die just
now tho it looks like it when we pass through the lawn and come to a ward of
beds and see him sitting dejected on the edge of his bed with his hair
hanging over his brow where before it was always combed back — He's in a
bathrobe and looks up at us almost displeased (but everybody is displeased
by unexpected visits from friends or relatives in a hospital) — Nobody
wants to be surprised on their hospital bed — He sighs and comes out to the
warm lawn with us and the expression on his face says "Well ah so you've
come to see me because I'm sick but what do you really want? " as tho all
the old humorous courage of the year before has now given away to a
profoundly deep 15 Japanese skepticism like that of a Samurai warrior in a
fit of suicidal depression (surprising me by its abject gloomy fearful
frown).
15
I mean it was like my first frightened realization of what to be
Japanese really meant — To be Japanese and not to believe in life any more
and to be gloomy like Beethoven yet to be Japanese in gloom, the gloom of
Basho behind it all, the huge thunderous scowl of Issa or of Shiki, kneeling
in the frost with the bowed head like the bowed-head-oblivion of all the old
horses of Japan long dust.
He sits there on the lawn bench looking down and when Dave asks him
"Well you gonna be alright soon George" he says simply "I don't know" — He
really means "I dont care" — And always warm and courteous with me he now
hardly pays any attention to me — He's a little nervous because the other
patients, GI vets, will see that he's received a visit from a bunch of
ragged beatniks including Joey Rosenberg who is bouncing around the lawn
looking at flowers with that bemused sincere smile — But little neat
George, just five feet five and a few pounds over that and so clean, with
his soft feathery hair like the hair of a child, his delicate hands, he just
stares at the ground — His answers come like an old man's (he's only 30) —
"I guess all the Dharma talk about everything is nothing is just sorta
sinking in my bones, " he concedes, which makes me shudder — (On the way
Dave's been telling us to be ready because George's changed so) — But I try
to keep things going, "Do you remember those dancing girls in St Louis? " —
"Yen, whore candy" (he's referring to a piece of perfumed cotton one of the
girls threw at us in her dance, which we tacked up later to a highway
accident cross we'd yanked out of the ground one blood red sunset in
Arizona, tacking this perfumed beautiful cotton right where the head of
Christ was so that when we brought the cross to New York naturally we had
everybody smelling it but George pointed out how beautiful we'd done all
this subconsciously because the net result was that all the hepcats of
Greenwich Village who came in to see us were picking up the cross and
putting their heads [noses] to it) — But George doesn't care any more —
And anyway it's time to leave.
But ah, as we're leaving and waving back at him and he's turned around
tentatively to go into the hospital I linger behind the others and turn
around several times to wave again — Finally I start to make a joke of it
by ducking around a corner and peeking out and waving again... He ducks
behind a bush and waves back I dart to a bush and peek out... Suddenly we're
two crazy hopeless sages goofing on a lawn — Finally as we part further and
further and he comes closer to the door we are making elaborate gestures and
down to the most infinitesimal like when he steps inside the door I wait
till I see him sticking a finger out — So from around my corner I stick out
a shoe — So from his door he sticks out an eye — So from my corner I stick
out nothing but just yell "Wu! " — So from his door he sticks out nothing
and says nothing
— So I hide in the corner and do nothing — But suddenly I burst out
and there HE is bursting out and we start waving gyrations and duck back to
our hiding places — Then I pull a big one by simply walking away rapidly
but suddenly I turn and wave again — He walking backwards and waving back
— The further I go now also walking backwards the more I wave —
Finally we're so far apart by about a hundred yards the game is almost
impossible but we continue somehow — Finally I see a distant sad little Zen
wave of hand
— I jump up into the air and gyrate both arms — He does the same —
He goes into the hospital but a moment later he's peeking out this time from
the ward window! — I'm behind a tree trunk thumbing my nose at him —
There's no end to it, in fact — The other kids are all back at the car
wondering what's keeping me — What's keeping me is that I know George will
get better and live and teach the joyful truth and George knows I know this,
that's why he's playing the game with me, the magic game of glad freedom
which is what Zen or for that matter the Japanese soul ultimately means I
say, "And someday I will go to Japan with George" I tell myself after we've
made our last little wave because I've heard the supper bell ring and seen
the other patients rush for the chow line and knowing George's fantastic
appetite wrapped in that little frail body I don't wanta hang him up tho he
nevertheless does one last trick: He throws a glass of water out the window
in a big froosh of water and I don't see him any more.
"Wotze mean by that? " I'm scratching my head going back to the car.

16

To complete this crazy day at 3 o'clock in the morning here I am
sitting in a car being driven 100 miles an hour around the sleeping streets
and hills and waterfronts of San Francisco, Dave's gone off to sleep with
Romana and the others are passed out and this crazy nextdoor neighbor of the
roominghouse (himself a Bohemian but also a laborer, a housepainter who
comes home with big muddy boots and has his little boy living with him the
wife has died) — I've been in his pad listening to booming loud Stan Getz
jazz on his Hi Fi and happened to mention I thought Dave Wain and Cody
Pomeray were the two greatest drivers in the world — "What? " he yells, a
big blond husky kid with a strange fixed smile, "man I used to drive the
getaway car! come on down I'll show ya! " — So almost dawn and here we are
cuttin down Buchanan and around the corner on screeching wheels and he opens
her up, goes zipping towards a red light so takes a sudden screeching left
and goes up a hill fullblast, when we come to the top of the hill I figger
he'll pause awhile to see what's over the top but he goes even faster and
practically flies off the hill and we head down one of those incredibly
steep San Fran streets with our snout pointed to the waters of the Bay and
he steps on the gas! we go sailing down a hundred m. p. h. to the bottom of
the hill where there's an intersection luckily with the light on green and
thru that we blast with just one little bump where the road crosses and
another bump where the street is dipping downhill again — We come down to
the waterfront and screech right In a minute we're soaring over the ramps
around the Bridge entrance and before I can gulp up a shot or two from my
last late bottle we're already parked back outside the pad on Buchanan —
The greatest driver in the world whoever he was and I never saw him again —
Bruce something or other — What a getaway.

17

I end up groaning drunk on the floor this time beside Dave's floor
mattress forgetting that he's not even there. But a strange thing happened
that morning I remember now: before Cody's call from downvalley: I'm feeling
hopelessly idiotically depressed again groaning to remember Tyke's dead and
remembering that sinking beach but at the side of the radiator in the toilet
lies a copy of Boswell's Johnson which we'd been discussing so happy in the
car: I open to any page then one more page and start reading from the top
left and suddenly I'm in an entirely perfect world again: old Doc Johnson
and Boswell are visiting a castle in Scotland belonging to a deceased friend
called Rorie More, they're drinking sherry by the great fireplace looking at
the picture of Rorie on the wall, the widow of Rorie is there, Johnson
suddenly says "Sir, here's what I would do to deal with the sword of Rorie
More" (the portrait shows old Rorie with his Highlands flinger) "I'd get
inside him with a dirk and stab him to my pleasure like an animal" and
bleary with hangover I realize that if there was any way for Johnson to
express his sorrow to the widow of Rorie More on the unfortunate
circumstance of his death, this was the way — So pitiful, irrational, yet
perfect — I rush down to the kitchen where Dave Wain and some others are
already eating breakfast of sorts and start reading the whole thing to the
lot of them — Jonesy looks at me askance over his pipe for being so
literary so early in the morning but I'm not being literary at all — Again
I see death, the death of Rorie More, but Johnson's response to death is
ideal and so ideal I only wish old Johnson be sitting in the kitchen now —
(Help! I'm thinking).
The call comes from Cody in Los Gatos that he lost his job tire
recapping — "Because we were there last night? " — 'No no something
entirely different, he's gotta lay off some men because his mortgage is
bleeding him and all that and some girl is tryna sue him for forging a check
and all that, so man I've got to find another job but I have to pay the rent
and everything's all fucked up down here, Oh old buddy how about, cant you,
I plead or I don't plead, or honestly, Jack, ah, lend me a hundred dollars
willya? " — 'By God Cody I'll be right down and GIVE you a hundred
dollars'... "You mean you'll really do that, listen just to lend to me is
enough but if you insist, hm" (fluttering his eyelashes over the phone
because he knows I mean it) "you old loverboy you, how you gonna get down
here there and give me that money there son and make my old heart glad" —
"I'll have Dave drive me down" — "Okay I'll pay the rent with it right away
and because it's now Friday, why, Thursday or whatever, that's right
Thursday, why I dont have to be lookin for a new job till next Monday so you
can stay here and we'll have a long weekend just goofin and talkin boy like
we used to do, I can demolish you at chess or we can watch a baseball game"
and in a whisper "and we can sneak into the City see and see my purty baby"
— So I ask Dave Wain and yes he's ready to go anytime, he's just following
me like I often follow people myself, and so off we go again.
And on the way we drop in on Monsanto at the bookstore and the idea
suddenly comes to me for Dave and me and Cody to go to the cabin and spend a
big quiet crazy weekend (how? ) but when Monsanto hears this idea he'll come
too, in fact he'll bring his little Chinese buddy Arthur Ma and we'll catch
McLear at Santa Cruz and go visit Henry Miller and suddenly another big huge
ball is begun. So there's Willie waiting down on the street, I go to the
store, buy the bottle, Dave wheels Willie around, Ron Blake and now Ben
Fagan are on the back mattress, I'm sitting in my front seat rocking chair
as now in broad afternoon we go blattin again down that Bay Shore highway to
see old Cody and Monsanto's in back of us in his jeep with Arthur Ma, two
jeeps now, and about to be two more as I'll show — Coming to Cody's in mid
afternoon, his own house already filled with visitors (local Los Gatos
literaries and all kinds of people the phone there ringing continually too)
and Cody says to Evelyn "I'll just spend a couple days with Jack and the
gang like the old days and look for a job Monday" — "Okay" — So we all go
to a wonderful pizza restaurant in Los Gatos where the pizzas are piled an
inch high with mushrooms and meat and anchovies or anything you want, I cash
a travelers check at the supermarket, Cody takes the 100 in cash, gives it
to Evelyn in the restaurant, and later that day the two jeeps resume down to
Monterey and down that blasted road I walked on blistered feet back to the
frightful bridge at Raton Canyon And I'd thought I'd never see the place
again. But now I was coming back loaded with observers. The sight of the
canyon down there as we renegotiated the mountain road made me bite my lip
with marvel and sadness.

18

It's as familiar as an old face in an old photograph as tho I'm gone a
million years from all that sun shaded brush on rocks and that heartless
blue of the sea washing white on yellow sand, those rills of yellow arroyo
running down mighty cliff shoulders, those distant blue meadows, that whole
ponderous groaning upheaval so strange to see after the last several days of
just looking at little faces and mouths of people As tho nature had a
Gargantuan leprous face of its own with broad nostrils and huge bags under
its eyes and a mouth big enough to swallow five thousand jeepster
stationwagons and ten thousand Dave Wains and Cody Pomerays without a sigh
of reminiscence or regret — There it is, every sad contour of my valley,
the gaps, the Mien Mo captop mountain again, the dreaming woods below our
high shelved road, suddenly indeed the sight of poor Alf again far way
grazing in the mid afternoon by the corral fence — And there's the creek
bouncing along as tho nothing had ever happened elsewhere and even in the
daytime somehow dark and hungry looking in its deeper tangled grass. Cody's
never seen this country before altho he's an old Californian by now, I can
see he's very impressed and even glad he's come out on a little jaunt with
the boys and with me and is seeing a grand sight — He's like a little boy
again now for the first time in years because he's like let out of school,
no job, the bills paid, nothing to do but gratefully amuse me, his eyes are
shining — In fact ever since he's come out of San Quentin there's been
something hauntedly boyish about him as tho prison walls had taken all the
adult dark tenseness out of him — In fact every evening after supper in the
cell he shared with the quiet gunman he'd bent his serious head to a daily
letter or at least every-other-day letter full of philosophical and
religious musings to his mistress Billie... And when you're in bed in jail
after lights out and you're not sleepy there's ample time to just remember
the world and indeed savor its sweetness if any (altho it's always sweet to
remember it in jail tho harder in prison, as Genet shows) with the result
that he'd not only come to a chastisement of his bashing bitternesses (and
of course it's always good to get away from alcohol and excessive smoking
for two years) (and all that regular sleep) he was just like a kid again,
but as I say that haunting kidlikeness I think all ex cons seem to have when
they've just come out — In seeking to severely penalize criminals society
by putting the criminals away behind safe walls actually provide them with
the means of greater strength for future atrocities glorious and otherwise
— "Well I'll be damned" he keeps saying as he sees those bluffs and cliffs
and hanging vines and dead trees, "you mean to tell me you ben alone here
for three weeks, why I wouldn't dare that... must be awful at night
... looka that old mule down there... man, dig the redwood country way
back in... reminds me of old Colorady b'god when I used to steal a car every
day and drive out to hills like this with a fresh little high school
sumptin" — "Yum Yum, " says Dave Wain emphatically turning that big goofy
look to us from his driving wheel with his big mad feverish shining eyes
full of yumyum and yabyum too — "S'matter with you boys not making
extensive plans to bring a bevy of schoolgirls down there to wile away our
conversation pieces thar" says Cody real relaxed and talking sadly. Behind
us the Monsanto jeepster follows doggedly — Passing thru Monterey Monsanto
has already called PatMcLear, staying for the summer with wife and kid in
Santa Cruz, McLear with his own jeepster is following us a few miles down
the highway — It's a big Big Sur day.
We wheel downhill to cross the creek and at the corral fence I proudly
get out to officially open the gate and let the cars through We go bumping
down the two-rutted lane to the cabin and park My heart sinks to see the
cabin. To see the cabin so sad and almost human waiting there for me as if
forever, to hear my little neat gurgling creek resuming its song just for
me, to see the very same bluejays still waiting in the tree for me and maybe
mad at me now they see I'm back because I havent been there to lay out their
Cherios along the porch rail every blessed morning- And in fact first thing
I do is rush inside and get them some food and lay it out — But so many
people around now they're afraid to try it.
Monsanto all decked out in his old clothes and looking forward to a
wine and talkfest weekend in his pleasant cabin takes the big sweet axe down
from the wall nails and goes out and starts hammering at a huge log — In
fact it's really a half of a tree that fell there years ago and's been
hammered at intermittently but now he's bound he's going to crack it in half
and again in half so we can then start splitting it down the middle for huge
bonfire type logs — Meanwhile little Arthur Ma who never goes anywhere
without his drawing paper and his Yellowjack felt tip pencils is already
seated in my chair on the porch (wearing my hat now too) drawing one of his
interminable pictures, he'll do twenty-five a day and twenty-five the next
day too — He'll talk and go on drawing — He has felt tips of all colors,
red, blue, yellow, green, black, he draws marvelous subconscious glurbs and
can also do excellent objective scenes or anything he wants on to
cartoons... Dave is taking my rucksack and his rucksack out of Willie and
throwing them into the cabin, Ben Fagan is wandering around near the creek
puffing on his pipe with a happy bhikku smile, Ron Blake is unpacking the
steaks we bought enroute in Monterey and I'm already flicking the plastics
off the top of bottles with that expert twitch and twist you only get to
learn after years of winoing in alleys east and west. Still the same, the
fog is blowing over the walls of the canyon obscuring the sun but the sun
keeps fighting back — The inside of the cabin with the fire finally going
is still the dear lovable abode now as sharp in my mind as I look at it as
an unusually well focused snapshot — The sprig of ferns still stands in a
glass of water, the books are there, the neat groceries ranged along the
wall shelves — I feel excited to be with the gang but there's a hidden
sadness too and which is expressed later by Monsanto when he says "This is
the kind of place where a person should really be alone, you know? When you
bring a big gang here it somehow desecrates it not that I'm referring to us
or anybody in particular? there's such a sad sweetness to those trees as tho
yells shouldnt insult them or conversation only" — Which is just the way I
feel too.
In a gang we all go down the path towards the sea, passing underneath
"That sonofabitch bridge" Cody calls it looking up with horror... "That
thing's enough to scare anybody away" — But worst of all for an old driver
like Cody, and Dave too, is to see that upended old chassis in the sand,
they spend a half hour poking around the wreckage and shaking their heads —
We kick around the beach awhile and decide to come back at night with
bottles and flashlights and build a huge bonfire, now it's time to get back
to the cabin and cook those steaks and have a ball, and there's McLear's
jeep already arrived and parked and there's McLear himself and that
beautiful blonde wife of his in her tight blue jeans that makes Dave say
"Yum yum" and Cody just say "Yes, that's right, yes, that's right, ah hum
honey, yes. "

19

A roaring drinking bout begins deep in the canyon — Fog nightfall
sends cold seeping into the windows so all these softies demand that the
wood windows be closed so we all sit there in the glow of the one lamp
coughing in the smoke but they dont care — They think it's just the steaks
smoking over the fire — I have one of the jugs in my hand and I won't let
go — McLear is the handsome young poet who's just written the" most
fantastic poem in America, called "Dark Brown', which is every detail of his
and his wife's body described in ecstatic union and communion and inside out
and everywhichaway and not only that he insists on reading it to us — But I
wanta read my "Sea" poem too — But Cody and Dave Wain are talking about
something else and that silly kid Ron Blake is singing like Chet Baker —
Arthur Ma is drawing in the corner, and it sorta goes like this generally:
"That's what old men do, Cody, they drive slowly backwards in Safeway
Supermarket parking lots" — "Yes that's right, I was tellin you about that
bicycle of mine but that's what they do yes you see that's because while the
old woman is shoppin in that store they figure they'll park a little closer
to the entrance and so they spend a half hour to think their big move out
and they back in out slowly from their slot, can hardly turn around to see
what's in back, usually nothin there, then they wheel real slow and trembly
to that slot they picked but all of a sudden some cat jumps in it with his
pickup and them old men is scratchin their heads saying and whining "Owww,
these young fellers nowadays" and all that obvious, ah, yes, but that
BICYCLE of mine in Denver I tell you I had it twisted and that wheel used to
wobble so by necissity I had to invent a new way to maneuver them handlebars
see... " — 'Hey Cody have a drink, " I'm yelling in his ear and meanwhile
McLear is reading: "Kiss my thighs in darkness the pit of fire" and Monsanto
is chuckling saying to Fagan: "So this crazy character comes down stairs and
asking for a copy of Aleister Crowley and I didnt know "bout that till you
told me the other day, then on the way out I see him sneak a book off the
shelf but he puts another one in its place that he got out of his pocket,
and the book is a novel by somebody called Denton Welch all about this young
kid in China wanderin around the streets like real romantic young Truman
Capote only it's China" and Arthur Ma suddenly yells: "Hold still you buncha
bastards, I got a hole in my eye" and generally the way parties go, and so
on, ending with the steak dinner (I dont even touch a bite but just drink
on), then the big bonfire on the beach to which we march all in one
armswinging gang, I've gotten the idea in my head I'm the leader of a
guerilla warfare unit and I'm marching ahead the lieutenant giving orders,
with all our flashlights and yells we come swarming down the narrow path
going "Hup one two three" and challenging the enemy to come out of hiding,
some guerillas. Monsanto that old woodsman starts a huge bonfire on the
beach that can be seen flaring from miles away, cars passing across the
bridge way up there can see there's a party goin on in the hole of night, in
fact the bonfire lights up the eerie weird beams and staunches of the bridge
almost all the way up, giant shadows dance on the rocks — The sea swirls up
but seems subdued — It's not like being alone down in the vast hell writing
the sounds of the sea.
The night ending with everybody passing out exhausted on cots, in
sleepingbags outside (McLear goes home with wife) but Arthur Ma and I by the
late fire keep up yelling spontaneous questions and answers right till dawn
like "Who told you you had a hat on your head? " — "My head never questions
hats" — "What's the matter with your liver training? " — 'My liver
training got involved in kidney work" — (and here again another great
gigantic little Oriental friend for me, an eastcoaster who's never known
Chinese or Japanese kids, on the West coast it's quite common but for an
eastcoaster like me it's amazing and what with all my earlier studies in Zen
and Chan and Tao) — (And Arthur also being a gentle small soft-haired
seemingly soft little Oriental goofnik) And we come to great chanted
statements, taking turns, without a pause to think, just one then the other,
bing and bang, the beauty of them being that while one guy is yelling like
(me):... "Tonight the full apogee August moon will out, early with a
jaundiced tint, and pop angels all over my rooftop along with Devas
sprinkling flowers" (any kind of nonsense being the rule) the other guy has
time not only to figure the next statement but can take off from the
subconscious arousement of an idea from "angels all over my rooftop" and so
can yell without thinking an answer the stupider or rather the more
unexpectedly insaner sillier brighter it is the better 'Pilgrims dropping
turds and sweet nemacular nameless railroad trains from heaven with
omnipotent youths bearing monkey women that will stomp through the stage
waiting for the moment when by pinching myself I prove that a thought is
like a touch" — But this is only the beginning because now we know the
routine and get better and better till at dawn I seem to recall we were so
fantastically brilliant (while everyone snored) the skies must have shook to
hear it and not just foil: let's see if I can recreate at least the style of
this game:
ARTHUR: "When are you going to become the Eighth Patriarch? "
ME: "As soon as you give me that old motheaten sweater" — (Much better
than that, forget this for now, because I want to talk first about Arthur Ma
and try again to duplicate our feat).

20

As I say my first little Chinese friend, I keep saying "little" George
and "little" Arthur but the fact is they were both small anyway — Altho
George talked slowly and was a little absent from everything in the way of a
Zen Master actually who realizes that everything is indifferent anyway,
Arthur was friendlier, warmer in a way, curious and always asking questions,
more active than George with his constant draw-ng, and of course Chinese
instead of Japanese — He wanted me to meet his father the following weeks
— He was Mon-santo's best friend at the time and they made an extremely
strange pair going down the street together, the big ruddy happy man with
the crewcut and corduroy jacket and sometimes pipe in mouth, and the little
childlike Chinese boy who looked so young most bartenders wouldn't serve him
tho he was actually 30 years old — Nevertheless the son of a famous
Chinatown family and Chinatown is right back there behind the fabled beatnik
streets of Frisco — Also Arthur was a tremendous little loverboy who had
fabulously beautiful girls on the line and however'd just separated from his
wife, a girl I never saw but Monsanto told me she was the most beautiful
Negro girl in the world — Arthur came from a large family but as a painter
and a Bohemian his family disapproved of him now so he lived alone in a
comfortable old hotel on North Beach tho sometimes he went around the corner
into Chinatown to visit his father who sat in the back of his Chinese
general store brooding among his countless poems written swiftly in Chinese
stroke on pieces of beautiful colored paper which he then hanged from the
ceiling of his little cubicle — There he sat, clean, neat, almost shiney,
wondering about what poem to write next but his keen little eyes always
jumping to the street door to see who's going by and if someone came into
the shop itself he knew at once who it was and for what — He was in fact
the best friend and trusted adviser of Chiang Kai Shek in America, true and
no lie — But Arthur himself was in favor of the Red Chinese which was a
family matter and a Chinese matter I had nothing to say about and didnt
interest me except insofar as it gave a dramatic picture of father and son
in an old culture — The point of the matter anyway being that he was
goofing with me just like George had done and making me happy somehow like
George had done — Something anciently familiar about his loyal presence
made me wonder if I'd ever lived before in some other lifetime in China or
if he'd been an Occidental himself in a previous lifetime of his own
involved with mine somewhere else than China — The pity of it is that I
have no record of what we were yelling and announcing back and forth as the
birds woke up outside but it went generally like this: — ME: "Unless
someone sticks a hot iron in my heart or heaps up Evil Karma like tit and
tat the pile of that and pulls my mother out her bed to slay her before my
damning human eyes... "
ARTHUR: "And I break my hand on heads... "
M E: "Everytime you throw a rock at a cat from your glass house you
heap upon yourself the automatic Stanley Gould winter so dark of death after
death, and growing old
ARTHUR: "Because lady those ashcans'll bite you back and be cold too...
"
ME: "And your son will never rest in the imperturbable knowledge that
what he thinks he thinks as well as what he does he thinks as well as what
he feels he thinks as well as future that... "
ARTHUR: "Future that my damn old sword cutter Paisan Pasha lost the
Preakness again... "
ME: "Tonight the moon shall witness angels trooping at the baby's
window where inside he gurgles in his pewk looking with mewling eyes for
babyside waterfall lambikin hillside the day the little Arab shepherd boy
hugged the babylamb to heart while the mother bleeted at his bay heel... "
ARTHUR: "And so Joe the sillicks killit no not... "
ME: "Shhhhoww graaa... "
ARTHUR: "Wind and carstart... "
ME: "The angels Devas monsters Asuras Devadattas Ved-antas McLaughlins
Stones will hue and hurl in hell if they dont love the lamb the lamb the
lamb of hell lambchop... "
ARTHUR: "Why did Scott Fitzgerald keep a notebook? "
ME: "Such a marvelous notebook... "
ARTHUR: "Komi donera ness pata sutyamp anda wanda vesnoki shadakiroo
paryoumemga sikarem nora sarkadium baron roy kellegiam myorki ayastuna
haidanseetzel ampho andiam yerka yama chelmsford alya bonneavance koroom
cemanda versel... "
ME: "The a6th Annual concert of the Armenian Convention? "

21

Incidentally I forgot to mention that during the three weeks alone the
stars had not come out at all, not even for one minute on any night, it was
the foggy season, except the very last night when I was getting ready to
leave — Now the stars were out every night, the sun shone considerably
longer but a sinister wind accompanied the Autumn in Big Sur: it seemed like
the whole Pacific Ocean was blowing with all its might right into Raton
Canyon and also over the high gap from another end causing all the trees to
shudder as the big groaning howl came newsing and noising from downcanyon,
when it hit there was raised a roar of noise I didn't like — It seemed ill
omened to me somewhere... It was much better to have fog and silence and
quiet trees — Now the whole canyon by one blast could be led screaming and
waving in all directions in such a confused mass that even the fellows with
me were a little surprised to see it — It was too big a wind for such a
little canyon.
This development also prevented the constant hearing of the reassuring
creek. One good thing was that when jet planes broke the sound barrier
overhead the wind dispersed the clap of empty thunder they caused, because
during the foggy season the noise would come down into the canyon,
concentrate there, and rock the house like an explosion making me think the
first time (alone) that somebody'd set off a blast of dynamite nearby.
While I woke up groaning and sick there was plenty of wine right there
to start me off with the hounds of hair, so okay, but Monsanto had retired
early and typically sensibly to sleep by the creek and now he was awake
singing swooshing his whole head into the creek and going Brrrrr and rubbing
his hands for a new day — Dave Wain made breakfast with his usual lecture
"Now the real way to fry eggs is to put a cover over them so that they can
have that neat basted white look on the yellows, soon's I get this pancake
batter ready we'll start on them" — My list of groceries was so all
inclusive in the beginning it was now feeding guerilla troops.
A big axe chopping contest began after breakfast, some of us sitting
watching on the porch and the performers down below hacking away at the tree
trunk which was over a foot thick'- They were chopping off two foot chunks,
no easy job — I realized you can always study the character of a man by the
way he chops wood — Monsanto an old lumberman up in Maine as I say now
showed us how he conducted his whole life in fact by the way he took neat
little short handled chops from both left and right angles getting his work
done in reasonably short time without too much sweat — But his strokes were
rapid — Whereas old Fagan pipe-in-mouth slogged away I guess the way he
learned in Oregon and in the Northwest fire schools, also getting his job
done, silently, not a word — But Cody's fantastic fiery character showed in
the way he went at the log with horrible force, when he brought down the axe
with all his might and holding it far at the end you could hear the whole
treetrunk groaning the whole length inside, runk, sometimes you could hear a
lengthwise cracking going on, he is really very strong and he brought that
axe down so hard his feet left the earth when it hit — He chopped off his
log with the fury of a Greek god — nevertheless it took him longer and much
more sweat than Monsanto
— "Used to do this in a workgang in southern Arizony" he said,
whopping one down that made the whole treetrunk dance off the ground — But
it was like an example of vast but senseless strength, a picture of poor
Cody's life and in a sense my own — I too chopped with all my might and got
madder and went faster and raked the log but took more time than Monsanto
who watched us smiling — Little Arthur thereupon tried his luck but gave up
after five strokes... The axe was like to carry him away anyway... Then Dave
Wain demonstrated with big easy strokes and in no time we had five huge logs
to use — But now it was time to get in the cars (McLear had re-arrived) and
go driving south down the coast highway to a hot springs bath house down
there, which sounded good to me at first. But the new Big Sur Autumn was now
all winey sparkling blue which made the terribleness and giantness of the
coast all the more clear to see in all its gruesome splendor, miles and
miles of it snaking away south, our three jeeps twisting and turning the
increasing curves, sheer drops at our sides, further ghostly high bridges to
cross with smashings below — Tho all the boys are wowing to see it — To me
it's just an inhospitable madhouse of the earth, I've seen it enough and
even swallowed it in that deep breath — The boys reassure me the hot
springs bath will do me good (they see I'm gloomy now hungover for good) but
when we arrive my heart sinks again as McLear points out to sea from the
balcony of the outdoor pools: "Look out there floating in the sea weeds, a
dead otter! " — And sure enough it is a dead otter I guess, a big brown
pale lump floating up and down mournfully with the swells and ghastly weeds,
my otter, my dear otter, my dear otter I'd written poems about
— "Why did he die? " I ask myself in despair — "Why do they do that?
" — "What's the sense of all this? " — All the fellows are shading their
eyes to get a better look at the big peaceful tortured hunk of seacow out
there as tho it's something of passing interest while tome it's a blow
across the eyes and down into my heart — The hot water pools are steaming,
Fagan and Monsanto and the others are all sitting peacefully up to their
necks, they're all naked, but there's a gang of fairies also there naked all
standing around in various bath house postures that make me hesitate to take
my clothes off just on general principles — In fact Cody doesnt even bother
to do anything but lie down with his clothes on in the sun, on the balcony
table, and just smoke — But I borrow McLear's yellow bathingsuit and get in
— "What ya wearing a bathingsuit in a hot springs pool for boy? " says
Fagan chuckling — With horror I realize there's spermatazoa floating in the
hot water... I look and I see the other men (the fairies) all taking good
long looks at Ron Blake who stands there facing the sea with his arse for
all to behold, not to mention McLear and Dave Wain too — But it's very
typical of me and Cody that we wont undress in this situation (we were both
raised Catholics? ) — Supposedly the big sex heroes of our generation, in
fact — You might think — But the combination of the strange silent
watching fairy-men, and the dead otter out there, and the spermatazoa in the
pools makes me sick, not to mention that when somebody informs me this bath
house is owned by the young writer Kevin Cudahy whom I knew very well in New
York and I ask one of the younger strangers where's Kevin Cudahy he doesnt
even deign to reply — Thinking he hasnt heard me I ask again, no reply, no
notice, I ask a third time, this time he gets up and stalks out angrily to
the locker rooms — It all adds up to the confusion that's beginning to pile
up in my battered drinking brain anyway, the constant reminders of death not
the least of which was the death of my peaceful love of Raton Canyon now
suddenly becoming a horror.
From the baths we go to Nepenthe which is a beautiful cliff top
restaurant with vast outdoor patio, with excellent food, excellent waiters
and management, good drinks, chess tables, chairs and tables to just sit in
the sun and look at the grand coast — Here we all sit at various tables and
Cody starts playing chess with everybody will join while he's chomping away
at those marvelous hamburgers called Heavenburgers (huge with all the side
works) — Cody doesn't like to just sit around and lightly chat away, he's
the kind of guy if he's going to talk he has to do all the talking himself
for hours till everything is exhaustedly explained, sans that he just wants
to bend over a chessboard and say "He he heh, old Scrooge is saving up a
pawn hey? cak! I got ya! " — But while I'm sitting there discussing
literature with McLear and Monsanto suddenly a strange couple of gentlemen
nearby strike up an acquaintance — One of them is a youngster who says he
is a lieutenant in the Army — I instantly (drunk on fifth Manhattan by now)
go into my theory of guerilla warfare based on my observations the night
before when it did seriously occur to me that if Monsanto, Arthur, Cody,
Dave, Ben, Ron Blake and I were all members of one fighting unit (and all
carrying canteens of booze on our belts) it would be very difficult for the
enemy to hurt any of us because we'd be, as dear friends, watching so
desperately closely over one another, which I tell the first lieutenant,
which attracts the interest of the older man who admits that he's a GENERAL
in the Army — There are also some further homosexuals at a separate table
which prompts Dave Wain to look up from the chess game at one quiet drowsy
point and announce in his dry twang "Under redwood beams, people talking
about homosexuality and war... call it my Nepenthe Haiku" — "Yass" says
Cody checkmating him "see what you can ku about that m'boy and get out of
there and I'll noose you with my queen, dear. " I mention the general only
because there is also some-thing sinister about the fact that during this
long binge I came across him and another general, two strange generals, and
I'd never met any generals in my life — This first general was strange
because he seemed too polite and yet there was something sinister about his
steely eyes behind goof darkglasses — Something sinister too about the
first lieutenant who guessed who we were (the San Francisco poets, a major
nucleus of them indeed) and didn't seem at all pleased tho the general
seemed amused — Nevertheless in a sinister way the general seemed to take
great interest in my theory about buddy units for guerilla warfare and when
President Kennedy about a year later ordered just such a new scheme for part
of our armed forces I wondered (still crazy even then but for new reasons)
if the general had got an idea from me... The second general, even stranger,
coming up, occurred when I was even more far gone.
Manhattans and more Manhattans and finally when we got back to the
cabin in late afternoon I was feeling good but realized I was going to be
finished tomorrow — But poor young Ron Blake asked me if he could stay with
me in the cabin, the others were all going back to the city in the three
cars, I couldn't think of any way to reject his request in a harmless way so
said yes... So when they all left suddenly I was alone with this mad beatnik
kid singing me songs and all I wanta do is sleep — But I've got to make the
best of it and not disappoint his believing heart. Because after all the
poor kid actually believes that there's something noble and idealistic and
kind about all this beat stuff, and I'm supposed to be the King of the
Beatniks according to the newspapers, so but at the same time I'm sick and
tired of all the endless enthusiasms of new young kids trying to know me and
pour out all their lives into me so that I'll jump up and down and say yes
yes that's right, which I cant do any more — My reason for coming to Big
Sur for the summer being precisely to get away from that sort of thing —
Like those pathetic live highschool kids who all came to my door in Long
Island one night wearing jackets that said "Dharma Bums" on them, all
expecting me to be 25 years old according to a mistake on a book jacket and
here I am old enough to be their father — But no, hep swinging young jazzy
Ron wants to dig everything, go to the beach, run and romp and sing, talk,
write tunes, write stories, climb mountains, go hiking, see everything, do
everything with everybody But having one last quart of port with me I agree
to follow him to the beach.
We go down the old sad path of the bhikku and suddenly I see a dead
mouse in the grass — "A wee dead mousie" I say cleverly poetically but
suddenly I realize and remember now for the first time how I've left the
cover off the rat poison in Monsanto's shelf and so this is my mouse — It's
lying there dead — Like the otter in the sea — It's my own personal mouse
that I've carefully fed chocolate and cheese all summer but once again I've
unconsciously sabotaged all these great plans of mine to be kind to living
beings even bugs, once again I've murdered a mouse one way or the other —
And on top of that when we come to the place where the garter snake usually
lie; sunning itself, and I bring it to Ron's attention, he suddenly yells
"LOOKOUT! you never can tell what kind of snake it is! " which really scares
me, my heart pounds with horroi — My little friend the garter snake turns
therefore with my head from a living being with a long green body into the
evil serpent of Big Sur.
On top of that, at the surf, where long streamers o: hollow sea weed
always lie around drying in the sun some of them huge, like living bodies
with skin, pieces of living material that always made me sad somehow, here's
the young hepcat lifting them up and dancing a dervish around the beach with
them, turning my Sur into something sea-change — Something brainchange.
All that night by lamplight we sing and yell songs which is okay but in
the morning the bottle is gone and I wake up with the "final horrors" again,
precisely the way I woke up in the Frisco skidrow room before escaping down
here, it's all caught up with me again, I can hear myself again whining "Why
does God torture me? " — But anybody who's never had delirium tremens even
in their early stages may not understand that it's not so much a physical
pain but a mental anguish indescribable to those ignorant people who dont
drink and accuse drinkers of irresponsibility — The mental anguish is so
intense that you feel you have betrayed your very birth, the efforts nay the
birth pangs of your mother when she bore you and delivered you to the world,
you've betrayed every effort your father ever made to feed you and raise you
and make you strong and my God even educate you for "life', you feel a guilt
so deep you identify yourself with the devil and God seems far away
abandoning you to your sick silliness — You feel sick in the greatest sense
of the word, breathing without believing in it, sicksicksick, your soul
groans, you look at your helpless hands as tho they were on fire and you
cant move to help, you look at the world with dead eyes, there's on your
face an expression of incalculable repining like a constipated angel on a
cloud — In fact it's actually a cancerous look you throw on the world,
through browngray wool fuds over your eyes — Your tongue is white and
disgusting, your teeth are stained, your hair seems to have dried out
overnight, there are huge mucks in the corners of your eyes, greases on your
nose, froth at the sides of your mouth: in short that very disgusting and
well-known hideousness everybody knows who's walked past a city street drunk
in the Boweries of the world... But there's no joy at all, people say "Oh
well he's drunk and happy let him sleep it off — The poor drunkard is
crying... He's crying for his mother and father and great brother and great
friend, he's crying for help — He tries to pull himself together by moving
one shoe nearer to his foot and he cant even do that properly, he'll drop
the shoe, or knock something over, he'll do something invariably that'll
start him crying again — He'll want to bury his face in his hands and moan
for mercy and he knows there is none — Not only because he doesn't deserve
it but there's no such thing anyway — Because he looks up at the blue sky
and there's nothing there but empty space making a big face at him He looks
at the world, it's sticking its tongue out at him and once that mask is
removed it's looking at him with hollow big red eyes like his own eyes — He
may see the earth move but there's no significance of any particular kind to
attach to that — One little unexpected noise behind him will make him snarl
in rage — He'll pull and tug at his poor stained shirt — He feels like
rubbing his face into something that isn't. His socks are thick tired moisty
slimes — The beard on his cheeks itches the running sweats and annoys the
tortured mouth — There's a twisted feeling of no-more, never-again, agh...
What was beautiful and clean yesterday has irrationally and unaccountably
changed into a big dreary crock of shit... The hairs on his fingers stare at
him like tomb hairs — The shirt and trousers have become glued to his
person as tho he was to be drunk forever — The ache of remorse sinks in as
tho somebody was pushing it in from above — The pretty white clouds in the
sky hurt his eyes only — The only thing to do is turn over and lie face
down and weep — The mouth is so blasted there's not even a chance to gnash
the teeth — There's not even strength to tear the hair.
And here comes Ron Blake starting off his new day singing at the top of
his voice — I go down by the creek and throw myself in the sand and lie
looking with sad eyes at the water which no longer friends me but sorta
wants me to Go away — There isnt a drop to drink left in the cabin, all the
goddamn jeeps are gone with all its healthy cargo of people and I'm alone
with an enthusiastic kid on a lark — The little bugs I'd saved from
drowning just because I was bemused and alone and glad, now drown unnoticed
within my reach anyway — The spider is still minding his own business in
the outhouse — Alf lows mournfully in the valley far away to express just
the way I feel... The bluejays yak around me as tho because I'm too tired
and helpless to feed them any more they're figuring on trying me if they
can, "They're friggin vultures anyway" I moan with my mouth in the sand —
The once pleasant thumpthump gurgle slap of the creek is now an endless
jabbering of blind nature which doesn't understand anything in the first
place — My old thoughts about the silt of a billion years covering all this
and all cities and generations eventually is just a dumb old thought, "Only
a silly sober fool could think it, imagine gloating over such nonsense"
(because in one sense the drinker learns wisdom, in the words of Goethe or
Blake or whichever it was "The pathway to wisdom lies through excess') —
But in this condition you can only say "Wisdom is just another way to make
people sick" — "I'm SICK" I yell emphatically to the trees, to the woods
around, to the hills above, looking around desperately, nobody cares... I
can even hear Ron singing at his lunch inside. What's even more horrible he
tries to show compunction and wants to help me. "Anything I can do" — Later
he goes for a lone walk so I go in the cabin and lie on the cot and spend
about two hours groaning out a lament: "O mon Dieux, pourquoi Tu m'laisse
faire malade comme fa — Papa Papa aide mue — Aw j'ai mal au coeur —
J'envie Owaowaowao-" (I go into a long "awaowaowao" that I guess lasted a
whole minute) — I toss over and find new reasons to groan — I think I'm
alone and I'm letting it all go a whole lot like I'd heard my father do when
he was dying of cancer in the night in the bed next to mine... When I do
manage to stagger up and go lean on the door I realize with double upon
double horror that Ron Blake has been sitting there all this time listening
to everything over a book — (I wonder now what he told people about this
later, it must have sounded horrible) (Idiotic too, cretinous even, maybe
only French Canadian who knows? )
... "Ron I'm sorry you had to hear all that, I'm sick" — "I know, man,
it's okay, lie down and try to sleep" — "I can't sleep! " I yell in a rage
— I feel like yelling "Fuck yourself you little idiot what do you know what
Im going through! " but then I realize how oldman disgusting and hopeless
all that is, and here he is enjoying his big weekend with the big writer he
was supposed to tell all his friends what a great swinging ball it was and
what I did and said But methinks and mayhap he took away a lesson in
temperance, or a lesson in beatness really — Because the only time I've
ever been sicker and madder was a week later when Dave and I came back with
the two girls leading to the final horrible night.

22

But look at this: in the afternoon restless youngster Ron wants to go
hitch hiking to Monterey of all things to go see McLear and I say "Okay go
ahead" — "Ain't you coming with me? " he asks surprised to see the champion
on-the-roader wont even hitch hike any more, "No I'll stay here and get
better — I gotta be alone, " which is true, because as soon as he's gone
and has yelled one final hoot from the canyon road directly above and gone
on, and I've sat in the sun alone on the porch, fed my birds finally again,
washed my socks and shirt and pants and hung them up to dry on bushes,
slurped up tons of water kneeling at the creek race, stared silently at the
trees, soon as the sun goes down I swear on my arm I'm as well as I ever
was: just like that suddenly.
"Can it be that Ron and all these other guys, Dave and McLear or
somebody, the other guys earlier are all a big bunch of witches out to make
me go mad? " I seriously consider this... Remembering that childhood revery
I always had, which I used to ponder seriously as I walked home from St
Joseph's Parochial School or sat in the parlor of my home, that everybody in
the world is making fun of mooney me and I dont know it because everytime I
turn around to see who's behind me they snap back into place with regular
expressions, but soon's I look away again they dart up to my nape of neck
and all whisper there giggling and plotting evil, silently, you can't hear
them, and when I turn quickly to catch them they've already snapped back
perfectly in place and are saying "Now the proper way to cook eggs is" or
they're singing Chet Baker songs looking the other way or they're saying
"Did I ever tell you about Jim that time? " — But my childhood revery also
included the fact that everybody in the world was making this fun of me
because they were all members of an eternal secret society or Heaven society
that knew the secret of the world and were seriously fooling me so I'd wake
up and see the light (i. e., become enlightened, in fact) — So that I, "Ti
Jean', was the LAST Ti Jean left in the world, the last poor holy fool,
those people at my neck were the devils of the earth among whom God had cast
me, an angel baby, as tho I was the last Jesus in fact! and all these people
were waiting for me to realize it and wake up and catch them peeking and
we'd all laugh in Heaven suddenly — But animals werent doing that behind my
back, my cats were always adornments licking their paws sadly, and Jesus, he
was a sad witness to this, somewhat like the animals — He wasn't peeking
down my neck — There lies the root of my belief in Jesus — So that
actually the only reality in the world was Jesus and the lambs (the animals)
and my brother Gerard who had instructed me — Meanwhile some of the peekers
were kindly and sad, like my father, but had to go along with everybody else
in the same boat — But my waking up would take place and then everything
would vanish except Heaven, which is God — And that was why later in life
after these rather strange you must admit childhood reveries, after I had
that fainting vision of the Golden Eternity and others before and after it
including Samadhis during Buddhist meditations in the woods, I conceived of
myself as a special solitary angel sent down as a messenger from Heaven to
tell everybody or show everybody by example that their peeking society was
actually the Satanic Society and they were all on the wrong track. With all
this in my background, now at the point of adulthood disaster of the soul,
through excessive drinking, all this was easily converted into a fantasy
that everybody in the world was witching me to madness: and I must have Х
believed it subconsciously because as I say as soon as Ron Blake left I was
well again and in fact content.
In fact very contented — I rose that following morning with more joy
and health and purpose than ever, and there was me old Big Sur Valley all
mine again, here came good old Alf and I gave him food and patted his big
rough neck with its various cocotte's manes, there was the mountain of Mien
Mo in the distance just a dismal old hill with funny bushes around the sides
and a peaceful farm on top, and nothing to do all day but amuse myself
undisturbed by witches and booze — And I'm singing ditties again "My soul
ain't snow, wouldn't you know, the color of my soul, is interpole" and such
silly stuff — And I yell "If Arthur Ma is a witch he sure is a funny witch!
har har! "... And there's the bluejay idiot with one foot on the bar of soap
on the porch rail, pecking at the soap and eating it, leaving the cereal
unattended, and when I laugh and yell at him he looks up cute with an
expression that seems to say "What's the matter? wotti do wong? "
— "Wo wo, got the wong place, " said another bluejay landing nearby
and suddenly leaving again... And everything of my life seems beautiful
again, I even start remembering the nutty things of the binge and go back
even farther and remember nutty things all through my life, it's just
amazing now inside our own souls we can lift out so much strength I think it
would be enough strength to move mountains at that, to lift our boots up
again and go clomping along happy out of nothing but the good source power
in our own bones — And when I visit the sea it doesn't scare me anymore, I
just sing out "Seventy thousand schemers in the sea" and go back to my cabin
and just quietly pour my coffee in the cup, afternoon, how pleasant!
I make a wood run, axe and yank logs outa everywhicha-where and leave
em by the side of the road to leisurely carry home — I investigate a cabin
down the creek that has 15 wood matches in it for my emergency — Take a
shot of sherry, hate it — Find an old San Francis Chronicle with my name in
it all over — Hack a giant redwood log in half in the middle of the creek
— That kind of day, perfect, ending up sewing my holy sweater singing
"There's no place like home" remembering my mother — I even plunge into all
the books and magazines around, I read up on "Pataphysics and yell
contemptuously in the lamplight " "T'sa'n intellectual excuse for facetious
joking, " throwing the magazine away, adding 'Peculiarly attractive to
certain shallow types" — Then I turn my rumbling attention to a couple of
unknown Fin du Siecle poets called Theo Marzials and Henry Harland — I take
a nap after supper and dream of the US Navy, a ship anchored near a war
scene, at an island, but everything is drowsy as two sailors go up the trail
with fishing poles and a dog between them go make love quietly in the hills:
the captain and everybody know they're queer and rather than being
infuriated however they're all drowsily enchanted by such gentle love: you
see a sailor peeking after them with binoculars from the poop: there's
supposed to be a war but nothing happens, just laundry...
I wake up from this silly but strangely pretty dream feeling
exhilarated — Besides now the stars come out every night and I go out on
that porch and sit in the old canvas chair and turn my face up to all that
mooching going on up there, starmooched firmament, all those stars crying
with happy sadness, all that ream and cream of mocky ways with alleyways of
lightyears old as Dame Mae Whitty and the hills... I go walking towards Mien
Mo mountain in the moon illuminated August night, see gorgeous misty
mountains rising the horizon and like saying to me "You don't have to
torture your consciousness with endless thinking" so I sit in the sand and
look inward and see those old roses of the unborn again Amazing, and in just
a few hours this change — And I have enough physical energy to walk back to
the sea suddenly realizing what a beautiful oriental silk scroll painting
this whole canyon would make, those scrolls you open slowly at one end and
keep unrolling and unrolling as the valley unfolds towards sudden cliffs,
sudden Bodhisattvas sitting alone in lamplit huts, sudden creeks, rocks,
trees, then sudden white sand, sudden sea, out to sea and you've reached the
end of the scroll And with all those misty rose darknesses of varying tint
and tuckaway shades to express the actual ephemerality of night — One long
roll unfurling from the range fence among the misty hills, moon meadows,
even the hay rick near the creek, down to the trail, the narrowing creek,
then the mystery of the AW SEA — So I investigate the scroll of the valley
but I'm singing "Man is a busy little animal, a nice little animal, his
thoughts about everything, dont amount to shit. "
In fact back at the cabin to make my bedtime hot Oval-tine I even sing
"Sweet Sixteen" like an angel (by God bettern Ron Blake) and all the old
memories of Ma and Pa, the upright piano in old Massachusetts, the old
sum-mernight sings
— That's how I go to sleep, under the stars on the porch, and at dawn
I turn over with a blissful smile on my face because the owls are callin and
answering from two different huge dead trunks across the valley, hoo hoo
hoo. So maybe it's true what Milarepa says: "Though you youngsters of the
new generation dwell in towns infested with deceitful fate, the link of
truth still remains" (and said this in 890! ) — "When you remain in
solitude, do not think of the amusements in the town... You should turn your
mind inwardly, and then you'll find your way... The wealth I found is the
inexhaustible Holy Property... The companion I found is the bliss of
perpetual Voidness... Here in the place of Yolmo Tag Pug Senge Dzon, the
tigress howling with a pathetic trembling voice reminds me that her piteous
cubs are playing lively... Like a madman I have no pretension and no hope...
I am telling you the honest truth... These are the crazy words of mine... Oh
you innumerable motherlike beings, by the force of imaginary destiny you see
a myriad visions and experience endless emotions... I smile... To a Yogi,
everything is fine and splendid!... In the goodly quiet of this
Self-Benefiting sky Enclosure, the timely sounds I hear are all my fellows"
sounds... At such a pleasant place, in solitude, I, Milarepa, happily
remain, meditating upon the void-illuminating mind — The more Ups and Downs
the more Joy I feel — The greater the fear, the greater the happiness I
feel... "

23

But in the morning (and I'm no Milarepa who could also sit naked in the
snow and was seen flying on one occasion) here comes Ron Blake back with Pat
McLear and Pat's wife the beautiful one, and by God their little sweet five
year old girl who is such a pleasant sight to see as she goes jongling and
jiggling through the fields to look for flowers, everything to her is
perfectly new beautiful primordial Garden of Eden morning here in this
tortured human canyon — And a rather beautiful morning develops — There's
fog so we close the blinds and light the fire and the lamp, me and Pat, and
sit there drinking from the jug he brought talking about literature and
poetry while his wife listens and occasionally gets up to heat more coffee
and tea or goes out to play with Ron and the little girl — Pat and I are in
a serious talkative mood and I feel that lonely shiver in my chest which
always warns me: you actually love people and you're glad Pat is here.
Pat is one if not THE most handsome man I've ever seen — Strange that
he's announced in a preface to his poems that his heroes, his Triumvirate,
are Jean Harlow, Rimbaud and Billy the Kid because he himself is handsome
enough to play Billy the Kid in the movies, that same darkhaired handsome
slightly sliteyed look you expect from the myth appearance of Billy the Kid
(I suppose not the actual real life William Bonnie who's said to've been a
pimply cretin monster).
So we launch on a big discussion of everything in the comfortable gloom
of the cabin by the warm red glow of the girly fire, I'm wearing dark
glasses anyway for fun, Pat says "Well Jack I didnt have a chance to talk to
you yesterday or even last year or even ten years ago when I first met you,
I remember I was terrified of you and Pomeray when you ran up my steps one
night with sticks of tea, you looked like a couple of car thieves or bank
robbers — And you know a lot of this sneery stuff they've written against
us, against San Francisco or beat poetry and writers is because a lot of us
don't LOOK like writers or intellectuals or anything, you and Pomeray I must
say look awful in a way, I'm sure I dont fill the bill either" — 'Man you
oughta go to Hollywood and play Billy the Kid" — "Man I'd rather go to
Hollywood and play Rimbaud" — 'Well you can't play Jean Harlow" — "I'd
really like to just get my "Dark Brown" published in Paris, do you know that
when you think it's possible a word from you to Gallimard or Girodias would
help" — "I dunno" — "Do you know that when I read your poems Mexico City
Blues I immediately turned around and started writing a brand new way, you
enlightened me with that book" — "But it's nothing like what you do, in
fact it's miles away, I am a language spinner and you're idea man" and so on
we talk till about noon and Ron's been in and out, "s'made jaunts to the
beach with the little ladies and Pat and I don't realize the sun has come
out but still sit there deep in the cabin by now talking about Villon and
Cervantes.
Suddenly, boom, the door of the cabin is flung open with a loud crash
and a burst of sunlight illuminates the room and I see an Angel standing arm
outstretched in the door! — It's Cody! all dressed in his Sunday best in a
suit! beside him are ranged several graduating golden angels from Evelyn
golden beautiful wife down to the most dazzling angel of them all little
Timmy with the sun striking off his hair in beams! — It's such an
incredible sight and surprise that both Pat and I rise from our chairs
involuntarily, like we've been lifted up in awe, or scared, tho I dont feel
scared so much as ecstatically amazed as tho I've seen a vision... And the
way Cody stands there not saying a word with his arm outstretched for some
reason, struck a pose of some sort to surprise us or warn us, he's so much
like St Michael at the moment it's unbelievable especially as I also
suddenly realize what he's just actually done, he's had wife and kiddies
sneak up ever so quiet up the porch steps (which are noisy and creaky),
across the wood planks, easy and tiptoeing, stood there awhile while he
prepared to fling the door open, all lined up and stood straight, then pow,
he's opened the door and thrown the golden universe into the dazzled mystic
eyes of big hip Pat McLear and big amazed grateful me — It reminds me of
the. "time I once saw a whole tiptoeing gang of couples sneaking into our
back kitchen door on West Street in Lowell the leader telling me to shush as
I stand there nine years old amazed, then all bursting in on my father
innocently listening to the Primo Carnera-Ernie Schaaft fight on the old
1930s radio — For a big roaring toot... But Cody's oldfashioned family
tiptoe sneak carries that strange apocalyptic burst of gold he somehow
always manages to produce, like I said elsewhere the time in Mexico he drove
an old car over a rutted road very slowly as we were all high on tea and I
saw golden Heaven, or the other times he's always seemed so golden like as I
say in a davenport of some sort in Heaven in the golden top of Heaven.
Not that he means to produce this effect: he's just standing there with
innate dramatic mystery holding forth his arm as if to say Behold, the sun!
and Behold, the angels! sorta pointing at all the golden heads of his family
and Pat and I stand aghast.
"Happy birthday Jack! " yells Cody or some such ordinary crazy inane
greeting "I've come to you with good news! I've brought Evelyn and Emily and
Gaby and Timmy because we're all so grateful and glad because everything has
worked out absolutely dead perfect, or living perfect, boy, with that little
old hunnerd dollars you gave me let me tell you the fantastic story of what
happened" (to him it was utterly fantastic), "I went out and traded in my
Nash that as you know wont even start but I have to have m'old buddies push
it down the road for me, this guy had a perfect gem of a purple or what
color is it Maw? magenty, slamelty, a jeepster station-wagon Jack but a
perfect beauty mind you listen with a beautiful radio, a brand new set of
backup lights, thisa and thata down to the perfect new tires and that
wonderful shiney paint job, that color'll knock you out, that's what it is,
Grape! " (as Evelyn murmurs the color) "Grape color for all the old grape
wine jacks, so we've come here to not only thank you and see you again but
to celebrate this, and on top of all that, occasion, goo me I'm all so gushy
and girly, hee hee hee, yes that's right come on in children and then go out
and get that gear in the car and get ready to sleep outdoors tonight and get
that good open fresh air, Jack on top of all that and my heart is jess OVER
flowin I got a NEW JOB!! along with that splissly little old beautiful new
jeep! a new job right downtown in Los Gatos in fact I dont even have to
drive to work any more, I can walk it, just half a mile, now Ma you come in
here, meet old Pat McLear here, start up some eggs or some of that steak we
brought, open up that vieen roossee wine we brought for drunk old Jack that
good old boy while I personally private take him to walk with me back down
the road where the jeep is parked, unlock that gate, you got the corral key
Jack, okay, and we'll talk and walk just like old times and drive back real
slow in my new slowboat to China. " So it's a whole new day, a whole new
situation the way it is with Cody, in fact a whole new universe as suddenly
we're alone again really for the first time in ages walking rapidly down the
road to go get the car and he looks at me with that hand-rubbing wicked look
like he's about to spring a surprise on me that's the top surprise of them
all, "You guessed it old buddy I have here the LAST, the absolutely LAST yet
most perfect of all blackhaired seeded packed tight superbomber joints in
the world which you and I are now going to light up, "s'why I didnt want you
to bring any of that wine right away, why boy we got time to drink wine and
wine and dance" and here he is lighting up, says "Now dont walk too fast,
it's time to stroll along like we used to do remember sometimes on our
daysoff on the railroad, or walkin across that Third and Townsend tar like
you said and the time we watched the sun go down so perfect holy purple over
that Mission cross — Yessir, slow and easy, lookin at this gone valley" so
we start to puff the pot but as usual it creates doubtful paranoias in both
our minds and we actually sort of fall silent on the way to the car which is
a beautiful grape colour at that, a brand new shiney Jeepster with all the
equipments, and the whole golden reunion deteriorates into Cody's
matter-of-fact lecture on why the car is going to be such a honey (the
technical details) and he even yells at me to hurry up with that corral
gate, "Cant wait here all day, hor hor hor. "
But that's not the point, about pot paranoia, yet maybe it is at that
— I've long given it up because it bugs me anyway
— But so we drive back slowly to the shack and Evelyn and Pat's wife
have met and are having woman talk and McLear and I and Cody talk around the
table planning excursions with the kids to the beach. And there's Evelyn and
I havent had a chance to talk to her for years either, Oh the old days when
we'd stay up late by the fireplace as I say discussing Cody's soul, Cody
this and Cody that, you could hear the name Cody ringing under the roofs of
America from coast to coast almost to hear his women talking about him,
always pronouncing "Cody" with a kind of anguish yet there was girlish
squealing pleasure in it, "Cody has to learn to control the enormous forces
in him" and Cody "will always modify his little white lies so much that they
turn into black ones', and according to Irwin Garden Cody's women were
always having transcontinental telephone talks about his dong (which is
possible).
Because he was always tremendously generated towards complete
relationship with his women to the point where they ended up in one
convoluted octopus mess of souls and tears and fellatio and hotel room
schemes and rushing in and out of cars and doors and great crises in the
middle of the night, wow that madman you can at least write on his grave
someday "He Lived, He Sweated" — No halfway house is Cody's house — Tho
now as I say sorta sweetly chastised and a little bored at last with the
world after the crummy injustice of his arrest and sentence he's sorta
quieted down and where he'd launch into a tremendous explanation of every
one of his thoughts for the benefit of everybody in the room as he's putting
on his socks and arranging his papers to leave, now he just flips it aside
and may make a stale shrug — A Jesuit at work — Tho I remember one crazy
moment in the shack that was typically Cody-like: complicated and
simultaneous with a million nuances as though the whole of creation suddenly
exploded and imploded together in one moment: at the moment that Pat's
pretty little angel daughter is coming in to hand me an extremely tiny
flower ('It's for you, " she says direct to me) (for some reason the poor
little thing thinks I need a flower, or else her mother instructed her for
charming reasons, like adornment) Cody is furiously explaining to his little
son Tim "Never let the right hand know what your left hand is doing" and at
that moment I'm trying to close my pafm around the incredibly small flower
and it's so small I cant even do that, cant feel it, cant hardly see it, in
fact such a small flower only that little girl could have found it, but I
look up to Cody as he says that to Tim, and also to impress Evelyn who's
watching me, I announced 'Never let the left hand know what the right hand
is doing but this right hand cant even hold this flower" and Cody only looks
up "Yass yass. "
So what started as a big holy reunion and surprise party in Heaven
deteriorates to a lot of showoff talk, actually, at least on my part, but
when I get to drink the wine I feel lighter and we all go down to the beach
— I walk in front with Evelyn but when we get to the narrow path I walk in
front like an Indian to show her what a big Indian I've been all summer —
I'm bursting to tell her everything — "See that grove there, once in a
while you'll be surprised out of your shoes to see the mule quietly standing
there with locks of hair like Ruth's over his forehead, a big Biblical mule
meditating, or over there, but up here, and look at that bridge, now what do
you think of that? " — All the kids are fascinated by the upsidedown car
wreck... At one point I'm sitting in the sand as Cody walks up my way, I say
to him imitating Wallace Beery and scratching my armpits "Cuss a man for
dyin in Death Valley" (the last lines of that great movie Twenty Mule Team)
and Cody says "That's right, if anybody can imitate old Wallace Beery that's
the only way to do it, you had just the right timber there in the tone of
your voice there, Cuss a man for dyin in Death Valley hee hee yes" but he
rushes off to talk to McLear's wife.
Strange sad desultory the way families and people sorta scatter around
a beach and look vaguely at the sea, all disorganized and picnic sad — At
one point I'm telling Evelyn that a tidal wave from Hawaii could very easily
come someday and we'd see it miles away a huge wall of awful water and "Boy
it would take some doing to run back and climb up these cliffs, huh? " but
Cody hears this and says, "What? " and I say "It would wash over us and take
us all to Salinas I bet" and Cody says "What? that brand new jeep? I'm goin
back and move it! " (an example of his strange humor).
"How'd'st rain rule here? " says I to Evelyn to show her what a big
poet I am — She really loves me, used to love me in the old days like a
husband, for awhile there she had two husbands Cody and me, we were a
perfect family till Cody finally got jealous or maybe I got jealous, it was
wild for awhile I'd be coming home from work on the railroad all dirty with
my lamp and just as I came in for my Joy bubblebath old Cody was rushing off
on a call so Evelyn had her new husband in the second shift then when Cody
come home at dawn all dirty for his Joy bubblebath, ring, the phone's rung
and the crew clerk's asked me out and I'm rushing off to work, both of us
using the same old clunker car in shifts — And Evelyn always maintaining
that she and I were really made for each other but her Karma was to serve
Cody in this particular lifetime, which I really believe and I believe she
loves him, too, but she'd say "I'll get you. Jack, in another lifetime...
And you'll be very happy" — "What? " I'd yell to joke, "me running up the
eternal halls of Karma tryina get away from you hey? " — "It'll take you
eternities to get rid of me, " she adds sadly, which makes me jealous, I
want her to say I'll never get rid of her... I wanta be chased for eternity
till I catch her.
"Ah Jack" she says putting her arm around me on the beach, "it's nice
to see you again, Oh I wish we could be quiet again and just have our
suppers of homemade pizza all together and watch TV together, you have so
many friends and responsibilities now it's sad, and you get sick drinking
and everything, why dont you just come stay with us awhile and rest" — "I
will" — But Ron Blake is redhot for Evelyn and keeps coming over to dance
with seaweeds and impress her, he's even asked me to ask Cody to let him
spend some time alone with Evelyn, Cody's said "Go ahead man. "
Having run out of liquor in fact Ron does get his opportunity to be
alone with Evelyn as Cody and me and the kids in one car, and McLear and
family in the other start for Monterey to stock up for the night and also
more cigarettes — Evelyn and Ron light a bonfire on the beach to wait for
us... As we're driving along little Timmy says to Paw "We shoulda brought
Mommy with us, her pants got wet in the beach" — "By now they oughta be
steamin, " says Cody matterof-factly in another one of his fantastic puns as
he lockwallops that awful narrow dirt canyon road like a getaway car in the
mountains in a movie, we leave poor McLear miles back — When Cody comes to
a narrow tight curve with all our death staring us in the face down that
hole he just swerves the curve saying "The way to drive in the mountains is,
boy, no fiddlin around, these roads dont move, you're the one that moves'...
And we come out on the highway and go right battin up to Monterey in the Big
Sur dusk where down there on the faint gloamy frothing rocks you can hear
the seals cry.
24
McLear exhibits another strange facet of his handsome but faintly
"decadent" Rimbaud-type personality at his summer camp by coming out in the
livingroom with a goddamn HAWK on his shoulder — It's his pet hawk, of all
things, the hawk is black as night and sits there on his shoulder pecking
nastily at a clunk of hamburg he holds up to it — In fact the sight of that
is so rarely poetic, McLear whose poetry is really like a black hawk, he's
always writing about darkness, dark brown, dark bedrooms, moving curtains,
chemical fire dark pillows, love in chemical fiery red darkness, and writes
all that in beautiful long lines that go across the page irregularly and
aptly somehow — Handsome Hawk McLear, in fact I suddenly yell out "Now I
know your real name! it's M'Lear! M'Lear the Scotch Highland moorhaunter
with his hawk about to go mad and tear his white hair in a tempest" — Or
some such silly thing, feeling good again now we've got new wine — Time to
go back to the cabin and fly down that dark highway the way only Cody can
fly (even bettern Dave Wain but you feel safer with Dave Wain tho the reason
Cody gives you a sense of dooming boom as he pushes the night out the wheels
is not because he'll lose perfect control of the car but you feel the car
will take off suddenly up to Heaven or at least just up into what the
Russians call the Dark Cosmos, there's a booming rushing sound out the
window when Cody bats her down the white line at night, with Dave Wain it's
all conversation and smooth sailing, with Cody it's a crisis about to get
worse) — And now he's saying to me "Not only today but the other day with
the boys, that beautiful McLear woman there, wow, with her tight blue jeans,
man I cried under a tree to see that poppin around so innocent like, whoo,
so I tell you what we're gonna do old buddy: tomorrow we go back to Los
Gatos the whole family and we've dropped Evelyn and the kids home after the
hiss-the-villain play we're all gonna see at seven... "
— "The what? " — "It's a play, " he says suddenly imitating the tired
whiney voice of an old PTA Committee woman, "you go there and you sit down
and out comes this old 1910 play about villains foreclosing the mortgage,
mustaches, you know, calico tears, you can sit there you see and hiss the
villain all you want even for all I know yell obscenities or something I
dunno — But it's Evelyn's world, you know, she's designing the sets and
that's the work she's done while I was in the can so I cant begrudge her
that, in fact I aint got a word in edgewise, when you're the father of a
family you go along with the little woman acourse, and the kids enjoy it,
after that plan and after you've hissed the villain we'll drop them home and
then old buddy" zooming up the car even of all thinks, the hawk is black as
night and sits there faster in lieu of rubbing his hands with zeal, so to
say Zocm, "you and me gonna go flyin down that Bay Shore highway and as
usual you're gonna ask your usual dumb almost Okie wino questions, Hey Cody"
(whining like a old drunk) 7 b'lieve we're coming into Burlingame aint it?
and you're always wrong, hee hee, old crazy dumb fuckin old Jack, then we go
rubbin shoulders into that City and go poppin right up to my sweet little
old baby Willamine that I want you to meet inasmuch and also I want you go
dig because she's gonna dig YOU my dear old sonumbitch Jack, and I'm gonna
leave you two little lovebirds together for days on end alone, you can live
there and just enjoy that gone little woman because also" (his tone now
businesslike) "I want her to dig as much as possible everything you got to
tell her about what YOU know, hear me? She's my soulmate and confidante and
mistress and I want her to be happy and learn" — "What's she look like? " I
ask grossly — And I see the grimace on his face, he really knows me, "Eh
well she looks alright, she has a gone little body that's all I can say and
in bed she is by far the first and only and last possible greatest
everything you dig" — This being just another of a long line of occasions
when Cody gets me to be a sub-beau for his beauties so that everything can
tie in together, he really loves me like a brother and more than that, he
gets annoyed at me sometimes especially when I fumble and blumble like with
a bottle or the time I almost stripped the gears of the car because I forgot
I was driving, in which case actually I remind him of his old wino father
but the fantastic thing is that HE reminds ME of MY father so that we have
this strange eternal father-image relationship that goes on and on sometimes
with tears, it's easy for me to think of Cody and almost cry, sometimes I
can see the same tearful expression in his eyes when he sometimes looks at
me — He reminds me of my father because he too blusters and hurries and
fills all his pockets with Racing Forms and papers and pencils and we're all
ready to go on some mission in the night he takes with ultimate seriousness
as tho we were going on the last trip of them all but it always ends up
being a hilarious meaningless Marx Brothers adventure which gives me even
more reason to love him (and my father too) — That way — And finally in
the book I wrote about us ('On The Road') I forgot to mention two important
things, that we were both devout little Catholics in our childhood, which
gives us something in common tho we never talk about it, it's just there in
our natures, and secondly and most important that strange business when we
shared another girl (Marylou, or that is, let's call her Joanna) and Cody at
the time announced "That's what we'll be old buddy, you and me, double
husbands, later on we'll have whole Harreeeem and reams of Hareems boy, and
we'll call ourselves or that is" (flutter) "ourself Duluomeray, see Duluoz
and Pomeray, Duluo-meray, see, hee hee hee" tho he was younger then and
really silly but that gives an indication of the way he felt about me: some
kind of new thing in the world actually where men can really be angelic
friends and not be homosexual and not fight over girls — But alas the only
thing we'd ever fought about was money, or the ridiculous time we fought
about a little line of marijuana dust running down the middle of a page
where we were separating our shares with a knife, when I objected I wanted
some of the dust he yelled "Our original agreement had nothing to do with
the dust! " and he slumps it all into his pocket and stalks off redfaced so
I jump up and pack and announce I'm leaving and Evelyn drives me to the City
but the car won't start (this is years ago) so Cody redfaced and crazy and
ashamed now has to push us with the clunker, there we go down San Jose
boulevard with Cody behind us pushing us and with Cody behind us pushing us
and bumping us not just to give us a start but to chastise me for being so
greedy and I shouldnt leave at all — In fact he'd back up and come up on
our rear and really wham us — That night ending me dead drunk on Mal
Damlette's floor on North Beach — And in any case the whole question of us,
the two most advanced men friends in the world still fighting over money
after all being, as Julien says in New York, indication of the fact that
"Money is the only thing Canucks ever fight about, and Okies too I guess"
but Julien I suppose imagining and fantasizing himself as a noble Scotsman
who fights about honor (tho I tell him "Ah you Scotchmen save your spit in
your watchpocket'). Lacrimae rerum, the tears of things, all the years
behind me and Cody, the way I always say "me and Cody" instead of "Cody and
I" or some such, and Irwin watching us across the world night now with a
bite of marvel on his lower lip saying "Ah, angels of the West, Companions
in Heaven" and writing letters asking "What now, what's the latest, what
visions, what arguments, what sweet agreements? " and such.
That night the kids end up sleeping in the jeep anyway because they're
afraid of the big black woods and I sleep by the creek in my bag and in the
morning we're all set to go back to Los Gatos and see the villain play —
Frustrated Ron is casting sad eyes at Evelyn, apparently she's put him off
because she says to me (and I dont blame her) "Really the way Cody presses
people on me it's awful, at least I should have my own choice" (but she
laughing because it's funny and it is funny the way Cody does it anxious and
harried wondering if that's what she really wants and wants no such thing)
— 'At least not with utter strangers, " says I to be funny — She: "Besides
I'm so sick of all this sex business, that's all he talks about, his
friends, here they are all open channels to do good as co creators with God
and all they think about is behinds
— that's why you're so refreshing" she adds — "But I aint so
refreshing as all that? hey! " — But that's my relationship with Evelyn,
we're real pals and we can kid about anything even the first night I met her
in Denver in 1947 when we danced and Cody watched anxiously, a kind of
romantic pair in fact and I shudder sometimes to think of all that stellar
mystery of how she IS going to get me in a future lifetime, wow — And I
seriously do believe that will be my salvation, too. A long way to go.

25

The silly stupid hiss-the-villain play is alright in itself but just as
we arrive at the scene of the chuck wagons and tents all done up real old
western style there's a big fat sheriff type with two sixshooters standing
at the admission gate, Cody says "That's to give it color see" but I'm drunk
and as we all pile out of the car I go up to the fat sheriff and start
telling him a Southern joke (in fact just the plot of an Erskine Caldwell
short story) which he receives with a witless smiling expression or really
like the expression of an executioner or a Southern constable listening to a
Yankee talk — So naturally I'm surprised later when we go into the cute old
west saloon and the kids start banging on the old piano and I join them with
big loud Stravinsky chords, here comes two gun sheriff fatty coming in and
saying in a menacing voice like TV western movies "You cant play that piano"
— I'm surprised, turning to Evelyn, to learn that he's the blasted
proprietor of the whole place and if he says I cant play the piano there's
nothing I can do about it legally — But besides that he's got actual
bullets in those six guns — He's going all out to play the part — But to
be yanked from joyful pianothumping with kids to see that awful dead face of
negative horror I just jump up and say "Alright, the hell with it I'm
leaving anyway" so Cody follows me to the car where I take another swig of
white port — "Let's get the hell out of here" I say... "Just what I was
thinkin about, " says Cody, "in fact I've already arranged with the director
of the play to drive Evelyn and the kids home so we'll just go to the City
now" — "Great! " — "And I've told Evelyn we're cuttin out so let's go. " `
'I'm sorry Cody I screwed up your little family party'- "No No" he protests
"Man I have to come to these things you know and be a big hubby and father
type and you know I'm on parole and I gotta put up appearances but it's a
drag" — To show what a drag it is we go scootin down that road passing six
cars easy as pie — "And I'm GLAD this happened because it gave us an
excuse, hee hee titter you know to get outa there, I was thinking for an
excuse when it happened, that old fart is crazy you know! he's a millionaire
you know! I've talked to him, that little beady brain, and you be glad you
missed hangin around till that performance, man, and that AUDIENCE, ow, ugh,
I almost wish I was back in San Quentin but here we go, son! "
So of old we're alone in a car at night bashing down the line to a
specific somewhere, nothing nowhere about it whatever, especially this time
in a way — That white line is feeding into our fender like an anxious
impatient electronic quiver shuddering in the night and how beautifully
sometimes it curves one side or the other as he smoothly swerves for passing
or for something else, avoiding a bump or something... And on the big
highway Bay Shore how beautifully he just swings in and out of lanes almost
effortlessly and completely unnoticeable passing to the right and to the
left without a flaw all kinds of cars with anxious eyes turning to us, altho
he's the only one on the road who knows how to drive completely well — it's
blue dusk all up and down the California world — Frisco glitters up ahead
— Our radio plays rhythm and blues as we pass the joint back and forth in
jutjawed silence both looking ahead with big private thoughts now so vast we
cant communicate them any more and if we tried it would take a million years
and a billion books — Too late, too late, the history of everything we've
seen together and separately has become a library in itselt — me shelves
pile higher — They're full of misty documents or documents of the Mist —
The mind has convoluted in every tuckaway every-whichaway tuckered hole till
there's no more the expressing of our latest thoughts let alone old —
Mighty genius of the mind Cody whom I announce as the greatest writer the
world will ever know if he ever gets down to writing again like he did
earlier — It's so enormous we both sit here sighing in fact — "No the only
writing I done, " he says, "a few letters to Willamine, in fact quite a few,
she's got em all wrapped in ribbons there, I figgered if I tried to write a
book or sumptin or prose or sumptin they'd just take it away from me when I
left so I wrote her "bout three letters a week for two years — and the
trouble of course and as I say and you've heard a million times is the mind
flows the mind rises and nobody can by any possible c- oh hell, I dont wanta
talk about it" — Besides I can see from glancing at him that becoming a
writer holds no interest for him because life is so holy for him there's no
need to do anything but live it, writing's just an afterthought or a scratch
anyway at the surface — But if he could! if he would! there I am riding in
California miles away from home where my poor cat's buried and my mother
grieves and that's what I'm thinking. It always makes me proud to love the
world somehow — Hate's so easy compared — But here I go flattering myself
helling headbent to the silliest hate I ever had.

26

Altho Cody's said these things I'm very well aware that the real
arrangement of the evening is that we're just going to see Billie together
so she can get her kicks meeting me (after hearing about me from him and
after reading my books etc. ) and in fact Cody has already conferred with
Evelyn about how I'm going to be staying at their house in Los Gatos for a
month, as of old sleeping in my bag in the backyard not because they dont
want me to sleep in the house but it's my idea, but it's beautiful anyway to
sleep under the stars and anyway I therefore keep out of the way of the
family when they get up to go to work and school... At noon they see me
shambling in from the big back field yard yawning for coffee — And I'm in
line for that, i. e., that's what I want to do and that's my plan — but
when we run upstairs to Willamine's apartment and come bursting in to this
neat little well arranged pad with goldfish bowl, books, strange doodads,
neat kitchen, the whole clean as a pin, and there's Billie herself a blonde
with arched eyebrows exactly like the male Julien blond with arched eyebrows
and I yell out "It's Julien by God it's Julien! " (and by now I'm drunk
anyway because we've as of old picked up an old hitch hiker on Bay Shore who
says his name is Joe Ihnat and we bought him a bottle and I bought me one
too, never will forget old Joe Ihnat in fact somehow because he said he was
a Russian and his was an ancient Russian name and when I wrote out our names
he said my name was an ancient Russian name also) (tho it's Breton) (and
also told us he'd just been beaten up by a young Negro for no reason in a
public toilet and Cody gasps and says to me "I've met those Negroes that
beat up old men, they're called the Strongarms in San Quentin, they're all
put away among themselves away from the other prisoners, they're all Negroes
and it seems all they wanta do is beat up old defenseless men, he's tellin
the absolute truth'... "But why do they do that? "... "Oh man I dont know
they just wanta hit up on some old man that cant hit back and just beat him
and beat him till he's dead" and Oh the horror of Cody's knowledge of the
world when all is said and done) — So now we're sitting with Billie in her
pad, outside the window you see the glittering lights of the city again, ah
Urbi y Roma, the world again, and she's got these mad blue eyes, arched
eyebrows, intelligent face, just like Julien, I keep sayig "Julien goddamit!
" and I see even in my drunkenness a little worried flutter in Cody's eyes
— The fact of the matter being, Billie and I go for each other like two
tons of bricks right there in front of Cody so that when he rises and
announces he's going back to Los Gatos to get some sleep to go to work it's
already well agreed I'm staying right where I am and not only for tonight
but for weeks months years.
Poor Cody — Yet you see I've already explained why actually
subconsciously this is what he really wants to happen but he wont admit it
ever and always invents reasons around this to get mad at me and call me a
bastard — But aside from Cody I find Billie to be a very companionable
strange kid in this lonesome night and I actually NEED to stay with her
awhile — In fact both Billie and I explain to Cody why — But there's
nothing evil, man-against-man or sinister about any of it, it's just a
strange innocence, a spontaneous burst of love in fact and Cody understands
that bettern anybody else anyway so he leaves at midnight saying he'll be
back tomorrow night and all of a sudden I'm alone with a charming woman and
we're talking a blue streak sitting cross-legged facing each other on the
floor in a litter of books and bottles. It gives me a pang of pain and
remorse really now to recall that on this first night her apartment was so
neat and clean and charming — The chair by the goldfish bowl which I
quickly appropriated as my old man chair, where I sat constantly sipping
port for a whole week, the kitchen with its intelligent arrangements of
spices and eggs in the icebox, and for that matter too the poor little son
of Billie sleeping in a well arranged back room (her son from her deceased
husband who was also a railroad man) Elliott the child's name and I didn't
get to see him till later that night — And with the huge packet of Cody's
San Quentin letters in her hand she launches forth on her theories about
Cody and eternity but all I can keep saying as I swig from my bottle is
"Julien, you're talking too much! Julien, Julien, my God who'd ever dream
I'd run into a woman who looks like Julien... you look like Julien but
you're not Julien and on top of that you're a woman, how goddam strange" —
In fact she had to pack me off to bed drunk — But not before our first
lovely undertaking of love and everything Cody said about her being
absolutely true — But the main thing being that tho she looked like Julien
etc. and had Cody's big sad abstract letters about Karma in a ribbon and
actually went out in the morning and earned a hundred a week in fashion
modeling she had the most musical beautiful and sad voice I've ever heard in
my life The things she's saying are really rather inane because after all
her education is based on really Californian hysterias like the earlier
mistress of Cody Rosemarie who also was thin and pale haired and crazy and
kept talking abstract (Like she's saying "I thought I could do something to
ease the contradiction between immanent and universal ethics which I thought
was my problem and was what I hoped to gain thru therapy, like, any
evolution presupposes an involution and all that kind of thinking" as I
sigh, but she does say something interesting once in a while like "While
Cody was in prison my main occupation was praying for him, I had an all day
going, there was also a bit we did together every evening from 9: 00 to 9:
09 but he's out now and something else is happening I'm not sure what... but
I'm sure we aid the storm when we transcend time in one respect and can't
even keep up with it in others... ")-But also all kinds of to-me-unimportant
and uninteresting crap about channels about people being either closed or
open channels and Cody is a big open channel pouring out all his holy gysm
on Heaven, I really can't remember, or the destinies, the sighs, the
rooftops of all that, the stars are shining down on their poor heads as they
draw breath to explain inanities really — Like the letters to her (I glance
at them) are all about how they've met and their souls have collided in this
dimension because of some unfulfilled Karma on another planet and in another
plane that is, and now they have to gird themselves to assume this big
responsibility to meet some measure of this and that, I dont even wanta go
into it — Because also the fact of the matter being, when Willamine talks
to me I'm utterly bored, I'm only interested in the sad music of her voice
and in the strange circumstance (I guess Karmalike too) that she looks like
poor Julien.
Her voice is the main point — She talks with a broken heart... Her
voice lutes brokenly like a heart lost, musically too, like in a lost grove,
it's almost too much to bear sometimes like some fantastic futuristic Jerry
Southern singer in a night club who steps up to the mike in the spotlight in
Las Vegas but doesn't even have to sing, just talk, to make men sigh and
women wonder I guess (if women ever wonder)... So that as she's trying to
explain all that nonsense to me (all that philosophy of hers and Cody's and
Cody's new buddy Perry, coming up the next day) I just sit and marvel and
stare at her mouth wondering where all the beauty is coming from and why —
And we end up making love sweetly too — A little blonde well experienced in
all the facets of lovemaking and sweet with compassion and just too much so
that b'dawn we're already going to get married and fly away to Mexico in a
week — In fact I can see it now, a great big four way marriage with Cody
and Evelyn.
For she is the great enemy of Evelyn — She's not satisfied just to be
Cody's lover and soul heart she wants to go right over there and lay Evelyn
down on the line and take Cody away with her forever and to do this she'll
even have a deadend heaven deep love affair with old Jack (same pattern of
old) — There's not much difference between her and Evelyn when you listen
to their talk about Cody except in Evelyn's case I'm always fascinatedly
interested — Billie actually bores me tho of course I cant tell her that —
Evelyn is still the champ and I wonder about Cody.
O the ups and downs and juggling of women, blondes at that, all in that
great magical City of the Gandharvas of San Francisco and here I am alone on
a magic carpet with one of em, whee, at first of course it's a great ball, a
great new eye-shattering explosion of experience — Not dreaming, I, what's
to come — For with sad musical Billie in my arms and my name Billie too
now, Billie and Billie arm in arm, oh beautiful, and Cody has given his
consent in a way, we go roaming the Genghiz Khan clouds of soft love and
hope and anybody who's never done this is crazy — Because a new love affair
always gives hope, the irrational mortal loneliness is always crowned, that
thing I saw (that horror of snake emptiness) when I took the deep iodine
deathbreath on the Big Sur beach is now justified and hosannah'd and raised
up like a sacred urn to Heaven in the mere fact of the taking off of clothes
and clashing wits and bodies in the inexpressibly nervously sad delight of
love... Dont let no old fogies tell you otherwise, and on top of that nobody
in the world even ever dares to write the true story of love, it's awful,
we're stuck with a 50% incomplete literature and drama — Lying mouth to
mouth, kiss to kiss in the pillow dark, loin to loin in unbelievable
surrendering sweetness so distant from all our mental fearful abstractions
it makes you wonder why men have termed God antisexual somehow — The secret
underground truth of mad desire hiding under fenders under buried junkyards
throughout the world, never mentioned in newspapers, written about haltingly
and like corn by authors and painted tongue in cheek by artists, agh, just
listen to Tris-tan und Isolde by Wagner and think of him in a Bavarian field
with his beloved naked beauty under the fall leaves.
How strange in all, and making everything that's happened in the past
weeks, the backs and forths and pains of me in City and Sur, all piled up
now rationally like a big construction whereon could be built a divingboard
which would enable me clumsily to dive into Billie's soul and therefore why
complain? In the middle of the night she fetches the little 4 year old boy
to show me the spiritual beauty of her son — He is one of the weirdest
persons I've ever met — He has large liquid brown eyes very beautiful and
he hates anybody who comes near his mother and keeps asking her questions
constantly like "Why do you stay with him? why is he here, who is he? " or
"Why is it dark outside? " or "Why does the sun shine yesterday? " or
anything, he'll just ask questions about everything and she answers every
one of them with extreme delight and patience till I say "Doesnt he bother
you with all these questions? why dont you let him croon and goof like a
little child, he's tugging at your knee asking EVERYTHING man why don't you
just let him singsong? "... She answers "1 answer him because I may be
missing his next question, everything he asks me and says to me represents
something important about the abso-lute I may be missing" — "What do you
mean the absolute? " — "You yourself said everything is the absolute" but
of course she's right and I realize that in my dirty old soul I'm already
jealous of Elliott.

27

The mat of night admits the groaning glory godlike love I guess but at
the same time it's also boring in a way and we both laugh to discuss that —
We stay awake that first night till dawn discussing everything in the books
from Cody in every detail down to me in every detail to her in every detail
to Evelyn to books and philosophies and religions and the absolute and I end
up whispering her poems... Poor kid has to get up in the morning and go to
work and I'm left there snoring drunk... But she makes her neat breakfast
and takes Elliott off to the daily babysitter lady and I wake up at one in
the afternoon alone and take a swig of wine and get in the hot bath to read
a book — The phone keeps ringing, everybody from Monsanto to Fagan to
McLear to the Moon Man has somehow found out where I am and what the number
is, tho none of them have previously even met Billie let alone seen her — I
shudder to realize Cody will get mad for making his secret life so public.
But here comes Perry — Like me Perry has that strange brotherly
relationship with Cody whereby he gets to be confidant and sometimes lover
of all Cody's gals... And I can see why — He looks just like me only he's
young and looks like I did when first Cody met me but the point is not that
so much, he is a tempestuous lost tossed soul just out of Soledad State
Prison for attempted robbery with a boyish face and black hair falling over
it but powerful chick muscular arms that I realize he could break a man in
half with — His name is strange too, Perry Yturbide, I immediately say: "I
know what you are, Basque" — "Basque? is that it? I never found out! let's
call my mother longdistance in Utah and tell her that! " — And he rings up
his mother way over there, on Billie's phone bill, and here I am bottle of
port wine in one hand and butt in mouth talking to a Basque ex con's mother
in Utah telling her in fact reassuring her "Yes I believe it's a Basque
name" — She's saying "Hey, what you say? who are you? " And there's Perry
smiling all glad — A very strange kid — It's been a long time in fact in
my literary sort of life that I've met a real tough hombre like that out of
jails and with those arms of steel and that fevered concern that scares
governments and makes officials pale, that's why he's always put away in
prison this type of man — Yes yet the type of man the country always needs
when there's a little old war started by an aging governor — A real
dangerous character, in fact, Perry, because tho I appreciate his poetic
soul and everything I realize looking at him he's capable of exploding and
killing somebody for an idea maybe or for love. Some of his own friends ring
Billie's doorbell, everybody seems to know I'm there, they come up, they are
strange anarchistic Negroes and ex cons, it seems to be some sort of gang, I
begin to wonder — Like a ring of fevered sages, the Negroes are intense and
crazy and intellectual but they've all got those strong muscular arms again
and all have jail records yet they all talk as tho the end of the world
depended on their words — Hard to explain (but will do). Billie and her
gang in fact, with all that fancy rigamarole about spiritual matters I
wonder if it isnt just a big secret hustler outfit tho I also realize that
I've noticed it before in San Francisco a kind of ephemeral hysteria that
hides in the air over the rooftops among certain circles there leading
always to suicide and maim... Me just an innocent lost hearted meditator and
Goop among strange intense criminal agitators of the heart — It reminds me
in fact of a nightmare I had just before coming out to the Coast, in the
dream I'm back in San Francisco but there's something funny going on:
there's dead silence throughout the entire city: men like printers and
office executives and house-painters are all standing silently in second
floor windows looking down on the empty streets of San Francisco: once in a
while some beatniks walk by below, also silent: they're being watched but
not only by the authorities but by everybody: the beatniks seem to have the
whole street system to themselves: but nobody's saying anything: and in this
intense silence I take a ride on a self propelled platform right downtown
and out to the farms where a woman running a chicken farm invites me to join
her and live with her... The little platform rolling quietly as the people
are watching from windows in groups of profile like the profiles in old Van
Dyck paintings, intense, suspicious, momentous — This Billie business
reminding me of that but because to me the only thing that matters is the
conceptions in my own mind, there has to be no reality anyway to what I
suppose is going on — But this also an indication of the coming madness in
Big Sur.

28

Strange — and Perry Yturbide that first day while Billie's at work and
we've just called his mother now wants me to come with him to visit a
general of the US Army — 'Why? and what's all these generals looking out of
silent windows? " I say — but nothing surprises Perry — "We'll go there
because I want you to dig the most beautiful girls we ever saw, " in fact we
take a cab — But the "beautiful girls" turn out to be eight and nine and
ten years old, daughters of the general or maybe even cousins or daughters
of a next door strange general, but the mother is there, there are also boys
playing in a backroom, we have Elliott with us whom Perry has carried on his
shoulders all the way — I look at Perry and he says "I wanted you to see
the most beautiful little cans in town" and I realize he's dangerously
insane — In fact he then says "See this perfect beauty? " a pony tailed ten
year old daughter of the general (who ain't home yet) "I'm going to kidnap
her right now" and he takes her by the hand and they go out on the street
for an hour while I sit there over drinks talking to the mother — There's
some vast conspiracy to make me go mad anyway — The mother is polite as
ordinarily — The general comes home and he's a rugged big baldheaded
general and with him is his best friend a photographer called Shea, a thin
well combed welldressed ordinary downtown commercial photographer of the
city — I dont understand anything — But suddenly little Elliott is crying
in the other room and I rush in there and see that the two boys have whacked
him or something because he did something wrong so I chastise them and carry
Eliiott back into the livingroom on my shoulders like Perry does, only
Eliiott wants to get down off my shoulders at once, in fact he won't even
sit on my lap, in fact he hates my guts — I call Billie desperately at her
agency and she says she'll be over to pick us all up and adds 'How's Perry
today? "... "He's kidnapping little girls he says are beautiful, he wants to
marry ten year old girls with pony tails" — "That's the way he is, be sure
to dig him" — In her musical sad voice over the phone.
I turn my poor tortured attention to the general who says he was an
anti-Fascist fighter with the Maquis during World War II and also a guerilla
in the South Pacific and knows one of the finest restaurants in San
Francisco where we can all go feast, a Fillipino restaurant near Chinatown,
I say okay, great — He gives me more booze — Seeing the amusing Irish face
of Shea the photographer I yell "You can take my picture anytime you want"
and he says sinister: "Not for propaganda reasons, anything but propaganda
reasons" — "What the hell do you mean propaganda reasons, I aint got nothin
to do with propaganda" (and here comes Perry back through the door with
Poopoo holding his hand, they've gone to dig the street and have a coke) and
I realize everybody is just living their lives quietly but it's only me
that's insane. In fact I yearn to have old Cody around to explain all this
to me tho it soon becomes apparent to me not even Cody could explain, I'm
beginning to go seriously crazy, just like Subterranean Irene went crazy tho
I don't realize it yet... I'm beginning to read plots into every simple line
— Besides the "general" scares me even further by turning out to be a
strange affluent welldressed civilian who doesn't even help me to pay the
tab for the Fillipino dinner which we have, meeting Billie at the
restaurant, and the restaurant itself is weird especially because of a big
raunchy mad thicklipped sloppy young Fillipino woman sitting alone at the
end of the restaurant gobbling up her food obscenely and looking at us
insolently as tho to say "Fuck you, I eat the way I like" splashing gravy
everywhere I cant understand what's going on
— Because also the general has suggested this dinner but I have to pay
for everybody, him, Shea, Perry, Billie, Eliiott, me, others, strange
apocalyptic madness is now shuddering in my eyeballs and I'm even running
out of money in their Apocalypse which they themselves have created in this
San Francisco silence anyway.
I yearn to go hide and cry in Evelyn's arms but I end up hiding in
Billie's arms and here she goes again, the second evening, explaining all
her spiritual ideas — "But what about Perry? what's he up to? and who's
that strange general? what are you, a bunch of communists? "

29

The little child refuses to sleep in his crib but has to come trotting
out and watch us make love on the bed but Billie says "That's good, he'll
learn, what other way will he ever learn? " — I feel ashamed but because
Billie is there and she's the mother I must go along and not worry...
Another sinister fact — At one point the poor child is drooling long
slavers of spit from his lips watching, I cry "Billie, look at him, it's not
good for him" but she says again "Anything he wants he can have, even us. "
"But kid it's not fair, why doesn't he just sleep? " — "He doesn't
wanta sleep, he wants to be with us" — "Ooh, " and I realize Billie is
insane and I'm not as insane as I thought and there's something wrong — I
feel myself skidding: also because during the following week I keep sitting
in that same chair by the goldfish bowl drinking bottle after bottle of port
like an automaton, worrying about something, Monsanto comes to visit,
McLear, Fagan, everybody, they call to me dashing up the stairs and we have
long drunken days talking but I never seem to get out of that chair and
never even take another delightful warm bath reading books — And at night
Billie comes home and we pitch into love again like monsters who dont know
what else to do and by now I'm too blurry to know what's going on anyway tho
she reassures me everything is alright, and meanwhile Cody has completely
disappeared — In fact I call him up and say "Are you gonna come back and
get me here? " — "Yes yes yes in a few days, stay there" as tho maybe he
wants me to learn what's happening like putting me through an ordeal to see
what I have to say about it because he's been through the ordeal himself.
In fact everything is going crazy. Perry's visits scare me: I begin to
think he must be one of those "strong armers" who beat up old men: I watch
him warily — All this time he's pacing back and forth saying "Man dont you
appreciate those sweet little cans? what does it matter how old a woman is,
nine or nineteen, those little pony tails jiggling as they walk with those
little jigglin cans" — 'Did you ever kidnap one? " — "You out of wine,
I'll make a run for you get some more, or would you rather have pot or
sumptin? what's wrong with you? " — "I dont know what's goin on! " —
"You're drinking too much maybe. Cody told me you're falling apart man, dont
do it" — "But what's goin on? " — "Who cares, pops, we're all swinging in
love and trying to go from day to day with self respect while all the
squares are putting us down" — "Who? " — "The Squares, putting down Us
... we wanta swing and live and carry across the night like when we get
to L. A. I'm goin to show you the maddest scene some friends of mine down
there" (in my drunkenness I've already projected a big trip with Billie and
Elliott and Perry to Mexico but we're going to stop in L. A. to see a rich
woman Perry knows who's going to give him money and if she doesn't he's
going to get it anyway, and as I say Billie and I are going to be married
too) — The insanest week of my life
— Billie at night saying "You're worried that I cant handle marrying
you but of course we can, Cody wants it too, I'll talk to your mother and
make her love me and need me: Jack! " she suddenly cries with anguished
musical voice (because I've just said "Ah Billie go get yourself a he-man
and get married'), "You're my last chance to marry a He Man! " — 'Whattayou
mean He Man, dont you realize I'm crazy? " — "You're crazy but you're my
last chance to have an understanding with a He Man" — "What about Cody? "
"Cody will never leave Evelyn" — Very strange — But more, tho I don't
understand it.

30

I do understand the strange day Ben Fagan finally came to visit me
alone, bringing wine, smoking his pipe, and saying "Jack you need some
sleep, that chair you say you've been sitting in for days have you noticed
the bottom is falling out of it? " — I get on the floor and by God look and
it's true, the springs are coming out — "How long have you been sitting in
that chair? " — "Every day waiting for Billie to come home and talking to
Perry and the others all day... My God let's go out and sit in the park, " I
add — In the blur of days McLear has also been over on a forgotten day
when, on nothing but his chance mention that maybe I could get his book
published in Paris I jump up and dial longdistance for Paris and call Claude
Gallimard and only get his butler apparently in some Parisian suburb and I
hear the insane giggle on the other end of the line — "Is this the home,
c'est le chez eux de Monsieur Gallimard? " — Giggle — "Ou est Monsieur
Gallimard? " — Giggle — A very strange phone call — McLear waiting there
expectantly to get his "Dark Brown" published — So in a fury of madness I
then call London to talk to my old buddy Lionel just for no reason at all
and I finally reach him at home he's saying on the wire "You're calling me
from San Francisco? but why? "... Which I can't answer any more than the
giggling butler (and to add to my madness, of course, why should a
longdistance call to Paris to a publisher end up with a giggle and a
longdistance call to an old friend in London end up with the friend getting
mad? ) — So Fagan now sees I'm going overboard crazy and I need sleep —
"We'll get abottle! " I yell — But end up, he's sitting in the grass of the
park smoking his pipe, from noon to 6 P. M., and I'm passed out exhausted
sleeping in the grass, bottle unopened, only to wake up once in a while
wondering where I am and by God I'm in Heaven with Ben Fagan watching over
men and me.
And I say to Ben when I wake up in the gathering 6 P. M. dusk "Ah Ben
I'm sorry I ruined our day by sleeping like this" but he says: "You needed
the sleep, I told ya" — "And you mean to tell me you been sitting all
afternoon like that? " — 'Watching unexpected events, " says he, "like
there seems to be sound of a Bacchanal in those bushes over there" and I
look and hear children yelling and screaming in hidden bushes in the park —
"What they doing? " — "I dont know: also a lot of strange people went by"
— "How long have I been sleeping? " — "Ages" — "I'm sorry" — "Why should
be sorry, I love you anyway" — "Was I snoring? " — 'You've been snoring
all day and I've been sitting here all day" — "What a beautiful day! " —
'Yes it's been a beautiful day" — "How strange! " — "Yes, strange... but
not so strange either, you're just tired" — "What do you think of Billie? "
— He chuckles over his pipe: "What do you expect me to say? that the frog
bit your leg? " — "Why do you have a diamond in your forehead? " — "I dont
have a diamond in my forehead damn you and stop making arbitrary
conceptions! " he roars — "But what am I doing? " — "Stop thinking about
yourself, will ya, just float with the world" — "Did the world float by the
park? " — "All day, you should have seen it, I've smoked a whole package of
Edgewood, it's been a very strange day" — "Are you sad I didn't talk to
you? " — "Not at all, in fact I'm glad: we better be starting back, " he
adds, 'Billie be coming home from work soon now" — "Ah Ben, Ah Sunflower"
— "Ah shit" he says — "It's strange" — "Who said it wasn't" — "I dont
understand it" — 'Dont worry about it" — "Hmm holy room, sad room, life is
a sad room" — "All sentient beings realize that, " he says sternly —
Benjamin my real Zen Master even more than all our Georges and Arthurs
actually
— "Ben I think I'm going crazy" — "You said that to me in 1955" —
"Yeh but my brain's gettin soft from drinkin and drinkin and drinkin" —
"What you need is a cup of tea I'd say if I didn't know that you're too
crazy to know how really crazy you are" — "But why? what's going on? " —
"Did you come three thousand miles to find out? " — "Three thousand miles
from where, after all? from whiney old me" — "That's alright, everything is
possible, even Nietzsche knew that" — "Aint nothin wrong with old
Nietzsche" — " "Xcept he went mad too" — "Do you think I'm going mad? " —
"Ho ho ho" (hearty laugh) — 'What's that mean, laughing at me? " —
"Nobody's laughing at you, dont get excited" — "What'll we do now? " —
"Let's go visit the museum over there" — There's a museum of some sort
across the grass of the park so I get up wobbly and walk with old Ben across
the sad grass, at one point I put my arm over his shoulder and lean on him
— "Are you a ghoul? " I ask — 'Sure, why not? " — "I like ghouls that let
me sleep? " — "Duluoz it's good for you to drink in a way "cause you're
awful stingy with yourself when you're sober" — "You sound like Julien" —
"I never met Julien but I understand Billie looks like him, you kept saying
that before you went to sleep" — "What happened while I was asleep? " "Oh,
people went by and came back and forth and the sun sank and finally sank
down and's gone now almost as you can see, what you want, just name it you
got it" — "Well I want sweet salvation" — "What's sposed to be sweet about
salvation? maybe it's sour" — "It's sour in my mouth" — 'Maybe your mouth
is too big, or too small, salvation is for little kitties but only for
awhile" — "Did you see any little kitties today? " — "Shore, hundreds of
came to visit you while you were sleeping" — "Really? " — "Sure, didn't
you know you were saved? " — "Now come on! " — "One of them was real big
and roared like a lion but he had a big wet snout and kissed you and you
said "Ah"" — "What's this museum up here? " — "Let's go in and find
out'... That's the way Ben is, he doesnt know what's going on either but at
least he waits to find out maybe — But the museum is closed — We stand
there on the steps looking at the closed door — "Hey, " I say, "the temple
is closed. " So suddenly in red sundown me and Ben Fagan arm in arm are
walking slowly sadly back down the broad steps like two monks going down the
esplanade of Kyoto (as I imagine Kyoto somehow) and we're both smiling
happily suddenly
— I feel good because I've had my sleep but mainly I feel good because
somehow old Ben (my age) has blessed me by sitting over my sleep all day and
now with these few silly words — Arm in arm we slowly descend the steps
without a word — it's been the only peaceful day I've had in California, in
fact, except alone in the woods, which I tell him and says "Well, who said
you werent alone now? " making me realize the ghostliness of existence tho I
feel his big bulging body with my hands and say: "You sure some pathetic
ghost with all that ephemeral heavy crock a flesh" — "I didn't say nottin"
he laughs — "Whatever I say Ben, dont mind it, I'm just a fool" — "You
said in 1957 in the grass drunk on whiskey you were the greatest thinker in
the world" — "That was before I fell asleep and woke up: now I realize I'm
no good at all and that makes me feel free" — "You're not even free being
no good, you better stop thinking, that's all'... "I'm glad you visited me
today. I think I might have died'... "It's all your fault'... "What are we
gonna do with our lives? " — "Oh, " he says, "I dunno, just watch em I
guess" — "Do you hate me?... well, do you like me?... well, how are things?
" — "The hicks are alright" — "Anybody hex ya lately...? "... "Yeh, with
cardboard games? " — "Cardboard games? " I ask... "Well you know, they
build cardboard houses and put people in them and the people are cardboard
and the magician makes the dead body twitch and they bring water to the
moon, and the moon has a strange ear, and all that, so I'm alright, Goof. "
'Okay. "

31

So there I am as it starts to get dark standing with one hand on the
window curtain looking down on the street as Ben Fagan walks away to get the
bus on the corner, his big baggy corduroy pants and simple blue Goodwill
workshirt, going home to the bubble bath and a famous poem, not really
worried or at least not worried about what I'm worried about tho he too
carries that anguishing guilt I guess and hopeless remorse that the
potboiler of time hasnt made his early primordial dawns over the pines of
Oregon come true — I'm clutching at the drapes of the window like the
Phantom of the Opera behind the masque, waiting for Billie to come home and
remembering how I used to stand by the windows like this in my childhood and
look out on dusky streets and think how awful I was in this development
everybody said was supposed to be "my life" and "their lives'. — Not so
much that I'm a drunkard that I feel guilty about but that others who occupy
this plane of "life on earth" with me don't feel guilty at all — Crooked
judges shaving and smiling in the morning on the way to their heinous
indifferences, respectable generals ordering soldiers by telephone to go die
or drop dead, pickpockets nodding in cells saying "I never hurt anybody, "
"that's one thing you can say for me, yes sir', Women who regard themselves
saviors of men simply stealing their substance because they think their
swan-rich necks deserve it anyway (though for every swan-rich neck you lose
there's another ten waiting, each one ready to lay for a lemon), in fact
awful hugefaced monsters of men just because their shirts are clean deigning
to control the lives of working men by running for Governor saying "Your tax
money in my hands will be aptly used, " "You should realize how valuable I
am and how much you need me, without me what would you be, not led at all? "
— Forward to the big designed mankind cartoon of a man standing facing the
rising sun with strong shoulders with a plough at his feet, the necktied
governor is going to make hay while the sun rises — ? — I feel guilty for
being a member of the human race — Drunkard yes and one of the worst fools
on earth — In fact not even a genuine drunkard just a fool — But I stand
there with hand on curtain looking down for Billie, who's late, Ah me, I
remember that frightening thing Mila-repa said which is other than those
reassuring words of his I remembered in the cabin of sweet loneness on Big
Sur: "When the various experiences come to light in meditation, do not be
proud and anxious to tell other people, else to Goddesses and Mothers you
will bring annoyance" and here I am a perfectly obvious fool American writer
doing just that not only for a living (which I was always able to glean
anyway from railroad and ship and lifting boards and sacks with humble hand)
but because if I don't write what actually I see happening in this unhappy
globe which is rounded by the contours of my deathskull I think I'll have
been sent on earth by poor God for nothing — Tho being a Phantom of the
Opera why should that worry me? — In my youth leaning my brow hopelessly on
the typewriter bar, wondering why God ever was anyway? — Or biting my lip
in brown glooms in the parlor chair in which my father's died and we've all
died a million deaths
— Only Fagan can understand and now he's got his bus — And when
Billie comes home with Elliott I smile and sit down in the chair and it
utterly collapses under me, blang, I'm sprawled on the floor with surprise,
the chair has gone. 'How'd that happen? " wonders Billie and at the same
time we both look at the fishbowl and both the goldfishes are upsidedown
floating dead on the surface of the water.
I've been sitting in that chair by that fishbowl for a week drinking
and smoking and talking and now the goldfish are dead.
"What killed them? " "I don't know" — "Did I kill them because I gave
them some Kelloggs corn flakes? " — "Mebbe, you're not supposed to give
them anything but their fish food" — "But I thought they were hungry so I
gave them a few flicks of corn flakes" — "Well I dont know what killed
them'... "But why dont anybody know? what happened? why do they do this?
otters and mouses and every damn thing dyin on all sides Billie, I cant
stand it, it's all my goddam fault every time! " — "Who said it was your
fault dear? "... "Dear? you call me dear? why do you call me dear? "... "Ah,
let me love you" (kissing me), "just because you dont deserve it" —
(Chastised): "Why dont I deserve it" — "Because you say so... "
— "But what about the fish'... "I dont know, really" — "Is it because
I've been sitting in that crumbling chair all week blowing smoke on their
water? and all the others smoking and all the talk? " — But the little kid
Elliott comes crawling up his mommy's lap and starts asking questions:
"Billie, " he calls her, "Billie, Billie, Billie, " feeling her face, I'm
almost going mad from the sadness of it all — "What did you do all day? "
— "I was with Ben Fagan and slept in the park... Billie what are we gonna
do? " — "Anytime you say like you said, we'll get married and fly to Mexico
with Perry and Elliott'... 'I'm afraid of Perry and I'm afraid of Elliott"
— "He's only a little boy" — "Billie I dont wanta get married. I'm
afraid... " — 'Afraid? " — "I wanta go home and die with my cat. " I could
be a handsome thin young president in a suit sitting in an oldfashioned
rocking chair, no instead I'm just the Phantom of the Opera standing by a
drape among dead fish and broken chairs — Can it be that no one cares who
made me or why?... "Jack what's the matter, what are you talking about? "
but suddenly as she's making supper and poor little Elliott is waiting there
with spoon upended in fist I realize it's just a little family home scene
and I'm just a nut in the wrong place — And in fact Billie starts saying
"Jack we should be married and have quiet suppers like this with Elliott,
something would sanctify you forever I'm positive. " 'What have I done
wrong? " — "What you've done wrong is withhold your love from a woman like
me and from previous women and future women like me — can you imagine all
the fun we'd have being married, putting Elliott to bed, going out to hear
jazz or even taking planes to Paris suddenly and all the things I have to
teach you and you teach me — instead all you've been doing is wasting life
really sitting around sad wondering where to go and all the time it's right
there for you to take" "Supposin I dont want it" — "That's part of the
picture where you say you dont want it, of course you want... " — "But I
dont, I'm a creepy strange guy you dont even know" — ('Cweepy? what's
cweepy? Billie? what's cweepy? " is asking poor little Elliott)... And
meanwhile Perry comes in for a minute and I pointblank say to him 'I don't
understand you Perry, 1 love you, dig you, you're wild, but what's all this
business where you wanta kidnap little girls? " but suddenly as I'm asking
that I see tears in his eyes and I realize he's in love with Billie and has
always been, wow I even say it, "You're in love with Billie aint ya? I'm
sorry, I'm cuttin out" — "What are you talkin about man? " — It's a big
argument then about how he and Billie are just friends so 1 start singing
Just Friends like Sinatra "Two friends but not like before" but goodhearted
Perry seeing me sing runs downstairs to get another bottle for me — But
nevertheless the fish are dead and the chair is broken.
Perry in fact is a tragic young man with enormous potentials who's just
let himself swing and float to hell I guess, unless something else happens
to him soon, I look at him and realize that besides loving Billie secretly
and truly he must also love old Cody as much as I do and all the world
bettern I do yet he is the character who is always being put away behind
bars for this — Rugged, covered with woe, he sits there with his black hair
always over his brow, over his black eyes, his iron arms hanging helplessly
like the arms of a powerful idiot in the madhouse, with the beauty of
lostness pasted all over him — Who is he? in fact? — And why doesnt blonde
Billie washing the homey dishes there acknowledge his love? — In fact me
and Perry end up we're both sitting with hanging heads when Billie comes
back in the livingroom and sees us like that, like two repentant catatonics
in hell — Some Negro comes in and says if I give him a few dollars he'll
get some pot but as soon as I give him five dollars he suddenly says "Well I
aint gonna get nothin" — 'You got five dollars, go out and get it" — "I
aint sure I can get any" — I dont like him at all — I suddenly realize I
can leap up and throw him on the floor and take the five dollars away from
him but I dont even care about the money but I am mad about him doing that
— "Who is that guy? " — I know that if I start fighting him he has a knife
and we'll wreck Billie's livingroom too — But suddenly another Negro comes
in and turns out a sweet visit talking about jazz and brotherhood and they
all leave and me and Billie are alone to wonder some more. All the muscular
gum of sex is such a bore, but Billie and I have such a fantastic sexball
anyway that's why we're able to philosophize like that and agree and laugh
together in sweet nakedness "Oh baby we're together crazy, we could live in
an old log cabin in the hills and never say anything for years, it was meant
that we'd meet'... She's saying all kinds of things as an idea begins to
dawn on me: 'Say I know Billie, let's leave the City and take Elliott with
us and go to Monsanto's cabin in the woods for a week or two and forget
everything" "Yes I can call up my boss right now and get a coupla weeks off,
Oh Jack let's do it" — "And it'll be good for Elliott, get away from all
these sinister friends of yours, my God" — "Perry aint sinister. " 'We'll
get married and go away and have a lodge in the Adirondacks, at night by the
lamp we'll have simple suppers with Elliott" — Til make love to you always"
"But you wont even have to because we both realize we're bugs... our lodge
will have truth written all over it but tho the whole world come smear it
with big black paints of hate and lies we'll be falling dead drunk in truth"
"Have some coffee" — "My hands'll grow numb and I wont be able to handle
the axe but still I'll be the truth man... I'll stand by the drape of the
window night listening to the babble of all the world and I'll tell you
about it" "But Jack I love you and that's not the only reason why, don't you
see that we're meant for each other from the beginning, didn't you see that
when you came in with Cody and started calling me Julien for that silly
reason you told me about where I look like some old buddy you know in New
York" — "Who hates Cody's guts and Cody hates him" — 'But dont you see
what a waste it is? " — "But what about Cody? you want me to marry you but
you love Cody and in fact Perry loves you too? " — "Sure but what's wrong
with that or all that? there's perfect love between us forever there's no
doubt about it but we only have two bodies" — (a strange statement) — I
stand by the window looking out on the glittering San Francisco night with
its magic cardboard houses saying "And you have Elliott who doesnt like me
and I dont like myself either, how about that? " (Billie says nothing to
this but only stores up an anger that comes out later) — 'But we can call
Dave Wain and he'll drive us to Big Sur cabin and we'll be alone in the
woods at least" — "I'm telling you that's what I wanta do! " — "Call him
now! " — I tell her the number and she dials it like a secretary "O the sad
music of it all, I've done it all, seen it all, done everything with
everybody" I say phone in hand, "the whole world's coming on like a high
school sophomore eager to learn what he calls New things, mind you, the same
old singsong sad song truth of death... because the reason I yell death so
much is because I'm really yelling life, because you cant have death without
life, hello Dave? there you are? know what I'm callin you about? listen
pal... take that big brunette Romana that Rumanian madwoman and pack her in
Willie and come down to Billie's here and pick us up, we'll pack while you's
en route, honey's on, and we'll all go spend two weeks of bliss in/
Monsanto's cabin" — "Does Monsanto agree? "... "I'll call him right now and
ask him, he'll say sure'... "Well I thought I'd be painting Romana's wall
tomorrow but maybe I'd a just got drunk doin that anyway: sure you wanta do
all this now? " — "Yes yeh yeh, come on... " "And I can bring Romana? "
... "Yes but why not? "... "And what's the purpose of all this? "...
"Ah Daddy, maybe just to see you again and we can talk about purposes
anywhere: you wanta go on a lecture tour to Utah university and Brown
university and tell the well scrubbed kids? " — 'Scrubbed with what? "...
"Scrubbed with hopeless perfection of pioneer puritan hope that leaves
nothing but dead pigeons to look at? " — "Okay I'll be right out... first I
gotta get Willie's tank filled up and an oil change too" — 'I'll pay you
when you get here" — "I heard you were eloping with Billie" — "Who told
you that? " — "It was in the paper today'... "Well we'll start off by
getting into Willie again and dont bring Ron Blake, we'll be just two
couples dig? " — 'Yeh — and lissen I'll bring my surf castin rod and catch
some fish down there'... "We'll have a ball... and listen Dave I'm grateful
you're free and willing to drive us down there, I'm down in the mouth, I've
been sitting here for a week drinking and the chair broke and the fish died
and I'm all screwed up again" — "Well you shouldnt oughta drink that sweet
stuff all the time and you never eat" — "But that's not the real trouble"
"Well we'll decide what the real trouble is" — "That's right" — "Methinks
the real trouble is those pigeons" — "Why? " "I dunno, remember when we
were in East St Louis with George, and Jack you said you'd love those
beautiful dancing girls if you knew they would live forever as beautiful as
they are? " "But that's only a quote from Buddha" — "Yeh, but the girls
didn't expect all that" — "How ya feeling Dave? what's Fagan doing tonight"
— "Oh he's sitting in his room writing something, calls it his G O O F B O
O K, has big wild drawings in it, and Lex Pascal is drunk again and the
music is playing and I'm real sad and I'm glad you called'... "You like me
Dave? " — "I ain't got nothin else to do, kid" — "But you really have
somethin else to do really? " — "Lissen never mind, I'll be up, you call
Monsanto right away tho because we also gotta get the corral gate keys from
him" — "I'm glad I know you Dave" — "Me too Jack" — "Why? " "Maybe I
wanted to stand on my head in the snow to prove it but I do, am glad, will
be glad, after all that's right there's nothing else for us to do but solve
these damn problems and I've got one right here in my pants for Romana" "But
that's so sick and tired to call life a problem that can be solved" — "Yes
but I'm just repeating what I read in the dead pigeon textbooks" — "But
Dave I love you" — "Okay I'll be right over. "

32

We pack up little Eliott's pathetic warmclothes and put food together
and get the hamper all set and wait for Dave to come sadly in the night —
And we have a big talk... "Billie but why did the fish die? " but she knows
already they probably died because I gave them Kelloggs cornflakes or
something went wrong, one thing sure is that she didnt forget to feed them
or anything, it's all me, all my fault, I'd as soon be rusted by autumn
too-much-think than be dead-fisher cause of those poor little hunks of
golden death floating on that scummy water — It reminds me of the otter —
But I cant explain it to Billie who's all abstract and talking about our
abstract soul-meetings in hell, and little Elliott is pulling at her asking
"Where we going? where we going? what for? what for? " She's saying "And all
because you think you don't deserve to be loved because you think you caused
the death of the goldfish tho they probably just died on their own
accord'... "Why would they do that? why? what kind of logic is that for fish
to have? " — "Or because you think you drink too much and therefore every
time you're feeling good on a little booze you give up and say your hands
hang helpless, like you said last night when you were holding me with those
hands blessing my heart and my body with your love, O Jack it's time for you
to wake up and come with me or at least come with somebody and open your
eyes to why God's put you here, stop all that staring at the floor, you and
Perry both you're crazy — I'll draw you magic moon circles'll change all
your luck" — I look her dead in the eye and it is blue and I say "O Billie,
forgive me" — "But you see you go there talkin guilty again" — "Well I
dont know all those big theories about how everything should be goddamit all
I know is that I'm a helpless hunk of helpful horse manure looking in your
eye saying Help me" — "But when you make those big final statements it
doesnt help you" — "Of course I know that but what do you want? " — "I
want us to get married and settle down to a sensible understanding about
eternal things" — "And you may be right" — I see it all raving before me
the endless yakking kitchen mouthings of life, the long dark grave of tomby
talks under midnight kitchen bulbs, in fact it fills me with love to realize
that life so avid and misunderstood nevertheless reaches out skinny skeleton
hand to me and to Billie too — But you know what I mean. And this is the
way it begins.

33

It sounds all so sad but it was actually such a gay night as Dave and
Romana came over and there's all the business of packing boxes and clothes
down to the car, nipping out of bottles, getting ready in fact to sing all
the way to Big Sur 'Home On the Range" and "I'm Just a Lonsome Old Turd" by
Dave Wain — Me sitting up front next to Dave and Romana for some reason
maybe because I wanted to identify with my old broken front rockingchair and
lean there flapping and singing but with Romana between us the seat is
pinned down and no longer flaps — Meanwhile Billie is on the back mattress
with sleeping child and off we go booming down Bay Shore to that other shore
whatever it will bring, the way people always feel whenever they essay some
trip long or short especially in the night... The eyes of hope looking over
the glare of the hood into the maw with its white line feeding in straight
as an arrow, the lighting of fresh cigarettes, the buckling to lean forward
to the next adventure something that's been going on in America ever since
the covered wagons clocked the deserts in three months flat — Billie
doesn't mind that I dont sit in back with her because she knows I wanta sing
and have a good time — Romana and I hit up fantastic medleys of popular and
folk songs of all kinds and Dave contributes his New York Chicago blue light
nightclub romantic baritone specialities — My wavering Sinatra is barely
heard in fact — Beat on your knees and yell and sing Dixie and Banjo On My
Knee, get raucous and moan out Red River Valley, "Where's my harmonica, I
been meanin to buy me a eight dollar harmonica for eight years now. " It
always starts out good like that, the bad moments — Nothing is gained or
lost also by the fact that I insist we stop at Cody's en route so I can pick
up some clothes I left there but secretly I want Evelyn to finally come face
to face with Billie — It surprises me more however to see the look of
absolute fright on Cody's face as we pour into his livingroom at midnight
and I announce that Billie's in the jeep sleeping — Evelyn is not perturbed
at all and in fact says to me privately in the kitchen "I guess it was bound
to happen sometime she'd come here and see it but I guess it was destined to
be you who'd bring her" "What's Cody so worried about? " — "You're spoiling
all his chance to be real secretive" — "He hasnt come and seen us for a
whole week, that's in a way what happened, he just left me stranded there:
I've been feeling awful, too"
— "Well if you want you can ask her to come in" "Well we're leaving in
a minute anyway, you wanta see her at least? " "I dont care" — Cody is
sitting in the livingroom absolutely rigid, stiff, formal, with a big Irish
stone in his eye: I know he's really mad at me this time tho I dont really
know why I go out and there's Billie alone in the car over sleeping Elliott
biting her fingernail — "You wanta come in and meet Evelyn? " — "I
shouldnt, she wont like that, is Cody there? " — "Yah" — So Willamine
climbs out (I remember just then Evelyn telling me seriously that Cody
always calls his women by their full first names, Rosemarie, Joanna, Evelyn,
Willamine, he never gives them silly nicknames nor uses them). The meeting
is not eventful, of course, both girls keep their silence and hardly look at
each other so it's all me and Dave Wain carrying on with the usual boloney
and I see that Cody is really very sick and tired of me bringing gangs
arbitrarily to his place, running off with his mistress, getting drunk and
thrown out of family plays, hundred dollars or no hundred dollars he
probably feels I'm just a fool now anyway and hopelessly lost forever but I
dont realize that myself because I'm feeling good — I want us to resume
down that road singing bawdier and darker songs till we're negotiating
narrow mountain roads at the pitch of the greatest songs.
I try to ask Cody about Perry and all the other strange characters who
visit Billie in the City but he just looks at me out of the corner eye and
says "Ah, yah, hm, "... I dont know and I never will know what he's up to
anyway in the long run: I realize I'm just a silly stranger goofing with
other strangers for no reason far away from anything that ever mattered to
me whatever that was... Always an ephemeral "visitor" to. the Coast never
really involved with anyone's lives there because I'm always ready to fly
back across the country but not to any life of my own on the other end
either, just a traveling stranger like Old Bull Balloon, an exemplar of the
loneliness of Doren Coit actually waiting for the only real trip, to Venus,
to the mountain of Mien Mo — Tho when I look out of Cody's livingroom
window just then I do see my star still shining for me as it's done all
these 38 years over crib, out ship windows, jail windows, over sleepingbags
only now it's dummier and dimmer and getting blurreder damnit as tho even my
own star be now fading away from concern for me as I from concern for it...
In fact we're all strangers with strange eyes sitting in a midnight
livingroom for nothing — And small talk at that, like Billie saying "I
always wanted a nice fireplace" and I'm yelling "Dont worry we got one at
the cabin hey Dave? and all the wood's chopped! " and Evelyn: — 'What does
Monsanto think of you using his cabin all summer, weren't you supposed to go
there alone in secret? " — "It's too late now! " I sing swigging from the
bottle without which I'd only drop with shame face flat on the floor or on
the gravel driveway — And Dave and Romana look a little uneasy finally so
we all get up to go, zoom, and that's the last time I see Cody or Evelyn
anyway.
And as I say our songs grow mightier as the road grows darker and
wilder, finally here we are on the canyon road the headlights just reaching
out there around bleak sand shoulders — Down to the creek where I unlock
the corral gate — Across the meadow and back to the haunted cabin — Where
on the strength of that night's booze and getaway gladness Billie and I
actually have a good time lighting fires and making coffee and gong to be
together in the one sleepingbag easy as pie after we've bundled up little
Elliott and Dave and Romana have retired in his double nylon bag by the
creek in the moonlight.
No, it's the next day and night that concerns me.

34

The whole day begins simply enough with me getting up feeling fair and
going down to the creek to slurp up water in my palms and wash up, seeing
the languid waving of one large brown thigh over the mass of Dave's nylons
indicative of an early morning love scene, in fact Romana telling us later
at breakfast "When I woke up this morning and saw all those trees and water
and clouds I told Dave "It's a beautiful universe we created"'... A real
Adam and Eve waking up, in fact this being one of Dave's gladdest days
because he'd really wanted to get away from the City again anyway and this
time with a pretty doll, and's brought his surf casting gear planning a big
day — And we've brought a lot of good food — The only trouble is there's
no more wine so Dave and Romana go off in Willie to get some more anyway at
a store thirteen miles south down the highway — Billie and I are alone
talking by the fire... I begin to feel extremely low as soon as last night's
alcohol wears off.
Everything is trembly again, the trembling hand, I cant for a fact even
light the fire and Billie has to do it — "I cant light a fire any more! " I
yell... "Well I can" she says in a rare instance when she lets me have it
for being such a nut — Little Elliott is constantly pulling at her asking
this and that, "What is that stick for, to put in the fire? why? how does it
burn? why does it burn? where are we? when are we leaving" and the pattern
develops where she begins to talk to him instead of me anyway because I'm
just sitting there staring at the floor sighing — Later when he takes his
nap we go down the path to the beach, about noon, both of us sad and silent
— "What's the matter I wonder" I say out loud — She: 'Everything was
alright last night when we slept in the bag together now you wont even hold
my hand... goddamit I'm going to kill myself! " — Because I've begun to
realize in my soberness that this thing has come too far, that I dont love
Billie, that I'm leading her on, that I made a mistake dragging everyone
here, that I simply wanta go home now, I'm just plumb sick and tired just
like Cody I guess of the whole nervewracking scene bad enough as it is
always pivoting back to this poor haunted canyon which again gives me the
willies as we walk under the bridge and come to those heartless breakers
busting in on sand higher than earth and looking like the heartlessness of
wisdom — Besides I suddenly notice as if for the first time the awful way
the leaves of the canyon that have managed to be blown to the surf are all
hesitantly advancing in gusts of wind then finally plunging into the surf,
to be dispersed and belted and melted and taken off to sea — I turn around
and notice how the wind is just harrying them off trees and into the sea,
just hurrying them as it were to death — In my condition they look human
trembling to that brink — Hastening, hastening — In that awful huge roar
blast of autumn Sur wind.
Boom, clap, the waves are still talking but now I'm sick and tired of
whatever they ever said or ever will say — Billie wants me to stroll with
her down towards the caves but I dont want to get up from the sand where I'm
sitting back to boulder... She goes alone — I suddenly remember James Joyce
and stare at the waves realizing "All summer you were sitting here writing
the so called sound of the waves not realizing how deadly serious our life
and doom is, you fool, you happy kid with a pencil, dont you realize you've
been using words as a happy game — all those marvelous skeptical things you
wrote about graves and sea death it's ALL TRUE YOU FOOL! Joyce is dead! The
sea took him! it will take YOU! " and I look down the beach and there's
Billie wading in the treacherous undertow, she's already groaned several
times earlier (seeing my indifference and also of course the hopelessness at
Cody's and the hopelessness of her wrecked apartment and wretched life)
"Someday I'm going to commit suicide, " I suddenly wonder if she's going to
horrify the heavens and me too with a sudden suicide walk into those awful
undertows... I see her sad blonde hair flying, the sad thin figure, alone by
the sea, the leaf-hastening sea, she suddenly reminds me of something... I
remember her musical sighs of death and I see the words clearly imprinted in
my mind over her figure in the sand: — ST CAROLYN BY THE SEA — "You were
my last, chance" she's said but dont all women say that?... But can it be by
"last chance" she doesnt mean mere marriage but some profoundly sad
realization of something in me she really needs to go on living, at least
that impression coming across anyway on the force of all the gloom we've
shared — Can it be I'm withholding from her something sacred just like she
says, or am I just a fool who'll never learn to have a decent eternally
minded deepdown relation with a woman and keep throwing that away for a song
at a bottle? — In which case my own life is over anyway and there are the
Joycean waves with their blank mouths saying "Yes that's so, " and there are
the leaves hurrying one by one down the sand and dumping in — In fact the
creek is freighting hundreds more of them a minute right direct from the
back hills — That big wind blasts and roars, it's all yellow sunny and blue
fury everywhere — I see the rocks wobble as it seems God is really getting
mad for such a world and's about to destroy it: big cliffs wobbling in my
dumb eyes: God says "It's gone too far, you're all destroying everything one
way or the other wobble boom the end is NOW. " 'The Second Coming, tick
lock, " I think shuddering — St Carolyn by the Sea is going in further — I
could run and go see her but she's so far away — I realize that if that nut
is going to try this I'll have to make an awful run and swim to get her — I
get up and edge over but just then she turns around and starts back... "And
if 1 call her "that nut" in my secret thoughts wonder what she calls me? "
— O hell, I'm sick of life — If I had any guts I'd drown myself in that
tiresome water but that wouldnt be getting it over at all, I can just see
the big transformations and plans jellying down there to curse us up in some
other wretched suffering form eternities of it — I guess that's what the
kid feels — She looks so sad down there wandering Ophelialike in bare feet
among thunders.
On top of that now here come the tourists, people from other cabins in
the canyon, it's the sunny season and they're out two three times a week,
what a dirty look I get from the elderly lady who's apparently heard about
the "author" who was secretly invited to Mr Monsanto's cabin but instead
brought gangs and bottles and today worst of all trollopes — (Because in
fact earlier that morning Dave and Romana have already made love on the sand
in broad daylight visible not only to others down the beach but from that
high new cabin on the shoulder of the cliff) (tho hidden from sight from the
bridge by cliffwall) — So it's all well known news now there's a ball going
on in Mr Monsanto's cabin and him not even here — This elderly lady being
accompanied by children of all kinds — So that when Billie returns from the
far end of the beach and starts back with me down the path (and I'm silly
with a big footlong wizard pipe in my mouth trying to light it in the wind
to cover up) the lady gives her the once over real close but Billie only
smiles lightly like a little girl and chirps hello.
I feel like the most disgraceful and nay disreputablewretch on earth,
in fact my hair is blowing in beastly streaks across my stupid and moronic
face, the hangover has now worked paranoia into me down to the last pitiable
detail. Back at the cabin I cant chop wood for fear I'll cut a foot off, I
cant sleep, I cant sit, I cant pace, I keep going to the creek to drink
water till finally I'm going down there a thousand times making Dave Wain
wonder as he's come back with more wine — We sit there slugging out of our
separate bottles, in my paranoia I begin to wonder why I get to drink just
the one bottle and he the other — But he's gay "I am now going out surf
castin and catch us a grabbag of fish for a marvelous supper; Romana you get
the salad ready and anything else you can think of; we'll leave you alpne
now" he adds to gloomy me and Billie thinking he's in our way, "and say, why
dont we go to Nepenthe and private our grief tonight and enjoy the moonlight
on the terrace with Manhattans, or go see Henry Miller? " — "No! " I almost
yell, "I mean I'm so exhausted I dont wanta do anything or see anybody'...
(already feeling awful guilt about Henry Miller anyway, we've made an
appointment with him about a week ago and instead of showing up at his
friend's house in Santa Cruz at seven we're all drunk at ten calling long
distance and poor Henry just said "Well I'm sorry I dont get to meet you
Jack but I'm an old man and at ten o'clock it's time for me to go to bed,
you'd never make it here till after midnight now') (his voice on the phone
just like on his records, nasal, Brooklyn, goodguy voice, and him
disappointed in a way because he's gone to the trouble of writing the
preface to one of my books) (tho I suddenly now think in my remorseful
paranoias 'Ah the hell with it he was only gettin in the act like all these
guys write prefaces so you dont even get to read the author first') (as an
example of how really psychotically suspicious and loco I was getting).
Alone with Billie's even worse — "I cant see anything to do now, " she
says by the fire like an ancient Salem housewife ('Or Salem witch? " I'm
leering) — "I could have Elliott taken care of in a private home or an
orphanage and just go to a nunnery myself, there's a lot of them around —
or I could kill myself and Elliott both" — "Dont talk like that" —
"There's no other way to talk when there's no more directions to take" —
"You've got me all wrong I wouldnt be any good for you" — "I know that now,
you want to be a hermit you say but you dont do it much I noticed, you're
just tired of life and wanta sleep, in a way that's how I feel too only I've
got Elliott to worry about... I could take both our lives and solve that" —
'You, creepy talk" — 'You told me the first night you loved me, that I was
most interesting, that you hadn't met anyone you liked so much then you just
went on drinking, I really can see now what they say about you is true: and
all the others like you: O I realize you're a writer and suffer through too
much but you're really ratty sometimes... but even that I know you cant help
and I know you're not really ratty but awfully broken up like you explained
to me, the reasons
... but you're always groaning about how sick you are, you really dont
think about others enough and I KNOW you cant help it, it's a curious
disease a lot of us have anyway only better hidden sometimes... but what you
said the first night and even just now about me being St Carolyn in the Sea,
why dont you follow through with what your heart knows is Good and best and
true, you give up so easy to discouragement... then I guess too you dont
really want me and just wanta go home and resume your own life maybe with
Louise your girlfriend'... "No I couldn't with her either. I'm just bound up
inside like constipation, I cant move emotionally like you'd say emotionally
as tho that was some big grand magic mystery everybody saying "O how
wonderful life is, how miraculous, God made this and God made that", how do
you know he doesnt hate what He did: He might even be drunk and not noticing
what he went and done tho of course that's not true" — "Maybe God is dead"
— "No, God cant be dead because He's the unborn'... "But you have all those
philosophies and sutras you were talking about" — 'But dont you see they've
all become empty words, I realize I've been playing like a happy — child
with words words words in a big serious tragedy, look around" — "You could
make some effort, damn it! "
But what's even ineffably worse is that the more she advises me and
discusses the trouble the worse and worse it gets, it's as tho she didn't
know what she was doing, like an unconscious witch, the more she tries to
help the more I tremble/almost too realizing she's doing it on purpose and
knows she's witching me but it's all gotta be formally understood as "help"
dingblast it — She must be some kind of chemical counterpart to me, I just
cant stand her for a minute, I'm racked with guilt because all the evidence
there seems to say she's a wonderful person sympathizing in her quiet sad
musical voice with an obvious rogue nevertheless none of these rational
guilts stick — All I feel is the invisible stab from her — She's hurting
me! — At some points in our conversation I'm a veritable ham actor jumping
up to twitch my head, that's the effect she has — "What's the matter? " she
asks softly — Which makes me almost scream and I've never screamed in my
life — It's the first time in my life I'm not confident I can hold myself
together no matter what happens and be inly calm enough to even smile with
condescension at the screaming hysterias of women in madwards — I'm in the
same madward all of a sudden... And what's happened? what's caused it...
"Are you driving me mad on purpose? " I finally blurt... But naturally she
protests I'm talking out of my head, there's no such evident intention
anywhere, we're just on a happy weekend in the country with friends. "Then
there's something wrong with ME! " I yell — "That's obvious but why dont
you try to calm down and for instance like make love to me, I've been
begging you all day and all you do is groan and turn away as tho I was an
ugly old bat" — She comes and offers herself to me softly and gently but I
just stare at my quivering wrists — It's really very awful — It's hard to
explain — Besides then the little boy is constantly coming at Billie when
she kneels at my lap or sits on it or tries to soothe my hair and comfort
me, he keeps saying in the same pitiful voice "Dont do it Billie dont do it
Billie dont do it Billie" till finally she has to give up that sweet
patience of hers where she answers his every little pathetic question and
yell "Shut up! Elliott will you shut upl DO I have to beat you again! " and
I groan "No! " but Elliott yells louder "Dont do it Billie dont do it Billie
dont do it Billie! " so she sweeps him off and starts whacking him
screamingly on the porch and I am about to throw in the towel and gasp up my
last, it's horrible.
Besides when she beats Elliott she herself cries and then will be
yelling madwoman things like "I'll kill both of us if you dont stop, you
leave me no alternative! O my child! " suddenly picking him up and embracing
him rocking tears, and gnashing of hair and all under those old peaceful
blue-jay trees where in fact the jays are still waiting for their food and
watching all this — Even so Alf the Sacred Burro is in the yard waiting for
somebody to give him an apple — I look up at the sun going down golden
throughout the insane shivering canyon, that blasted rogue wind comes
topping down trees a mile away with an advancing roar that when it hits the
broken cries of mother and son in grief are blown away with all those crazy
scattering leaves — The creek screeches — A door bangs horribly, a shutter
follows suit, the house shakes — I'm beating my knees in the din and cant
even hear that. 'What's I got to do with you committing suicide anyway? "
I'm yelling — "Alright, it has nothing to do with you" — "So okay you have
no husband but at least you've got little Elliott, he'll grow up and be
okay, you can always meanwhile go on with your job, get married, move away,
do something, maybe it's Cody but more than that I'd say it's all those mad
characters making you insane and wanta kill yourself like that — Perry... "
— "Dont talk about Perry, he's wonderful and sweet and I love him and he's
much kinder to me than you'll ever be: at least he gives of himself — "But
what's all this giving of ourselves, what's there to give that'll help
anybody'... "You'll never know you're so wrapped up in yourself — We're now
starting to insult each other which would be a healthy sign except she keeps
breaking down and crying on my shoulder more or less again insisting I'm her
last chance (which isnt true)... "Let's go to a monastery together, " she
adds madly... "Evelyn, I mean Billie you might go to a nunnery at that, by
God get thee to a nunnery, you look like you'd make a nun, maybe that's what
you need all that talk about Cody about religion maybe all this worldly
horror is just holding you back from what you call your true realizing, you
could become a big reverend mother someday with not a worry on your mind tho
I met a reverend mother once who cried... ah it's all so sad" — "What did
she cry about? " — "I dont know, after talking to me, I remember I said
some silly things like "the universe is a woman because it's round" but I
think she cried because she was remembering her early days when she had a
romance with some soldier who died, at least that's what they say, she was
the greatest woman I ever saw, big blue eyes, big smart woman... you could
do that, get out of this awful mess and leave it all behind" — "But I love
love too much for that" — "And not because you're sensual either you poor
kid" — In fact we quiet down a little and do actually make love in spite of
Elliott pulling at her 'Billie don't do it don't do it Billie don't do it"
till right in the middle I'm yelling "Don't do what? what's he mean? — can
it be he's right and Billie you shouldnt do it? can it be we're sinning
after all's said and done? O this is insane! — but he's the most insane of
them all, " in fact the child is up on bed with us tugging at her shoulder
just like a grownup jealous lover trying to pull a woman off another man
(she being on top indication of exactly how helpless and busted down I've
become and here it is only four in the afternoon) — A little drama going on
in the cabin maybe a little different than what cabins are intended for or
the local neighbors are imagining.

35

But there's an awful paranoiac element sometimes in orgasm that
suddenly releases not sweet genteel sympathy but some token venom that
splits up in the body — I feel a great ghastly hatred of myself and
everything, the empty feeling far from being the usual relief is now as tho
I've been robbed of my spinal power right down the middle on purpose by a
great witching force — I feel evil forces gathering down all around me,
from her, the kid, the very walls of the cabin, the trees, even the sudden
thought of Dave Wain and Romana is evil, they're all coming now — I leave
poor Billie face in hand and rush off to drink water in the creek but every
time I do something like that I have to run back to be sorry and say so, but
the moment I see her again "She's doing something else" I leer and I don't
feel sorry at all — She's mumbling face in hands and the little boy's
crying at her side — "My God she should get to a nunnery! " I think rushing
back to the creek... Suddenly the water in the creek tastes different as tho
somebody's thrown gasoline or kerosene in it upstream — 'Maybe those
neighbors wanta get back at me that's what! " — I taste the water carefully
and I'm positive that's what happened.
Like an idiot I'm sitting by the creek staring when Dave Wain comes
striding down with one fish on the line and his big cheerful western twang
as tho nothing unusual's happened "Well boy I spent a whole two hours and
look what I got! one measly but beautiful pathetic as you'll see holy little
rainbow sea trout that I'm now going to clean... Now the way to clean fish
is as follows, " and he kneels innocently by the creek to show me how — I
have nothing else to do but watch and smile — He says: "Be prepared to be
taken on tour of Farollone Island within next two years, boy, with wild
canaries actually lighting on your boat hundreds of miles out at sea — See
I'm tryna to save money for a fishboat of my own, I think fishing is bettern
anything and I intend to entirely reorganize my life for this tho I see the
stern image of Fagan shrieking with a Roshi stick, but you ought to see how
fast you can bait up hundreds of herring and clean salmon in one and a half
minutes, it's a fact, and you walk about in hickory shirts and wool knit
caps — Man I know all about it and I'm writing a final definitive article
on how clean hard work is the saviour of us all — When you're out there
it's a very primal light, fishing is — You're a hunter — Birds find fish
for you — Weather drives you — Foolish mind-hangs dissolve before utter
fatigue and everything comes in" — As I squat there I imagine maybe Billie
is telling Romana what happened in the cabin and Dave'11 know in a while tho
he seems to know a lot that's going on — He's hinted several times, like
now, "You look like you're having the worse time of your life, that kid
Elliott is enough to drive anybody crazy and Billie is sure a nervous little
wench — Now here's the way you scale, with this here knife" — And I marvel
that I cant be so useful and humanly simple and good enough to make small
talk to make others feel better, like Dave, there he is long and hollow of
cheeks from long drinking himself the past few weeks, but he's not
complaining or moaning in the corner like me, at least he does something
about it, he puts himself to the test — He gives me that feeling again that
I'm the only person in the world who is devoid of human beingness, damn it,
that's true, that's the way I feel anyway — "Ah Dave someday you and me'll
go fishing in your abandoned mining camp on the Rogue River, huh, we'll be
feeling better by then somehow gaddamit" "Well we've got to cut down on the
sauce a whole lot, Jack, " saying "Jack" sadly a lot like Jarry Wagner used
to do on our Dharmabumming mountain climbs where we'd confide dolors, "yes,
and we drink too many SWEET drinks in a way, you know all that sugar and no
food is bound to upset your metabolism and fill your blood with sugar to the
point where you aint got the strength of a hen; you especially you've been
drinking nothin but sweet port and sweet Manhattans now for weeks — I
promise you the holy flesh of this little fish will heal you, " (chuckle). I
suddenly look at the fish and feel horrible all over again, that old death
scheme is back only now I'm gonna put my big healthy Anglosaxon teeth into
it and wrench away at the mournful flesh of a little living being that only
an hour ago/was swimming happily in the sea, in fact even Dave thinking this
and saying: "Ah yes that little muzzling mouth was blindly sucking away in
the glad waters of life and now look at it, here's where the fittin head's
chopped off, you dont have to look, us big drunken sinners are now going to
use it for our sacrificial supper so in fact when we cook it I'm going to
say an Indian prayer for it hoping it's the same prayer the local Indians
used — Jack in a way we might even start having fun here and make a great
week out of it! " — "Week? " — "I thought we was coming here for a week"
— "Oh I said that didn't I... I feel awful about everything... I dont think
I can make it... I'm going crazy with Billie and Elliott and me too... maybe
I'll have to, maybe we'll have to leave or something, I think I'll die here"
— And Dave is disappointed naturally and here I've already routed him up
out of his own affairs to drive down here anyway, another matter to make me
feel like a rat.

36

But Dave's making the best of clomping up and down the cabin preparing
the bag of cornmeal and starting the corn oil in the frying pan, Romana too
she's making an exquisite big salad with lots of mayonnaise and in fact poor
Billie is mutely helping her setting the table and the little boy is
crooning by the stove it's almost like a happy domestic scene suddenly —
Only I watch it from the porch with horrified eyes — Also because their
shadows in the lamplight gone casting on the walls look huge and monsterlike
and witch-like and warlock-like, I'm alone in the woods with happy ghosts —
The wind is howling as the sun goes down so I go in, but I go out at once
again madly to my creek, always thinking the creek itself will give me water
that will clear away everything and reassure me forever (also remembering in
my distress Edgar Cayce's advice "Drink a lot of water') but "There's
kerosene in the water! " I yell in the wind, nobody hearing — I feel like
kicking the creek and screaming — I turn around and there's the cabin with
its warm interiors, the silent people inside all noticeably glum because
they cant understand anyway what's with the nut wandering in and out from
cabin to creek, silent, wan faced, stupefacted, trembling and sweating like
midsummer was on the roof and instead it's even cold now — I sit in the
chair with my back to the door and watch Dave as he lectures on bravely.
'What we're having is a sacrificial banquet with all kinds of goodies you
see laid in a regal spread around one little delicious fish so that we all
have to pray to the fish and take tiny little bites, we only have about four
bites apiece and there's all kinds of parts of the fish where the bites are
more significant — But beyond that the way to properly fry a freshcaught
fish is to be sure the oil is burning and furiously so when you lay the fish
in it, not burning but real hot oil, well, yeh even burning, hand me the
spat, you then gently lay the fish into the oil and create a tremendous
crackling racket" (which he does as Romana cheers) (and I glance at Billie
and she's thinking of something else like a nun in the corner) but Dave
keeps on making jokes till he actually has us all smiling — While the fish
is cooking, tho, Romana as she's been doing all day is constantly handing me
a bite to eat, some hors d'oeuvres or piece of tomato or other, apparently
trying to help me feel better... "You've got to EAT" she and Dave keep
saying but I dont want to eat and yet they're always holding out bites to my
mouth until finally now I begin to frown thinking "What's all these bites
they keep throwing at me, poison? — and what's wrong with my eyes, they're
all dilated black like I've had drugs, all I've had is wine, did Dave put
drugs in my wine or something? thinking it will help or something? or are
they members of a secret society that dopes people secretly the idea being
to enlighten them or something? " even as Romana is handing me a bite and I
take it from her big brown hands and chew... She's wearing purple panties
and purple bras, nothing else, just for fun, Dave's slappin her on the can
joyfully as he cooks the supper, it's some big erotic natural thing to do
for Romana, she believes in showing her beautiful big body anyway — In fact
at one point when Billie's up leaning over a chair Dave goes behind Billie
and playfully touches her and winks at me, but I'm not of all this like a
moron and we could all be having fun such as soldiers dream the day away
imagining, dammit — But the venoms in the blood are asexual as well as
asocial and a-everything — "Billie's so nice and thin, like I'm used to
Romana maybe I should switch around here for variety, " says Dave at the
sizzling frying pan I look over my shoulder and see at first with a leap of
joy but then with ominous fear an enormous full moon at full fat standing
there between Mien Mo mountain and the north canyon wall, like saying to me
as I look over my trembling shoulder "Hoo doo you. "
But I say "Dave, look, as if all this wasn't enough" and I point out
the moon to him, there's dead silence in the trees and also among us inside,
there she is, vast lugubrious fullmoon that frights madmen and makes waters
wave, she's got one or two treetops silhouetted and's got that whole side of
the canyon lit up in silver Dave just looks at the moon with his tired
madness eyes (over-excited eyes, my mother'd said) and says nothing I go out
to the creek and drink water and come back and wonder about the moon and
suddenly the four shadows in the cabin area all dead silent as tho they had
conspired with the moon.
"Time to eat, Jack, " says Dave coming out on the porch suddenly — No
one's saying anything — I go in and sheepishly sit at the table like the
useless pioneer who doesn't do anything to help the men or please the women,
the idiot in the wagon train who nevertheless has to be fed Dave stands
there saying "Oh full moon, here is our little fish which we are now going
to partake of to feed us so that we shall be stronger; thank you Fish
people, thank you Fish God; thank you moon for making our light tonight;
this is the night of the fullmoon fish which we now consecrate with the
first delicate bite" He takes his fork and opens the little fish carefully,
it's beautifully breaded and fried and centered in a dazzle of salads and
vegetables and cornmeal johnny-cakes, he opens a funny gill, goes under,
removes a strange bite and projects it to my mouth saying "Take the first
bite Jack, just a little bite, and be sure to chew very slowly" I do so,
oily delicious bite but nothing delicious any more in my tongue — Then the
others take their little holy bites, little Elliott's eyes shining with
delight at this wonderful game that however has started to frighten me —
For obvious reasons by now. As we eat Dave announces that he and I are sick
from too much drinking and by God we're going to reform and see to it that
we shape up, then he launches into stories as usual, ending in a talkative
ordinary supper that I think will sorta straighten me out at first but after
supper I feel even worse, "That fish has all the death of otters and mouses
and snakes right in it or something" I'm thinking — Billie is quietly
washing the dishes without complaint, Dave is gladly smoking after-dinner
cigarettes on the porch, but here I am again mooning by the creek hiding
from all of them each five minutes tho I cant understand what makes me do
it... I HAVE to get out of there... But I have no right to STAY AWAY — So I
keep coming back but it's all an insane revolving automatic directionless
circle of anxiety, back and forth, around and around, till they're really by
now so perturbed by my increasing silent departures and creepy returns
they're all sitting without a word by the stove but now their heads are
together and they're whispering — From the woods I see those three shadowy
heads whispering me by the stove — What's Dave saying? — And why do they
look like they're plotting something further? — Can it be it was all
arranged by Dave Wain via Cody that I would meet Billie and be driven mad
and now they've got me alone in the woods and are going to give me final
poisons tonight that will utterly remove all my control so that in the
morning I'll have to go to a hospital forever and never write another line?
— Dave Wain is jealous because I wrote 10 novels? — Billie has been
assigned by Cody to get me to marry her so he'll get all my money? Romana is
a member of the expert poisoning society (I've heard her mention tree
spirits already, earlier in the car, and she's sung some strange songs the
night before) — The three of them, Dave Wain in fact the chief conspirator
because I know he does have amphetamine on his person and the needles in a
little box, just one injection of a tomato, or of a portion of fish, or
drops into a bottle of wine, and my eyes become mad wide and black like they
are now, my nerves OO ouch, this is what I'm thinking Still they sit there
by the fire in dead silence, when I tromp into the cabin in fact they all
start up again talking: sure sign — I walk out again, "I'm going down the
road a ways" — "Okay" — But the moment I'm alone on the path a million
waving moony arms are thrashing around me and every hole in the cliffs and
burnt out trees I'd calmly passed a hundred times all summer in dead of fog,
now has something moving in it quickly — I hurry back Even on the porch I'm
scared to see the familiar bushes near the outhouse or down by the broken
treetrunk — And now a babble in the creek has somehow entered my head and
with all the rhythm of the sea waves going "Kettle blomp you're up, you rop
and dop, ligger lagger ligger" I grab my head but it keeps babbling.
Masks explode before my eyes when I close them, when I look at the moon
it waves, moves, when I look at my hands and feet they creep — Everything
is moving, the porch is moving like ooze and mud, the chair trembles under
me — 'Sure you dont wanta go to Nepenthe for a Manhattan Jack? " — "No"
('Yeh and you'd dump poison in it" I think darkly but seriously hurt I could
ever allow myself to think that about poor Dave) — And I realize the
unbearable anguish of insanity: how uninformed people can be thinking insane
people are "happy', O God, in fact it was Irwin Garden once warned me not to
think the madhouses are full of "happy nuts', "There's a tightening around
the head that hurts, there's a terror of the mind that hurts even more,
they're so unhappy and especially because they cant explain it to anybody or
reach out and be helped through all the hysterical paranoia they are really
suffering more than anyone in the world and I think in the universe in fact,
" and Irwin knew this from observing his mother Naomi who finally had to
have a lobotomy
... Which sets me thinking how nice to cut away therefore all that
agony in my forehead and STOP IT! STOP THAT BABBLING! — Because now the
babbling's not only in the creek, as I say it's left the creek and come in
my head, it would be alright for coherent babbling meaning something but
it's all brilliantly enlightened babble that does more than mean something:
it's telling me to die because everything is over — Everything is swarming
all over me. Dave and Romana retire again by the creek for a night's sweet
sleep. under the moon while Billie and I sit there gloomy by the fire — Her
voice is crying: "It might make you feel better to just come in my arms" —
"I've got to try something, Billie after all I've told you I cant make you
see what's happening to me, you dont understand" — "Come into our
sleepingbag again like last night, just sleep'... We get in naked but now
I'm not drunk I'm aware of the real tight squeeze in there and besides in my
fever I'm perspiring so much it's unbearable, her own skin is soaking wet
from mine, yet our arms arc outside in the cold — "This won't do! " —
"What'll you do? " — "Let's try the cot inside" but maniacally I arrange
the cot all screwy with a board on top of it forgetting to put sleepingbag
pads underneath like I'd done all summer, I simply forget all that, Billie,
poor Billie lies down with me on this absurd board thinking I'm trying to
drive my madness away by self torturing ordeals... It's ridiculous, we lie
there stiff as boards on a board — I roll off and saying "We'll try
something else" — I try laying out the sleepingbag on the floor of the
porch but the moment she's in my arms a mosquito comes at me, or I burst out
sweating, or I see a flash of lightning, or I hear a big roaring Hymn in my
head, or imagine a thousand people are coming down the creek talking, or the
roar of the wind is bringing flying treetrunks that will crush us — "Wait a
minute. " I yell and get up to pace awhile and run down to drink water by
the creek where Dave and Romana are peacefully entangled — I start cursing
Dave "Bastard's got the only decent spot there is to sleep in anyway, right
there in that sand by the creek, if he wasnt here I could sleep there and
the creek would cover the noise in my head and I could sleep there, with
Billie even, all night, bastard's got my spot, " and I kick back to the
porch
— Poor Billie's arms are outstretched to me: "Please Jack, come on,
love me, love me" — "I CANT" — "But why cant you, if even we'll never see
each other again let us our last night be beautiful and something to
remember forever. " 'Like a big ideal memory for both of us, cant you give
me just that? " — "I would if I could" I'm muttering around like a fussy
old nut inside the cabin looking for a match — I cant even light my
cigarette, something sinister blows it out, when it's lit it mortifies my
hot mouth anyway like a mouthful of death — I grab up another batch of bags
and blankets and start piling myself up on the other side of the porch
saying to Billie who's sighing now realizing it's hopeless "First I'll try
to take a nap by myself here then when I wake up I'll feel better and come
over to you" — So I try that, turning over rigidly my eyes wide open
staring full fright into the dark like the time in the movie Humphrey Bogart
who's just killed his partner trying to sleep by the fire and you see his
eyes staring into the fire rigid and insane — That's just the way I'm
staring If I try to close my eyes some elastic pulls them open again — If I
try to turn over the whole universe turns over with me but it's no better on
the other side of the universe — I realize I may never come out of this and
my mother is waiting for me at home praying for me because she must know
what's happening tonight, I cry out to her to pray and help me — I remember
my cat for the first time in three hours and let out a yell that scares
Billie — "All right Jack? "... 'Give me a little time'... But now she's
started to sleep, poor girl is exhausted, I realize she's going to abandon
me to my fate anyway and I cant help thinking she and Dave and Romana are
all secretly awake waiting for me to die — 'For what reason? " I'm thinking
"this secret poisoning society, I know, it's because I'm a Catholic, it's a
big anti-Catholic scheme, it's Communists destroying everybody, systematic
individuals are poisoned till finally they'll have everybody, this madness
changes you completely and in the morning you no longer have the same mind
— the drug is invented by Airapatianz, it's the brainwash drug, I always
thought that Romana was a Communist being a Rumanian, and as for Billie that
gang of hers is strange, and Cody dont care, and Dave's all evil just like I
always figured maybe" but soon my thoughts arent even as "rational" as that
any more but become hours of raving... There are forces whispering in my ear
in rapid long speeches advising and warning, suddenly other voices are
shouting, the trouble is all the voices are longwinded and talking very fast
like Cody at his fastest and like the creek so that I have to keep up with
the meaning tho I wanta bat it out of my ears — I keep waving at my ears —
I'm afraid to close my eyes for all the turmoiled universes I see tilting
and expanding suddenly exploding suddenly clawing in to my center, faces,
yelling mouths, long haired yellers, sudden evil confidences, sudden
rat-tat-tats of cerebral committees arguing about "Jack" and talking about
him as if he wasn't there... Aimless moments when I'm waiting for more
voices and suddenly the wind explodes huge groans in the million treetop
leaves that sound like the moon gone mad — And the moon rising higher,
brighter, shining down in my eyes now like a streetlamp — The huddled
shadowy sleeping figures over there so coy So human and safe, I'm crying
"I'm not human any more and I'll never be safe any more, Oh what I wouldnt
give to be home on Sunday afternoon yawning because I'm bored, Oh for that
again, it'll never come back again Ma was right, it was all bound to drive
me mad, now it's done What'll I say to her? — She'll be terrified and go
mad herself — Oh ti Tykey, aide mue — me who's just eaten fish have no
right to ask for brother Tyke again " An argot of sudden screamed reports
rattles through my head in a language I never heard but understand
immediately — For a moment I see blue Heaven and the Virgin's white veil
but suddenly a great evil blue like an ink spot spreads over it, "The devil!
— the devil's come after me tonight! tonight is the night! that's what! "
— But angels are laughing and having a big barn dance in the rocks of the
sea, nobody cares any more — Suddenly as clear as anything I ever saw in my
life, I see the Cross.

37

I see the Cross, it's silent, it stays a long time, my heart goes out
to it, my whole body fades away to it, I hold out my arms to be taken away
to it, by God I am being taken away my body starts dying and swooning out to
the Cross standing in a luminous area of the darkness, I start to scream
because I know I'm dying but I dont want to scare Billie or anybody with my
death scream so I swallow the scream and ju'st let myself go into death and
the Cross: as soon as that happens I slowly sink back to life — Therefore
the devils are back, commissioners are sending out orders in my ear to think
anew, babbling secrets are hissed, suddenly I see the Cross again, this time
smaller and far away but just as clear and I say through all the noise of
the voices "I'm with you, Jesus, for always, thank you'... I lie there in
cold sweat wondering what's come over me for years my Buddhist studies and
pipesmoking assured meditations on emptiness and all of a sudden the Cross
is manifested to me — My eyes fill with tears — "We'll all be saved — I
wont even tell Dave Wain about it, I wont go wake him up down there and
scare him, he'll know soon enough — now I can sleep. " I turn over but it's
only begun — It's only one o'clock in the morning and the night wears on to
the wheeling moon worse and worse till dawn by which time I've seen the
Cross again and again but there's a battle somewhere and the devils keep
coming back — I know if I could only sleep for an hour the whole complex of
noisy brains would settle down, some control would come back somewhere
inside there, some blessing would soothe the whole issue
— But the bat comes silently flapping around me again, I see him
clearly in the moonlight now his little head of darkness and wings that
zigzag maddeningly so you cant even get a look at them Suddenly I hear a
hum, a definite flying saucer is hovering right over those trees where the
hum must be, there are orders in there, "They're coming to get me O my God!
" — I jump up and glare at the tree, I'm going to defend myself — The bat
flaps in front of my face — "The bat is their representative in the canyon,
his radar message they got, why dont they leave? doesnt Dave hear that awful
hum? " — Billie is dead asleep but little Elliott suddenly thumps his foot,
once — 1 realize he's not even asleep and knows everything that's going on
I lie down again and peek at him across the porch floor: I suddenly
realizing he's staring at the moon and there he goes again, thumping his
foot: he's sending messages — He's a warlock disguised as a little boy,
he's also destroying Billie! — I get up to look at him feeling guilty too
realizing this is all nonsense probably but he is not properly covered, his
little bare arms are outside the blankets in the cold night, he hasn't even
got a nightshirt, I curse at Billie — 1 cover him up and he whimpers — I
go back and lie down with mad eyes looking deep inside me, suddenly a bliss
comes over me as the sleep mechanism takes sinking hold — And there I am
dreaming me and two kids are hired to work in the mountains on the same
"ridge" as Desolation Peak (i. e. Mien Mo Mountain again) and start with a
cliffside river crew who tell us two workers have apparently sunk in the
cliffside snow and we must lean over sheer drops and see if we can "dump
them out" or haul them in — All we do is lie there on crumbly snow a
thousand foot fall to the river crumbling the snow off in slabs so big you
wouldn't know if men were trapped in em or not — Not only that the bosses
have special shoes on sliders that are holding them to the safe shore (like
ski clamps) so I begin to realize they're only fooling us poor kids and we
could have fallen too (I almost do) — (did) — (almost) — As observer of
the story I see it's just an annual ritualistic joke to fool the new kids on
the job who are then dispatched to the other side of the river to slump off
more snow from sheer banks in hopes of finding the lost workmen — So we
start there on a big trip, downriver first, but en route all the peasants
tell us stories of the God Monster Machine on the other shore who makes
sounds like certain birds and owls and has a million infernal contraptions
enough to make you sick with all the slipshod windmill rickety details, as
"Observer of the story" again I see it's just a trick to make us scared when
we get there at night and hear actual natural sounds of birds, owls, etc.
thinking as green rookies in the country it's that "Monster'... Meanwhile we
sign on to go to the main mountain but I promise myself if I dont like the
work there I'll come back get my old job on Desolation — Already our
employers have shown a murderous sense of humor — I arrive at Mien Mo
Mountain which is like Raton Canyon again but has a large tho dry rot river
running in the wide hole and down there on many rocks are huge brooding
vultures — Old bums row out to them and pull them clumsily off the rocks
and start feeding them like pets, bites of red meat or red mite, tho at
first I thought the eccentric old town bums wanted them to eat or to sell
(still maybe so) because before I study this I look and see hundreds of
slowly fornicating vulture couples on the town dump
... These are now humanly formed vultures with human shaped arms, legs,
heads, torsos, but they have rainbow colored feathers, and the men are all
quietly sitting behind Vulture Women slowly somehow fornicating at them in
all the same slow obscene movement — Both man and woman sit facing the same
direction and somehow there's contact because you can see all their feathery
rainbow behinds slowly dully monotonously fornicating on the dumpslopes —
As I pass I even see the expression on the face of a youngish blond vulture
man eternally displeased because his Vulture Mistress is an old Yakker who's
been arguing with him all the time — His face is completely human but
inhumanly pasty like uncooked pale pie dough with dull seamed buggy horror
that he's doomed to all this enough to make me shudder in sympathy, I even
see her awful expression of middleaged pie dough tormentism — They're so
human! But suddenly me and the two kid workers are taken to the Vulture
People respectable quarter of town to our apartment where a Vulture Woman
and her daughter show us our rooms Their faces are leprous thick with softy
yeast but painted with makeup to make them like thick Christmas dolls and
dull and fuzzy but human expressions, like with thick lips of rubber muzz,
fat expressions all crumbly like cracker meal, yellow pizza puke faces,
disgusting us tho we say nothing — The apartment has dirty beatnik beds and
mattresses everywhere but I walk thru the back looking for a sink — It's
huge... An endless walk thru long greasy pantries and vast washrooms a block
long with single filthy little sink all dark and slimey like underground
Lowell High School crumbling basements... Finally I come to the Kitchen
where we "new workers" are s'posed to cook little meals all summer — It's
vast stone fireplaces and stone stoves all rancid and greasy from a monthold
Vulture People Banquet Orgy with still dozens of uncooked chickens lying
around on the floor among garbage and bottles — Rancid stale grease
everywhere, nobody's ever cleaned it up or knew how and the place as big as
a garage — I push my way out of there pushing a huge greasystink
foodstained tray of some sort hurrying away from the big stinky emptiness
and horror — The fat golden chickens lie rotten upsidedown on littered
stone slabs — I hurry out never having seen such a dirty sight in my life.
Meanwhile I learn the two boys are studying a hamper full of Vulture Food
for us and one of them wisely says "Blisters in our sugar, " meaning the
Vultures put their blisters in our sugar so we'll "die" but instead of being
really dead we'll be taken to the Underground Slimes to walk neck deep in
steaming mucks pulling huge groaning wheels (among small forked snakes) so
the devil with the long ears can mine his Purple Magenta Square Stone that
is the secret of all this Kingdom — You end up down there groaning and
pulling thru dead bodies of other people even your own family floating in
the ooze — If you succeed you can become a pasty Vulture Person obscenely
fornicating slowly on the dump above, I think, either that or the devil just
invents the Vulture People with what's left over out of the underground Hell
— "Beans anyone? " I hear myself saying as thump! I'm awake again! Elliott
has thumped his foot just at that moment on the porch! — I look over
there!... He's doing it on purpose, he knows everything that's going on! —
What on earth have I brought these people for and why just this particular
night of that moon that moon that moon?
I'm up again and pacing up and down and drinking water at the creek,
Dave and Romana's lump figures in the moonlight dont move, like hypocrites,
"Bastard has my only sleeping spot" — I clutch my head, I'm so alone in all
this — I go fearfully casting about for control back inside the cabin by
the lighted lamp, a smoke, trying to squeeze the last red drop out of the
rancid port bottle, no go — Now that Billie's asleep and so still and
peaceful I wonder if I can sleep just by lying beside her and holding her —
I do just this, crawling in with all my clothes which I've put on because
I'm afraid of going mad naked or of not being able to suddenly run away from
everything, in my shoes, she moans a little in her sleep and resumes
sleeping as I hold her with those rigid staring eyes — Her blonde flesh in
the moonlight, the poor blonde hair so carefully washed and combed, the
ladylike little body also a burden to carry around like my own but so frail,
thinnish, I just stare at her shoulders with tears — I'd wake her up and
confess everything but I'll only scare her — I've done irreparable harm
('Garradarable narm! " yells the creek) All my self sayings suddenly
blurting babbles so the meaning cant even stay a minute I mean a moment to
satisfy my rational endeavours to hold, control, every thought I have is
smashed to a million pieces by million pieced mental explosions that I
remember I thought were so wonderful when I'd first seen them on Peotl and
Mescaline, I'd said then (when still innocently playing with words) "Ah, the
manifestation of multiplicity, you can actually see it, it aint just words"
but now it's "Ah the keselamaroyot you rot" — Till when dawn finally comes
my mind is just a series of explosions that get louder and more "multiply"
broken in pieces some of them big orchestral and then rainbow explosions of
sound and sight mixed. At dawn also I've almost dimmed into sleep three
times but I swear (and this is something I remember that makes me realize I
don't understand what happened at Big Sur even now) the little boy somehow
thumped his foot just at the moment of drowse, to instantly wake me up, wide
awake, back to my horror which when all is said and done is the horror of
all the worlds the showing of it to me being damn well what I deserve anyway
with my previous blithe yakkings about the sufferings of others in books.
Books, shmooks, this sickness has got me wishing if I can ever get out of
this I'll gladly become a millworker and shut my big mouth.

38

Dawn is most horrible of all with the owls suddenly calling back and
forth in the misty moon haunt — And even worse than dawn is morning, the
bright sun only GLARING in on my pain, making it all brighter, hotter, more
maddening, more nervewracking — I even go roaming up and down the valley in
the bright Sunday morning sunshine with bag under arm looking hopelessly for
some spot to sleep in — As soon as I find a spot of grass by the path I
realize I cant lie down there because the tourists might walk by and see me
— As soon as I find a glade near the creek I realize it's too sinister
there, like Hemingway's darker part of the swamp where "the fishing would be
more tragic" somehow — All the haunts and glades having certain special
evil forces concentrated there and driving me away — So haunted I go
wandering up and down the canyon crying with that bag under my arm: "What on
earth's happened to me? and how can earth be like that? "
Am I not a human being and have done my best as well as anybody else?
never really trying to hurt anybody or halfhearted cursing Heaven? — The
words I'd studied all my life have suddenly gotten to me in all their
serious and definite deathliness, never more I be a "happy poet" "Singing"
"about death" and allied romantic matters, "Go thou crumb of dust you with
your silt of a billion years, here's a billion pieces of silt for you, shake
that out of your shaker" — And all the green nature of the canyon now
waving in the morning sun looking like a cruel idiot convocation. Coming
back to the sleepers and staring at them wild eyed like my brother'd once
stared at me in the dark over my crib, staring at them not only enviously
but lonely in human isolation from their simple sleeping minds — "But they
all look dead! " I'm carking in my canyon, "Sleep is death, everything is
death! " The horrible climax coming when the others finally get up and pook
about making a troubled breakfast, and I've told Dave I cant possibly stay
here another minute, he must drive us all back to town, "Okay but 1 sure
wish we could stay a week like Romana wants to do, " — "Well you drive me
and come back" — "Well I dunno if Monsanta would like that we've already
dirtied up the place aplenty, in fact we've got to dig a garbage pit and get
rid of the junk" — Billie offers to dig the garbage pit but does so by
digging a neat tiny coffinshaped grave instead of just a garbage hole —
Even Dave Wain blinks to see it — It's exactly the size fit for putting a
little dead Elliott in it, Dave is thinking the same thing I am I can tell
by a glance he gives me... We've all read Freud sufficiently to understand
something there — Besides little Elliott's been crying all morning and has
had two beatings both of them ending up crying and Billie saying she cant
stand it any more she's going to kill herself — And Romana too notices it,
the perfect 4 foot by 3 foot neatly sided grave like you're ready to sink a
little box in it — Horrifying me so much I take the shovel and go down to
dump junk into it and mess up the neat pattern somehow but little Elliott
starts screaming and grabs the shovel and refuses I go near the hole — So
Billie herself goes and starts filling the garbage in but then looks at me
significantly (I'm sure sometimes she really did aspire to make me crazy)
"Do you want to finish the job yourself? " — "What do you mean? " — "Cover
the earth on, do the honors? " "What do you mean do the honors! " — "Well I
said I'd dig the garbage pit and I've done that, aint you supposed to do the
rest? " — Dave Wain is watching fascinated, there's something screwy he
sees there too, something cold and frightening — "Well okay" I say, "I'll
dump the earth over it and tamp it down" but I go down to do this Elliot is
screaming "NO no no no no! " ('My God, the fishes" bones are in that grave"
I realize too) — "What's the matter he wont let me go near that hole! why
did you make it look like a grave? " I finally yell... But Billie is only
smiling quietly and steadily at me, over the grave, shovel in hand, the kid
weeping tugging the shovel, rushing up to block my way, trying to shove me
back with his little hands... I cant understand any of it — He's screaming
as I grab the shovel as tho I'm about to bury Billie in there or something
or himself maybe — 'What's the matter with this kid is he a cretin? " I
yell. With the same quiet steady smile Billie says "Oh you're so fucking
neurotic! " I simply get mad and dump earth over the garbage and tromp it
all down and say "The hell with all this madness! " I get mad and stomp up
on the porch and throw myself in the canvas chair and close my eyes — Dave
Wain says he's going down the road to investigate the canyon a bit and when
he comes back the girls will have finished packing and we'll all leave —
Dave goes off, the girls clean up and sweep, the little kid is sleeping and
suddenly hopelessly and completely finished I sit there in the hot sun and
close my eyes: and there's the golden swarming peace of Heaven in my eyelids
— It comes with a sure hand a soft blessing as big as it is beneficent, i.
e., endless — I've fallen asleep. I've fallen asleep in a strange way, with
my hands clasped behind my head thinking I'm just going to sit there and
think, but I'm sleeping like that, and when I wake up just one short minute
later I realize the two girls are both sitting behind me in absolute silence
— When I'd sat down they were sweeping, but now they were squatting behind
my back, facing each other, not a word — I turn and see them there —
Blessed relief has come to me from just that minute — Everything has washed
away — I'm perfectly normal again — Dave Wain is down the road looking at
fields and flowers — I'm sitting smiling in the sun, the birds sing again,
all's well again. I still cant understand it.
Most of all I cant understand the miraculousness of the silence of the
girls and the sleeping boy and the silence of Dave Wain in the fields —
Just a golden wash of goodness has spread over all and over all my body and
mind — All the dark torture is a memory — I know now I can get out of
there, we'll drive back to the City, I'll take Billie home, I'll say goodbye
to her properly, she wont commit no suicide or do anything wrong, she'll
forget me, her life'll go on, Romana's life will go on, old Dave will manage
somehow, I'll forgive them and explain everything (as I'm doing now) — And
Cody, and George Baso, and ravened McLear and perfect starry Fagan, they'll
all pass through one way or the other — I'll stay with Monsanto at his home
a few days and he'll smile and show me how to be happy awhile, we'll drink
dry wine instead of sweet and have quiet evenings in his home — Arthur Ma
will come to quietly draw pictures at my side — Monsanto will say "That's
all there is to it, take it easy, everything's okay, dont take things too
serious, it's bad enough as it is without you going the deep end over
imaginary conceptions just like you always said yourself — I'll get my
ticket and say goodbye on a flower day and leave all San Francisco behind
and go back home across autumn America and it'll all be like it was in the
beginning — Simple golden eternity blessing all — Nothing ever happened —
Not even this — St Carolyn by the Sea will go on being golden one way or
the other... The little boy will grow up and be a great man... There'll be
farewells and smiles — My mother'll be waiting for me glad — The corner of
the yard where Tyke is buried will be a new and fragrant shrine making my
home more homelike somehow — On soft Spring nights I'll stand in the yard
under the stars — Something good will come out of all things yet And it
will be golden and eternal just like that — There's no need to say another
word.
"SEA'
Sounds of the Pacific Ocean at Big Sur
'Sea'
Cherson! Cherson!
You aint just whistlin Dixie, Sea
Cherson! Cherson! We calcimine fathers
here below! Kitchen lights on...
Sea Engines from Russia seabirding here below...
When rocks outsea froth I'll know Hawaii
cracked up & scramble up my doublelegged cliff
to the silt of a million years...
Shoo — Shaw — Shirsh...
Go on die salt light You billion yeared
rock knocker Gavroom
Seabird Gabroobird
Sad as wife & hill Loved as mother & fog
Oh! Oh! Oh! Sea! Osh!
Where's yr little Neppytune tonight?
These gentle tree pulp pages
which've nothing to do with yr crash roar,
liar sea, ah, were made for rock
tumble seabird digdown footstep hollow weed
move bedarvaling crash? Ah again?
Wine is salt here? Tidal wave kitchen?
Engines of Russia in yr soft talk...
Les poissons de la mer
parle Breton... Mon nom es Lebris
de Keroack...
Parle, Poissons, Loti,
parle... Parlning Ocean sanding
crash the billion rocks...
Ker plotsch... Shore... shoe...
god brash...
The headland looks like a longnosed Collie sleeping
with his light on his nose, as the ocean,
obeying its accommodations of mind, crashes in
rhythm which could & will intrude, in thy
rhythm of sand thought...
... Big frigging shoulders on that sonofabitch
Parle, O, parle, mer, parle. Sea speak to me, speak
to me, your silver you light Where hole opened up in Alaska
Gray — shh — wind in The canyon wind in the rain
Wind in the rolling rash Moving and t wedel
Sea Sea
Diving sea O bird — la vengeance
De la roche Cossez
Ah
Rare, he rammed the gate rare over by Cherson, Cherson,
we calcify fathers here below
... a watery cross, with weeds
entwined — This grins restoredly, low sleep — Wave — Oh, no,
shush — Shirk — Boom plop Neptune now his arms extends
while one millions of souls sit lit in caves of darkness
... What old bark? The dog mountain? Down by the Sea
Engines? God rush — Shore...
Shaw — Shoo — Oh soft sigh we wait hair twined like
arks — Pissit — Rest not
... Plottit, bisp tesh, cashes,
re tav, plo, aravow, shirsh, — Who's whispering over
there — the silly earthen creek! The fog thunders — We put
silver light on face — We took the heroes in — A billion
years aint nothing...
O the cities here below! The men with a thousand
arms! the stanchions of their upward gaze! the
coral of their poetry! the sea dragons tenderized, meat
for fleshy fish... Navark, navark, the fishes
of the Sea speak Breton... wash as soft as people's
dreams — We got peoples in & out the shore, they call
it shore, sea call it pish rip plosh — The
5 billion years since earth we saw substantial
chan — Chinese are the waves — the woods
are dreaming
No human words bespeak the token sorrow older
than old this wave becrashing smarts the
sand with plosh of twirled sandy
thought — Ah change the world? Ah set
the fee? Are rope the angels in all the sea?
Ah ropey otter barnacle'd be...
Ah cave, Ah crosh! A feathery sea
Too much short — Where
Miss Nop tonight? Wroten Kerarc'h
in the labidalian aristotelian park
with slime a middle
... And Ranti forner
who pulled pearls by rope to throne
the King by the roll in the
forest of everseas? Not everseas, be seas
... Creep Crash
The woman with her body
in the sea — The frog who never moves & thunders, sharsh
... The snake with his body under the sand — The dog
with the light on his nose, supine, with shoulders so
enormous they reach back to rain crack — The leaves hasten
to the sea — We let them hasten to be wetted & give
em that old salt change, a nuder think will make you see
they originate from the We Sea anyway... No dooming booms
on Sunday afternoons — We run thru the core of cliffs,
blam up caves, disengage no jelly or jellied pendant
thinkers...
Our armies of anchored seaweed in the
coves gives of the smell of jellied salt...
Reach, reach, some leaves havent hastened near
enuf — Roll, roll, purl the sand shark floor
a greeny pali andarva
... Ah back — Ah forth...
Ah shish — Boom, away, doom, a day — Vein we
firm... The sea is We... Parle, parle, boom the
earth — Aree — Shaw, Sho, Shoosh, flut,
ravad, tapavada pow, coof, loof, roof,...
No, no, no, no, no, no...
Oh ya, ya, ya, yo, yair... Shhh...
Which one? the one? Which
one? The one ploshed... The ploshed one? the same,
ah boom — Who's that ant that giant golden saltchange
ant magnifying my mountain of feet? "Tis Finder, finding
the change in thought to join the boomer hangers in the
cave a light — And built a house above it? Never fear,
naver foir, les bretons qui parlent la langue de la Mar
sont espanol comme le cul du Kurd qui dit le maha
prajna paramita du Sud? Ah oui! Ke Vlum!
Glum sea, silent me...
They aint about to try it them ants who wear
out tunnels in a week the tunnel a million years
won — no — Down around the headland slobs for weed,
the chicken of the sea go yak! they sleep...
Aroar, aroar, arah, aroo... Otter me otter me daughter me sea
... me last blue lagoon inside of me, the sea — Divine is the
substance all over the Sea... Of space we speak &
hasten — Let no mouth swallow the sea — Gavril...
Gavro... the Cherson Chinese & Old Fingernail sea — Is
ringin yr ear? Dier, dee? Is Virgin you trying to
fathom me
Tiresome old sea, aint you sick & tired of all of this merde?
this incessant boom boom & sand walk — you people
hoary rockies here to Fuegie & never get sad? Or despair
like a German phoney? Just gloom booboom & green
on foggy nights... the fog is part of us...
I know, but tired as I can be listening to all
this silly majesty... Basho
Lao! Pop!
Who is this fish sitting unsunk? Run up
a Hawaii typhoon smash him against his rock... We'll jelly you,
jellied man, show you essential jello of the sea... King
of the Sea.
No Monarc'h ever Irish be?
Ju see the Irish sea? Green winds on tamarack vines
Joyce — James — Shhish... Sea — Sssssss — see
... Varash
... mnavash la vache
ecriture — the sea dont say muc'h actually...
Gosh, she,
huzzy, tow, led men on, Ulysses and all them
fair headed moin... Terplash, & what difference
make! One little white spark of light!
Hair woven hands Penelope seaboat
smeller — Courtiers in Telemachus "sguise
dropedary dropedary creep — Or...
Franc gold rippled that undersea creek
where fish fish for fisher men — Salteen
breen the wet Souwesters of old Portugee Prayers
Tsall tangled, changed, salt & drop the sand
& weed & water brains entangled — Rats
of old Venetian yellers Ariel Calibanned
to Roma Port... Pow — spell...
Speak you parler, in this my mother's
parlor, wash your undershoes when you
come in, say thanks to foggy moon
Go brash, Topahta
offat, — we'll gray ye rose — Morning
primord creeper sees the bird of paravision
dying tweet the yellow mouthroof! How sweet
the earth, yells sand! Xcept when tumble
boom! O we wait too
for Heaven — all in One...
All is there in fair & sight
I'm going to wash now
old Pavia down, & pack my salt
to Either Town... Cliffs of Antique
aint got no rose, the morning's seen
the ledder pose... Boom de boom dey
the sea is me...
We are the sea... It ain't all snow
We wash Fujiyama down soon, & sand
crookbird back... We hie bash
rock — ak... Long short...
Low and easy... Wind & many freezing
bottoms and luckrock... Rappaport...
Endymion thou tangled dreamer love my thigh
... Rose, Of Shelley, Rose, O Urns!
Ogled urns in fish eye
Cinco sea the Chico sea the Magellan headland sea
... What hype sidereal did he put down bending beatnik sea goatee
over old goat manuscripts to find the other side of Flat?
See round, see the end of me? Rounden huge bedoom?
Awp hole cave & shwrul... sand & salt & hair eyes
... Strong enuf to make coffee grow in your hair...
Whose plantation Neptune got? That of Atlas still down there,
Hesperid's his feet, Sur his sleet, Irish Sea fingertip
& Cornwall aye his soul bedoom
Shurning — Shurning — plop
be dosh — This sigh old learning's high beside me — Rough
old hands have played out pedigree, we've sunk more boats
than dreamer'll ever ever see
... Burning — Burning — The world
is burning & needs waaater
... I'll have a daughter,
oughter, wait & see... Churning, Churning, Me...
Panties — Panties... these ancient fancies are
so girling... You've not seen mermaids in my actual sea
... You've not seen sexless babies with breasts of Majesty...
My wife — My wife... Her name is Oh so really
high life
The low life Kingdom where we part out tea, is sea
side Me... Josh — coof... patra...
Aye ee mo powsh... Ssst — Cum here read me...
Dirty postcard... Urchin sea... Karash your name...?
Wanta swim, sink or swim? Ears ringing again?
Sea vibrate rhythm crash sets off cave
hanger blowers whistling dog ear back — to sea
Arree... Gerudge Napoleon nada
Nada
Pluto eats the sea... Room...
Hands folded by the sea... 'On est tous caches, mange
le silence, " disent les poissons de la mer — Ah Mar — Gott
Thalatta — Merde — Marde de mer — Mu mer — Mak a vash...
The ocean is the mother... Je ne suis pas mauvaise quand j'suis
tranquille — dans les tempetes j'cries! Comme une folle!
j'mange, j'arrache toutes! Clock — Clack Milk...
Mai! mai! mai! ma! says the wind blowing sand...
Pluto eats the sea... Ami go — da — che pop
Go — Come Cark... Care — Kee ter da vo
Kataketa pow! kek kek kek! Kwakiutl! Kik!
Some of theserather taratasters trapped hyra tecere thaped
the anadondak ram ma lat round by Krul to Pat the lat
rat the anaakakalked romon tottek
Kara VOOOM
frup... Feet cold? wade... Mind sore?
sim — sin — Horny? — lay the sea! Corny? try me...
Ussens here hang no more here we go, ka va ra ta
plowsh, shhh, and more, again, ke vlook
ke bloom & here comes big Mister Trosh
... more waves coming, every syllable windy
Back wash palaver
paralarle — paralleling parle pe Saviour
A troublesome spirit hanging here cant make it
in the void... The sea'll only drown me — These words
are affectations of sick mortality...
We try to make our way in self reliance, aid
not ever comes too quick from wherever & whatever
heaven dear may have suggested to promise us...
But these waves scare me...
I am going to die in full despair...
Wake up where? On second breath in life
the atmosphere is dearer maybe closer to Heaven
... O Paradise... Is the sea really so bad?
Have you sent men here for this cold clown
& monstrous eater at the world? whose sound
I mock?
God I've got to believe in you or live in death!
Will you save us — all? Soon or now?
Send illumination to our drowning brains
... We're pitiful, Lord, we need yr help!
Save us, Dear... (Save yourself, God man,
ha ha! ) If you were God man
you'd command these waves to very well Tennyson stop
& even Tennyson is dear
now dead Leave it to the light
Concern yourself with supper, & an eye
somebody's eye — a wife,
a girl, a friend, an animal
... a blood let drop...
he for his sea, he for his fire,
thee for thy desire
"The sea drove me away & yelled "Go to your desire! "
... As I hurried up the valley It added one last yell: —
"And laugh! "'
Even the sea cant stop me from writing something to read in my old age
... This is the chart of brief forms, this sea the briefest — Shish
yourself...
After scaring me like that, Mar, I'll excoriate yr slum — yr
iodine weeds & slime hoops, even yr dried hollow seaweed
stinks — you stink all over... Boom — Try that, creep...
The little Monterey fishingboat glides downward home 15 miles to go,
be home to fried fish & beer b'five... It guides the sea its bird
routes...
... Silver loss forever outward
... From blue sky of human bridges
to the massive mawkcloud sea center heap — to the gray...
Some boys call it gunboat blue, or gray, but I call it
the Civil War of Rocks
... Rocks "come air, rocks "come water,
& rock rocks... Kara tavira, mnash grand bash
... poosh 1'abas — croosh L'a haut — Plash au pied...
Peeeee — Rolle test boulles... Manche d'la rache...
The handsome King prevails over boom sing bird head...
"Crache tes idees, " spit yr ideas, says the sea, to me, quite
appro priate ly... Pss! pss! pss!
Ps! girl inside! Red shoes scum, eyes of old
sorcerers, toenails hanging down in the barrel of old firkin cheese
the Dutchman forgot t'eat that tempest
nineteen O sixteen
When torpedoed by gunboat Pedro in the Valley
of a Million Fees?
When Magellan crosseyed ate the Amazonian feet...
And, Ah, when Colombo cross't! When Drake sir francised the waves
with feeding of the blue jay dark — pounded his aleward
tank before the boom, housed up all thoughts of Erik
the Red the Greenland caperer & builder of rockdungs in New
Port — New — yet... Oldport Indian Fishhead...
Oldport Tattoo Kwakiutl Headpost taboo potash Coyotl potlatch?
Old Primitive Columbia....
Named for Colom bus? Name for Aruggio Vesmarica...
Ar! — Or! — Da! What about Verrazano?
he sailed!... He Verrazano zailed & we
statened his Island in on deep
in on dashun Rotted the Wallower?
Sinners liars goodmen all sink waterswim drink Neptune's
nectar the zal sotat... Zal sotate name for crota?
Crota ta crotte, you aint 'bout to find (Jesus Christian! )
any dry turds here below... Why fo no?
Go crash yonder rock of bleak with yr filet mignon teeth
& see — For you, the hearth, the heart, the lock of hair...
For me, for us, the Sea, the murdering of time by eating
lusty cracks of lip feed wave at aeons of sandy artistry
till nothing's left but old age newmorning primordial pain
of sitters by the unborn
bird of roses yet undone...
With weeds your roses,
sand crabs your hummers? With buzzers in the sea!
With runners in the deep! This Sceptred Osh, this wide leg
spanning rock U. S. to rock Ja Pan, this onstable
roller roaming all, this ploosher at yr gory
dry dung door, this mouth of silverwhite arring to hold thee,
this purger of conscience arra for thee...
No mouse in here but's got a little glee — and
aft, or oft, the osprey in his glee's agley...
Oh purty purty ocean me...
Sop! bring the Scepter down! Again you've accepted me!
Breathe our iodine, filthy yr drink,
faint at feet wet, drop yr profile move it in the sea,
float weeded watery Adonais longs for thee — & Shelley three,
that's three — burn in salt with slow most change...
We've had no crack at eternity in a billion years of trying...
one grain of sand possesses 3 thousand worlds of glee...
not to mention me... Ah sea
Ah si — Ah so... shoot — shiver — mix...
ha roll — tara — ta ta... curlurck — Kayash — Kee...
Pearls pearls in the yellow West
... Yellow sky to China...
Pacific we named here water as always meeting
water — Pacific Pacific Pacific tapfic — geroom...
gedowsh... gaka... gaya... Tatha — gata — mana...
What sails used old bhikkus? Dhikkus? Dhikkus!
What raft mailed Mose to the hoven dovepost?
What saved Blackswirl from the Kidd plank?
What Go-Bug here? Seet! Seeeeeeeeeee
eeeeeee — kara... Pounders out yar...
Big Sur they call this sand
these rocks this creek? Raton Canyon by name pours
Coyote leaves & old Pomo bones & old dust of Tomahawks
into your angler'd maw... My salt maw shall salvage
Taylors — sewing in the room below...
Sewing weed shrat for hikers in the milky silt...
Sewing crosswards for certainty... Sartan
are we of Price Victory in this salt War with thee
& thine thee jellied yink! Look O the sea here called
Pacific Sea! Taki!
My golden empty soul'll
outlast yr salty sill
... the Windows of my jelly eye
& fish head muck look out on thee, slit, with cigar-a-mouth,
some contempt... Yet I hie me to see you
... you hie thee to eat me — Fair in sight
and worn, aright... Arra! Aroo!
Ger der va... Silly silent cities in the sea
have children playing cardboard mush with eignyard old Englander
beeplates slickered oer with scum of histories below...
No tempest as still & awful
as the tempest within... Sorcerer hip! Buddhalands
& Buddhaseas! What sails Maudgalyayana used
he only knows to tell but got kilt by yellers
screaming down the cliff 'Let's go home!
Now! "
... leave marge smashed djamas
Maudgalyayana was murdered by the seaBut the sea dont tell...
The sea dont murder... The seadrang scholars
oughter know that or
go back to School Hear over there the ocean motor?
Feel the splawrsh of it? Six silly centepedes here, Machree...
Ah Ratatatatatat... the machinegun sea, rhythmie
balls of you pouring in with smooth eglantinee
jn yr pedigreed milkpup tenor...
Tinder marsh aright arrooo... arrac'h — arrache...
Kamac'h — monarc'h... Kerarc'h Jevac'h...
Tamana — gavow... Va — Voovla — Via...
Mia — mine sea
poo
Farewell, Sur...
Didja ever tell him about water meeting water...?
O go back to otter... Term — Term — Klerm
Kerm — Kurn — Cow... Kow... Cash — Cac'h — Cluck...
Clock — Gomeat sea need de deep I see you
Enoc'h soon anarf
in Old Brittany
21 August 1960 Pacific Ocean at Big Sur
California
The complete poems written by the sea are to be found at the end of
this book, in the appendix entitled "SEA'. Sounds of the Pacific Ocean at
Big Sur. JK.

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