Henry Miller's
TROPIC OF CAPRICORN
__________
FOREWORD
to
HISTORIA CALAMITATUM
(the story of my misfortunes)
Often the hearts
of men and women are stirred, as likewise they are soothed in their sorrows,
more by example than by words. And
therefore, because I too have known some consolation from speech had with one
who was a witness thereof, am I now minded to write of the sufferings which
have sprung out of my misfortunes, for the eyes of one who, though absent, is
of himself ever a consoler. This I do so
that, in comparing your sorrows with mine, you may discover that yours are in
truth nought, or at the most but of small account, and so shall you come to
bear them more easily.
PETER
ABERLARD
_________________
On the Ovarian Trolley
Once
you have given up the ghost, everything follows with dead certainty, even in
the midst of chaos. From the beginning
it was never anything but chaos: it was a fluid which enveloped me, which I
breathed in through the gills. In the
substrata, where the moon shone steady and opaque, it was smooth and
fecundating; above it was a jangle and a discord. In everything I quickly saw the opposite, the
contradiction, and between the real and the unreal the irony, the paradox. I was my own worst enemy. There was nothing I wished to do which I
could just as well not do. Even as a
child, when I lacked for nothing, I wanted to die: I wanted to surrender
because I saw no sense in struggling. I
felt that nothing would be proved, substantiated, added or subtracted by
continuing an existence which I had not asked for. Everybody around me was a failure, or if not
a failure, ridiculous. Especially the
successful ones. The successful ones
bored me to tears. I was sympathetic to
a fault, but it was not sympathy that made me so. It was purely negative quality, a weakness
which blossomed at the mere sight of human misery. I never helped anyone expecting that it would
do me any good; I helped because I was helpless to do otherwise. To want to change the condition of affairs
seemed futile to me; nothing would be altered, I was convinced, except by a
change of heart, and who could change the hearts of men? Now and then a friend was converted: it was
something to make me puke. I had no more
need of God than He had of me, and if there were one, I often said to myself, I
would meet Him calmly and spit in His face.
What was most annoying was that at
first blush people usually took me to be good, to be kind, generous, loyal,
faithful. Perhaps I did possess these
virtues, but if so it was because I was indifferent: I could afford to be good,
kind, generous, loyal, and so forth, since I was free of envy. Envy was the one thing I was never a victim
of. I have never envied anybody or
anything. On the contrary, I have only
felt pity for everybody and everything.
From the very beginning I must have
trained myself not to want anything too badly.
From the very beginning I was independent, in a false way. I had need of nobody because I wanted to be
free, free to do and to give only as my whims dictated. The moment anything was expected or demanded
of me I balked. That was the form my
independence took. I was corrupt, in
other words, corrupt from the start.
It's as though my mother fed me a poison, and though I was weaned young
the poison never left my system. Even
when she weaned me it seemed that I was completely indifferent; most children
rebel, or make a pretence of rebelling, but I didn't give a damn. I was a philosopher when still in swaddling
clothes. I was against life, on
principle. What principle? The principle of futility. Everybody around me was struggling. I myself never made an effort. If I appeared to be making an effort it was
only to please someone else; at bottom I didn't give a rap. And if you can tell me why this should have
been so I will deny it, because I was born with a cussed streak in me and
nothing can eliminate it. I heard later,
when I had grown up, that they had a hell of a time bringing me out of the
womb. I can understand that
perfectly. Why budge? Why come out of a nice warm place, a cosy
retreat in which everything is offered you gratis? The earliest remembrance I have is of the
cold, the snow and ice in the gutter, the frost on the window panes, the chill
of the sweaty green walls in the kitchen.
Why do people live in outlandish climates in the temperate zones,
as they are miscalled? Because people
are naturally idiots, naturally sluggards, naturally cowards. Until I was about ten years old I never
realized that there were "warm" countries, places where you didn't
have to sweat for a living, nor shiver and pretend that it was tonic and
exhilarating. Wherever there is cold
there are people who work themselves to the bone and when they produce young
they preach to the young the gospel of work - which is nothing, at bottom, but
the doctrine of inertia. My people were
entirely Nordic, which is to say idiots.
Every wrong idea which has ever been expounded was theirs. Among them was the doctrine of cleanliness,
to say nothing of righteousness. They
were painfully clean. But inwardly they
stank. Never once had they opened the
door which leads to the soul; never once did they dream of taking a blind leap
into the dark. After dinner the dishes
were promptly washed and put in the closet; after the paper was read it was
neatly folded and laid away on a shelf; after the clothes were washed they were
ironed and folded and then tucked away in the drawers. Everything was for tomorrow, but tomorrow
never came. The present was only a
bridge and on this bridge they are still groaning, as the world groans, and not
one idiot ever thinks of blowing up the bridge.
In my bitterness I often search for
reasons to condemn them, the better to condemn myself. For I am like them too, in many ways. For a long while I thought I had escaped, but
as time goes on I see that I am no better, that I am even a little worse,
because I saw more clearly than they ever did and yet remained powerless to
alter my life. As I look back on my life
it seems to me that I never did anything of my own volition but always through
the pressure of others. People often
think of me as an adventurous fellow; nothing could be farther from the
truth. My adventures were always adventitious,
always thrust on me, always endured rather than undertaken. I am of the very essence of that proud,
boastful Nordic people who have never had the least sense of adventure but who
nevertheless have scoured the earth, turned it upside down, scattering relics
and ruins everywhere. Restless spirits,
but not adventurous ones. Agonizing
spirits, incapable of living in the present.
Disgraceful cowards, all of them, myself included. For there is only one great adventure and
that is inward toward the self, and for that, time nor space nor even deeds
matter.
Once every few years I was on the
verge of making this discovery, but in characteristic fashion I always managed
to dodge the issue. If I try to think of
a good excuse I can think only of the environment, of the streets I knew and
the people who inhabited them. I can
think of no street in America, or of people inhabiting such a street, capable
of leading one on toward the discovery of the self. I have walked the streets in many countries
of the world but nowhere have I felt so degraded and humiliated as in
America. I think of all the streets in
America combined as forming a huge cesspool, a cesspool of the spirit in which
everything is sucked down and drained away to everlasting shit.. Over this cesspool the spirit of work weaves
a magic wand; palaces and factories spring up side by side, and munitions
plants and chemical works and steel mills and sanatoriums and prisons and
insane asylums. The whole continent is a
nightmare producing the greatest misery of the greatest number. I was one, a single entity in the midst of the
greatest jamboree of wealth and happiness (statistical wealth, statistical
happiness) but I never met a man who was truly wealthy or truly happy. At least I knew that I was unhappy,
unwealthy, out of whack and out of step.
That was my only solace, my only joy.
But it was hardly enough. It
would have been better for my peace of mind, for my soul, if I had expressed my
rebellion openly, if I had gone to jail for it, if I had rotted there and
died. It would have been better if, like
the mad Czolgosz, I had shot some good President McKinley, some gentle,
insignificant soul like that who had never done anyone the least harm. Because in the bottom of my heart there was
murder: I wanted to see America destroyed, razed from top to bottom. I wanted to see this happen purely out of
vengeance, as atonement for the crimes that were committed against me and
against others like me who have never been able to lift their voices and
express their hatred, their rebellion, their legitimate blood lust.
I was the evil product of an evil
soil. If the self were not imperishable,
the "I" I write about would have been destroyed long ago. To some this may seem like an invention, but
whatever I imagine to have happened did actually happen, at least to me. History may deny it, since I have played no
part in the history of my people, but even if everything I say is wrong, is
prejudiced, spiteful, malevolent, even if I am a liar and a poisoner, it is
nevertheless the truth and it will have to be swallowed.
As to what
happened ...
Everything that happens, when it has
significance, is in the nature of a contradiction. Until the one for whom this is written came
along I imagined that somewhere outside, in life, as they say, lay the solution
to all things. I thought, when I came
upon her, that I was seizing hold of life, seizing hold of something which I
could bite into. Instead I lost hold of
life completely. I reached out for
something to attach myself to - and I found nothing. But in reaching out, in the effort to grasp,
to attach myself, left high and dry as I was, I nevertheless found something I
had not looked for - myself. I
found that what I had desired all my life was not to live -if what others are
doing is called living - but to express myself.
I realized that I had never the least interest in living, but only in
this which I am doing now, something which is parallel to life, of it at the
same time, and beyond it. What is true
interests me scarcely at all, nor even what is real; only that interests me
which I imagine to be, that which I had stifled every day in order to
live. Whether I die today or tomorrow is
of no importance to me, never has been, but that today even, after years of
effort, I cannot say what I think and feel - that bothers me, that
rankles. From childhood on I can see
myself on the track of this spectre, enjoying nothing, desiring nothing but
this power, this ability. Everything
else is a lie - everything I ever did or said which did not bear upon this. And that is pretty much the greater part of
my life.
I was a contradiction in essence, as
they say. People took me to be serious
and high-minded, or to be gay and reckless, or to be sincere and earnest, or to
be negligent and carefree. I was all
these things at once - and beyond that I was something else, something which
no-one suspected, least of all myself.
As a boy of six or seven I used to sit at my grandfather's workbench and
read to him while he sewed. I remember
him vividly in those moments when, pressing the hot iron against the seam of a
coat, he would stand with one hand over the other and look out of the window
dreamily. I remember the expression on
his face, as he stood there dreaming, better than the contents of the books I
read, better than the conversations we had or the games which I played in the
street. I used to wonder what he was
dreaming of, what it was that drew him out of himself. I hadn't learned yet how to dream wide-awake. I was always lucid, in the moment, and all of
a piece. His daydreaming fascinated
me. I knew that he had no connection
with what he was doing, not the least thought for any of us, that he was alone
and being alone he was free. I was never
alone, least of all when I was by myself.
Always, it seems to me, I was accompanied: I was like a little crumb of
a big cheese, which was the world, I suppose, though I never stopped to think
about it. But I know I never existed
separately, never thought myself the big cheese, as it were. So that even when I had reason to be
miserable, to complain, to weep, I had the illusion of participating in a
common, a universal misery. When I wept
the whole world was weeping - so I imagined.
I wept very seldom. Mostly I was
happy, I was laughing, I was having a good time. I had a good time because, as I said before,
I really didn't give a fuck about anything.
If things were wrong with me they were wrong everywhere, I was convinced
of it. And things were wrong usually
only when one cared too much. That
impressed itself on me very early in life.
For example, I remember the case of my young friend Jack Lawson. For a whole year he lay in bed, suffering the
worst agonies. He was my best friend, so
people said at any rate. Well, at first
I was probably sorry for him and perhaps now and then I called at his house to
inquire about him; but after a month or two had elapsed I grew quite callous
about his suffering. I said to myself he
ought to die and the sooner he dies the better it will be, and having thought
thus I acted accordingly: that is to say, I promptly forgot about him,
abandoned him to his fate. I was only
about twelve years old at the time and I remember being proud of my
decision. I remember the funeral too -
what a disgraceful affair it was. There
they were, friends and relatives all congregated about the bier and all of the
bawling like sick monkeys. The mother
especially gave me a pain in the ass.
She was such a rare, spiritual creature, a Christian Scientist, I
believe, and though she didn't believe in disease and didn't believe in death
either, she raised such a stink that Christ himself would have risen from the
grave. But not her beloved Jack! No, Jack lay there cold as ice and rigid and
unbeckonable. He was dead and there were
no two ways about it. I knew it and I
was glad of it. I didn't waste any tears
over it. I couldn't say that he was
better off because after all the "he" had vanished. He was gone and with him the
sufferings he had endured and the suffering he had unwittingly inflicted on
others. Amen!, I said to myself, and
with that, being slightly hysterical, I let a loud fart - right beside the
coffin.
This caring too much - I remember that
it only developed with me about the time I first fell in love. And even then I didn't care enough. If I had really cared I wouldn't be here now
writing about it: I'd have died of a broken heart, or I'd have swung for
it. It was a bad experience because it
taught me how to live a lie. It taught
me to smile when I didn't want to smile, to work when I didn't believe in work,
to live when I had no reason to go on living.
Even when I had forgotten her I still retained the trick of doing what I
didn't believe in.
It was all chaos from the beginning,
as I have said. But sometimes I got so
close to the centre, to the very heart of the confusion, that it's a wonder
things didn't explode around me.
It is customary to blame everything on
the war. I say the war had nothing to do
with me, with my life. At a time when
others were getting themselves comfortable berths I was taking one miserable
job after another, and never enough in it to keep body and soul together. Almost as quickly as I was hired I was
fired. I had plenty of intelligence but
I inspire distrust. Wherever I went I
fomented discord - not because I was idealistic but because I was like a
searchlight exposing the stupidity and futility of everything. Besides, I wasn't a good ass licker. That marked me, no doubt. People could tell at once when I asked for a
job that I really didn't give a damn whether I got it or not. And of course I generally didn't get it. But after a time the mere looking for a job
became an activity, a pastime, so to speak.
I would go in and ask for most anything.
It was a way of killing time - no worse, as far as I could see, than
work itself. I was my own boss and I had
my own hours, but unlike other bosses I entrained only my own ruin, my own
bankruptcy. I was not a corporation or a
trust or a state or a federation or a polity of nations - I was more like God,
if anything.
This went on from about the middle of
the war until ... well, until one day I was trapped. Finally the day came when I did desperately
want a job. I needed it. Not having another minute to lose, I decided
that I would take the last job on earth, that of messenger boy. I walked into the employment bureau of the
telegraph company - the Cosmodemonic Telegraph Company of North America -
toward the close of the day, prepared to go through with it. I had just come from the public library and I
had under my arm some fat books on economics and metaphysics. To my great amazement I was refused the job.
The guy who turned me down was a
little runt who ran the switchboard. He
seemed to take me for a college student, though it was clear enough from my
application that I had long left school.
I had even honoured myself on the application with a Ph.D. degree from
Columbia University. Apparently that
passed unnoticed, or else was suspiciously regarded by this runt who had turned
me down. I was furious, the more so
because for once in my life I was in earnest.
Not only that, but I had swallowed my pride, which in certain peculiar
ways is rather large. My wife of course
gave me the usual leer and sneer. I had
done it as a gesture, she said. I went
to bed thinking about it, still smarting, getting angrier and angrier as the
night wore on. The fact that I had a
wife and child to support didn't bother me so much; people didn't offer you
jobs because you had a family to support, that much I understood only too
well. No, what rankled was that they had
rejected me, Henry V. Miller, a competent, superior individual who had
asked for the lowest job in the world.
That burned me up. I couldn't get
over it. In the morning I was up bright
and early, shaved, put on my best clothes and hotfooted it to the subway. I went immediately to the main offices of the
telegraph company ... up to the twenty-fifth floor or wherever it was that the
president and the vice-presidents had their cubicles. I asked to see the president. Of course the president was either out of
town or too busy to see me, but wouldn't I care to see the vice-president, or
his secretary rather. I saw the
vice-president's secretary, an intelligent, considerate sort of chap, and I
gave him an earful. I did it adroitly,
without too much heat, but letting him understand all the while that I wasn't
to be put out of the way so easily.
When he picked up the telephone and
demanded the general manager I thought it was just a gag, that they were going
to pass me around like that from one to the other until I'd got fed up. But the moment I heard him talk I changed my
opinion. When I got to the general
manager's office, which was in another building uptown, they were waiting for
me. I sat down in a comfortable leather
chair and accepted one of the big cigars that were thrust forward. This individual seemed at once to be vitally
concerned about the matter. He wanted me
to tell him all about it, down to the last detail, his big hairy ears cocked to
catch the least crumb of information which would justify something or other
which was formulating itself inside his dome.
I realized that by some accident I had really been instrumental in doing
him a service. I let him wheedle it out
of me to suit his fancy, observing all the time which way the wind was
blowing. And as the talk progressed I
noticed that he was warming up to me more and more. At last someone was showing a little
confidence in me! That was all I
required to get started on one of my favourite lines. For, after years of job hunting I had
naturally become quite adept: I knew not only what not to say, but I
knew also what to imply, what to insinuate.
Soon the assistant general manager was called in and asked to listen to
my story. By this time I knew what the
story was. I understood that Hymie -
"that little kike", as the general manager called him - had no
business pretending that he was the employment manager. Hymie had usurped his prerogative, that much
was clear. It was also clear that Hymie
was a Jew and that Jews were not in good odour with the general manager, nor
with Mr. Twilliger, the vice-president, who was a thorn in the general
manager's side.
Perhaps it was Hymie, "the dirty
little kike", who was responsible for the high percentage of Jews on the
messenger force. Perhaps Hymie was
really the one who was doing the hiring at the employment office - at Sunset
Place, they called it. It was an
excellent opportunity, I gathered, for Mr. Clancy, the general manager, to talk
down a certain Mr. Burns who, he informed me, had been the employment manager
for some thirty years now and who was evidently getting lazy on the job.
The conference lasted several
hours. Before it was terminated Mr.
Clancy took me aside and informed me that he was going to make me the
boss of the works. Before putting me
into office, however, he was going to ask me as a special favour, and also as a
sort of apprenticeship which would stand me in good stead, to work as a special
messenger. I would receive the salary of
employment manager, but it would be paid me out of a separate account. In short I was to float from office to office
and observe the way affairs were conducted by all and sundry. I was to make a little report from time to
time as to how things were going. And
once in a while, so he suggested, I was to visit him at his home on the q.t.
and have a little chat about the conditions in the hundred and one branches of
the Cosmodemonic Telegraph Company in New York City. In other words I was to be a spy for a few
months and after that I was to have the run of the joint. Maybe they'd make me a general manager too
one day, or a vice-president. It was a
tempting offer, even if it was wrapped in a lot of horseshit. I said Yes.
In a few months I was sitting at
Sunset Place hiring and firing like a demon.
It was a slaughterhouse, so help me God.
The thing was senseless from the bottom up. A waste of men, material and effort. A hideous farce against a backdrop of sweat
and misery. But just as I had accepted
the spying, so I accepted the hiring and firing and all that went with it. I said Yes to everything. If the vice-president decreed that no
cripples were to be hired I hired no cripples.
If the vice-president said that all messengers over forty-five were to
be fired without notice I fired them without notice. I did everything they instructed me to do,
but in such a way that they had to pay for it.
When there was a strike I folded my arms and waited for it to blow over. But I first saw to it that it cost them a
good penny. The whole system was so
rotten, so inhuman, so lousy, so hopelessly corrupt and complicated, that it
would have taken a genius to put any sense or order into it, to say nothing of
human kindness or consideration. I was
up against the whole system of American labour, which is rotten at both
ends. I was the fifth wheel on the wagon
and neither side had any use for me, except to exploit me. In fact, everybody was being exploited - the
president and his gang by the unseen powers, the employees by the officials,
and so on and around, in and out and through the whole works. From my little perch at Sunset Place I had a
bird's eye view of the whole American society.
It was like a page out of the telephone book. Alphabetically, numerically, statistically,
it made sense. But when you looked at it
up close, when you examined the pages separately, or the parts separately, when
you examined one lone individual and what constituted him, examined the air he
breathed, the life he led, the chances he risked, you saw something so foul and
degrading, so low, so miserable, so utterly hopeless and senseless, that it was
worse than looking into a volcano. You
could see the whole American life - economically, politically, morally,
spiritually, artistically, statistically, pathologically. It looked like a grand chancre on a worn-out
cock. It looked worse than that, really,
because you couldn't see anything resembling a cock any more. Maybe in the past this thing had life, did
produce something, did at least give a moment's pleasure, a moment's
thrill. But looking at it from where I
sat it looked rottener than the wormiest cheese. The wonder was that the stench of it didn't
carry 'em off.... I'm using the past tense all the time, but of course it's the
same now, maybe even a bit worse. At
least now we're getting it full stink.
By the time Valeska arrived on the
scene I had hired several army corps of messengers. My office at Sunset Place was like an open
sewer, and it stank like one. I had dug
myself into the first-line trench and I was getting it from all directions at
once. To begin with, the man I had
ousted died of a broken heart a few weeks after my arrival. He held out just long enough to break me in
and then he croaked. Things happened so
fast that I didn't have a chance to feel guilty. From the moment I arrived at the office it
was one long uninterrupted pandemonium.
An hour before my arrival - I was always late - the place was already
jammed with applicants. I had to elbow
my way up the stairs and literally force my way in to get to my desk. Before I could take my hat off I had to
answer a dozen telephone calls. There
were three telephones on my desk and they all rang at once. They were bawling the piss out of me before I
had even sat down to work. There wasn't
even time to take a crap - until five or six in the afternoon. Hymie was worse off than I because he was
tied to the switchboard. He sat there
from eight in the morning until six, moving waybills around. A waybill was a messenger loaned by one
office to another office for the day or a part of the day. None of the hundred and one offices even had
a full staff; Hymie had to play chess with the waybills while I worked like a
madman to plug up the gaps. If by a
miracle I succeeded of a day in filling all the vacancies, the next morning
would find the situation exactly the same - or worse. Perhaps twenty per cent of the force was
steady; the rest was driftwood. The
steady ones drove the new ones away. The
steady ones earned forty to fifty dollars a week, sometimes sixty or
seventy-five, sometimes as much as a hundred dollars a week, which is to say
that they earned far more than the clerks and often more than their own
managers. As for the new ones, they
found it difficult to earn ten dollars a week.
Some of them worked an hour and quit, often throwing a batch of
telegrams in the garbage can or down the sewer.
And whenever they quit they wanted their pay immediately, which was
impossible, because in the complicated bookkeeping which ruled no-one could say
what a messenger had earned until at least ten days later. In the beginning I invited the applicant to
sit down beside me and I explained everything to him in detail. I did that until I lost my voice. Soon I learned to save my strength for the
grilling that was necessary. In the
first place, every other boy was a born liar, if not a crook to boot. Many of them had already been hired and fired
a number of times. Some found it an
excellent way to find another job, because their duty brought them to hundreds
of offices which normally they would never have set foot in. Fortunately McGovern, the old trusty who
guarded the door and handed out the application blanks, had a camera eye. And then there were the big ledgers behind
me, in which there was a record of every applicant who had ever passed through
the mill. The ledgers were very much
like a police record; they were full of red ink marks, signifying this or that
delinquency. To judge from the evidence
I was in a tough spot. Every other name
involved a theft, a fraud, a brawl, or dementia or perversion or idiocy. "Be careful - so-and-so is an
epileptic!" "Don't hire this
man - he's a nigger!" "Watch
out - X has been in Dannemora - or else in Sing Sing."
If I had been a stickler for etiquette
nobody would ever have been hired. I had
to learn quickly, and not from the records or from those about me, but from
experience. There were a thousand and
one details by which to judge an applicant: I had to take them all in at once,
and quickly, because in one short day, even if you are as fast as Jack
Robinson, you can only fire so many and no more. And no matter how many I hired it was never
enough. The next day it would begin all
over again. Some I knew would last only
a day, but I had to hire them just the same.
The system was wrong from start to finish, but it was not my place to
criticize the system. It was mine to
hire and fire. I was in the centre of a
revolving disk which was whirling so fast that nothing could stay put. What was needed was a mechanic, but according
to the logic of the higher-ups there was nothing wrong with the mechanism,
everything was fine and dandy except that things were temporarily out of
order. And things being temporarily out
of order brought on epilepsy, theft, vandalism, perversion, niggers, Jews,
whores and whatnot - sometimes strikes and lockouts. Whereupon, according to this logic, you took
a big broom and you swept the stable clean, or you took clubs and guns and you
beat sense into the poor idiots who were suffering from the illusion that
things were fundamentally wrong. It was
good now and then to talk of God, or to have a little community sing - maybe
even a bonus was justifiable now and then, that is when things were getting too
terribly bad for words. But on the whole,
the important thing was to keep hiring and firing; as long as there were men
and ammunition we were to advance, to keep mopping up the trenches. Meanwhile Hymie kept taking cathartic pills -
enough to blow out his rear end if he had had a rear end, but he hadn't one any
more, he only imagined he was taking a crap, he only imagined he was shitting
on his can. Actually the poor bugger was
in a trance. There were a hundred and
one offices to look after and each one had a staff of messengers which was mythical,
if not hypothetical, and whether the messengers were real or unreal, tangible
or intangible, Hymie had to shuffle them about from morning to night while I
plugged up the holes, which was also imaginary because who could say when a
recruit had been dispatched to an office whether he would arrive there today or
tomorrow or never. Some of them got lost
in the subway or in the labyrinths under the skyscrapers; some rode around on
the elevated line all day because with a uniform it was a free ride and perhaps
they had never enjoyed riding around all day on the elevated lines. Some of them started for Staten Island and
ended up in Canarsie, or else were brought back in a coma by a cop. Some forgot where they lived and disappeared
completely. Some whom we hired for New
York turned up in Philadelphia a month later, as though it were normal and
according to Hoyle. Some would start for
their destination and on the way decide that it was easier to sell newspapers
and they would sell them, in the uniform we had given them, until they were
picked up. Some went straight to the
observation ward, moved by some strange preservative instinct.
When he arrived in the morning Hymie
first sharpened his pencils; he did this religiously no matter how many calls
were coming in, because, as he explained to me later, if he didn't sharpen the
pencils first things off the bat they would never get sharpened. The next thing was to take a glance out the
window and see what the weather was like.
Then, with a freshly sharpened pencil he made a little box at the head
of the slate which he kept beside him and in it he gave the weather
report. This, he also informed me, often
turned out to be a useful alibi. If the
snow were a foot thick or the ground covered with sleet, even the devil himself
might be excused for not shuffling the waybills around more speedily, and the
employment manager might also be excused for not filling up the holes on such
days, no? But why he didn't take a crap
first instead of plugging in on the switchboard soon as his pencils were
sharpened was a mystery to me. That too
he explained to me later. Anyway, the
day always broke with confusion, complaints, constipation and vacancies. It also began with loud smelly farts, with
bad breaths, with ragged nerves, with epilepsy, with meningitis, with low
wages, with back pay that was overdue, with worn-out shoes, with corns and
bunions, with flat feet and broken arches, with pocketbooks missing and
fountain pens lost or stolen, with telegrams floating in the sewer, with
threats from the vice-president and advice from the managers, with wrangles and
disputes, with cloudbursts and broken telegraph wires, with new methods of
efficiency and old ones that had been discarded, with hope for better times and
a prayer for the bonus which never came.
The new messengers were going over the top and getting machine-gunned;
the old ones were digging in deeper and deeper, like rats in a cheese. It took ten minutes to reach San Francisco
over the wire, but it might take a year to get the message to the man whom it
was intended for - or it might never reach him.
The Y.M.C.A., eager to improve the
morale of working boys everywhere in America, was holding meetings at noon hour
and wouldn't I like to send a few spruce-looking boys to hear William Carnegie
Asterbilt Junior give a five-minute talk on service. Mr. Mallory of the Welfare League would like
to know if I could spare a few minutes some time to tell me about the model
prisoners who were on parole and who would be glad to serve in any capacity,
even as messengers. Mrs. Guggenhoffer of
the Jewish Charities would be very grateful if I would aid her in maintaining
some broken-down homes which had broken down because everybody was either
infirm, crippled or disabled in the family.
Mr. Haggerty of the Runaway Home for Boys was sure he had just the right
youngsters for me, if only I would give them a chance; all of them had been
mistreated by their stepfathers or stepmothers.
The Mayor of New York would appreciate it if I would give my personal
attention to the bearer of said letter whom he could vouch for in every way -
but why the hell he didn't give said bearer a job himself was a mystery. Man leaning over my shoulder hands me a slip
of paper on which he has just written - "Me understand everything but me
no hear the voices." Luther
Winifred is standing beside him, his tattered coat fastened together with
safety pins. Luther is two-sevenths pure
Indian and five-sevenths German-American, so he explains. On the Indian side he is a Crow, one of the
Crows from Montana. His last job was
putting up window shades, but there is no ass in his pants and he is ashamed to
climb a ladder in front of a lady. He
got out of the hospital the other day and so he is still a little weak, but he
is not too weak to carry messages, so he thinks.
And then there is Ferdinand Mish - how
could I have forgotten him? He has been
waiting in line all morning to get a word with me. I never answered the letters he sent me. Was that just? he asks me blandly. Of course not. I remember vaguely the last letter which he
sent me from the Cat and Dog Hospital on the Grand Concourse, where he was an
attendant. He said he repented that he
had resigned his post "but it was on account of his father being too
strict over him, not giving him any recreation or outside pleasure." "I'm twenty-five now," he wrote,
"and I don't think I should ought to be sleeping no more with my father,
do you? I know you are said to be a very
fine gentleman and I am now self-dependent, so I hope ...” McGovern, the old
trusty, is standing by Ferdinand's side waiting for me to give him the
sign. He wants to give Ferdinand the
bum's rush - he remembers him from five years ago when Ferdinand lay down on
the sidewalk in front of the main office in full uniform and threw an epileptic
fit. No, shit, I can't do it! I'm going to give him a chance, the poor
bastard. Maybe I'll send him to
Chinatown where things are fairly quiet.
Meanwhile, while Ferdinand is changing into a uniform in the back room,
I'm getting an earful from an orphan boy who wants to "help make the
company a success." He says that if
I give him a chance he'll pray for me every Sunday when he goes to church,
except the Sundays when he has to report to his parole officer. He didn't do nothing, it appears. He just pushed the fellow and the fellow fell
on his head and got killed. Next:
an ex-consul from Gibraltar. Writes a
beautiful hand - too beautiful. I ask
him to see me at the end of the day - something fishy about him. Meanwhile Ferdinand's thrown a fit in the
dressing room. Lucky break! If it had happened in the subway, with a
number on his hat and everything, I'd have been canned. Next: a guy with one arm and mad as
hell because McGovern is showing him the door.
"What the hell! I'm strong
and healthy, ain't I?" he shouts, and to prove it he picks up a chair with
his good arm and smashes it to bits. I
get back to the desk and there's a telegram lying there for me. I open it.
It's from George Blasini, ex-manager No. 2459 of S.W. office. "I am sorry that I had to quit so soon,
but the job was not fitted for my character idleness and I am a true lover of
labour and frugality but many a time we be unable to control or subdue our personal
pride." Shit!
In the beginning I was enthusiastic,
despite the damper above and the clamps below.
I had ideas and I executed them, whether it pleased the vice-president
or not. Every ten days or so I was put
on the carpet and lectured for having "too big a heart." I never had any money in my pocket but I used
other people's money freely. As long as
I was the boss I had credit. I gave
money away right and left; I gave my clothes away and my linen, my books,
everything that was superfluous. If I had
had the power I would have given the company away to the poor buggers who
pestered me. If I was asked for a dime I
gave a half dollar, if I was asked for a dollar I gave five. I didn't give a fuck how much I gave away,
because it was easier to borrow and give than to refuse the poor devils. I never saw such an aggregation of misery in
my life, and I hope I'll never see it again.
Men are poor everywhere - they always have been and they always will
be. And beneath the terrible poverty
there is a flame, usually so low that it is almost invisible. But it is there and if one has the courage to
blow on it it can become a conflagration.
I was constantly urged not to be too lenient, not to be too sentimental,
not to be too charitable. Be firm! Be hard! they cautioned me. Fuck that! I said to myself, I'll be
generous, pliant, forgiving, tolerant, tender.
In the beginning I heard every man to the end; if I couldn't give him a
job I gave him money, and if I had no money I gave him cigarettes or I gave him
courage. But I gave! The effect was dizzying. Nobody can estimate the results of a good
deed, of a kind word. I was swamped with
gratitude, with good wishes, with invitations, with pathetic, tender little
gifts. If I had had real power instead
of being the fifth wheel on a wagon, God knows what I might not have
accomplished. I could have used the
Cosmodemonic Telegraph Company of North America as a base to bring all humanity
to God; I could have transformed North and South America alike, and the Dominion
of Canada too. I had the secret in my
hand: it was to be generous, to be kind, to be patient. I did the work of five men. I hardly slept for three years. I didn't own a whole shirt and often I was so
ashamed of borrowing from my wife, or robbing the kid's bank, that to the
carfare to go to work in the morning I would swindle the blind newspaperman at
the subway station. I owed so much money
all around that if I were to work for twenty years I would not have been able
to pay it back. I took from those who
had and I gave to those who needed, and it was the right thing to do, and I
would do it all over again if I were in the same position.
I even accomplished the miracle of
stopping the crazy turnover, something that nobody had dared to hope for. Instead of supporting my efforts they
undermined me. According to the logic of
the higher-ups the turnover had ceased because the wages were too high. So they cut the wages. It was like kicking the bottom out of a
bucket. The whole edifice tumbled, collapsed
on my hands. And, just as though nothing
had happened they insisted that the gaps be plugged up immediately. To soften the blow a bit they intimated that
I might even increase the percentage of Jews, I might take on a cripple now and
then, if he were capable, I might do this and that, all of which they had
informed me previously was against the code.
I was so furious that I took on anything and everything; I would have
taken on broncos and gorillas if I could have imbued them with the modicum of
intelligence which was necessary to deliver messages. A few days previously there had been only
five or six vacancies at closing time.
Now there were three hundred, four hundred, five hundred - they were
running out like sand. It was
marvellous. I sat there and without
asking a question I took them on in carload lots - niggers, Jews, paralytics,
cripples, ex-convicts, whores, maniacs, perverts, idiots, any fucking bastard
who could stand on two legs and hold a telegram in his hand. The managers of the hundred and one offices
were frightened to death. I
laughed. I laughed all day long thinking
what a fine stinking mess I was making of it.
Complaints were pouring in from all parts of the city. The service was crippled, constipated,
strangulated. A mule could have gotten
there faster than some of the idiots I put into harness.
The best thing about the new day was
the introduction of female messengers.
It changes the whole atmosphere of the joint. For Hymie especially it was a godsend. He moved his switchboard around so that he
could watch me while juggling the waybills back and forth. Despite the added work he had a permanent
erection. He came to work with a smile
and he smiled all day long. He was in
heaven. At the end of the day I always
had a list of five or six who were worth trying out. The game was to keep them on the string, to
promise them a job but to get a free fuck first. Usually it was only necessary to throw a feed
into them in order to bring them back to the office at night and lay them out
on the zinc-covered table in the dressing room.
If they had a cosy apartment, as they sometimes did, we took them home
and finished it in bed. If they liked to
drink Hymie would bring a bottle along.
If they were any good and really needed some dough Hymie would flash his
roll and peel off a five spot or a ten spot, as the case might be. It makes my mouth water when I think of that
roll he carried about with him. Where he
got it from I never knew, because he was the lowest-paid man in the joint. But it was always there, and no matter what I
asked for I got. And once it happened
that we did get a bonus and I paid Hymie back to the last penny - which so
amazed him that he took me out that night to Delmonico's and spent a fortune on
me. Not only that, but the next day he
insisted on buying me a hat and shirts and gloves. He even insinuated that I might come home and
fuck his wife, if I liked, though he warned me that she was having a little
trouble at present with her ovaries.
In addition to Hymie and McGovern I
had as assistants a pair of beautiful blondes who often accompanied us to
dinner in the evening. And there was
O'Mara, an old friend of mine who had just returned from the Philippines and
whom I made my chief assistant. There
was also Steve Romero, a prize bull whom I kept around in case of trouble. And O'Rourke, the company detective, who
reported to me at the close of the day when he began his work. Finally I added another man to the staff -
Kronski, a young medical student, who was diabolically interested in the
pathological cases of which we had plenty.
We were a merry crew, united in our desire to fuck the company at all
costs. And while fucking the company we
fucked everything in sight that we could get hold of, O'Rourke excepted, as he
had a certain dignity to maintain, and besides he had trouble with his prostate
and had lost all interest in fucking.
But O'Rourke was a prince of a man, and generous beyond words. It was O'Rourke who often invited us to
dinner in the evening and it was O'Rourke we went to when we were in trouble.
That was how it stood at Sunset Place
after a couple of years had rolled by. I
was saturated with humanity, with experiences of one kind and another. In my sober moments I made notes which I
intended to make use of later if ever I should have a chance to record my
experiences. I was waiting for a
breathing spell. And then by chance one
day, when I had been put on the carpet for some wanton piece of negligence, the
vice-president let drop a phrase which stuck in my crop. He had said that he would like to see some
one write a sort of Horatio Alger book about the messengers; he hinted that
perhaps I might be the one to do such a job.
I was furious to think what a ninny he was and delighted at the same
time because secretly I was itching to get the thing off my chest. I thought to myself - you poor old futzer,
you, just wait until I get it off my chest.... I'll give you an Horatio Alger
book ... just you wait! My head was in a
whirl leaving his office. I saw the army
of men, women and children that had passed through my hands, saw them weeping,
begging, beseeching, imploring, cursing, spitting, fuming, threatening. I saw the tracks they left on the highways,
the freight trains lying on the floor, the parents in rags, the coal box empty,
the sink running over, the walls sweating and between the cold beads of sweat
the cockroaches running like mad; I saw them hobbling along like twisted gnomes
or falling backwards in the epileptic frenzy, the mouth twitching, the slaver
pouring from the lips, the limbs writhing; I saw the walls giving way and the
pest pouring out like a winged fluid, and the men higher up with their ironclad
logic, waiting for it to blow over, waiting for everything to be patched up, waiting
contentedly, smugly, with big cigars in their mouths and their feet on the
desk, saying things were temporarily out of order. I saw the Horatio Alger hero, the dream of a
sick America, mounting higher and higher, first messenger, then operator, then
manager, then chief, then superintendent, then vice-president, then president,
then trust magnate, then beer baron, then Lord of all the Americas, the money
god, the god of gods, the clay of clay, nullity on high, zero with ninety-seven
thousand decimals fore and aft. You
shits, I said to myself, I will give you the picture of twelve little men,
zeros without decimals, ciphers, digits, the twelve uncrushable worms who are
hollowing out the base of your rotten edifice.
I will give you Horatio Alger as he looks the day after the Apocalypse,
when all the stink has cleared away.
From all over the earth they had come
to me to be succoured. Except for the
primitives there was scarcely a race which wasn't represented on the
force. Except for the Ainus, the Maoris,
the Papuans, the Veddas, the Lapps, the Zulus, the Patagonians, the Igorots,
the Hottentots, the Tuaregs, except for the lost Tasmanians, the lost Grimaldi
men, the lost Atlanteans, I had a representative of almost every species under
the sun. I had two brothers who were
still sun-worshippers, two Nestorians from the old Assyrian world; I had two
Maltese twins from Malta and a descendant of the Mayas from Yucatan; I had a
few of our little brown brothers from the Philippines and some Ethiopians from
Abyssinia; I had men from the pampas of Argentina and stranded cowboys from
Montana; I had Greeks, Letts, Poles, Croats, Slovenes, Ruthenians, Czechs,
Spaniards, Welshmen, Finns, Swedes, Russians, Danes, Mexicans, Puerto Ricans,
Cubans, Uruguayans, Brazilians, Australians, Persians, Japs, Chinese, Javanese,
Egyptians, Africans from the Gold Coast and the Ivory Coast, Hindus, Armenians,
Turks, Arabs, Germans, Irish, English, Canadians - and plenty of Italians and
plenty of Jews. I had only one Frenchman
that I can recall and he lasted about three hours. I had a few American Indians, Cherokees
mostly, but no Tibetans, and no Eskimos: I saw names I could never have imagined
and handwriting which ranged from cuneiform to the sophisticated and
astoundingly beautiful calligraphy of the Chinese. I heard men beg for work who had been
Egyptologists, botanists, surgeons, gold miners, professors of Oriental
languages, musicians, engineers, physicians, astronomers, anthropologists,
chemists, mathematicians, mayors of cities and governors of states, prison
wardens, cowpunchers, lumberjacks, sailors, oyster pirates, stevedores,
riveters, dentists, painters, sculptors, plumbers, architects, dope peddlers,
abortionists, white slavers, sea divers, steeplejacks, farmers, cloak and suit
salesmen, trappers, lighthouse keepers, pimps, aldermen, senators, every bloody
thing under the sun, and all of them down and out, begging for work, for cigarettes,
for carfare, for a chance, Christ Almighty, just another chance! I saw and got to know men who were saints, if
there are saints in this world; I saw and spoke to savants, crapulous and
uncrapulous ones; I listened to men who had the divine fire in their bowels,
who could have convinced God Almighty that they were worthy of another chance,
but not the vice-president of the Cosmococcic Telegraphy Company. I sat riveted to my desk and I travelled
around the world at lightning speed, and I learned that everywhere it is the
same - hunger, humiliation, ignorance, vice, greed, extortion, chicanery,
torture, despotism: the inhumanity of man to man: the fetters, the harness, the
halter, the bridle, the whip, the spurs.
The finer the calibre the worse off the man. Men were walking the streets of New York in
that bloody, degrading outfit, the despised, the lowest of the low, walking
around like auks, like penguins, like oxen, like trained seals, like patient
donkeys, like bug jackasses, like crazy gorillas, like docile maniacs nibbling
at the dangling bait, like waltzing mice, like guinea pigs, like squirrels,
like rabbits, and many and many a one was fit to govern the world, to write the
greatest book every written. When I
think of some of the Persians, the Hindus, the Arabs I knew, when I think of
the character they revealed, their grace, their tenderness, their intelligence,
their holiness, I spit on the white conquerors of the world, the
degenerate British, the pigheaded Germans, the smug, self-satisfied
French. The earth is one great sentient
being, a planet saturated through and through with man, a live planet
expressing itself falteringly and stutteringly; it is not the home of the white
race or the black race or the yellow race or the lost blue race, but the home
of man and all men are equal before God and will have their chance, if
not now then a million years hence. The
little brown brothers of the Philippines may bloom again one day and the
murdered Indians of America north and south may also come alive one day to ride
the plains where now the cities stand belching fire and pestilence. Who has the last say? Man!
The earth is his because he is the earth, its fire, its water,
its air, its mineral and vegetable matter, its spirit which is cosmic, which is
imperishable, which is the spirit of all the planets, which transforms itself
through him, through endless signs and symbols, through endless
manifestations. Wait, you cosmococcic
telegraphic shits, you demons on high waiting for the plumbing to be repaired,
wait, you dirty white conquerors who have sullied the earth with your cloven
hoofs, your instruments, your weapons, your disease germs, wait, all you who
are sitting in clover and counting your coppers, it is not the end. The last man will have his say before it is
finished. Down to the last sentient
molecule justice must be done - and will be done! Nobody is getting away with anything, least
of all the cosmococcic shits of North America.
When it came time for my vacation - I
hadn't taken one for three years, I was so eager to make the company a success!
- I took three weeks instead of two and I wrote the book about the twelve
little men. I wrote it straight off,
five, seven, sometimes eight thousand words a day. I thought that a man, to be a writer, must do
at least five thousand words a day. I
thought he must say everything all at once - in one book - and collapse
afterwards. I didn't know a thing about
writing. I was scared shitless. But I was determined to wipe Horatio Alger
out of the North American consciousness.
I suppose it was the worst book any man has ever written. It was a colossal tome and faulty from start
to finish. But it was my first book and
I was in love with it. If I had had the
money, as Gide had, I would have published it at my own expense. If I had had the courage that Whitman had, I
would have peddled it from door to door.
Everybody I showed it to said it was terrible. I was urged to give up the idea of
writing. I had to learn, as Balzac did,
that one must write volumes before signing one's own name. I had to learn, as I soon did, that one must
give up everything and not do anything else but write, that one must write and
write and write, even if everybody in the world advises you against it, even if
nobody believes in you. Perhaps one does
it just because nobody believes; perhaps the real secret lies in making people
believe. That the book was inadequate,
faulty, bad, terrible, as they said, was only natural. I was attempting at the start what a man of
genius would have undertaken only at the end.
I wanted to say the last word at the beginning. It was absurd and pathetic. It was a crushing defeat, but it put iron in
my backbone and sulphur in my blood. I
knew at least what it was to fail. I
knew what it was to attempt something big.
Today, when I think of the circumstances under which I wrote that book,
when I think of the overwhelming material which I tried to put into form, when
I think of what I hoped to encompass, I pat myself on the back, I give myself a
double A. I am proud of the fact that I
made such a miserable failure of it; had it succeeded I would have become a
monster. Sometimes, when I look over my
notebooks, when I look at the names alone of those whom I thought to write
about, I am seized with vertigo. Each
man came to me with a world of his own; he came to me and unloaded it on my
desk; he expected me to pick it up and put it on my shoulders. I had no time to make a world of my own: I
had to stay fixed like Atlas, my feet on the elephant's back and the elephant
on the tortoise's back. To inquire on
what the tortoise stood would be to go mad.
I didn't dare to think of anything
then except the "facts". To
get beneath the facts I would have had to be an artist, and one doesn't become
an artist overnight. First you have to
be crushed, to have your conflicting points of view annihilated. You have to be wiped out as a human being in
order to be born again as an individual.
You have to be carbonized and mineralized in order to work upwards from
the least common denominator of the self.
You have to get beyond pity in order to feel from the very roots of your
being. One can't make a new heaven and
earth with "facts". There are
no "facts" - there is only the fact that man, every man
everywhere in the world, is on his way to ordination. Some men take the long route and some take
the short route. Every man is working
out his destiny in his own way and nobody can be of help except by being kind,
generous and patient. In my enthusiasm
certain things were then inexplicable to me which are now clear. I think, for example, of Carnahan, one of the
twelve little men I had chosen to write about.
He was what is called a model messenger.
He was a graduate of a prominent university, had a sound intelligence
and was of exemplary character. He
worked eighteen and twenty hours a day and earned more than any messenger on
the force. The clients whom he served
wrote letters about him, praising him to the skies; he was offered good
positions which he refused for one reason or another. He lived frugally, sending the best part of
his wages to his wife and children who lived in another city. He had two vices - drink and the desire to
succeed. He could go for a year without
drinking, but if he took one drop he was off.
He had cleaned up twice in Wall Street and yet, before coming to me for
a job, he had gotten no further than to be a sexton of a church in some little
town. He had been fired from that job
because he had broken into the sacramental wine and rung the bells all night
long. He was truthful, sincere,
earnest. I had implicit confidence in
him and my confidence was proven by the record of his service which was without
a blemish. Nevertheless he shot his wife
and children in cold blood and then he shot himself. Fortunately none of them died; they all lay
in the hospital together and they all recovered. I went to see his wife, after they had
transferred him to jail, to get her help.
She refused categorically. She
said he was the meanest, cruellest son of a bitch that ever walked on two legs
- she wanted to see him hanged. I
pleaded with her for two days, but she was adamant. I went to the jail and talked to him through
the mesh. I found that he had already
made himself popular with the authorities, had already been granted special
privileges. He wasn't at all
dejected. On the contrary, he was
looking forward to making the best of his time in prison by "studying
up" on salesmanship. He was going
to be the best salesman in America after his release. I might almost say that he seemed happy. He said not to worry about him, he would get
along all right. He said everybody was
swell to him and that he had nothing to complain about. I left him somewhat in a daze. I went to a nearby beach and decided to take
a swim. I saw everything with new
eyes. I almost forgot to return home, so
absorbed had I become in my speculations about this chap. Who could say that everything that happened
to him had not happened for the best?
Perhaps he might leave the prison a full-fledged evangelist instead of a
salesman. Nobody could predict what he
might do. And nobody could aid him
because he was working out his destiny in his own private way.
There was another chap, a Hindu named
Guptal. He was not only a model of good
behaviour - he was a saint. He had a
passion for the flute which he played all by himself in his miserable little
room. One day he was found naked, his
throat slit from ear to ear, and beside him on the bed was his flute. At the funeral there were a dozen women who
wept passionate tears, including the wife of the janitor who had murdered
him. I could write a book about this
young man who was the gentlest and the holiest man I ever met, who had never
offended anybody and never taken anything from anybody, but who had made the
cardinal mistake of coming to America to spread peace and love.
There was David Olinski, another
faithful, industrious messenger who thought of nothing but work. He had one fatal weakness - he talked too
much. When he came to me he had already
been around the globe several times and what he hadn't done to make a living
isn't worth telling about. He knew about
twelve languages and he was rather proud of his linguistic ability. He was one of those men whose very
willingness and enthusiasm is their undoing.
He wanted to help everybody along, show everybody how to succeed. He wanted more work than we could give him -
he was a glutton for work. Perhaps I
should have warned him, when I sent him to his office on the East Side, that he
was going to work in a tough neighbourhood, but he pretended to know so much
and he was so insistent in working in that locality (because of his linguistic
ability) that I said nothing. I thought
to myself - you'll find out quickly enough for yourself. And sure enough, he was only there a short
time when he got into trouble. A tough
Jewboy from the neighbourhood walked in one day and asked for a blank. Dave, the messenger, was behind the
desk. He didn't like the way the man
asked for the blank. He told him he
ought to be more polite. For that he got
a box in the ears. That made him wag his
tongue some more, whereupon he got such a wallop that his teeth flew down his
throat and his jawbone was broken in three places. Still he didn't know enough to hold his
trap. Like the damned fool he was he
goes to the police station and registers a complaint. A week later, while he's sitting on a bench
snoozing, a gang of roughnecks break into the place and beat him to a
pulp. His head was so battered that his
brains looked like an omelette. For good
measure they emptied the safe and turned it upside down. Dave died on the way to the hospital. They found five hundred dollars hidden away
in the toe of his sock.... Then there was Clausen and his wife Lena. They came in together when he applied for the
job. Lena had a baby in her arms and he
had two little ones by the hand. They
were sent to me by some relief agency. I
put him on as a night messenger so that he'd have a fixed salary. In a few days I had a letter from him, a
batty letter in which he asked me to excuse him for being absent as he had to
report to his parole officer. Then
another letter saying that his wife had refused to sleep with him because she
didn't want any more babies and would I please come to see them and try to
persuade her to sleep with him. I went
to his home - a cellar in the Italian quarter.
It looked like a bughouse. Lena
was pregnant again, about seven months under way, and on the verge of
idiocy. She had taken to sleeping on the
roof because it was too hot in the cellar, also because she didn't want him to
touch her any more. When I said it
wouldn't make any difference now she just looked at me and grinned. Clausen had been in the war and maybe the gas
had made him a bit goofy - at any rate he was foaming at the mouth. He said he would brain her if she didn't stay
off that roof. He insinuated that she
was sleeping up there in order to carry on with the coal man who lived in the
attic. At this Lena smiled again with
that mirthless batrachian grin. Clausen
lost his temper and gave her a swift kick in the ass. She went out in a huff taking the brats with
her. He told her to stay out for
good. Then he opened a drawer and pulled
out a big Colt. He was keeping it in
case he needed it some time, he said. He
showed me a few knives, too, and a sort of blackjack which he had made
himself. Then he began to weep. He said his wife was making a fool of
him. He said he was sick of working for
her because she was sleeping with everybody in the neighbourhood. The kids weren't his because he couldn't make
a kid any more even if he wanted to. The
very next day, while Lena was out marketing, he took the kids up to the roof
and with the blackjack he had shown me he beat their brains out. Then he jumped off the roof head first. When Lena came home and saw what happened she
went off her nut. They had to put her in
a strait jacket and call for the ambulance....
There was Schuldig, the rat who had spent twenty years in prison for a
crime he had never committed. He had
been beaten almost to death before he confessed; then solitary confinement,
starvation, torture, perversion, dope.
When they finally released him he was no longer a human being. He described to me one night his last thirty
days in jail, the agony of waiting to be released. I have never heard anything like it; I didn't
think a human being could survive such anguish.
Freed, he was haunted by the fear that he might be obliged to commit a
crime and be sent back to prison again.
He complained of being followed, spied on, perpetually tracked. He said "they" were tempting him to
do things he had no desire to do.
"They" were the dicks who were on his trail, who were paid to
bring him back again. At night, when he
was asleep, they whispered in his ear.
He was powerless against them because they mesmerized him first. Sometimes they placed dope under his pillow,
and with it a revolver or a knife. They
wanted him to kill some innocent person so that they would have a solid case
against him this time. He got worse and
worse. One night, after he had walked
around for hours with a batch of telegrams in his pocket, he went up to a cop
and asked to be locked up. He couldn't
remember his name or address or even the office he was working for. He had completely lost his identity. He repeated over and over - "I'm
innocent.... I'm innocent." Again
they gave him the third degree. Suddenly
he jumped up and shouted like a madman - "I'll confess ... I'll
confess" - and with that he began to reel off one crime after
another. He kept it up for three
hours. Suddenly, in the midst of a
harrowing confession, he stopped short, gave a quick look about, like a man who
has suddenly come to, and then, with the rapidity and the force which only a
madman can summon, he made a tremendous leap across the room and crashed his
skull against the stone wall.... I relate these incidents briefly and hurriedly
as they flash through my mind; my memory is packed with thousands of such details,
with a myriad faces, gestures, tales, confessions all entwined and interlaced
like the stupendous reeling façade of some Hindu temple made not of stone but
of the experience of human flesh, a monstrous dream edifice built entirely of
reality and yet not reality itself but merely the vessel in which the mystery
of the human being is contained. My mind
wanders to the clinic where in ignorance and good will I brought some of the
younger ones to be cured. I can think of
no more evocative image to convey the atmosphere of this place than the
painting by Hieronymus Bosch in which the magician, after the manner of a
dentist extracting a live nerve, is represented as the deliverer of
insanity. All the trumpery and quackery
of our scientific practitioners came to apotheosis in the person of the suave
sadist who operated this clinic with the full concurrence and connivance of the
law. He was a ringer for Caligary,
except that he was minus the dunce cap.
Pretending that he understood the secret regulations of the glands,
invested with the power of a medieval monarch, oblivious of the pain he
inflicted, ignorant of everything but his medical knowledge, he went to work on
the human organism like a plumber sets to work on the underground drainpipes. In addition to the poisons he threw into the
patient's system he had recourse to his fists or his knees as the case might
be. Anything justified a
"reaction". If the victim were
lethargic he shouted at him, slapped him in the face, pinched his arm, cuffed
him, kicked him. If on the contrary the
victim were too energetic he employed the same methods, only with redoubled
zest. The feelings of his subject were
of no importance to him; whatever reaction he succeeded in obtaining was merely
a demonstration or manifestation of the laws regulating the operation of the
internal glands of secretion. The
purpose of his treatment was to render the subject fit for society. But no matter how fast he worked, no matter
whether he was successful or not successful, society was turning out more and
more misfits. Some of them were so
marvellously maladapted that when, in order to get the proverbial reaction, he
slapped them vigorously on the cheek they responded with an uppercut or a kick
in the balls. It's true, most of his
subjects were exactly what he described them to be - incipient criminals. The whole continent was on the slide - is
still on the slide - and not only the glands needs regulating but the ball
bearings, the armature, the skeletal structure, the cerebrum, the cerebellum,
the coccyx, the larynx, the pancreas, the liver, the upper intestine and the
lower intestine, the heart, the kidneys, the testicles, the womb, the Fallopian
tubes, the whole goddamned works. The
whole country is lawless, violent, explosive, demoniacal. It's in the air, in the climate, in the
ultra-grandiose landscape, in the stone forests that are lying horizontal, in
the torrential rivers that bite through the rocky canyons, in the supra-normal
distances, the supernal arid wastes, the over-lush crops, the monstrous fruits,
the mixture of quixotic bloods, the fatras of cults, sects, beliefs, the
opposition of laws and languages, the contradictoriness of temperaments,
principles, needs, requirements. The continent
is full of buried violence, of the bones of antediluvian monsters and of lost
races of man, of mysteries which are wrapped in doom. The atmosphere is at times so electrical that
the soul is summoned out of its body and runs amok. Like the rain everything comes in bucketsful
- or not at all. The whole continent is
a huge volcano whose crater is temporarily concealed by a moving panorama which
is partly dream, partly fear, partly despair.
From Alaska to Yucatan it's the same story. Nature dominates. Nature wins out. Everywhere the same fundamental urge to slay,
to ravage, to plunder. Outwardly they
seem like a fine, upstanding people - healthy, optimistic, courageous. Inwardly they are filled with worms. A tiny spark and they blow up.
Often it happens, as in Russia, that a
man came in with a chip on his shoulder.
He woke up that way, as if struck by a monsoon. Nine times out of ten he was a good fellow, a
fellow whom everyone liked. But when the
rage came on nothing could stop him. He
was like a horse with the blind staggers and the best thing you could do for
him was to shoot him on the spot. It
always happens that way with peaceable people.
One day they run amok. In America
they're constantly running amok. What
they need is an outlet for their energy, for their blood lust. Europe is bled regularly by war. America is pacifistic and cannibalistic. Outwardly it seems to be a beautiful
honeycomb, with all the drones crawling over each other in a frenzy of work;
inwardly it's a slaughterhouse, each man killing off his neighbour and sucking
the juice from his bones. Superficially
it looks like a bold, masculine world; actually it's a whorehouse run by women,
with the native sons acting as pimps and the bloody foreigners selling the
flesh. Nobody knows what it is to sit on
his ass and be content. That happens
only in the films where everything is faked, even the fires of hell. The whole continent is sound asleep and in
that sleep a grand nightmare is taking place.
Nobody can have slept more soundly
than I in the midst of this nightmare.
The war, when it came along, made only a sort of faint rumble in my
ears. Like my compatriots, I was
pacifistic and cannibalistic. The
millions who were put away in the carnage passed away in a cloud, much like the
Aztecs passed away, and the Incas and the Red Indians and the buffaloes. People pretended to be profoundly moved, but
they weren't. They were simply tossing
fitfully in their sleep. No-one lost his
appetite, no-one got up and rang the fire alarm. The day I first realized that there had been
a war was about six months or so after the armistice. It was on a street car on the 14th Street
crosstown line. One of our heroes, a
Texas lad with a string of medals across his chest, happened to see an officer
passing on the sidewalk. The sight of
the officer enraged him. He was a
sergeant himself and he probably had good reason to be sore. Anyway, the sight of the officer enraged him
so that he got up from his seat and began to bawl the shit out of the
government, the army, the civilians, the passengers in the car, everybody and
everything. He said if there was ever
another war they couldn't drag him to it with a twenty-mule team. He said he'd see every son of a bitch killed
before he'd go again himself; he said he didn't give a fuck about the medals
they had decorated him with and to show that he meant it he ripped them of and
threw them out the window; he said if he was ever in a trench with an officer
again he'd shoot him in the back like a dirty dog, and that held good for General
Pershing or any other general. He said a
lot more, with some fancy cuss words that he'd picked up over there, and nobody
opened his trap to gainsay him. And when
he got through I felt for the first time
that there had really been a war and that the man I was listening to had been
in it and that despite his bravery the war had made him a coward and that if he
did any more killing it would be wide-awake and in cold blood, and nobody would
have the guts to send him to the electric chair because he had performed his
duty toward his fellow men, which was to deny his own sacred instincts and so
everything was just and fair because one crime washes away the other in the
name of God, country and humanity, peace be with you and all. And the second time I experienced the reality
of war was when ex-sergeant Griswold, one of our night messengers, flew off the
handle one day and smashed the office to bits at one of the railway
stations. They sent him to me to give
him the gate, but I didn't have the heart to fire him. He had performed such a beautiful piece of
destruction that I felt more like hugging and squeezing him; I was only hoping
to Christ he would go up to the twenty-fifth floor, or wherever it was that the
president and the vice-presidents had their offices, and mop up the whole
bloody gang. But in the name of
discipline, and to uphold the bloody farce it was, I had to do something to
punish him or be punished for it myself, and so not knowing what less I could
do I took him off the commission basis and put him back on a salary basis. He took it pretty badly, not realizing
exactly where I stood, either for him or against him, and so I got a letter
from him pronto, saying that he was going to pay me a visit in a day or two and
that I'd better watch out because he was going to take it out of my hide. He said he'd come up after office hours and
that if I was afraid I'd better have some strong-arm men around to look after
me. I knew he meant every word he said
and I felt pretty damned quaky when I put the letter down. I waited in for him alone, however, feeling
that it would be even more cowardly to ask for protection. It was a strange experience. He must have realized the moment he laid eyes
on me that I was a son of a bitch and a lying, stinking hypocrite, as he had
called me in his letter. I was only that
because he was what he was, which wasn't a hell of a lot better. He must have realized immediately that we
were both in the same boat and that the bloody boat was leaking pretty
badly. I could see something like that
going on in him as he strode forward, outwardly still furious, still foaming at
the mouth, but inwardly all spent, all soft and feathery. As for myself, what fear I had vanished the
moment I saw him enter. Just being there
quiet and alone, and being less strong, less capable of defending myself, gave
me the drop on him. Not that I wanted to
have the drop on him either. But it had
turned out that way and I took advantage of it, naturally. The moment he sat down he went soft as
putty. He wasn't a man any more, but
just a big child. There must have been
millions of them like him, big children with machine guns who could ripe out
whole regiments without batting an eyelash; but back in the work trenches,
without a weapon, without a clear, visible enemy, they were helpless as
ants. Everything revolved about the
question of food. The food and the rent
- that was all there was to fight about - but there was no way, no clear,
visible way, to fight for it. It was
like seeing an army strong and well equipped, capable of licking anything in
sight, and yet ordered to retreat every day, to retreat and retreat and retreat
because that was the strategic thing to do, even though it meant losing ground,
losing guns, losing ammunition, losing food, losing sleep, losing courage,
losing life itself finally. Wherever
there were men fighting for food and rent there was this retreat going on, in
the fog, in the night, for no earthly reason except that it was the strategic
thing to do. It was eating the heart out
of him. To fight was easy, but to fight
for food and rent was like fighting an army of ghosts. All you could do was to retreat, and while
you retreated you watched your own brothers getting popped off, one after the
other, silently, mysteriously, in the fog, in the dark, and not a thing to do
about it. He was so damned confused, so
perplexed, so hopelessly muddled and beaten, that he put his head in his arms
and wept on my desk. And while he's
sobbing like that suddenly the telephone rings and it's the vice-president's
office - never the vice-president himself, but always his office - and
they want this man Griswold fired immediately and I say Yes Sir! and I hang
up. I don't say anything to Griswold
about it but I walk home with him and I have dinner with him and his wife and
kids. And when I leave him I say to
myself that if I have to fire that guy somebody's going to pay for it - any
anyway I want to know first where the order comes from and why. And hot and sullen I go right up to the
vice-president's office in the morning and I ask to see the vice-president
himself and did you give the order I ask - and why? And before he has a chance to deny it, or to
explain his reason for it, I give him a little war stuff straight from the
shoulder and where he don't like it and can't take it - and if you don't like
it, Mr. Will Twilldilliger, you can take the job, my job and his job and you
can shove them up your ass - and like that I walk out on him. I go back to the slaughterhouse and I go
about my work as usual. I expect, of
course, that I'll get the sack before the day's over. But nothing of the kind. No, to my amazement I get a telephone call
from the general manager saying to take it easy, to just calm down a bit, yes,
just go easy, don't do anything hasty, we'll look into it, etc. I guess they're still looking into it because
Griswold went on working just as always - in fact, they even promoted him to a
clerkship, which was a dirty deal, too, because as a clerk he earned less money
than as a messenger, but it saved his pride and it also took a little more of
the spunk out of him too, no doubt. But
that's what happens to a guy when he's just a hero in his sleep. Unless the nightmare is strong enough to wake
you up you go right on retreating, and either you end up on a bench or you end
up as vice-president. It's all one and
the same, a bloody fucking mess, a farce, a fiasco from start to finish. I know it as I was in it, because I woke
up. And when I woke up I walked out on
it. I walked out by the same door that I
had walked in - without as much as a by-your-leave, sir!
Things take place instantaneously, but
there's a long process to be gone through first. What you get when something happens is only
the explosion, and the second before that the spark. But everything happens according to law - and
with the full consent and collaboration of the whole cosmos. Before I could get up and explode the bomb
had to be properly prepared, properly primed.
After putting things in order for the bastards up above I had to be
taken down from my high horse, had to be kicked around like a football, had to
be stepped on, squelched, humiliated, fettered, manacled, made impotent as a
jellyfish. All my life I have never wanted
for friends, but at this particular period they seemed to spring up around me
like mushrooms. I never had a moment to
myself. If I went home of a night,
hoping to take a rest, somebody would be there waiting to see me. Sometimes a gang of them would be there and
it didn't seem to make much difference whether I came or not. Each set of friends I made despised the other
set. Stanley, for example, despised the
whole lot. Ulric too was rather scornful
of the others. He had just come back
from Europe after an absence of several years.
We hadn't seen much of each other since boyhood and then one day, quite
by accident, we met on the street. That
day was an important day in my life because it opened up a new world to me, a
world I had often dreamed about but never hoped to see. I remember vividly that we were standing on
the corner of Sixth Avenue and 49th Street toward dusk. I remember it because it seemed utterly
incongruous to be listening to a man talking about Mt. Etna and Vesuvius and
Capri and Pompeii and Morocco and Paris on the corner of Sixth Avenue and 49th
Street, Manhattan. I remember the way he
looked about as he talked, like a man who hadn't quite realized what he was in
for but who vaguely sensed that he had made a horrible mistake in
returning. His eyes seemed to be saying
all the time - this has no value, no value whatever. He didn't say that, however, but just this
over and over: "I'm sure you'd like it!
I'm sure it's just the place for you." When he left me I was in a daze. I couldn't get hold of him again quickly enough. I wanted to hear it all over again, in minute
detail. Nothing that I had read about
Europe seemed to match this glowing account from my friend's own lips. It seemed all the more miraculous to me in
that we had sprung out of the same environment. He had managed it because he had rich friends
- and because he knew how to save his money.
I had never known anyone who was rich, who had travelled, who had money
in the bank. All my friends were like
myself, drifting from day to day, and never a thought for the future. O'Mara, yes, he had travelled a bit, almost
all over the world - but as a bum, or else in the army, which was even worse
than being a bum. My friend Ulric was
the first fellow I had ever met who I could truly say had travelled. And he knew how to talk about his
experiences.
As a result of that chance encounter
on the street we met frequently thereafter, for a period of several
months. He used to call for me in the
evening after dinner and we would stroll through the park which was nearby. What a thirst I had! Every slightest detail about the other world
fascinated me. Even now, years and years
since, even now, when I know Paris like a book, his picture of Paris is still
before my eyes, still vivid, still real.
Sometimes, after a rain, riding swiftly through the city in a taxi, I
catch fleeting glimpses of this Paris he described; just momentary snatches, as
in passing the Tuileries, perhaps, or a glimpse of Montmartre, of the Sacré
Coeur, through the Rue Lafitte, in the last flush of twilight. Just a Brooklyn Boy! That was an expression he used sometimes when
he felt ashamed of his inability to express himself more adequately. And I was just a Brooklyn boy, too, which is
to say one of the last and the least of men.
But as I wander about, rubbing elbows with the world, seldom it happens
that I meet anyone who can describe so lovingly and faithfully what he has seen
and felt. Those nights in Prospect Park
with my old friend Ulric are responsible, more than anything else, for my being
here today. Most of the places he
described for me I have still to see; some of them I shall perhaps never
see. But they live inside me, warm and
vivid, just as he created them in our rambles through the park.
Interwoven with this talk of the other
world was the whole body and texture of Lawrence's work. Often, when the park had long been emptied,
we were still sitting on a bench discussing the nature of Lawrence's
ideas. Looking back on these discussions
now I can see how confused I was, how pitifully ignorant of the true meaning of
Lawrence's words. Had I really
understood, my life could never have taken the course it did. Most of us live the greater part of our lives
submerged. Certainly in my own case I
can say that not until I left America did I emerge above the surface. Perhaps America had nothing to do with it,
but the fact remains that I did not open my eyes wide and full and clear until
I struck Paris. And perhaps that was
only because I had renounced America, renounced my past.
My friend Kronski used to twit me
about my "euphorias". It was a
sly way he had of reminding me, when I was extraordinarily gay, that the morrow
would find me depressed. It was
true. I had nothing but ups and
downs. Long stretches of gloom and
melancholy followed by extravagant bursts of gaiety, of trancelike
inspiration. Never a level in which I
was myself. It sounds strange to say so,
yet I was never myself. I was either
anonymous or the person called Henry Miller raised to the nth
degree. In the latter mood, for
instance, I could spill out a whole book to Hymie while riding a trolley
car. Hymie, who never suspected me of
being anything but a good employment manager.
I can see his eyes now as he looked at me one night when I was in one of
my states of "euphoria". We
had bordered the trolley at the Brooklyn Bridge to go to some flat in
Greenpoint where a couple of trollops were waiting to receive us. Hymie had started to talk to me in his usual
way about his wife's ovaries. In the
first place he didn't know precisely what ovaries meant and so I was explaining
to him in crude and simple fashion. In
the midst of my explanation it suddenly seemed so profoundly tragic and
ridiculous that Hymie shouldn't know what ovaries were that I became drunk, as
drunk I mean as if I had had a quart of whisky under my belt. From the idea of diseased ovaries there
germinated in one lightning-like flash a sort of tropical growth made up of the
most heterogeneous assortment of odds and ends in the midst of which, securely
lodged, tenaciously lodged, I might say, were Dante and Shakespeare. At the same instant I also suddenly recalled
my whole private train of thought which had begun about the middle of the
Brooklyn Bridge and which suddenly the word "ovaries" had broken. I realized that everything Hymie had said up
till the word "ovaries" had sieved through me like sand. What I had begun, in the middle of the
Brooklyn Bridge, was what I had begun time and time again in the past, usually
when walking to my father's shop, a performance which was repeated day in and
day out as if in a trance. What I had
begun, in brief, was a book of the hours, of the tedium and monotony of my life
in the midst of a ferocious activity.
Not for years had I thought of this book which I used to write every day
on my way from Delancey Street to Murray Hill.
But going over the bridge, the sun setting, the skyscrapers gleaming
like phosphorescent cadavers, the remembrance of the past set in ...
remembrance of going back and forth over the bridge, going to a job which was
death, returning to a home which was a morgue, memorizing Faust looking
down into the cemetery, spitting into the cemetery from the elevated train, the
same guard on the platform every morning, an imbecile, the other imbeciles reading
their newspapers, new skyscrapers going up, new tombs to work in and die in,
the boats passing below, the Fall River Line, the Albany Day Line, why I am
going to work, what will I do tonight, the warm cunt beside me and can I work
my knuckles into her groin, run away and become a cowboy, try Alaska, the gold
mines, get off and turn around, don't die yet, wait another day, a stroke of
luck, river, end it, down, down, like a corkscrew, head and shoulders in the
mud, legs free; fish will come and bite, tomorrow a new life, where, anywhere,
why begin again, the same thing everywhere, death, death is the solution, but
don't die yet, wait another day, a stroke of luck, a new face, a new friend,
millions of chances, you're too young yet, you're melancholy, you don't die
yet, wait another day, a stroke of luck, fuck anyway, and so on over the bridge
into the glass shed, everybody glued together, worms, ants, crawling out of a
dead tree and their thoughts crawling out the same way.... Maybe, being up high
between the two shores, suspended above the traffic, above life and death, on
each side of the high tombs, tombs blazing with dying sunlight, the river
flowing heedlessly, flowing on like time itself, maybe each time I passed up
there, something was tugging away at me, urging me to take it in, to announce
myself; anyway each time I passed on high I was truly alone and whenever that
happened the book commenced to write itself, screaming the things which I never
breathed, the thoughts I never uttered, the conversations I never held, the
hopes, the dreams, the delusions I never admitted. If this then was the true self it was
marvellous, and what's more it seemed never to change but always to pick up
from the last stop, to continue in the same vein, a vein I had struck when I
was a child and went down in the street for the first time alone and there
frozen into the dirty ice of the gutter lay a dead cat, the first time I had
looked at death and grasped it. From
that moment I knew what it was to be isolated: every object, every living thing
and every dead thing led its independent existence. My thoughts too led an independent
existence. Suddenly, looking at Hymie
and thinking of that strange word "ovaries", now stranger than any
word in my whole vocabulary, this feeling of icy isolation came over me and
Hymie sitting beside me was a bullfrog, absolutely a bullfrog and nothing
more. I was jumping from the bridge head
first, down into the primeval ooze, the legs clear and waiting for a bite; like
that, Satan had plunged through the heavens, through the solid core of the
earth, head down and ramming through to the very hub of the earth, the darkest,
densest, hottest pit of hell. I was
walking through the Mojave Desert and the man beside me was waiting for
nightfall in order to fall on me and slay me.
I was walking again in Dreamland and a man was walking above me on a
tightrope and above him a man was sitting in an airplane spelling letters of
smoke in the sky. The woman hanging on
my arm was pregnant and in six or seven years the thing she was carrying inside
her would be able to read the letters in the sky and he or she or it would know
that it was a cigarette and later would smoke the cigarette, perhaps a package
a day. In the womb nails formed on every
finger, every toe; you could stop right there, at a toenail, the tiniest
toenail imaginable, and you could break your head over it, trying to figure it
out. On one side of the ledger are the
books man has written, containing such a hodgepodge of wisdom and nonsense, of
truth and falsehood, that if one lived to be as old as Methuselah one couldn't
disentangle the mess; on the other side of the ledger things like toenails,
hair, teeth, blood, ovaries, if you will, all incalculable and all
written in another kind of ink, in another script, an incomprehensible,
indecipherable script. the bullfrog eyes
were trained on me like two collar buttons stuck in cold fat; they were stuck
in the cold sweat of the primeval ooze.
Each collar button was an ovary that had come unglued, an illustration
out of the dictionary without benefit of lucubration; lacklustre in the cold
yellow fat of the eyeball each buttoned ovary produced a subterranean chill,
the skating rink of hell where men stood upside down in the ice, the legs free
and waiting for a bite. Here Dante
walked unaccompanied, weighed down by his vision, and through endless circles
gradually moving heavenward to be enthroned in his work. Here Shakespeare with smooth brow fell into
the bottomless reverie of rage to emerge in elegant quartos and
innuendoes. A glaucous frost of
non-comprehension swept clear by gales of laughter. From the hub of the bullfrog's eye radiated
clean white spokes of sheer lucidity not to be annotated or categorized, not to
be numbered or defined, but revolving sightless in kaleidoscopic change. Hymie
the bullfrog was an ovarian spud generated in the high passage between two
shores: for him the skyscrapers had been built, the wilderness cleared, the
Indians massacred, the buffaloes exterminated; for him the twin cities had been
joined by the Brooklyn Bridge, the caissons sunk, the cables strung from tower
to tower; for him men sat upside down in the sky writing words in fire and
smoke; for him the anaesthetic was invented and the high forceps and the big
Bertha which could destroy what the eyes could not see; for him the molecule
was broken down and the atom revealed to be without substance; for him each
night the stars were swept with telescopes and worlds coming to birth
photographed in the act of gestation; for him the barriers of time and space
were set at nought and all movement, be it the flight of birds or the
revolution of the planets, expounded irrefutably and incontestably by the high
priests of the dispossessed cosmos.
Then, as in the middle of the bridge, in the middle of a walk, in the
middle always, whether of a book, a conversation, or making love, it was borne
in on me again that I had never done what I wanted and out of not doing what I
wanted to do there grew up inside me this creation which was nothing but an
obsessional plant, a sort of coral growth, which was expropriating everything,
including life itself, until life itself became this which was denied but which
constantly asserted itself, making life and killing life at the same time. I could see it going on after death, like
hair growing on a corpse, people saying "death" but the hair still
testifying to life, and finally no death but this life of hair and nails, the
body gone, the spirit quenched, but in the death something still alive,
expropriating space, causing time, creating endless movement. Through love this might happen, or sorrow, or
being born with a club foot; the cause nothing, the event everything. In the beginning was the Word....
Whatever this was, the Word, disease or creation, it was still running
rampant; it would run on and on, outstrip time and space, outlast the angels,
unseat God, unhook the universe. Any
word contained all words - for him who had become detached through love or
sorrow or whatever the cause. In every
word the current ran back to the beginning which was lost and which would never
be found again since there was neither beginning nor end but only that which
expressed itself in beginning and end.
So, on the ovarian trolley there was this voyage of man and bullfrog
composed of identical stuff, neither better nor less than Dante but infinitely
different, the one not knowing precisely the meaning of anything, the other
knowing too precisely the meaning of everything, hence both lost and confused
through beginnings and endings, finally to be deposited at Java or India
Street, Greenpoint, there to be carried back into the current of life,
so-called, by a couple of sawdust molls with twitching ovaries of the
well-known gastropod variety.
What strikes me now as the most
wonderful proof of my fitness, or unfitness, for the times is the fact that
nothing people were writing or talking about had any real interest for me. Only the object haunted me, the separate,
detached, insignificant thing. It
might be a part of the human body or a staircase in a vaudeville house; it
might be a smokestack or a button I had found in the gutter. Whatever it was it enabled me to open up, to
surrender, to attach my signature. To
the life about me, to the people who made up the world I knew, I could not
attach my signature. I was as definitely
outside their world as a cannibal is outside the bounds of civilized
society. I was filled with a perverse
love of the thing-in-itself - not a philosophic attachment, but a passionate,
desperately passionate hunger, as if in this discarded, worthless thing
which everyone ignored there was contained the secret of my own regeneration.
Living in the midst of a world where
there was a plethora of the new I attached myself to the old. In every object there was a minute particle
which particularly claimed my attention.
I had a microscopic eye for the blemish, for the grain of ugliness which
to me constituted the sole beauty of the object. Whatever set the object apart, or made it
unserviceable, or gave it a date, attracted and endeared it to me. If this was perverse it was also healthy,
considering that I was not destined to belong to this world which was springing
up about me. Soon I too would become
like these objects which I venerated, a thing apart, a non-useful member of
society. I was definitely dated, that
was certain. And yet I was able to
amuse, to instruct, to nourish. But
never to be accepted, in a genuine way.
When I wished to, when I had the itch, I could single out any man, in
any stratum of society, and make him listen to me. I could hold him spellbound, if I chose, but,
like a magician, or a sorcerer, only as long as the spirit was in me. At bottom I sensed in others a distrust, an
uneasiness, an antagonism which, because it was instinctive, was
irremediable. I should have been a
clown; it would have afforded me the widest range of expression. But I underestimated the profession. Had I become a clown, or even a vaudeville
entertainer, I would have been famous.
People would have appreciated me precisely because they would not have
understood; but they would have understood that I was not to be
understood. That would have been a
relief, to say the least.
It was always a source of amazement to
me how easily people could become riled just listening to me talk. Perhaps my speech was somewhat extravagant,
though often it happened when I was holding myself in with main force. The turn of a phrase, the choice of an
unfortunate adjective, the facility with which the words came to my lips, the
allusions to subjects which were taboo - everything conspired to set me off as an outlaw, as an enemy of
society. No matter how well things began
sooner or later they smelled me out. If
I were modest and humble, for example, then I was too modest, too humble. If I were gay and spontaneous, bold and
reckless, then I was too free, too gay.
I could never get myself quite au point with the individual I
happened to be talking to. If it were
not a question of life and death - everything was life and death to me then -
if it was merely a question of passing a pleasant evening at the home of some
acquaintance, it was the same thing.
There were vibrations emanating from me, overtones and undertones, which
charged the atmosphere unpleasantly.
Perhaps the whole evening they had been amused by my stories, perhaps I
had them in stitches, as it often happened, and everything seemed to auger
well. But sure as fate something was
bound to happen before the evening came to a close, some vibration set loose
which made the chandelier ring or which reminded some sensitive soul of the
pisspot under the bed. Even while the
laughter was still dying off the venom was beginning to make itself felt. "Hope to see you again some time,"
they would say, but the wet, limp hand which was extended would belie the
words.
Persona non grata! Jesus, how clear it seems to me now! No pick and choice possible: I had to take
what was to hand and learn to like it. I
had to learn to live with the scum, to swim like a sewer rat or be
drowned. If you elect to join the herd
you are immune. To be accepted and
appreciated you must nullify yourself, make yourself indistinguishable from the
herd. You may dream, if you dream
alike. But if you dream something
different you are not in America, of America American, but a Hottentot in
Africa, or a Kalmuck, or a chimpanzee.
The moment you have a "different" thought you cease to be an
American. And the moment you become
something different you find yourself in Alaska or Easter Island or Iceland.
Am I saying this with rancour, with
envy, with malice? Perhaps. Perhaps I regret not having been able to
become an American. Perhaps. In my zeal now, which is again American,
I am about to give birth to a monstrous edifice, a skyscraper, which will last
undoubtedly long after the other skyscrapers have vanished, but which will
vanish too when that which produced it disappears. Everything American will disappear one day,
more completely than that which was Greek, or Roman, or Egyptian. This is one of the ideas which pushed
me outside the warm, comfortable bloodstream where, buffaloes all, we once
grazed in peace. An idea that has caused
me infinite sorrow, for not to belong to something enduring is the last agony. But I am not a buffalo and I have no desire
to be one, I am not even a spiritual buffalo. I have slipped away to rejoin an older stream
of consciousness, a race antecedent to the buffaloes, a race that will survive
the buffalo.
All things, all objects animate or
inanimate that are different, are veined with ineradicable traits. What is me is ineradicable, because it is
different. This is a skyscraper, as I
said, but it is different from the usual skyscraper à l'américaine. In this skyscraper there are no elevators, no
seventy-third-storey windows to jump from.
If you get tired of climbing you are shit out of luck. There is no slot directory in the main
lobby. If you are searching for somebody
you will have to search. If you want a
drink you will have to go out and get it; there are no soda fountains in this
building, and no cigar stores, and no telephone booths. All the other skyscrapers have what you want!
this one contains nothing but what I want, what I like. And somewhere in this skyscraper Valeska has
her being, and we're going to get to her when the spirit moves me. For the time being she's all right, Valeska,
seeing as how she's six feet under and by now perhaps picked clean by the
worms. When she was in the flesh she was
picked clean too, by the human worms who have no respect for anything which has
a different tint, a different odour.
The sad thing about Valeska was the
fact that she had nigger blood in her veins.
It was depressing for everybody around her. She made you aware of it whether you wished
to be or no. The nigger blood, as I say,
and the fact that her mother was a trollop.
The mother was white, of course.
Who the father was nobody knew, not even Valeska herself.
Everything was going along smoothly
until the day an officious little Jew from the vice-president's office happened
to espy her. He was horrified, so he
informed me confidentially, to think that I had employed a coloured person as
my secretary. He spoke as though she
might contaminate the messengers. The
next day I was put on the carpet. It was
exactly as though I had committed sacrilege.
Of course I pretended that I hadn't observed anything unusual about her,
except that she was extremely intelligent and extremely capable. Finally the president himself stepped
in. There was a short interview between
him and Valeska during which he very diplomatically proposed to give her a better
position in Havana. No talk of the blood
taint. Simply that her services had been
altogether remarkable and that they would like to promote her - to Havana. Valeska came back to the office in a
rage. When she was angry she was
magnificent. She said she wouldn't
budge. Steve Romero and Hymie were there
at the time and we all went out to dinner together. During the course of the evening we got a bit
tight. Valeska's tongue was
wagging. On the way home she told me
that she was going to put up a fight; she wanted to know if it would endanger
my job. I told her quietly that if she
were fired I would quit too. She
pretended not to believe it at first. I
said I meant it, that I didn't care what happened. She seemed to be unduly impressed; she took
me by the two hands and she held them very gently, the tears rolling down her
cheeks.
That was the beginning of things. I think it was the very next day that I
slipped her a note saying that I was crazy about her. She read the note sitting opposite me and
when she was through she looked me square in the eye and said she didn't
believe it. But we went to dinner again
that night and we had more to drink and we danced and while we were dancing she
pressed herself against me lasciviously.
It was just the time, as luck would have it, that my wife was getting
ready to have another abortion. I was
telling Valeska about it as we danced.
On the way home she suddenly said - "Why don't you let me lend you
a hundred dollars?" The next thing
I brought her home to dinner and I let her hand the wife the hundred
dollars. I was amazed how well the two
of them got along. Before the evening
was over it was agreed upon that Valeska would come to the house the day of the
abortion and take care of the kid. The
day came and I gave Valeska the afternoon off.
About an hour after she had left I suddenly decided that I would take
the afternoon off also. I started toward
the burlesque on Fourteenth Street. When
I was about a block from the theatre I suddenly changed my mind. It was just the thought that if anything
happened - if the wife were to kick off - I wouldn't feel so damned good having
spent the afternoon at the burlesque. I
walked around a bit, in and out of the penny arcades, and then I started
homeward.
It's strange how things turn out. Trying to amuse the kid I suddenly remembered
a trick my grandfather had shown me when I was a child. You take the dominoes and you make tall
battleships out of them; then you gently pull the tablecloth on which the
battleships are floating until they come to the edge of the table when suddenly
you give a brisk tug and they fall onto the floor. We tried it over and over again, the three of
us, until the kid got so sleepy that she toddled off to the next room and fell
asleep. The dominoes were lying all over
the floor and the tablecloth was on the floor too. Suddenly Valeska was leaning against the
table, her tongue halfway down my throat, my hand between her legs. As I laid her back on the table she twined
her legs around me. I could fell one of
the dominoes under my feet - I thought of my grandfather sitting on the bench,
the way he had warned my mother one day that I was too young to be reading so
much, the pensive look in his eyes as he pressed the hot iron against the wet
seam of a coat; I thought of the attack on San Juan Hill which the Rough Riders
had made, the picture of Teddy charging at the head of his volunteers in the
big book which I used to read beside the workbench; I thought of the battleship
"Maine" that floated over my bed in the little room with the
iron-barred window, and of Admiral Dewey and of Schley and Sampson; I thought
of the trip to the Navy Yard which I never made because on the way my father
suddenly remembered that we had to call on the doctor that afternoon and when I
left the doctor's office I didn't have any more tonsils nor any more faith in
human beings.... We had hardly finished when the bell rang and it was my wife
coming home from the slaughterhouse. I
was still buttoning my fly as I went through the hall to open the gate. She was as white as flour. She looked as though she'd never be able to
go through another one. We put her to
bed and then we gathered up the dominoes and put the tablecloth back on the
table. Just the other night in a bistro,
as I was going to the toilet, I happened to pass two old fellows playing
dominoes. I had to stop a moment and
pick up a domino. The feeling of it
immediately brought back the battleships, the clatter they made when they fell
on the floor. And with the battleships
my lost tonsils and my faith in human beings gone. So that every time I walked over the Brooklyn
Bridge and looked down toward the Navy Yard I felt as though my guts were
dropping out. Way up there, suspended
between the two shores, I felt always as though I were hanging over a void; up
there everything that had ever happened to me seemed unreal, and worse than
unreal - unnecessary. Instead of
joining me to life, to men, to the activity of men, the bridge seemed to break
all connections. If I walked toward the
one shore or the other it made no difference: either way was hell. Somehow I had managed to sever my connection
with the world that human hands and human minds were creating. Perhaps my grandfather was right, perhaps I
was spoiled in the bud by the books I read.
But it is ages since books have claimed me. For a long time now I have practically ceased
to read. But the taint is still
there. Now people are books to me. I read them from cover to cover and toss them
aside. I devour them, one after the
other. And the more I read, the more
insatiable I become. There is no limit
to it. There could be no end, and there
was none, until inside me a bridge began to form which united me again with the
current of life from which as a child I had been separated.
A terrible sense of desolation. It hung over me for years. If I were to believe in the stars I should
have to believe that I was completely under the reign of Saturn. Everything that happened to me happened too
late to mean much to me. It was even so
with my birth. Slated for Christmas I
was born a half hour too late. It always
seemed to me that I was meant to be the sort of individual that one is destined
to be by virtue of being born on the 25th day of December. Admiral Dewey was born on that day and so was
Jesus Christ ... perhaps Krishnamurti too, for all I know. Anyway that's the sort of guy I was intended
to be. But due to the fact that my
mother had a clutching womb, that she held me in her grip like an octopus, I
came out under another configuration - with a bad setup in other words. They say - the astrologers, I mean - that it
will get better and better for me as I go on; the future, in fact, is supposed
to be quite glorious. But what do I care
about the future? It would have been
better if my mother had tripped on the stairs the morning of the 25th December
and broken her neck: that would have given me a fair start! When I try to think, therefore, of where the
break occurred I keep putting it back further and further, until there is no
other way of accounting for it than by the retarded hour of birth. Even my mother, with her caustic tongue,
seemed to understand it somewhat.
"Always dragging behind, like a cow's tail" - that's how she
characterized me. But is it my fault
that she held me locked inside her until the hour had passed? Destiny had prepared me to be such and such a
person; the stars were in the right conjunction and I was right with the stars
and kicking to get out. But I had no
choice about the mother who was to deliver me.
Perhaps I was lucky not to have been born an idiot, considering all the
circumstances. One thing seems clear,
however - and this is a hangover from the 25th - that I was born with a
crucifixion complex. That is, to be more
precise, I was born a fanatic. Fanatic! I remember that word being hurled at me from
early childhood on. By my parents
especially. What is a fanatic? One who believes passionately and acts
desperately upon what he believes. I was
always believing in something and so getting into trouble. The more my hands were slapped the more
firmly I believed. I believed -
and the rest of the world did not! If it
were only a question of enduring punishment one could go on believing till the
end; but the way of the world is more insidious than that. Instead of being punished you are undermined,
hollowed out, the ground taken from under your feet. It isn't even treachery, what I have in
mind. Treachery is understandable and
combatable. No, it is something worse,
something less than treachery.
It's a negativism that causes you to overreach yourself. You are perpetually spending your energy in
the act of balancing yourself. You are
seized with a sort of spiritual vertigo, you totter on the brink, your hair
stands on end, you can't believe that beneath your feet lies an immeasurable
abyss. It comes about through excess of
enthusiasm, through a passionate desire to embrace people, to show them your
love. The more you reach out toward the
world the more the world retreats.
Nobody wants real love, real hatred.
Nobody wants you to put your hand in his sacred entrails - that's only
for the priest in the hour of sacrifice.
While you live, while the blood's still warm, you are to pretend that
there's no such thing as blood and no such thing as a skeleton beneath the
covering of flesh. Keep of the grass! That's the motto by which people live.
If you continue this balancing at the
edge of the abyss long enough you become very very adept: no matter which way
you are pushed you always right yourself.
Being in constant trim you develop a ferocious gaiety, an unnatural
gaiety, I might say. There are only two
peoples in the world today who understand the meaning of such a statement - the
Jews and the Chinese. If it happens that
you are neither of these you find yourself in a strange predicament. You are always laughing at the wrong moment;
you are considered cruel and heartless when in reality you are only tough and
durable. But if you would laugh when
others laugh and weep when they weep then you must be prepared to die as they
die and live as they live. That means to
be right and to get the worst of it at the same time. It means to be dead while you are alive and
alive only when you are dead. In this
company the world always wears a normal aspect, even under the most abnormal
conditions. Nothing is right or wrong
but thinking makes it so. You no longer
believe in reality but in thinking. And
when you are pushed off the dead end your thoughts go with you and they are of
no use to you.
In a way, in a profound way, I mean,
Christ was never pushed off the dead end.
At the moment when he was tottering and swaying, as if by a great
recoil, the negative backwash rolled up and stayed his death. The whole negative impulse of humanity seemed
to coil up into a monstrous inert mass to create the human integer, the figure
one, one and indivisible. There was a
resurrection which is inexplicable unless we accept the fact that men have
always been willing and ready to deny their own destiny. The earth rolls on, the stars roll on, but
men, the great body of men which makes up the world, are caught in the image of
the one and only one.
If one isn't crucified, like Christ,
if one manages to survive, to go on living above and beyond the sense of
desperation and futility, then another curious thing happens. It's as though one had actually died and
actually been resurrected again; one lives a supernormal life, life the
Chinese. That is to say, one is
unnaturally gay, unnaturally healthy, unnaturally indifferent. The tragic sense is gone: one lives on like a
flower, a rock, a tree, one with Nature and against Nature at the same
time. If your best friend dies you don't
even bother to go to the funeral; if a man is run down by a streetcar right
before your eyes you keep on walking just as though nothing had happened; if a
war breaks out you let your friends go to the front but you yourself take no
interest in the slaughter. And so on and
so on. Life becomes a spectacle and, if
you happen to be an artist, you record the passing show. Loneliness is abolished, because all values,
your own included, are destroyed.
Sympathy alone flourishes, but it is not a human sympathy, a limited
sympathy - it is something monstrous and evil.
You care so little that you can afford to sacrifice yourself for anybody
or anything. At the same time your
interest, your curiosity, develops at an outrageous pace. This too is suspect, since it is capable of
attaching you to a collar button just as well as to a cause. There is no fundamental, unalterable
difference between things: all is flux, all is perishable. The surface of your being is constantly
crumbling; within however you grow hard as a diamond. And perhaps it is this hard, magnetic core inside
you which attracts others to you willy-nilly.
One thing is certain, that when you die and are resurrected you belong
to the earth and whatever is of the earth is your inalienably. You become an anomaly of nature, a being
without shadow; you will never die again but only pass away like the phenomena
about you.
Nothing of this which I am now
recording was known to me at the time that I was going through the great
change. Everything I endured was in the
nature of a preparation for that moment when, putting on my hat one evening, I
walked out of the office, out of my hitherto private life, and sought the woman
who was to liberate me from a living death.
In the light of this I look back now upon my nocturnal rambles through
the streets of New York, the white nights when I walked in my sleep and saw the
city in which I was born as one sees things in a mirage. Often it was O'Rourke, the company detective,
whom I accompanied through the silent streets.
Often the snow was on the ground and the air chill and frosty. And O'Rourke talking interminably about
thefts, about murders, about love, about human nature, about the Golden
Age. He had a habit, when he was well
launched upon a subject, of stopping suddenly in the middle of the street and
planting his heavy foot between mine so that I couldn't budge. And then, seizing the lapel of my coat, he
would bring his face to mine and talk into my eyes, each word boring in like
the turn of a gimlet. I can see again
the two of us standing in the middle of the street at four in the morning, the
wind howling, the snow blowing down, and O'Rourke oblivious of everything but
the story he had to get off his chest.
Always as he talked I remember taking in the surroundings out of the
corner of my eye, being aware not of what he was saying but of the two of us
standing in Yorkville or on Allen Street or on Broadway. Always it seemed a little crazy to me, the earnestness
with which he recounted his banal murder stories in the midst of the greatest
muddle of architecture that man had ever created. While he was talking about fingerprints I
might be taking stock of a coping or a cornice on a little red brick building
just back of his black hat; I would get to thinking of the day the cornice had
been installed, who might be the man who had designed it and why had he made it
so ugly, so like every other lousy, rotten cornice which we had passed from the
East Side up to Harlem and beyond Harlem, if we wanted to push on, beyond New
York, beyond the Mississippi, beyond the Grand Canyon, beyond the Mojave
Desert, everywhere in America where there are buildings for man and woman. It seemed absolutely crazy to me that each day
of my life I had to sit and listen to other people's stories, the banal
tragedies of poverty and distress, of love and death, of yearning and
disillusionment. If, as it happened,
there came to me each day at least fifty men, each pouring out his tale of woe,
and with each one I had to be silent and "receive", it was only
natural that at some point along the line I had to close my ears, had to harden
my heart. The tiniest little morsel was
sufficient for me; I could chew on it and digest it for days and weeks. Yet I was obliged to sit there and be
inundated, to get out at night again and receive more, to sleep listening, to
dream listening. They streamed in from
all over the world, from every stratum of society, speaking a thousand
different tongues, worshipping different gods, obeying different laws and
customs. The tale of the poorest among
them was a huge tome, and yet if each and every one were written out at length
it might all be compressed to the size of the Ten Commandments, it might all be
recorded on the back of a postage stamp, like the Lord's Prayer. Each day I was so stretched that my hide
seemed to cover the whole world; and when I was alone, when I was no longer
obliged to listen, I shrank to the size of a pinpoint. The greatest delight, and it was a rare one,
was to walk the streets alone ... to walk the streets at night when no-one was
abroad and to reflect on the silence that surrounded me. Millions lying on their backs, dead to the
world, their mouths wide open and nothing but snores emanating from them. Walking amidst the craziest architecture
every invented, wondering why and to what end, if every day from these wretched
hovels or magnificent palaces there had to stream forth an army of men itching
to unravel their tale of misery. In a
year, reckoning it modestly, I received twenty-five thousand tales; in two
years fifty thousand; in four years it would be a hundred thousand; in ten
years I would be stark mad. Already I
knew enough people to populate a good-sized town. What a town it would be, if only they could
be gathered together! Would they want
skyscrapers? Would they want
museums? Would they want libraries? Would they too build sewers and bridges and
tracks and factories? Would they make
the same little cornices of tin, one like another, on, on, ad infinitum, from
Battery Park to the Golden Bay? I doubt
it. Only the lash of hunger could stir
them. The empty belly, the wild look in
the eye, the fear, the fear of worse, driving them on. One after the other, all the same, all goaded
to desperation, out of the goad and whip of hunger building the loftiest
skyscrapers, the most redoubtable dreadnoughts, making the finest steel, the
flimsiest lace, the most delicate glassware.
Walking with O'Rourke and hearing nothing but theft, arson, rape,
homicide was like listening to a little motif out of a grand symphony. And just as one can whistle an air of Bach
and be thinking of a woman he wants to sleep with,, so, listening to O'Rourke,
I would be thinking of the moment when he would stop talking and say
"what'll you have to eat?" In
the midst of the most gruesome murder I could think of the pork tenderloin
which we would be sure to get at a certain place farther up the line, and
wonder too what sort of vegetables they would have on the side to go with it,
and whether I would order pie afterwards or a custard pudding. It was the same when I slept with my wife now
and then; while she was moaning and gibbering I might be wondering if she had
emptied the grounds in the coffee pot, because she had the bad habit of letting
things slide - the important things, I mean. Fresh coffee was important - and fresh bacon
with the eggs. If she were knocked up
again that would be bad, serious in a way, but more important than that was fresh
coffee in the morning and the smell of bacon and eggs. I could put up with heartbreaks and abortions
and busted romances, but I had to have something under my belt to carry on, and
I wanted something nourishing, something appetizing. I felt exactly like Jesus Christ would have
felt if he had been taken down from the cross and not permitted to die in the
flesh. I am sure that the shock of
crucifixion would have been so great that he would have suffered a complete
amnesia as regards humanity. I am
certain that after his wounds had healed he wouldn't have given a damn about
the tribulations of mankind but would have fallen with the greatest relish upon
a fresh cup of coffee and a slice of toast, assuming he could have had it.
Whoever, through too great love, which
is monstrous after all, dies of his misery, is born again to know neither love
nor hate, but to enjoy. And this joy of
living, because it is unnaturally acquired, is a poison which eventually
vitiates the whole world. Whatever is
created beyond the normal limits of human suffering, acts as a boomerang and
brings about destruction. At night the
streets of New York reflect the crucifixion and death of Christ. When the snow is on the ground and there is
the utmost silence there comes out of the hideous buildings of New York a music
of such sullen despair and bankruptcy as to make the flesh shrivel. No stone was laid upon another with love or
reverence; no street was laid for dance or joy.
One thing has been added to another in a mad scramble to fill the belly,
and the streets smell of empty bellies and full bellies and bellies half
full. The streets smell of a hunger
which has nothing to do with love; they smell of the belly which is insatiable
and of the creations of the empty belly which are null and void.
In this null and void, in this zero
whiteness, I learned to enjoy a sandwich, or a collar button. I could study a cornice or a coping with the
greatest curiosity while pretending to listen to a tale of human woe. I can remember the dates on certain buildings
and the names of the architects who designed them. I can remember the temperature and the
velocity of the wind, standing at a certain corner; the tale that accompanied
it is gone. I can remember that I was
even then remembering something else, and I can tell you what it was that I was
then remembering, but of what use? There
was one man in me which had died and all that was left were his remembrances;
there was another man who was alive, and that man was supposed to be me,
myself, but he was alive only as a tree is alive, or a rock, or a beast of the
field. Just as the city itself had
become a huge tomb in which men struggled to earn a decent death, so my own
life came to resemble a tomb which I was constructing out of my own death. I was walking around in a stone forest the
centre of which was chaos; sometimes in the dead centre, in the very heart of
chaos, I danced or drank myself silly, or I made love, or I befriended someone,
or I planned a new life, but it was all chaos, all stone, and all hopeless and
bewildering. Until the time when I would
encounter a force strong enough to whirl me out of this mad stone forest no
life would be possible for me nor could one page be written which would have
meaning. Perhaps in reading this, one has
still the impression of chaos but this is written from a live centre and what
is chaotic is merely peripheral, the tangential shreds, as it were, of a world
which no longer concerns me. Only a few
months ago I was standing in the streets of New York looking about me as years
ago I had looked about me; again I found myself studying the architecture,
studying the minute details which only the dislocated eye takes in. But this time it was like coming down from
Mars. What race of men is this, I asked
myself. What does it mean? And there was no remembrance of suffering or
of the life that was snuffed out in the gutter, only that I was looking upon a
strange and incomprehensible world, a world so removed from me that I had the
sensation of belonging to another planet.
From the top of the Empire State Building I looked down one night upon
the city which I knew from below: there they were, in true perspective, the
human ants which whom I had crawled, the human lice with whom I had
struggled. They were moving along at a
snail's pace, each one doubtless fulfilling his microcosmic destiny. In their fruitless desperation they had
reared this colossal edifice which was their pride and boast. And from the topmost ceiling of this colossal
edifice they had suspended a string of cages in which the imprisoned canaries
warbled their senseless warble. At the
very summit of their ambition there were these little spots of beings warbling
away for dear life. In a hundred years,
I thought to myself, perhaps they would be caging live human beings, gay,
demented ones, who would sing about the world to come. Perhaps they would breed a race of warblers
who would warble while the others worked.
Perhaps in every cage there would be a poet or a musician so that life
below might flow on unimpeded, one with the stone, one with the forest, a
rippling creaking chaos of null and void.
In a thousand years they might all be demented, workers and poets alike,
and everything fall back to ruin as has happened again and again. Another thousand years, or five thousand, or
ten thousand, exactly where I am standing now to survey the scene, a little boy
may open a book in a tongue as yet unheard of and about this life now passing,
a life which the man who wrote the book never experienced, a life with deducted
form and rhythm, with beginning and end, and the boy on closing the book will
think to himself what a great race the Americans were, what a marvellous life
there had once been on this continent which he is now inhabiting. But no race to come, except perhaps the race
of blind poets, will ever be able to imagine the seething chaos out of which
this future history was composed.
Chaos!
A howling chaos! No need to
choose a particular day. And day of my
life - back there - would suit. Every
day of my life, my tiny, microcosmic life, was a reflection of the outer
chaos. Let me think back.... At
seven-thirty the alarm went off. I
didn't bounce out of bed. I lay there
till eight-thirty, trying the gain a little more sleep. Sleep - how could I sleep? In the back of my mind was an image of the
office where I was already due. I could
see Hymie arriving at eight sharp, the switchboard already buzzing with demands
for help, the applicants climbing up the wide wooden stairway, the strong smell
of camphor from the dressing room. Why
get up and repeat yesterday's song and dance?
As fast as I hired them they dropped out. Working my balls off and not even a clean
shirt to wear. Mondays I got my
allowance from the wife - carfare and lunch money. I was always in debt to her and she was in
debt to the grocer, the butcher, the landlord, and so on. I couldn't be bothered shaving - there wasn't
time enough. I put on the torn shirt,
gobble up the breakfast, and borrow a nickel for the subway. If she were in a bad mood I would swindle the
money from the newsdealer at the subway.
I get to the office out of breath, an hour behind time and a dozen calls
to make before I even talk to an applicant.
While I make one call there are three other calls waiting to be
answered. I use two telephones at
once. The switchboard is buzzing. Hymie is sharpening his pencils between
calls. McGovern the doorman is standing
at my elbow to give me a word of advice about one of the applicants, probably a
crook, who is trying to sneak back under a false name. Behind me the cards and ledgers containing
the name of every applicant who had ever passed through the machine. The bad ones are starred in red ink; some of
them have six aliases after their names.
Meanwhile the room is crawling like a hive. The room stinks with sweat, dirty feet, old
uniforms, camphor, Lysol, bad breaths.
Half of them will have to be turned away - not that we don't need them,
but that even under the worst conditions they just won't do. The man in front of my desk, standing at the
rail with palsied hands and bleary eyes, is an ex-mayor of New York City. He's seventy now and would be glad to take
anything. He has wonderful letters of
recommendation, but we can't take anyone over forty-five years of age. Forty-five in New York is the deadline. The telephone rings and it's a smooth
secretary from the Y.M.C.A. Wouldn't I
make an exception for a boy who has just walked into his office - a boy who was
in the reformatory for a year or so. What
did he do? He tried to rape his
sister. An Italian, of course. O'Mara, my assistant, is putting an applicant
through the third degree. He suspects
him of being an epileptic. Finally he
succeeds and for good measure the boy throws a fit right there in the
office. One of the women faints. A beautiful looking young woman with a
handsome fur around her neck is trying to persuade me to take her on. She's a whore clean through and I know if I
put her on there'll be hell to pay. She
wants to work in a certain building uptown - because it is near home, she
says. Nearing lunch time and a few
cronies are beginning to drop in. They
sit around watching me work, as if it were a vaudeville performance. Kronski, the medical student, arrives; he
says one of the boys I've just hired has Parkinson's disease. I've been so busy I haven't had a chance to
go to the toilet. All the telegraph
operators, all the managers, suffer from haemorrhoids, so O'Rourke tells me. He's been having electrical massages for the
last two years, but nothing works. Lunch
time and there are six of us at the table.
Some one will have to pay for me, as usual. We gulp it down and rush back. More calls to make, more applicants to
interview. The vice-president is raising
hell because we can't keep the force up to normal. Every paper in New York and for twenty miles
outside New York carries long ads demanding help. All the schools have been canvassed for
part-time messengers. All the charity
bureaus and relief societies have been invoked.
They drop out like flies. Some of
them don't even last an hour. It's a
human flour mill. And the saddest thing
about it is that it's totally unnecessary.
But that's not my concern. Mine
is to do or die, as Kipling says. I plug
on, through one victim after another, the telephone ringing like mad, the place
smelling more and more vile, the holes getting bigger and bigger. Each one is a human being asking for a crust
of bread; I have his height, weight, colour, religion, education, experience,
etc. All the data will go into a ledger
to be filed alphabetically and then chronologically. Names and dates. Fingerprints too, if we had the time for
it. So that what? So that the American people may enjoy the
fastest form of communication known to man, so that they may sell their wares
more quickly, so that the moment you drop dead in the street your next of kin
may be apprised immediately, that is to say, within an hour, unless the
messenger to whom the telegram is entrusted decides to throw up the job and
throw the whole batch of telegrams in the garbage can. Twenty million Christmas blanks, all wishing
you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, from the directors and president
and vice-president of the Cosmodemonic Telegraph Company, and maybe the telegram
reads "Mother dying, come at once," but the clerk is too busy to
notice the message and if you sue for damages, spiritual damages, there is a
legal department trained expressly to meet such emergencies and so you can be
sure that your mother will die and you will have a Merry Christmas and Happy
New Year just the same. The clerk, of
course, will be fired and after a month or so he will come back for a
messenger's job and he will be taken on and put on the night shift near the
docks where nobody will recognize him, and his wife will come with the brats to
thank the general manager, or perhaps the vice-president himself, for the
kindness and consideration shown. And
then one day everybody will be heartily surprised that said messenger robbed
the till and O'Rourke will be asked to take the night train for Cleveland or
Detroit and to track him down even if it costs ten thousand dollars. And then the vice-president will issue an
order that no more Jews are to be hired, but after three or four days he will
let up a bit because there are nothing but Jews coming for the job. And because it's getting so very tough and
the timber so damned scarce I'm on the point of hiring a midget from the circus
and I probably would have hired him if he hadn't broken down and confessed that
he was a she. And to make it worse
Valeska takes "it" under her wing, takes "it" home that
night and under pretence of sympathy gives "it" a thorough
examination, including a vaginal exploration with the index finger of the right
hand. And the midget becomes very
amorous and finally very jealous. It's a
trying day and on the way home I bump into the sister of one of my friends and
she insists on taking me to dinner.
After dinner we go to a movie and in the dark we begin to play with each
other and finally it gets to such a point that we leave the movie and go back
to the office where I lay her on the zinc-covered table in the dressing
room. And when I get home, a little
after midnight, there's a telephone call from Valeska and she wants me to hop
into the subway immediately and come to her house, it's very urgent. It's an hour's ride and I'm dead weary, but
she said it was urgent and so I'm on the way.
And when I get there I meet her cousin, a rather attractive young woman,
who, according to her own story, has just had an affair with a strange man
because she was tired of being a virgin.
And what was all the fuss about?
Why this, that in her eagerness she had forgotten to take the usual
precautions, and maybe now she was pregnant and then what? They wanted to know what I thought should be
done and I said: "Nothing."
And then Valeska takes me aside and she asks me if I wouldn't care to
sleep with her cousin, to break her in, as it were, so that there wouldn't be a
repetition of that sort of thing.
The whole thing was cockeyed and we
were all laughing hysterically and then we began to drink - the only thing they
had in the house was kümmel and it didn't take much to put us under. And then it got more cockeyed because the two
of them began to paw me and neither one would let the other do anything. The result was I undressed them both and put
them to bed and they fell asleep in each other's arms. And when I walked out, toward 5 A.M., I
discovered I didn't have a cent in my pocket and I tried to bum a nickel from a
taxi driver but nothing doing so finally I took off my furlined overcoat and I
gave it to him - for a nickel. When I
got home my wife was awake and sore as hell because I had stayed out so
long. We had a hot discussion and
finally I lost my temper and I clouted her and she fell on the floor and began
to weep and sob and then the kid woke up and hearing the wife bawling she got
frightened and began to scream at the top of her lungs. The girl upstairs came running down to see
what was the matter. She was in her
kimono and her hair was hanging down her back.
In the excitement she got close to me and things happened without either
of us intending anything to happen. We
put the wife to bed with a wet towel around her forehead and while the girl
upstairs was bending over I stood behind her and lifting her kimono I got it
into her and she stood there a long time talking a lot of foolish, soothing
nonsense. Finally I climbed into bed
with the wife and to my utter amazement she began to cuddle up to me and
without saying a word we locked horns and we stayed that way until dawn. I should have been worn out, but instead I
was wide-awake, and I lay there beside her planning to take the day off and
look up the whore with the beautiful fur whom I was talking to earlier in the
day. After that I began to think about
another woman, the wife of one of my friends who always twitted me about my
indifference. And then I began to think
about one after the other - all those whom I had passed up for one reason or
another - until finally I fell sound asleep and in the midst of it I had a wet
dream. At seven-thirty the alarm went
off as usual and as usual I looked at my torn shirt hanging over the chair and
I said to myself what's the use and I turned over. At eight o'clock the telephone rang and it
was Hymie. Better get over quickly, he
said, because there's a strike on. And
that's how it went, day after day, and there was no reason for it, except that
the whole country was cockeyed and what I relate was going on everywhere,
either on a smaller scale or a larger scale, but the same thing everywhere,
because it was all chaos and all meaningless.
It went on and on that way, day in and
day out for almost five solid years. The
continent itself perpetually wracked by cyclones, tornadoes, tidal waves,
droughts, blizzards, heat waves, pests, strikes, hold-ups, assassinations,
suicides ... a continuous fever and torment, an eruption, a whirlpool. I was like a man sitting in a lighthouse:
below me the wild waves, the rocks, the reefs, the debris of shipwrecked
fleets. I could give the danger signal
but I was powerless to avert catastrophe.
I breathed danger and catastrophe. At times the sensation of it was so strong
that it belched like fire from my nostrils.
I longed to be free of it all and yet I was irresistibly attracted. I was violent and phlegmatic at the same
time. I was like the lighthouse itself -
secure in the midst of the most turbulent sea.
Beneath me was solid rock, the same shelf of rock on which the towering
skyscrapers were reared. My foundations
went deep into the earth and the armature of my body was made of steel riveted
with hot bolts. Above all I was an eye,
a huge searchlight which scoured far and wide, which revolved ceaselessly,
pitilessly. This eye so wide-awake seemed
to have made all my other faculties dormant; all my powers were used up in the
effort to see, to take in the drama of the world.
If I longed for destruction it was
merely that this eye might be extinguished.
I longed for an earthquake, for some cataclysm of nature which would
plunge the lighthouse into the sea. I
wanted a metamorphosis, a change to fish, to leviathan, to destroyer. I wanted the earth to open up, to swallow
everything in one engulfing yawn. I
wanted to see the city buried fathoms deep in the bosom of the sea. I wanted to sit in a cave and read by
candlelight. I wanted that eye
extinguished so that I might have a chance to know my own body, my own desires. I wanted to be alone for a thousand years in
order to reflect on what I had seen and heard - and in order to forget. I wanted something of the earth which was not
of man's doing, something absolutely divorced from the human of which I was
surfeited. I wanted something purely
terrestrial and absolutely divested of idea.
I wanted to feel the blood running back into my veins, even at the cost
of annihilation. I wanted to shake the
stone and the light out of my system. I
wanted the dark fecundity of nature, the deep well of the womb, silence, or
else the lapping of the black waters of death.
I wanted to be that night which the remorseless eye illuminated, a night
diapered with stars and trailing comets.
To be of night so frighteningly silent, so utterly incomprehensible and
eloquent at the same time. Never more to
speak or to listen or to think. To be
englobed and encompassed and to encompass and to englobe at the same time. No more pity, no more tenderness. To be human only terrestrially, like a planet
or a worm or a brook. To be decomposed,
divested of light and stone, variable as the molecule, durable as the atom,
heartless as the earth itself.
It
was just about a week before Valeska committed suicide that I ran into
Mara. The week or two preceding that
event was a veritable nightmare. A
series of sudden deaths and strange encounters with women. First of all there was Pauline Janowski, a
little Jewess of sixteen or seventeen who was without a home and without
friends or relatives. She came to the
office looking for a job. It was toward
closing time and I didn't have the heart to turn her down cold. For some reason or other I took it into my
head to bring her home for dinner and if possible try to persuade the wife to
put her up for a while. What attracted
me to he was her passion for Balzac. All
the way home she was talking to me about Lost Illusions. The car was packed and we were jammed so
tight together that it didn't make any difference what we were talking about
because we were both thinking of only one thing. My wife of course was stupefied to see me
standing at the door with a beautiful young girl. She was polite and courteous in her frigid
way but I could see immediately that it was no use asking her to put the girl
up. It was about all she could do to sit
through the dinner with us. As soon as
we had finished she excused herself and went to the movies. The girl started to weep. We were still sitting at the table, the
dishes piled up in front of us. I went
over to her and I put my arms around her.
I felt genuinely sorry for her and I was perplexed as to what to do for
her. Suddenly she threw her arms around
my neck and she kissed me passionately.
We stood there a long while embracing each other and then I thought to
myself no, it's a crime, and besides maybe the wife didn't go to the movies at
all, maybe she'll be ducking back any minute.
I told the kid to pull herself together, that we'd take a trolley ride
somewhere. I say the child's bank lying
on the mantelpiece and I took it to the toilet and emptied it silently. There was only about seventy-five cents in
it. We got on a trolley and went to the
beach. Finally we found a deserted spot
and we lay down in the sand. She was
hysterically passionate and there was nothing to do but to do it. I thought she would reproach me afterwards,
but she didn't. We lay there a while and
she began talking about Balzac again. It
seems she had ambitions to be a writer herself.
I asked her what she was going to do.
She said she hadn't the least idea.
When we got up to go she asked me to put her on the highway. Said she thought she would go to Cleveland or
some place. It was after midnight when I
left her standing in front of a gas station.
She had about thirty-five cents in her pocketbook. As I started homeward I began cursing my wife
for the mean bitch that she was. I
wished to Christ it was she whom I had left standing on the highway with no
place to go to. I knew that when I got
back she wouldn't even mention the girl's name.
I got back and she was waiting up for
me. I thought she was going to give me
hell again. But no, she had waited up
because there was an important message from O'Rourke. I was to telephone him soon as I got
home. However, I decided not to
telephone. I decided to get undressed
and go to bed. Just when I had gotten
comfortably settled the telephone rang.
It was O'Rourke. There was a
telegram for me at the office - he wanted to know if he should open it and read
it to me. I said of course. The telegram was signed Monica. It was from Buffalo. Said she was arriving at the Grand Central in
the morning with her mother's body. I
thanked him and went back to bed. No
questions from the wife. I lay there
wondering what to do. If I were to
comply with the request that would mean starting things all over again. I had just been thanking my stars that I had
gotten rid of Monica. And now she was
coming back with her mother's corpse.
Tears and reconciliation. No, I didn't
like the prospect at all. Supposing I
didn't show up? What then? There was always somebody around to take care
of a corpse. Especially if the bereaved
were an attractive young blonde with sparkling blue eyes. I wondered if she'd go back to her job in the
restaurant. If she hadn't known Greek
and Latin I would never have been mixed up with her. But my curiosity got the better of me. And then she was so goddamned poor, that too
got me. Maybe it wouldn't have been so
bad if her hands hadn't smelled greasy.
That was the fly in the ointment - the greasy hands. I remember the first night I met her and we
strolled through the park. She was
ravishing to look at, and she was alert and intelligent. It was just the time when women were wearing
short skirts and she wore them to advantage.
I used to go to the restaurant night after night just to watch her
moving around, watch her bending over to serve or stopping down to pick up a
fork. And with the beautiful legs and
the bewitching eyes a marvellous line about Homer, with the pork and sauerkraut
a verse of Sappho's, the Latin conjugations, the odes of Pindar, with the
dessert perhaps The Rubaiyat or Cynara. But the greasy hands and the frowsy bed in
the boarding house opposite the marketplace - Whew! I couldn't stomach it. The more I shunned her the more clinging she
became. Ten-page letters about love with
footnotes on Thus Spake Zarathustra.
And then suddenly silence and me congratulating myself heartily. No, I couldn't bring myself to go to the
Grand Central Station in the morning. I
rolled over and I fell sound asleep. In
the morning I would get the wife to telephone the office and say I was
ill. I hadn't been ill now for over a
week - it was coming to me.
At noon I find Kronski waiting for me
outside the office. He wants me to have
lunch with him ... there's an Egyptian girl he wants me to meet. The girl turns out to be a Jewess, but she
came from Egypt and she looks like an Egyptian.
She's hot stuff and the two of us are working on her at once. As I was supposed to be ill I decided not to
return to the office but to take a stroll through the East Side. Kronski was going back to cover me up. We shook hands with the girl and we each went
our separate ways. I headed toward the
river where it was cool, having forgotten about the girl almost
immediately. I sat on the edge of the
pier with my legs dangling over the stringpiece. A scow passed with a load of red bricks. Suddenly Monica came to my mind. Monica arriving at the Grand Central Station
with a corpse. A corpse f.o.b. New York!
It seemed so incongruous and ridiculous that I burst out laughing. What had she done with it? Had she checked it or had she left it on a
siding? No doubt she was cursing me out
roundly. I wondered what she would
really think if she could have imagined me sitting there at the dock with my
legs dangling over the stringpiece. It
was warm and sultry despite the breeze that was blowing off the river. I began to snooze. As I dozed off Pauline came to my mind. I imagined her walking along the highway with
her hand up. She was a brave kid, no
doubt about it. Funny that she didn't
seem to worry about getting knocked up.
Maybe she was so desperate she didn't care. And Balzac!
Well, that was her affair. Anyway
she'd had enough to eat with, until she met another guy. But a kind like that thinking about becoming
a writer! Well, why not? Everybody had illusions of one sort or
another. Monica too wanted to be a
writer. Everybody was becoming a
writer. A writer! Jesus, how futile it seemed!
I dozed off ... When I woke up I had
an erection. The sun seemed to be burning
right into my fly. I got up and I washed
my face at the drinking fountain. It was
still as hot and sultry as ever. The
asphalt was soft as mush, the flies were biting, the garbage was rotting in the
gutter. I walked about between the
pushcarts and looked at things with an empty eye. I had a sort of lingering hard-on all the
while, but no definite object in mind.
It was only when I got back to Second Avenue that I suddenly remembered
the Egyptian Jewess from lunch time. I
remembered her saying that she lived over the Russian restaurant near Twelfth
Street. When I got abreast of the
Russian restaurant I paused a moment and then I ran up the stairs three at a
time. The hall door was open. I climbed up a couple of flights scanning the
names on the doors. She was on the top
floor and there was a man's name under hers.
I knocked softly. No answer. I knocked again, a little harder. This time I heard someone moving about. Then a voice close to the door, asking who it
is and at the same time the knob turning.
I pushed the door open and stumbled into the darkened room. Stumbled right into her arms and felt her
naked under the half-opened kimono. She
must have come out of a sound sleep and only half realized who was holding her
in her arms. When she realized it was me
she tried to break away but I had her tight and I began kissing her
passionately and at the same time backing her up toward the couch near the
window. She mumbled something about the
door being open but I wasn't taking any chance of letting her slip out of my
arms. So I made a slight detour and
little by little I edged her toward the door and made her shove it to with her
ass. I locked it with my one free hand
and then I moved her into the centre of the room and with the free hand I
unbuttoned my fly and got my pecker out and into position. She was so drugged with sleep that it was
almost like working on an automaton. I
could see too that she was enjoying the idea of being fucked half asleep. The only thing was that every time I made a
lunge she grew more wide-awake. And as
she grew more conscious she became more frightened. It was difficult to know how to put her to
sleep again without losing a good fuck.
I managed to tumble her on to the couch without losing ground and she
was hot as hell now, twisting and squirming like an eel. From the time I had started to maul her I
don't think she had opened her eyes once.
I kept saying to myself - "an Egyptian fuck ... an Egyptian
fuck" - and so as not to shoot off immediately I deliberately began
thinking about the corpse that Monica had dragged to the Grand Central Station
and about the thirty-five cents that I had left with Pauline on the
highway. Then bango! A loud knock on the door and with that she
opens her eyes wide and looks at me in utmost terror. I started to pull away quickly but to my
surprise she held me tight. "Don't
move," she whispered in my ear.
"Wait!" There was
another loud knock and then I heard Kronski's voice saying "It's me,
Thelma ... it's me, Izzy."
At that I almost burst out laughing.
We slumped back again into a natural position and as her eyes softly
closed I moved it around inside her, gently, so as not to wake her up
again. It was one of the most wonderful
fucks I ever had in my life. I thought it
was going to last forever. Whenever I
felt in danger of going off I would stop moving and think - think for example
of where I would like to spend my vacation, if I got one, or think of the
shirts lying in the bureau drawer, or the patch in the bedroom carpet just as
the foot of the bed. Kronski was still
standing at the door - I could hear him changing about from one position to
another. Every time I became aware of him standing there I
jibbed her a little for good measure and in her half sleep she answered back,
humorously, as though she understood what I meant by this put-and-take
language. I didn't dare to think what
she might be thinking or I'd have come immediately. Sometime I skirted dangerously close to it,
but the saving trick was always Monica and the corpse at the Grand Central
Station. The thought of that, the
humorousness of it, I mean, acted like a cold douche.
When it was all over she opened her
eyes wide and stared at me, as though she were taking me in for the first
time. I hadn't a word to say to her; the
only thought in my head was to get out as quickly as possible. As we were washing up I noticed a note on the
floor near the door. It was from Kronski. His wife had just been taken to the hospital
- he wanted her to meet him at the hospital.
I felt relieved! It meant that I
could break away without wasting any words.
The next day I had a telephone call
from Kronski. His wife had died on the
operating table. That evening I went
home for dinner; we were still at the table when the bell rang. There was Kronski standing at the gate
looking absolutely sunk. It was always
difficult for me to offer words of condolence; with him it was absolutely
impossible. I listened to my wife
uttering her trite words of sympathy and I felt more than ever disgusted with
her. "Let's get out of here,"
I said.
We walked along in absolute silence
for a while. At the park we turned in
and headed for the meadows. There was a
heavy mist which made it impossible to see a yard ahead. Suddenly, as we were swimming along, he began
to sob. I stopped and turned my head
away. When I thought he had finished I
looked around and there he was staring at me with a strange smile. "It's funny," he said, "how
hard it is to accept death." I
smiled too now and put my hand on his shoulder.
"Go on," I said "talk your head off. Get it off your chest." We started walking again, up and down over
the meadows, as though we were walking under the sea. The mist had become so thick that I could
just barely discern his features. He was
talking quietly and madly. "I knew
it would happen," he said. "It
was too beautiful to last." The
night before she was taken ill he had had a dream. He dreamt that he had lost his identity. "I was stumbling around in the dark
calling my own name. I remember coming
to a bridge, and looking down into the water I saw myself drowning. I jumped off the bridge head first and when I
came up I saw Yetta floating under the bridge.
She was dead." And then
suddenly he added: "You were there yesterday when I knocked at the door,
weren't you? I knew you were and I
couldn't go away. I knew too that Yetta
was dying and I wanted to be with her, but I was afraid to go alone." I said nothing and he rambled on. "The first girl I ever loved died in the
same way. I was only a kid and I
couldn't get over it. Every night I used
to go to the cemetery and sit by her grave.
People thought I was out of my mind.
I guess I was out of my mind.
Yesterday, when I was standing at the door, it all came back to me. I was back in Trenton, at the grave, and the
sister of the girl I loved was sitting beside me. She said it couldn't go on that way much
longer, that I would go mad. I thought
to myself that I really was mad and to prove it to myself I decided to do
something mad and so I said to her it isn't her I love, it's you,
and I pulled her over me and we lay there kissing each other and finally I
screwed her, right beside the grave. And
I think that cured me because I never went back there again and I never thought
about her any more - until yesterday when I was standing at the door. If I could have gotten hold of you yesterday
I would have strangled you. I don't know
why I felt that way but it seemed to me that you had opened up a tomb, that you
were violating the dead body of the girl I loved. That's crazy, isn't it? And why did I come to see you tonight? Maybe it's because you're absolutely
indifferent to me ... because you're not a Jew and I can talk to you ...
because you don't give a damn, and you're right.... Did you ever read The
Revolt of the Angels?"
We had just arrived at the bicycle
path which encircles the park. The
lights of the boulevard were swimming in the mist. I took a good look at him and I saw that he
was out of his head. I wondered if I
could make him laugh. I was afraid, too,
that if he once got started laughing he would never stop. So I began to talk at random, about Anatole
France at first, and then about other writers, and finally, when I felt that I
was losing him, I suddenly switched to General Ivolgin, and with that he began
to laugh, not a laugh either, but a cackle, like a rooster with its head on the
block. It got him so badly that he had
to stop and hold his guts; the tears were streaming down his eyes and between
the cackles he let out the most terrible, heartrending sobs. "I knew you would do me good," he
blurted out, as the last outbreak died away.
"I always said you were a crazy son of a bitch.... You're a Jew
bastard yourself, only you don't know it.... Now tell me, you bastard, how was
it yesterday? Did you get your end
in? Didn't I tell you she was a good
lay? And do you know who she's living
with? Jesus, you were lucky you didn't
get caught. She's living with a Russian
poet - you know the guy, too. I
introduced you to him once in the Café Royal.
Better not let him get wind of it.
He'll beat your brains out ... and then he'll write a beautiful poem
about it and send it to her with a bunch of roses. Sure, I knew him out in Stelton, in the
anarchist colony. His old man was a
Nihilist. The whole family's crazy. By the way, you'd better take care of
yourself. I meant to tell you that the
other day, but I didn't think you would act so quickly. You know she may have syphilis. I'm not trying to scare you. I'm just telling you for your own
good...."
This outburst seemed to really assuage
him. He was trying to tell me in his
twisted Jewish way that he liked me. To
do so he had to first destroy everything around me - the wife, the job, my
friends, the "nigger wench", as he called Valeska, and so on. "I think some day you're going to be a
great writer," he said. "But,"
he added maliciously, "first you'll have to suffer a bit. I mean really suffer, because you
don't know what the word means yet. You only
think you've suffered. You've got
to fall in love first. That nigger wench
now ... you don't really suppose that you're in love with her, do you? Did you ever take a good look at her ass ...
how it's spreading, I mean? In five
years she'll look like Aunt Jemima.
You'll make a swell couple walking down the avenue with a string of
pickaninnies trailing behind you. Jesus,
I'd rather see you marry a Jewish girl.
You wouldn't appreciate her, of course, but she'd be good for you. You need something to steady yourself. You're scattering your energies. Listen, why do you run around with all these
dumb bastards you pick up? You seem to have
a genius for picking up the wrong people.
Why don't you throw yourself into something useful? You don't belong in that job - you could be a
big guy somewhere. Maybe a labour leader
... I don't know what exactly. But first
you've got to get rid of that hatchet-faced wife of yours. Ugh! when I look at her I could spit in her
face. I don't see how a guy like you could
ever have married a bitch like that.
What was it - just a pair of steaming ovaries? Listen, that's what's the matter with you -
you've got nothing but sex on the brain.... No, I don't mean that either. You've got a mind and you've got passion and enthusiasm
... but you don't seem to give a damn what you do or what happens to you. If you weren't such a romantic bastard I'd
almost swear that you were a Jew. It's
different with me - I never had anything to look forward to. But you've got something in you - only you're
too damned lazy to bring it out. Listen,
when I hear you talk sometimes I think to myself - if only that guy would put
it down on paper! Why you could write a
book that would make a guy like Dreiser hang his head. You're different from the Americans I know;
somehow you don't belong, and it's a damned good thing you don't. You're a little cracked, too -I suppose you
know that. But in a good way. Listen, a little while ago, if it had been
anybody else who talked to me that way I'd have murdered him. I think I like you better because you didn't
try to give me any sympathy. I know
better than to expect sympathy from you.
If you had said one false word tonight I'd really have gone mad. I know it.
I was on the very edge. When you
started in about General Ivolgin I thought for a minute it was all up with
me. That's what makes me think you've
got something in you ... that was real cunning!
And now let me tell you something ... if you don't pull yourself
together soon you're going to be screwy.
You've got something inside you that's eating you up. I don't know what it is, but you can't put it
over on me. I know you from the bottom
up. I know there's something griping you
- and it's not just your wife, nor your job, nor even the nigger wench whom you
think you're in love with. Sometimes I
think you were born in the wrong time.
Listen, I don't want you to think I'm making an idol of you but there's
something to what I say ... if you had just a little more confidence in
yourself you could be the biggest man in the world today. You wouldn't even have to be a writer. You might become another Jesus Christ for all
I know. Don't laugh - I mean it. You haven't the slightest idea of your
possibilities ... you're absolutely blind to everything except your own
desires. You don't know what you
want. You don't know because you never
stop to think. You're letting people use
you up. You're a damned fool, an
idiot. If I had a tenth of what you've
got I could turn the world upside down.
You think that's crazy, eh? Well,
listen to me ... I was never more sane in my life. When I came to see you tonight I thought I
was about ready to commit suicide. It
doesn't make much difference whether I do or not. But anyway, I don't see much point in doing
it now. That won't bring her back to
me. I was born unlucky. Wherever I go I seem to bring disaster. But I don't want to kick off yet ... I want
to do some good in the world first. That
may sound silly to you, but it's true.
I'd like to do something for others...."
He stopped abruptly and looked at me
again with that strange wan smile. It
was the look of a hopeless Jew in whom, as with all his race, the life instinct
was so strong that, even though there was absolutely nothing to hope for, he
was powerless to kill himself. That
hopelessness was something quite alien to me.
I thought to myself - if only we could change skins! Why, I could kill myself for a bagatelle! And what got me more than anything was the
thought that he wouldn't even enjoy the funeral - his own wife's funeral! God knows, the funerals we had were sorry
enough affairs, but there was always a bit of food and drink afterwards, and
some good obscene jokes and some hearty belly laughs. Maybe I was too young to appreciate the
sorrowful aspects, though I saw plainly enough how they howled and wept. But that never meant much to me because after
the funeral, sitting in the beer garden next to the cemetery, there was always
an atmosphere of good cheer despite the black garments and the crepes and the
wreaths. It seemed to me, as a kid then,
that they were really trying to establish some sort of communion with the dead
person. Something almost Egyptian-like,
when I think back on it. Once upon a
time I thought they were just a bunch of hypocrites. But they weren't. They were just stupid, healthy Germans with a
lust for life. Death was something
outside their ken, strange to say, because if you went only by what they said
you would imagine that it occupied a good deal of their thoughts. But they really didn't grasp it at all - not
the way the Jew does, for example. They
talked about the life hereafter but they never really believed in it. And if anyone were so bereaved as to pine
away they looked upon that person suspiciously, as you would look upon an
insane person. There were limits to
sorrow as there were limits to joy, that was the impression they gave me. And at the extreme limits there was always
the stomach which had to be filled - with limburger sandwiches and beer and
kümmel and turkey legs if there were any about.
They wept in their beer, like children.
And the next minute they were laughing, laughing over some curious quirk
in the dead person's character. Even the
way they used the past tense had a curious effect upon me. An hour after he was shovelled under they
were saying of the defunct - "he was always so good-natured" - as
though the person in mind were dead a thousand years, a character in history,
or a personage out of the Nibelungenlied. The thing was that he was dead, definitely
dead for all time, and they, the living, were cut off from him now and forever,
and today as well as tomorrow must be lived through, the clothes washed, the
dinner prepared, and when the next one was struck down there would be a coffin
to select and a squabble about the will, but it would be all in the daily
routine and to take time off to grieve and sorrow was sinful because God, if
there was a God, had ordained it that way and we on earth had nothing to say
about it. To go beyond the ordained
limits of joy or grief was wicked. To
threaten madness was the high sin. They
had a terrific animal sense of adjustment, marvellous to behold if it had been
truly animal, horrible to witness when you realized that it was nothing more
than dull German torpor, insensitivity.
And yet, somehow, I preferred these animated stomachs to the
hydra-headed sorrow of the Jew. At
bottom I couldn't feel sorry for Kronski - I would have to feel sorry for his
whole tribe. The death of his wife was
only an item, a trifle, in the history of his calamities. As he himself had said, he was born unlucky. He was born to see things go wrong - because
for five thousand years things had been going wrong in the blood of the
race. They came into the world with that
sunken, hopeless leer on their faces and they would go out of the world the
same way. They left a bad smell behind
them - a poison, a vomit of sorrow. The
stink they were trying to take out of the world was the stink they themselves
had brought into the world. I reflected
on all this as I listened to him. I felt
so well and clean inside that when we parted, after I had turned down a side
street, I began to whistle and hum. And
then a terrible thirst came upon me and I says to meself in me best Irish
brogue - shure and it's a bit of a drink ye should be having now, me lad - and
saying it I stumbled into a hole in the wall and I ordered a big foaming stein
of beer and a thick hamburger sandwich with plenty of onions. I had another mug of beer and then a drop of
brandy and I thought to myself in my callous way - if the poor bastard hasn't
got brains enough to enjoy his own wife's funeral then I'll enjoy it for
him. And the more I thought about it,
the happier I grew, and if there was the least bit of grief or envy it was only
for the fact that I couldn't change places with her, the poor dead Jewish soul,
because death was something absolutely beyond the grip and comprehension of a
dumb goy like myself and it was a pity to waste it on the likes of them as knew
all about it and didn't need it anyway.
I got so damned intoxicated with the idea of dying that in my drunken
stupor I was mumbling to the God above to kill me this night, kill me, God, and
let me know what it's all about. I tried
my stinking best to imagine what it was like, giving up the ghost, but it was
no go. The best I could do was to
imitate a death rattle, but on that I nearly choked, and then I got so damned
frightened that I almost shit in my pants.
That wasn't death, anyway. That
was just choking. Death was more like
what we went through in the park: two people walking side by side in the mist,
rubbing against trees and bushes, and not a word between them. It was something emptier than the name itself
and yet right and peaceful, dignified, if you like. It was not a continuation of life, but a leap
in the dark and no possibility of ever coming back, not even as a grain of
dust. And that was right and beautiful,
I said to myself, because why would one want to come back. To taste it once is to taste it forever -
life or death. Whichever way the
coin flips is right, so long as you hold no stakes. Sure, it's tough to choke on your own spittle
- it's disagreeable more than anything else.
And besides, one doesn't always die choking to death. Sometimes one goes off in his sleep, peaceful
and quiet as a lamb. The Lord comes and
gathers you up into the fold, as they say.
Anyway, you stop breathing. And
why the hell should one want to go on breathing forever? Anything that would have to be done
interminably would be torture. The poor
human bastards that we are, we ought to be glad that somebody devised a way
out. We don't quibble about going to
sleep. A third of our lives we snore
away like drunken rats. What about
that? Is that tragic? Well then, say three-thirds of drunken
ratlike sleep. Jesus, if we had any
sense we'd be dancing with glee at the thought of it! We could all die in bed tomorrow, without
pain, without suffering - if we had the sense to take advantage of our
remedies. We don't want to die, that's
the trouble with us. That's why God and
the whole shooting match upstairs in our crazy dustbins. General Ivolgin! That got a cackle out of him ... and a few
dry sobs. I might as well have said
limburger cheese. But General Ivolgin
means something to him ... something crazy.
Limburger cheese would be too sober, too banal. It's all limburger cheese, however, including
General Ivolgin, the poor drunken sap.
General Ivolgin was evolved out of Dostoyevsky's limburger cheese, his
own private brand. That means a certain
flavour, a certain label. So people
recognize it when they smell it, taste it.
But what made this General Ivolgin limburger cheese? Why, whatever made limburger cheese, which is
x and therefore unknowable. And
so therefore? Therefore nothing ...
nothing at all. Full stop - or else a
leap in the dark and no coming back.
As I was taking my pants off I
suddenly remembered what the bastard had told me. I looked at my cock and it looked just as
innocent as ever. "Don't tell me
you've got the syph," I said, holding it in my hand and squeezing it a bit
as though I might see a bit of puss squirting out. No, I didn't think there was much chance of
having the syph. I wasn't born under
that kind of star. The clap, yes, that
was possible. Everybody had the clap
sometime or other. But not syph! I knew he'd wish it on me if he could, just
to make me realize what suffering was.
But I couldn't be bothered obliging him.
I was born a dumb but lucky goy.
I yawned. It was all so much
goddamned limburger cheese that syph or no syph, I thought to myself, if she's
up to it I'll tear off another piece and call it a day. But evidently she wasn't up to it. She was for turning her ass on me. So I just lay there with a stiff prick up
against her ass and I gave it to her by mental telepathy. And by Jesus, she must have gotten the
message sound asleep though she was, because it wasn't any trouble going in by
the stable door and besides I didn't have to look at her face which was one
hell of a relief. I thought to myself,
as I gave her the last hook and whistle - "me lad, it's limburger cheese
and now you can turn over and snore...."
It seemed as if it would go on
forever, the sex and death chant. The
very next afternoon at the office I received a telephone call from my wife
saying that her friend Arline had just been taken to the insane asylum. They were friends from the convent school in
Canada where they had both studied music and the art of masturbation. I had met the whole flock of them little by
little, including Sister Antolina who wore a truss and who apparently was the
high priestess of the cult of onanism.
They had all had a crush on Sister Antolina at one time or another. And Arline with the chocolate eclair mug
wasn't the first of the little group to go to the insane asylum. I don't say it was masturbation that drove
them there but certainly the atmosphere of the convent had something to do with
it. They were all spoiled in the egg.
Before the afternoon was over my old
friend MacGregor walked in. He arrived
looking glum as usual and complaining about the advent of old age, though he
was hardly past thirty. When I told him
about Arline he seemed to liven up a bit.
He said he always knew there was something wrong with her. Why?
Because when he tried to force her one night she began to weep
hysterically. It wasn't the weeping as
much as what she said. She said she had
sinned against the Holy Ghost and for that she would have to lead a life of
continence. Recalling the incident he
began to laugh in his mirthless way.
"I said to her - well you don't need to do it if you don't want ...
just hold it in your hand. Jesus, when I
said that I thought she'd go clean off her nut.
She said I was trying to soil her innocence - that's the way she put
it. And at the same time she took it in
her hand and she squeezed it so hard I damned near fainted. Weeping all the while, too. And still harping on the Holy Ghost and her
'innocence', I remembered what you told me once and so I gave her a sound slap
in the jaw. It worked like magic. She quieted down after a bit, enough to let
me slip it in, and then the real fun commenced.
Listen, did you ever fuck a crazy woman?
It's something to experience.
From the instant I got it in she started talking a blue streak. I can't describe it to you exactly, but it
was almost as though she didn't know I was fucking her. Listen, I don't know whether you've ever had
a woman eat an apple while you were doing it ... well, you can imagine how that
affects you. This one was a thousand
times worse. It got on my nerves so that
I began to think I was a little queer myself.... And now here's something
you'll hardly believe, but I'm telling you the truth. You know what she did when we got
through? She put her arms around me and
she thanked me.... Wait, that isn't all.
Then she got out of bed and she knelt down and offered up a prayer for
my soul. Jesus, I remember that so
well. 'Please make Mac a better
Christian,' she said. And me lying there
with a limp cock listening to her. I
didn't know whether I was dreaming or what.
'Please make Mac a better Christian!'
Can you beat that?"
"What are you doing
tonight?" he added cheerfully.
"Nothing special," I said.
"Then come along with me. I've got a gal I want you to meet.... Paula. I picked her up at the Roseland a few nights
ago. She's not crazy - she's just a
nymphomaniac. I want to see you dance
with her. It'll be a treat ...just to
watch you. Listen, if you don't shoot
off in your pants when she stars wiggling, well then I'm a son of a bitch. Come on, close the joint. What's the use of farting around in this
place?"
There was a lot of time to kill before
going to the Roseland so we went to a little hole in the wall over near Seventh
Avenue. Before the war it was a French
joint; now it was a speakeasy run by a couple of wops. There was a tiny bar near the door and in the
back a little room with a sawdust floor and a slot machine for music. The idea was that we were to have a couple of
drinks and then eat. That was the idea. Knowing him as I did, however, I wasn't at
all sure that we would be going to the Roseland together. If a woman should come along who pleased his
fancy - and for that she didn't have to be beautiful or sound of wind and limb
- I knew he'd leave me in the lurch and beat it. The only thing that concerned me, when I was
with him, was to make sure in advance that he had enough money to pay for the
drinks we ordered. And, of course, never
let him out of my sight until the drinks were paid for.
The first drink or two always plunged
him into reminiscence. Reminiscences of
cunt to be sure. His reminiscences were
reminiscent of a story he had told me once and which made an indelible
impression upon me. It was about a
Scotchman on his deathbed. Just as he
was about to pass away his wife, seeing him struggling to say something, bends
over him tenderly and says - "What is it, Jock, what is it ye're trying to
say?" And Jock, with a last effort,
raises himself wearily and says: "Just cunt ... cunt ... cunt."
That was always the opening theme, and
the ending theme, with MacGregor. It was
his way of saying - futility. The
leitmotif was disease, because between fucks, as it were, he worried his head
off, or rather he worried the head off his cock. It was the most natural thing in the world,
at the end of an evening, for him to say - "come on upstairs a minute, I
want to show you my cock." From
taking it out and looking at it and washing it and scrubbing it a dozen times a
day naturally his cock was always swollen and inflamed. Every now and then he went to the doctor and
he had it sounded. Or, just to relieve
him, the doctor would give him a little box of salve and tell him not to drink
so much. This would cause no end of
debate, because as he would say to me, "if the salve is any good why do I
have to stop drinking?" Or,
"if I stopped drinking altogether do you think I would need to use the
salve?" Of course, whatever I
recommended went in one ear and out the other.
He had to worry about something and the penis was certainly good food
for worry. Sometimes he worried about
his scalp. He had dandruff, as most
everybody has, and when his cock was in good condition he forgot about that and
he worried about his scalp. Or else his
chest. The moment he thought about his
chest he would start to cough. And such
coughing! As though he were in the last
stages of consumption. And when he was
running after a woman he was as nervous and irritable as a cat. He couldn't get her quickly enough. The moment he had her he was worrying about
how to get rid of her. They all had
something wrong with them, some trivial little thing, usually, which took the
edge off his appetite.
He was rehearsing all this as we sat
in the gloom of the back room. After a
couple of drinks he got up, as usual, to go to the toilet, and on his way he
dropped a coin in the slot machine and the jiggers began to jiggle and with
that he perked up and pointing to the glasses he said: "Order another
round." He came back from the
toilet looking extraordinarily complacent, whether because he had relieved his
bladder or because he had run into a girl in the hallway, I don't know. Anyhow, as he sat down, he started in on
another tack - very composed now and very serene, almost like a
philosopher. "You know, Henry,
we're getting on in years. You and I
oughtn't to be frittering our time away like this. If we're ever going to amount to anything
it's high time we started in...." I
had been hearing this line for years now and I knew what the upshot would
be. This was just a little parenthesis
while he calmly glanced about the room and decided which bimbo was the least
sottish-looking. While he discoursed
about the miserable failure of our lives his feet were dancing and his eyes
were getting brighter and brighter. It
would happen as it always happened that just as he was saying - "Now you
take Woodruff, for instance. He'll never
get ahead because he's just a natural means scrounging son of a bitch ..."
- just at such a moment, as I say, it would happen that some drunken cow in
passing the table would catch his eye and without the slightest pause he would
interrupt his narrative to say "hello kid, why don't you sit down and have
a drink with us?" And as a drunken
bitch like that never travels alone, but always in pairs, why she'd respond
with a "Certainly, can I bring my friend over?" And MacGregor, as though he were the most
gallant chap in the world, would say "Why sure, why not? What's her name?" And then, tugging at my sleeve, he'd bend
over and whisper: "Don't you beat it on me, do you hear? We'll give 'em one drink and get rid of them,
see?"
And, as it always happened, one drink
led to another and the bill was getting too high and he couldn't see why he
should waste his money on a couple of bums so you go out first, Henry, and
pretend you're buying some medicine and I'll follow in a few minutes ... but wait
for me, you son of a bitch, don't leave me in the lurch like you did the last
time. And like I always did, when I got
outside I walked away as fast as my legs would carry me, laughing to myself and
thanking my lucky stars that I had gotten away from his as easily as I
had. With all those drinks under my belt
it didn't matter much where my feet were dragging me. Broadway lit up just as crazy as ever and the
crowd thick as molasses. Just fling
yourself into it like an ant and let yourself get pushed along. Everybody doing it, some for a good reason
and some for no reason at all. All this
push and movement representing action, success, get ahead. Stop and look at shoes or fancy shirts, the
new fall overcoat, wedding rings at ninety-eight cents apiece. Every other joint a food emporium.
Every time I hit that runway toward
dinner hour a fever of expectancy seized me.
It's only a stretch of a few blocks, from Times Square to Fiftieth
Street, and when one says Broadway that's all that's really meant and it's
really nothing, just a chicken run and a lousy one at that, but at seven in the
evening when everybody's rushing for a table there's a sort of electrical
crackle in the air and your hair stands on end like antennae and if you're
receptive you not only get every flash and flicker but you get the statistical
itch, the quid pro quo of the interactive, interstitial, ectoplasmatic
quantum of bodies jostling in space like the stars which compose the Milky Way,
only this is the Gay White Way, the top of the world with no roof above and not
even a crack or a hole under your feet to fall through a say it's a lie. The absolute impersonality of it brings you
to a pitch of warm human delirium which makes you run forward like a blind nag
and wag your delirious ears. Every one
is so utterly, confoundedly not himself that your become automatically the
personification of the whole human race, shaking hands with a thousand human
hands, cackling with a thousand different human tongues, cursing, applauding,
whistling, crooning, soliloquizing, orating, gesticulating, urinating,
fecundating, wheedling, cajoling, whimpering, bartering, pimping, caterwauling,
and so on and so forth. You are all the
men who ever lived up to Moses, and beyond that you are a woman buying a hat,
or a bird cage, or just a mouse trap.
You can lie in wait in a show window, like a fourteen-carat gold ring,
or you can climb the side of a building like a human fly, but nothing will stop
the procession, not even umbrellas flying at lightning speed, not double-decked
walruses marching calmly to the oyster banks.
Broadway, such as I see it now and have seen it for twenty-five years,
is a ramp that was conceived by St. Thomas Aquinas while he was yet in the
womb. It was meant originally only to be
used by snakes and lizards, by the horned toad and the red heron, but when the
great Spanish Armada was sunk the human kind wriggled out of the ketch and
slopped over, creating by a sort of foul, ignominious squirm and wiggle the
cuntlike cleft that runs from the Battery south to the golf links north through
the dead and wormy centre of Manhatten Island.
From Times Square to Fiftieth Street all that St. Thomas Aquinas forgot
to include in his magnum opus is here included, which is to say, among
other things, hamburger sandwiches, collar buttons, poodle dogs, slot machines,
grey bowlers, typewriter ribbons, orange sticks, free toilets, sanitary
napkins, mint jujubes, billiard balls, chopped onions, crinkled doilies,
manholes, chewing gum, sidecars and sourballs, cellophane, cord tyres, magnetos,
horse liniment, cough drops, feenament, and that feline opacity of the
hysterically endowed eunuch who marches to the soda fountain with a sawed-off
shotgun between his legs. The
before-dinner atmosphere, the blend of patchouli, warm pitchblende, iced
electricity, sugared sweat and powdered urine drives one on to a fever of
delirious expectancy. Christ will never
more come down to earth nor will there be any lawgiver, nor will murder cease,
nor theft, nor rape, and yet ... and yet one expects something, something
terrifying marvellous and absurd, perhaps a cold lobster with mayonnaise served
gratis, perhaps an invention, like the electric light, like television, only
more devastating, more soul-rending, an invention unthinkable that will bring a
shattering calm and void, not the calm and void of death but of life such as
the monks dreamed, such as is dreamed still in the Himalayas, in Tibet, in
Lahore, in the Aleutian Islands, in Polynesia, in Easter Island, the dream of men
before the flood, before the word was written, the dream of cave men and
anthropophagists, of those with double sex and short tails, of those who are
said to be crazy and have no way of defending themselves because they are
outnumbered by those who are not crazy.
Cold energy trapped by cunning brutes and then set free like explosive
rockets, wheels intricately interwheeled to give the illusion of force and
speed, some for light, some for power, some for motion, words wired by maniacs
and mounted like false teeth, perfect, and repulsive as lepers, ingratiating,
soft, slippery, nonsensical movement, vertical, horizontal, circular, between
walls and through walls, for pleasure, for barter, for crime, for sex; all
light, movement, power impersonally conceived, generated, and distributed
throughout a choked, cuntlike cleft intended to dazzle and awe the savage, the
yokel, the alien, but nobody dazzled or awed, this one hungry, that one
lecherous, all one and the same and no different from the savage, the yokel, the alien, except
for odds and ends, bric-à-brac, the soapsuds of thought, the sawdust of the
mind. In the same cunty cleft, trapped
and undazzled, millions have walked before me, among them one, Blaise Cendrars,
who afterwards flew to the moon, thence back to earth and up the Orinoco
impersonating a wild man but actually sound as a button, though no longer
vulnerable, no longer mortal, a splendiferous hulk of a poem dedicated to the
archipelago of insomnia. Of those with
fever few hatched, among them myself still unhatched, but pervious and
maculate, knowing with quiet ferocity the ennui of ceaseless drift and
movement. Before dinner the slat and
chink of sky light softly percolating through the bounded grey dome, the
vagrant hemispheres spored with blue-egged nuclei coagulating, ramifying, in
the one basket lobsters, in the other the germination of a world antiseptically
personal and absolute. Out of the
manholes, grey with the underground life, men of the future world saturated
with shit, the iced electricity biting into them like rats, the day done in and
darkness coming on like the cool, refreshing shadows of the sewers. Like a soft prick slipping out of an
overheated cunt I, the still unhatched, making a few abortive wriggles, but
either not dead and soft enough or else sperm-free and skating ad astra,
for it is still not dinner and a peristaltic frenzy takes possession of the
upper colon, the hypergastric region, the umbilical and the postpineal
lobe. Boiled alive, the lobsters swim in
ice, giving no quarter and asking no quarter, simply motionless and unmotivated
in the ice-watered ennui of death, life drifting by the show window muffled in
desolation, a sorrowful scurvy eaten away by
ptomaine, the frozen glass of the window cutting like a jack-knife,
clean and no remainder.
Life drifting by the show window ... I
too as much a part of life as the lobster, the fourteen-carat ring, the horse
liniment, but very difficult to establish the fact, the fact being that life is
merchandise with a bill of lading attached, what I choose to eat being more
important than I the eater, each one eating the other and consequently eating, the
verb, ruler of the roost. In the act
of eating the host is violated and justice defeated temporarily. The plate and what's on it, through the
predatory power of the intestinal apparatus, commands attention and unifies the
spirit, first hypnotizing it, then
slowly swallowing it, then masticating it, then absorbing it. The spiritual part of the being passes off
like a scum, leaves absolutely no evidence or trace of its passage, vanishes,
vanishes even more completely than a point in space after a mathematical
discourse. The fever, which may return
tomorrow, bears the same relation to life as the mercury in a thermometer bears
to heat. Fever will not make life heat,
which is what was to have been proved and thus consecrates the meat balls and
spaghetti. To chew while thousands chew,
each chew an act of murder, gives the necessary social cast from which you look
out the window and see that even human kind can be slaughtered justly, or
maimed, or starved, or tortured because, while chewing, the mere advantage of
sitting in a chair with clothes on, wiping the mouth with a napkin, enables you
to comprehend what the wisest men have never been able to comprehend, namely
that there is no other way of life possible, said wise men often disdaining to
use chair, clothes or napkin. Thus men
scurrying through a cunty cleft of a street called Broadway every day at
regular hours, in search of this or that, tend to establish this and that,
which is exactly the method of mathematicians, logicians, physicists,
astronomers and such like. The proof is
the fact and the fact has no meaning except what is given to it by those who
establish the facts.
The meat balls devoured, the paper
napkin carefully thrown on the floor, belching a trifle and not knowing why or
whither, I step out into the twenty-four-carat sparkle and fall in with the
theatre pack. This time I wander through
the side streets following a blind man with an accordion. Now and then I sit on a stoop and listen to
an aria. At the opera, the music makes
no sense; here in the street it has just the right demented touch to give it
poignancy. The woman who accompanies the
blind man holds a tin cup in her hands; he is a part of life too, like the tin
cup, like the music of Verdi, like the Metropolitan Opera House. Everybody and everything is a part of life,
but when they have all been added together, still somehow it is not life. When is it life, I ask myself, and
why not now? The blind man wanders
on and I remain sitting on the stoop.
The meat balls were rotten, the coffee was lousy, the butter was
rancid. Everything I look at is rotten,
lousy, rancid. The street is like a bad
breath; the next street is the same, and the next and the next. At the corner the blind man stops again and
plays "Home to Our Mountains".
I find a piece of chewing gum in my pocket - I chew it. I chew for the sake of chewing. There is absolutely nothing better to do
unless it were to make a decision, which is impossible. The stoop is comfortable and nobody is
bothering me. I am part of the world, of
life, as they say, and I belong and I don't belong.
I sit on the stoop for an hour or so,
mooning. I come to the same conclusions
I always come to when I have a minute to think for myself. Either I must go home immediately and start
to write or I must run away and start a wholly new life. The thought of beginning a book terrifies me:
there is so much to tell that I don't know where or how to begin. The thought of running away and beginning all
over again is equally terrifying: it means working like a nigger to keep body
and soul together. For a man of my
temperament, the world being what it is, there is absolutely no hope, no
solution. Even if I could write
the book I want to write nobody would take it - I know my compatriots only too
well. Even if I could begin again
it would be no use, because fundamentally I have no desire to work and no
desire to become a useful member of society.
I sit there staring at the house across the way. It seems not only ugly and senseless, like
all the other houses on the street, but from staring at it so intently, it has
suddenly become absurd. The idea of
constructing a place of shelter in that particular way strikes me as absolutely
insane. The city itself strikes me as a
piece of the highest insanity, everything about it, sewers, elevated lines,
slot machines, newspapers, telephones, cops, doorknobs, flophouses, screens,
toilet paper, everything. Everything
could just as well not be and not only nothing lost but a whole universe
gained. I look at the people brushing by
me to see if by chance one of them might agree with me. Supposing I intercepted one of them and just
asked him a simple question. Supposing I
just said to him suddenly: "Why do you go on living the way you
do?" He would probably call a
cop. I ask myself - does anyone ever
talk to himself the way I do? I ask
myself if there isn't something wrong with me.
The only conclusion I can come to is that I am different. And that's a very grave matter, view it how
you will. Henry, I say to myself, rising
slowly from the stoop, stretching myself, brushing my trousers and spitting out
the gum, Henry, I say to myself, you are young yet, you are just a spring
chicken and if you let them get you by the balls you're an idiot because you're
a better man than any of them only you need to get rid of your false notions
about humanity. You have to realize,
Henry me boy, that you're dealing with cut-throats, with cannibals, only
they're dressed up, shaved, perfumed, but that's all they are - cut-throats,
cannibals. The best thing for you to do
now, Henry, is to go and get yourself a frosted chocolate and when you sit at
the soda fountain keep your eyes peeled and forget about the destiny of man
because you might still find yourself a nice lay and a good lay will clean your
ballbearings out and leave a good taste in your mouth whereas this only brings
on dyspepsia, dandruff, halitosis, encephalitis. And while I'm soothing myself thus a guy
comes up to me to bum a dime and I hand him a quarter for good measure thinking
to myself that if I had had a little more sense I'd have had a juicy pork chop
with that instead of the lousy meat balls but what’s the difference now it's
all food and food makes energy and energy is what makes the world go
round. Instead of the frosted chocolate
I keep walking and soon I'm exactly where I intended to be all the time, which
is in front of the ticket window of the Roseland. And now, Henry, says I to myself, if you're
lucky your old pal MacGregor will be here and first he'll bawl the shit out of
you for running away and then he'll lend you a five spot, and if you just hold
your breath while climbing the stairs maybe you'll see the nymphomaniac too and
you'll get a dry fuck. Enter very
calmly, Henry, and keep your eyes peeled!
And I enter as per instructions on velvet toes, checking my hat and
urinating a little as a matter of course, then slowly redescending the stairs
and sizing up the taxi girls all diaphanously gowned, powdered, perfumed,
looking fresh and alert but probably bored as hell and leg weary. Into each and every one of them, as I shuffle
about, I throw an imaginary fuck. The place
is just plastered with cunt and fuck and that's why I'm reasonably sure to find
my old friend MacGregor here. The way I
no longer think about the condition of the world is marvellous. I mention it because for a moment, just while
I was studying a juicy ass, I had a relapse.
I almost went into a trance again.
I was thinking, Christ help me, that maybe I ought to beat it and go
home and begin the book. A terrifying
thought! Only I spent a whole evening
sitting in a chair and saw nothing and heard nothing. I must have written a good-sized book before
I woke up. Better not to sit down. Better to keep circulating. Henry, what you ought to do is to come here
some time with a lot of dough and just see how far it'll take you. I mean a hundred or two hundred bucks, and
spend it like water and say yet to everything.
The haughty looking one with the statuesque figure, I bet she'd squirm
like an eel if her palm were well greased.
Supposing she said - twenty bucks! and you could say Sure! Supposing you could say - Listen, I've got a
car downstairs ... let's run down to Atlantic City for a few days. Henry, there ain't no car and there ain't no
twenty bucks. Don't sit down ... keep
moving.
At the rail which fences off the floor
I stand and watch them sailing around.
This is no harmless recreation ... this is serious business. At each end of the floor there is a sign
reading "No Improper Dancing Allowed". Well and good. No harm in placing a sign at each end of the
floor. In Pompeii they probably hung a
phallus up. This is the American
way. It means the same thing. I mustn't think about Pompeii or I'll be
sitting down and writing a book again. Keep
moving, Henry. Keep your mind on the
music. I keep struggling to imagine
what a lovely time I would have if I had the price of a string of tickets, but
the more I struggle the more I slip back.
Finally I'm standing knee deep in the lava beds and the gas is choking
me. It wasn't the lava that killed the
Pompeians, it was the poison gas that precipitated the eruption. That's how the lava caught them in such queer
poses, with their pants down, as it were.
If suddenly all New York were caught that way - what a museum it would
make! My friend MacGregor standing at
the sink scrubbing his cock ... the abortionists on the East Side caught
red-handed ... the nuns lying in bed and masturbating one another ... the
auctioneer with an alarm clock in his hand ... the telephone girls at the
switchboard ... J.P. Morganana sitting on the toilet bowl placidly wiping his
ass ... dicks with rubber hoses giving the third degree ... strippers giving
the last strip and tease....
Standing knee deep in the lava beds
and my eyes choked with sperm: J. P. Morganana is placidly wiping his ass while
the telephone girls plug the switchboards, while dicks with rubber hoses
practise the third degree, while my old friend MacGregor scrubs the germs out
of his cock and sweetens it and examines it under the microscope. Everybody caught with his pants down,
including the strip teasers who wear no pants, no beards, no moustaches, just a
little patch to cover their twinkling little cunts. Sister Antolina lying in the convent bed, her
guts trussed up, her arms akimbo and waiting for the Resurrection, waiting,
waiting for life without hernia, without intercourse, without sin, without
evil, meanwhile nibbling a few animal crackers, a pimento, some fancy olives, a
little headcheese. The Jewboys on the
East Side, in Harlem, the Bronx, Canarsie, Brownsville, opening and closing the
trapdoors, pulling out arms and legs, turning the sausage machine, clogging up
the drains, working like fury for cash down and if you let a peep out of you
out you go. With eleven hundred tickets
in my pocket and a Rolls Royce waiting for me downstairs I could have the most
excruciatingly marvellous time, throwing a fuck into each and every one
respectively regardless of age, sex, race, religion, nationality, birth or
breeding. There is no solution for a man
like myself, I being what I am and the world being what it is. The world is divided into three parts of
which two parts are meat balls and spaghetti and the other part a huge
syphilitic chancre. The haughty one with
the statuesque figure is probably a cold turkey fuck, a sort of con anonyme
plastered with gold leaf in tin foil.
Beyond despair and disillusionment there is always the absence of worse
things and the emoluments of ennui.
Nothing is lousier and emptier than the midst of bright gaiety clicked
by the mechanical eye of the mechanical epoch, like maturating in a black box,
a negative tickled with acid and yielding a momentaneous simulacrum of
nothingness. At the outermost limit of
this momentaneous nothingness my friend MacGregor arrives and is standing by my
side and with him is the one he was talking about, the nymphomaniac called
Paula. She has the loose, jaunty swing
and perch of the double-barrelled sex, all her movements radiating from the
groin, always in equilibrium, always ready to flow, to wind and twist and
clutch, the eyes going tic-toc, the toes twitching and twinkling, the flesh
rippling like a lake furrowed by a breeze.
This is the incarnation of the hallucination of sex, the sea nymph
squirming in the maniac's arms. I watch
the two of them as they move spasmodically inch by inch around the floor; they
move like an octopus working up a rut.
Between the dangling tentacles the music shimmers and flashes, now
breaks in a cascade of sperm and rose water, forms again into an oily spout, a
column standing erect without feet, collapses again like chalk, leaving the
upper part of the leg phosphorescent, a zebra standing in a pool of golden
marshmallow, one leg striped, the other molten.
A golden marshmallow octopus with rubber hinges and molten hoofs, its
sex undone and twisted into a knot. On
the sea floor the oysters are doing the St. Vitus dance, some with lockjaw,
some with double-jointed knees. The
music is sprinkled with rat poison, with the rattlesnake's venom, with the
fetid breath of the gardenia, the spittle of the sacred yak, the bolloxed sweat
of the musk-rat, the leper's sugar-coated nostalgia. The music is a diarrhoea, a lake of gasoline,
stagnant with cockroaches and stale horse piss.
The drooling notes are the foam and dribble of the epileptic, the night
sweat of the fornicating nigger frigged by the Jew. All America is in the trombone's smear, that
frazzled brokendown whinny of the gangrened sea cows stationed off Point Loma,
Pawtucket, Cape Hatteras, Labrador, Canarsie and intermediate points. The octopus is dancing like a rubber dick
- the rhumba of Spuyten Duyvil inédit.
Laura the nympho is doing the rhumba, her sex exfoliated and twisted
like a cow's tail. In the belly of the
trombone lies the American soul farting its contented heart out. Nothing goes to waste - not the least spit of
a fart. In the golden marshmallow dream
of happiness, in the dance of the sodden piss and gasoline, the great soul of
the American continent gallops like an octopus, all the sails unfurled, the
hatches down, the engine whirring like a dynamo. The great dynamic soul caught in the click of
the camera's eye, in the heat of rut, bloodless as a fish, slippery as mucus,
the soul of the people miscegenating on the sea floor, popeyed with longing,
harrowed with lust. The dance of Saturday
night, of cantaloupes rotting in the garbage pail, of fresh green snot and
slimy unguents for the tender parts. The
dance of the slot machine and the monsters who invent them. The dance of the gat and the slugs who use
them. The dance of the blackjack and the
pricks who batter brains to a polypous pulp.
The dance of the magneto world, the spark that unsparks, the soft purr
of the perfect mechanism, the velocity race on a turntable, the dollar at par
and the forests dead and mutilated. The
Saturday night of the soul's hollow dance, each jumping jigger a functional
unit in the St. Vitus dance of the ringworm's dream. Laura the nympho brandishing her cunt, her
sweet rose-petal lips toothed with ballbearing clutches, her ass balled and
socketed. Inch by inch, millimetre by
millimetre they shove the copulating corpse around. And then crash! Like pulling a switch the music suddenly
stops and with the stoppage the dancers come apart, arms and legs intact, like
tea leaves dropping to the bottom of the cup.
Now the air is blue with words, a slow sizzle as of fish on the
griddle. The chaff of the empty soul
rising like monkey chatter in the topmost branches of the trees. The air blue with words passing out through
the ventilators, coming back again in sleep through corrugated funnels and
smokestacks, winged liked the antelope, striped like the zebra, now lying quiet
as the mollusc, now spitting flame.
Laura the nympho cold as a statue, her parts eaten away, her hair
musically enraptured. On the brink of
sleep Laura stands with muted lips, her words falling like pollen through a
fog. The Laura of Petrarch seated in a
taxi, each word ringing through the cash register, then sterilized, then
cauterized. Laura the basilisk make
entirely of asbestos, walking to the fiery stake with a mouth full of gum. Hunky-dory is the word on her
lips. The heavy fluted lips of the
seashell, Laura's lips, the lips of lost Uranian love. All floating shadowward through the slanting
fog. Last murmuring dregs of shell-like
lips slipping off the Labrador coast, oozing eastward with the mud tides,
easing starward in the iodine drift.
Lost Laura, last of the Petrarchs, slowly fading on the brink of sleep. Not grey the world, but lacklustre, the light
bamboo sleep of spoon-backed innocence.
And this in the black frenzied
nothingness of the hollow of absence leaves a gloomy feeling of saturated
despondency not unlike the topmost tip of desperation which is only the gay
juvenile maggot of death's exquisite rupture with life. From this inverted cone of ecstasy life will
rise again into prosaic skyscraper eminence, dragging me by the hair and teeth,
lousy with howling empty joy, the animated foetus of the unborn death maggot
lying in wait for rot and putrefaction.
Sunday morning the telephone wakes me
up. It's my friend Maxie Schnadig
announcing the death of our friend Luke Ralston. Maxie has assumed a truly sorrowful tone of
voice which rubs me the wrong way. He
says Luke was such a swell guy. That too
sounds the wrong note for me because while Luke was all right, he was only
so-so, not precisely what you might call a swell guy. Luke was an ingrown fairy and finally, when I
got to know him intimately, a big pain in the ass. I told Maxie that over the telephone; I could
tell from the way he answered me that he didn't like it very much. He said Luke had always been a friend to
me. It was true enough, but it wasn't
enough. The truth was that I was really
glad Luke had kicked off at the opportune moment: it meant that I could forget
about the hundred and fifty dollars which I owed him. In fact, as I hung up the receiver I really
felt joyous. It was a tremendous relief
not to have to pay that debt. As for
Luke's demise, that didn't disturb me in the least. On the contrary, it would enable me to pay a
visit to his sister, Lottie, whom I always wanted to lay but never could for
one reason or another. Now I could see
myself going up there in the middle of the day and offering her my condolences. Her husband would be at the office and there
would be nothing to interfere. I saw
myself putting my arms around her and comforting her; nothing like tackling a
woman when she is in sorrow. I could see
her opening her eyes wide - she had beautiful, large grey eyes - as I moved her
toward the couch. She was the sort of
woman who would give you a fuck while pretending to be talking music or some
such thing. She didn't like the naked
reality, the bare facts, so to speak. At
the same time she'd have enough presence of mind to slip a towel under her so
as not to stain the couch. I knew her
inside out. I knew that the best time to
get her was now, now while she was running up a little fever of emotion over dear
dead Luke - whom she didn't think much of, by the way. Unfortunately it was Sunday and the husband
would be sure to be home. I went back to
bed and I lay there thinking first about Luke and all that he had done for me
and then about her, Lottie. Lottie
Somers was her name - it always seemed a beautiful name to me. It matched her perfectly. Luke was stiff as a poker, with a sort of
skull and bones face, and impeccable and just beyond words. She was just the opposite - soft, round,
spoke with a drawl, caressed her words, moved languidly, used her eyes
effectively. One would never take them
for brother and sister. I got so worked
up thinking about her that I tried to tackle the wife. But that poor bastard, with her Puritanical
complex, pretended to be horrified. She
liked Luke. She wouldn't say that he was
a swell guy, because that wasn't like her, but she insisted that he was
genuine, loyal, a true friend, etc. I
had so many loyal, genuine, true friends that that was all horseshit to
me. Finally we got into such an argument
over Luke that she got an hysterical attack and began to weep and sob - in bed,
mind you. That made me hungry. The idea of weeping before breakfast seemed
monstrous to me. I went downstairs and I
fixed myself a wonderful breakfast, and as I put it away I was laughing to
myself, about Luke, about the hundred and fifty bucks that his sudden death had
wiped off the slate, about Lottie and the way she would look at me when the
moment came ... and finally, the most absurd of all, I thought of Maxie, Maxie
Schnadig, the faithful friend of Luke, standing at the grave with a big wreath
and perhaps throwing a handful of earth on the coffin just as they were
lowering it. Somehow that seemed just
too stupid for words. I don't know why
it should seem so ridiculous, but it did.
Maxie was a simpleton. I tolerated
him only because he was good for a touch now and then. And then too there was his sister Rita. I used to let him invite me to his home
occasionally, pretending that I was interested in his brother who was
deranged. It was always a good meal and
the half-witted brother was real entertainment.
He looked like a chimpanzee and he talked like one too. Maxie was too simple to suspect that I was
merely enjoying myself; he though I took a genuine interest in his brother.
It was a beautiful Sunday and I had as
usual about a quarter in my pocket. I
walked along wondering where to go to make a touch. Not that it was difficult to scrape up a
little dough, no, but the thing was to get the dough and beat it without being
bored stiff. I could think of a dozen guys
right in the neighbourhood, guys who would fork it out without a murmur, but it
would meal a long conversation afterwards - about art, religion, politics. Another thing I could do, which I had done
over and over again in a pinch, was to visit the telegraph offices, pretending
to pay a friendly visit of inspection and then, at the last minute, suggest
that they rifle the till for a buck or so until the morrow. That would involve time and even worse
conversation. Thinking it over coldly
and calculatingly I decided that the best bet was my little friend Curley up in
Harlem. If Curley didn't have the money
he would filch it from his mother's purse.
I knew I could rely on him. He
would want to accompany me, of course, but I could always find a way of ditching
him before the evening was over. He was
only a kid and I didn't have to be too delicate with him.
What I liked about Curley was that,
although only a kid of seventeen, he had absolutely no moral sense, no
scruples, no shame. He had come to me as
a boy of fourteen looking for a job as a messenger. His parents, who were then in South America,
had shipped him to New York in care of an aunt who seduced him almost
immediately. He had never been to school
because the parents were always travelling; they were carnival people who
worked "the griffs and the grinds", as he put it. The father had been in prison several
times. He was not his real father, by
the way. Anyway, Curley came to me as a
mere lad who was in need of help, in need of a friend more than anything. At first I thought I could do something for
him. Everybody took a liking to him
immediately, especially the women. He
became the pet of the office. Before
long, however, I realized that he was incorrigible, that at the best he had the
makings of a clever criminal. I liked
him, however, and I continued to do things for him, but I never trusted him out
of my sight. I think I liked him
particularly because he had absolutely no sense of honour. He would do anything in the world for me and
at the same time betray me. I couldn't
reproach him for it ... it was amusing to me.
The more so because he was frank about it. He just couldn't help it. His Aunt Sophie, for instance. He said she had seduced him. True enough, but the curious thing was that
he let himself be seduced while they were reading the Bible together. Young as he was he seemed to realize that his
Aunt Sophie had need of him in that way.
So he let himself be seduced, as he said, and then, after I had known
him a little while he offered to put me next to his Aunt Sophie. He even went so far as to blackmail her. When he needed money badly he would go to the
aunt and wheedle it out of her - with sly threats of exposure. With an innocent face, to be sure. He looked amazingly like an angel, with big
liquid eyes that seemed so frank and sincere.
So ready to do things for you - almost like a faithful dog. And then cunning enough, once he had gained
your favour, to make you humour his little whims. Withal extremely intelligent. The sly intelligence of a fox and - the utter
heartlessness of a jackal.
It wasn't at all surprising to me,
consequently, to learn that afternoon that he had been tinkering with
Valeska. After Valeska he tackled the
cousin who had already been deflowered and who was in need of some male whom
she could reply upon. And from her
finally to the midget who had made herself a pretty little nest at
Valeska's. The midget interested him
because she had a perfectly normal cunt.
He hadn't intended to do anything with her because, as he said, she was
a repulsive little Lesbian, but one day he happened to walk in on her as she
was taking a bath, and that started things off.
It was getting to be too much for him, he confessed, because the three
of them were hot on his trail. He liked
the cousin best because she had some dough and she wasn't reluctant to part
with it. Valeska was too cagey, and
besides she smelled a little too strong.
In fact, he was getting sick of women.
He said it was his Aunt Sophie's fault.
She gave him a bad start. While
relating this he busies himself going through the bureau drawers. The father is a mean son of a bitch who ought
to be hanged, he says, not finding anything immediately. He shows me a revolver with a pearl handle
... what would it fetch? A gun was too
good to use on the old man ... he'd like to dynamite him. Trying to find out why he hated the
old man so, it developed that the kid was really stuck on his mother. He couldn't bear the thought of the old man
going to bed with her. You don't mean to
say that you're jealous of your old man, I ask.
Yes, he's jealous. If I wanted to
know the truth it's that he wouldn't mind sleeping with his mother. Why not?
That's why he had permitted his Aunt Sophie to seduce him ... he was
thinking of his mother all the time. But
don't you feel bad when you go through her pocketbook, I asked. He laughed.
It's not her money, he said, it's his. And what have they done for me? They were always farming me out. The first thing they taught me was how to
cheat people. That's a hell of a way to
raise a kid....
There's not a red cent in the
house. Curley's idea of a way out is to
go with me to the office where he works and while I engage the manager in
conversation go through the wardrobe and clean out all the loose change. Or, if I'm not afraid of taking a chance, he
will go through the cash drawer. They'll
never suspect us, he says. Had he
ever done that before, I ask. Of course
... a dozen or more times, right under the manager's nose. And wasn't there any stink about it? To be sure ... they had fired a few
clerks. Why don't you borrow something
from your Aunt Sophie, I suggest. That's
easy enough, only it means a quick diddle and he doesn't want to diddle her any
more. She stinks, Aunt Sophie. What do you mean, she stinks? Just that ... she doesn't wash herself
regularly. Why, what's the matter with
her? Nothing, just religious. And getting fat and greasy at the same
time. But she likes to be diddled just
the same? Does she? She's crazier than ever about it. It's disgusting. It's like going to bed with a sow. What does your mother think about her? Her?
She's sore as hell at her.
She thinks Sophie's trying to seduce the old man. Well, maybe she is! No, the old man's got something else. I caught him red-handed one night, in the
movies, mushing it up with a young girl.
She's a manicurist from the Astor Hotel.
He's probably trying to squeeze a little dough out of her. That's the only reason he ever makes a woman.
He's a dirty, mean son of a bitch and
I'd like to see him get the chair some day!
You'll get the chair yourself some day if you don't watch out. Who, me?
Not me! I'm too
clever. You're clever enough but you've
got a loose tongue. I'd be a little more
tight-lipped if I were you. You know, I
added, to give him an extra jolt, O'Rourke is wise to you; if you ever fall out
with O'Rourke it's all up with you.... Well, why doesn't he say something if
he's so wise? I don't believe you.
I explain to him at some length that
O'Rourke is one of those people, and there are damned few in the world, who
prefer not to make trouble for another person if they can help it. O'Rourke, I say, has the detective's instinct
only in that he likes to know what's going on around him; people's
characters are plotted out in his head, and filed there permanently, just as
the enemy's terrain is fixed in the minds of army leaders. People think that O'Rourke goes around
snooping and spying, that he derives a special pleasure in performing this
dirty work for the company. Not so. O'Rourke is a born student of human
nature. He picks things up without
effort, due, to be sure, to his peculiar way of looking at the world. Now about you ... I have no doubt that he
knows everything about you. I never
asked him, I admit, but I imagine so from the questions he poses now and
then. Perhaps he's just giving you
plenty of rope. Some night he'll run
into you accidentally and perhaps he'll ask you to stop off somewhere and have
a bite to eat with him. And out of a
clear sky he'll suddenly say - you remember, Curley, when you were working up
in SA office, the time that little Jewish clerk was fired for tapping the
till? I think you were working overtime
that night, weren't you? An interesting
case, that. You know, they never
discovered whether the clerk stole the money or not. They had to fire him, of course, for
negligence, but we can't say for certain that he really stole the money. I've been thinking about that little affair
now for quite some time. I have a hunch
as to who took the money, but I'm not absolutely sure.... And then he'll
probably give you a beady eye and abruptly change the conversation to something
else. He'll probably tell you a little
story about a crook he knew who thought he was very smart and getting away with
it. He'll draw that story out for you
until you feel as though you were sitting on hot coals. By that time you'll be wanting to beat it,
but just when you're ready to go he'll suddenly be reminded of another very
interesting little case and he'll ask you to wait just a little longer while he
orders another dessert. And he'll go on
like that for three or four hours at a stretch, never making the least overt
insinuation, but studying you closely all the time, and finally, when you think
you're free, just when you're shaking hands with him and breathing a sigh of
relief, he'll step in front of you and, planting his big square feet between
your legs, he'll grab you by the lapel and, looking straight through you, he'll
say in a soft, winsome voice - now look here, my lad, don't you think you
had better come clean? And if you
think he's only trying to browbeat you and that you can pretend innocence and
walk away, you're mistaken. Because at
that point, when he asks you to come clean, he means business and nothing on
earth is going to stop him. When it gets
to that point I'd recommend you to make a clean sweep of it, down to the last
penny. He won't ask me to fire you and
he won't threaten you with jail - he'll just quietly suggest that you put aside
a little bit each week and turn it over to him.
Nobody will be the wiser. He
probably won't even tell me. No, he's
very delicate about these things, you'll see.
"And supposing," says Curley
suddenly, "that I tell him I stole the money in order to help you
out? What then?" He began to laugh hysterically.
"I don't think O'Rourke would
believe that," I said calmly.
"You can try it, of course, if you think it will help you to clear
your own skirts. But I rather think it
will have a bad effect. O'Rourke knows
me ... he knows I wouldn't let you do a thing like that."
"But you did let me do it!"
"I didn't tell you to do it. You did it without my knowledge. That's quite different. Besides, can you prove that I accepted money
from you? Wouldn't it seem a little
ridiculous to accuse me, the one who befriended you, of putting you up to a job
like that? Who's going to believe
you? Not O'Rourke. Besides, he hasn't trapped you yet. Why worry about it in advance? Maybe you could begin to return the money
little by little before he gets after you.
Do it anonymously."
By this time Curley was quite used
up. There was a little schnapps in the
cupboard which his old man kept in reserve and I suggested that we take a
little to brace us up. As we were
drinking the schnapps it suddenly occurred to me that Maxie had said he would
be a Luke's house to pay his respects.
It was just the moment to get Maxie.
He would be full of slobbering sentiments and I could give him any old
kind of cock-and-bull story. I could say
that the reason I had assumed such a hard-boiled air on the phone was because I
was harassed, because I didn't know where to turn for the ten dollars which I
needed so badly. At the same time I
might be able to make a date with Lottie.
I began to smile thinking about it.
If Luke could only see what a friend he had in me! The most difficult thing would be to go up to
the bier and take a sorrowful look at Luke.
Not to laugh!
I explained the idea to Curley. He laughed so heartily that the tears were
rolling down his face. Which convinced
me, by the way, that it would be safer to leave Curley downstairs while I made
the touch. Anyway, it was decided on.
They were just sitting down to dinner
when I walked in, looking as sad as I could possibly make myself look. Maxie was there and almost shocked by my
sudden appearance. Lottie had gone
already. That helped me to keep up the
sad look. I asked to be alone with Luke
a few minutes, but Maxie insisted on accompanying me. The others were relieved, I imagine, as they
had been conducting the mourners to the bier all afternoon. And like the good Germans they were they
didn't like having they dinner interrupted.
As I was looking at Luke, still with that sorrowful expression I had
mustered, I became aware of Maxie's eyes fixed on me inquisitively. I looked up and smiled at him in my usual
way. He seemed absolutely nonplussed at
this. "Listen, Maxie," I said,
"are you sure they won't hear us?"
He looked still more puzzled and grieved, but nodded reassuringly. "It's like this, Maxie ... I came up
here purposely to see you ... to borrow a few bucks. I know it seems lousy but you can imagine how
desperate I must be to do a thing like this." He was shaking his head solemnly as I spit
this out, his mouth forming a big O as if he were trying to frighten the
spirits away. "Listen, Maxie,"
I went on rapidly and trying to keep my voice down sad and low, "this is
no time to give me a sermon. If you want
to do something for me lend me ten bucks now, right away ... slip it to me
right here while I look at Luke. You
know, I really liked Luke. I didn't mean
all that over the telephone. You got me
at a bad moment. The wife was tearing
her hair out. We're in a mess, Maxie,
and I'm counting on you to do something.
Come out with me if you can and I'll tell you more about it...." Maxie, as I had expected, couldn't come out
with me. He wouldn't think of deserting
them at such a moment.... "Well, give it to me now," I said, almost
savagely. "I'll explain the whole
thing to you tomorrow. I'll have lunch
with you downtown."
"Listen, Henry," says Maxie,
fishing around in his pocket, embarrassed at the idea of being caught with a
wad in his hand at that moment, "listen," he said, "I don't mind
giving you the money, but couldn't you have found another way of reaching
me? It isn't because of Luke ...
it's...." He began to hem and haw,
not knowing really what he wanted to say.
"For Christ's sake," I
muttered, bending over Luke more closely so that if anyone walked in on us they
would never suspect what I was up to ... "for Christ's sake, don't argue
about it now ... hand it over and be done with it.... I'm desperate, do you
hear me?" Maxie was so confused and
flustered that he couldn't disengage a bill without pulling the wad out of his
pocket. Leaning over the coffin
reverently I peeled off the topmost bill from the wad which was peeping out of
his pocket. I couldn't tell whether it
was a single or a ten spot. I didn't
stop to examine it but tucked it away as rapidly as possible and straightened
myself up. Then I took Maxie by the arm
and returned to the kitchen were the family were eating solemnly but
heartily. They wanted me to stay for a
bite, and it was awkward to refuse, but I refused as best I could and beat it,
my face twitching now with hysterical laughter.
At the corner, by the lamppost, Curley
was waiting for me. By this time I
couldn't restrain myself any longer. I
grabbed Curley by the arm and rushing him down the street I began to laugh, to
laugh as I have seldom laughed in my life.
I thought it would never stop.
Every time I opened my mouth to start explaining the incident I had an
attack. Finally I got frightened. I thought maybe I might laugh myself to
death. After I had managed to quiet down
a bit, in the midst of a long silence, Curley suddenly says: "Did you
get it?" That precipitated
another attack, even more violent than before.
I had to lean against a rail and hold my guts. I had a terrific pain in the guts but a
pleasurable pain.
What relieved me more than anything
was the sight of the bill I had filched from Maxie's wad. It was a twenty-dollar bill! That sobered me up at once. And at the same time it enraged me a
bit. It enraged me to think that in the
pocket of that idiot, Maxie, there were still more bills, probably more
twenties, more tens, more fives. If he had
come out with me, as I had suggested, and if I had taken a good look at that
wad I would have felt no remorse in blackjacking him. I don't know why it should have made me feel
so, but it enraged me. The most
immediate thought was to get rid of Curley as quickly as possible - a five spot
would fix him up - and then go on a little spree. What I particularly wanted was to meet some
low-down, filthy cunt who hadn't a spark of decency in her. Where to meet one like that ... just like
that? Well, get rid of Curley
first. Curley, of course, is hurt. He had expected to stick with me. He pretends not to want the five bucks, but
when he sees that I'm willing to take it back, he quickly stows it away.
Again the night, the incalculably
barren, cold, mechanical night of New York in which there is no peace, no
refuge, no intimacy. The immense, frozen
solitude of the million-footed mob, the cold, waste fire of the electrical
display, the overwhelming meaninglessness of the perfection of the female who
through perfection has crossed the frontier of sex and gone into the minus
sign, gone into the red, like the electricity, like the neutral energy of the
males, like planets without aspect, like peace programs, like love over the
radio. To have money in the pocket in
the midst of white, neutral energy, to walk meaningless and unfecundated through
the bright glitter of the calcimined streets, to think aloud in full solitude
on the edge of madness, to be of a city, a great city, to be of the last moment
of time in the greatest city in the world and feel no part of it, is to become
oneself a city, a world of dead stone, of waste light, of unintelligible
motion, of imponderables and incalculables, of the secret perfection of all
that is minus. To walk in money through
the night crowd, protected by money, lulled by money, dulled by money, the crowd
itself a money, the breath money, no least single object anywhere that is not
money, money, money everywhere and still not enough, and then no money or a
little money or less money or more money, but money, always money, and if you
have money or you don't have money it is the money that counts and money makes
money, but what makes money make money?
Again the dance hall, the money
rhythm, the love that comes over the radio, the impersonal, wingless touch of
the crowd. A despair that reaches down
to the very soles of the boots, an ennui, a desperation. In the midst of the highest mechanical
perfection to dance without joy, to be so desperately alone, to be almost
inhuman because you are human. If there
were life on the moon what more nearly perfect, joyless evidence of it could
there be than this? If to travel away
from the sun is to reach the chill idiocy of the moon, then we have arrived at
our goal and life is but the cold, lunar incandescence of the sun. This is the dance of ice-cold life in the hollow
of an atom, and the more we dance the colder it gets.
So we dance, to an ice-cold frenzied
rhythm, to short waves and long waves, a dance on the inside of the cup of
nothingness, each centimetre of lust running to dollars and cents. We taxi from one perfect female to another
seeking the vulnerable defect, but they are flawless and impermeable in their
impeccable lunar consistency. This is
the icy white maidenhead of love's logic, the web of the ebbed tide, the fringe
of absolute vacuity. And on this fringe
of the virginal logic of perfection I am dancing the soul dance of white
desperation, the last white man pulling the trigger on the last emotion, the
gorilla of despair beating his breast with immaculate gloved paws. I am the gorilla who feels his wings growing,
a giddy gorilla in the centre of a satin-like emptiness; the night too grows
like an electrical plant, shooting white-hot buds into velvet black space. I am the black space of the night in which
the buds break with anguish, a starfish swimming on the frozen dew of the
moon. I am the germ of a new insanity, a
freak dressed in intelligible language, a sob that is buried like a splinter in
the quick of the soul. I am dancing the
very sane and lovely dance of the angelic gorilla. These are my brothers and sisters who are
insane and unangelic. We are dancing in
the hollow of the cup of nothingness. We
are of one flesh, but separated like stars.
In the moment all is clear to me,
clear that in this logic there is no redemption, the city itself being the
highest form of madness and each and every part, organic or inorganic, an
expression of this same madness. I feel
absurdly and humbly great, not as megalomaniac, but as human spore, as the dead
sponge of life swollen to saturation. I
no longer look into the eyes of the woman I hold in my arms but I swim through,
head and arms and legs, and I see that behind the sockets of the eyes there is
a region unexplored, the world of futurity, and here there is no logic
whatever, just the still germination of events unbroken by night and day, by
yesterday and tomorrow. The eye,
accustomed to concentration on points in space, now concentrates on points in
time; the eye sees forward and backward at will. The eye which was the eye of the self no
longer exists; this selfless eye neither reveals nor illuminates. It travels along the line of the horizon, a
ceaseless, uninformed voyage. Trying to
retain the lost body I grew in logic as the city, a point digit in the anatomy
of perfection. I grew beyond my own
death, spiritually bright and hard. I
was divided into endless yesterdays, endless tomorrows, resting only on the
cusp of the event, a wall with many windows, but the house gone. I must shatter the walls and windows, the
last shell of the lost body, if I am to rejoin the present. That is why I no longer look into the
eyes or through the eyes, but by the legerdemain of will swim through
the eyes, head and arms and legs, to explore the curve of vision. I see around myself as the mother who bore me
once saw round the corners of time. I
have broken the wall created by birth and the line of voyage is round and
unbroken, even as the navel. No form, no
image, no architecture, only concentric flights of sheer madness. I am the arrow of the dream's substantiality. I verify by flight. I nullify by dropping to earth.
Thus moments pass, veridic moments of
time without space when I know all, and knowing all I collapse beneath the
vault of the selfless dream.
Between these moments, in the
interstices of the dream, life vainly tries to build up, but the scaffold of
the city's mad logic is no support. As
an individual, as flesh and blood, I am levelled down each day to make the
fleshless, bloodless city whose perfection is the sum of all logic and death to
the dream. I am struggling against an
oceanic death in which my own death is but a drop of water evaporating. to raise my own individual life but a
fraction of an inch above this sinking sea of death I must have a faith greater
than Christ's, a wisdom deeper than that of the greatest seer. I must have the ability and the patience of
formulate what is not contained in the language of our time, for what is now
intelligible is meaningless. My eyes are
useless, for they render back only the image of the known. My whole body must become a constant beam of
light, moving with an ever greater rapidity, never arrested, never looking
back, never dwindling. The city grows
like a cancer; I must grow like a sun.
The city eats deeper and deeper into the red; it is an insatiable white
louse which must die eventually of inanition.
I am going to starve the white louse which is eating me up. I am going to die as a city in order to
become again a man. Therefore I close my
ears, my eyes, my mouth.
Before I shall have become quite a man
again I shall probably exist as a park, a sort of natural park in which people
come to rest, to while away the time.
What they say or do will be of little matter, for they will bring only
their fatigue, their boredom, their hopelessness. I shall be a buffer between the white louse
and the red corpuscle. I shall be a
ventilator for removing the poisons accumulated through the effort to perfect
that which is imperfectible. I shall be
law and order as it exists in nature, as it is projected in dream. I shall be the wild park in the midst of the
nightmare of perfection, the still, unshakeable dream in the midst of frenzied
activity, the random shot on the white billiard table of logic, I shall know
neither how to weep nor protest, but I shall be there always in absolute
silence to receive and to restore. I
shall say nothing until the time comes again to be a man. I shall make no effort to preserve, no effort
to destroy. I shall make no judgements,
no criticisms. Those who have had enough
will come to me for reflection and meditation; those who have not had enough
will die as they lived, in disorder, in desperation, in ignorance of the truth
of redemption. If one says to me, you
must be religious, I shall make no answer.
Or even if there be a revolution brewing, I shall make no answer. There will always be a cunt or a revolution
around the corner, but the mother who bore me turned many a corner and made no
answer, and finally she turned herself inside out and I am the answer.
Out of such a wild mania for
perfection naturally no-one would have expected an evolution to a wild park,
not even I myself, but it is infinitely better, while attending death, to live
in a state of grace and natural bewilderment.
Infinitely better, as life moves toward a deathly perfection, to be just
a bit of breathing space, a stretch of green, a little fresh air, a pool of
water. Better also to receive men
silently and to enfold them, for there is no answer to make while they are
still frantically rushing to turn the corner.
I'm thinking now about the rock fight
one summer's afternoon long ago when I was staying with my Aunt Caroline up
near Hell Gate. My cousin Gene and I had
been corralled by a gang of boys while we were playing in the park. We didn't know which side we were fighting
for but we were fighting in dead earnest amidst the rock pile by the river
bank. We had to show even more courage
than the other boys because we were suspected of being sissies. That's how it happened that we killed one of
the rival gang. Just as they were
charging us my cousin Gene let go at the ringleader and caught him in the guts
with a handsome-sized rock. I let go
almost at the same instant and my rock caught him in the temple and when he
went down he lay there for good and not a peep out of him. A few minutes later the cops came and the boy
was found dead. He was eight or nine
years old, about the same age as us.
What they would have done to us if they had caught us I don't know. Anyway, so as not to arouse any suspicion we
hurried home; we had cleaned up a bit on the way and had combed our hair. We walked in looking almost as immaculate as
when we had left the house. Aunt
Caroline gave us our usual two big slices of sour rye with fresh butter and a
little sugar over it and we sat there at the kitchen table listening to her
with an angelic smile. It was an
extremely hot day and she thought we had better stay in the house, in the big
front room where the blinds had been pulled down, and play marbles with our
little friend Joey Kasselbaum. Joey had
the reputation of being a little backward and ordinarily we would have trimmed
him, but that afternoon, by a sort of mute understanding, Gene and I allowed
him to win everything we had. Joey was
so happy that he took us down to his cellar later and made his sister pull up
her dress and show us what was underneath.
Weesie, they called her, and I remember that she was stuck on me
instantly. I came from another part of
the city, so far away it seemed to them, that it was almost like coming from
another country. They even seemed to
think that I talked differently from them.
Whereas the other urchins used to pay to make Weesie lift her dress up,
for us it was done with love. After a
while we persuaded her not to do it any more for the other boys - we were in
love with her and we wanted her to go straight.
When I left my cousin the end of the
summer I didn't see him again for twenty years or more. When we did meet what deeply impressed me was
the look of innocence he wore - the same expression as the day of the rock
fight. When I spoke to him about the
fight I was still more amazed to discover that he had forgotten that it was he
who had killed the boy; he remembered the boy's death but he spoke of it as
though neither he nor I had any part in it.
When I mentioned Weesie's name he had difficulty in placing her. Don't you remember the cellar next door ... Joey
Kesselbaum? At this a faint smile
passed over his face. He thought it
extraordinary that I should remember such things. He was already married, a father, and working
in a factory making fancy pipe cases. He
considered it extraordinary to remember events that had happened so far back in
the past.
On leaving him that evening I felt
terribly despondent. It was as though he
had attempted to eradicate a precious part of my life, and himself with
it. He seemed more attached to the
tropical fish which he was collecting than to the wonderful past. As for me I recollect everything, everything
that happened that summer, and particularly the day of the rock fight. There are times, in fact, when the taste of
that big slice of sour rye which his mother handed me that afternoon is
stronger in my mouth than the food I am actually tasting. And the sight of Weesie's little bud almost
stronger than the actual feel of what is in my hand. The way the boy lay there after we drowned
him, far far more impressive than the history of the World War. The whole long summer, in fact, seems like an
idyll out of the Arthurian legends. I
often wonder what it was about this particular summer which makes it so vivid
in my memory. I have only to close my
eyes a moment in order to relive each day.
The death of the boy certainly caused me no anguish - it was forgotten
before a week had elapsed. The sight of
Weesie standing in the gloom of the cellar with her dress lifted up, that too
passed easily away. Strangely enough,
the thick slice of rye bread which his mother handed me each day seems to
possess more potency than any other image of that period. I wonder about it ... wonder deeply. Perhaps it is that whenever she handed me the
slice of bread it was with a tenderness and a sympathy that I had never known
before. She was a very homely woman, my
Aunt Caroline. Her face was marked by
the pox, but it was a kind, winsome face which no disfigurement could mar. She was enormously stout and she had a very
soft, a very caressing voice. When she
addressed me she seemed to give me even more attention, more consideration,
than her own son. I would like to have
stayed with her always: I would have chosen her for my own mother had I been
permitted. I remember distinctly how
when my mother arrived on a visit she seemed peeved that I was so contented
with my new life. She even remarked that
I was ungrateful, a remark I never forgot, because then I realized for the
first time that to be ungrateful was perhaps necessary and good for one. If I close my eyes now and I think about it,
about the slice of bread, I think almost at once that in this house I never
knew what it was to be scolded. I think
if I had told my Aunt Caroline that I had killed a boy in the lot, told her
just how it happened, she would have put her arms around me and forgiven me -
instantly. That's why perhaps that
summer is so precious to me. It was a
summer of tacit and complete absolution.
That's why I can't forget Weesie either.
She was full of a natural goodness, a child who was in love with me and
who made no reproaches. She was the
first of the other sex to admire me for being different. After Weesie it was the other way round. I was loved, but I was hated too for being
what I was. Weesie made an effort to
understand. The very fact that I came
from a strange country, that I spoke another language, drew her closer to
me. The way her eyes shone when she
represented me to her little friends is something I will never forget. Her eyes seemed to be bursting with love and
admiration. Sometimes the three of us
would walk to the riverside in the evening and sitting on the bank we would
talk as children talk when they are out of sight of their elders. We talked then, I know it now so well, more
sanely and more profoundly than our parents.
To give us that thick slice of bread each day the parents had to pay a
heavy penalty. The worst penalty was
that they became estranged from us. For,
with each slice they fed us we became not only more indifferent to them, but we
became more and more superior to them.
In our ungratefulness was our strength and our beauty. Not being devoted we were innocent of all
crime. The boy whom I saw drop dead, who
lay there motionless, without making the slightest sound or whimper, the
killing of that boy seems almost like a clean, healthy performance. The struggle for food, on the other hand,
seems foul and degrading and when we stood in the presence of our parents we
sensed that they had come to us unclean and for that we could never forgive
them. The thick slice of bread in the
afternoon, precisely because it was not earned, tasted delicious to us. Never again will bread taste this way. Never again will it be given this way. The day of the murder it was even tastier
than ever. It had a slight taste of
terror in it which has been lacking ever since.
And it was received with Aunt Caroline's tacit but complete absolution.
There is something about the rye bread
which I am trying to fathom - something vaguely delicious, terrifying and
liberating, something associated with first discoveries. I am thinking of another slice of sour rye which
was connected with a still earlier period, when my little friend Stanley and I
used to rifle the icebox. That was stolen
bread and consequently even more marvellous to the palate than the bread which
was given with love. But it was in the
act of eating the rye bread, the walking around with it and talking at the same
time, that something in the nature of revelation occurred. It was like a state of grace, a state of
complete ignorance, of self-abnegation.
Whatever was imparted to me in these moments I seem to have retained
intact and there is no fear that I shall ever lose the knowledge that was
gained. It was just the fact perhaps
that it was not knowledge as we ordinarily think of it. It was almost like receiving a truth, though
truth is almost too precise a word for it.
The important thing about the sour rye discussions is that they always
took place away from home, away from the eyes of our parents whom we feared but
never respected. Left to ourselves there
were no limits to what we might imagine.
Facts had little importance for us; what we demanded of a subject was
that it allow us opportunity to expand.
What amazes me, when I look back on it, is how well we understood one
another, how well we penetrated to the essential character of each and every
one, young or old. At seven years of age
we knew with dead certainty, for example, that such a fellow would end up in
prison, that another would be a drudge, and another a good for nothing, and so
on. We were absolutely correct in our
diagnoses, much more correct, for example, than our parents, or our teachers,
more correct, indeed, than the so-called psychologists. Alfie Betcha turned out to be an absolute
bum; Johnny Gerhardt went to the penitentiary; Bob Kunst became a work
horse. Infallible predictions. The learning we received only tended to
obscure our vision. From the day we went
to school we learned nothing; on the contrary, we were made obtuse, we were
wrapped in a fog of words and abstractions.
With the sour rye the world was what
it is essentially, a primitive world ruled by magic, a world in which fear
plays the most important role. The boy
who could inspire the most fear was the leader and he was respected as long as
he could maintain his power. There were
other boys who were rebels, and they were admired, but they never became the
leader. The majority were clay in the
hands of the fearless ones; a few could be depended on, but the most not. The air was full of tension - nothing could
be predicted for the morrow. This loose,
primitive nucleus of a society created sharp appetites, sharp emotions, sharp
curiosity. Nothing was taken for
granted; each day demanded a new test of power, a new sense of strength or of
failure. And so, up until the age of
nine or ten, we had a real taste of life - we were on our own. That is, those of us who were fortunate
enough not to have been spoiled by our parents, those of us who were free to
roam the streets at night and to discover things with our own eyes.
What I am thinking of, with a certain
amount of regret and longing, is that this thoroughly restricted life of early
boyhood seems like a limitless universe and the life which followed upon it,
the life of the adult, a constantly diminishing realm. From the moment when one is put in school one
is lost; one has the feeling of having a halter put around his neck. The taste goes out of the bread as it goes
out of life. Getting the bread becomes
more important than the eating of it.
Everything is calculated and everything has a price upon it.
My cousin Gene became an absolute
nonentity; Stanley became a first-rate failure.
Besides these two boys, for whom I had the greatest affection, there was
another, Joey, who has since become a letter carrier. I could weep when I think of what life has
made them. As boys they were perfect,
Stanley least of all because Stanley was more temperamental. Stanley went into violent rages now and then
and there was no telling how you stood with him from day to day. But Joey and Gene were the essence of
goodness; they were friends in the old meaning of the word. I think of Joey often when I go out into the
country because he was what is called a country boy. That meant, for one thing, that he was more
loyal, more sincere, more tender, than the boys we knew. I can see Joey now coming to meet me; he was
always running with arms wide open and ready to embrace me, always breathless
with adventures that he was planning for my participation, always loaded with
gifts which he had saved for my coming.
Joey received me like the monarchs of old received their guests. Everything I looked at was mine. We had innumerable things to tell each other
and nothing was dull or boring. The
difference between our respective worlds was enormous. Though I was of the city too, still, when I
visited my cousin Gene, I became aware of an even greater city, a city of New
York proper in which my sophistication was negligible. Stanley knew no excursions from his own
neighbourhood, but Stanley had come from a strange land over the sea, Poland,
and there was always between us the mark of the voyage. The fact that he spoke another tongue also
increased our admiration for him. Each
one was surrounded by a distinguished aura, by a well-defined identity which
was preserved inviolate. With the
entrance into life these traits of difference fell away and we all became more
or less alike and, of course, most unlike our own selves. And it is this loss of the peculiar self, of
the perhaps unimportant individuality, which saddens me and makes the rye bread
stand out glowingly. The wonderful sour
rye went into the making of our individual selves; it was like the communion
loaf in which all participate but from which each one receives only according
to his peculiar state of grace. Now we
are eating of the same bread, but without benefit of communion, without
grace. We are eating to fill our bellies
and our hearts are cold and empty. We
are separate but not individual.
There was another thing about the sour
rye and that was that we often ate a raw onion with it. I remember standing with Stanley in the late
afternoons, a sandwich in hand, in front of the veterinary's which was just
opposite my home. It always seemed to be
late afternoon when Dr. McKinney elected to castrate a stallion, an operation
which was done in public and which always gathered a small crowd. I remember the smell of the hot iron and the
quivering of the horse's legs, Dr. McKinney's goatee, the taste of the raw
onion and the smell of the sewer gas just behind us where they were laying in a
new gas main. It was an olfactory
performance through and through and, as Abélard so well describes it,
practically painless. Not knowing the
reason for the operation we used to hold long discussions afterwards which
usually ended in a brawl. Nobody liked
Dr. McKinney either; there was a smell of iodoform about him and of stale horse
piss. Sometimes the gutter in front of
his office was filled with blood and in the wintertime the blood froze into the
ice and gave a strange look to his sidewalk.
Now and then the big two-wheeled cart came, an open cart which smelled
like the devil, and they whisked a dead horse into it. Rather it was hoisted in, the carcass, by a
long chain which made a creaking noise like the dropping of an anchor. The smell of a bloated dead horse is a foul
smell and our street was full of foul smells.
On the corner was Paul Sauer's place where raw hides and trimmed hides
were stacked up in the street; they stank frightfully too. And then the acid odour coming from the tin
factory behind the house - like the smell of modern progress. The smell of a dead horse, which is almost
unbearable, is still a thousand times better than the smell of burning
chemicals. And the sight of a dead horse
with a bullet hole in the temple, his head lying in a pool of blood and his
asshole bursting with the last spasmic evacuation, is still a better sight than
that of a group of men in blue aprons coming out of the arched doorway of the
tin factory with a hand truck loaded with bales of fresh-made tin. Fortunately for us there was a bakery
opposite the tin factory and from the back door of the bakery, which was only a
grill, we could watch the bakers at work and get the sweet, irresistible odour
of bread and cake. And if, as I say, the
gas mains were being laid there was another strange medley of smells - the
smell of earth just turned up, of rotten iron pipes, of sewer gas, and of the
onion sandwiches which the Italian labourers ate whilst reclining against the
mounds of upturned earth. There were
other smells too, of course, but less striking; such, for instance, as the
smell of Silverstein's tailor shop where there was always a great deal of
pressing going on. This was a hot, fetid
stench which can be best apprehended by imagining that Silverstein, who was a
lean, smelly Jew himself, was cleaning out the farts which his customers had
left behind in their pants. Next door
was the candy and stationary shop owned by two daffy old maids who were
religious; here there was the almost sickeningly sweet smell of toffee, of
Spanish peanuts, of jujubes and Sen-Sen and of Sweet Corporal cigarettes. The stationary store was like a beautiful
cave, always cool, always full of intriguing objects; where the soda fountain
was, which gave of another distinct odour, ran a thick marble slab which turned
sour in the summertime and yet mingled pleasantly, the sourness, with the
slightly ticklish, dry smell of the carbonated water when it was fizzed into
the glass of ice cream.
With the refinements that come with
maturity the smells faded out, to be replaced by only one other distinctly
memorable, distinctly pleasurable smell - the odour of the cunt. More particularly the odour that lingers on
the fingers after playing with a woman, for, if it has not been noticed before,
this smell is even more enjoyable, perhaps, because it already carries with it
the perfume of the past tense, than the odour of the cunt itself. But this odour, which belongs to maturity, is
but a faint odour compared with the odours attaching to childhood. It is an odour which evaporates, almost as
quickly in the mind's imagination, as in reality. One can remember many things about the woman
one has loved but it is hard to remember the smell of her cunt - with anything
like certitude. The smell of wet hair,
on the other hand, a woman's wet hair, is much more powerful and lasting - why,
I don't know. I can remember even now,
after almost forty years, the smell of my Aunt Tillie's hair after she had
taken a shampoo. This shampoo was
performed in the kitchen which was always overheated. Usually it was a late Sunday afternoon, in
preparation for a ball, which meant again another singular thing - that there
would appear a cavalry sergeant with very beautiful yellow stripes, a
singularly handsome sergeant who even to my eyes was far too gracious, manly
and intelligent for an imbecile such as my Aunt Tillie. But anyway, there she sat on a little stool
by the kitchen table drying her hair with a towel. Beside her was a little lamp with a smoked
chimney and beside the lamp two curling irons the very sight of which filled me
with an inexplicable loathing. Generally
she had a little mirror propped up on the table; I can see her now making wry
faces at herself as she squeezed the blackheads out of her nose. She was a stringy, ugly, imbecilic creature
with two enormous buck teeth which gave her a horsy look whenever her lips drew
back in a smile. She smelled sweaty,
too, even after a bath. But the smell of
her hair - that smell I can never forget, because somehow the smell is
associated with my hatred and contempt for her.
This smell, when the hair was just drying, was like the smell that comes
up from the bottom of a marsh. There
were two smells - one of the wet hair and another of the same hair when she
threw it into the stove and it burst into flame. There were always curled knots of hair which
came from her comb, and they were mixed with dandruff and the sweat of her
scalp which was greasy and dirty. I used
to stand by her side and watch her, wondering what the ball would be like and
wondering how she would behave at the ball.
When she was all primped up she would ask me if she didn't look
beautiful and if I didn't love her, and of course I would tell her yes. But in the water closet later, which was in
the hall just next to the kitchen, I would sit in the flickering light of the
burning taper which was placed on the window ledge, and I would say to myself
that she looked crazy. After she was
gone I would pick up the curling irons and smell them and squeeze them. They were revolting and fascinating - like
spiders. Everything about this kitchen
was fascinating to me. Familiar as I was
with it I never conquered it. It was at
once so public and so intimate. Here I
was given my bath, in the big tin tub, on Saturdays. Here the three sisters washed themselves and
primped themselves. Here my grandfather
stood at the sink and washed himself to the waist and later handed me his shoes
to be shined. Here I stood at the window
in the winter time and watched the snow fall, watched it dully, vacantly, as if
I were in the womb and listening to the water running while my mother sat on
the toilet. It was in the kitchen where
the secret confabulations were held, frightening, odious sessions from which
they always reappeared with long, grave faces or eyes red with weeping. Why they ran to the kitchen I don't
know. But it was often while they stood
thus in secret conference, haggling about a will or deciding how to dispense
with some poor relative, that the door was suddenly opened and a visitor would
arrive, whereupon the atmosphere immediately changed. Changed violently, I mean, as though they
were relieved that some outside force had intervened to spare them the horrors
of a protracted secret session. I
remember now that, seeing that door open and the face of an unexpected visitor
peering in, my heart would leap with joy.
Soon I would be given a big glass pitcher and asked to run to the corner
saloon where I would hand the pitcher in, through the little window at the
family entrance, and wait until it was returned brimming with foamy suds. This little run to the corner for a pitcher
of beer was an expedition of absolutely incalculable proportions. First of all there was the barber shop just
below us, where Stanley's father practised his profession. Time and again, just as I was dashing out for
something, I would see the father giving Stanley a drubbing with a razor strop,
a sight that made my blood boil. Stanley
was my best friend and his father was nothing but a drunken Polack. One evening, however, as I was dashing out
with a pitcher, I had the intense pleasure of seeing another Polack go for
Stanley's old man with a razor. I saw
his old man coming through the door backwards, the blood running down his neck,
his face white as a sheet. He fell on
the sidewalk in front of the shop, twitching and moaning, and I remember
looking at him for a minute or two and walking on feeling absolutely contented
and happy about it. Stanley had sneaked
out during the scrimmage and was accompanying me to the saloon door. He was glad too, though he was a bit
frightened. When we got back the
ambulance was there in front of the door and they were lifting him in on the
stretcher, his face and neck covered with a sheet. Sometimes it happened that Father Carroll's
pet choirboy strolled by the house just as I was hitting the air. This was an event of primary importance. The boy was older than any of us and he was a
sissy, a fairy in the making. His very
walk used to enrage us. As soon as he
was spotted the news went out in every direction and before he had reached the
corner he was surrounded by a gang of boys all much smaller than himself who
taunted him and mimicked him until he burst into tears. Then we would pounce on him, like a pack of
wolves, pull him to the ground and tear the clothes off his back. It was a disgraceful performance but it made
us feel good. Nobody knew yet what a
fairy was, but whatever it was we were against it. In the same way we were against the Chinamen. There was one Chinaman, from the laundry up
the street, who used to pass frequently and, like the sissy from Father
Carroll's church, he too had to run the gauntlet. He looked exactly like the picture of a
coolie which one sees in the schoolbooks.
He wore a sort of black alpaca coat with braided buttonholes, slippers
without heels, and a pigtail. Usually he
walked with his hands in his sleeves. It
was his walk which I remember best, a sort of sly, mincing, feminine walk which
was utterly foreign and menacing to us.
We were in mortal dread of him and we hated him because he was
absolutely indifferent to our gibes. We
thought he was too ignorant to notice our insults. Then one day when we entered the laundry he
gave us a little surprise. First he handed
us the package of laundry; then he reached down below the counter and gathered
a handful of lichee nuts from the big bag.
He was smiling as he came from behind the counter to open the door. He was still smiling as he caught hold of
Alfie Betcha and pulled his ears; he caught hold of each of us in turn and
pulled our ears, still smiling. Then he
made a ferocious grimace and, swift as a cat, he ran behind the counter and
picked up a long, ugly-looking knife which he brandished at us. We fell over ourselves getting out of the
place. When we got to the corner and
looked around we saw him standing in the doorway with an iron in his hand
looking very calm and peaceful. After
this incident nobody would go to the laundry any more; we had to pay little Louis
Pirossa a nickel each week to collect the laundry for us. Louis's father owned the fruit stand on the
corner. He used to hand us the rotten
bananas as a token of his affection.
Stanley was especially fond of the rotten bananas as his aunt used to fry
them for him. The fried bananas were
considered a delicacy in Stanley's home.
Once, on his birthday, there was a party given for Stanley and the whole
neighbourhood was invited. Everything
went beautifully until it came to the fried bananas. Somehow nobody wanted to touch the bananas,
as this was a dish known only to Polacks like Stanley's parents. It was considered disgusting to eat fried
bananas. In the midst of the embarrassment
some bright youngster suggested that crazy Willie Maine should be given the
fried bananas. Willie Maine was older
than any of us but unable to talk. He
said nothing but Bjork! Bjork! He said this to everything. So when the bananas were passed to him he
said Bjork! and he reached for them with two hands. But his brother George was there and George
felt insulted that they should have palmed off the rotten bananas on his crazy
brother. So George started a fight and
Willie, seeing his brother attacked, began to fight also, screaming Bjork! Bjork!
Not only did he strike out at the other boys but at the girls too, which
created a pandemonium. Finally Stanley's
old man, hearing the noise, came up from the barber shop with a strop in his
hand. He took crazy Willie Maine by the
scruff of the neck and began to lambast him. Meanwhile his brother George had sneaked off
to call Mr. Maine senior. The latter,
who was also a bit of a drunkard, arrived in his shirt sleeves and seeing poor
Willie being beaten by the drunken barber, he went for him with two stout fists
and beat him up unmercifully. Willie,
who had gotten free meanwhile, was on his hands and knees, gobbling up the
fried bananas which had fallen to the floor.
He was stuffing them away like a billy goat, fast as he could find
them. When the old man saw him there chewing
away like a goat he became furious and picking up the strop he went after
Willie with a vengeance. Now Willie
began to howl - Bjork! Bjork! -
and suddenly everybody began to laugh.
That took the steam out of Mr. Maine and he relented. Finally he sat down and Stanley's aunt
brought him a glass of wine. Hearing the
racket some of the other neighbours came in and there was more wine and then
beer and then schnapps and soon everybody was happy and singing and whistling
and even the kids got drunk and then crazy Willie got drunk and again he got
down on the floor like a billy goat and he yelled Bjork! Bjork! and Alfie Betcha, who was very
drunk though only eight years old, bit crazy Willie Maine in the backside and
then Willie bit him and then we all started biting each other and the parents
stood by laughing and screaming with glee and it was very very merry and there
was more fried bananas and everybody ate them this time and then there were
speeches and more bumpers downed and crazy Willie Maine tried to sing for us
but could only sing Bjork! Bjork! It was a stupendous success, the birthday
party, and for a week or more no-one talked of anything but the party and what
good Polacks Stanley's people were. The
fried bananas, too, were a success and for a time it was hard to get any rotten
bananas from Louis Pirossa's old man because they were so much in demand. And then an event occurred which cast a pall
over the entire neighbourhood - the defeat of Joe Gerhardt at the hands of Joey
Silverstein. The latter was the tailor's
son; he was a lad of fifteen or sixteen, rather quiet and studious looking, who
was shunned by the other older boys because he was a Jew. One day as he was delivering a pair of pants
to Fillmore Place he was accosted by Joey Gerhardt who was about the same age
and who considered himself a rather superior being. There was an exchange of words and then Joe
Gerhardt pulled the pants away from the Silverstein boy and threw them in the
gutter. Nobody had ever imagined that
young Silverstein would reply to such an insult by recourse to his fists and so
when he struck out at Joe Gerhardt and cracked him square in the jaw everybody
was taken aback, most of all Joe Gerhardt himself. There was a fight which lasted about twenty
minutes and at the end Joe Gerhardt lay on the sidewalk unable to get up. Whereupon the Silverstein boy gathered up the
pair of pants and walked quietly and proudly back to his father's shop. Nobody said a word to him. The affair was regarded as a calamity. Who had ever heard of a Jew beating up a
Gentile? It was something inconceivable,
and yet it had happened, right before everyone's eyes. Night after night, sitting on the curb as we used
to, the situation was discussed from every angle, but without any solution
until ... well until Joe Gerhardt's younger brother, Johnny, became so wrought
up about it that he decided to settle the matter himself. Johnny, though younger and smaller than his
brother, was as tough and invincible as a young puma. He was typical of the shanty Irish who made
up the neighbourhood. His idea of
getting even with young Silverstein was to lie in wait for him one evening as
the latter was stepping out of the store and trip him up. When he tripped him up that evening he had
provided himself in advance with two little rocks which he concealed in his
fists and when poor Silverstein went down he pounced on him and then with the
two handsome little rocks he pounded poor Silverstein's temples. To his amazement Silverstein offered no
resistance; even when he got up and gave him a chance to get to his feet
Silverstein never so much as budged.
Then Johnny got frightened and ran away.
He must have been thoroughly frightened because he never came back
again; the next that was heard of him was that he had been picked up out West
somewhere and sent to a reformatory. His
mother, who was a slatternly, jolly Irish bitch, said that it served him right
and she hoped to God she'd never lay eyes on him again. When the poor Silverstein recovered he was
not the same any more; people said the beating had affected his brain, that he
was a little daffy. Joe Gerhardt, on the
other hand, rose to prominence again. It
seems that he had gone to see the Silverstein boy while he lay in bed and had
made a deep apology to him. This again
was something that had never been heard of before. It was something so strange, so unusual, that
Joe Gerhardt was looked upon almost as a knight errant. Nobody had approved of the way Johnny
behaved, and yet nobody would have thought of going to young Silverstein and
apologizing to him. That was an act of
such delicacy, such elegance, that Joe Gerhardt was looked upon as a real
gentleman - the first and only gentleman in the neighbourhood. It was a word that had never been used among
us and now it was on everybody's lips and it was considered a distinction to be
a gentleman. This sudden transformation
of the defeated Joe Gerhardt into a gentleman I remember made a deep impression
on me. A few years later, when I moved
into another neighbourhood and encountered Claude de Lorraine, a French boy, I
was prepared to understand and accept "a gentleman". This Claude was a boy such as I had never
laid eyes on before. In the old
neighbourhood he would have been regarded as a sissy; for one thing he spoke
too well, too correctly, too politely, and for another thing he was too
considerate, too gentle, too gallant.
And then, while playing with him, to hear him suddenly break into French
as his mother or father came along, provided us with something like a
shock. German we had heard and German
was a permissible transgression, but French! why to talk French, or even to
understand it, was to be thoroughly alien, thoroughly aristocratic, rotten,
distingué. And yet Claude was one of us,
as good as us in every way, even a little bit better, we had to admit
secretly. But there was a blemish - his
French! It antagonized us. He had no right to be living in our
neighbourhood, no right to be as capable and manly as he was. Often, when his mother called him in and we
had said goodbye to him, we got together in the lot and we discussed the
Lorraine family backwards and forwards.
We wondered what they ate, for example, because being French they must
have different customs than ours. No-one
had ever set foot in Claude de Lorraine's home either - that was another
suspicious and repugnant fact. Why? What were they concealing? Yet when they passed us in the street they
were always very cordial, always smiled, always spoke in English and a most
excellent English it was. They used to
make us feel rather ashamed of ourselves - they were superior, that's what it
was. And there was still another
baffling thing - with the other boys a direct question brought a direct answer,
but with Claude de Lorraine there was never any direct answer. He always smiled very charmingly before
replying and he was very cool, collected, employing an irony and a mockery
which was beyond us. He was a thorn in
our side, Claude de Lorraine, and when finally he moved out of the neighbourhood
we all breathed a sigh of relief. As for
myself, it was only maybe ten or fifteen years later that I thought about this
boy and his strange, elegant behaviour.
And it was then that I felt I had made a bad blunder. For suddenly one day it occurred to me that
Claude de Lorraine had come up to me on a certain occasion obviously to win my
friendship and I had treated him rather cavalierly. At the time I thought of this incident it
suddenly dawned on me that Claude de Lorraine must have seen something
different in me and that he had meant to honour me by extending the hand of
friendship. But back in those days I had
a code of honour, such as it was, and that was to run with the herd. Had I become a bosom friend of Claude de
Lorraine I would have been betraying the other boys. No matter what advantages lay in the wake of
such a friendship they were not for me; I was one of the gang and it was my
duty to remain aloof from such as Claude de Lorraine. I remembered this incident once again, I must
say, after a still greater interval - after I had been in France a few months
and the word raisonnable had come to acquire a wholly new significance
for me. Suddenly one day, overhearing
it, I thought of Claude de Lorraine's overtures on the street in front of his
house. I recalled vividly that he had
used the word reasonable. He had
probably asked me to be reasonable, a word which then would never have
crossed my lips as there was no need for it in my vocabulary. It was a word, like gentleman, which was
rarely brought out and then only with great discretion and circumspection. It was a word which might cause others to
laugh at you. There were lots of words
like that - really, for example.
No-one I knew had ever used the word really - until Jack Lawson
came along. He used it because his
parents were English and, though we made fun of him, we forgave him for
it. Really was a word which
reminded me immediately of little Carl Ragner from the old neighbourhood. Carl Ragner was the only son of a politician
who lived on the rather distinguished little street called Fillmore Place. He lived near the end of the street in a
little red brick house which was always beautifully kept. I remember the house because passing it on my
way to school I used to remark how beautifully the brass knobs on the door were
polished. In fact, nobody else had brass
knobs on their doors. Anyway, little
Carl Ragner was one of those boys who was not allowed to associate with other
boys. He was rarely seen, as a matter of
fact. Usually it was a Sunday that we
caught a glimpse of him walking with his father. Had his father not been a powerful figure in
the neighbourhood Carl would have been stoned to death. He was really impossible, in his Sunday
garb. Not only did he wear long pants
and patent leather shoes, but he sported a derby and a cane. At six years of age a boy who would allow
himself to be dressed up in this fashion must be a ninny - that was the
consensus of opinion. Some said he was
sickly, as though that were an excuse for his eccentric dress. The strange thing is that I never once heard
him speak. He was so elegant, so
refined, that perhaps he had imagined it was bad manners to speak in
public. At any rate, I used to lie in
wait for him Sunday mornings just to see him pass with his old man. I watched him with the same avid curiosity
that I would watch the firemen cleaning the engines in the firehouse. Sometimes on the way home he would be
carrying a little box of ice cream, the smallest size they had, probably just
enough for him, for his dessert. Dessert
was another word which had somehow become familiar to us and which we used
derogatorily when referring to the likes of little Carl Ragner and his
family. We could spend hours wondering
what these people ate for dessert, our pleasure consisting principally
in bandying about this new-found word, dessert, which had probably been
smuggled out of the Ragner household. It
must also have been about this time that Santos Dumont came into fame. For us there was something grotesque about
the name Santos Dumont. About his
exploits we were not much concerned - just the name. For most of us it smelled of sugar, of Cuban
plantations, of the strange Cuban flag which had a star in the corner and which
was always highly regarded by those who saved the little cards which were given
away with Sweet Caporal cigarettes and on which there were represented either
the flags of the different nations or the leading soubrettes of the stage or the
famous pugilists. Santos Dumont, then,
was something delightfully foreign, in contradistinction to the usual foreign
person or object, such as the Chinese laundry, or Claude de Lorraine's haughty
French family. Santos Dumont was a
magical word which suggested a beautiful flowing moustache, a sombrero, spurs,
something airy, delicate, humorous, quixotic.
Sometimes it brought up the aroma of coffee beans and of straw mats, or,
because it was so thoroughly outlandish and quixotic, it would entail a digression
concerning the life of the Hottentots.
For there were among us, older boys who were beginning to read and who
would entertain us by the hour with fantastic tales which they had gleaned from
books such as Ayesha or Ouida's Under Two Flags. The real flavour of knowledge is most
definitely associated in my mind with the vacant lot at the corner of the new
neighbourhood where I was transplanted at about the age of ten. Here, when the full days came on and we stood
about the bonfire roasting chippies and raw potatoes in the little cans which
we carried, there ensued a new type of discussion which differed from the old
discussions I had known in that the origins were always bookish. Someone had just read a book of adventure, or
a book of science, and forthwith the whole street became animated by the
introduction of a hitherto unknown subject.
It might be that one of these boys had just discovered that there was
such a thing as the Japanese current and he would try to explain to us how the
Japanese current came into existence and what the purpose of it was. This was the only way we learned things -
against the fence, as it were, while roasting chippies and raw potatoes. These bits of knowledge sank deep - so deep,
in fact, that later, confronted with a more accurate knowledge it was often
difficult to dislodge the older knowledge.
In this way it was explained to us one day by an older boy that the
Egyptians had known about the circulation of the blood, something which seemed
so natural to us that it was hard later to swallow the story of the discovery
of the circulation of the blood by an Englishman named Harvey. Nor does it seem strange to me now that in
those days most of our conversation was about remote places, such as China,
Peru, Egypt, Africa, Iceland, Greenland.
We talked about ghosts, about God, about the transmigration of souls,
about Hell, about astronomy, about strange birds and fish, about the formation
of precious stones, about rubber plantations, about methods of torture, about
the Aztecs and the Incas, about marine life, about volcanoes and earthquakes,
about burial rites and wedding ceremonies in various parts of the earth, about
languages, about the origin of the American Indian, about the buffaloes dying
out, about strange diseases, about cannibalism, about wizardry, about trips to
the moon and what it was like there, about murderers and highwaymen, about the
miracles in the Bible, about the manufacture of pottery, about a thousand and
one subjects which were vital to us because we were starved and the world was
full of wonder and mystery and it was only when we stood shivering in the
vacant lot that we got to talking seriously and felt a need for communication
which was at once pleasurable and terrifying.
The wonder and the mystery of life -
which is throttled in us as we become responsible members of society! Until we were pushed out to work the world
was very small and we were living on the fringe of it, on the frontier, as it
were, of the unknown. A small Greek
world which was nevertheless deep enough to provide all manner of variation,
all manner of adventure and speculation.
Not so very small either, since it held in reserve the most boundless
potentialities. I have gained nothing by
the enlargement of my world; on the contrary, I have lost. I want to become more and more childish and
to pass beyond childhood in the opposite direction. I want to go exactly contrary to the normal
line of development, pass into a superinfantile realm of being which will be
absolutely crazy and chaotic but not crazy and chaotic as the world about
me. I have been an adult and a father
and a responsible member of society. I
have earned my daily bread. I have
adapted myself to a world which never was mine.
I want to break through this enlarged world and stand again on the
frontier of an unknown world which will throw this pale, unilateral world into
shadow. I want to pass beyond the
responsibility of fatherhood to the irresponsibility of the anarchic man who cannot
be coerced nor wheedled nor cajoled nor bribed nor traduced. I want to take as my guide Oberon the
nightrider who, under the spread of his black wings, eliminates both the beauty
and the horror of the past; I want to flee toward a perpetual dawn with a
swiftness and relentlessness that leaves no room for remorse, regret, or
repentance. I want to outstrip the
inventive man who is a curse to the earth in order to stand once again before
an impassable deep which not even the strongest wings will enable me to
traverse. Even if I must become a wild
and natural park inhabited only by idle dreamers I must not stop to rest here
in the ordered fatuity of responsible, adult life. I must do this in remembrance of a life
beyond all comparison with the life which was promised me, in remembrance of
the life of a child who was strangled and stifled by the mutual consent of
those who had surrendered. Everything
which the fathers and the mothers created I disown. I am going back to a world even smaller than
the old Hellenic world, going back to a world which I can always touch with
outstretched arms, the world of what I know and see and recognize from moment
to moment. Any other world is
meaningless to me, and alien and hostile.
In traversing the first bright world which I knew as a child I wish not
to rest there but to muscle back to a still brighter world from which I must
have escaped. What this world is like I
do not know, nor am I ever sure that I will find it, but it is my world and
nothing else intrigues me.
The first glimpse, the first realization,
of the bright new world came through my meeting Roy Hamilton. I was in my twenty-first year, probably the
worst year of my whole life. I was in
such a state of despair that I had decided to leave home. I thought and spoke
only of California where I had planned to go to start a new life. So violently did I dream of this new promised
land that later, when I had returned from California, I scarcely remembered the
California I had seen but thought and spoke only of the California which I had
known in my dreams. It was just prior to
my leave-taking that I met Hamilton. He
was a dubious half brother to my old friend MacGregor; they had only recently
made each other's acquaintance, as Roy, who had lived most of his life in
California, had been under the impression all along that his real father was
Mr. Hamilton and not Mr. MacGregor. As a
matter of fact it was in order to disentangle the mystery surrounding his
parentage that he had come East. Living
with the MacGregors had apparently brought him no nearer to a solution of the
mystery. Indeed he seemed to be more
perplexed than ever after getting acquainted with the man who he had concluded
must be his legitimate father. He was
perplexed, as he later admitted to me, because in neither man could he find any
resemblance to the man he considered himself to be. It was probably this harassing problem of
deciding whom to take for a father which had stimulated the development of his
own character. I say this, because
immediately upon being introduced to him, I felt that I was in the presence of
a being such as I had never known before.
I had been prepared, through MacGregor's description of him, to meet a
rather "strange" individual, "strange" in MacGregor's mouth
meaning slightly cracked. He was indeed
strange, but so sharply sane that I had once felt exalted. For the first time I was talking to a man who
got behind the meaning of words and went to the very essence of things. I felt that I was talking to a philosopher,
not a philosopher such as I had encountered through books, but a man who
philosophized constantly - and who lived this philosophy which he expounded. That is to say, he had no theory at all,
except to penetrate to the very essence of things and, in the light of each
fresh revelation to so life his life that there would be a minimum of discord
between the truths which were revealed to him and the exemplification of these
truths in action. Naturally his
behaviour was strange to those about him.
It had not, however, been strange to those who knew him out on the Coast
where, as he said, he was in his own element.
There apparently he was regarded as a superior being and was listened to
with the utmost respect, even with awe.
I came upon him in the midst of a
struggle which I only appreciated many years later. At the time I couldn't see the importance
which he attached to finding his real father; in fact, I used to joke about it
because the role of the father meant little to me, or the role of the mother, for
that matter. In Roy Hamilton I saw the
ironic struggle of a man who had already emancipated himself and yet was
seeking to establish a solid biological link for which he had absolutely no
need. This conflict over the real father
had, paradoxically, made him a superfather.
He was a teacher and an exemplar; he had only to open his mouth for me
to realize that I was listening to a wisdom which was utterly different from
anything which I had heretofore associated with that word. It would be easy to dismiss him as a mystic,
for a mystic he undoubtedly was, but he was the first mystic I had ever
encountered who also knew how to keep his feet on the ground. He was a mystic who knew how to invent
practical things, among them a drill such as was badly needed for the oil
industry and from which he later made a fortune. Because of his strange metaphysical talk,
however, nobody at the time gave much heed to his very practical
invention. It was regarded as another
one of his cracked ideas.
He was continually talking about
himself and his relation to the world about, a quality which created the
unfortunate impression that he was simply a blatant egotist. It was even said, which was true enough as
far as it went, that he seemed more concerned about the truth of Mr.
MacGregor's fatherhood than about Mr. MacGregor, the father. The implication was that he had no real love
for his new-found father but was simply deriving a strong personal
gratification from the truth of the discovery, that he was exploiting his discovery
in his usual self-aggrandizing way. It
was deeply true, of course, because Mr. MacGregor in the flesh was infinitely
less than Mr. MacGregor as symbol of the lost father. But the MacGregors knew nothing about symbols
and would never have understood even had it been explained to them. They were making a contradictory effort to at
once embrace the long lost son and at the same time reduce him to an
understandable level on which they could seize him not as the "long
lost" but simply as the son.
Whereas it was obvious to anyone with the least intelligence that this
son was not a son at all but a sort of spiritual father, a sort of Christ, I
might say, who was making a most valiant effort to accept as blood and flesh
what he had already all too clearly freed himself from.
I was surprised and flattered,
therefore, that this strange individual whom I looked upon with the warmest
admiration should elect to make me his confidant. By comparison I was very bookish,
intellectual, and worldly in a wrong way.
But almost immediately I discarded this side of my nature and allowed
myself to bask in the warm, immediate light which his profound and natural
intuition of things created. To come
into his presence gave me the sensation of being undressed, or rather peeled,
for it was much more than mere nakedness which he demanded of the person he was
talking to. In talking to me he
addressed himself to a me whose existence I had only dimly suspected, the me,
for example, which emerged when, suddenly, reading a book, I realized that I
had been dreaming. Few books had this
faculty of putting me into a trance, this trance of utter lucidity in which,
unknown to oneself, one makes the deepest resolutions. Roy Hamilton's conversations partook of this
quality. It made me more than ever
alert, preternaturally alert, without at the same time crumbling the fabric of
dream. He was appealing, in other words,
to the germ of the self, to the being who would eventually outgrow the naked
personality, the synthetic individuality, and leave me truly alone and solitary
in order to work out my own proper destiny.
Our talk was like a secret language in
the midst of which the others went to sleep or faded away like ghosts. For my friend MacGregor it was baffling and
irritating; he knew me more intimately than any of the other fellows but he had
never found anything in me to correspond to the character which I now presented
him with. He spoke of Roy Hamilton as a
bad influence, which again was deeply true since this unexpected meeting with
his half brother served more than anything else to alienate us. Hamilton opened my eyes and gave me new
values, and though later I was to lose the vision which he had bequeathed me,
nevertheless I could never again see the world, or my friends, as I had seen
them prior to his coming. Hamilton
altered me profoundly, as only a rare book, a rare personality, a rare
experience, can alter one. For the first
time in my life I understood what it was to experience a vital friendship and
yet not to feel enslaved or attached because of the experience. Never, after we parted, did I feel the need
of his actual presence; he had given himself completely and I possessed him
without being possessed. It was the
first clean, whole experience of friendship, and it was never duplicated by any
other friend. Hamilton was friendship
itself, rather than a friend. He was the
symbol personified and consequently entirely satisfactory, hence no longer
necessary to me. He himself understood
this thoroughly. Perhaps it was the fact
of having no father that pushed him along the road toward the discovery of the
self, which is the final process of identification with the world and the
realization consequently of the uselessness of ties. Certainly, as he stood then, in the full plenitude
of self-realization, no-one was necessary to him, least of all the father of
flesh and blood whom he vainly sought in Mr. MacGregor. It must have been in the nature of a last
test for him, his coming East and seeking out his real father, for when he said
goodbye, when he renounced Mr. MacGregor and Mr. Hamilton also, he was like a
man who had purified himself of all dross.
Never have I seen a man look so single, so utterly alone and alive and
confident of the future as Roy Hamilton looked when he said goodbye. And never have I seen such confusion and
misunderstanding as he left behind with the MacGregor family. It was as though he had died in their midst,
had been resurrected, and was taking leave of them as an utterly new, unknown
individual. I can see them now standing
in the areaway, their hands sort of foolishly, helplessly empty, weeping they
knew not why, unless it was because they were bereft of something they had
never possessed. I like to think of it
in just this way. They were bewildered
and bereft, and vaguely, so very vaguely aware that somehow a great opportunity
had been offered them which they had not the strength or the imagination to
seize. It was this which the foolish,
empty fluttering of the hands indicated to me; it was a gesture more painful to
witness than anything I can imagine. It
gave me the feeling of the horrible inadequacy of the world when brought face
to face with truth. It gave me the
feeling of the stupidity of the blood tie and of the love which is not
spiritually imbued.
I look back rapidly and I see myself
again in California. I am alone and I am
working like a slave in the orange grove as Chula Vista. Am I coming into my own? I think not.
I am a very wretched, forlorn, miserable person. I seem to have lost everything. In fact, I am hardly a person - I am more
nearly an animal. All day long I am
standing or walking behind the two jackasses which are hitched to my
sledge. I have no thoughts, no dreams,
no desires. I am thoroughly healthy and
empty. I am a nonentity. I am so thoroughly alive and healthy that I
am like the luscious deceptive fruit which hangs on the Californian trees. One more ray of sun and I will be
rotten. "Pourri avant d'être
mûri!"
Is it really me that is rotting
in this bright California sunshine? Is
there nothing left of me, of all that I was up to this moment? Let me think a bit.... There was
Arizona. I remember now that it was
already night when I first set foot on Arizona soil. Just light enough to catch the last glimpse
of a fading mesa. I am walking through
the main street of a little town whose name is lost. What am I doing here on this street, in this
town? Why, I am in love with Arizona, an
Arizona of the mind which I search for in vain with my two good eyes. In the train there was still with me the Arizona
which I had brought from New York - even after we had crossed the state
line. Was there not a bridge over a
canyon which had startled me out of my reverie?
A bridge such as I had never seen before, a natural bridge created by a
cataclysmic eruption thousands of years ago?
And over this bridge I had seen a man crossing, a man who looked like an
Indian, and he was riding a horse and there was a long saddlebag hanging beside
the stirrup. A natural millenary bridge
which in the dying sun with air so clear looked the youngest, newest bridge
imaginable. And over that bridge so
strong, so durable, there passed, praise be to God, just a man and a horse,
nothing more. This then was Arizona, and
Arizona was not a figment of the imagination but the imagination itself
dressed as a horse and rider. And this
was even more than the imagination itself because there was no aura of
ambiguity but only sharp and dead isolate the thing itself which was the dream
and the dreamer himself seated on horseback.
And as the train stops I put my foot down and my foot had put a deep
hole in the dream; I am in the Arizona town which is listed in the timetable
and it is only the geographical Arizona which anybody can visit who has the
money. I am walking along the main
street with a valise and I see hamburger sandwiches and real estate
offices. I feel so terribly deceived
that I begin to weep. It is dark now and
I stand at the end of the street, where the desert begins, and I weep like a
fool. Which me is this weeping? Why it is the new little me which had begun
to germinate back in Brooklyn and which is now in the midst of a vast desert
and doomed to perish. Now, Roy
Hamilton, I need you! I need you for
one moment, just one little moment, while I am falling apart. I need you because I was not quite ready to
do what I have done. And do I not
remember your telling me that it was unnecessary to make the trip, but to do it
if I must? Why didn't you persuade me
not to go? Ah, to persuade was never his
way. And to ask advice was never my
way. So here I am, bankrupt in the
desert, and the bridge which was real is behind me and what is unreal is before
me and Christ only knows I am so puzzled and bewildered that if I could sink
into the earth and disappear I would do so.
I look back rapidly and I see another
man who was left to perish quietly in the bosom of his family - my father. I understand better what happened to him if I
go back very, very far and think of such streets as Maujer, Conselyea, Humboldt
... Humboldt particularly. These streets
belonged to a neighbourhood which was not far removed from our neighbourhood
but which was different, more glamorous, more mysterious. I had been on Humboldt Street only once as a
child and I no longer remember the reason for that excursion unless it was to
visit some sick relative languishing in a German hospital. But the street itself made a most lasting
impression upon me; why I have not the faintest idea. It remains in my memory as the most
mysterious and the most promising street that I have ever seen. Perhaps when we were making ready to go my
mother had, as usual, promised something spectacular as a reward for
accompanying her. I was always being
promised things which never materialized.
Perhaps then, when I got to Humboldt Street and looked upon this new
world with astonishment, perhaps I forgot completely what had been promised me
and the street itself became the reward.
I remember that it was very wide and that there were high stoops, such
as I had never seen before, on either side of the street. I remember too that in a dressmaker's shop on
the first floor of one of these strange houses there was a bust in the window
with a tape measure slung around the neck and I know that I was greatly moved
by this sight. There was snow on the
ground but the sun was out strong and I recall vividly how about the bottoms of
the ash barrels which had been frozen into the ice there was then a little pool
of water left by the melting snow. The
whole street seemed to be melting in the radiant winter's sun. On the banisters of the high stoops the
mounds of snow which had formed such beautiful white pads were now beginning to
slide, leaving dark patches of the brownstone which was then much in vogue. The little glass signs of the dentists and
physicians, tucked away in the corners of the windows, gleamed brilliantly in
the noonday sun and gave me the feeling for the first time that these offices
were perhaps not the torture chambers which I knew them to be. I imagined, in my childish way, that here in
this neighbourhood, in this street particularly, people were more friendly,
more expansive, and of course infinitely more wealthy. I must have expanded greatly myself though
only a tot, because for the first time I was looking upon a street which seemed
devoid of terror. It was the sort of
street, ample, luxurious, gleaming, melting which later, when I began reading
Dostoyevsky, I associated with the thaws of St. Petersburg. Even the churches here were of a different
style of architecture; there was something semi-Oriental about them, something
grandiose and warm at the same time, which both frightened me and intrigued
me. On this broad, spacious street I saw
that the houses were set well back from the sidewalk, reposing in quiet and
dignity, and unmarred by the intercalation of shops and factories and
veterinary stables. I saw a street
composed of nothing but residences and I was filled with awe and
admiration. All this I remember and no
doubt it influenced me greatly, yet none of this is sufficient to account for
the strange power and attraction which the very mention of Humboldt Street
still evokes in me. Some years later I
went back in the night to look at this street again, and I was even more stirred
than when I had looked upon it for the first time. The aspect of the street of course had
changed, but it was night and the night is always less cruel than the day. Again I experienced the strange delight of spaciousness,
of that luxuriousness which was now somewhat faded but still redolent, still
assertive in a patchy way as once the brownstone banisters had asserted
themselves through the melting snow.
Most distinct of all, however, was the almost voluptuous sensation of
being on the verge of a discovery. Again
I was strongly aware of my mother's presence, of the big puffy sleeves of her
fur coat, of the cruel swiftness with which she had whisked me through the
streets years ago and of the stubborn tenacity with which I had feasted my eyes
on all that was new and strange. On the
occasion of this second visit I seemed to dimly recall another character out of
my childhood, the old housekeeper whom they called by the outlandish name of
Mrs. Kicking. I could not recall her
being taken ill but I did seem to recall the fact that we were paying her a
visit at the hospital where she was dying and that this hospital must have been
near Humboldt Street which was not dying but which was radiant in the melting
snow of a winter's noon. What then had
my mother promised me that I have never since been able to recall? Capable as she was of promising anything,
perhaps that day, in a fit of abstraction, she had promised something so
preposterous that even I with all my childish credulity could not quite swallow
it. And yet, if she had promised me the
moon, though I knew it was out of the question, I would have struggled to
invest her promise with a crumb of faith.
I wanted desperately everything that was promised me, and if, upon
reflection I realized that it was clearly impossible, I nevertheless tried in
my own way to grope for a means of making these promises realizable. That people could make promises without ever
having the least intention of fulfilling them was something unimaginable to me. Even when I was most cruelly deceived I still
believed; I believed that something extraordinary and quite beyond the other
person's power had intervened to make the promise null and void.
This question of belief, this old
promise that was never fulfilled, is what makes me think of my father who was
deserted at the moment of his greatest need.
Up to the time of his illness neither my father nor my mother had ever
shown any religious inclinations. Though
always upholding the church to others, they themselves never set foot in a
church from the time that they were married.
Those who attended church too regularly they looked upon as being a bit
daffy. The very way they said - "so
and so is religious" - was enough to convey the scorn and contempt, or
else the pity, which they felt for such individuals. If now and then, because of us children, the
pastor called at the house unexpectedly, he was treated as one to whom they
were obliged to defer out of ordinary politeness but whom they had nothing in
common with, whom they were a little suspicious of, in fact, as representative
of a species midway between a fool and a charlatan. To us, for example, they would say "a
lovely man", but when their cronies came round and the gossip began to
fly, then one would hear an entirely different brand of comment, accompanied usually
by peels of scornful laughter and sly mimicry.
My father fell mortally ill as a
result of swearing off too abruptly. All
his life he had been a jolly hail fellow well met: he had put on a rather
becoming paunch, his cheeks were well filled out and red as a beet, his manners
were easy and indolent, and he seemed destined to live on into a ripe old age,
sound and healthy as a nut. But beneath
this smooth and jolly exterior things were not at all well. His affairs were in bad shape, the debts were
piling up, and already some of his older friends were beginning to drop
him. My mother's attitude was what
worried him most. She saw things in a
black light and she took no trouble to conceal it. Now and then she became hysterical and went
at him hammer and tongs, swearing at him in the vilest language and smashing
the dishes and threatening to run away for good. The upshot of it was that he arose one
morning determined never to touch another drop.
Nobody believed that he meant it seriously; there had been others in the
family who swore off, who went on the water wagon, as they used to say, but who
quickly tumbled off again. No-one in the
family, and they had all tried at different times, had ever become a successful
teetotaller. But my old man was different. Where or how he got the strength to maintain
his resolution, God only knows. It seems
incredible to me, because had I been in his boots myself I would have drunk
myself to death. Not the old man,
however. This was the first time in his
life he had ever shown any resolution about anything. My mother was so astounded that, idiot that
she was, she began to make fun of him, to quip him about his strength of will
which had heretofore been so lamentably weak.
Still he stuck to his guns. His
drinking pals faded away rather quickly.
In short, he soon found himself almost completely isolated. That must have cut him to the quick, for
before very many weeks had passed, he became deathly ill and a consultation was
held. He recovered a bit, enough to get
out of bed and walk about, but still a very sick man. He was supposed to be suffering from ulcers
of the stomach, though nobody was quite sure exactly what ailed him. Everybody understood, however, that he had
made a mistake in swearing off so abruptly.
It was too late, however, to return to a temperate mode of living. His stomach was so weak that it wouldn't even
hold a plate of soup. In a couple of
months he was almost a skeleton. And
old. He looked like Lazarus raised from
the grave.
One day my mother took me aside and
with tears in her eyes begged me to go visit the family doctor and learn the
truth about my father's condition. Dr.
Rausch had been the family physician for years.
He was a typical "Dutchman" of the old school, rather weary
and crotchety now after years of practising and yet unable to tear himself
completely away from his patients. In
his stupid Teutonic way he tried to scare the less serious patients away, tried
to argue them into health, as it were.
When you walked into his office he didn't even bother to look up at you,
but kept on writing or whatever it might be that he was doing while firing
random questions at you in a perfunctory and insulting manner. He behaved so rudely, so suspiciously, that,
ridiculous as it may sound, it almost appeared
as though he expected his patients to bring with them not only their
ailments, but the proof of their ailments. He made one feel that there was not only
something wrong physically but that there was also something wrong
mentally. "You only imagine
it" was his favourite phrase, which he flung out with a nasty, leering
gibe. Knowing him as I did, and
detesting him heartily, I came prepared, that is, with the laboratory analysis
of my father's stool. I had also an
analysis of his urine in my overcoat pocket, should he demand further proofs.
When I was a boy Dr. Rausch had shown
some affection for me, but ever since the day I went to him with a dose of clap
he had lost confidence in me and always showed a sour puss when I stuck my head
through the door. Like father like son
was his motto, and I was therefore not at all surprised when, instead of giving
me the information which I demanded, he began to lecture me and the old man at
the same time for our way of living.
"You can't go against Nature," he said with a wry, solemn
face, not looking at me as he uttered the words but making some useless
notation in his big ledger. I walked
quietly up to his desk, stood beside him a moment without making a sound, and
then, when he looked up with his usual aggrieved, irritated expression, I said
- "I didn't come here for moral instruction ... I want to know what's the
matter with my father." At this he
jumped up and turning to me with his most severe look, he said, like the
stupid, brutal Dutchman that he was: "Your father hasn't a chance of
recovering; he'll be dead in less than six months." I said "Thank you, that's all I wanted
to know," and I made for the door.
Then, as though he felt that he had committed a blunder, he strode after
me heavily and, putting his hand on my shoulder, he tried to modify the
statement by hemming and hawing and saying I don't mean it is absolutely
certain he will die, etc., which I cut short by opening the door and yelling at
him, at the top of my lungs, so that his patients in the anteroom would hear it
- "I think you're a goddamned old fart and I hope you croak, good
night!"
When I got home I modified the
doctor's report somewhat by saying that my father's condition was very serious
but that if he took good care of himself he would pull through all right. This seemed to cheer the old man up
considerably. Of his own accord he took
to a diet of milk and zwieback which, whether it was the best thing or not,
certainly did him no harm. He remained a
sort of semi-invalid for about a year, becoming more and more calm inwardly as
time went on and apparently determined to let nothing disturb his peace of
mind, nothing, no matter if everything went to hell. As he grew stronger he took to making a daily
promenade to the cemetery which was nearby.
There he would sit on a bench in the sun and watch the old people potter
around the graves. The proximity to the
grave, instead of rendering him morbid, seemed to cheer him up. He seemed, if anything, to have become
reconciled to the idea of eventual death, a fact which no doubt he had
heretofore refused to look in the face.
Often he came home with flowers which he had picked in the cemetery, his
face beaming with a quiet, serene joy, and seating himself in the armchair he
would recount the conversation which he had had that morning with one of the
other valetudinarians who frequented the cemetery. It was obvious after a time that he was
really enjoying his sequestration, or rather not just enjoying it, but
profiting deeply from the experience in a way that was beyond my mother's
intelligence to fathom. He was getting
lazy, was the way she expressed it.
Sometimes she put it even more extremely, tapping her head with her
forefinger as she spoke, but not saying anything overtly because of my sister
who was without question a little wrong in the head.
And then one day, through the courtesy
of an old widow who used to visit her son's grave every day and was, as my
mother would say, "religious", he made the acquaintance of a minister
belonging to one of the neighbouring churches.
This was a momentous event in the old man's life. Suddenly he blossomed forth and that little
sponge of a soul which had almost atrophied through lack of nourishment took on
such astounding proportions that he was almost unrecognizable. The man who was responsible for this
extraordinary change in the old man was in no way unusual himself; he was a
Congregationalist minister attached to a modest little parish which adjoined
our neighbourhood. His one virtue was
that he kept his religion in the background.
The old man quickly fell into a sort of boyish idolatry; he talked of
nothing but this minister whom he considered his friend. As he had never looked at the Bible in his
life, nor any other book for that matter, it was rather startling, to say the
least, to hear him say a little prayer before eating. He performed this little ceremony in a
strange way, much the way one takes a tonic, for example. If he recommended me to read a certain
chapter of the Bible he would add very seriously - "it will do you
good". It was a new medicine which
he had discovered, a sort of quack remedy which was guaranteed to cure all ills
and which one might take even if he had no ills, because in any case it could
certainly do no harm. He attended all
the services, all the functions which were held at the church, and between
times, when out for a stroll, for example, he would stop off at the minister's
home and have a little chat with him. If
the minister said that the president was a good soul and should be re-elected
the old man would repeat to everyone exactly what the minister had said and
urge them to vote for the president's re-election. Whatever the minister said was right and just
and nobody could gainsay him. There's no
doubt that it was an education for the old man.
If the minister had mentioned the pyramids in the course of his sermon
the old man immediately began to inform himself about the pyramids. He would talk about the pyramids as though
everyone owed it to himself to become acquainted with the subject. The minister had said that the pyramids were
one of the crowning glories of man, ergo not to know about the pyramids was to
be disgracefully ignorant, almost sinful.
Fortunately the minister didn't dwell much on the subject of sin; he was
of the modern type of preacher who prevailed on his flock more by arousing
their curiosity than by appealing to their conscience. His sermons were more like a night-school
extension course and for such as the old man, therefore, highly entertaining
and stimulating. Every now and then the
male members of the congregation were invited to a little blowout which was
intended to demonstrate that the good pastor was just an ordinary man like
themselves and could, on occasion, enjoy a hearty meal and even a glass of
beer. Moreover it was observed that he
even sang - not religious hymns, but jolly little songs of the popular
variety. Putting two and two together
one might even infer from such jolly behaviour that now and then he enjoyed
getting a little piece of tail - always in moderation, to be sure. That was the word that was balsam to the old
man's lacerated soul - "moderation".
It was like discovering a new sign in the zodiac. And though he was still too ill to attempt a return
to even a moderate way of living, nevertheless it did his soul good. And so, when Uncle Ned, who was continually
going on the water wagon and continually falling off it again, came round to
the house one evening the old man delivered him a little lecture on the virtue
of moderation. Uncle Ned was, at that
moment, on the water wagon and so, when the old man, moved by his own
words, suddenly went to the sideboard to fetch a decanter of wine everyone was
shocked. No-one had ever dared invite
Uncle Ned to drink when he had sworn off; to venture such a thing constituted a
serious breach of loyalty. But the old
man did it with such conviction that no-one could take offence, and the result
was that Uncle Ned took a small glass of wine and went home that evening
without stopping off at a saloon to quench his thirst. It was an extraordinary happening and there
was much talk about it for days after.
In fact, Uncle Ned began to act a bit queer from that day on. It seems that he went the next day to the wine
store and bought a bottle of sherry which he emptied into the decanter. He placed the decanter on the sideboard, just
as he had seen the old man do, and, instead of polishing it off in one swoop,
he contented himself with a glassful at a time - "just a thimbleful",
as he put it. His behaviour was so
remarkable that my aunt, who was unable to quite believe her eyes, came one day
to the house and held a long conversation with the old man. She asked him, among other things, to invite
the minister to the house some evening so that Uncle Ned might have the
opportunity of falling under his beneficent influence. The long and short of it was that Ned was
soon taken into the fold and, like the old man, seemed to be thriving under the
experience. Things went fine until the
day of the picnic. That day,
unfortunately, was an unusually warm day and, what with the games, the
excitement, the hilarity, Uncle Ned developed an extraordinary thirst. It was not until he was three sheets to the
wind that someone observed the regularity and the frequency with which he was
running to the beer keg. It was then too
late. Once in that condition he was
unmanageable. Even the minister could do
nothing with him. Ned broke away from
the picnic quietly and went on a little rampage which lasted for three days and
nights. Perhaps it would have lasted
longer had he not gotten into a fist fight down at the waterfront where he was
found lying unconscious by the night-watchman.
He was taken to the hospital with a concussion of the brain from which
he never recovered. Returning from the
funeral the old man said with a dry eye - "Ned didn't know what it was to
be temperate. It was his own fault. Anyway, he's better off now...."
And as though to prove to the minister
that he was not made of the same stuff as Uncle Ned he became even more
assiduous in his churchly duties. He had
gotten himself promoted to the position of "elder", an office of
which he was extremely proud and by grace of which he was permitted during the
Sunday services to aid in taking up the collection. To think of my old man marching up the aisle
of a Congregational church with a collection box in his hand; to think of him
standing reverently before the altar with this collection box while the
minister blessed the offering, seems to me now something so incredible that I
scarcely know what to say of it. I like
to think, by contrast, of the man he was when I was just a kid and I would meet
him at the ferry house of a Saturday noon.
Surrounding the entrance to the ferry house there were then three
saloons which of a Saturday noon were filled with men who had stopped off for a
little bite at the free lunch counter and a schooner of beer. I can see the old man, as he stood in his
thirtieth year, a healthy, genial soul with a smile for everyone and a pleasant
quip to pass the time of day, see him with his arm resting on the bar, his
straw hat tipped on the back of his head, his left hand raised to down the
foaming suds. My eye was then on about a
level with his heavy gold chain which was spread crosswise over his vest; I
remember the shepherd plaid suit which he wore in midsummer and the distinction
it gave him among the other men at the bar who were not lucky enough to have
been born tailors. I remember the way he
would dip his hand into the big glass bowl on the free lunch counter and hand
me a few pretzels, saying at the same time that I ought to go and have a look
at the scoreboard in the window of the Brooklyn Times nearby. And perhaps, as I ran out of the saloon to
see who was winning, a strong of cyclists would pass close to the curb, holding
to the little strip of asphalt which had been laid down expressly for
them. Perhaps the ferry boat was just
coming into the dock and I would stop a moment to watch the men in uniform as
they pulled away at the big wooden wheels to which the chains were
attached. As the gates were thrown open
and the planks laid down and mob would rush through the shed and make for the
saloons which adorned the nearest corners.
Those were the days when the old man knew the meaning of
"moderation", when he drank because he was truly thirsty, and to down
a schooner of beer by the ferry house was a man's prerogative. Then it was as Melville has so well said:
"Feed all things with food convenient for them - that is, if the food be
procurable. The food of thy soul is light and space; feed it then on light and
space. But the food of the body is
champagne and oysters; feed it then on champagne and oysters; and so shall it
merit a joyful resurrection, if there is any to be." Yes, then it seems to me that the old man's
soul had not yet shrivelled up, that it was endlessly bounded by light and
space and that his body, heedless of the resurrection, was feeding on all that
was convenient and procurable - if not champagne and oysters, at least good
lager beer and pretzels. Then his body
had not been condemned, nor his way of living, nor his absence of faith. Nor was he yet surrounded by vultures, but
only by good comrades, ordinary mortals like himself who looked neither high
nor low but straight ahead, the eye always fixed on the horizon and content
with the sight thereof.
And now, as a battered wreck, he has
made himself into an elder of the church and he stands before the altar, grey
and bent and withered, while the minister gives his blessing to the measly
collection which will go to make a new bowling alley. Perhaps it was necessary for him to
experience the birth of the soul, to feed this spongelike growth with that
light and space which the Congregational church offered. But what a poor substitute for a man who had
known the joys of that food which the body craved and which, without the pangs
of conscience, had flooded even his spongelike soul with a light and space that
was ungodly but radiant and terrestrial. I think again of his seemly little
"corporation" over which the thick gold chain was strung and I think
that with that death of his paunch there was left to survive only the sponge of
a soul, a sort of appendix to his own bodily death. I think of the minister who had swallowed him
up as a sort of inhuman sponge eater, the keeper of a wigwam hung with
spiritual scalps. I think of what
subsequently ensued as a kind of tragedy in sponges, for though he promised
light and space, no sooner had he passed out of my father's life than the whole
airy edifice came tumbling down.
It all came about in the most ordinary
lifelike way. One evening, after the
customary men's meeting, the old man came home with a sorrowful
countenance. They had been informed that
evening that the minister was taking leave of them. He had been offered a more advantageous
position in the township of New Rochelle and, despite his great reluctance to
desert his flock, he had decided to accept the offer. He had of course accepted it only after much
meditation - as a duty, in other words.
It would mean a better income, to be sure, but that was nothing compared
to the grave responsibilities which he was about to assume. They had need of him in New Rochelle and he
was obeying the voice of his conscience.
All this the old man related with the same unctuousness that the
minister had given to his words. But it
was immediately apparent that the old man was hurt. He couldn't see why New Rochelle could not
find another minister. He said it wasn't
fair to tempt the minister with a bigger salary. We need him here, he said ruefully,
with such sadness that I almost felt like weeping. He added that he was going to have a
heart-to-heart talk with the minister, that if anybody could persuade him to
remain it was he. In the days that
followed he certainly did his best, no doubt much to the minister's
discomfiture. It was distressing to see
the blank look on his face when he returned from these conferences. He had the expression of a man who was trying
to grasp at a straw to keep from drowning.
Naturally the minister remained adamant.
Even when the old man broke down and wept before him he could not be
moved to change his mind. That was the
turning point. From that moment on the
old man underwent a radical change. He
seemed to grow bitter and querulous. He
not only forgot to say grace at the table but he abstained from going to
church. He resumed his old habit of
going to the cemetery and basking on a bench.
He became morose, then melancholy, and finally there grew into his face
an expression of permanent sadness, a sadness encrusted with disillusionment,
with despair, with futility. He never
again mentioned the man's name, nor the church, nor any of the elders with whom
he had once associated. If he happened
to pass them in the street he bade them the time of day without stopping to
shake hands. He read the newspapers
diligently, from back to front, without comment. Even the ads he read, every one, as though
trying to block up a huge hole which was constantly before his eyes. I never heard him laugh again. At the most he would give us a sort of weary,
hopeless smile, a smile which faded instantly and left us with the spectacle of
a life extinct. He was dead as a crater,
dead beyond all hope of resurrection.
And not even had he been given a new stomach, or a tough new intestinal
tract, would it have been possible to restore him to life again. He had passed beyond the lure of champagne
and oysters, beyond the need of light and space. He was like the dodo which buries its head in
the sand and whistles out of its asshole.
When he went to sleep in the Morris chair his lower jaw dropped like a
hinge that has become unloosened; he had always been a goon snorer but now he
snored louder than ever, like a man who was in truth dead to the world. His snores, in fact, were very much like the
death rattle, except that they were punctuated by an intermittent long drawn
out whistling of the peanut stand variety.
He seemed, when he snored, to be chopping the whole universe to bits so
that we who succeeded him would have enough kindling wood to last a
lifetime. It was the most horrible and
fascinating snoring that I have ever listened to: it was stertorous and
stentorian, morbid and grotesque; at times it was like an accordion collapsing,
at other times like a frog croaking in the swamps; after a prolonged whistle
there sometimes followed a frightful wheeze as if he were giving up the ghost,
then it would settle back again into a regular rise and fall, a steady hollow
chopping as though he stood stripped to the waist, with axe in hand, before the
accumulated madness of all the bric-à-brac of this world. What gave these performances a slightly
crazed quality was the mummy-like expression of the face in which the big
blubber lips alone came to life; they were like the gills of a shark snoozing
on the surface of the still ocean.
Blissfully he snored away on the bosom of the deep, never disturbed by a
dream or a draught, never fitful, never plagued by an unsatisfied desire; when
he closed his eyes and collapsed, the light of the world went out and he was
alone as before birth, a cosmos gnashing itself to bits. He sat there in his
Morris chair as Jonah must have sat in the body of the whale, secure in the
last refuge of a black hole, expecting nothing, desiring nothing, not dead but
buried alive, swallowed whole and unscathed, the big blubber lips gently
flapping with the flux and reflux of the white breath of emptiness. He was in the land of Nod searching for Cain
and Abel but encountering no living soul, no word, no sign. He drove with the whale and scraped the icy
black bottom; he covered furlongs at top speed, guided only by the fleecy manes
of undersea beasts. He was the smoke
that curled out of the chimney tops, the heavy layers of cloud that obscured
the moon, the thick slime that made the slippery linoleum floor of the ocean
depths. He was deader than dead because
alive and empty, beyond all hope of resurrection in that he had travelled beyond
the limits of light and space and securely nestled himself in the black hole of
nothingness. He was more to be envied
than pitied, for his sleep was not a lull or an interval but sleep itself which
is the deep and hence sleeping ever deepening, deeper and deeper in sleep
sleeping, the sleep of the deep in deepest sleep, at the nethermost depth full
silent, the deepest and sleepest sleep of sleep's sweet sleep. He was asleep. He is asleep. He will he asleep. Sleep.
Sleep. Father, sleep, I beg you,
for we who are awake are boiling in horror....
With the world fluttering away on the
last wings of a hollow snore I see the door opening to admit Grover
Watrous. "Christ be with you!"
he says, dragging his clubfoot along. He
is quite a young man now and he has found God.
There is only one God and Grover Watrous has found Him and so there is
nothing more to say except that everything has to be said over again in Grover
Watrous' new God-language. This bright
new language which God invented especially for Grover Watrous intrigues me
enormously, first because I had always considered Grover to be a hopeless
dunce, second because I notice that there are no longer any tobacco stains on
his agile fingers. When we were boys
Grover lived next door to us. He would
visit me from time to time in order to practise a duet with me. Though he was only fourteen or fifteen he
smoked like a trooper. His mother could
do nothing against it because Grover was a genius and a genius had to have a
little liberty, particularly when he was also unfortunate enough to have been
born with a clubfoot. Grover was the
kind of genius who thrives on dirt. He
not only had nicotine stains on his fingers but he had filthy black nails which
would break under hours of practising, imposing upon young Grover the ravishing
obligation of tearing them off with his teeth.
Grover used to spit out broken nails along with the bits of tobacco
which got caught in his teeth. It was
delightful and stimulating. The
cigarettes burned holes into the piano and, as my mother critically observed,
also tarnished the keys. When
Grover took leave the parlour stank like the backroom of an undertaker's
establishment. It stank of dead
cigarettes, sweat, dirty linen, Grover's oaths and the dry heat left by the
dying notes of Weber, Berlioz, Liszt and Co.
It stank too of Grover's running ear and of his decaying teeth. It stank of his mother's pampering and
whimpering. His own home was a stable
divinely suited to his genius, but the parlour of our home was like the waiting
room of a mortician's office and Grover was a lout who didn't even know enough
to wipe his feet. In the wintertime his
nose ran like a sewer and, Grover being too engrossed in his music to bother
wiping his nose, his cold not was left to trickle down until it reached his
lips where it was sucked in by a very long white tongue. To the flatulent music of Weber, Berlioz,
Liszt and Co. it added a piquant sauce which made those empty devils palatable. Every other word from Grover's lips was an
oath, his favourite expression being - "I can't get the fucking thing
right!" Sometimes he grew so
annoyed that he would take his fists and pound the piano like a madman. It was his genius coming out the wrong
way. His mother, in fact, used to attach
a great deal of importance to these fits of anger; they convinced her that he
had something in him. Other people
simply said that Grover was impossible.
Much was forgiven, however, because of his clubfoot. Grover was sly enough to exploit this bad
foot; whenever he wanted anything badly he developed pains in the foot. Only the piano seemed to have no respect for
this maimed member. The piano therefore
was an object to be cursed and kicked and pounded to bits. If he were in good form, on the other hand,
Grover would remain at the piano for hours on end; in fact, you couldn't drag
him away. On such occasions his mother
would go stand in the grass plot in front of the house and waylay the
neighbours in order to squeeze a few words of praise out of them. She would be so carried away by her son's
"divine" playing that she would forget to cook the evening meal. The old man, who worked in the sewers,
usually came home grumpy and famished.
Sometimes he would march directly upstairs to the parlour and yank Grover
off the piano stool. In the old man's
opinion Grover was just a laze son of a bitch who could make a lot of
noise. Now and then he threatened to
chuck the fucking piano out of the window - and Grover with it. If the mother were rash enough to interfere
during these scenes he would give her a clout and tell her to go piss up the
end of a rope. He had his moments of
weakness too, of course, and in such a mood he might ask Grover what the hell
he was rattling away at, and if the latter said, for example, "why, the
Sonata Pathétique", the old buzzard would say - "What the hell
does that mean? Why in Christ's name
don't they put it down in plain English?"
The old man's ignorance was even harder for Grover to bear than his
brutality. He was heartily ashamed of
his old man and when the latter was out of sight he would ridicule him
unmercifully. When he got a little older
he used to insinuate that he wouldn't have been born with a clubfoot if the old
man hadn't been such a mean bastard. He
said that the old man must have kicked his mother in the belly when she was
pregnant. This alleged kick in the belly
must have affected Grover in diverse ways, for when he had grown up to be quite
a young man, as I was saying, he suddenly took to God with such a passion that
there was no blowing your nose before him without first asking God's
permission.
Grover's conversion followed right
upon the old man's deflation, which is why I am reminded of it. Nobody had seen the Watrouses for a number of
years and then, right in the midst of a bloody snore, you might say, in pranced
Grover scattering benedictions and calling upon God as his witness as he rolled
up his sleeves to deliver us from evil.
What I noted first in him was the change in his personal appearance; he
had been washed clean in the blood of the Lamb.
He was so immaculate, indeed, that there was almost a perfume emanating
from him. His speech too had been
cleaned up; instead of wild oaths there was now nothing but blessings and
invocations. It was not a conversation
which he held with us but a monologue in which, if there were any questions, he
answered them himself. As he took the
chair which was offered him he said with the nimbleness of a jack rabbit that
God had given his only beloved Son in order that we might enjoy life
everlasting. Did we really want this
life everlasting - or were we simply
going to wallow in the joys of the flesh and die without knowing salvation? The incongruity of mentioning the "joys
of the flesh" to an aged couple, one of whom was sound asleep and snoring,
never struck him, to be sure. He was so
alive and jubilant in the first flush of God's merciful grace that he must have
forgotten that my sister was dippy, for, without even inquiring how she had
been, he began to harangue her in this newfound spiritual palaver to which she
was entirely impervious because, as I say, she was minus so many buttons that
if he had been talking about chopped spinach it would have been just as
meaningful to her. A phrase like
"the pleasures of the flesh" meant to her something like a beautiful
day with a red parasol. I could see by
the way she sat on the edge of her chair and bobbed her head that she was only
waiting for him to catch his breath in order to inform him that the pastor - her
pastor, who was an Episcopalian - had just returned from Europe and that they
were going to have a fair in the basement of the church where she would have a
little booth fitted up with dollies from the five-and-ten-cent store. In fact, no sooner had he paused a moment
than she let loose - about the canals of Venice, the snow in the Alps, the dog
carts in Brussels, the beautiful liverwurst in Munich. She was not only religious, my sister, but
she was clean daffy. Grover had just
slipped in something about having seen a new heaven and a new earth ... for
the first heaven and the first earth were passed away, he said, mumbling
the words in a sort of hysterical glissando in order to unburden himself of an
oracular message about the New Jerusalem which God had established on earth and
in which he, Grover Watrous, once foul of speech and marred by a twisted foot,
had found the peace and the calm of the righteous. "There shall be no more
death..." he started to shout when my sister leaned forward and asked
him very innocently if he liked to bowl because the pastor had just installed a
beautiful new bowling alley in the basement of the church and she knew he would
be pleased to see Grover because he was a lovely man and he was kind to the
poor. Grover said that it was a sin to
bowl and that he belonged to no church because the churches were godless; he
had even given up playing the piano because God needed him for higher
things. "He that overcometh
shall inherit all things," he added, "and I will be his God,
and he shall be my son." He
paused again to blow his nose in a beautiful white handkerchief, whereupon my
sister took the occasion to remind him that in the old days he always had a
running nose but that he never wiped it.
Grover listened to her very solemnly and then remarked that he had been
cured of many evil ways. At this point
the old man woke up and, seeing Grover sitting beside him large as life, he was
quite startled and for a moment or two he was not sure, it seemed, whether
Grover was a morbid phenomenon of dream or an hallucination, but the sight of
the clean handkerchief brought him quickly to his wits. "Oh, it's you!" he exclaimed. "The Watrous boy, what? Well, what in the name of all that's holy are
you doing here?"
"I came in the name of the Holy
of Holies," said Grover unabashed.
"I have been purified by the death of Calvary and I am here in
Christ's sweet name that ye may be redeemed and walk in light and power and
glory."
The old man looked dazed. "Well, what's come over you?" he
said, giving Grover a feeble, consolatory smile. My mother had just come in from the kitchen
and had taken a stand behind Grover's chair.
By making a wry grimace with her mouth she was trying to convey to the
old man that Grover was cracked. Even my
sister seemed to realize that there was something wrong with him, especially
when he had refused to visit the new bowling alley which her lovely pastor had
expressly installed for young men such as Grover and his likes.
What was the matter with Grover? Nothing, except that his feet were solidly
planted on the fifth foundation of the great wall of the Holy City of
Jerusalem, the fifth foundation made entirely of sardonyx, whence he commanded
a view of a pure river of the water of life issuing from the throne of God. And the sight of this river of life was to
Grover like the bite of a thousand fleas in his lower colon. Not until he had run at least seven times
around the earth would he be able to sit quietly on his ass [arse] and observe
the blindness and the indifference of men with something like equanimity. He was alive and purged, and though to the
eyes of the sluggish, sluttish spirits who are sane he was "cracked",
to me he seemed infinitely better off this way than before. He was a pest who could do you no harm. If you listened to him long enough you became
somewhat purged yourself, though perhaps unconvinced. Grover's bright new language always caught me
in the midriff and through inordinate laughter cleansed me of the dross
accumulated by the sluggish sanity about me.
He was alive as Ponce de Leon had hoped to be alive; alive as only a few
men have ever been. And being
unnaturally alive he didn't mind in the least if you laughed in his face, nor
would he have minded if you had stolen the few possessions which were his. He was alive and empty, which is so close to
Godhead that it is crazy.
With his feet solidly planted on the
great wall of the New Jerusalem, Grover knew a joy which is
incommensurable. Perhaps if he had not
been born with a clubfoot he would not have known this incredible joy. Perhaps it was well that his father had
kicked the mother in the belly while Grover was still in the womb. Perhaps it was that kick in the belly which
had sent Grover soaring, which made him so thoroughly alive and awake that even
in his sleep he was delivering God's messages.
The harder he laboured the less he was fatigued. He had no more worries, no regrets, no
clawing memories. He recognized no
duties, no obligations, except to God.
And what did God expect of him?
Nothing, nothing ... except to sing His praises. God only asked of Grover Watrous that he
reveal himself alive in the flesh. He
only asked of him to be more and more alive.
And when fully alive Grover was a voice and this voice was a flood which
made all dead things into chaos and this chaos in turn became the mouth of the
world in the very centre of which was the verb to be. In the beginning there was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and the word was God. So God was this strange little infinitive
which is all there is - and is it not enough?
For Grover it was more than enough: it was everything. Starting from the Verb what difference did it
make which road he travelled? To leave
the Verb was to travel away from the centre, to erect a Babel. Perhaps God had deliberately maimed Grover
Watrous in order to hold him to the centre, to the Verb. By an invisible cord God held Grover Watrous
to his stake which ran through the heart of the world and Grover became the fat
goose which laid a golden egg every day....
Why do I write of Grover Watrous? Because I have met thousands of people and
none of them were alive in the way that Grover was. Most of them were more intelligent, many of
them were brilliant, some of them were even famous, but none were alive and
empty as Grover was. Grover was
inexhaustible. He was like a bit of
radium which, even if buried under a mountain, does not lose its power to give
off energy. I had seen plenty of
so-called energetic people before - is not America filled with them? -
but never in the shape of a human being, a reservoir of energy. And what created this inexhaustible reservoir
of energy? An illumination. Yes, it happened in the twinkling of an eye,
which is the only way that anything important ever does happen. Overnight all Grover's preconceived values
were thrown overboard. Suddenly, just
like that, he ceased moving as other people move. He put the brakes on and he kept the motor
running. If once, like other people, he
had thought it was necessary to get somewhere, now he knew that somewhere was
anywhere and therefore right here and so why move? Why not park the car and keep the motor
running? Meanwhile the earth itself is
turning and Grover knew it was turning and knew that he was turning with
it. Is the earth getting anywhere? Grover must undoubtedly have asked himself
this question and must undoubtedly have satisfied himself that it was not
getting anywhere. Who, then, had said
that we must get somewhere? Grover would
inquire of this one and that where they were heading for and the strange thing
was that although they were all heading for their individual destinations none
of them ever stopped to reflect that the one inevitable destination for all
alike was the grave. This puzzled Grover
because nobody could convince him that death was not a certainty, whereas
anybody could convince anybody else that any other destination was an
uncertainty. Convinced of the dead
certainty of death Grover suddenly became tremendously and overwhelmingly
alive. For the first time in his life he
began to live, and at the same time the clubfoot dropped completely out of his
consciousness. This is a strange thing,
too, when you come to think of it, because the clubfoot, just like death, was
another ineluctable fact. Yet the
clubfoot dropped out of mind, or, what is more important, all that had been
attached to the clubfoot. In the same
way, having accepted death, death too dropped out of Grover's mind. Having seized on the single certainty of
death all the uncertainties vanished.
The rest of the world was now limping along with clubfooted
uncertainties and Grover Watrous alone was free and unimpeded. Grover Watrous was the personification of certainty. He may have been wrong, but he was
certain. And what good does it do to
be right if one has to limp along with a clubfoot? Only a few men have ever realized the truth
of this and their names have become very great names. Grover Watrous will probably never be known,
but he is very great just the same. This
is probably the reason why I write about him - just the fact that I had enough
sense to realize that Grover had achieved greatness even though nobody else
will admit it. At the time I simply
thought that Grover was a harmless fanatic, yes, a little "cracked",
as my mother insinuated. But every man
who has caught the truth of certitude was a little cracked and it is only these
men who have accomplished anything for the world. Other men, other great men, have
destroyed a little here and there, but these few whom I speak of, and among
whom I include Grover Watrous, were capable of destroying everything in order
that the truth might live. Usually these
men were born with an impediment, with a clubfoot, so to speak, and by a strange
irony it is only the clubfoot which men remember. If a man like Grover becomes depossessed of
his clubfoot, the world says that he has become "possessed". This is the logic of incertitude and its fruit
is misery. Grover was the only truly
joyous being I have ever met in my life and this, therefore, is a little
monument which I am erecting in his memory, in the memory of his joyous
certitude. It is a pity that he had to
use Christ for a crutch, but then what does it matter how one comes by the truth
so long as one pounces upon it and lives by it?
AN INTERLUDE
Confusion is a word we have invented
for an order which is not understood. I
like to dwell on this period when things were taking shape because the order,
if it were understood, must have been dazzling.
In the first place there was Hymie, Hymie the bullfrog, and there were
also his wife's ovaries which had been rotting away for a considerable
time. Hymie was completely wrapped up in
is wife's rotting ovaries. It was the
daily topic of conversation; it took precedence now over the cathartic pills
and the coated tongue. Hymie dealt in
"sexual proverbs", as he called them.
Everything he said began from or led up to the ovaries. Despite everything he was still nicking it
off with his wife - prolonged snakelike copulations in which he would smoke a
cigarette or two before un-cunting. He
would endeavour to explain to me how the pus from the rotting ovaries put her
in heat. She had always been a good fuck,
but now she was better than ever. Once
the ovaries were ripped out there'd be no telling how she'd take it. She seemed to realize that too. Ergo, fuck away! Every night, after the dishes were cleared
away, they'd strip down in their little birdlike apartment and lie together
like a couple of snakes. He tried to
describe to me on a number of occasions - the way she fucked. It was like an oyster inside, an oyster with
soft teeth that nibbled away at him.
Sometimes it felt as though he were right inside her womb, so soft and
fluffy it was, and those soft teeth biting away at his pecker and making him
delirious. They used to lie
scissors-fashion and look up at the ceiling.
To keep from coming he would think about the office, about the little
worries which plagued him and kept his bowels tied up in a knot. In between orgasms he would let his mind
dwell on someone else, so that when she'd start working on him again he might
imagine he was having a brand new fuck with a brand new cunt. He used to arrange it so that he could look
out the window while it was going on. He
was getting so adept at it that he could undress a woman on the boulevard there
under his window and transport her to the bed; not only that, but he could
actually make her change places with his wife, all without un-cunting. Sometimes he'd fuck away like that for a
couple of hours and never even bother to shoot off. Why waste it! he would say.
Steve Romero, on the other hand, had a
hell of a time holding it in. Steve was
built like a bull and he scattered his seed freely. We used to compare notes sometimes sitting in
the chop suey joint around the corner from the office. It was a strange atmosphere. Maybe it was because there was no wine. Maybe it was the funny little black mushrooms
they served us. Anyway it wasn't
difficult to get started on the subject.
By the time Steve met us he would already have had his workout, a shower
and a rubdown. He was clean inside and
out. Almost a perfect specimen of a
man. Not very bright, to be sure, but a
good egg, a companion. Hymie, on the
other hand, was like a toad. He seemed
to come to the table direct from the swamps where he had passed a mucky
day. Filth rolled off his lips like
honey. In fact, you couldn't call it
filth, in his case, because there wasn't any other ingredient with which you
might compare it. It was all one fluid,
a slimy, sticky substance made entirely of sex.
When he looked at his food he saw it as potential sperm; if the weather
were warm he would say it was good for the balls; if he took a trolley ride he
knew in advance that the rhythmic movement of the trolley would stimulate his
appetite, would give him a slow, "personal" hard on, as he put
it. Why "personal" I never
found out, but that was his expression.
He liked to go out with us because we were always reasonably sure of
picking up something decent. Left to
himself he didn't always fare so well.
With us he got a change of meat - Gentile cunt, as he put it. He liked Gentile cunt. Smelled sweeter, he said. Laughed easier too.... Sometimes in the very
midst of things. The one thing he
couldn't tolerate was dark meat. It
amazed and disgusted him to see me travelling around with Valeska. Once he asked me if she didn't smell kind of
extra strong like. I told him I liked it
that way - strong and smelly, with lots of gravy around it. He almost blushed at that. Amazing how delicate he could be about some
things. Food for example. Very finicky about his food. Perhaps a racial trait. Immaculate about his person, too. Couldn't stand the sight of a spot on his clean
cuffs. Constantly brushing himself off,
constantly taking his pocket mirror out to see if there was any food between
his teeth. If he found a crumb he would
hide his face behind the napkin and extract it with his pear-handled toothpick. The ovaries of course he couldn't see. Nor could he smell them either, because his
wife too was an immaculate bitch.
Douching herself all day long in preparation for the evening nuptials. It was tragic, the importance she gave to her
ovaries.
Up until he day she was taken to the hospital
she was a regular fucking block. The
thought of never being able to fuck again frightened the wits out of her. Hymie of course told her it wouldn't make any
difference to him one way or the other.
Glued to her like a snake, a cigarette in his mouth, the girls passing
below on the boulevard, it was hard for him to imagine a woman not being able
to fuck any more. He was sure the
operation would be successful. Successful! That's to say that she'd fuck even better
than before. He used to tell her that,
lying on his back looking up at the ceiling.
"You know I always love you," he would say. "Move over just a little bit, will
you.... there, like that.... that's it.
What was I saying? Oh yes ... why
sure, why should you worry about things like that? Of course I'll be true to you. Listen, pull away just a little bit ... yeah,
that's it.... that's fine." He used
to tell us about it in the chop suey joint.
Steve would laugh like hell.
Steve couldn't do a thing like that.
He was too honest - especially with women. That's why he never had any luck. Little Curley, for example - Steve hated
Curley - would always get what he wanted.... He was a born liar, a born
deceiver. Hymie didn't like Curley much
either. He said he was dishonest,
meaning of course dishonest in money matters.
About such things Hymie was scrupulous.
What he disliked especially was the way Curley talked about his aunt. It was bad enough, in Hymie's opinion, that
he should be screwing the sister of his own mother, but to make her out to be
nothing but a piece of stale cheese, that was too much for Hymie. One ought to have a bit of respect for a
woman, provided she's not a whore. If
she's a whore, that's different. Whores
are not women. Whores are whores. That was how Hymie looked at things.
The real reason for this dislike,
however, was that whenever they went out together Curley always got the best
choice. And not only that, but it was
usually with Hymie's money that Curley managed it. Even the way Curley asked for money irritated
Hymie - it was like extortion, he said.
He thought it was partly my fault, that I was too lenient with the
kid. "He's got no moral
character," Hymie would say.
"And what about you, your moral character?" I would
ask. "Oh me! Shit, I'm too old to have any moral
character. But Curley's only a
kid."
"You're jealous, that's
what," Steve would say.
"Me? Me jealous of him?" And he'd try to smother the idea with a
scornful little laugh. It made him
wince, a jab like that.
"Listen," he would say, turning to me, "did I ever act
jealous toward you? Didn't I always turn
a girl over to you if you asked me? What
about that red-haired girl in SU office ... you remember ... the one with the
big teats? Wasn't that a nice piece of
ass to turn over to a friend? But I did
it, didn't I? I did it because you said
you liked big teats. But I wouldn't do
it for Curley. He's a little crook. Let him do his own digging."
As a matter of fact, Curley was
digging away very industriously. He must
have had five or six on the string at one time, from what I could gather. There was Valeska, for example - he had made
himself pretty solid with her. She was
so damned pleased to have some one fuck her without blushing that when it came
to sharing him with her cousin and then with the midget she didn't put up the
least objection. What she liked best was
to get in the tub and let him fuck her under water. It was fine until the midget got wise to
it. Then there was a nice rumpus which
was finally ironed out on the parlour floor.
To listen to Curley talk he did everything but climb the
chandeliers. And always plenty of pocket
money to boot. Valeska was generous, but
the cousin was a softy. If she came
within a foot of a stiff prick she was like putty. An unbuttoned fly was enough to put her in a
trance. It was almost shameful the
things Curley made her do. He took
pleasure in degrading her. I could
scarcely blame him for it, she was such a prim, priggish bitch in her street
clothes. You'd almost swear she didn't
own a cunt, the way she carried herself in the street. Naturally, when he got her alone he made her
pay for her highfalutin' ways. He went
at it cold-bloodedly. "Fish it
out!" he'd say, opening his fly a little.
"Fish it out with your tongue!" (He had it in for the whole bunch because, as
he put it, they were sucking one another off behind his back.) Anyway, once she got the taste of it in her
mouth you could do anything with her.
Sometimes he'd stand her on her hands and push her around the room that
way, like a wheelbarrow. Or else he'd do
it dog fashion, and while she groaned and squirmed he'd nonchalantly light a
cigarette and blow the smoke between her legs.
Once he played her a dirty trick doing it that way. He had worked her up to such a state that she
was beside herself. Anyway, after he had
almost polished the ass of her with his back-scuttling he pulled out for a
second, as though to cool his cock off, and then very slowly and gently he
shoved a big long carrot up her twat.
"That, Miss Abercrombie," he said, "is a sort of
Doppelgänger to my regular cock," and with that he unhitches himself and
yanks up his pants. Cousin Abercrombie
was so bewildered by it all that she let a tremendous fart and out tumbled the
carrot. At least, that's how Curley
related it to me. He was an outrageous
liar, to be sure, and there may not be a grain of truth in the yarn, but
there's no denying that he had a flair for such tricks. As for Miss Abercrombie and her high-tone
Narragansett ways, well, with a cunt like that one can always imagine the
worst. By comparison Hymie was a
purist. Somehow Hymie and his fat
circumcised dick were two different things.
When he got a personal hard on, as he said, he really meant that he was
irresponsible. He meant that Nature was
asserting itself - through his, Hymie Laubscher's, fat circumcised dick. It was the same with his wife's cunt. It was something she wore between her legs,
like an ornament. It was a part of Mrs.
Laubscher personally, if you get what I mean.
Well, all this is simply by way of
leading up to the general sexual confusion which prevailed at this time. It was like taking a flat in the Land of
Fuck. The girl upstairs, for instance
... she used to come down now and then, when the wife was giving a recital, to
look after the kid. She was so obviously
a simpleton that I didn't give her any notice at first. But like all the others she had a cunt too, a
sort of impersonal personal cunt which was unconsciously conscious of. The oftener she came down the more conscious
she got, in her unconscious way. One
night, when she was in the bathroom, after she had been in there a suspiciously
long while, she got me to thinking of things.
I decided to take a peep through the keyhole and see for myself what was
what. Lo and behold, if she wasn't
standing in front of the mirror stroking and petting her little pussy. Almost talking to it, she was. I was so excited I didn't know what to do at
first. I went back into the big room,
turned out the lights, and lay there on the couch waiting for her to come
out. As I lay there I could still see
that bushy cunt of hers and the fingers strumming it like. I opened my fly to let my pecker twitch about
in the cool of the dark. I tried to
mesmerize her from the couch, or at least I tried letting my pecker mesmerize
her. "Come here, you bitch," I
kept saying to myself, "come in here and spread that cunt over me." She must have caught the message immediately,
for in a jiffy she had opened the door and was groping about in the dark to
find the couch. I didn't say a word, I
didn't make a move. I just kept my mind
riveted on her cunt moving quietly in the dark like a crab. Finally she was standing beside the
couch. She didn't say a word
either. She just stood there quietly and
as I slid my hand up her legs she moved one foot a little to open her crotch a
bit more. I don't think I ever put my
hand into such a juicy crotch in all my life.
It was like paste running down her legs, and if there had been any
billboards handy I could have plastered up a dozen or more. After a few moments, just as naturally as a
cow lowering its head to grace, she bent over and put it in her mouth. I had my whole four fingers inside her,
whipping it up to a froth. Her mouth was
stuffed full and the juice pouring down her legs. Not a word out of us, as I say. Just a couple of quiet maniacs working away
in the dark like gravediggers. It was a
fucking Paradise and I knew it, and I was ready and willing to fuck my brains
away if necessary. She was probably the
best fuck I ever had. She never once
opened her trap - not that night, nor the next night, nor any night. She'd steal down like that in the dark, soon
as she smelled me there alone, and plaster her cunt all over me. It was an enormous cunt, too, when I think
back on it. A dark, subterranean
labyrinth fitted up with divans and cosy corners and rubber teeth and syringes
and soft nestles and eiderdown and mulberry leaves. I used to nose in like the solitary worm and
bury myself in a little cranny where it was absolutely silent, and so soft and
restful that I lay like a dolphin on the oyster banks. A slight twitch and I'd be in the Pullman
reading a newspaper or else up an impasse where there were mossy round cobblestones
and little wicker gates which opened and shut automatically. Sometimes it was like riding the
shoot-the-shoots, a steep plunge and then a spray of tingling sea crabs, the
bulrushes swaying feverishly and the gills of tiny fishes lapping against me
like harmonica stops. In the immense
black grotto there was a silk-and-soap organ playing a predaceous black
music. When she pitched herself high,
when she turned the juice on full, it made a violaceous purple, a deep mulberry
stain like twilight, a ventriloqual twilight such as dwarfs and cretins enjoy
when they menstruate. It made me think
of cannibals chewing flowers, of Bantus running amuck, of wild unicorns rutting
in rhododendron beds. Everything was
anonymous and unformulated, John Doe and his wife Emmy Doe; above us the gas
tanks and below the marine life. Above
the belt, as I say, she was batty. Yes,
absolutely cuckoo, though still abroad and afloat. Perhaps that was what made her cunt so
marvellously impersonal. It was one cunt
out of a million, a regular Pearl of the Antilles, such as Dick Osborn
discovered when reading Joseph Conrad.
In the broad Pacific of sex she lay, a gleaming silver reef surrounded
with human anemones, human starfish, human madrepores. Only an Osborn could have discovered her,
given the proper latitude and longitude of cunt. Meeting her in the daytime, watching her
slowly going daft, it was like trapping a weasel when night came on. All I had to do was to lie down in the dark
with my fly open and wait. She was like
Ophelia suddenly resurrected among the Kaffirs.
Not a word of any language could she remember, especially not
English. She was a deaf-mute who had
lost her memory, and with the loss of memory she had lost her frigidaire, her
curling irons, her tweezers and handbag.
She was even more naked than a fish, except for the tuft of her between
her legs. And she was even slipperier
than a fish because after all a fish has scales and she had none. It was dubious at times whether I was in her
or she in me. It was open warfare, the
newfangled Pancrace, with each one biting his own ass. Love among the newts and cutout wide
open. Love without gender and without
lysol. Incubational love, such as the
wolverines practise above the tree line.
One the one side the Arctic Ocean, on the other the Gulf of Mexico. And though we never referred to it openly
there was always with us King Kong, King Kong asleep in the wrecked hull of the
Titanic among the phosphorescent bones of millionaires and lampreys. No logic could drive King Kong away. He was the giant truss that supports the
soul's fleeting anguish. He was the
wedding cake with hairy legs and arms a mile long. He was the revolving screen on which the news
passes away. He was the muzzle of the
revolver that never went off, the leper armed with sawed-off gonococci.
It was here in the void of hernia that
I did all my quiet thinking via the penis.
There was first of all the binomial theorem, a phrase which has always
puzzled me: I put it under the magnifying glass and studied it from X to
Z. There was Logos, which somehow I had
always identified with breath: I found that on the contrary it was a sort of
obsessional stasis, a machine which went on grinding corn long after the
granaries had been filled and the Jews driven out of Egypt. There was Bucephalus, more fascinating to me
perhaps than any word in my whole vocabulary: I would trot it out whenever I
was in a quandary, and with it of course Alexander and his entire purple
retinue. What a horse! Sired in the Indian Ocean, the last of the
line, and never once mated, except to the Queen of the Amazons during the
Mesopotamian adventure. There was the
Scotch Gambit! An amazing expression
which has nothing to do with chess. It
came to me always in the shape of a man on stilts, page 2,498 of Funk and
Wagnall's Unabridged Dictionary. A
gambit was a sort of leap in the dark with mechanical legs. A leap for no purpose - hence gambit! Clear as a bell and perfectly simple, once
you grasped it. Then there was Andromeda,
and the Gorgon Medusa, and Castor and Pollux of heavenly origin, mythological
twins, eternally fixed in the ephemeral stardust. There was lucubration, a word distinctly
sexual and yet suggesting such cerebral connotations as to make me uneasy. Always "midnight lucubrations", the
midnight being ominously significant.
And then arras. Somebody some
time or other had been stabbed "behind the arras". I saw an altar cloth made of asbestos and in
it was a grievous rent such as Ceasar himself might have made.
It was very quiet thinking, as I say,
the kind that the men of the Old Stone Age must have indulged in. Things were neither absurd nor
explicable. It was a jigsaw puzzle
which, when you grew tired, you could push away with two feet. Anything could be put aside with ease, even
the Himalayan mountains. It was just the
opposite kind of thinking from Mahomet's.
It led absolutely nowhere and was hence enjoyable. The grand edifice which you might construct
throughout the course of a long fuck could be toppled over in the twinkling of
an eye. It was the fuck that counted and
not the construction work. It was like
living in the Ark during the Flood, everything provided for down to a
screwdriver. What need to commit murder,
rape or incest when all that was demanded of you was to kill time? Rain, rain, rain, but inside the Ark
everything dry and toasty, a pair of every kind and in the larder fine
Westphalian hams, fresh eggs, olives, pickled onions, Worcestershire sauce and
other delicacies. God had chosen me,
Noah, to establish a new heaven and a new earth. He had given me a stout boat with all seams
caulked and properly dried. He had given
me also the knowledge to sail the stormy seas.
Maybe when it stopped raining there would be other kinds of knowledge to
acquire, but for the present a nautical knowledge sufficed. The rest was chess in the Café Royal, Second
Avenue, except that I had to imagine a partner, a clever Jewish mind that would
make the game last until the rains ceased.
But, as I said before, I had no time to be bored; there were my old
friends, Logos, Bucephalus, arras, lucubration, and so on. Why play chess?
Locked up like that for days and
nights on end I began to realize that thinking, when it is not masturbative, is
lenitive, healing, pleasurable. The
thinking that gets you nowhere takes you everywhere; all other thinking is done
on tracks and no matter how long the stretch, in the end there is always the
depot or the roundhouse. In the end
there is always a red lantern which says STOP!
But when the penis gets to thinking there is no stop or let: it is a
perpetual holiday, the bait fresh and the fish always nibbling at the
line. Which reminds me of another cunt,
Veronica something or other, who always got me thinking the wrong way. With Veronica it was always a tussle in the
vestibule. On the dance floor you'd
think she was going to make you a permanent present of her ovaries, but as soon
as she hit the air she'd start thinking, thinking of her hat, of her purse, of
her aunt who was waiting up for her, of the letter she forgot to mail, of the
job she was going to lose - all kinds of crazy, irrelevant thoughts which had
nothing to do with the thing in hand. It
was like she had suddenly switched her brain to her cunt - the most alert and
canny cunt imaginable. It was almost a
metaphysical cunt, so to speak. It was a
cunt which thought out problems, and not only that, but a special kind of
thinking it was, with a metronome going.
For this species of displaced rhythmic lucubration a peculiar dim light
was essential. It had to be just about
dark enough for a bat a yet light enough to find a button if one happened to
come undone and roll on the floor of the vestibule. You can see what I mean. A vague yet meticulous precision, a steely
awareness that simulated absent-mindedness.
And fluttery and fluky at the same time, so that you could never
determine whether it was fish or fowl. What
is this I hold in my hand? Fine or
superfine? The answer was always
duck soup. If you grabbed her by the
boobies she would squawk like a parrot: if you got under her dress she would
wriggle like an eel; if you held her too tight she would bite like a
ferret. She lingered and lingered and
lingered. Why? What was she after? Would she give in after an hour or two? Not a chance in a million. She was like a pigeon trying to fly with its
legs caught in a steel trap. She
pretended she had no legs. But if you
made a move to set her free she would threaten to moult on you.
Because she had such a marvellous ass
[arse] and because it was also so damned inaccessible I used to think of her as
the Pons Asinorum. Every schoolboy knows
that the Pons Asinorum is not to be crossed except by two white donkeys led by
a blind man. I don't know why it is so,
but that's the rule as it was laid down by old Euclid. He was so full of knowledge, the old buzzard,
that one day - I suppose purely to amuse himself - he built a bridge which no
living mortal could ever cross. He
called it the Pons Asinorum because he was the owner of a pair of beautiful
white donkeys, and so attached was he to these donkeys that he would let nobody
take possession of them. And so he
conjured a dream in which he, the blind man, would one day lead the donkeys
over the bridge and into the happy hunting grounds for donkeys. Well, Veronica was very much in the same
boat. She thought so much of her
beautiful white ass that she wouldn't part with it for anything. She wanted to take it with her to Paradise
when the time came. As for her cunt -
which by the way she never referred to at all - as for her cunt, I say, well
that was just an accessory to be brought along.
In the dim light of the vestibule, without ever referring overtly to her
two problems, she somewhere made you uncomfortably aware of them. That is, she made you aware in the manner of
a prestidigitator. You were to take a
look or a feel only to be finally deceived, only to be shown that you had not seen
and had not felt. It was a very subtle
sexual algebra, the midnight lucubration which would earn you an A or a B next
day, but nothing more. You passed your
examinations, you got your diploma, and then you were turned loose. In the meantime you used your ass to sit down
and your cunt to make water with.
Between the textbook and the lavatory there was an intermediate zone
which you were never to enter because it was labelled fuck. You might diddle and piddle, but you might
not fuck. The light was never completely
shut off, the sun never streamed in.
Always just light or dark enough to distinguish a bat. And just that little eerie flicker of light
was what kept the mind alert, on the lookout, as it were, for bags, pencils,
buttons, keys, et cetera. You couldn't
really think because your mind was already engaged. The mind was kept in readiness, like a vacant
seat at the theatre on which the owner had left his opera hat.
Veronica, as I say, had a talking
cunt, which was bad because its sole function seemed to be to talk one out of a
fuck. Evelyn, on the other hand, had a laughing
cunt. She lived upstairs too, only in
another house. She was always trotting
in at mealtimes to tell us a new joke. A
comedienne of the first water, the only really funny woman I ever met in my
life. Everything was a joke, fuck
included. She could even make a stiff
prick laugh, which is saying a good deal.
They say a stiff prick has no conscience, but a stiff prick that laughs
too is phenomenal. The only way I can describe
it is to say that when she got hot and bothered, Evelyn, she put on a ventriloqual
act with her cunt. You'd be ready to
slip it in when suddenly the dummy between her legs would let out a
guffaw. At the same time it would reach
out for you and give you a playful little tug and squeeze. It could sing too, this dummy of a cunt. In fact it behaved just like a trained seal.
Nothing is more difficult than to make
love in a circus. Putting on the trained
seal act all the time made her more inaccessible than if she had been trussed
up with iron thongs. She could break
down the most "personal" hard on in the world. Break it down with laughter. At the same time it wasn't quite as
humiliating as one might be inclined to imagine. There was something sympathetic about this
vaginal laughter. The whole world seemed
to unroll like a pornographic film whose tragic theme is impotence. You could visualize yourself as a dog, or a
weasel, or a white rabbit. Love was
something on the side, a dish of caviar, say, or a wax heliotrope. You could see the ventriloquist in you
talking about caviar or heliotropes, but the real person was always a weasel or
a white rabbit. Evelyn was always lying
in the cabbage patch with legs spread open offering a bright green leaf to the
first comer. But if you made a move to
nibble it the whole cabbage patch would explode with laughter, a bright, dewy,
vaginal laughter such as Jesus H. Christ and Immanuel Pussyfoot Kant never
dreamed of, because if they had the world would not be what it is today and
besides there would have been no Kant and no Christ Almighty. The female seldom laughs, but when she does
it's volcanic. When the female laughs
the male had better scoot to the cyclone cellar. Nothing will stand up under the vaginating
chortle, not even ferroconcrete. The
female, when once her risibility is aroused, can laugh down the hyena or the
jackal or the wildcat. Now and then one
hears it at a lynching bee, for example.
It means that the lid is off, that everything goes. It means that she will forage for herself -
and watch out that you don't get your balls cut off! It means that if the pest is coming SHE is
coming first, and with huge spiked thongs that will flay the living hide off
you. It means that she will lay not only
with Tom, Dick and Harry, but with Cholera, Meningitis, Leprosy; it means that
she will lay herself down on the altar like a mare in rut and take on all
comers, including the Holy Ghost. It
means that what it took the poor male, with his logarithmic cunning, five
thousand, ten thousand, twenty thousand years to build, she will pull down in a
night. She will pull it down and pee on
it, and nobody will stop her once she starts laughing in earnest. And when I said about Veronica that her laugh
would break down the most "personal" hard on imaginable I meant it:
she would break down the personal erection and hand you back an
impersonal one that was like a red-hot ramrod.
You might not get very far with Veronica herself, but with what she had
to give you could travel far and no mistake about it. Once you came within earshot of her it was
like you had gotten an overdose of Spanish fly.
Nothing on earth could bring it down again, unless you put it under a
sledgehammer.
It was going on this way all the time,
even though every word I say is a lie.
It was a personal tour in the impersonal world, a man with a tiny trowel
in his hand digging a tunnel through the earth to get to the other side. The idea was to tunnel through and find at
last the Culebra Cut, the ne plus ultra, of the honeymoon of flesh. And of course there was no end to the
digging. The best I might hope for was
to get stuck in the dead centre of the earth, where the pressure was strongest
and most even all around, and stay stuck there forever. That would give me the feeling of Ixion on
the wheel, which is one sort of salvation and not entirely to be sneezed
at. On the other hand I was a
metaphysician of the instinctivist sort: it was impossible for me to stay stuck
anywhere, even in the dead centre of the earth.
It was most imperative to find and to enjoy the metaphysical fuck, and
for that I would be obliged to come out on to a wholly new tableland, a mesa of
sweet alfalfa and polished monoliths, where the eagles and the vultures flew at
random.
Sometimes sitting in the park of an
evening, especially a park littered with papers and bits of food, I would see
one pass by, one that seemed to be going toward Tibet, and I would follow her
with the round eye, hoping that suddenly she would begin to fly, for if she did
that, if she would begin to fly, I knew I would be able to fly also, and that
would mean an end to the digging and the wallowing. Sometimes, probably because of twilight or
other disturbances, it seemed as though she actually did fly on rounding the
corner. That is, she would suddenly be
lifted from the ground for the space of a few feet, like a plane too heavily
loaded; but just that sudden involuntary life, whether real or imaginary it
didn't matter, gave me hope, gave me courage to keep the still round eye
riveted on the spot.
There were megaphones inside which
yelled "Go on, keep going, stick it out", and all that nonsense. But why?
To what end? Whither? Whence?
I would set the alarm clock in order to be up and about at a certain
hour, but why up and about? Why
get up at all? With that little trowel
in my hand I was working like a galley slave and not the slightest hope of
reward involved. Were I to continue
straight on I would dig the deepest hole any man had ever dug. On the other hand, if I had truly wanted to
get to the other side of the earth, wouldn't it have been much simpler to throw
away the trowel and just board an aeroplane for China? But the body follows after the
mind. The simplest thing for the body is
not always easy for the mind. And when
it gets particularly difficult and embarrassing is that moment when the two
start going in opposite directions.
Labouring with the trowel was bliss:
it left the mind completely free and yet there was never the slightest danger
of the two being separated. If the
she-animal suddenly began groaning with pleasure, if the she-animal suddenly
began to throw a pleasurable conniption fit, the jaws moving like old
shoelaces, the chest wheezing and the ribs creaking, if the she-bugger suddenly
started to fall apart on the floor, to the collapse of joy and
over-exasperation, just at the moment, not a second this side or that, the
promised tableland would heave in sight like a ship coming up out of a fog and
there would be nothing to do but plant the stars and stripes on it and claim it
in the name of Uncle Sam and all that's holy.
These misadventures happened so frequently that it was impossible not to
believe in the reality of a realm which was called Fuck, because that was the
only name which might be given to it, and yet it was more than fuck and by fucking
one only began to approach it. Everybody
had at one time or another planted the flag in this territory, and yet nobody
was able to lay claim to it permanently.
It disappeared overnight - sometimes in the twinkling of an eye. It was No Man's Land and it stank with the
litter of invisible deaths. If a truce
were declared you met in this terrain and shook hands or swapped tobacco. But the truces never lasted very long. The only thing that seemed to have permanency
was the "zone between" idea.
Here the bullets flew and the corpses piled up; then it would rain and
finally there would be nothing left but a stench.
This is all a figurative way of
speaking about what is unmentionable.
What is unmentionable is pure fuck and pure cunt: it must be mentioned
only in de luxe editions, otherwise the world will fall apart. What holds the world together, as I have
learned from bitter experience, is sexual intercourse. But fuck, the real thing, cunt,
the real thing, seems to contain some unidentified element which is far more
dangerous than nitro-glycerine. To get
an idea of the real thing you must consult a Sears Roebuck catalogue endorsed
by the Anglican Church. On page
twenty-three you will find a picture of Priapus juggling a corkscrew on the end
of his weeny; he is standing in the shadow of the Parthenon by mistake; he is
naked except for a perforated jock-strap which was loaned for the occasion by
the Holy Rollers of Oregon and Saskatchewan.
Long distance is on the wire demanding to know if they should sell short
or long. He says go fuck yourself
and hangs up the receiver. In the
background Rembrandt is studying the anatomy of our Lord Jesus Christ who, if you
remember, was crucified by the Jews and then taken to Abyssinia to be pounded
with quoits and other objects. The
weather seems to be fair and warmer, as usual, except for a slight mist rising
up out of the Ionian; this is the sweat of Neptune's balls which were castrated
by the early monks, or perhaps it was by the Manicheans in the time of the Pentecostal
plague. Long strips of horsemeat are
hanging out to dry and the flies are everywhere, just as Homer describes it in
ancient times. Hard by is a McCormick
threshing machine, a reaper and binder with a thirty-six horsepower engine and
no cutout. The harvest is in and the
workers are counting their wages in the distant fields. This is the flush of dawn on the first day of
sexual intercourse in the old Hellenistic world, now faithfully reproduced for
us in colour thanks to the Zeiss Brothers and other patient zealots of
industry. But this is not the way it
looked to the men of Homer's time who were on the spot. Nobody knows how the god Priapus looked when
he was reduced to the ignominy of balancing a corkscrew on the end of his
weeny. Standing that way in the shadow
of the Parthenon he undoubtedly fell a-dreaming of far-off cunt; he must have
lost consciousness of the corkscrew and the threshing and reaping machine; he
must have grown very silent within himself and finally he must have lost even
the desire to dream. It is my idea, and
of course I am willing to be corrected if I am wrong, that standing thus in the
rising mist he suddenly heard the Angelus peal and lo and behold there appeared
before his very eyes a gorgeous green marshland in which the Choctaws were
making merry with the Navajos; in the air above were the white condors, their
ruffs festooned with marigolds. He saw
also a huge slate on which was written the body of Christ, the body of Absalom
and the evil which is lust. He saw the
sponge soaked with frogs' blood, the eyes which Augustine had sewn into his
skin, the vest which was not big enough to cover our iniquities. He saw these things in the whilomst moment
when the Navajos were making merry with the Choctaws and he was so taken by
surprise that suddenly a voice issued from between his legs, from the long
thinking reed which he had lost in dreaming, and it was the most inspired, the
most shrill and piercing, the most jubilant and ferocious cachinnating sort of
voice that had ever wongled up from the depths.
He began to sing through that long cock of his with such divine grace
and elegance that the white condors came down out of the sky and shat huge
purple eggs all over the green marshland.
Our Lord Christ got up from his stone bed and, marked by the quoit
though he was, he danced like a mountain goat.
The fellaheen came out of Egypt in their chains, followed by the warlike
Igorots and the snail-eating men of Zanzibar.
This is how things stood on the first
day of sexual intercourse in the old Hellenistic world. Since then things have changed a great
deal. It is no longer polite to sing
through your weeny, nor is it permitted even to condors to shit purple eggs all
over the place. All this is
scatological, eschatological and ecumenical.
It is forbidden. Verboten. And so the Land of Fuck becomes ever more
receding: it becomes mythological.
Therefore am I constrained to speak mythologically. I speak with extreme unction, and with
precious unguents too. I put away the
clashing cymbals, the tubas, the white marigolds, the oleanders and the
rhododendrons. Up with the thorns and
the manacles! Christ is dead and mangled
with quoits. The fellaheen are bleaching
in the sands of Egypt, their wrists loosely shackled. The vultures have eaten away every
decomposing crumb of flesh. All is
quiet, a million golden mice nibbling at the unseen cheese. The moon is up and the Nile ruminates on her
riparian ravages. The earth belches
silently, the stars twitch and bleat, the rivers slip their banks. It's like this.... There are cunts which
laugh and cunts which talk; there are crazy, hysterical cunts shaped like
ocarinas and there are planturous, seismographic cunts which register the rise
and fall of sap; there are cannibalistic cunts which open wide like the jaws of
the whale and swallow alive; there are also masochistic cunts which close up
like the oyster and have hard shells and perhaps a pearl or two inside; there
are dithyrambic cunts which dance at the very approach of the penis and go wet
all over in ecstasy; there are the porcupine cunts which unleash their quills
and wave little flags at Christmas time; there are telegraphic cunts which
practise the Morse code and leave the mind full of dots and dashes; there are
the political cunts which are saturated with ideology and which deny even the
menopause; there are vegetative cunts which make no response unless you pull
them up by the roots; there are the religious cunts which smell like the
Seventh Day Adventists and are full of beads, worms, clamshells, sheep
droppings and now and then dried bread crumbs; there are the mammalian cunts
which are lined with otter skin and hibernate during the long winter; there are
cruising cunts fitted out like yachts, which are good for solitaries and
epileptics; there are glacial cunts in which you can drop shooting stars
without causing a flicker; there are miscellaneous cunts which defy category or
description, which you stumble on once in a lifetime and which leave you seared
and branded; there are cunts made of pure joy which have neither name nor
antecedent and these are the best of all, but whither have they flown?
And then there is the one cunt which
is all, and this we shall call the super-cunt, since it is not of this land at
all but of that bright country to which we were long ago invited to fly. Here the dew is ever sparkling and the tall
reeds bend with the wind. It is here
that the great father of fornication dwells, Father Apis, the mantic bull who
gored his way to heaven and dethroned the gelded deities of right and
wrong. From Apis sprang the race of
unicorns, that ridiculous beast of ancient writ whose learned brow lengthened
into a gleaming phallus, and from the unicorn by gradual stages was derived the
late-city man of which Oswald Spengler speaks.
And from the dead cock of this sad specimen arose the giant skyscraper
with its express elevators and observation towers. We are the last decimal point of sexual
calculation; the world turns like a rotten egg in its crate of straw. Now for the aluminium wings with which to fly
to that far-off place, the bright country where Apis, the father of
fornication, dwells. Everything goes
forward like oiled clocks; for each minute of the dial there are a million
noiseless clocks which tick off the rinds of time. We are travelling faster than the lightning
calculator, faster than starlight, faster than the magician can think. Each second is a universe of time. And each universe of time is but a wink of
sleep in the cosmogony of speed. When
speed comes to its end we shall be there, punctual as always and blissfully
undenominated. We shall shed our wings,
our clocks and our mantelpieces to lean on.
We will rise up feathery and jubilant, like a column of blood, and there
will be no memory to drag us down again.
This time I call the realm of the super-cunt, for it defies speed,
calculation or imagery. Nor has the
penis itself a known size or weight.
There is only the sustained feel of fuck, the fugitive in full flight,
the nightmare smoking his quiet cigar.
Little Nemo walks around with a seven-day hard on and a wonderful pair
of blue balls bequeathed by Lady Bountiful.
It is Sunday morning around the corner from Evergreen Cemetery.
It is Sunday morning and I am lying
blissfully dead to the world on my bed of ferroconcrete. Around the corner is the cemetery, which is
to say - the world of sexual intercourse. My balls ache with the fucking that is going
on, but it is all going on beneath my window, on the boulevard where Hymie
keeps his copulating nest. I am thinking
of one woman and the rest if blotto. I
say I am thinking of her, but the truth is I am dying a stellar death. I am lying there like a sick star waiting for
the light to go out. Years ago I lay on
this same bed and I waited and waited to be born. Nothing happened. Except that my mother, in her Lutheran rage,
threw a bucket of water over me. My
mother, poor imbecile that she was, thought I was lazy. She didn't know that I had gotten caught in
the stellar drift, that I was being pulverized to a black extinction out there
on the farthest rim of the universe. She
thought it was sheer laziness that kept me riveted to the bed. She threw the bucket of water over me: I
squirmed and shivered a bit, but I continued to lie there on my ferroconcrete
bed. I was immovable. I was a burned-out meteor adrift somewhere in
the neighbourhood of Vega.
And now I'm on the same bed and the
light that's in me refuses to be extinguished.
The world of men and women are making merry in the cemetery
grounds. They are having sexual
intercourse, God bless them, and I am alone in the Land of Fuck. It seems to me that I hear the clanking of a
great machine, the linotype bracelets passing through the wringer of sex. Hymie and his nymphomaniac of a wife are
lying on the same level with me, only they are across the river. The river is called Death and it has a bitter
taste. I have waded through it many
times, up to the hips, but somehow I have neither been petrified nor
immortalized. I am still burning
brightly inside, though outwardly dead as a planet. From this bed I have gotten up to dance, not
once but hundreds, thousands of times.
Each time I came away I had the conviction that I had danced the skeleton
dance on a terrain vague. Perhaps
I had wasted too much of my substance on suffering; perhaps I had the crazy
idea that I would be the first metallurgical bloom of the human species;
perhaps I was imbued with the notion that I was both a sub-gorilla and a
super-god. On this bed of ferroconcrete
I remember everything and everything is in rock crystal. There are never any animals, only thousands
and thousands of human beings all talking at once, and for each word they utter
I have an answer immediately, sometimes before the word is out of their
mouths. There is plenty of killing, but
no blood. The murders are perpetrated
with cleanliness, and always in silence.
But even if everyone were killed there would still be conversation, and
the conversation would be at once intricate and easy to follow. Because it is I who create it! I know it, and that is why it never drives me
mad. I have conversations which may take
place only twenty years hence, when I meet the right person, the one whom I
shall create, let us say, when the proper time comes. All these talks take place in a vacant lot
which is attached to my bed like a mattress.
Once I gave it a name, this terrain vague: I called it Ubiguchi,
but somehow Ubiguchi never satisfied me, it was too intelligible, too full of
meaning. It would be better to keep it
just terrain vague, which is what I intend to do. People think that vacuity is nothingness, but
it is not so. Vacuity is a discordant
fullness, a crowded ghostly world in which the soul goes reconnoitring. As a boy I remember standing in the vacant
lot as if I were a very lively soul standing naked in a pair of shoes. The body had been stolen from me because I
had no particular need of it. If I
killed a little bird and roasted it over the fire and ate it, it was not
because I was hungry but because I wanted to know about Timbuktu or Tierra del
Fuego. I had to stand in the vacant lot
and eat dead birds in order to create a desire for that bright land which later
I would inhabit alone and people with nostalgia. I expected ultimate things of this place, but
I was deplorable deceived. I went as far
as one could go in a state of complete deadness, and then by a law, which must
be the law of creation, I suppose, I suddenly flared up and began to live inexhaustibly,
like a star whose light is unquenchable.
Here began the real cannibalistic excursions which have meant so much to
me: no more dead chippies picked from the bonfire, but live human meat, tender,
succulent human flesh, secrets like fresh bloody livers, confidences like
swollen tumours that have been kept on ice.
I learned not to wait for my victim to die, but to eat into him while he
was talking to me. Often when I walked
away from an unfinished meal I discovered that it was nothing more than an old
friend minus an arm or a leg. I
sometimes left him standing there - a trunk full of stinking intestines.
Being of the city, of the only city in
the world and no place like Broadway anywhere, I used to walk up and down
staring at the floodlit hams and other delicacies. I was a schizerino from the
sole of my boots to the tips of my hair.
I lived exclusively in the gerundive, which I understood only in
Latin. Long before I had read of her in
the Black Book I was cohabiting with Hilda, the giant cauliflower of my
dreams. We traversed all the morganatic
diseases together and a few which were ex cathedra. We dwelt in the carcass of the instincts and
were nourished by ganglionic memories.
There was never a universe, but millions and billions of universes,
all of them put together no bigger than a pinhead. It was a vegetal sleep in the wilderness of
the mind. It was the past, which alone
comprises eternity. Amidst the fauna and
flora of my dreams I would hear long distance calling. Messages were dropped on my table by the
deformed and the epileptic. Hans Castorp
would call sometimes and together we would commit innocent crimes. Or, if it were a bright freezing day, I would
do a turn in the velodrome with my Presto bike from Chemnitz, Bohemia.
Best of all was the skeleton
dance. I would first wash all my parts
at the sink, change my linen, shave, powder, comb my hair, don my dancing
pumps. Feeling abnormally light inside
and out I would wind in and out of the crowd for a time to get the proper human
rhythm, the weight and substance of flesh.
Then I would make a beeline for the dance floor, grab a hunk of giddy
flesh and begin the autumnal pirouette.
It was like that I walked into the hairy Greek's place one night and ran
smack into her. She seemed blue-black,
white as chalk, ageless. There was not
just the flow to and from, but the endless chute, the voluptuousness of
intrinsic restlessness. She was
mercurial and at the same time of a savoury weight. She had the marmoreal stare of a faun embedded
in lava. The time has come, I thought,
to wander back from the periphery. I
made a move toward the centre, only to find the ground shifting from under my
feet. The earth slid rapidly beneath my
bewildered feet. I moved again out of the earth belt and behold, my hands were
full of meteoric flowers. I reached for
her with two flaming hands but she was more elusive than sand. I thought of my favourite nightmares, but she
was unlike anything which had made me sweat and gibber. In my delirium I began to prance and
neigh. I bought frogs and mated them
with toads. I thought of the easiest
thing to do, which is to die, but I did nothing. I stood still and began to petrify at the
extremities. That was so wonderful, so
healing, so eminently sensible, that I began to laugh way down inside the
viscera, like a hyena crazed with rut.
Maybe I would turn into a rosetta stone!
I just stood still and waited.
Spring came, and fall, and then winter.
I renewed my insurance policy automatically. I ate grass and the roots of deciduous
trees. I sat for days on end looking at
the same film. Now and then I brushed my
teeth. If you fired an automatic at me
the bullets glanced off and made a queer tat-a-tat ricocheting against the
walls. Once up a dark street, felled by
a thug, I felt a knife go clean through me.
It felt like a spritz bath.
Strange to say, the knife left no holes in my skin. The experience was so novel that I went home
and stuck knives into all parts of my body.
More needle baths. I sat down,
pulled all the knives out, and again I marvelled that there was no trace of
blood, no holes, no pain. I was just
about to bite into my arm when the telephone rang. It was long distance calling. I never knew who put in the calls because
no-one ever came to the phone. However,
the skeleton dance....
Life is drifting by the show
window. I lie there like a floodlit ham
waiting for the axe to fall. As a matter
of fact, there is nothing to fear, because everything is cut neatly into fine little slices and
wrapped in cellophane. Suddenly all the
lights of the city are extinguished and the sirens sound their warning. The city is enveloped in poison gas, bombs
are bursting, mangled bodies flying through the air. There is electricity everywhere, and blood and
splinters and loudspeakers. The men in
the air are full of glee; those below are screaming and bellowing. When the gas and the flames have eaten all
the flesh away the skeleton dance begins.
I watch from the show window which is now dark. It is better than the sack of Rome because
there is more to destroy.
Why do the skeletons dance so
ecstatically, I wonder? Is it the fall
of the world? Is it the dance of death
which has been so often heralded? To see
millions of skeletons dancing in the snow while the city founders is an awesome
sight. Will anything ever grow
again? Will babes come out of the
womb? Will there be food and wine? There are men in the air, to be sure. They will come down to plunder. There will be cholera and dysentery and those
who were above and triumphant will perish like the rest. I have the sure feeling that I will be the
last man on earth. I will emerge from
the show window when it is all over and walk calmly amidst the ruins. I will have the whole earth to myself.
Long distance calling! To inform me that I am not utterly
alone. Then the destruction was not
complete? It's discouraging. Man is not even able to destroy himself; he
can only destroy others. I am
disgusted. What a malicious cripple! What cruel delusions! So there are more of the species about and
they will tidy up the mess and begin again.
God will come down again in flesh and blood and take up the burden of
guilt. They will make music and build
things in stone and write it all down in little books. Pfui! What blind tenacity, what clumsy ambitions!
I am on the bed again. The old Greek world, the dawn of sexual
intercourse - and Hymie! Hymie Laubscher
always on the same level, looking down on the boulevard across the river. There is a lull in the nuptial feast and the
clam fritters are brought in. Move
over just a little, he says. There,
like that, that's it! I hear frogs
croaking in the swamp outside my window.
Big cemetery frogs nourished by the dead. They are all huddled together in sexual
intercourse; they are croaking with sexual glee.
I realize now how Hymie was conceived
and brought into being. Hymie the
bullfrog! His mother was at the bottom
of the pack and Hymie, then an embryo, was hidden away in her sac. It was in the early days of sexual
intercourse and there was no Marquis of Queensbury rules to hinder. It was fuck and be fucked - and the devil
take the hindmost. It has been that way
ever since the Greeks - a blind fuck in the mud and then a quick spawn and then
death. People are fucking on different
levels but it's always in a swamp and the litter is always destined for the
same end. When the house is torn down
the bed is left standing: the cosmosexual altar.
I was polluting the bed with
dreams. Stretched out taut on the
ferroconcrete my soul would leave its body and roam from place to place on a
little trolley such as is used in department stores for making change. I made ideological changes and excursions; I
was a vagabond in the country of the brain.
Everything was absolutely clear to me because done in rock crystal; at
every egress there was written in big letters ANNIHILATION. The fright of extinction solidified me; the
body itself became a piece of ferroconcrete.
It was ornamented by a permanent erection in bad taste. I had achieved that state of vacuity so
earnestly desired by certain devout members of esoteric cults. I was no more. I was not even a personal hard on.
It was about this time, adopting the
pseudonym Samson Lackawanna, that I began my depredations. The criminal instinct in me had gotten the
upper hand. Whereas heretofore I had
been only an errant soul, a sort of Gentile Dybbuk, now I became a flesh-filled
ghost. I had taken the name which
pleased me and I had only to act instinctively.
In Hong Kong, for instance, I made my entry as a book agent. I carried a leather purse filled with Mexican
dollars and I visited religiously all those Chinese who were in need of further
education. At the hotel I rang for women
like you would ring for whisky and soda.
Mornings I studied Tibetan in order to prepare for the journey to
Lhasa. I already spoke Yiddish fluently,
and Hebrew too. I could count two rows
of figures at once. It was so easy to
swindle the Chinese that I went back to manila in disgust. There I took a Mr. Rico in hand and taught
him the art of selling books with no handling charges. All the profit came from ocean freight rates,
but it was sufficient to keep me in luxury while it lasted.
The breath had become as much a trick
as breathing. Things were not dual
merely, but multiple. I had become a
cage of mirrors reflecting vacuity. But
vacuity once stoutly posited I was at home and what is called creation was
merely a job of filling up holes. The
trolley conveniently carried me about from place to place and in each little
side pocket of the great vacuum I dropped a ton of poems to wipe out the idea
of annihilation. I had ever before me
boundless vistas. I began to live in the
vista, like a microscopic speck on the lens of a giant telescope. There was no night in which to rest. It was perpetual starlight on the arid
surface of dead planets. Now and then a
lake black as marble in which I saw myself walking amidst brilliant orbs of
light. So low hung the stars and so
dazzling was the light they shed, that it seemed as if the universe were only
about to be born. What rendered the
impression stronger was that I was alone; not only were there no animals, no
trees, no other beings, but there was not even a blade of grass, not even a
dead root. In that violet incandescent
light without even the suggestion of a shadow, motion itself seemed to be
absent. It was like a blaze of pure
consciousness, thought become God. And
God, for the first time in my knowledge, was clean-shaven. I was also clean-shaven, flawless, deadly
accurate. I saw my image in the marble
black lakes and it was diapered with stars.
Stars, stars ... like a clout between the eyes and all remembrance fast
run out. I was Samson and I was
Lackawanna and I was dying as one being in the ecstasy of full consciousness.
And now here I am, sailing down the
river in my little canoe. Anything you
would like to have me do I will do for you - gratis. This is the Land of Fuck, in which there are
no animals, no trees, no stars, no problems.
Here the spermatozoon reigns supreme.
Nothing is determined in advance, the future is absolutely uncertain,
the past non-existent. For every million
born 999,999 are doomed to die and never again be born. But the one that makes a home run is assured
of life eternal. Life is squeezed into a
seed, which is a soul. Everything has a
soul, including minerals, plants, lakes, mountains, rocks. Everything is sentient, even at the lowest
stage of consciousness.
Once this fact is grasped there can be
no more despair. At the very bottom of
the ladder, chez the spermatozoa, there is the same condition of bliss
as at the top, chez God. God is
the summation of all the spermatozoa come to full consciousness. Between the bottom and the top there is no stop,
no halfway station. The river stars
somewhere in the mountains and flows on into the sea. On this river that leads to God the canoe is
as serviceable as the dreadnought. From
the very start the journey is homeward.
Sailing down the river.... Slow as the
hookworm, but tiny enough to make every bend.
And slippery as an eel withal.
What is your name? shouts someone.
My name? Why, just call me God
- God the embryo. I go sailing
on. Somebody would like to buy me a
hat. What size do you wear, imbecile! he
shouts. What size? Why, size X!
(And why do they always shout at me?
Am I supposed to be deaf?) The
hat is lost at the next cataract. Tant
pis - for the hat. Does God need a
hat? God needs only to become God, more
and more God. All this voyaging, all
these pitfalls, the time that passes, the scenery, and against the scenery man,
trillions and trillions of things called man, like mustard seeds. Even in embryo God has no memory. The backdrop of consciousness is made up of
infinitesimally minute ganglia, a coat of hair soft as wool. The mountain goat stands alone amidst the
Himalayas; he doesn't question how he got to the summit. He grazes quietly amidst the décor;
when the time comes he will travel down again.
He keeps his muzzle to the ground, grubbing for the sparse nourishment
which the mountain peaks afford. In this
strange Capricornian condition of embryosis God the he-goat ruminates in stolid
bliss among the mountain peaks. The high
altitudes nourish the germ of separation which will one day estrange him
completely from the soul of man, which will make him a desolate, rocklike
father dwelling forever apart in a void which is unthinkable. But first come the morganatic diseases, of
which we must now speak....
There is a condition of misery which
is irremediable - because its origin is lost in obscurity. Bloomingdale's, for example, can bring about
this condition. All department stores
are symbols of sickness and emptiness, but Bloomingdale's is my special
sickness, my incurable obscure malady.
In the chaos of Bloomingdale's there is an order, but this order is
absolutely crazy to me: it is the order which I would find on the head of a pin
if I were to put it under the microscope.
It is the order of an accidental series of accidents accidentally
conceived. This order has, above all, an
odour - and it is the odour of Bloomingdale's which strikes terror into my
heart. In Bloomingdale's I fall apart
completely: I dribble onto the floor, a helpless mess of guts and bones and
cartilage. There is the smell, not of
decomposition, but of misalliance. Man,
the miserable alchemist, has welded together, in a million forms and shapes,
substances and essences which have nothing in common. Because in his mind there is a tumour which
is eating him away insatiably; he has left the little canoe which was taking
him blissful down the river in order to construct a bigger, safer boat in which
there may be room for everyone. His
labours take him so far afield that he has lost all remembrance of why he left
the little canoe. The ark is so full of
bric-à-brac that it has become a stationary building above a subway in which
the smell of linoleum prevails and predominates. Gather together all the significance hidden
away in the interstitial miscellany of Bloomingdale's and put it on the head of
a pin and you will have left a universe in which the grand constellations move
without the slightest danger of collision.
It is this microscopic chaos which brings on my morganatic
ailments. In this street I began to stab
horses at random, or I lift a skirt here and there looking for a letter box, or
I put a postage stamp across a mouth, an eye, a vagina. Or I suddenly decide to climb a tall
building, like a fly, and once having reached the roof I do fly with real wings
and I fly and fly and fly, covering towns like Weehawken, Hoboken, Hackensack,
Canarsie, Bergen Beach in the twinkling of an eye. Once you become a real schizerino flying is
the easiest thing in the world; the trick is to fly with the etheric body, to
leave behind in Bloomingdale's your sack of bones, guts, blood and cartilage;
to fly only with your immutable self which, if you stop a moment to reflect, is
always equipped with wings. Flying this
way, in full daylight, has advantages over the ordinary night-flying which
everybody indulges in. You can leave off
from moment to moment, as quick and decisive as stepping on a brake; there is
no difficulty in finding your other self, because the moment you leave off you are
your other self, which is to say, the so-called whole self. Only, as the Bloomingdale experience goes to
prove, this whole self, about which so much boasting has been done, falls apart
very easily. The smell of linoleum, for
some strange reason, will always make me fall apart and collapse on the
floor. It is the smell of all the
unnatural things which were glued together in me, which were assembled, so to
say, by negative consent.
It is only after the third meal that
the morning gifts, bequeathed by the phoney alliance of the ancestors, begin to
drop away and the true rock of the self, the happy rock sheers up out of the
muck of the soul. With nightfall the
pinhead universe begins to expand. It
expands organically, from an infinitesimal nuclear speck, in the way that
minerals or star clusters form. It eats
into the surrounding chaos like a rat boring through store cheese. All chaos could be gathered together on a
pinhead, but the self, microscopical at the start, works up to a universe from
any point in space. This is not the self
about which books are written, but the ageless self which has been farmed out
through millenary ages to men with names and dates, the self which begins and
ends as a worm, which is the worm in the cheese called the world. Just as the slightest breeze can set a vast
forest in motion so, by some unfathomable impulse from within, the rocklike
self can begin to grow, and in this growth nothing can prevail against it. It's like Jack Frost at work, and the whole
world a windowpane. No hint of labour,
no sound, no struggle, no rest; relentless, remorseless, unremitting, the
growth of the self goes on. Only two
items on the bill of fare: the self and the not-self. And an eternity in which to work it out. In this eternity, which has nothing to do
with time or space, there are interludes in which something like a thaw sets
in. The form of the self breaks down,
but the self, like climate, remains. In
the night the amorphous matter of the self assumes the most fugitive forms;
error seeps in through the portholes and the wanderer is unlatched from his
door. The door which the body wears, if
opened out into the world, leads to annihilation. It is the door in every fable out of which the
magician steps; nobody has ever read of him returning home through the selfsame
door. If opened inward there are
infinite doors, all resembling trapdoors: no horizons are visible, no airlines,
no rivers, no maps, no tickets. Each couche
is a halt for the night only, be it five minutes or ten thousand years. The doors have no handles and they never wear
out. Most important to note - there is
no end in sight. All these halts for the
night, so to speak, are like abortive explorations of a myth. One can feel his way about, take bearings,
observe passing phenomena; one can even feel at home. But there is no taking root. Just as the moment when one begins to feel
"established" the whole terrain founders, the soil underfoot is
afloat, the constellations are shaken loose from their moorings, the whole
known universe, including the imperishable self, starts moving silently,
ominously, shudderingly serene and unconcerned, toward an unknown, unseen
destination. All the doors seem to be
opening at once; the pressure is so great that an implosion occurs and the
swift plunge the skeleton bursts asunder.
It was some gigantic collapse which Dante must have experienced when he
situated himself in Hell; it was not a bottom which he touched, but a core, a
dead centre from which time itself is reckoned.
Here the comedy begins, from here it is seen to be divine.
All this by way of saying that in
going through the revolving doors of the Amarillo Dance Hall one night, some
twelve or fourteen years ago, the great event took place. The interlude which I think of as the Land of
Fuck, a realm of time more than of space, is for me the equivalent of that
Purgatory which Dante has described in nice detail. As I put my hand on the brass rail of the
revolving door to leave the Amarillo Dance Hall, all that I had previously
been, was, and about to be foundered.
There was nothing unreal about it; the very time in which I was born
passed away, carried off by a mightier stream.
Just as I had previously been bundled out of the womb, so now I was
shunted back to some timeless vector where the process of growth is kept in
abeyance. I passed into the world of
effects. There was no fear, only a
feeling of fatality. My spine was
socketed to the node; I was up against the coccyx of an implacable new
world. In the plunge the skeleton blew
apart, leaving the immutable ego as helpless as a squashed louse.
If from this point I do not begin, it
is because there is no beginning. If I
do not fly at once to the bright land it is because wings are of no avail. It is zero hour and the moon is at nadir....
Why I think of Maxie Schnadig I don't
know, unless it is because of Dostoyevsky.
The night I sat down to read Dostoyevsky for the first time was a most
important event in my life, even more important than my first love. It was the first deliberate, conscious act which
had significance for me; it changed the whole face of the world. Whether it is true that the clock stopped
that moment when I looked up after the first deep gulp I don't know any more. But the world stopped dead for a moment, that
I know. It was my first glimpse into the
soul of a man, or shall I say simply that Dostoyevsky was the first man to
reveal his soul to me? Maybe I had been
a bit queer before that, without realizing it, but from the moment that I dipped
into Dostoyevsky I was definitely, irrevocably, contentedly queer. The ordinary, walking, workaday world was
finished for me. Any ambition or desire
I had to write was also killed - for a long time to come. I was like those men who have been too long
in the trenches, too long under fire.
Ordinary human suffering, ordinary human jealousy, ordinary human
ambitions - it was just so much shit to me.
I can best visualize my condition when
I think of my relations with Maxie and his sister Rita. At the time Maxie and I used to go swimming
together a great deal, that I remember well.
Often we passed the whole day and night at the beach. I had only met Maxie' sister once or twice;
whenever I brought up her name Maxie would rather frantically begin to talk
about something else. That annoyed me
because I was really bored to death with Maxie's company, tolerating him only
because he loaned me money readily and bought me things which I needed. Every time we started for the beach I was in
hopes his sister would turn up unexpectedly.
But no, he always managed to keep her out of reach. Well, one day as we were undressing in the
bathhouse and he was showing me what a fine tight scrotum he had, I said to him
right out of the blue - "Listen, Maxie, that's all right about your nuts,
they're fine and dandy, and there's nothing to worry about but where in hell is
Rita all the time, why don't you bring her along some time and let me take a
good look at her quim ... yes, quim, you know what I mean." Maxie, being a Jew from Odessa, had never
heard the word quim before. He was
deeply shocked by my words and yet at the same time intrigued by this new
word. In a sort of daze he said to me -
"Jesus, Henry, you oughtn't to say a thing like that to me!" "Why not?" I answered. "She's got a cunt, your sister, hasn't
she?" I was about to add something
else when he broke into a terrific fit of laughter. That saved the situation, for the time
being. But Maxie didn't like the idea at
all deep down. All day long it bothered
him, though he never referred to our conversation again. No, he was very silent that day. The only form of revenge he could think of
was to urge me to swim far beyond the safety zone in the hope of tiring me out
and letting me drown. I could see
clearly what was in his mind that I was possessed with the strength of ten
men. Damned if I would go drown myself
just because his sister like all other women happened to have a cunt.
It was at Far Rockaway where this took
place. After we had dressed and eaten a
meal I suddenly decided that I wanted to be alone and so, very abruptly, at the
corner of a street, I shook hands and said goodbye. And there I was! Almost instantaneously I felt alone in the
world, alone as one feels only in moments of extreme anguish. I think I was picking my teeth absentmindedly
when this wave of loneliness hit me full on, like a tornado. I stood there on the street corner and sort
of felt myself all over to see if I had been hit by something. It was inexplicable, and at the same time it
was very wonderful, very exhilarating, like a double tonic, I might say. When I say that I was at Far Rockaway I mean
that I was standing at the end of the earth, at a place called Xanthos, if
there be such a place, and surely there ought to be a word like this to express
no place at all. If Rita had come along
then I don't think I would have recognized her.
I had become an absolute stranger standing in the very midst of my own
people. They looked crazy to me, my
people, with their newly sunburned faces and their flannel trousers and their
clockwork stockings. They had been
bathing like myself because it was a pleasant, healthy recreation and now like
myself they were full of sun and food and a little heavy with fatigue. Up until this loneliness hit me I too was a
bit weary, but suddenly, standing there completely shut off from the world, I
woke up with a start. I became so
electrified that I didn't dare move for fear I would charge like a bull or
start to climb the wall of a building or else dance and scream. Suddenly I realized that all this was because
I was really a brother to Dostoyevsky, that perhaps I was the only man in all
America who knew what he meant in writing those books. Not only that, but I felt all the books I
would one day write myself germinating inside me: they were bursting inside
like ripe cocoons. And since up to this
time I had written nothing but fiendishly long letters about everything and
nothing, it was difficult for me to realize that there must come a time when I
should begin, when I should put down the first word, the first real word. And this time was now! That was what dawned on me.
I used the word Xanthos a moment
ago. I don't know whether there is a
Xanthos or not, and I really don't care one way or another, but there must be a
place in the world, perhaps in the Grecian islands, where you can come to the
end of the known world and you are thoroughly alone and yet you are not
frightened of it but rejoice, because at this dropping off place you can feel
the old ancestral world which is eternally young and new and fecundating. You stand there, wherever the place is, like
a newly hatched chick beside its eggshell.
This place is Xanthos, or as it happened in my case, Far Rockaway.
There I was! It grew dark, a wind came up, the streets
became deserted, and finally it began to pour cats and dogs. Jesus, that finished me! When the rain came down, and I got it smack
in the face staring at the sky, I suddenly began to bellow with joy. I laughed and laughed and laughed, exactly
like an insane man. Nor did I know what
I was laughing about. I wasn't thinking
of a thing. I was just overwhelmed with
joy, just crazy with delight in finding myself absolutely alone. If then and there a nice juicy quim had been
handed me on a platter, if all the quims in the world had been offered me for
to make my choice, I wouldn't have batted an eyelash. I had what no quim could give me. And just about at that point, thoroughly
drenched but still exultant, I thought of the most irrelevant thing in the
world - carfare! Jesus, the
bastard Maxie had walked off without leaving me a sou. There I was with my find budding antique
world and not a penny in my jeans. Herr
Dostoyevsky Junior had now to begin to walk here and there peering into
friendly and unfriendly faces to see if he could pry loose a dime. He walked from one end of Far Rockaway to the
other but nobody seemed to give a fuck about handing out carfare in the
rain. Walking about in that heavy animal
stupor which comes with begging I got to thinking of Maxie the window trimmer
and how the first time I spied him he was standing in the show window dressing
a mannequin. And from that in a few
minutes to Dostoyevsky, then the world stopped dead, and then, like a great
rosebush opening in the night, his sister Rita's warm, velvety flesh.
Now this is what is rather strange....
A few minutes after I thought of Rita, her private and extraordinary quim, I
was in the train, bound for New York and dozing off with a marvellous languid
erection. And stranger still, when I got
out of the train, whom should I bump into rounding a corner but Rita
herself. And as though she had been
informed telepathically of what was going on in my brain, Rita too was hot
under the whiskers. Soon we were sitting
in a chop suey joint, seated side by side in a little booth, behaving exactly
like a pair of rabbits in rut. On the
dance floor we hardly moved. We were
wedged in tightly and we stayed that way, letting them jog and jostle us about
as they might. I could have taken her
home to my place, as I was alone at the time, but no, I had a notion to bring
her back to her own home, stand her up in the vestibule and give her a fuck
right under Maxie's nose - which I did.
In the midst of it I thought again of the mannequin in the show window
and of the way he had laughed that afternoon when I let drop the word
quim. I was on the point of laughing
aloud when suddenly I felt that she was coming, one of those long drawn-out
orgasms such as you get now and then in a Jewish cunt. I had my hands under her buttocks, the tips
of my fingers just inside her cunt, in the lining, as it were; as she began to
shudder I lifted her from the ground and raised her gently up and down on the
end of my cock. I thought she would go
off her nut completely, the way she began to carry on. She must have had four or five orgasms like
that in the air, before I put her feet down on the ground. I took it out without spilling a drop and
made her lie down in the vestibule. Her
hat had rolled off into a corner and her handbag had spilled open and a few
coins had tumbled out. I note this
because just before I gave it to her good and proper I made a mental note to
pocket a few coins for my carfare home.
Anyway, it was only a few hours since I had said to Maxie in the bathhouse
that I would like to take a look at his sister's quim, and here it was now
smack up against me, sopping wet and throwing out one squirt after
another. If she had been fucked before
she had never been fucked properly, that's a cinch. And I myself was never in such a fine cool
collected scientific frame of mind as now lying on the floor of the vestibule
right under Maxie's nose, pumping it into the private, sacred, and
extraordinary quim of his sister Rita. I
could have held it in indefinitely - it was incredible how detached I was and
yet thoroughly aware of every quiver and jolt she made. But somebody had to pay for making me walk
around in the rain grubbing a dime.
Somebody had to pay for the ecstasy produced by the germination of all
those unwritten books inside me.
Somebody had to verify the authenticity of this private, concealed cunt
which had been plaguing me for weeks and months. Who better qualified than I? I thought so hard and fast between orgasms
that my cock must have grown another inch or two. Finally I decided to make an end of it by
turning her over and back-scuttling her.
She balked a bit at first, but when she felt the thing slipping out of
her she nearly went crazy. "Oh yes,
of yes, do it, do it!" she gibbered, and with that I really got excited, I
had hardly slipped it into her when I felt it coming, one of those long
agonizing spurts from the tip of the spinal column. I shoved it in so deep that I felt as if
something had given way. We fell over,
exhausted, the both of us, and panted like dogs. At the same time, however, I had the presence
of mind to feel around for a few coins.
Not that it was necessary, because she had already loaned me a few dollars,
but to make up for the carfare which I was lacking in Far Rockaway. Even then, by Jesus, it wasn't finished. Soon I felt her mouth. I had still a sort of semi hard on. She got it into her mouth and she began to
caress it with her tongue. I saw
stars. The next thing I knew her feet
were around my neck and my tongue up her twat.
And then I had to get over her again and shove it in, up to the
hilt. She squirmed around like an eel,
so help me God. And then she began to
come again, long, drawn out, agonizing orgasms, with a whimpering and gibbering
that was hallucinating. Finally I had to
pull it out and tell her to stop. What a
quim! And I had only asked to take a
look at it!
Maxie with his talk of Odessa revived
something which I had lost as a child.
Though I had never a very clear picture of Odessa the aura of it was
like the little neighbourhood in Brooklyn which meant so much to me and from
which I had been torn away too soon. I
get a very definite feeling of it every time I see an Italian painting without
perspective; if it is a picture of a funeral procession, for example, it is
exactly the sort of experience which I knew as a child, one of intense
immediacy. If it is a picture of the
open street, the women sitting in the windows are sitting on the street
and not above it and away from it.
Everything that happens is known immediately by everybody, just as among
primitive people. Murder is in the air,
chance rules.
Just as in the Italian primitives this
perspective is lacking, so in the little old neighbourhood from which I was
uprooted as a child there were these parallel vertical planes on which
everything took place and through which, from layer to layer, everything was
communicated, as if by osmosis. The
frontiers were sharp, clearly defined, but they were not impassable. I lived then, as a boy, close to the boundary
between the north and the south side. I
was just a little bit over on the north side, just a few steps from a broad
thoroughfare called North Second Street, which was for me the real boundary
line between the north and the south side.
The actual boundary was Grand Street, which led to Broadway Ferry, but
this street meant nothing to me, except that it was already beginning to be
filled with Jews. No, North Second
Street was the mystery street, the frontier between two worlds. I was living, therefore, between two
boundaries, the one real, the other imaginary - as I have lived all my
life. There was a little street, just a
block long, which lay between Grand Street and North Second Street, called
Fillmore Place. this little street was
obliquely opposite the house my grandfather owned and in which we lived. It was the most enchanting street I have ever
seen in all my life. It was the ideal
street - for a boy, a lover, a maniac, a drunkard, a crook, a lecher, a thug,
an astronomer, a musician, a poet, a tailor, a shoemaker, a politician. In fact this was just the sort of street it
was, containing just such representatives of the human race, each one a world
unto himself and all living together harmoniously and inharmoniously, but
together, a solid corporation, a close knit human spore which could not
disintegrate unless the street itself disintegrated.
So it seemed, at least. Until the Williamsburg Bridge was opened,
whereupon there followed the invasion of the Jews from Delancy Street, New
York. This brought about the
disintegration of our little world, of the little street called Fillmore Place,
which like the name itself was a street of value, of dignity, of light, of
surprises. The Jews came, as I say, and
like moths they began to eat into the fabric of our lives until there was
nothing left but this mothlike presence which they brought with them
everywhere. Soon the street began to
smell bad, soon the real people moved away, soon the houses began to
deteriorate and even the stoops fell away, like the paint. Soon the street looked like a dirty mouth
with all the prominent teeth missing, with ugly charred stumps gaping here and
there, the lips rotting, the palate gone.
Soon the garbage was knee deep in the gutter and the fire escapes filled
with bloated bedding, with cockroaches, with dried blood. Soon the kosher sign appeared on the shop
windows and there was poultry everywhere and lox and sour pickles and enormous
loaves of bread. Soon there were baby
carriages in every areaway and on the stoops and in the little yards and before
the shop fronts. And with the change the
English language also disappeared; one heard nothing but Yiddish, nothing but
this sputtering, choking, hissing tongue in which God and rotten vegetables
sound alike and mean alike.
We were among the first families to
move away, following the invasion. Two
or three times a year I came back to the old neighbourhood, for a birthday or
for Christmas or Thanksgiving. With each
visit I marked the loss of something I have loved and cherished. It was like a bad dream. It got worse and worse. The house in which my relatives still lived
was like an old fortress going to ruin; they were stranded in one of the wings
of the fortress, maintaining a forlorn, island life, beginning themselves to
look sheepish, hunted, degraded. They
even began to make distinctions between their Jewish neighbours, finding some
of them quite human, quite decent, clean, kind, sympathetic, charitable, etc.
etc. To me it was heartrending. I could have taken a machine gun and mowed
the whole neighbourhood down, Jew and Gentile together.
It was about the time of the invasion
that the authorities decided to change the name of North Second Street to
Metropolitan Avenue. This highway, which
to the Gentiles had been the road to the cemeteries, now became what is called
an artery of traffic, a link between two ghettos. On the New York side the river front was
rapidly being transformed owing to the erection of skyscrapers. On our side, the Brooklyn side, the
warehouses were piling up and the approaches to the various new bridges created
plazas, comfort stations, poolrooms, stationary shops, ice-cream parlours,
restaurants, clothing stores, hock shops, etc.
In short, everything was becoming metropolitan, in the odious
sense of the word.
As long as we lived in the old
neighbourhood we never referred to Metropolitan Avenue: it was always North
Second Street, despite the official change of name. Perhaps it was eight or ten years later, when
I stood one winter's day at the corner of the street facing the river and
noticed for the first time the great tower of the Metropolitan Life Insurance
Building, that I realized that North Second Street was no more. The imaginary boundary of my world had
changed. My glance travelled now far
beyond the cemeteries, far beyond the rivers, far beyond the city of New York
or the State of New York, beyond the whole United States indeed. At Point Loma, California, I had looked out
upon the broad Pacific and I had felt something there which kept my face
permanently screwed in another direction.
I came back to the old neighbourhood, I remember, one night with my old
friend Stanley who had just come out of the army, and we walked the streets
sadly and wistfully. A European can
scarcely know what this feeling is like.
Even when a town becomes modernized, in Europe, there are still vestiges
of the old. In America, though there are
vestiges, they are effaced, wiped out of the consciousness, trampled upon,
obliterated, nullified by the new. The
new is, from day to day, a moth which eats into the fabric of life, leaving nothing
finally but a great hole. Stanley and I,
we were walking through this terrifying hole.
Even a war does not bring this kind of desolation and destruction. Through war a town may be reduced to ashes
and the entire population wiped out, but what springs up again resembles the
old. Death is fecundating, for the soil
as well as for the spirit. In America
the destruction is complete, annihilating.
There is no rebirth, only a cancerous growth, layer upon layer of new,
poisonous tissue, each one uglier than the previous one.
We were walking through this enormous
hole, as I say, and it was a winter's night, clear, frosty, sparkling, and as
we came through the south side toward the boundary line we saluted all the old
relics or the spots where things had once stood and where there had once been
something of ourselves. And as we
approached North Second Street, between Fillmore Place and North Second Street
- a distance of only a few yards and yet such a rich, full area of the globe -
before Mrs. O'Melio's shanty I stopped and looked up at the house where I had
known what it was to really have a being.
Everything had shrunk now to diminutive proportions, including the world
which lay beyond the boundary line, the world which had been so mysterious to
me and so terrifyingly grand, so delimited.
Standing there in a trance I suddenly recalled a dream which I have had
over and over, which I still dream now and then, and which I hope to dream as
long as I live. It was the dream of
passing the boundary line. As in all
dreams the remarkable thing is the vividness of the reality, the fact that one
is in reality and not dreaming.
Across the line I am unknown and absolutely alone. Even the language has changed. In fact, I am always regarded as a stranger,
a foreigner. I have unlimited time on my
hands and I am absolutely content in sauntering through the streets. There is only one street, I must say -
the continuation of the street on which I lived. I come finally to an iron bridge over the
railroad yards. It is always nightfall
when I reach the bridge, though it is only a short distance from the boundary
line. Here I look down upon the webbed
tracks, the freight stations, the tenders, the storage sheds, and as I gaze down
upon this cluster of strange moving substances a process of metamorphosis takes
places, just as in a dream. With
the transformation and deformation I become aware that this is the old dream
which I have dreamed so often. I have a
wild fear that I shall wake up, and indeed I know that I will wake up shortly,
just as the moment when in the midst of a great open space I am about to walk
into the house which contains something of the greatest importance to me. Just as I go toward this house the lot upon which
I am standing begins to grow vague at the edges, to dissolve, to vanish. Space rolls in on me like a carpet and
swallows me up, and with it of course the house which I never succeed in
entering.
There is absolutely no transition from
this, the most pleasurable dream I know, to the heart of a book called Creative
Evolution. In this book by Henri
Bergson, which I came to as naturally as to the dream of the land beyond the
boundary, I am again quite alone, again a foreigner, again a man of
indeterminate age standing on an iron bridge observing a peculiar metamorphosis
without and within. If this book had not
fallen into my hands at the precise moment it did, perhaps I would have gone
mad. It came at a moment when another
huge world was crumbling on my hands. If
I had never understood a thing which was written in this book, if I have
preserved only the memory of one word, creative, it is quite
sufficient. This word was my
talisman. With it I was able to defy the
whole world, and especially my friends.
There are times when one must break with
one's friends in order to understand the meaning of friendship. It may seem strange to say so, but the
discovery of this book was equivalent to the discovery of a weapon, an
implement, wherewith I might lop off all the friends who surrounded me and who
no longer meant anything to me. This
book became my friend because it taught me that I had no need of friends. It gave me the courage to stand alone, and it
enabled me to appreciate loneliness. I
have never understood the book; at times I thought I was on the point of
understanding, but I never really did understand. It was more important for me not to
understand. With this book in my hands,
reading aloud to my friends, questioning them, explaining to them, I was made
clearly to understand that I had no friends, that I was alone in the
world. Because in not understanding the
meaning of the words, neither I nor my friends, one thing became very clear and
that was that there were ways of not understanding and that the difference
between the non-understanding of one individual and the non-understanding of
another created a world of terra firma even more solid than differences of
understanding. Everything which once I
thought I had understood crumbled, and I was left with a clean slate. My friends, on the other hand, entrenched
themselves more solidly in the little ditch of understanding which they had dug
for themselves. They died comfortably in
their little bed of understanding, to become useful citizens of the world. I pitied them, and in short order I deserted
them one by one, without the slightest regret.
What was there then in this book which
could mean so much to me and yet remain obscure? I come back to the word creative. I am sure that the whole mystery lies in the
realization of the meaning of this word.
When I think of the book now, and the way I approached it, I think of a
man going through the rites of initiation.
The disorientation and reorientation which comes with the initiation
into any mystery is the most wonderful experience which it is possible to
have. Everything which the brain has
laboured for a lifetime to assimilate, categorize and synthesize has to be
taken apart and reordered. Moving day
for the soul! And of course it's not for
a day, but for weeks and months that this goes on. You meet a friend on the street by chance,
one whom you haven't seen for several weeks, and he has become an absolute
stranger to you. You give him a few
signals from your new perch and if he doesn't cotton [on] you pass him up - for
good. It's exactly like mopping up a
battlefield: all those who are hopelessly disabled and agonizing you dispatch
with one swift blow of your club. You
move on, to new fields of battle, to new triumphs or defeats. But you move!
And as you move the world moves with you, with terrifying
exactitude. You seek out new fields of
operation, new specimens of the human race whom you patiently instruct and
equip with the new symbols. You choose
sometimes those whom you would never have looked at before. You try everybody and everything within
range, provided they are ignorant of the revelation.
It was in this fashion that I found
myself sitting in the busheling room of my father's establishment, reading
aloud to the Jews who were working there.
Reading to them from this new Bible in the way that Paul must have
talked to the disciples. With the added
advantage, to be sure, that these poor Jew bastards could not read the English
language. Primarily I was directing
myself toward Bunchek the cutter, who had a rabbinical mind. Opening the book I would pick a passage at
random and read it to them in a transposed English almost as primitive as
pidgin English. Then I would attempt to
explain, choosing for example and analogy the things they were familiar
with. It was amazing to me how well they
understood, how much better they understood, let me say, than a college
professor or a literary man or any educated man. Naturally what they understood had nothing to
do finally with Bergson's book, as a book, but was not that the purpose of such
a book as this? My understanding of the
meaning of a book is that the book itself disappears from sight, that it is
chewed alive, digested and incorporated into the system as flesh and blood
which in turn creates new spirit and reshapes the world. It was a great communion feast which we
shared in the reading of this book and the outstanding feature of it was the
chapter on Disorder which, having penetrated me through and through, has
endowed me with such a marvellous sense of order that if a comet suddenly
struck the earth and jarred everything out of place, stood everything upside
down, turned everything inside out, I could orient myself to the new order in
the twinkling of an eye. I have no fear
or illusions about disorder any more than I have of death. The labyrinth is my happy hunting ground and
the deeper I burrow into the maze the more oriented I become.
With Creative Evolution under
my arm I board the elevated line at the Brooklyn Bridge after work and I
commence the journey homeward toward the cemetery. Sometimes I get on at Delancey Street, the
very heart of the ghetto, after a long walk through the crowded streets. I enter the elevated line below the ground,
like a worm being pushed through the intestines. I know each time I take my place in the crowd
which mills about the platform that I am the most unique individual down
there. I look upon everything which is
happening about me like a spectator from another planet. My language, my world, is under my arm. I am the guardian of a great secret; if I
were to open my mouth and talk I would tie up traffic. What I have to say, and what I am holding in
every night of my life on this journey to and from the office, is absolute
dynamite. I am not ready yet to throw my
stick of dynamite. I nibble at it
meditatively, ruminatively, cogently.
Five more years, ten more years perhaps, and I will wipe these people
out utterly. If the train in making a
curve gives a violent lurch I say to myself fine! jump the track, annihilate
them! I never think of myself as
being endangered should the train jump the track. We're wedged in like sardines and all the hot
flesh pressed against me diverts my thoughts.
I become conscious of a pair of legs wrapped around mine. I look down at the girl sitting in front of
me, I look her right in the eye, and I press my knees still further into her
crotch. She grows uneasy, fidgets about
in her seat, and finally she turns to the girl next to her and complains that I
am molesting her. The people about look
at me hostilely. I look out of the
window blandly and pretend I have heard nothing. Even if I wished to I can't remove my
legs. Little by little though, the girl,
by a violent pushing and squiggling, manages to unwrap her legs from mine. I find myself almost in the same situation
with the girl next to her, the one she was addressing her complaints to. Almost at once I feel a sympathetic touch and
then, to my surprise, I hear her tell the other girl that one can't help these
things, that it is really not the man's fault but the fault of the company for
packing us in like sheep. And again I
feel the quiver of her legs against mine, a warm, human pressure, like
squeezing one's hand. With my one free
hand I manage to open my book. My object
is twofold: first I want her to see the kind of book I read, second, I want to
be able to carry on the leg language without attracting attention. It works beautifully. By the time the train empties a bit I am able
to take a seat beside her and converse with her - about the book,
naturally. She's a voluptuous Jewess
with enormous liquid eyes and the frankness which comes from sensuality. When it comes time to get off we walk arm in
arm through the streets, toward her home.
I am almost on the confines of the old neighbourhood. Everything is familiar to me and yet
repulsively strange. I have not walked
these streets for years and now I am walking with a Jew girl from the ghetto, a
beautiful girl with a strong Jewish accent.
I look incongruous walking beside her.
I can sense that people are staring at us behind our backs. I am the intruder, the goy who has come down
into the neighbourhood to pick off a nice ripe cunt. She on the other hand seems to be proud of
her conquest; she's showing me off to her friends. This is what I picked up in the train, an
educated goy, a refined goy! I can
almost hear her think it. Walking slowly
I'm getting the lay of the land, all the practical details which will decided
whether I call for her after dinner or not.
There's no thought of asking her to dinner. It's a question of what time and where to
meet and how will we go about it, because, as she lets drop just before we
reach the door, she's got a husband who's a travelling salesman and she's got
to be careful. I agree to come back and
to meet her at the corner in front of the candy store at a certain hour. If I want to bring a friend along she'll
bring her girlfriend. No, I decide to
see her alone. It's agreed. She squeezes my hand and darts off into a
dirty hallway. I beat it quickly back to the elevated station and hasten home
to gulp down the meal.
It's a summer's night and everything
flung wide open. Riding back to meet her
the whole past rushes up kaleidoscopically.
This time I've left the book at home.
It's cunt I'm out for now and no thought of the book is in my head. I am back again this side of the boundary
line, each station whizzing past making my world grow more diminutive. I am almost a child by the time I reach the
destination. I am a child who is
horrified by the metamorphosis which has taken place. What has happened to me, a man of the
Fourteenth Ward, to be jumping off at this station in search of a Jewish
cunt? Supposing I do give her a fuck,
what then? What have I got to say to a
girl like that? What's a fuck when what
I want is love? Yes, suddenly it comes
over me like a tornado.... Una, with big blue eyes and flaxen hair, Una who
made me tremble just to look at her, Una whom I was afraid to kiss or even to
touch her hand. Where is Una? Yes, suddenly, that's the burning
question: where is Una? In two
seconds I am completely unnerved, completely lost, desolate, in the most
horrible anguish and despair. How did I
ever let her go? Why? What happened? When did it happen? I thought of her like a maniac night and day,
year in and year out, and then, without even noticing it, she drops out of my
mind, like that, like a penny falling through a hole in your pocket. Incredible, monstrous, mad. Why, all I had to do was to ask her to marry
me, ask her hand - that's all. If I had
done that she would have said yes immediately.
She loved me, she loved me desperately.
Why yes, I remember now, I remember how she looked at me the last time
we met. I was saying goodbye because I
was leaving that night for California, leaving everybody to begin a new
life. And I never had any intention of
leading a new life. I intended to ask
her to marry me, but the story I had framed like a dope came out of my lips so
naturally that I believed it myself, and so I said goodbye and I walked off,
and she stood there looking after me and I felt her eyes pierce me through and
through, I heard her howling inside, but like an automaton I kept on walking
and finally I turned the corner and that was the end of it. And I meant to say come to me! Come to me because I can't live any more
without you!
I am so weak, so
rocky, that I can scarcely climb down the El steps. Now I know what's happened - I've crossed the
boundary line! This Bible that I've been
carrying around with me is to instruct me, initiate me into a new way of
life. The world I knew is no more, it is
dead, finished, cleaned up. And
everything that I was is cleaned up with it.
I am a carcass getting an injection of new life. I am bright and glittery, rabid with new
discoveries, but in the centre it is still leaden, still slag. Now it dawns on me with full clarity: you
are alone in the world! You are
alone ... alone ... alone. It is bitter
to be alone ... bitter, bitter, bitter, bitter.
There is no end to it, it is unfathomable, and it is the lot of every
man on earth, but especially mine ... especially mine. Again the metamorphosis. Again everything totters and careens. I am in the dream again, the painful,
delirious, pleasurable, maddening dream of beyond the boundary. I am standing in the centre of the vacant
lot, but my home I do not see. I have no
home. The dream was a mirage. There never was a house in the midst of the
vacant lot. That's why I was never able
to enter it. My home is not in this
world, nor in the next. I am a man
without a home, without a friend, without a wife. I am a monster who belongs to a reality which
does not exist yet. Ah, but it does
exist, it will exist, I am sure of it. I
walk now rapidly, head down, muttering to myself. I've forgotten about my rendezvous so
completely that I never even noticed whether I walked past or not. Probably I did. Probably I looked right at her and didn't
recognize her. Probably she didn't
recognize me either. I am mad, mad with
pain, mad with anguish. I am
desperate. But I am not lost. No, there is a reality to which I
belong. It's far away, very far
away. I may walk from now till doomsday
with head down and never find it. But it
is there, I am sure of it. I look at
people murderously. If I could throw a
bomb and blow the whole neighbourhood to smithereens I would do it. I would be happy seeming them fly in the air,
mangled, shrieking, torn apart, annihilated.
I want to annihilate the whole earth.
I am not a part of it. It's mad from
start to finish. The whole shooting
match. It's a huge piece of stale cheese
with maggots festering inside it. Fuck
it! Blow it to hell! Kill, kill, kill: Kill them all, Jews and
Gentiles, young and old, good and bad....
I grow light, light as a feather, and
my pace becomes more steady, more calm, more even. What a beautiful night it is! The stars shining so brightly, so serenely,
so remotely. Not mocking me precisely,
but reminding me of the futility of it all.
Who are you, young man, to be talking of the earth, of blowing things to
smithereens? Young man, we have been
hanging here for millions and billions of years. We have seen it all, everything, and still we
shine peacefully every night, we light the way, we still the heart. Look around you, young man, see how still and
beautiful everything is. Do you see,
even the garbage lying in the gutter looks beautiful in this light. Pick up the little cabbage leaf, hold it
gently in your hand. I bend down and
pick up the cabbage leaf lying in the gutter.
It looks absolutely new to me, a whole universe in itself. I break a little piece off and examine
that. Still a universe. Still unspeakably beautiful and
mysterious. I am almost ashamed to throw
it back in the gutter. I bend down and
deposit it gently with the other refuse.
I become very thoughtful, very, very calm. I love everybody in the world. I know that somewhere at this very moment
there is a woman waiting for me and if only I proceed very calmly, very gently,
very slowly, I will come to her. She
will be standing on a corner perhaps and when I come in sight she will
recognize me - immediately. I believe
this, so help me God! I believe that
everything is just and ordained. My
home? Why, it is the world - the whole
world! I am at home everywhere, only I
did not know it before. But I know
now. There is no boundary line any
more. There never was a boundary line:
it was I who made it. I walk slowly and
blissfully through the streets. The
beloved streets. Where everybody walks and
everybody suffers without showing it.
When I stand and lean against a lamppost to light my cigarette even the
lamppost feels friendly. It is not a
thing of iron - it is a creation of the human mind, shaped a certain way,
twisted and formed by human hands, blown on with human breath, placed by human
hands and feet. I turn round and rub my
hand over the iron surface. It almost
seems to speak to me. It is a human
lamppost. It belongs, like the
cabbage leaf, like the torn socks, like the mattress, like the kitchen
sink. Everything stands in a certain way
in a certain place, as our mind stands in relation to God. The world, in its visible, tangible
substance, is a map of our love. Not God
but life is love. Love, love,
love. And in the midmost midst of it
walks this young man, myself, who is none other than Gottlieb Leberecht Müller.
Gottlieb Leberecht Müller! This is the name of a man who lost his
identity. Nobody could tell him who he
was, where he came from or what had happened to him. In the movies, where I first made the
acquaintance of this individual, it was assumed that he had met with an
accident in the war. But when I
recognized myself on the screen, knowing that I had never been to the war, I realized
that the author had invented this little piece of fiction in order not to
expose me. Often I forget which is the
real me. Often in my dreams I take the
draught of forgetfulness, as it is called, and I wander forlorn and desperate,
seeking the body and the name which is mine.
And sometimes between the dream and reality there is only the thinnest
line. Sometimes while a person is
talking to me I step out of my shoes and, like a plant drifting with the
current, I begin the voyage of my rootless self. In this condition I am quite capable of
fulfilling the ordinary demands of life - of finding a wife, of becoming a
father, of supporting the household, of entertaining friends, of reading books,
of paying taxes, of performing military service, and so on and so forth. In this condition I am capable, if needs be,
of killing in cold blood, for the sake of my family or to protect my country,
or whatever it may be. I am the
ordinary, routine citizen who answers to a name and who is given a number in
his passport. I am thoroughly
irresponsible for my fate.
Then one day, without the slightest
warning, I wake up and looking about me I understand absolutely nothing of what
is going on about me, neither my own behaviour nor that of my neighbours, nor
do I understand why the governments are at war or at peace, whichever the case
may be. At such moments I am born anew,
born and baptized by my right name: Gottlieb Leberecht Müller! Everything I do in my right name is looked upon
as crazy. People make furtive signs
behind my back, sometimes to my face even.
I am forced to break with friends and family and loved ones. I am obliged to break camp. And so, just as naturally as in a dream, I
find myself once again drifting with the current, usually walking along a
highway, my face set toward the sinking sun.
Now all my faculties become alert.
I am the most suave, silky, cunning animal - and I am at the same time
what might be called a holy man. I know
how to fend for myself. I know how to
avoid work, how to avoid entangling relationships, how to avoid pity, sympathy,
bravery, and all the other pitfalls. I
stay in place or with a person just long enough to obtain what I need, and then
I'm off again. I have no goal: the
aimless wandering is sufficient unto itself.
I am free as a bird, sure as an equilibrist. Manna falls from the sky; I have only to hold
out my hands and receive. And everywhere
I leave the most pleasant feeling behind me, as though, in accepting the gifts
that are showered upon me, I am doing a real favour to others. Even my dirty linen is taken care of by
loving hands. Because everybody loves a
right-living man! Gottlieb! What a beautiful name it is! Gottlieb!
I say it to myself over and over.
Gottlieb Leberecht Müller!
In this condition I have always fallen
in with thieves and rogues and murderers, and how kind and gentle they have
been with me! As though they were my
brothers. And are they not, indeed? Have I not been guilty of every crime, and
suffered for it? And is it not just
because of my crimes that I am united so closely to my fellowman? Always, when I see a light of recognition in
the other person's eyes, I am aware of this secret bond. It is only the just whose eyes never light
up. It is the just who have never known
the secret of human fellowship. It is
the just who are committing the crimes against man, the just who are the real
monsters. It is the just who demand our
fingerprints, who prove to us that we have died even when we stand before them
in the flesh. It is the just who impose
upon us arbitrary names, false names, who put false dates in the register and
bury us alive. I prefer the thieves, the
rogues, the murderers, unless I can find a man of my own stature, my own
quality.
I have never found such a man! I have never found a man as generous as myself,
as forgiving, as tolerant, as carefree, as reckless, as clean at heart. I forgive myself for every crime I have
committed. I do it in the name of
humanity. I know what it means to be
human, the weakness and the strength of it.
I suffer from this knowledge and I revel in it also. If I had the chance to be God I would reject
it. If I had the chance to be a star I
would reject it. The most wonderful
opportunity which life offers is to be human.
It embraces the whole universe.
It includes the knowledge of death, which not even God enjoys.
At the point from which this book is
written I am the man who baptized himself anew.
It is many years since this happened and so much has come in between
that it is difficult to get back to that moment and retrace the journey of
Gottlieb Leberecht Müller. However,
perhaps I can give the clue if I say that the man which I now am was born out
of a wound. That wound went to the
heart. By all man-made logic I should
have been dead. I was in fact given up
for dead by all who once knew me; I walked about like a ghost in their
midst. They used the past tense in
referring to me, they pitied me, they shovelled me under deeper and
deeper. Yet I remember how I used to
laugh then, as always, how I made love to other women, how I enjoyed my food
and drink, and the soft bed which I clung to like a fiend. Something had killed me, and yet I was
alive. But I was alive without a memory,
without a name; I was cut off from hope as well as from remorse or regret. I had no past and I would probably have no
future; I was buried alive in a void which was the wound that had been dealt
me. I was the wound itself.
I have a friend who talks to me from
time to time about the Miracle of Golgotha of which I understand nothing. But I do know something about the miraculous
wound which I received, the wound which killed me in the eyes of the world and
out of which I was born anew and rebaptized.
I know something of the miracle of this wound which I lived and which
healed with my death. I tell it as of
something long past, but it is with me always.
Everything is long past and seemingly invisible, like a constellation
which has sunk forever beneath the horizon.
What fascinates me is that anything so
dead and buried as I was could be resuscitated, and not just once, but
innumerable times. And not only that,
but each time I faded out I plunged deeper than ever into the void, so that
with each resuscitation the miracle becomes greater. And never any stigmata! The man who is reborn is always the same man,
more and more himself with each rebirth.
He is only shedding his skin each time, and with his skin his sins. The man whom God loves is truly a
right-living man. The man whom God loves
is the onion with a million skins. To
shed the first layer is painful beyond words; the next layer is less painful,
the next still less, until finally the pain becomes pleasurable, more and more
pleasurable, a delight, an ecstasy. And
then there is neither pleasure nor pain, but simply darkness yielding before
the light. And as the darkness falls
away the wound comes out of its hiding place: the wound which is man, man's
love, is bathed in light. The identity
which was lost is recovered. Man walks
forth from his open wound, from the grave which he had carried about with him
so long.
In the tomb which is my memory I see
her buried now, the one I loved better than all else, better than the world,
better than God, better than my own flesh and blood. I see her festering there in that bloody
wound of love, so close to me that I could not distinguish her from the wound
itself. I see her struggling to free
herself, to make herself clean of love's pain, and with each struggle sinking
back again into the wound, mired, suffocated, writhing in blood. I see the terrible look in her eyes, the mute
piteous agony, the look of the beast that is trapped. I see her opening her legs for deliverance
and each orgasm a groan of anguish. I
hear the walls falling, the walls caving in on us and the house going up in
flames. I hear them calling us from the
street, the summons to work, the summons to arms, but we are nailed to the
floor and the rats are biting into us.
The grave and womb of love intombing us, the night filling our bowels
and the stars shimmering over the black bottomless lake. I lose the memory of words, of her name even
which I pronounce like a monomaniac. I
forgot what she looked like, what she felt like, what she smelt like, what she
fucked like, piercing deeper and deeper into the night of the fathomless cavern. I followed her to the deepest hole of her
being, to the charnel house of her soul, to the breath which had not yet
expired from her lips. I sought
relentlessly for her whose name was not written anywhere, I penetrated to the
very altar and found - nothing. I
wrapped myself around this hollow shell of nothingness like a serpent with
fiery coils; I lay still for six centuries without breathing as world events
sieved through to the bottom forming a slimy bed of mucus. I saw the constellations wheeling about the
huge hole in the ceiling of the universe; I saw the outer planets and the black
star which was to deliver me. I saw the
Dragon shaking itself free of dharma and karma, saw the new race of man stewing
in the yoke of futurity. I saw through to
the last sign and symbol, but I could not read her face. I could see only the eyes shining through,
huge, fleshy-like luminous breasts, as though I were swimming behind them in
the electric effluvia of her incandescent vision.
How had she come to expand thus beyond
all grip of consciousness? By what
monstrous law had she spread herself thus over the face of the world, revealing
everything and yet concealing herself?
She was hidden in the face of the sun, like the moon in eclipse; she was
a mirror which had lost its quicksilver, the mirror which yields both the image
and the horror. Looking into the backs
of her eyes, into the pulpy translucent flesh, I saw the brain structure of all
formations, all relations, all evanescence.
I saw the brain within the brain, the endless machine endlessly turning,
the word Hope revolving on a spit, roasting, dripping with fat, revolving
ceaselessly in the cavity of the third eye.
I heard her dreams mumbled in lost tongues, the stifled screams
reverberating in minute crevices, the gasps, the groans, the pleasurable sighs,
the swish of lashing whips. I heard her
call my own name which I had not yet uttered, I heard her curse and shriek with
rage. I heard everything magnified a
thousand times, like a homunculus imprisoned in the belly of an organ. I caught the muffled breathing of the world,
as if fixed in the very cross-roads of sound.
Thus we walked and slept and ate
together, the Siamese twins whom Love had joined and whom Death alone could
separate.
We walked upside down, hand in hand,
at the neck of the bottle. She dressed
in black almost exclusively, except for patches of purple now and then. She wore no underclothes, just a simple sheath
of black velvet saturated with a diabolical perfume. We went to bed at dawn and got up just as it
was darkling. We lived in black holes
with drawn curtains, we ate from black plates, we read from black books. We looked out of the black hole of our life
into the black hole of the world. The
sun was permanently blacked out, as though to aid us in our continuous
internecine strife. For sun we had Mars,
for moon Saturn; we lived permanently in the zenith of the underworld. The earth had ceased to revolve and through
the hole in the sky above us there hung the black star which never
twinkled. Now and then we had fits of
laughter, crazy, batrachian laughter which made the neighbours shudder. Now and then we sang, delirious, off key,
full tremolo. We were locked in
throughout the long dark night of the soul, a period of incommensurable time
which began and ended in the manner of an eclipse. We revolved about our own egos, like phantom
satellites. We were drunk with our own
image which we saw when we looked into each other's eyes. How then did we look to others? As the beast looks to the plant, as the stars
look to the beast. Or as God would look
to man if the devil had given him wings.
And with it all, in the fixed, close intimacy of a night without end she
was radiant, jubilant, an ultra-black jubilation streaming from her like a
steady flow of sperm from the Mithraic Bull.
She was double barrelled, like a shotgun, a female bull with an
acetylene torch in her womb. In heat she
focused on the grand cosmocrator, her eyes rolled back to the whites, her lips
a-slaver. In the blind hole of sex she
waltzed like a trained mouse, her jaws unhinged like a snake's, her skin
horripilating in barbed plumes. She had
the insatiable lust of a unicorn, the itch that laid the Egyptians low. Even the hole in the sky through which the lacklustre
star shone down was swallowed up in her fury.
We lived glued to the ceiling, the hot
rancid fumes of the everyday life steaming up and suffocating us. We lived at marble heat, the ascending glow
of human flesh warming the snakelike coils in which we were locked. We lived riveted to the nethermost depths,
our skins smoked to the colour of a grey cigar by the fumes of worldly
passion. Like two heads carried on the
pikes of our executioners we circled slowly and fixedly over the heads and
shoulders of the world below. What was
life on the solid earth to us who were decapitated and forever joined at the
genitals? We were the twin snakes of
Paradise, lucid in heat and cool as chaos itself. Life was a perpetual black fuck about a fixed
pole of insomnia. Life was Scorpio
conjunction Mars, conjunction Mercury, conjunction Venus, conjunction
Saturn, conjunction Pluto, conjunction
Uranus, conjunction quicksilver, laudanum, radium, bismuth. The grand conjunction was every Saturday
night, Leo fornicating with Draco in the house of brother and sister. The great malheur was a ray of
sunlight stealing through the curtains.
The great curse was Jupiter, king of the fishes, that he might flash a
benevolent eye.
The reason why it is difficult to tell
it is because I remember too much. I
remember everything, but like a dummy sitting on the lap of a
ventriloquist. It seems to me that
throughout the long, uniterrupted connubial solstice I sat on her lap (even
when she was standing) and spoke the lines she had taught me. It seems to me that she must have commanded
God's chief plumber to keep the black star shining through the hole in the
ceiling, must have bid him to rain down perpetual night and with it all the
crawling torments that move noiselessly about in the dark so that the mind
becomes a twirling awl burrowing frantically into black nothingness. Did I only imagine that she talked
incessantly, or had I become such a marvellously trained dummy that I
intercepted the thought before it reached the lips? The lips were finely parted, smoothed down
with a thick paste of dark blood; I watched them open and close with the utmost
fascination, whether they hissed a viper's hate or cooed like a turtle
dove. They were always close up, as in
the movie stills, so that I knew every crevice, every pore, and when the
hysterical slavering began I watched the spittle fume and foam as though I were
sitting in a rocking chair under Niagara Falls.
I learned what to do just as though I were a part of her organism; I was
better than a ventriloquist's dummy because I could act without being violently
jerked by strings. Now and then I did
things impromptu like, which sometimes pleased her enormously; she would
pretend, of course, not to notice these irruptions, but I could always tell
when she was pleased by the way she preened herself. She had the gift for transformation; almost
as quick and subtle she was as the devil himself. Next to the panther and the jaguar she did
the bird stuff best: the wild heron, the ibis, the flamingo, the swan in
rut. She had a way of swooping suddenly,
as if she had spotted a ripe carcass, diving right into the bowels, pouncing
immediately on the titbits - the heart, the liver, or the ovaries - and making
off again in the twinkling of an eye. Did
someone spot her, she would lie stone quiet at the base of a tree, her eyes not
quite closed but immovable in that fixed stare of the basilisk. Prod her a bit and she would become a rose, a
deep black rose with the most velvety petals and of a fragrance that was
overpowering. It was amazing how
marvellously I learned to take my cue; now matter how swift the metamorphosis I
was always there in her lap, bird lap, beast lap, snake lap, rose lap, what
matter: the lap of laps, the lip of lips, tip to tip, feather to feather, the
yoke in the egg, the pearl in the oyster, a cancer clutch, a tincture of sperm
and cantharides. Life was Scorpio
conjunction Mars, conjunction Venus, Saturn, Uranus, et cetera; love was
conjunctivitis of the mandibles, clutch this, clutch that, clutch, clutch, the
mandibular clutch-clutch of the mandala wheel of lust. Come food time I could already hear her
peeling the eggs, and inside the egg cheep-cheep, blessed omen of the
next meal to come. I ate like a
monomaniac: the prolonged dreamlit voracity of the man who is thrice breaking
his fast. And as I ate she purred, the
rhythmic predatory wheeze of the succubus devouring her young. What a blissful night of love! Saliva, sperm, succubation, sphincteritis all
in one; the conjugal orgy of the Black Hole of Calcutta.
Out there where the black star hung, a
Pan-Islamic silence, as in the cavern world where even the wind is
stilled. Out there, did I dare to brood
on it, the spectral quietude of insanity, the world of men lulled, exhausted by
centuries of incessant slaughter. Out
there one gory encompassing membrane within which all activity took place, the
hero-world of lunatics and maniacs who had quenched the light of the heavens
with blood. How peaceful our little
dove-and-vulture life in the dark! Flesh
to bury in with teeth or penis, abundant odorous flesh with no mark of knife or
scissors, no scar of exploded shrapnel, no mustard burns, no scalded
lungs. Save for the hallucinating hole
in the ceiling, an almost perfect womb life.
But the hole was there - like a fissure in the bladder - and no wadding
could plug it permanently, no urination could pass off with a smile. Piss large and freely, aye, but how forget
the rent in the belfry, the silence unnatural, the imminence, the terror, the
doom of the "other" world? Eat
a bellyful, aye, and tomorrow another bellyful, and tomorrow and tomorrow and
tomorrow - but finally, what then?
Finally! What was finally? A change of ventriloquist, a change of lap, a
shift in the axis, another rift in the vault ... what? what? I'll tell you - sitting in her lap, petrified
by the still, pronged beams of the black star, horned, snaffled, hitched and
trepanned by the telepathic acuity of our interacting agitation, I thought of
nothing at all, nothing that was outside the cell we inhabited, not even the
thought of a crumb on a white tablecloth.
I thought purely within the walls of our amoebic life, the pure thought
such as Immanuel Pussyfoot Kant gave us and which only a ventriloquist's dummy
could reproduce. I thought out every
theory of science, every theory of art, every grain of truth in every cockeyed
system of salvation. I calculated
everything out to a pinpoint with gnostic decimals to boot, like primes
which a drunk hands out at the finish of a six-day race. But everything was calculated for another
life which somebody else would live some day - perhaps. We were at the very neck of the bottle, her
and I, as they say, but the neck of the bottle had been broken off and the
bottle was only a fiction.
I remember how the second time I met
her she told me that she had never expected to see me again, and the next time
I saw her she said she thought I was a dope fiend, and the next time she called
me a god, and after that she tried to commit suicide and then I tried and then
she tried again, and nothing worked except to bring us closer together, so
close indeed that we interpenetrated, exchanged personalities, name, identity,
religion, father, mother, brother. Even
her body went through a radical change, not once but several times. At first she was big and velvety, like the
jaguar, with that silky, deceptive strength of the feline species, the crouch,
the spring, the pounce; then she grew emaciated, fragile, delicate, almost like
a cornflower, and with each change thereafter she went through the subtlest
modulations - of skin, of muscle, colour, posture, odour, gait, gesture, et
cetera. She changed like a
chameleon. Nobody could say what she
really was like because with each one she was an entirely different
person. After a time she didn't even
know herself what she was like. She had
begun this process of metamorphosis before I met her, as I later discovered. Like so many women who think themselves ugly
she had willed to make herself beautiful, dazzlingly beautiful. To do this she first of all renounced her
name, then her family, her friends, everything which might attach her to the
past. With all her wits and faculties
she devoted herself to the cultivation of her beauty, of her charm, which she
already possessed to a high degree but which she had been made to believe were
non-existent. She lived constantly
before the mirror, studying every movement, every gesture, every slightest
grimace. She changed her whole manner of
speech, her diction, her intonation, her accent, her phraseology. She conducted herself so skilfully that it
was impossible even to broach the subject of origins. She was constantly on her guard, even in her
sleep. And, like a good general, she
discovered quickly enough that the best defence is attack. She never left a single position unoccupied;
her outposts, her scouts, her sentinels were stationed everywhere. Her mind was a revolving searchlight which
was never dimmed.
Blind to her own beauty, her own
charm, her own personality, to say nothing of her identity, she launched her
full powers toward the fabrication of a mythical creature, a Helen, a Juno,
whose charms neither man nor woman would be able to resist. Automatically, without the slightest
knowledge of legend, she began to create little by little the ontological
background, the mythic sequence of events preceding the conscious birth. She had no need to remember her lies, her
fictions - she had only to bear in mind her role. There was no lie too monstrous for her to
utter, for in her adopted role she was absolutely faithful to herself. She did not have to invent a past: she
remembered the past which belonged to her. She was never outflanked by a direct question
sine she never presented herself to an adversary except obliquely. She presented only the angles of the
ever-turning facets, the blinding prisms of light which she kept constantly
revolving. She was never a being, such as
might finally be caught in repose, but the mechanism itself, relentlessly operating
the myriad mirrors which would reflect the myth she had created. She had no poise whatsoever; she was
eternally poised above her multiple identities in the vacuum of the self. She had not intended to make herself a
legendary figure, she had merely wanted her beauty to be recognized. But in the pursuit of beauty she soon forgot
her question entirely, became the victim of her own creation. She became so stunningly beautiful that at
times she was frightening, at times positively uglier than the ugliest woman in
the world. She could inspire horror and
dread, especially when her charm was at its height. It was as though the will, blind and
uncontrollable, shone through the creation, exposing the monster which it is.
In the dark, locked away in the black
hole with no world looking on, no adversary, no rivals, the blinding dynamism
of the will slowed down a bit, gave her a molten copperish glow, the words
coming out of her mouth like lava, her flesh clutching ravenously for a hold, a
perch on something solid and substantial, something in which to reintegrate and
repose for a few moments. It was like a
fantastic long-distance message, an S O S from a sinking ship. At first I mistook it for passion, for the
ecstasy produced by flesh rubbing against flesh. I thought I had found a living volcano, a
female Vesuvius. I never thought of a
human ship going down in an ocean of despair, in a Sargasso of impotence. Now I think of that black star gleaming
through the hole in the ceiling, that fixed star which hung above our conjugal
cell, more fixed, more remote than the Absolute, and I know it was her, emptied
of all that was properly herself: a dead black sun without aspect. I know that we were conjugating the verb love
like two maniacs trying to fuck through an iron grate. I said that in the frantic grappling in the
dark I sometimes forgot her name, what she looked like, who she was. It's true.
I overreached myself in the dark.
I slid off the flesh rails into the endless space of sex, into the
channel-orbits established by this one and that one: Georgiana, for instance,
of only a brief afternoon, Thelma, the Egyptian whore, Carlotta, Alannah, Una,
Mona, Magda, girls of sex or seven; waifs, will-o'-the-wisps, faces, bodies,
thighs, a subway brush, a dream, a memory, a desire, a longing. I could start with Georgiana of a Sunday
afternoon near the railroad tracks, her dotted Swiss dress, her swaying haunch,
her Southern drawl, her lascivious mouth, her molten breasts; I could start
with Georgiana, the myriad branched candelabra of sex, and work outwards and
upwards through the ramification of cunt into the nth dimension of sex, world
without end. Georgiana was like the
membrane of the tiny little ear of an unfinished monster called sex. She was transparently alive and breathing in
the light of the memory of a brief afternoon on the avenue, the first tangible
odour and substance of the world of fuck which is in itself a being limitless
and undefinable, like our world the world.
The whole world of fuck like unto the ever-increasing membrane of the
animal we call sex, which is like another being growing into our own being and
gradually displacing it, so that in time the human world will be only a dim
memory of this new, all-inclusive, all-procreative being which is giving birth
to itself.
It was precisely this snakelike
copulation in the dark, this double-barrelled hookup, which put me in the
straitjacket of doubt, jealousy, fear, loneliness. If I began my hemstitching with Georgiana and
the myriad-branched candelabra of sex I was certain that she too was at work
building membrane, making ears, eyes, toes, scalp and whatnot of sex. She would begin with the monster who had
raped her, assuming there was truth in the story; in any case she too began
somewhere on a parallel track, working upwards and outwards through this
multiform, uncreated being through whose body we were both striving desperately
to meet. Knowing only a fraction of her
life, possessing only a bag of lies, of inventions, of imaginings, of obsessions
and delusions, putting together tag ends, coke dreams, reveries, unfinished
sentences, jumbled dream talk, hysterical ravings, ill-disguised fantasies,
morbid desires, meeting now and then a name become flesh, overhearing stray
bits of conversation, observing smuggled glances, half-arrested gestures, I
could well credit her with a pantheon of her own private fucking gods, of only
too vivid flesh and blood creatures, men of perhaps that very afternoon, of
perhaps only an hour ago, her cunt perhaps still choked with the sperm of the
last fuck. The more submissive she was,
the more passionately she behaved, the more abandoned she looked, the more
uncertain I became. There was no
beginning, no personal, individual starting point; we met like experienced swordsmen
on the field of honour now crowded with the ghosts of victory and defeat. We were alert and responsive to the least
thrust, as only the practised can be.
We came together under cover of dark
with our armies and from opposite sides we forced the gates of the
citadel. There was no resisting our
bloody work; we asked for no quarter and we gave none. We came together swimming in blood, a gory,
glaucous reunion in the night with all the stars extinguished save the fixed
black star hanging like a scalp above the hole in the ceiling. If she were properly coked she would vomit it
forth like an oracle, everything that had happened to her during the day,
yesterday, the day before, the year before last, everything, down to the
day she was born. And not a word of it
was true, not a single detail. Not a
moment did she stop, for if she had, the vacuum she created in her flight would
have brought about an explosion fit to sunder the world. She was the world's lying machine in
microcosm, geared to the same unending, devastating fear which enables men to
throw all their energies into creation of the death apparatus. To look at her one would think her fearless,
one would think her the personification of courage and she was, so long
as she was not obliged to turn in her traces.
Behind her lay the calm fact of reality, a colossus which dogged her
every step. Every day this colossal
reality took on new proportions, every day it became more terrifying, more
paralyzing. Every day she had to grow
swifter wings, sharper jaws, more piercing, hypnotic eyes. It was a race to the outermost limits of the
world, a race lost from the start, and no-one to stop it. At the edge of the vacuum stood Truth, ready
in one lightning-like sweep to recover the stolen ground. It was so simple and obvious that it drove
her frantic. Marshal a thousand
personalities, commandeer the biggest guns, deceive the greatest minds, make
the longest detour - still the end would be defeat. In the final meeting everything was destined
to fall apart - the cunning, the skill, the power, everything. She would be a grain of sand on the shore of
the biggest ocean, and, worse than anything, she would resemble each and every
other grain of sand on that ocean's shore.
She would be condemned to recognize her unique self everywhere until the
end of time. What a fate she had chosen
for herself! That her uniqueness should
be engulfed in the universal! That her
power should be reduced to the utmost node of passivity! It was maddening, hallucinating. It could not be! It must not be! Onward!
Like the black legions. Onward! Through every degree of the ever-widening
circle. Onward and away from the self,
until the last substantial particle of the soul be stretched to infinity. In her panic-stricken flight she seemed to
bear the whole world in her womb. We
were being driven out of the confines of the universe toward a nebular which no
instrument could visualize. We were being
rushed to a pause so still, so prolonged, that death by comparison seems a mad
witches' revel.
In the morning, gazing at the
bloodless crater of her face. Not a line
in it, not a wrinkle, not a single blemish!
The look of an angel in the arms of the Creator. Who killed Cock Robin? Who massacred the Iroquois? Not I, my lovely angel could say, and by
God, who, gazing at that pure, blameless face, could deny her? Who could see in that sleep of innocence that
one half of the face belonged to God and the other half to Satan? the mask was smooth as death, cool, lovely to
the touch, waxen, like a petal open to the faintest breeze. So alluringly still and guileless was it that
one could drown in it, one could go down into it, body and all, like a diver,
and nevermore return. Until the eyes
opened upon the world she would lie like that, thoroughly extinguished and
gleaming with a reflected light, like the moon itself. In her deathlike trance of innocence she
fascinated even more; her crimes dissolved, exuded through the pores, she lay coiled
like a sleeping serpent riveted to the earth.
The body, strong, lithe, muscular, seemed possessed of a weight
unnatural; she had a more than human gravity, the gravity, one might almost
say, of a warm corpse. She was like one
might imagine the beautiful Nefertiti to have been after the first thousand
years of mummification, a marvel of mortuary perfection, a dream of flesh
preserved from mortal decay. She lay
coiled at the base of a hollow pyramid, enshrined in the vacuum of her own
creation like a sacred relic of the past.
Even her breathing seemed stopped, so profound was her slumber. She had dropped below the human sphere, below
the animal sphere, below the vegetative sphere even: she had sunk down to the
level of the mineral world where animation is just a notch above death. She had so mastered the art of deception that
even the dream was powerless to betray her.
She had learned how not to dream: when she coiled up in sleep she
automatically switched off the current.
If one could have caught her thus and opened up the skull one would have
found it absolutely void. She kept no
disturbing secrets; everything was killed off which could be humanly
killed. She might live on endlessly,
like the moon, like any dead planet, radiating an hypnotic effulgence, creating
tides of passion, engulfing the world in madness, discolouring all earthly
substances with her magnetic, metallic rays.
Sowing her own death she brought everyone about her to fever pitch. In the heinous stillness of her sleep she
renewed her own magnetic death by union with the cold magma of the lifeless
planetary worlds. She was magically
intact. Her gaze fell upon one with a
transpiercing fixity: it was the moon-gaze through which the dead dragon of
life gave off a cold fire. The one eyes
was a warm brown, the colour of an autumn leaf; the other was hazel, the
magnetic eye which flickered like a compass needle. Even in sleep this eye continued to flicker
under the shutter of the lid; it was the only apparent sign of life in her.
The moment she opened her eyes she was
wide awake. She awoke with a violent
start, as if the sight of the world and its human paraphernalia were a
shock. Instantly she was in full
activity, lashing about like a great python.
What annoyed her was the light!
She awoke cursing the sun, cursing the glare of reality. The room had to be darkened, the candles lit,
the windows tightly shut to prevent the noise of the street from penetrating
the room. She moved about naked with a
cigarette dangling from the corner of her mouth. Her toilet was an affair of great
preoccupation; a thousand trifling details had to be attended to before she
could so much as don a bathrobe. She was
like an athlete preparing for the great event of the day. From the roots of her hair, which she studied
with keep attention, to the shape and length of her toenails, every part of her
anatomy was thoroughly inspected before sitting down to breakfast. Like an athlete I said she was, but in fact
she was more like a mechanic overhauling a fast plane for a test flight. Once she slipped on her dress she was
launched for the day, for the flight which might end perhaps in Irkutsk or
Teheran. She would take on enough fuel
at breakfast to last the entire trip.
The breakfast was a prolonged affair: it was the one ceremony of the day
over which she dawdled and lingered. It
was exasperatingly prolonged, indeed.
One wondered if she would ever take off, one wondered if she had
forgotten the grand mission which she had sworn to accomplish each day. Perhaps she was dreaming of her itinerary, or
perhaps she was not dreaming at all but simply allowing time for the functional
processes of her marvellous machine so that once embarked there would be no
turning back. She was very calm and
self-possessed at this hour of the day; she was like a great bird of the air
perched on a mountain crag, dreamily surveying the terrain below. It was not from the breakfast table that she
would suddenly swoop and dive to pounce upon her prey. No, from the early morning perch she would
take off slowly and majestically, synchronizing her every movement with the
pulse of the motor. All space lay before
her, her direction dictated only be caprice.
She was almost the image of freedom, were it not for the Saturnian
weight of her body and the abnormal span of her wings. However poised she seemed, especially at the
take-off, one sensed the terror which motivated the daily flight. She was at once obedient to her destiny and
at the same time frantically eager to overcome it. Each morning she soared aloft from her perch,
as from some Himalayan peak; she seemed always to direct her flight toward some
uncharted region into which, if all went well, she would disappear
forever. Each morning she seemed to
carry aloft with her this desperate, last-minute hope; she took leave with
calm, grave dignity, like one about to go down into the grave. Never once did she circle about the flying
field; never once did she cast a glance backward toward those whom she was
abandoning. Nor did she leave the
slightest crumb of personality behind her; she took to the air with all her
belongings, with every slightest scrap of evidence which might testify tot he
fact of her existence. She didn't even
leave the breath of a sigh behind, not even a toenail. A clean exist, such as the Devil himself
might make for reasons of his own. One
was left with a great void on his hands.
One was deserted, and not only deserted, but betrayed, inhumanly
betrayed. One had no desire to detain
her nor to call her back; one was left with a curse on his lips, with a black
hatred which darkened the whole day.
Later, moving about the city, moving slowly in pedestrian fashion,
crawling like the worm, one gathered rumours of her spectacular flight; she had
been seen rounding a certain point, she had dipped here or there for what
reason no-one knew, she had done a tailspin elsewhere, she had passed like a
comet, she had written letters of smoke in the sky, and so on and so
forth. Everything she had done was
enigmatic and exasperating, done apparently without purpose. It was like a symbolic and ironic commentary
on human life, on the behaviour of the antlike creature man, viewed from
another dimension.
Between the time she took off and the
time she returned I lived the life of a full-blooded schizerino. It was not an eternity which elapsed, because
somehow eternity has to do with peace and with victory, it is something
man-made, something earned: no, I experience an entr'acte in which every hair
turns white to the roots, in which every millimetre of skin itches and burns
until the whole body becomes a running sore.
I see myself sitting before a table in the dark, my hands and feet
growing enormous, as though elephantiasis were overtaking me at a gallop. I hear the blood rushing up to the brain and
pounding at the eardrums like Himalayan devils with sledgehammers; I hear her
flapping her huge wings, even in Irkutsk, and I know she is pushing on and on,
ever further away, ever further beyond reach.
It is so quiet in the room and so frightfully empty that I shriek and
howl just to make a little noise, a little human sound. I try to lift myself from the table but my
feet are too heavy and my hands have become like the shapeless feet of the
rhinoceros. The heavier my body becomes
the lighter the atmosphere of the room; I am going to spread and spread until I
fill the room with one solid mass of stiff jelly. I shall fill up even the cracks in the wall;
I shall grow through the wall like a parasitic plant, spreading and spreading until
the whole house is an indescribable mess of flesh and hair and nails. I know that this is death, but I am powerless
to kill the knowledge of it, or the knower.
Some tiny particle of me is alive, some speck of consciousness persists,
and, as the inert carcass expands, this flicker of life becomes sharper and
sharper and gleams inside me like the cold fire of a gem. It lights up the whole gluey mass of pulp so
that I am like a diver with a torch in the body of a dead marine monster. By some slender hidden filament I am still
connected with the life above the surface of the deep, but it is so far away,
the upper world, and the weight of the corpse so great that, even if it were
possible, it would take years to reach the surface. I move around in my own dead body, exploring
every nook and cranny of its huge, shapeless mass. It is an endless exploration, for with the
ceaseless growth the whole topography changes, slipping and drifting like the
hot magma of the earth. Never for a
minute is there terra firma, never for a minute does anything remain still and
recognizable: it is a growth without landmarks, a voyage in which the
destination changes with every last move or shudder. It is this interminable filling of space
which kills all sense of space and time; the more the body expands the tinier
becomes the world, until at last I feel that everything is concentrated on the
head of a pin. Despite the floundering
of this enormous dead mass which I have become, I feel that what sustains it,
the world out of which it grows, is no bigger than a pinhead. In the midst of pollution, in the very heart
and gizzard of death, as it were, I sense the seed, the miraculous,
infinitesimal level which balances the world.
I have overspread the world like a syrup and the emptiness of it is
terrifying, but there is no dislodging the seed; the seed has become a little
knot of cold fire which roars like a sun in the vast hollow of the dead
carcass.
When the great plunder-bird returns
exhausted from her flight she will find me here in the midst of my nothingness,
I, the imperishable schizerino, a blazing seed hidden in the heart of
death. Every day she thinks to find
another means of sustenance, but there is no other, only this eternal seed of
light which by dying each day I rediscover for her. Fly, O devouring bird, fly to the limits of
the universe! Here is your nourishment
growing in the sickening emptiness you have created! You will come back to perish once more in the
black hole; you will come back again and again, for you have not the wings to
carry you out of the world. This is the
only world you can inhabit, this tomb of the snake where darkness reigns.
And suddenly for no reason at all,
when I think of her returning to her nest, I remember Sunday mornings in the
little old house near the cemetery. I remember
sitting at the piano in my nightshirt, working away at the pedals with bare
feet, and the folks lying in bed toasting themselves in the next room. The rooms opened one on the other, telescope
fashion, as in the good old American railroad flats. Sunday mornings one lay in bed until one was
ready to screech with wellbeing. Toward
eleven or so the folks used to rap on the wall of my room for me to come and
play for them. I would dance into the
room like the Fratellini Brothers, so full of flame and feathers that I could
hoist myself like a derrick to the topmost limb of the tree of heaven. I could do anything and everything
singlehanded, being double-jointed at the same time. The old man called me "Sunny Jim",
because I was full of "Force", full of vim and vigour. First I would do a few handsprings for them
on the carpet before the bed; then I would sing falsetto, trying to imitate a
ventriloquist's dummy; then I would dance a few light fantastic steps to show
which way the wind lay, and zoom! like a breeze I was on the piano stool and
doing a velocity exercise. I always
began with Czerny, in order to limber up for the performance. The old man hated Czerny, and so did I, but
Czerny was the plat du jour on the bill of fare then, and so Czerny it was
until my joints were rubber. In some
vague way Czerny reminds me of the great emptiness which came upon me
later. What a velocity I would work up,
riveted to the piano stool! It was like
swallowing a bottle of tonic at one gulp and then having someone strap you to
the bed. After I had played about
ninety-eight exercises I was ready to do a little improvising. I used to take a fistful of chords and crash
the piano from one end to the other, then sullenly modulate into "The
Burning of Rome" or the "Ben Hur Chariot Race" which everybody
liked because it was intelligible noise.
Long before I read Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
I was composing the music to it, in the key of sassafras. I was learned then in science and philosophy,
in the history of religions, in inductive and deductive skills, in
pharmacopoeia and metallurgy, in the useless branches of learning which give
you indigestion and melancholia before your time. This vomit of learned truck was stewing in my
guts the whole week long, waiting for it to come Sunday to be set to
music. In between "The Midnight
Fire Alarm" and "Marche Militaire" I would get my inspiration,
which was to destroy all the existent forms of harmony and create my own
cacophony. Imagine Uranus well aspected
to Mars, to Mercury, to the Moon, to Jupiter, to Venus. It's hard to imagine because Uranus functions
best when it is badly aspected, when it is "afflicted", so to
speak. Yet the music which I gave off
Sunday mornings, a music of wellbeing, and of well-nourished desperation, was
born of an illogically well-aspected Uranus firmly anchored in the Seventh
House. I didn't know it then, I didn't
know that Uranus existed, and lucky it was that I was ignorant. But I can see it now, because it was a fluky
joy, a phoney wellbeing, a destructive sort of fiery creation. The greater my euphoria the more tranquil the
folks became. Even my sister who was
dippy became calm and composed. The
neighbours used to stand outside the window and listen, and now and then I would
hear a burst of applause, and then bang, zip! like a rocket I was off again -
Velocity Exercise No. 947½. If I
happened to espy a cockroach crawling up the wall I was in bliss: that would
lead me without the slightest modulation to Opus Izzit of my sadly corrugated
clavichord. One Sunday, just like that,
I composed one of the loveliest scherzos imaginable - to a louse. It was spring and we were all getting the
sulphur treatment; I had been poring all week over Dante's Inferno in
English. Sunday came like a thaw, the
birds driven so crazy by the sudden heat that they flew in and out of the
window, immune to the music. One of the
German relatives had just arrived from Hamburg, or Bremen, a maiden aunt who
looked like a bull-dyker. Just to be
near her was sufficient to throw me into a fit of rage. She used to pat me on the head and tell me I
would be another Mozart. I hated Mozart,
and I hate him still, and so to get even with her I would play badly, play all
the sour notes I knew. And then came the
little louse, as I was saying, a real louse which had gotten buried in my
winter underwear. I got him out and I
put him tenderly on the tip of a black key.
Then I began to do a little gigue around him with my right hand; the
noise had probably deafened him. He was
hypnotized, it seemed, by my nimble pyrotechnic. This trancelike immobility finally got on my
nerves. I decided to introduce a
chromatic scale, coming down on him full force with my third finger. I caught him fair and square, but with such
force that he was glued to my fingertip.
That put the St. Vitus dance in me.
From then on the scherzo commenced.
It was a potpourri of forgotten melodies spiced with aloes and the juice
of porcupines, played sometimes in three keys at once and pivoting always like
a waltzing mouse around the immaculate conception. Later, when I went to hear Prokofiev, I
understood what was happening to him; I understood Whitehead and Russell and
Jeans and Eddington and Rudolf Eucken and Frobenius and Link Gillespie; I
understood why, if there had never been a binomial theorem, man would have
invented it; I understood why electricity and compressed air, to say nothing of
Sprudel baths and fango packs. I
understood very clearly, I must say, that man has a dead louse in his blood,
and that when you're handed a symphony or a fresco or a high explosive you're
really getting an ipecac reaction which was not included in the predestined
bill of fare. I understood too why I had
failed to become the musician I was. All
the compositions I had created in my head, all these private and artistic
auditions which were permitted me, thanks to St. Hildegarde or St. Bridget, or
John of the Cross, or God knows whom, were written for an age to come, an age
with less instruments and stronger antennae, stronger eardrums too. A different kind of suffering has to be
experienced before such music can be appreciated. Beethoven staked out the new territory - one
is aware of its presence when he erupts, when he breaks down in the very core
of his stillness. It is a realm of new
vibrations - to us only a misty nebula, for we have yet to pass beyond our own
conception of suffering. We have yet to
ingest this nebulous world, its travail, its orientation. I was permitted to hear an incredible music
lying prone and indifferent to the sorrow about me. I heard the gestation of the new world, the
sound of torrential rivers taking their course, the sound of stars grinding and
chafing, of fountains clotted with blazing gems. All music is still governed by the old
astronomy, is the product of the hothouse, a panacea for Weltschmerz. Music is still the antidote for the nameless,
but this is not yet music. Music
is planetary fire, an irreducible which is all-sufficient; it is the slate
writing of the gods, the abracadabra which the learned and the ignorant alike
muff because the axle has been unhooked.
Look to the bowels, to the inconsolable and ineluctable! Nothing is determined, nothing is settled or
solved. All this that is going on, all
music, all architecture, all law, all government, all invention, all discovery
- all this is velocity exercises in the dark, Czerny with a capital Zed riding
a crazy white horse in a bottle of mucilage.
One of the reasons why I never got
anywhere with the bloody music is that it was always mixed up with sex. As soon as I was able to play a song the
cunts were around me like flies. To
begin with, it was largely Lola's fault.
Lola was my first piano teacher.
Lola Niessen. It was a ridiculous
name and typical of the neighbourhood we were living in then. It sounded like a stinking bloater, or a
wormy cunt. To tell the truth, Lola was
not exactly a beauty. She looked
somewhat like a Kalmuck or a Chinook, with sallow complexion and
bilious-looking eyes. She had a few
warts and wens, not to speak of the moustache.
What excited me, however, was her hairiness; she had wonderful long fine
black hair which she arranged in ascending and descending buns on her Mongolian
skull. At the nape of the neck she
curled it up in a serpentine knot. She
was always late in coming, being a conscientious idiot, and by the time she
arrived I was always a bit enervated from masturbating. As soon as she took the stool beside me,
however, I became excited again, what with the stinking perfume she soused her
armpits with. In the summer she wore
loose sleeves and I could see the tufts of hair under her arms. The sight of it drove me wild. I imagined her as having hair all over, even
in her navel. And what I wanted to do
was to roll in it, bury my teeth in it.
I could have eaten Lola's hair as a delicacy, if there had been a bit of
flesh attached to it. Anyway she was
hairy, that's what I want to say, and being hairy as a gorilla she got my mind
of the music and on to her cunt. I was so
damned eager to see that cunt of hers that finally one day I bribed her little
brother to let me have a peep at her while she was in the bath. It was even more wonderful than I had
imagined: she had a shag that reached from the navel to the crotch, an enormous
thick tuft, a sporran, rich as a hand-woven rug. When she went over it with the powder puff I
thought I would faint. The next time she
came for the lesson I left a couple of buttons open on my fly. She didn't seem to notice anything
amiss. The following time I left my
whole fly open. This time she caught
on. She said, "I think you've
forgotten something, Henry." I looked
at her, red as a beet, and I asked her blandly what? She pretended to look away while pointing to
it with her left hand. Her hand came so
close that I couldn't resist grabbing it and pushing it in my fly. She got up
quickly, looking pale and frightened. By
this time my prick was out of my fly and quivering with delight. I closed in on her and I reached up under her
dress to get at that hand-woven rug I had seen through the keyhole. Suddenly I got a sound box on the ears, and then
another and then she took me by the ear and leading me to a corner of the room
she turned my face to the wall and said, "Now button up your fly, you
silly boy!" We went back to the
piano in a few moments - back to Czerny and the velocity exercises. I couldn't see a sharp from a flat any more,
but I continued to play because I was afraid she might tell my mother of the
incident. Fortunately it was not an easy
thing to tell one's mother.
The incident, embarrassing as it was,
marked a decided change in our relations.
I thought that the next time she came she would be severe with me, but,
on the contrary, she seemed to have dolled herself up, to have sprinkled more
perfume over herself, and she was even a bit gay, which was unusual for Lola
because she was a morose, withdrawn type.
I didn't dare to open my fly again, but I would get an erection and hold
it throughout the lesson, which she must have enjoyed because she was always
stealing sidelong glances in that direction.
I was only fifteen at the time, and she was easily twenty-five or twenty-eight. It was difficult for me to know what to do,
unless it was to deliberately knock her down one day while my mother was
out. For a time I actually shadowed her
at night, when she went out alone. She
had a habit of going out for long walks alone in the evening. I used to dog her steps; hoping she would get
to some deserted spot near the cemetery where I might try some rough
tactics. I had a feeling sometimes that
she knew I was following her and that she enjoyed it. I think she was waiting for me to waylay her
- I think that was what she wanted.
Anyway, one night I was lying in the grass near the railroad tracks; it
was a sweltering summer's night and people were lying about anywhere and
everywhere, like panting dogs. I wasn't
thinking of Lola at all - I was just mooning there, too hot to think about
anything. Suddenly I see a woman coming
along the narrow cinderpath. I'm lying
sprawled out on the embankment and nobody around that I can notice. The woman is coming along slowly, head down,
as though she were dreaming. As she gets
close I recognize her. "Lola!"
I call. "Lola!" She seems to be really astonished to see me
there. "Why, what are you doing
here?" she says, and with that she sits down beside me on the
embankment. I didn't bother to answer
her, I didn't say a word - I just crawled over her and flattened her. "Not here, please," she begged, but
I paid no attention. I got my hand
between her legs, all tangled up in that thick sporran of hers, and she was
sopping wet, like a horse slavering. It
was my first fuck, by Jesus, and it had to be that a train would come along and
shower hot sparks over us. Lola was
terrified. It was her first fuck too, I
guess, and she probably needed it more than I, but when she felt the sparks she
wanted to tear loose. It was like trying
to hold down a wild mare. I couldn't
keep her down, no matter how I wrestled with her. She got up, shook her clothes down, and
adjusted the bun at the nape of her neck.
"You must go home," she says.
"I'm not going home," I said, and with that I took her by the
arm and started walking. We walked along
in dead silence for quite a distance.
Neither of us seemed to be noticing where we were going. Finally we were out on the highway and up
above us were the reservoirs and near the reservoirs was a pond. Instinctively I headed towards the pond. We had to pass under some low-hanging trees
as we neared the pond. I was helping
Lola to stoop down when suddenly she slipped, dragging me with her. She made no effort to get up; instead she
caught hold of me and pressed me to her, and to my complete amazement I also
felt her slip her hand in my fly. She
caressed me so wonderfully that in a jiffy I came in her hand. Then she took my hand and put it between her
legs. She lay back completely relaxed
and opened her legs wide. I bent over
and kissed every hair on her cunt; I put my tongue in her navel and licked it
clean. Then I lay with my head between
her legs and lapped up the drool that was pouring from her. She was moaning now and clutching wildly with
her hands; her hair had come completely undone and was lying over the bare
abdomen. To make it short, I got it in
again, and I held it a long time, for which she must have been damned grateful
because she came I don't know how many times - it was like a pack of
firecrackers going off, and with it she sunk her teeth into me, bruised my
lips, clawed me, ripped my shirt and what the hell not. I was branded like a steer when I got home
and took a look at myself in the mirror.
It was wonderful while it lasted, but
it didn't last long. A month later the
Niessens moved to another city, and I never saw Lola again. But I hung her sporran over the bed and I
prayed to it every night. And whenever I
began the Czerny stuff I would get an erection, thinking of Lola lying in the
grass, thinking of her long black hair, the bun at the nape of her neck, the
groans she vented and the juice that poured out of her. Playing the piano was just one long vicarious
fuck for me. I had to wait another two
years before I would get my end in again, as they say, and then it wasn't so
good because I got a beautiful dose with it, and besides it wasn't in the grass
and it wasn't summer, and there was no heat in it but just a cold mechanical
fuck for a buck in a dirty little hotel room, the bastard trying to pretend she
was coming and not coming any more than Christmas was coming. And maybe it wasn't her that gave me the
clap, but her pal in the next room who was laying up with my friend Simmons. It was like this - I had finished so quick
with my mechanical fuck that I thought I'd go in and see how it was going with
my friend Simmons. Lo and behold, they
were still at it, and they were going strong.
She was a Czech, his girl, and a bit sappy; she hadn't been at it very
long, apparently, and she used to forget herself and enjoy the act. Watching her hand it out, I decided to wait
and have a go at her myself. And so I
did. And before the week was out I had a
discharge, and after that I figured it would be blueballs or rocks in the groin.
Another year or so and I was giving
lessons myself, and as luck would have it, the mother of the girl I'm teaching
is a slut, a tramp and a trollop if ever there was one. She was living with a nigger, as I later found
out. Seems she couldn't get a prick big
enough to satisfy her. Anyway, every
time I started to go home she'd hold me up at the door and rub it up against
me. I was afraid of starting in with her
because rumour had it that she was full of syph, but what the hell are you
going to do when a hot bitch like that plasters her cunt up against you and
slips her tongue halfway down your throat.
I used to fuck her standing up in the vestibule, which wasn't so
difficult because she was light and I could hold her in my hands like a
doll. And like that I'm holding her one
night when suddenly I hear a key being fitted into the lock, and she hears it
too and she's frightened stiff. There's
nowhere to go. Fortunately there's a
portiere hanging at the doorway and I hide behind that. Then I hear her black buck kissing her and
saying how are yer, honey? and she's saying how she had been waiting up
for him and better come right upstairs because she can't wait and so on. And when the stairs stop squeaking I gently
open the door and sally out, and then by God I have a real fright because if
that black buck ever finds out I'll have my throat slit and no mistake about
it. And so I stop giving lessons at that
joint, but soon the daughter is after me - just turning sixteen - and won't I
come and give her lessons at a friend's house?
We begin the Czerny exercises all over again, sparks and
everything. It's the first smell of
fresh cunt I've had, and it's wonderful, like new-mown hay. We fuck our way through one lesson after
another and in between lessons we do a little extra fucking. And then one day it's the sad story - she's
knocked up and what to do about it? I
have to get a Jewboy to help me out, and he wants twenty-five bucks for the job
and I've never seen twenty-five bucks in my life. Besides, she's under age. Besides, she might have blood poisoning. I give him five bucks on account and beat it
to the Adirondacks for a couple of weeks.
In the Adirondacks I meet a schoolteacher who's dying to take
lessons. More velocity exercises, more
condoms and conundrums. Every time I
touched the piano I seemed to shake a cunt loose.
If there was a party I had to bring
the fucking music roll along; to me it was just like wrapping my penis in a
handkerchief and slinging it under my arm.
In vacation time, at a farmhouse or an inn, where there was always a
surplus of cunt, the music had an extraordinary effect. Vacation time was a period I looked forward
to the whole year, not because of the cunts so much as because it meant no
work. Once out of harness I became a
clown. I was so chock-full of energy
that I wanted to jump out of my skin. I
remember one summer in the Catskills meeting a girl named Francie. She was beautiful and lascivious, with strong
Scotch teats and a row of white even teeth that was dazzling. It began in the river where we were
swimming. We were holding on to the boat
and one of her boobies had slipped out of bounds. I slipped the other one out for her and then
I undid the shoulder straps. She ducked
under the boat coyly and I followed and as she was coming up for air I wiggled
the bloody bathing suit off her and there she was floating like a mermaid with
her big strong teats bobbing up and down like bloated corks. I wriggled out of my tights and we began
playing like dolphins under the side of the boat. In a little while her girlfriend came along
in a canoe. She was a rather hefty girl,
a sort of strawberry blonde with agate-coloured eyes and full of freckles. She was rather shocked to find us in the raw,
but we soon tumbled her out of the canoe and stripped her. And then the three of us began to play tag
under the water, but it was hard to get anywhere with them because they were
slippery as eels. After we had had
enough of it we ran to a little bathhouse which was standing in the field like
an abandoned sentry box. We had brought
our clothes along and we were going to get dressed, the three of us, in this
little box. It was frightfully hot and
sultry and the clouds were gathering for a storm. Agnes - that was Francie's friend - was in a
hurry to get dressed. She was beginning
to be ashamed of herself standing there naked in front of us. Francie, on the other hand, seemed to be
perfectly at ease. She was sitting on
the bench was her legs crossed and smoking a cigarette. Anyway, just as Agnes was pulling on her
chemise there came a flash of lightning and a terrifying clap of thunder right
on the heels of it. Agnes screamed and
dropped her chemise. There came another
flash in a few seconds and again a peal of thunder, dangerously close. The air got blue all around us and the flies
began to bite and we felt nervous and itchy and a bit panicky too. Especially Agnes who was afraid of the
lightning and even more afraid of being found dead and the three of us stark
naked. She wanted to get her things on
and run for the house, she said. And
just as she got that off her chest the rain came down, in bucketsful. We thought it would stop in a few minutes and
so we stood there naked looking out at the steaming river through the partly opened
door. It seemed to be raining rocks and
the lightning kept playing around us incessantly. We were all thoroughly frightened now and in
a quandary as to what to do. Agnes was
wringing her hands and praying out loud; she looked like a George Grosz idiot,
one of those lopsided bitches with a rosary around the neck and yellow jaundice
to boot. I thought she was going to
faint on us or something. Suddenly I got
the bright idea of doing a war dance in the rain - to distract them. Just as I jump out to commence my shindig a
streak of lightning flashes and splits open a tree not far off. I'm so damned scared that I lose my
wits. Always when I'm frightened I
laugh. So I laughed, a wild,
blood-curdling laugh which made the girls scream. When I heard them scream, I don't know why,
but I thought of the velocity exercises, and with that I felt that I was
standing in the void and it was blue all around and the rain was beating a
hot-and-cold tattoo on my tender flesh.
All my sensations had gathered on the surface of the skin and underneath
the outermost layer of skin I was empty, light as a feather, lighter than air
or smoke or talcum or magnesium or any goddamned thing you want. Suddenly I was a Chippewa and it was the key
of sassafras again and I didn't give a fuck whether the girls were screaming or
fainting or shitting in their pants, which they were minus anyway. Looking a crazy Agnes with the rosary around
her neck and her big breadbasket blue with fright I got the notion to do a
sacrilegious dance, with one hand cupping my balls and the other hand thumbing
my nose at the thunder and lightning.
The rain was hot and cold and the grass seemed full of dragonflies. I hopped about like a kangaroo and I yelled
at the top of my lungs - "O Father, you wormy old son of a bitch, pull in
that fucking lightning or Agnes won't believe in you any more! Do you hear me, you old prick up there, stop
the shenanigans ... you're driving Agnes nutty.
Hey you, are you deaf, you old futzer?" And with a continuous rattle of this defiant
nonsense on my lips I danced around the bathhouse, leaping and bounding like a
gazelle and using the most frightful oaths I could summon. When the lightning cracked I jumped higher
and when the thunder clapped I roared like a lion and then I did a handspring
and then I rolled in the grass like a cub and I chewed the grass and spit it
out for them and I pounded my chest like a gorilla and all the time I could see
the Czerny exercises resting on the piano, the white page full of sharps and flats,
and the fucking idiot, think I to myself, imagining that that's the way to
learn how to manipulate the well-tempered clavichord. And suddenly I thought that Czerny might be
in heaven by now and looking down on me and so I spat up at him high as I could
spit and when the thunder rolled again I yelled with all my might - "You
bastard, Czerny, you up there, may the lightning twist your balls off
... may you swallow your own crooked tail and strangle yourself ... do you hear
me, you crazy prick?"
But in spite of all my good efforts
Agnes was getting more delirious. She
was a dumb Irish Catholic and she had never heard God spoken to that way
before. Suddenly, while I was dancing
about in the rear of the bathhouse she bolted for the river. I heard Francie scream - "Bring her
back, she'll drown herself! Bring her
back!" I started after her, the
rain still coming down like pitchforks, and yelling to her to come back, but
she ran on blindly as though possessed of the devil, and when she got to the
water's edge she drove straight in and made for the boat. I swam after her and as we got to the side of
the boat, which I was afraid she would capsize, I got hold of her round the
waist with my one hand and I started to talk to her calmly and soothingly, as
though I was talking to a child.
"Go away from me," she said, "you're an
atheist!" Jesus, you could have
knocked me over with a feather, so astonished I was to hear that. So that was it? All that hysteria because I was insulting the
Lord Almighty. I felt like batting her
one in the eye to bring her to her senses.
But we were out over our heads and I had a fear that she would do some
mad thing like pulling the boat over our heads if I didn't handle her
right. So I pretended that I was
terribly sorry and I said I didn't mean a word of it, that I had been scared to
death, and so on and so forth, and as I talked to her gently, soothingly, I
slipped my arm down from her waist and I gently stroked her ass. That was what she wanted all right. She was talking to me blubberingly about what
a good Catholic she was and how she had tried not to sin, and maybe she was so
wrapped up in what she was saying she didn't know what I was doing, but just
the same when I got my hand in her crotch and said all the beautiful things I
could think of, about God, about love, about going to church and confessing and
all that crap, she must have felt something because I had a good three fingers
inside her and working them around like drunken bobbins. "Put your arms around me, Agnes," I
said softly, slipping my hand out and pulling her to me so that I could get my
legs between hers.... "There, that's a girl ... take it easy now ... it'll
stop soon." And still talking about
the church, the confessional, God, love, and the whole bloody mess I managed to
get it inside of her. "You're very
good to me," she said, just as though she didn't know my prick was in her,
"and I'm sorry I acted like a fool."
"I know, Agnes," I said, "it's all right ... listen, grab
me tighter ... yeah, that's it."
"I'm afraid the boat's going to tip over," she says, trying
her best to keep her ass in position by paddling with her right hand. "Yes, let's go back to the shore,"
I said, and I start to pull away from her.
"Oh don't leave me," she says, clutching me tighter. "Don't leave me, I'll drown." Just then Francie comes running down to the
water. "Hurry," says Agnes, "hurry
... I'll drown."
Francie was a good sort, I must
say. She certainly wasn't a Catholic and
if she had any morals they were of the reptilian order. She was one of those girls who are born to
fuck. She had no aims, no great desires,
showed no jealousy, held no grievances, was constantly cheerful and not at all
unintelligent. At nights when we were
sitting on the porch in the dark talking to the guests she would come over and
sit on my lap with nothing on underneath her dress and I would slip it into her
as she laughed and talked to the others.
I think she would have brazened it out before the Pope if she had been
given the chance. Back in the city, when
I called on her at her home, she pulled the same stunt off in front of her
mother whose sight, fortunately, was growing dim. If we went dancing and she got too hot in the
pants she would drag me to a telephone booth and, queer girl that she was,
she'd actually talk to someone, someone like Agnes for example, while pulling
off the trick. She seemed to get a
special pleasure out of doing it under people's noses; she said there was more
fun in it if you didn't think about it too hard. In the crowded subway, coming home from the
beach, say, she'd slip her dress around so that the slit was in the middle and
take my hand and put it right on my cunt.
If the train was tightly packed and we were safely wedged in a corner
she'd take my cock out of my fly and hold it in her two hands, as though it
were a bird. Sometimes she'd get playful
and hang her bag on it, as though to prove that there wasn't the least
danger. Another thing about her was that
she didn't pretend that I was the only guy she had on the string. Whether she told everything I don't know, but
she certainly told me plenty. She told
me about her affairs laughingly, while she was climbing over me or when I had
it in her, or just when I was about to come.
She would tell me how they went about it, how big they were or how
small, what they said when they got excited and so on and so forth, giving me
every possible detail, just as though I were going to write a textbook on the
subject. She didn't seem to have the
least feeling of sacredness about her own body or her feelings or anything
connected with herself. "Francie,
you bloody fucker," I used to say, "you've got the morals of a
clam." "But you like me, don't
you?" she answer. "Men like to
fuck, and so do women. It doesn't harm
anybody and it doesn't mean you have to love everyone you fuck, does it? I wouldn't want to be in love; it must be
terrible to have to fuck the same man all the time, don't you think? Listen, if you didn't fuck anybody but me all
the time you'd get tired of me quick, wouldn't you? Sometimes it's nice to be fucked by someone
you don't know at all. Yes, I think
that's the best of all," she added - "there's no complications, no
telephone numbers, no love letters, no scraps, what? Listen, do you think this is very bad? Once I tried to get my brother to fuck me;
you know what a sissy he is - he gives everybody a pain. I don't remember exactly how it was any more,
but anyway we were in the house alone and I was passionate that day. He came into my bedroom to ask me for
something. I was lying there with my
dress up, thinking about it and wanting it terribly, and when he came in I
didn't give a damn about his being my brother, I just thought of him as a man,
and so I lay there with my skirt up and I told him I wasn't feeling well, that
I had a pain in my stomach. He wanted to
run right out and get something for me but I told him no, just to rub my
stomach a bit, that would do it good. I
opened my waist and made him rub my bare skin.
He was trying to keep his eyes on the wall, the big idiot, and rubbing
me as though I were a piece of wood.
'It's not there, you chump,' I said, 'it's lower down ... what are you
afraid of?' And I pretended that I was
in agony. Finally he touched me
accidentally. 'There! that's it!' I
shouted. 'Oh do rub it, it feels so
good!' Do you know, the big sap
actually massaged me for five minutes without realizing that it was all a game? I was so exasperated that I told him to get
the hell out and leave me alone. 'You're
a eunuch,' I said, but he was such a sap I don't think he knew what the word
meant." She laughed, thinking what
a ninny her brother was. She said he
probably still had his maiden. What did
I think about it - was it so terribly bad?
Of course she knew I wouldn't think anything of the kind. "Listen, Francie," I said,
"did you ever tell that story to the cop you're going with?" She guessed she hadn't. "I guess so too," I said. "He'd beat the piss out of you if he
ever heard that yarn." "He's
socked me already," she answered promptly.
"What?" I said, "you let him beat you
up?" "I don't ask him
to," she said, "but you know how quick-tempered he is. I don't let anybody else sock me but somehow
coming from him I don't mind it so much.
Sometimes it makes me feel good inside.... I don't know, maybe a woman
ought to get beaten up once in a while.
It doesn't hurt so much, if you really like a guy. And afterwards he's so damned gentle - I
almost feel ashamed of myself...."
It isn't often you get a cunt who'll admit
such things - I mean a regular cunt and not a moron. There was Trix Miranda, for example, and her
sister, Mrs. Costello. A fine pair of
birds they were. Trix, who was going
with my friend MacGregor, tried to pretend to her own sister, with whom she was
living, that she had no sexual relations with MacGregor. And the sister was pretending to all and
sundry that she was frigid, that she couldn't have any relations with a man
even if she wanted to, because she was "built too small". And meanwhile my friend MacGregor was fucking
them silly, both of them, and they both knew each other but still they lied
like that to each other. Why? I couldn't make it out. The Costello bitch was hysterical; whenever
she felt that she wasn't getting a fair percentage of the lays that MacGregor
was handing out she'd throw a pseudo-epileptic fit. That meant throwing towels over her, patting
her wrists, opening her bosom, chafing her legs and finally hoisting her
upstairs to bed where my friend MacGregor would look after her as soon as he
had put the other one to sleep.
Sometimes the two sisters would lie down together to take a nap of an
afternoon; if MacGregor were around he would go upstairs and lie between them. As he explained it to me laughingly, the
trick was for him to pretend to go to sleep.
He would lie there breathing heavily, opening now one eye, now the
other, to see which one was really dozing off.
As soon as he was convinced that one of them was asleep he'd tackle the
other. On such occasions he seemed to
prefer the hysterical sister, Mrs. Costello, whose husband visited her about
once every six months. The more risk he
ran, the more thrill he got out of it, he said.
If it were with the other sister, Trix, whom he was supposed to be
courting, he had to pretend that it would be terrible if the other one were to
catch them like that, and at the same time, he admitted to me, he was always
hoping that the other one would wake up and catch them. But the married sister, the one who was
"built too small", as she used to say, was a wily bitch and besides
she felt guilty toward her sister and if her sister had ever caught her in the
act she'd probably have pretended that she was having a fit and didn't know
what she was doing. Nothing on earth
could make her admit that she was actually permitting herself the pleasure of
being fucked by a man.
I knew her quite well because I was
giving her lessons for a time, and I used to do my damnedest to make her admit
that she had a normal cunt and that she'd enjoy a good fuck if she could get it
now and then. I used to tell her wild
stories, which were really thinly disguised accounts of her own doings, and yet
she remained adamant. I had even gotten
her to the point one day - and this beats everything - where she let me put my
finger inside her. I thought sure it was
settled. It's true she was dry and a bit
tight, but I put that down to her hysteria.
But imagine getting that far with a cunt and then having her say to your
face, as she yanks her dress down violently - "you see, I told you I
wasn't built right!" "I don't
see anything of the kind," I said angrily.
"What do you expect me to do - use a microscope on you?"
"I like that," she said,
pretending to get on her high horse.
"What a way of talking to me!"
"You know damned well you're
lying," I continued. "Why do
you lie like that? Don't you think it's
human to have a cunt and to use it once in a while? Do you want it to dry up on you?"
"Such language!" she said,
biting her underlip and reddening like a beet.
"I always thought you were a gentleman."
"Well, you're no lady," I
retorted, "because even a lady admits to a fuck now and then, and besides
ladies don't ask gentlemen to stick their fingers up inside them and see how
small they're built."
"I never asked you to touch
me," she said. "I wouldn't
think of asking you to put your hand on me, on my private parts anyway."
"Maybe you thought I was going to
swab your ear for you, is that it?"
"I thought of you like a doctor
at that moment, that's all I can say," she said stiffly, trying to freeze
me out.
"Listen," I said, taking a
wild chance, "let's pretend that it was all a mistake, that nothing
happened, nothing at all. I know you too
well to think of insulting you like that.
I wouldn't think of doing a thing like that to you - no, damned if I
would. I was just wondering if maybe you
weren't right in what you said, if maybe you aren't built rather small. You know, it all went so quick I couldn't
tell what I felt ... I don't think I even put my finger inside you. I must have just touched the outside - that's
about all. Listen, sit down here on the
couch ... let's be friends again."
I pulled her down beside me - she was melting visibly - and I put my arm
around her waist, as though to console her more tenderly. "Has it always been like that?" I
asked innocently, and I almost laughed the next moment, realizing what an
idiotic question it was. She hung her
head coyly, as though we were touching on an unmentionable tragedy. "Listen, maybe if you sat on my lap
..." and I hoisted her gently on to
my lap, at the same time delicately putting my hand under her dress and resting
it lightly on her knee ... "maybe if you sat a moment like this, you'd
feel better ... there, that's it, just snuggle back in my arms ... are you
feeling better?" She didn't answer,
but she didn't resist either; she just lay back limply and closed her
eyes. Gradually and very gently and
smoothly I moved my hand up her leg, talking to her in a low, soothing voice all
the time. When I got my fingers into her
crotch and parted the little lips she was as moist as a dishrag. I massaged it gently, opening it up more and
more, and still handing out a telepathic line about women sometimes being
mistaken about themselves and how sometimes they think they're very small when
really they're quite normal, and the longer I kept it up the juicier she got
and the more she opened up. I had four
fingers inside her and there was room inside for more if I had had more to put
in. She had an enormous cunt and it had
been well reamed out, I could feel. I
looked at her to see if she was still keeping her eyes shut. Her mouth was open and she was gasping but her
eyes were tight shut, as though she were pretending to herself that it was all
a dream. I could move her about roughly
now - no danger of the slightest protest.
And maliciously perhaps, I jostled her about unnecessarily, just to see
if she would come to. She was as limp as
a feather pillow and even when her head struck the arm of the sofa she showed
no sign of irritation. It was as though
she had anesthetized herself for a gratuitous fuck. I pulled all her clothes off and threw them
on the floor, and after I had given her a bit of a workout on the sofa I
slipped it out and laid her on the floor, on her clothes; and then I slipped it
in again and she held it tight with that suction valve she used so skilfully,
despite the outward appearance of coma.
It seems strange to me that the music
always passed off into sex. Nights, if I
went out alone for a walk, I was sure to pick up someone - a nurse, a girl
coming out of a dance hall, a salesgirl, anything with a skirt on. If I went out with my friend MacGregor in his
car - just a little spin to the beach, he would say - I would find myself by
midnight sitting in some strange parlour in some queer neighbourhood with a
girl on my lap, usually one I didn't give a damn about because MacGregor was
even less selective than I. Often,
stepping in his car, I'd say to him - "listen, no cunts tonight,
what?" And he'd say - "Jesus,
no, I'm fed up ... just a little drive somewhere ... maybe to Sheepshead Bay,
what do you say?" We wouldn't have
gone more than a mile when suddenly he'd pull the car up to the curb and nudge
me. "Get a look at that," he'd
say, pointing to a girl strolling along the sidewalk. "Jesus, what a leg!" Or else - "Listen, what do you say we
ask her to come along? Maybe she can dig
up a friend." And before I could
say another word he'd be hailing her and handing out his usual patter, which
was the same for everyone. And nine
times out of ten the girl came along.
And before we'd gone very far, feeling her up with his free hand, he'd
ask her if she didn't have a friend she could dig up to keep us company. And if she put up a fuss, if she didn't like
being pawed over that way too quickly, he'd say - "All right, get the hell
out then ... we can't waste any time on the likes of you!" And with that he'd slow up and shove her
out. "We can't be bothered with
cunts like that, can we Henry?" he'd say, chuckling softly. "You wait, I promise you something good
before the night's over." And if I
reminded him that we were going to lay off for one night he'd answer:
"Well, just as you like.... I was only thinking it might make it more
pleasant for you." And then
suddenly the brakes would pull us up and he'd be saying to some silky
silhouette looming out of the dark - "hello, sister, what yer doing -
taking a little stroll?" And maybe
this time it would be something exciting, a dithery little bitch with nothing
else to do but pull up her skirt and hand it to you. Maybe we wouldn't even have to buy her a
drink, just haul up somewhere on a side road and go at it, one after the other,
in the car. And if she was an
empty-headed bimbo, as they usually were, he wouldn't even bother to drive her
home. "We're not going that
way," he'd say, the bastard that he was.
"You'd better jump out here," and with that he'd open the door
and out with her. His next thought was,
of course, was she clean? That would
occupy his mind all the way back.
"Jesus, we ought to be more careful," he'd say. "You don't know what you're getting
yourself into picking them up like that.
Ever since that last one - you remember, the one we picked up on the
Drive - I've been itchy as hell. Maybe
it's just nervousness ... I think about it too much. Why can't a guy stick to one cunt, tell me
that, Henry. You take Trix, now, she's a
good kid, you know that. And I like her
too, in a way, but ... shit, what's the use of talking about it? You know me - I'm a glutton. You know, I'm getting so bad that sometimes
when I'm on my way to a date - mind you, with a girl I want to fuck, and everything
fixed too - as I say, sometimes I'm rolling along and maybe out of the corner
of my eye I catch a flash of a leg crossing the street and before I know it
I've got her in the car and the hell with the other girl. I must be cunt-struck, I guess ... what do
you think? Don't tell me," he would
add quickly. "I know you, you bugger
... you'll be sure to tell me the worst."
And then, after a pause - "you're a funny guy, do you know
that? I never notice you refusing
anything, but somehow you don't seem to be worrying about it all the time. Sometimes you strike me as though you didn't
give a damn one way or the other. And
you're a steady bastard too - almost a monogamist, I'd say. How you can keep it up so long with one woman
beats me. Don't you get bored with
them? Jesus, I know so well what they're
going to say. Sometimes I feel like
saying ... you know, just breeze in on 'em and say: 'Listen, kid, don't say a
word ... just fish it out and open your legs wide'." He laughed heartily. "Can you imagine the expression on
Trix's face if I pulled a line like that on her? I'll tell you, once I came pretty near doing
it. I keep my hat and coat on. Was she sore! She didn't mind my keeping my coat on so
much, but the hat! I told her I was
afraid of a draught ... of course there wasn't any draught. The truth is, I was so damned impatient to
get away that I thought if I kept my hat on I'd be off quicker. Instead I was there all night with her. She put up such a row that I couldn't get her
quiet.... But listen, that's nothing.
Once I had a drunken Irish bitch and this one had some queer ideas. In the first place, she never wanted it in
bed ... always on the table. You know,
that's all right once in a while, but if you do it often it wears you out. So one night - I was a little tight, I guess
- I says to her, no, nothing doing, you drunken bastard ... you're gonna go to
bed with me tonight. I want a real fuck
- in bed. You know, I had to
argue with that bitch for an hour almost before I could persuade her to go to
bed with me, and then only on the agreement that I was to keep my hat on. Listen, can you picture me getting over that
stupid bitch with my hat on? And stark
naked to boot! I asked her ... I said,
'why do you want me to keep my hat on?'
You know what she said? She said
it seemed more genteel. Can you imagine
what a mind that cunt had? I used to
hate myself for going with that bitch. I
never went to her sober, that's one thing.
I'd have to be tanked up first and kind of blind and batty - you know
how I get sometimes...."
I knew very well what he meant. He was one of my oldest friends and one of
the most cantankerous bastards I ever knew.
Stubborn wasn't the word for it.
He was like a mule - a pigheaded Scotchman. And his old man was even worse. When the two of them got into a rage it was a
pretty sight. The old man used to dance,
positively dance with rage. If
the old lady got between she'd get a sock in the eye. They used to put him out of the house
regularly. Out he'd go, with all his
belongings, including the furniture, including the piano too. In a month or so he'd be back again - because
they always gave him credit at home. And
then he'd come home drunk some night with a woman he'd picked up somewhere and
the rumpus would start all over again.
It seems they didn't mind so much his coming home with a girl and
keeping her all night, but what they did object to was the cheek of him asking
his mother to serve them breakfast in bed.
If his mother tried to bawl him out he'd shut her up by saying -
"What are you trying to tell me?
You wouldn't have been married yet if you hadn't been knocked
up." The old lady would wring her
hands and say - "What a son! What a
son! God help me, what have I done to
deserve this?" To which he'd
remark, "Aw forget it! You're just
an old prune!" Often as not his
sister would come up to try and smooth matters out. "Jesus, Wallie," she'd say,
"it's none of my business what you do, but can't you talk to your mother
more respectfully?" Whereupon
MacGregor would make his sister sit on the bed and start coaxing her to bring
up the breakfast. Usually he'd have to
ask his bedmate what her name was in order to present her to his sister. "She's not a bad kid," he'd say,
referring to his sister. "She's the
only decent one in the family.... Now listen, Sis, bring up some grub, will
yer? Some nice bacon and eggs, eh, what
do you say? Listen, is the old man
around? What's his mood today? I'd like to borrow a couple of bucks. You try and worm it out of him, will
you? I'll get you something nice for
Christmas." Then, as though
everything were settled, he'd pull back the covers to expose the wench beside
him. "Look at her, Sis, ain't she
beautiful? Look at that leg! Listen, you ought to get yourself a man ...
you're so skinny. Patsy here, I bet she
doesn't go begging for it, eh Patsy?" and with that a sound slap on the
rump for Patsy. "Now scram, Sis, I
want some coffee ... and don't forget, make the bacon crisp! Don't get any of that lousy store bacon ...
get something extra. And be quick about
it!"
What I liked about him were his
weaknesses; like all men who practise will power he was absolutely flabby
inside. There wasn't a thing he wouldn't
do - out of weakness. He was always very
busy and he was never really doing anything.
And always boning up on something, always trying to improve his
mind. For example, he would take the
unabridged dictionary and, tearing out a page each day, would read it through
religiously on his way back and forth from the office. He was full of facts, and the more absurd and
incongruous the facts, the more pleasure he derived from them. He seemed to be bent on proving to all and
sundry that life was a farce, that it wasn't worth the game, that one thing
cancelled out another, and so on. He was
brought up on the North Side, not very far from the neighbourhood in which I
had spent my childhood. He was very much
a product of the North Side too, and that was one of the reasons why I liked
him. The way he talked, out of the
corner of his mouth, for instance, the tough air he put on when talking to a
cop, the way he spat in disgust, the peculiar curse words he used, the
sentimentality, the limited horizon, the passion for playing pool or shooting
craps, the staying up all night swapping yarns, the contempt for the rich, the
hobnobbing with politicians, the curiosity about worthless things, the respect
for learning, the fascination of the dance hall, the saloon, the burlesque,
talking about seeing the world and never budging out of the city, idolizing no
matter whom so long as the person showed "spunk", a thousand and one
little traits or peculiarities of this sort endeared him to me because it was
precisely such idiosyncrasies which marked the fellows I had known as a
child. The neighbourhood was composed of
nothing, it seemed, but loveable failures.
The grownups behaved like children and the children were
incorrigible. Nobody could rise very far
above his neighbour or he'd be lynched.
It was amazing that anyone ever became a doctor or a lawyer. Even so, he had to be a good fellow, had to
pretend to talk like everyone else, and he had to vote the Democratic
ticket. To hear MacGregor talk about
Plato or Nietzsche, for instance, to his buddies was something to
remember. In the first place, to even
get permission to talk about such things as Plato or Nietzsche to his
companions, he had to pretend that it was only by accident that he had run
across their names; or perhaps he'd say that he had met an interesting drunk
one night in the back room of a saloon and this drunk had started talking about
these guys Nietzsche and Plato. He would
even pretend he didn't quite know how the names were pronounced. Plato wasn't such a dumb bastard, he would
say apologetically. Plato had an idea or
two in his bean, yes sir, yes siree.
He'd like to see one of those dumb politicians at Washington trying to
lock horns with a guy like Plato. And
he'd go on, in this roundabout, matter of fact fashion to explain to his
crapshooting friends just what kind of a bright bird Plato was in his time and
how he measured up against other men in other times. Of course, he was probably an eunuch, he
would add, by way of throwing a little cold water on all this erudition. In those days, as he nimbly explained, the
big guys, the philosophers, often had their nuts cut off - a fact! - so as to
be out of all temptation. The other guy,
Nietzsche, he was a real case, a case for the bughouse. He was supposed to be in love with his
sister. Hypersensitive like. Had to live in a special climate - in Nice,
he thought it was. As a rule he didn't
care much for the Germans, but this guy Nietzsche was different. As a matter of fact, he hated the Germans,
this Nietzsche. He claimed he was a Pole
or something like that. He had them dead
right, too. He said they were stupid and
swinish, and by God, he knew what he was talking about. Anyway, he showed them up. He said they were full of shit, to make it
brief, and by God, wasn't he right though?
Did you see the way those bastards turned tail when they got a dose of
their own medicine? "Listen, I know
a guy who cleaned out a nestful of them in the Argonne region - he said they
were so goddamned low he wouldn't shit on them.
He said he wouldn't even waste a bullet on them - he just bashed their
brains in with a club. I forget this
guy's name now, but anyway he told me he saw aplenty in the few months he was
there. He said the best fun he got out
of the whole fucking business was to pop off his own major. Not that he had any special grievance against
him - he just didn't like his mug. He
didn't like the way the guy gave orders.
Most of the officers that were killed got it in the back, he said. Served them right, too, the pricks! He was just a lad from the North Side. I think he runs a poolroom now down near
Wallabout Market. A quiet fellow, minds
his own business. But if you start
talking to him about the war he goes off the handle. He says he'd assassinate the President of the
United States if they ever tried to start another war. Yeah, and he'd do it too, I'm telling you....
But shit, what was that I wanted to tell you about Plato? Oh yeah...."
When the others were gone he'd
suddenly shift gears. "You don't
believe in talking like that, do you?" he'd begin. I had to admit I didn't. "You're wrong," he'd continue. "You've got to keep in with people, you
don't know when you may need one of those guys.
You act on the assumption that you're free, independent! You act as though you were superior to these
people. Well, that's where you make a
big mistake. How do you know where you'll
be five years from now, or even six months from now? You might be blind, you might be run over by
a truck, you might be put in the bughouse; you can't tell what's going to
happen to you. Nobody can. You might be as helpless as a baby...."
"So what?" I would say.
"Well, don't you think it would
be good to have a friend when you need one?
You might be so goddamned helpless you'd be glad to have someone help
you across the street. You think these
guys are worthless; you think I'm wasting my time with them. Listen, you never know what a man might do
for you some day. Nobody gets anywhere
alone...."
He was touchy about my independence,
what he called my indifference. If I was
obliged to ask him for a little dough he was delighted. That gave him a chance to deliver a little
sermon on friendship. "So you have
to have money, too?" he'd say, with a big satisfied grin spreading all
over his face. "So the poet has to
eat too? Well, well.... It's lucky you
came to me, Henry me boy, because I'm easy with you, I know you, you heartless
son of a bitch. Sure, what do you
want? I haven't got very much, but I'll
split it with you. That's fair enough,
isn't it? Or do you think, you bastard,
that maybe I ought to give you it all and go out and borrow something for
myself? I suppose you want a good
meal, eh? Ham and eggs wouldn't be good
enough, would it? I suppose you'd like
me to drive you to the restaurant too, eh?
Listen, get up from that chair a minute - I want to put a cushion under
your ass. Well, well, so you're
broke! Jesus, you're always broke - I
never remember seeing you with money in your pocket. Listen, don't you ever feel ashamed of
yourself? You talk about those bums I
hang out with ... well listen, mister, those guys never come and bum me for a
dime like you do. They've got more pride
- they'd rather steal it than come and grub it off me. But you, shit, you're full of
highfalutin' ideas, you want to reform the world and all that crap - you don't
want to work for money, no, not you ... you expect somebody to hand it to you
on a sliver platter. Huh! Lucky there's guys like me around that
understand you. You need to get wise to
yourself, Henry. You're dreaming. Everybody wants to eat, don't you know
that? Most people are willing to work
for it - they don't lie in bed all day like you and then suddenly pull on their
pants and run to the first friend at hand.
Supposing I wasn't here, what would you have done? Don't answer ... I know what you're going to
say. But listen, you can't go on all
your life like that. Sure, you talk fine
- it's a pleasure to listen to you.
You're the only guy I know that I really enjoy talking to, but where's
it going to get you? One of these days
they'll lock you up for vagrancy. You're
just a bum, don't you know that? You're
not even as good as those other bums you preach about. Where are you when I'm in a jam? You can't be found. You don't answer my letters, you don't answer
the telephone, you even hide sometimes when I come to see you. Listen, I know - you don't have to explain to
me. I know you don't want to hear my
stories all the time. But shit,
sometimes I really have to talk to you.
A fucking lot you care though. So
long as you're out of the rain and putting another meal under your belt you're
happy. You don't think about your
friends - until you're desperate. That's
no way to behave, is it? Say no
and I'll give you a buck. Goddamn it,
Henry, you're the only real friend I've got, but you're a son of a bitch of a
mucker if I know what I'm talking about.
You're just a born good for nothing son of a bitch. You'd rather starve than turn your hand to
something useful...."
Naturally I'd laugh and hold my hand
out for the buck he had promised me.
That would irritate him afresh.
"You're ready to say anything, aren't you, if only I give you the
buck I promised you? What a guy! Talk about morals - Jesus, you've got the
ethics of a rattlesnake. No, I'm
not giving it to you yet, by Christ. I'm
going to torture you a little more first.
I'm going to make you earn this money, if I can. Listen, what about shining my shoes - do that
for me, will you? They'll never get
shined if you don't do it now." I
pick up the shoes and ask him for the brush.
I don't mind shining his shoes, not in the least. But that too seems to incense him. "You're going to shine them, are
you? Well, by Jesus, that beats all
hell. Listen, where's your pride -
didn't you ever have any? And you're the
guy that knows everything. It's amazing. You know so goddamned much that you have to
shine your friend's shoes to worm a meal out of him. A fine pickle! Here, you bastard, here's the brush! Shine the other pair too while you're at
it."
A pause. He's washing himself at the sink and humming
a bit. Suddenly, in a bright, cheerful
tone - "How is it out today, Henry?
Is it sunny? Listen, I've got
just the place for you. What do you say
to scallops and bacon with a little tartar sauce on the side? It's a little joint down near the inlet. A day like today is just the day for scallops
and bacon, eh what, Henry? Don't tell me
you've got something to do ... if I haul you down there you've got to spend a
little time with me, you know that, don't you?
Jesus, I wish I had your disposition.
You just drift along, from minute to minute. Sometimes I think you're a damned sight
better off than any of us, even if you are a stinking son of a bitch and a
traitor and a thief. When I'm with you
the day seems to pass like a dream.
Listen, don't you see what I mean when I say I've got to see you
sometimes? I go nuts being all by myself
all the time. Why do I go chasing around
after cunt so much? Why do I play cards
all night? Why do I hang out with those
bums from the point? I need to talk to
someone, that's what."
A little later at the bay, sitting out
over the water, with a shot of rye in him and waiting for the sea food to be
served up.... "Life's not so bad if you can do what you want, eh
Henry? If I make a little dough I'm going
to take a trip around the world - and you're coming along with me. Yes, though you don't deserve it, I'm going
to spend some real money on you one day.
I want to see how you'd act if I gave you plenty of rope. I'm going to give you the money, see....
I won't pretend to lend it to you. We'll
see what'll happen to your fine ideas when you have some dough in your
pocket. Listen, when I was talking about
Plato the other day I meant to ask you something: I meant to ask you if you
ever read that yarn of his about Atlantis.
Did you? You did? Well, what do you think of it? Do you think it was just a yarn, or do you
think there might have been a place like that once?"
I didn't dare to tell him that I
suspected there were hundreds and thousands of continents whose existence past
or future we hadn't even begun to dream about, so I simply said I thought it
quite possible indeed that such a place as Atlantis might once have been.
"Well, it doesn't matter much one
way or the other, I suppose," he went on, "but I'll tell you what I
think. I think there must have been a
time like that once, a time when men were different. I can't believe that they always were the
pigs they are now and have been for the last few thousand years. I think it's just possible that there was a
time when men knew how to live, when they knew how to take it easy and to enjoy
life. Do you know what drives me
crazy? It's looking at my old man. Ever since he's retired he sits in front of
the fire all day long and mopes. To sit
there like a broken-down gorilla, that's what he slaved for all his life. Well shit, if I thought that was going to
happen to me I'd blow my brains out now.
Look around you ... look at the people we know ... do you know one that's
worth while? What's all the fuss about,
I'd like to know? We've got to live,
they say. Why? that's what I want
to know. They'd all be a damned sight
better off dead. They're all just so
much manure. When the war broke out and
I saw them go off to the trenches I said to myself good, maybe they'll
come back with a little sense! A lot of
them didn't come back, of course. But
the others! - listen, do you suppose they got more human, more
considerate? Not at all! They're all butchers at heart, and when
they're up against it they squeal. They
make me sick, the whole fucking lot of 'em.
I see what they're like, bailing them out every day. I see it from both sides of the fence. On the other side it stinks even worse. Why, if I told you some of the things I knew
about the judges who condemn these poor bastards you'd want to slug them. All you have to do is look at their
faces. Yes sir, Henry, I'd like to think
there was once a time when things were different. We haven't seen any real life - and we're not
going to see any. This thing is going to
last another few thousand years, if I know anything about it. You think I'm mercenary. You think I'm cuckoo to want to earn a lot of
money, don't you? Well I'll tell you, I
want to earn a little pile so that I can get my feet out of this muck. I'd go off and live with a nigger wench if I
could get away from this atmosphere.
I've worked my balls off trying to get where I am, which isn't very
far. I don't believe in work any more
than you do - I was trained that way, that's all. If I could put over a deal, if I could
swindle a pile out of one of these dirty bastards I'm dealing with, I'd do it
with a clear conscience. I know a little
too much about the law, that's the trouble.
But I'll fool them yet, you'll see.
And when I put it over I'll put it over big...."
Another shot of rye as the sea food's
coming along and he starts in again.
"I meant that about taking you on a trip with me. I'm thinking about it seriously. I suppose you'll tell me you've got a wife
and a kid to look after. Listen, when
are you going to break off with that battle-axe of yours? Don't you know that you've got to ditch
her?" He begins to laugh
softly. "Ho! Ho! To think that I was the one who picked her
out for you! Did I ever think you'd be
chump enough to get hitched up to her? I
thought I was recommending you a nice piece of tail and you, you poor slob, you
marry her. Ho ho! Listen to me, Henry, while you've got a
little sense left: don't let that sour-balled puss muck up your life for you,
do you get me? I don't care what you do
or where you go. I'd hate to see you
leave town.... I'd miss you, I'm telling you that frankly, but Jesus, if you
have to go to Africa, beat it, get out of her clutches, she's no good for
you. Sometimes when I get hold of a good
cunt I think to myself now there's something nice for Henry - and I have in
mind to introduce her to you, and then of course I forget. But Jesus, man, there's thousands of cunts in
the world you can get along with. To
think that you had to pick on a mean bitch like that.... Do you want more
bacon? You'd better eat what you
want now, you know, there won't be any dough later. Have another drink, eh? Listen, if you try to run away from me today
I swear I'll never lend you a cent.... What was I saying? Oh yeah, about that screwy bitch you married. Listen, are you going to do it or not? Every time I see you you tell me you're going
to run away, but you never do it. You
don't think you're supporting her, I hope?
She don't need you, you sap, don't you see that? She just wants to torture you. As for the kid ... well, shit, if I were in
your boots I'd drown it. That sounds
kind of mean, doesn't it, but you know what I mean. You're not a father. I don't know what the hell you are ... I just
know you're too goddamned good a fellow to be wasting your life on them. Listen, why don't you try to make something
of yourself? You're young yet and you
make a good appearance. Go off somewhere,
way the hell off, and start all over again.
If you need a little money I'll raise it for you. It's like throwing it down a sewer, I know,
but I'll do it for you just the same.
The truth is, Henry, I like you a hell of a lot. I've taken more from you than I would from
anybody in the world. I guess we have a
lot in common, coming from the old neighbourhood. Funny I didn't know you in those days. Shit, I'm getting sentimental...."
The day wore on like that, with lots
to eat and drink, the sun out strong, a car to tote us around, cigars in
between, dozing a little on the beach, studying the cunts passing by, talking,
laughing, singing a bit too - one of many, many days I spent like that with
MacGregor. Days like that really seemed
to make the wheel stop. On the surface
it was jolly and happy-go-lucky; time passing like a sticky dream. But underneath it was fatalistic,
premonitory, leaving me the next day morbid and restless. I knew very well I'd have to make a break
some day; I knew very well I was pissing my time away. But I knew also there was nothing I could do
about it - yet. Something had to
happen, something big, something that would sweep me off my feet. All I needed was a push, but it had to be
some force outside my world that could give me the right push, that I was
certain of. I couldn't eat my heart out,
because it wasn't in my nature. All my
life things had worked out all right - in the end. It wasn't in the cards for me to exert
myself. Something had to be left to
Providence - in my case a whole lot.
Despite all the outward manifestations of misfortune or mismanagement I
knew that I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth. And with a double crown, too. The external situation was bad, admitted -
but what bothered me more was the internal situation. I was really afraid of myself, of my
appetite, my curiosity, my flexibility, my permeability, my malleability, my
geniality, my powers of adaptation. No
situation in itself could frighten me: I somehow always saw myself sitting
pretty, sitting inside a buttercup, as it were, and sipping the honey. Even if I were flung in jail I had a hunch
I'd enjoy it. It was because I know how
not to resist, I suppose. Other people
wore themselves out tugging and straining and pulling; my strategy was to float
with the tide. What people did to me
didn't bother me nearly so much as what they were doing to others or to
themselves. I was really so damned well
off inside that I had to take on the problems of the world. And that's why I was in a mess all the time. I wasn't synchronized with my own destiny, so
to speak. I was trying to live out the
world destiny. If I got home of an
evening, for instance, and there was no food in the house, not even for the
kid, I would turn right around and go looking for the food. But what I noticed about myself, and that was
what puzzled me, was that no sooner outside and hustling for the grub than I
was back at the Weltanschaunng again.
I didn't think of food for us exclusively, I thought of food in
general, food in all its stages, everywhere in the world at that hour, and how
it was gotten and how it was prepared and what people did if they didn't have
it and how maybe there was a way to fix it so that everybody would have it when
they wanted it and no more time wasted on such an idiotically simple
problem. I felt sorry for the wife and
kid, sure, but I also felt sorry for the Hottentots and the Australian bushmen,
not to mention the starving Belgians and the Turks and the Armenians. I felt sorry for the human race, for the
stupidity of man and his lack of imagination.
Missing a meal wasn't so terrible - it was the ghastly emptiness of the
street that disturbed me profoundly. All
those bloody houses, one like another, and all so empty and cheerless
looking. Fine paving stones under foot
and asphalt in the middle of the street and beautifully-hideously-elegant brownstone
stoops to walk up, and yet a guy could walk about all day and all night on this
expensive material and be looking for a crust of bread. That's what got me. The incongruousness of it. If one could only dash out with a dinner bell
and yell "Listen, listen, people, I'm a guy what's hungry. Who wants shoes shined? Who wants the garbage brought out? Who wants the drainpipes cleaned out?" If you could only go out in the street and
put it to them clear like that. But no,
you don't dare to open your trap. If you
tell a guy in the street you're hungry you scare the shit out of him, he runs
like hell. That's something I never
understood. I don't understand it
yet. The whole thing is so simple - you
just say Yes when someone comes up to you.
And if you can't say Yes you can take him by the arm and ask some other
bird to help you out. Why you have to
don a uniform and kill men you don't know, just to get that crust of bread, is
a mystery to me. That's what I think
about, more than about whose trap it's going down or how much it costs. Why should I give a fuck about what anything
costs? I'm here to live, not to
calculate. And that's just what the
bastards don't want you to do - to live!
They want you to spend your whole life adding up figures. That makes sense to them. That's reasonable. That's intelligent. If I were running the boat things wouldn't be
so orderly perhaps, but it would be gayer, by Jesus! You wouldn't have to shit in your pants over
trifles. Maybe there wouldn't be
macadamized roads and streamlined cars and loudspeakers and gadgets of a
million billion varieties, maybe there wouldn't even be glass in the windows,
maybe you'd have to sleep on the ground, maybe there wouldn't be French cooking
and Italian cooking and Chinese cooking, maybe people would kill each other
when their patience was exhausted and maybe nobody would stop them because
there wouldn't be any jails or any cops or judges, and there certainly wouldn't
be any cabinet ministers or legislatures because there wouldn't be any
goddamned laws to obey or disobey, and maybe it would take months and years to
trek from place to place, but you wouldn't need a visa or a passport or a carte
d'identité because you wouldn't be registered anywhere and you wouldn't
bear a number and if you wanted to change your name every week you could do it
because it wouldn't make any difference since you wouldn't own anything except
what you could carry around with you and why would you want to own anything
when everything would be free?
During this period when I was drifting
from door to door, job to job, friend to friend, meal to meal, I did try
nevertheless to rope off a little space for myself which might be an anchorage;
it was more like a life buoy in the midst of a swift channel. To get within a mile of me was to hear a huge
dolorous bell tolling. Nobody could see
the anchorage - it was buried deep in the bottom of the channel. One saw me bobbing up and down on the
surface, rocking gently sometimes or else swinging backwards and forwards
agitatedly. What held me down safely was
the big pigeonholed desk which I put in the parlour. This was the desk which had been in the old
man's tailoring establishment for the last fifty years, which had given birth
to many bills and many groans, which had housed strange souvenirs in its
compartments, and which finally I had filched from him when he was ill and away
from the establishment; and now it stood in the middle of the floor in our
lugubrious parlour on the third floor of a respectable brownstone house in the
dead centre of the most respectable neighbourhood in Brooklyn. I had to fight a tough battle to install it
there, but I insisted that it be there in the midmost midst of the shebang. It was like putting a mastodon in the centre
of a dentist's office. But since the
wife had no friends to visit her and since my friends didn't give a fuck if it
were suspended from the chandelier, I kept it in the parlour and I put all the
extra chairs we had around it in a big circle and then I sat down comfortably
and I put my feet up on the desk and dreamed of what I would write if I could
write. I had a spitoon alongside of the
desk, a big brass one from the same establishment, and I would spit in it now
and then to remind myself that it was there.
All the pigeonholes were empty and all the drawers were empty; there
wasn't a thing on the desk or in it except a sheet of white paper on which I
found it impossible to put so much as a pothook.
When I think of the titanic efforts I
made to canalize the hot lava which was bubbling inside me, the efforts I
repeated thousands of times to bring the funnel into place and capture a
word, a phrase, I think inevitably of the men of the old stone age. A hundred thousand, two hundred thousand
years, three hundred thousand years to arrive at the idea of the
paleolith. A phantom struggle, because
they weren't dreaming of such a thing as the paleolith. It came without effort, born of a second, a
miracle you might say, except that everything which happens is miraculous. Things happen or they don't happen, that's
all. Nothing is accomplished by sweat
and struggle. Nearly everything which we
call life is just insomnia, an agony because we've lost the habit of falling
asleep. We don't know how to let
go. We're like a Jack-in-the-box perched
on top of a spring and the more we struggle the harder it is to get back in the
box.
I think if I had been crazy I couldn't
have hit upon a better scheme to consolidate my anchorage than to install this
Neanderthal object in the middle of the parlour. With my feet on the desk, picking up the
current, and my spinal column snugly socketed in a thick leather cushion, I was
in an ideal relation to the flotsam and jetsam which was whirling about me, and
which, because they were crazy and part of the flux, my friends were trying to
convince me was life. I remember vividly
the first contact with reality that I got through my feet, so to speak. The million words or so which I had written,
mind you, well ordered, well connected, were as nothing to me - crude ciphers
from the old stone age - because the contact was through the head and the head
is a useless appendage unless you're anchored in midchannel deep in the
mud. Everything I had written before was
museum stuff, and most writing is still museum stuff and that's why it doesn't
catch fire, doesn't inflame the world. I
was only a mouthpiece for the ancestral race which was talking through me; even
my dreams were not authentic, not bona fide Henry Miller dreams. To sit still and think one thought which
would come up out of me, out of the life buoy, was a Herculean task. I didn't lack thoughts nor words nor the
power of expression - I lacked something much more important: the lever which
would shut off the juice. The bloody
machine wouldn't stop, that was the difficulty.
I was not only in the middle of the current but the current was running
through me and I had no control over it whatever.
I remember the day I brought the
machine to a dead stop and how the other mechanism, the one that was signed
with my own initials and which I had made with my own hands and my own blood
slowly began to function. I had gone to
the theatre nearby to see a vaudeville show; it was the matinee and I had a
ticket for the balcony. Standing on line
in the lobby, I already experienced a strange feeling of consistency. It was as though I were coagulating, becoming
a recognizable consistent mass of jelly.
It was like the ultimate stage in the healing of a wound. I was at the height of normality, which is a
very abnormal condition. Cholera might
come and blow its foul breath in my mouth - it wouldn't matter. I might bend over and kiss the ulcers of a
leprous hand, and no harm could possibly come to me. There was not just a balance in this constant
warfare between health and disease, which is all that most of us may hope for,
but there was a plus integer in the blood which meant that, for a few moments
at least, disease was completely routed.
If one had the wisdom to take root in such a moment, one would never
again be ill or unhappy or even die. But
to leap to this conclusion is to make a jump which would take one back further
than the old stone age. At that moment I
wasn't even dreaming of taking root; I was experiencing for the first time in
my life the meaning of the miraculous. I
was so amazed when I heard my own cogs meshing that I was willing to die then
and there for the privilege of the experience.
What happened was this.... As I passed
the doorman holding the torn stub in my hand the lights were dimmed and the
curtain went up. I stood a moment
slightly dazed by the sudden darkness.
As the curtain slowly rose I had the feeling that throughout the ages
man had always been mysteriously stilled by this brief moment which preludes
the spectacle. I could feel the curtain
rising in man. And immediately I
also realized that this was a symbol which was being presented to him endlessly
in his sleep and that if he had been awake the players would never have taken
the stage but he, Man, would have mounted the boards. I didn't think this thought - it was a
realization, as I say, and so simple and overwhelmingly clear was it that the
machine stopped dead instantly and I was standing in my own presence bathed in
a luminous reality. I turned my eyes
away from the stage and beheld the marble staircase which I should take to go
to my seat in the balcony. I saw a man
slowly mounting the steps, his hand laid across the balustrade. The man could have been myself, the old self
which had been sleepwalking ever since I was born. My eye didn't take in the entire staircase,
just the few steps which the man had climbed or was climbing in the moment that
I took it all in. The man never reached
the top of the stairs and his hand was never removed from the marble balustrade. I felt the curtain descend, and for another
few moments I was behind the scenes moving amidst the sets, like the property
man suddenly roused from his sleep and not sure whether he is still dreaming or
looking at a dream which is being enacted on the stage. It was as fresh and green, as strangely new
as the bread and cheese lands which the Biddenden maidens saw every day of
their long life joined at the hips. I
saw only that which was alive! the rest faded out in a penumbra. And it was in order to keep the world alive
that I rushed home without waiting to see the performance and sat down to
describe the little patch of staircase which is imperishable.
It was just about this time that the
Dadaists were in full swing, to be followed shortly by the surrealists. I never heard of either group until some ten
years later; I never read a French book and I never had a French idea. I was perhaps the unique Dadaist in America,
and I didn't know it. I might just as
well have been living in the jungles of the Amazon for all the contact I had
with the outside world. Nobody
understood what I was writing about or why I wrote that way. I was so lucid that they said I was daffy. I was describing the New World -
unfortunately a little too soon because it had not yet been discovered and
nobody could be persuaded that it existed.
It was an ovarian world, still hidden away in the Fallopian tubes. Naturally nothing was clearly formulated: there
was only the faint suggestion of a backbone visible, and certainly no arms or
legs, no hair, no nails, no teeth. Sex
was the last thing to be dreamed of; it was the world of Chronos and his
ovicular progeny. It was the world of
the iota, each iota being indispensable, frighteningly logical, and absolutely
unpredictable. There was no such thing
as a thing, because the concept "thing" was missing.
I say it was a New World I was
describing, but like the New World which Columbus discovered it turned out to
be a far older world than any we have known.
I saw beneath the superficial physiognomy of skin and bone the
indestructible world which man has always carried within him; it was neither
old nor new, really, but the eternally true world which changes from moment to
moment. Everything I looked at was
palimpsest and there was no layer of writing too strange for me to
decipher. When my companions left me of
an evening I would often sit down and write to my friends the Australian
bushmen or the Mound Builders of the Mississippi Valley or to the Igorots in
the Philippines. I had to write English,
naturally, because it was the only language I spoke, but between my language
and the telegraphic code employed by my bosom friends there was a world of
difference. Any primitive man would have
understood me: only those about me, that is to say, a continent of a hundred
million people, failed to understand my language. To write intelligibly for them I would have
been obliged first of all to kill something, secondly, to arrest time. I had just made the realization that life is
indestructible and that there is no such thing as time, only the present. Did they expect me to deny a truth which it
had taken all my life to catch a glimpse of?
They most certainly did. The one
thing they did not want to hear about was that life is indestructible. Was not their precious new world reared on
the destruction of the innocent, on rape and plunder and torture and
devastation? Both continents had been
violated; both continents had been stripped and plundered of all that was
precious - in things. No greater
humiliation, it seems to me, was meted out to any man than to Montezuma; no
race was ever more ruthlessly wiped out than the American Indian; no land was
ever raped in the foul and bloody way that California was raped by the gold
diggers. I blush to think of our origins
- our hands are steeped in blood and crime.
And there is no letup to the slaughter and the pillage, as I discovered
at first hand travelling throughout the length and breadth of the land. Down to the closest friend every man is a potential
murderer. Often it wasn't necessary to
bring out the gun or the lasso or the branding iron - they had found subtler
and more devilish ways of torturing and killing their own. For me the most excruciating agony was to
have the word annihilated before it had even left my mouth. I leaned, by bitter experience, to hold my
tongue; I learned to sit in silence, and even smile, when actually I was
foaming at the mouth. I learned to shake
hands and say how do you do to all these innocent-looking fiends who were only
waiting for me to sit down in order to suck my blood.
How was it possible, when I sat down
in the parlour at my prehistoric desk, to use this code language of rape and
murder? I was alone in this great
hemisphere of violence, but I was not alone as far as the human race was
concerned. I was lonely amidst a world
of things lit up by phosphorescent flashes of cruelty. I was delirious with an energy which could
not be unleashed except in the service of death and futility. I could not begin with a full statement - it
would have meant the straitjacket or the electric chair. I was like a man who had been too long
incarcerated in a dungeon - I had to feel my way slowly, lest I stumble and be
run over. I had to accustom myself
gradually to the penalties which freedom involves. I had to grow a new epidermis which would
protect me from this burning light in the sky.
The ovarian world is the product of a
life rhythm. The moment a child is born
it becomes part of a world in which there is not only the life rhythm but the
death rhythm. The frantic desire to
live, to live at any cost, is not a result of the life rhythm in us, but of the
death rhythm. There is not only no need
to keep alive at any price, but, if life is indestructible, it is absolutely
wrong. This keeping oneself alive, out
of a blind urge to defeat death, is in itself a means of sowing death. Every one who has not fully accepted life,
who is not incrementing life, is helping to fill the world with death. To make the simplest gesture with the hand
can convey the utmost sense of life; a word spoken with the whole being can
give life. Activity in itself means
nothing: it is often a sign of death. By
simple external pressure, by force of surroundings and example, by the very
climate which activity engenders, one can become part of a monstrous death
machine, such as America, for example.
What does a dynamo know of life, of peace, of reality? What does any individual American dynamo know
of the wisdom and energy, of the life abundant and eternal possessed by a
ragged beggar sitting under a tree in the act of meditation? What is energy? What is life? One has only to read the stupid twaddle of
the scientific and philosophic textbooks to realize how next than nothing is
the wisdom of these energetic Americans.
Listen, they had me on the run, these crazy horsepower fiends; in order
to break their insane rhythm, their death rhythm, I had to resort to a
wavelength which, until I found the proper sustenance in my own bowels, would
at least nullify the rhythm they had set up.
Certainly I did not need this grotesque, cumbersome, antediluvian desk
which I had installed in the parlour; certainly I didn't need twenty empty
chairs placed around it in a semicircle; I needed only elbow room in which to
write and a thirteenth chair which would take me out of the zodiac they were
using and put me in a heaven beyond heaven.
But when you drive a man almost crazy and when, to his own surprise
perhaps, he finds that he still has some resistance, some powers of his own,
then you are apt to find such a man acting very much like a primitive
being. Such a man is apt not only to
become stubborn and dogged, but superstitious, a believer in magic and a
practiser of magic. Such a man is beyond
religion - it is his religiousness he is suffering from. Such a man becomes a monomaniac, bent on
doing one thing only and that is to break the evil spell which has been put
upon him. Such a man is beyond throwing
bombs, beyond revolt; he wants to stop reacting, whether inertly or
ferociously. This man, of all men on
earth, wants the act to be a manifestation of life. If, in the realization of this terrible need,
he begins to act regressively, to become unsociable, to stammer and stutter, to
prove so utterly unadapted as to be incapable of earning a living, know that
this man has found his way back to the womb and source of life and that
tomorrow, instead of the contemptible object of ridicule which you have made of
him, he will stand forth as a man in his own right and all the powers of
the world will be of no avail against him.
Out of the crude cipher with which he
communicates from his prehistoric desk with the archaic men of the world a new
language builds up which cuts through the death language of the day like
wireless through a storm. There is no
magic in this wavelength any more than there is magic in the womb. Men are lonely and out of communication with
one another because all their inventions speak only of death. Death is the automaton which rules the world
of activity. Death is silent, because it
has no mouth. Death has never expressed
anything. Death is wonderful too - after
life. Only one like myself who has
opened his mouth and spoken, only one who has said Yes, Yes, Yes, and again
Yes! can open wide his arms to death and know no fear. Death as a reward, yes! Death as a result of fulfilment, yes! Death as a crown and shield, yes! But not death from the roots, isolating men,
making them bitter and fearful and lonely, giving them fruitless energy,
filling them with a will which can only say No!
The first word any man writes when he has found himself, his own rhythm,
which is the life rhythm, is Yes! Everything
he writes thereafter is Yes, Yes, Yes - Yes in a thousand million ways. No dynamo, no matter how huge - not even a
dynamo of a hundred million dead souls - can combat one man saying Yes!
The war was on and men were being
slaughtered, one million, two million, five million, ten million, twenty
million, finally a hundred million, then a billion, everybody, man, woman and
child, down to the last one. "No!"
they were shouting, "No! they shall not pass!" And yet everybody passed; everybody got a
free pass, whether he shouted Yes or No.
In the midst of this triumphant demonstration of spiritually destructive
osmosis I sat with my feet planted on the big desk trying to communicate with
Zeus the Father of Atlantis and with his lost progeny, ignorant of the fact
that Apollinaire was to die the day before the Armistice in a military
hospital, ignorant of the fact that in his "new writing" he had
penned these indelible lines:
Be forbearing when
you compare us
With those who were
the perfection of order.
We who everywhere
seek adventure,
We are not your
enemies.
We would give you
vast and strange domains
Where flowering
mystery waits for him would pluck it.
Ignorant that in this same poem he had
written:
Have compassion on
us who are always fighting on the frontiers
Of the boundless
future,
Compassion for our
errors, compassion for our sins.
I was ignorant of the fact that there
were men then living who went by the outlandish names of Blaise Cendras,
Jacques Vaché, Louis Aragon, Tristan Tzara, René Crevel, Henri de Montherlant,
André Breton, Max Ernst, Georges Grosz; ignorant of the fact that on July 14,
1916, at the Saal Waag, in Zurich, the first Dada Manifesto had been proclaimed
- "manifesto by Monsieur Antipyrine" - that in his strange document
it was stated: "Dada is life without slippers or parallel ... severe
necessity without discipline or morality and we spit on humanity." Ignorant of the fact that the Dada Manifesto
of 1918 contained these lines: "I am writing a manifesto and I want
nothing, yet I say certain things, and I am against manifestos as a matter of
principle, as I am also against principles.... I write this manifesto to show
that one may perform opposed actions together, in a single fresh respiration; I
am against action; for continual contradiction, for affirmation also, I am
neither for nor against and I do not explain for I hate good sense.... There is
a literature which does not reach the voracious mass. The work of creators, sprung from a real
necessity on the part of the author, and for himself. Consciousness of a supreme egotism where the
stars waste away.... Each page must explode, either with the profoundly serious
and heavy, the whirlwind, dizziness, the new, the eternal, with the
overwhelming hoax, with an enthusiasm for principles or with the mode of
typography. On the one hand a staggering
fleeing world, affianced to the jinglebells of the infernal gamut, on the other
hand: new beings...."
Thirty-two years later and I am still
saying Yes! Yes, Monsieur
Antipyrine! Yes, Monsieur Tristan
Bustanoby Tzara! Yes, Monsieur Max Ernst
Geburt! Yes! Monsieur René Crevel, now that you are dead
by suicide, yes, the world is crazy, you were right. Yes, Monsieur Blaise Cendras, you were right
to kill. Was it the day of the Armistice
that you brought out your little book - J'ai tué? Yes, "keep on my lads,
humanity...." Yes, Jacques Vaché,
quite right - "Art ought to be something funny and a trifle boring". Yes, my dear dead Vaché, how right you were
and how funny and how boring and touching and tender and true: "It is of
the essence of symbols to be symbolic".
Say it again, from the other world!
Have you a megaphone up there?
Have you found all the arms and legs that were blown off during the
mêlée? Can you put them together
again? Do you remember the meeting at
Nantes in 1916 with André Breton? Did
you celebrate the birth of hysteria together?
Had he told you, Breton, that there was only the marvellous and nothing
but the marvellous and that the marvellous is always marvellous - and isn't it
marvellous to hear it again, even though your ears are stopped? I want to include here, before passing on, a
little portrait of you by Emile Bouvier for the benefit of my Brooklyn friends
who may not have recognized me then but who will now, I am sure....
"... he was not all crazy, and
could explain his conduct when occasion required. His actions, nonetheless, were as
disconcerting as Jarry's worst eccentricities.
For example, he was barely out of hospital when he hired himself out as
a stevedore, and he thereafter passed his afternoons in unloading coal on the
quays along the Loire. In the evening,
on the other hand, he would make the rounds of the cafés and cinemas, dressed
in the height of fashion and with many variations of costume. What was more, in time of war, he would strut
forth sometimes in the uniform of a lieutenant of hussars, sometimes in that of
an English officer, of an aviator or of a surgeon. In civil life, he was quite as free and easy,
thinking nothing of introducing Breton under the name of André Salmon, while he
took unto himself, but quite without vanity, the most wonderful titles and
adventures. He never said good morning
nor good evening nor good-bye, and never took any notice of letters, except
those from his mother, when he had to ask for money. He did not recognize his best friends from
one day to another...."
Do you recognize me, lads? Just a Brooklyn boy communicating with the
red-haired albinos of the Zuni region.
Making ready, with feet on the deck, to write "strong works, works
forever incomprehensible", as my dead comrades were promising. These "strong works" - would you
recognize them if you saw them? Do you
know that of the millions who were killed not one death was necessary to
produce "the strong work"? New
beings, yes! We have need of new
beings still. We can do without the
telephone, without the automobile, without the high-class bombers - but we
can't do without new beings. If Atlantis
was submerged beneath the sea, if the Sphinx and the Pyramids remain an eternal
riddle, it was because there were no more new beings being born. Stop the machine a moment! Flash back!
Flash back to 1914, to the Kaiser sitting on his horse. Keep him sitting there a moment with his
withered arm clutching the bridle rein.
Look at his moustache! Look at
his haughty air of pride and arrogance!
Look at his cannon fodder lined up in strictest discipline, all ready to
obey the word, to get shot, to get disembowelled, to be burned in
quicklime. Hold it a moment now and look
at the other side: the defenders of our great and glorious civilization, the
men who will war to end war. Change
their clothes, change their uniforms, changes horses, change flags, change
terrain. My, is that the Kaiser I see on
a white horse? Are those the terrible
Huns? And where is Big Bertha? Oh, I see - I thought it was pointing toward
Notre Dame? Humanity, me lads, humanity
always marching in the van.... And the strong works we were speaking of? Where are the strong works? Call up the Western Union and dispatch a
messenger fleet of foot - not a cripple or an octogenarian, but a young
one! Ask him to find the great work and
bring it back. We need it. We have a brand-new museum ready waiting to
house it - and cellophane and the Dewey decimal system to file it. All we need is the name of the author. Even if he has no name, even if it is an
anonymous work, we won't kick. Even if
it has a little mustard gas in it we won't mind. Bring it back dead or alive - there's a
twenty-five thousand dollar reward for the man who fetches it.
And if they tell you that these things
had to be, that things could not have happened otherwise, that France did her
best and Germany her best and that little Liberia and little Ecuador and all
the other allies also did their best, and that since the war everybody has been
doing his best to patch things up or to forget, tell them that their best is
not good enough, that we don't want to hear any more this logic of "doing
the best one can", tell them we don't want the best of a bad bargain, we
don't believe in bargains good or bad, nor in war memorials. We don't want to hear about the logic of
events - or any kind of logic. "Je
ne parle pas logique", said Monthelant, "je parle
générosité". I don't think you
heard it very well, since it was in French.
I'll repeat it for you, in the Queen's own language: "I'm not
talking logic, I'm talking generosity".
That's bad English, as the Queen herself might speak it, but it's
clear. Generosity - do you
hear? You never practise it, any of you,
either in peace or in war. You don't
know the meaning of the word. You think
to supply guns and ammunition to the winning side is generosity; you think
sending Red Cross nurses to the front, or the Salvation Army, is
generosity. You think a bonus twenty
years too late is generosity; you think a little pension and a wheelchair is
generosity; you think if you give a man his old job back it's generosity. You don't know what the fucking word means,
you bastards! To be generous is to say
Yes before the man even opens his mouth.
To say Yes you have to be first a surrealist or a Dadaist, because you
have understood what it means to say No.
You can even say Yes and No at the same time, provided you do more than
is expected of you. Be a stevedore in
the daytime and a Beau Brummel in the night-time. Wear any uniform so long as it's not
yours. When you write your mother ask
her to cough up a little dough so that you may have a clean rag to ripe your
ass with. Don't be disturbed if you see
your neighbour going after his wife with a knife: he probably has good reason
to go after her, and if he kills her you may be sure he had the satisfaction of
knowing why he did it. If you're
trying to improve your mind, stop it!
There's no improving the mind.
Look to your heart and gizzard - the brain is in the heart.
Ah yes, if I had known then that these
birds existed -Cendras, Vaché, Grosz, Ernst, Apollinaire - if I had known that
then, if I had known that in their own way they were thinking exactly the same
things as I was, I think I'd have blown up.
Yes, I think I'd have gone off like a bomb. But I was ignorant. Ignorant of the fact that almost fifty years
previously a crazy Jew in South America had given birth to such startlingly
marvellous phrases as "doubt's duck with the vermouth lips", or
"I have seen a fig eat an onager" - that about the same time a
Frenchman, who was only a boy, was saying: "Find flowers that are
chairs" ... "my hunger is the black air's bits" ... "his
heart, amber and spunk". Maybe at
the same time, or thereabouts, while Jarry was saying "in eating the sound
of moths", and Apollinaire repeating after him "near a gentleman
swallowing himself", and Breton murmuring softly "night's pedals move
uninterruptedly", perhaps "in the air beautiful and black" which
the lone Jew had found under the Southern Cross another man, also lonely and
exiled and of Spanish origin, was preparing to put down on paper these
memorable words: "I seek, all in all, to console myself for my exile, for
my exile from eternity, for that unearthing (destierro) which I
am fond of referring to as my unheavening.... At present, I think that the best
way to write this novel is to tell how it should be written. It is the novel of the novel, the creation of
creation. Or God of God, Deus de Deo". Had I known he was going to add this, this
which follows, I would surely have gone off like a bomb.... "By being
crazy is understood losing one's reason.
Reason, but not the truth, for there are madmen who speak truths while
others keep silent...." Speaking of
these things, speaking of the war and the war dead, I cannot refrain from
mentioning that some twenty years later I ran across this in French by a
Frenchman. O miracles of miracles! "If faut le dire, il y a des cadavres
que je ne respecte qu'à moitié."
Yes, yes, and again yes! O, let
us do some rash thing - for the sheer pleasure of it! Let us do something live and magnificent,
even if destructive! Said the mad
cobbler: "All things are generated out of the grand mystery, and proceed
out of one degree into another. Whatever
goes forward in its degree, the same receives no abominate."
Everywhere in all times the same
ovarian world announcing itself. Yet
also, parallel with these announcements, these prophecies, these gynaecological
manifestos, parallel and contemporaneous with them, new totem poles, new
taboos, new war dances. While into the
air so black and beautiful the brothers of man, the poets, the diggers of the
future, were spitting their magic lines, in this same time, O profound and
perplexing riddle, other men were saying: "Won't you please come and take
a job in our ammunition factory. We
promise you the highest wages, the most sanitary and hygienic conditions. The work is so easy that even a child could
do it". And if you had a sister, a
wife, a mother, an aunt, as long as she could manipulate her hands, as long as
she could prove that she had no bad habits, you were invited to bring her or
them along to the ammunition works. If
you were shy of soiling your hands they would explain to you very gently and
intelligently just how these delicate mechanisms operated, what they did when
they exploded, and why you must now waste even your garbage because ... et
ipso facto e pluribus unum. The
thing that impressed me, going the rounds in search of work, was not so much
that they made me vomit every day (assuming I had been lucky enough to put
something into my guts), but that they always demanded to know if you were of
good habits, if you were steady, if you were sober, if you were industrious, if
you had ever worked before and if not why not.
Even the garbage, which I had gotten the job of collecting for the
municipality, was precious to them, the killers. Standing knee deep in the muck, the lowest of
the low, a coolie, an outcast, still I was part of the death racket. I tried reading the Inferno at night,
but it was in English and English is no language for a Catholic work. "Whatever enters in itself into its
selfhood, viz. into its own lubet...."
Lubet! If I had had a word
like that to conjure with then, how peacefully I might have gone about my
garbage collecting! How sweet, in the
night, when Dante is out of reach and the hands smell of muck and slime, to
take unto oneself this word which in the Dutch means "lust" and in
Latin "lubbitum" or the divine beneplacitum. Standing knee deep in the garbage I said one
day what Meister Eckhart is reported to have said long ago: "I truly have
need of God, but God has need of me too".
There was a job waiting for me in the slaughterhouse, a nice little job
of sorting entrails, but I couldn't raise the fare to get to Chicago. I remained in Brooklyn, in my own palace of
entrails, and turned round and round on the plinth of the labyrinth. I remained at home seeking the "germinal
vesicle", "the dragon castle on the floor of the sea", "the
Heavenly Heart", "the field of the square inch", "the house
of the square foot", "the dark pass", "the space of former
Heaven". I remained locked in, a
prisoner of Forculus, god of the door, of Cardea, god of the hinge, and of
Limentius, god of the threshold. I spoke
only with their sisters, the three goddesses called Fear, Pallor and
Fever. I saw no "Asian
luxury", as had St. Augustine, or as he imagined he had. Nor did I see "the two twins born, so
near together, that the second held the first by the heel". But I saw a street called Myrtle Avenue,
which runs from Borough hall to Fresh Pond Road, and down this street no saint
ever walked (else it would have crumbled), down this street no miracle ever
passed, nor any poet, nor any species of human genius, nor did any flower ever
grow there, nor did the sun strike it squarely, nor did the rain ever wash
it. For the genuine Inferno which I had
to postpone for twenty years I give you Myrtle Avenue, one of the innumerable
bridlepaths ridden by iron monsters which lead to the heart of America's
emptiness. If you have only seen Essen
or Manchester or Chicago or Levallois-Perret or Glasgow or Hoboken or Canarsie
or Bayonne you have seen nothing of the magnificent emptiness of progress and
enlightenment. Dear reader, you must see
Myrtle Avenue before you die, if only to realize how far into the future Dante
saw. You must believe me that on this
street, neither in the houses which line it, nor the cobblestones which pave
it, nor the elevated structure which cuts it atwain, neither in any creature
that bears a name and lives thereon, neither in any animal, bird or insect
passing through it to slaughter or already slaughtered, is there hope of
"lubet", "sublimate", or "abominate". It is a street not of sorrow, for sorrow
would be human and recognizable, but of sheer emptiness: it is emptier than the
most extinct volcano, emptier than a vacuum, emptier than the word God in the
mouth of an unbeliever.
I said I did not know a word of French
then, and it is true, but I was just on the brink of making a great discovery,
a discovery which would compensate for the emptiness of Myrtle Avenue and the
whole American continent. I had almost
reached the shore of that great French ocean which goes by the name of Elie
Faure, an ocean which the French themselves had hardly navigated and which they
had mistaken, it seems, for an inland sea.
Reading him even in such a withered language as English has become I
could see that this man who had described the glory of the human race on his
cuff was Father Zeus of Atlantis whom I had been searching for. An ocean I called him, but he was also a
world symphony. He was the first
musician the French have produced; he was exalted and controlled, an anomaly, a
Gallic Beethoven, a great physician of the soul, a giant lightning rod. He was also a sunflower turning with the sun,
always drinking in the light, always radiant and blazing with vitality. He was neither an optimist nor a pessimist,
any more than one can say that the ocean is beneficent or malevolent. He was a believer in the human race. He added a cubit to the race, by giving it
back its dignity, its strength, its need of creation. He saw everything as creation, as solar
joy. He didn't record it in orderly
fashion, he recorded it musically. He
was indifferent to the fact that the French have a tin ear - he was
orchestrating for the whole world simultaneously. What was my amazement then, when some years
later I arrived in France, to find that there were no monuments erected to him,
no streets named after him. Worse,
during eight whole years I never once heard a Frenchman mention his name. He had to die in order to be put in the
pantheon of French deities - and how sickly must they look, his deific
contemporaries, in the presence of this radiant sun! If he had not been a physician, and thus
permitted to earn a livelihood, what might not have happened to him! Perhaps another able hand for the garbage
trucks! The man who made the Egyptian
frescoes come alive in all their flaming colours, this man could just as well
have starved to death for all the public cared.
But he was an ocean and the critics drowned in this ocean, and the
editors and the publishers and the public too.
It will take aeons for him to dry up, to evaporate. It will take about as long as for the French
to acquire a musical ear.
If there had been no music I would
have gone to the madhouse like Nijinsky.
(It was just about this time that they discovered that Nijinsky was
mad. He had been found giving his money
away to the poor - always a bad sign!)
My mind was filled with wonderful treasures, my taste was sharp and
exigent, my muscles were in excellent condition, my appetite was strong, my
wind sound. I had nothing to do except
to improve myself, and I was going crazy with the improvements I made every
day. Even if there were a job for me to
fill I couldn't accept it, because what I needed was not work but a life more
abundant. I couldn't waste time being a
teacher, a lawyer, a physician, a politician or anything else that society had
to offer. It was easier to accept menial
jobs because it left my mind free. After
I was fired from the garbage trucks I remember taking up with an Evangelist who
seemed to have great confidence in me. I
was a sort of usher, collector and private secretary. He brought to my attention the whole world of
Indian philosophy. Evenings when I was
free I would meet with my friends at the home of Ed Bauries who lived in an
aristocratic section of Brooklyn. Ed
Bauries was an eccentric pianist who couldn't read a note. He had a bosom pal called George Neumiller
with whom he often played duets. Of the
dozen or so who congregated at Ed Bauries' home nearly every one of us could
play the piano. We were all between
twenty-one and twenty-five at the time; we never brought any women along and we
hardly ever mentioned the subject of woman during these sessions. We had plenty of beer to drink and a whole
big house at our disposal, for it was in the summertime, when his folks were
away, that we held our gatherings.
Though there were a dozen other homes like this which I could speak of,
I mention Ed Bauries' place because it was typical of something I have never
encountered elsewhere in the world. Neither
Ed Bauries himself nor any of his friends suspected the sort of books I was
reading then nor the things which were occupying my mind. When I blew in I was greeted enthusiastically
- as a clown. It was expected of me to
start things going. There were about
four pianos scattered throughout the big house, to say nothing of the celesta,
the organ, guitars, mandolins, fiddles and what not. Ed Bauries was a nut, a very affable,
sympathetic and generous one too. The
sandwiches were always of the best, the beer plentiful, and if you wanted to
stay the night he could fix you up on a divan just as pretty as you liked. Coming down the street - a big, wide street,
somnolent, luxurious, a street altogether out of the world - I could hear the
tinkle of the piano in the big parlour on the first floor. The windows were wide open and as I got into
range I could see Al Burger or Connie Grimm sprawling in their big easy chairs,
their feet on the window sill, and big beer mugs in their hands. Probably George Neumiller was at the piano,
improvising, his shirt peeled off and a big cigar in his mouth. They were talking and laughing while George
fooled around, searching for an opening.
Soon as he hit a theme he would call for Ed and Ed would sit beside him,
studying it out in his unprofessional way, then suddenly pouncing on the keys
and giving tit for tat. Maybe when I'd
walk in somebody would be trying to stand on his hands in the next room - there
were three big rooms on the first floor which opened one on to the other and
back of them was a garden, an enormous garden, with flowers, fruit trees, grape
vines, statues, fountains and everything.
Sometimes when it was too hot they brought the celesta or the little
organ into the garden (and a keg of beer, naturally) and we'd sit around in the
dark laughing and singing - until the neighbours forced us to stop. Sometimes the music was going on all through
the house at once, on every floor. It was
really crazy then, intoxicating, and if there had been women around it would
have spoiled it. Sometimes it was like
watching an endurance contest - Ed Bauries and George Neumiller at the grand
piano, each trying to wear the other out, changing places without stopping,
crossing hands, sometimes falling away to plain chopsticks, sometimes going
like a Wurlitzer. And always something
to laugh about all the time. Nobody
asked what you did, what you thought about, and so forth. When you arrived at Ed Bauries' place you
checked your identification marks.
Nobody gave a fuck what size hat you wore or how much you paid for
it. It was entertainment from the word
go - and the sandwiches and the drinks were on the house. And when things got going, three or four
pianos at once, the celesta, the organ, the mandolins, the guitars, beer running
through the halls, the mantelpieces full of sandwiches and cigars, a breeze
coming through from the garden, George Neumiller stripped to the waist and
modulating like a fiend, it was better than any show I've ever seen put on and
it didn't cost a cent. In fact, with the
dressing and undressing that went on, I always came away with a little extra
change and a pocketful of good cigars. I
never saw any of them between times - only Monday nights throughout the summer,
when Ed held open house.
Standing in the garden listening to
the din I could scarcely believe that it was the same city. And if I had ever opened my trap and exposed
my guts it would have been all over. Not
one of these bozos amounted to anything, as the world reckons. They were just good eggs, children, fellows
who liked music and who liked a good time.
They liked it so much that sometimes we had to call the ambulance. Like the night Al Burger twisted his knee
while showing us one of his stunts.
Everybody so happy, so full of music, so lit up, that it took him an
hour to persuade us he was really hurt.
We try to carry him to a hospital but it's too far away and besides,
it's such a good joke, that we drop him now and then and that makes him yell
like a maniac. So finally we telephone
for help from a police box, and the ambulance comes and the patrol wagon
too. They take Al to the hospital and
the rest of us to the hoosegow. And on
the way we sing at the top of our lungs.
And after we're bailed out we're still feeling good and the cops are
feeling good too, and so we all adjourn to the basement where there's a cracked
piano and we go on singing and playing.
All this is like some period B.C. in history which ends not because
there's a war but because even a joint like Ed Bauries' is not immune to the
poison seeping in from the periphery.
Because every street is becoming a Myrtle Avenue, because emptiness is
filling the whole continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Because, after a certain time, you can't
enter a single house throughout the length and breadth of the land and find a
man standing on his hands singing. It
just ain't done anymore. And there ain't
two pianos going at once anywhere, nor are there two men anywhere willing to
play all night just for the fun of it.
The men who can play like Ed Bauries and George Neumiller are hired by
the radio or the movies and only a thimbleful of their talent is used and the
rest is thrown into the garbage can.
Nobody knows, judging from public spectacles, what talent is disposable in
the great American continent. Later on,
and that's why I used to sit around on doorsteps in Tin Pan Alley, I would
while away the afternoons listening to the professionals mugging it out. That was good too, but it was different. There was no fun in it, it was a perpetual
rehearsal to bring in dollars and cents.
Any man in America who had an ounce of humour in him was saving it up to
put himself across. There were some wonderful
nuts among them too, men I'll never forget, men who left no name behind them,
and they were the best we produced. I
remember an anonymous performer on the Keith circuit who was probably the
craziest man in America, and perhaps he got fifty dollars a week for it. Three times a day, every day in the week, he
came out and held the audience spellbound.
He didn't have an act - he just improvised. He never repeated his jokes or his
stunts. He gave him prodigally, and I
don't think he was a hop fiend either.
He was one of those guys who are born in the corn crakes and the energy
and the joy in him was so fierce that nothing could contain it. He could play any instrument and dance any
step and he could invent a story on the spot and string it out till the bell
rang. He was not only satisfied to do
his own act but he would help the others out.
He would stand in the wings and wait for the right moment to break into
the other guy's act. He was the whole
show and it was a show that contained more therapy than the whole arsenal of
modern science. They ought to have paid
a man like this the wages which the President of the United States
receives. They ought to sack the
President of the United States and the whole Supreme Court and set up a man
like this as ruler. This man could cure
any disease on the calendar. He was the
kind of guy, moreover, as would do it for nothing, if you asked him to. This is the type of man which empties the
insane asylums. He doesn't propose a
cure - he makes everybody crazy. Between
this solution and a perpetual state of war, which is civilization, there is
only one other way out - and that is the road we will all take eventually
because everything else is doomed to failure.
The type that represents this one and only way bears a head with six
faces and eight eyes; the head is a revolving lighthouse, and instead of a
triple crown at the top, as there might well be, there is a hole which
ventilate what few brains there are.
There is very little brain, as I say, because there is very little
baggage to carry about, because living in full consciousness, the grey matter
passes off into light. This is the only
type of man one can place above the comedian; he neither laughs nor weeps, he
is beyond suffering. We don't recognize
him yet because he is too close to us, right under the skin, as a matter of
fact. When the comedian catches us in
the guts this man, whose name might be God, I suppose, if he had to use a name,
speaks up. When the whole human race is
rocking with laughter, laughing so hard that it hurts, I mean, everybody then
has his foot on the path. In that moment
everybody can just as well be God as anything else. In that moment we have the annihilation of
dual, triple, quadruple and multiple consciousness, which is what makes the
grey matter coil up in dead folds at the top of the skull. At that moment you can really feel the hole
in the top of the head; you know that you once had an eye there and that this
eye was capable of taking in everything at once. The eye is gone now, but when you laugh until
the tears flow and your belly aches, you are really opening the skylight and
ventilating the brains. Nobody can
persuade you at that moment to take a gun and kill your enemy; neither can
anybody persuade you to open a fat tome containing the metaphysical truths of
the world and read it. If you know what
freedom means, absolute freedom and not a relative freedom, then you must
recognize that this is the nearest to it you will ever get. If I am against the condition of the world it
is not because I am a moralist - it is because I want to laugh more. I don't say that God is one grand laugh: I
say that you've got to laugh hard before you can get anywhere near God. My whole aim in life is to get near to God, that is, to get nearer to myself. That's why it doesn't matter to me what road
I take. But music is very
important. Music is a tonic for the
pineal gland. Music isn't Bach or
Beethoven; music is the can opener of the soul.
It makes you terribly quiet inside, makes you aware that there's a roof
to your being.
The stabbing horror of life is not
contained in calamities and disasters, because these things wake one up and one
gets very familiar and intimate with them and finally they become tame again
... no, it is more like being in a hotel room in Hoboken, let us say, and just
enough money in one's pocket for another meal.
You are in a city that you never expect to be in again and you have only
to pass the night in your hotel room, but it takes all the courage and pluck
you possess to stay in that room. There
must be a good reason why certain cities, certain places, inspire such loathing
and dread. There must be some kind of
perpetual murder going on in these places.
The people are of the same race as you, they go about their business as
people do anywhere, they build the same sort of house, no better, no worse,
they have the same system of education, the same currency, the same newspapers
- and yet they are absolutely different from the other people you know, and the
whole atmosphere is different, and the rhythm is different and the tension is
different. It's almost like looking at
yourself in another incarnation. You
know, with a most disturbing certitude, that what governs life is not money,
not politics, not religion, not training, not race, not language, not customs,
but something else, something you're trying to throttle all the time and which
is really throttling you, because otherwise you wouldn't be terrified all of a
sudden and wonder how you were going to escape.
Some cities you don't even have to pass a night in - just an hour or two
is enough to unnerve you. I think of
Bayonne that way. I came on it in the
night with a few addresses that had been given me. I had a briefcase under my arm with a
prospectus of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. I was supposed to go under cover of dark and
sell the bloody encyclopaedia to some poor devils who wanted to improve
themselves. If I had been dropped off at
Helsingfors I couldn't have felt more ill at ease than walking the streets of
Bayonne. It wasn't an American city to
me. It wasn't a city at all, but a huge
octopus wriggling in the dark. The first
door I came to looked so forbidding I didn't even bother to knock; I went like
that to several addresses before I could summon the courage to knock. The first face I took a look at frightened
the shit out of me. I don't mean
timidity or embarrassment - I mean fear.
It was the face of a hod carrier, an ignorant mick who would as lief
fell you with an axe as spit in your eye.
I pretended I had the wrong name and hurried on to the next address. Each time the door opened I saw another
monster. And then I came at last to a
poor simply who really wanted to improve himself and that broke me down. I felt truly ashamed of myself, of my
country, my race, my epoch. I had a
devil of a time persuading him not to buy the damned encyclopaedia. He asked me innocently what then had brought
me to his home - and without a minute's hesitation I told him an astounding
lie, a lie which was later to prove a great truth. I told him I was only pretending to see the
encyclopaedia in order to met people and write about them. That interested him enormously, even more
than the encyclopaedia. He wanted to
know what I would write about him, if I could say. It's taken me twenty years to answer that
question, but here it is. If you would
still like to know, John Doe of the City of Bayonne, this is it.... I owe you a
great deal because after that lie I told you I left your house and I tore up
the prospectus furnished me by the Encyclopaedia Britannica and I threw
it in the gutter. I said to myself I
will never again go to people under false pretences even if it is to give them
the Holy Bible. I will never again sell
anything, even if I have to starve. I am
going home now and I will sit down and really write about people. And if anybody knocks at my door to sell me
something I will invite him in and say "why are you doing this?" And if he says it is because he has to make a
living I will offer him what money I have and beg him once again to think what
he is doing. I want to prevent as many
men as possible from pretending that they have to do this or that because they
must earn a living. It is not true. One can starve to death - it is much
better. Every man who voluntarily
starves to death jams another cog in the automatic process. I would rather see a man take a gun and kill
his neighbour, in order to get the food he needs, than keep up the automatic
process by pretending that he has to earn a living. That's what I want to say, Mr. John Doe.
I pass on. Not the stabbing horror of disaster and
calamity, I say, but the automatic throwback, the stark panorama of the soul's
atavistic struggle. A bridge in North
Carolina, near the Tennessee border.
Coming out of lush tobacco fields, low cabins everywhere and the smell
of fresh wood burning. The day passed in
a thick lake of waving green. Hardly a
soul in sight. Then suddenly a clearing
and I'm over a big gulch spanned by a rickety wooden bridge. This is the end of the world! How in God's name I got here and why I'm here
I don't know. How am I going to eat? And if I ate the biggest meal imaginable I
would still be sad, frightfully sad. I
don't know where to go from here. The
bridge is the end, the end of me, the end of my known world. This bridge is insanity: there is no reason
why it should stand there and no reason why people should cross it. I refuse to budge another step, I balk at
crossing that crazy bridge. Nearby is a
low wall which I lie against trying to think what to do and where to go. I realize quietly what a terribly civilized
person I am - the need I have for people, conversation, books, theatre, music,
cafés, drinks, and so forth. It's
terrible to be civilized, because when you come to the end of the world you
have nothing to support the terror of loneliness. To be civilized is to have complicated
needs. And a man, when he is full blown,
shouldn't need a thing. All day I had been
moving through tobacco fields, and growing more and more uneasy. What have I to do with all this tobacco? What am I heading into? People everywhere are producing crops and
goods for other people - and I am like a ghost sliding between all this
unintelligible activity. I want to find
some kind of work, but I don't want to be a part of this thing, this infernal automatic
process. I pass through a town and I
look at the newspaper telling what is happening in that town and its
environs. It seems to me that nothing
is happening, that the clock has stopped but that these poor devils are unaware
of it. I have a strong intuition,
moreover, that there is a murder in the air.
I can smell it. A few days back I
passed the imaginary line which divides the North from the South. I wasn't aware of it until a darky came along
driving a team; when he gets alongside of me he stands up in his seat and doffs
his hat most respectfully. He had
snow-white hair and a face of great dignity.
That made me feel horrible: it made me realize that there are still
slaves. This man had to tip his hat to
me - because I was of the white race.
Whereas I should have tipped my hat to him! I should have saluted him as a survivor of
all the vile tortures the white men have inflicted on the black. I should have tipped my hat first, to let him
know that I am not a part of this system, that I am begging forgiveness for all
my white brethren who are too ignorant and cruel to make an honest overt
gesture. Today I feel their eyes on me
all the time, they watch from behind doors, from behind trees. All very quiet, very peaceful,
seemingly. Nigger never say
nuthin'. Nigger he hum all time. White man think nigger learn his place. Nigger learn nuthin'. Nigger wait.
Nigger watch everything white man do.
Nigger no say nuthin', no sir, no siree.
BUT JUST THE SAME THE NIGGER IS KILLING THE WHITE MAN OFF! Every time the nigger looks at a white man
he's putting a dagger through him. It's
not the heat, it's not the hookworm, it's not the bad crops that's killing the
South off - it's the nigger. The nigger
is giving off a poison, whether he means to or not. The South is coked and doped with nigger
poison.
Pass on.... Sitting outside a barber
shop by the James River. I'll be here
just ten minutes, while I take a load off my feet. There's a hotel and a few stores opposite me;
it all tails off quickly, ends like it began - for no reason. From the bottom of my soul I pity the poor
devils who are born and die here. There
is no earthly reason why this place should exist. There is no reason why anybody should cross
the street and get himself a shave and haircut, or even a sirloin steak. Men, buy yourselves a gun and kill each other
off! Wipe this street out of my mind
forever - it hasn't an ounce of meaning in it.
The same day, after nightfall. Still plugging on, digging deeper and deeper
into the South. I'm coming away from a
little town by a short road leading to the highway. Suddenly I hear footsteps behind me and soon
a young man passes me on the trot, breathing heavily and cursing with all his
might. I stand there a moment, wondering
what it's all about. I hear another man
coming on the trot; he's an older man and he's carrying a gun. He breathes fairly easy, and not a word out
of his trap. Just as he comes in view
the moon breaks through the clouds and I catch a good look at his face. He's a man-hunter. I stand back as the others come up behind
him. I'm trembling with fear. It's the sheriff, I hear a man say, and he's
going to get him. Horrible. I move on toward the highway waiting to hear
the shot that will end it all. I hear
nothing - just this heavy breathing of the young man and the quick, eager steps
of the mob following behind the sheriff.
Just as I get near the main road a man steps out of the darkness and
comes over to me very quietly.
"Where yer goin', son?" he says, quiet like and almost
tenderly. I stammer out something about
the next town. "Better stay right
here, son," he says. I didn't say
another word. I let him take me back
into town and hand me over like a thief.
I lay on the floor with about fifty other blokes. I had a marvellous sexual dream which ended
with the guillotine.
I plug on.... It's just as hard to go
back as to go forward. I don't have the
feeling of being an American citizen anymore.
The part of America I came from, where I had some rights, where I felt
free, is so far behind me that it's beginning to get fuzzy in my memory. I feel as though someone's got a gun against
my back all the time. Keep moving, is
all I seem to hear. If a man talks to me
I try not to seem too intelligent. I try
to pretend that I am vitally interested in the crops, in the weather, in the
elections. If I stand and stop they look
at me, whites and blacks - they look at me through and through as though I were
juicy and edible. I've got to walk
another thousand miles or so as though I had a deep purpose, as though I were
really going somewhere. I've got to look
sort of grateful, too, that nobody has yet taken a fancy to plug me. It's depressing and exhilarating at the same
time. You're a marked man - and yet
nobody pulls the trigger. They let you
walk unmolested right into the Gulf of Mexico where you can drown yourself.
Yes sir, I reached the Gulf of Mexico
and I walked right into it and drowned myself.
I did it gratis. When they fished
the corpse out they found it was marked F.O.B. Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn; it was
returned C.O.D. When I was asked later
why I had killed myself I could only think to say - because I wanted to
electrify the cosmos! I meant by
that a very simple thing - The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western had been
electrified, the Seaboard Air Line had been electrified, but the soul of man
was still in the covered wagon stage. I
was born in the midst of civilization and I accepted it very naturally - what
else was there to do? But the joke was
that nobody else was taking it seriously.
I was the only man in the community who was truly civilized. There was no place for me - as yet. And yet the books I read, the music I heard
assured me that there were other men in the world like myself. I had to go and drown myself in the Gulf of
Mexico in order to have an excuse for continuing this pseudo-civilized
existence. I had to delouse myself of my
spiritual body, as it were.
When I woke up to the fact that as far
as the scheme of things goes I was less than dirt I really became quite
happy. I quickly lost all sense of
responsibility. And if it weren't for
the fact that my friends got tired of lending me money I might have gone on
indefinitely pissing the time away. The
world was like a museum to me; I saw nothing to do but eat into this marvellous
chocolate layer cake which the men of the past had dumped on our hands. It annoyed everybody to see the way I enjoyed
myself. Their logic was that art was
very beautiful, oh yes, indeed, but you must work for a living and then you
will find that you are too tired to think about art. But it was when I threatened to add a layer
or two of my own account to this marvellous chocolate layer cake that they blew
up on me. That was the finishing
touch. That meant I was definitely
crazy. First I was considered to be a
useless member of society; then for a time I was found to be a reckless,
happy-go-lucky corpse with a tremendous appetite; now I had become crazy. (Listen, you bastard, you find yourself a
job ... we're through with you!) In
a way it was refreshing, this change of front.
I could feel the wind blowing through the corridors. At least "we" were no longer
becalmed. It was war, and as a corpse I
was just fresh enough to have a little fight left in me. War is revivifying. War stirs the blood. It was in the midst of the world war, which I
had forgotten about, that this change of heart took place. I got myself married overnight, to
demonstrate to all and sundry that I didn't give a fuck one way or the other. Getting married was O.K. in their minds. I remember that, on the strength of the
announcement, I raised five bucks immediately.
My friend MacGregor paid for the license and even paid for the shave and
haircut which he insisted I go through with in order to get married. They said you couldn't go without being
shaved; I didn't see any reason why you couldn't get hitched up without a shave
and haircut, but since it didn't cost me anything I submitted to it. It was interesting to see how everybody was eager
to contribute something to our maintenance.
All of a sudden, just because I had shown a bit of sense, they came
flocking around us - and couldn't they do this and couldn't they do that for
us? Of course the assumption was that
now I would surely be going to work, now I would see that life is serious
business. It never occurred to them that
I might let my wife work for me. I was
really very decent to her in the beginning.
I wasn't a slave driver. All I
asked for was carfare - to hunt for the mythical job - and a little pin money
for cigarettes, movies, et cetera. The
important things, such as books, music albums, gramophones, porterhouse steaks
and such like I found we could get on credit, now that we were married. The instalment plan had been invented
expressly for guys like me. The down
payment was easy - the rest I left to Providence. One has to live, they were always
saying. Now, by God, that's what I said
to myself - One has to live! Live
first and pay afterwards. If I saw
an overcoat I liked I went in and bought it.
I would buy it a little in advance of the season too, to show that I was
a serious-mined chap. Shit, I was a
married man and soon I would probably be a father - I was entitled to a winter
overcoat at least, no? And when I had
the overcoat I thought of stout shoes to go with it - a pair of thick cordovans
such as I had wanted all my life but never could afford. And when it grew bitter cold and I was out
looking for the job I used to get terribly hungry sometimes - it's really
healthy going out like that day after day prowling about the city in rain and
snow and wind and hail - and so now and then I'd drop in to a cosy tavern and
order myself a juicy porterhouse steak with onions and french fried potatoes. I took out life insurance and accident
insurance too - it's important, when you're married, to do things like that, so
they told me. Supposing I should drop
dead one day - what then? I remember the
guy telling me that, in order to clinch his argument. I had already told him I would sign up, but
he must have forgotten it. I had said,
yes, immediately, out of force of habit, but as I say, he had evidently
overlooked it - or else it was against the code to sign a man up until you had delivered
the full sales talk. Anyway, I was just
getting ready to ask him how long it would take before you could make a loan on
the policy when he popped the hypothetical question: Supposing you should
drop dead one day - what then? I
guess he thought I was a little off my nut the way I laughed at that. I laughed until the tears rolled down my
face. Finally he said - "I don't
see that I said anything so funny".
"Well," I said, getting serious for a moment, "take a
good look at me. Now tell me, do you
think I'm the sort of fellow who gives a fuck what happens once he's
dead?" He was quite taken aback by
this, apparently, because the next thing he said was: "I don't think
that's a very ethical attitude, Mr. Miller.
I'm sure you wouldn't want your wife to ..." "Listen," I said, "supposing I
told you I don't give a fuck what happens to my wife when I die - what
then?" And since this seemed to
injure his ethical susceptibilities still more I added for good measure - "As far as I'm concerned
you don't have to pay the insurance when I croak - I'm only doing this to make
you feel good. I'm trying to help the
world along, don't you see? You've got
to live, haven't you? Well, I'm just
putting a little food in your mouth, that's all. If you have anything else to sell, trot it
out. I buy anything that sounds
good. I'm a buyer not a seller. I like to see people looking happy - that's
why I buy things. Now listen, how much
did you say that would come to per week?
Fifty-seven cents? Fine. What's fifty-seven cents? You see that piano - that comes to about
thirty-nine cents a week, I think. Look
around you ... everything you see costs so much a week. You say, if I should die, what then? Do you suppose I'm going to die on all these
people? That would be a hell of a
joke. No, I'd rather have them come and
take the things away - if I can't pay for them, I mean...." He was fidgeting about and there was a rather
glassy stare in his eye, I thought.
"Excuse me," I said, interrupting myself, "but wouldn't
you like to have a little drink - to wet the policy?" He said he thought not, but I insisted, and
besides, I hadn't signed the papers yet and my urine would have to be examined
and approved of and all sorts of stamps and seals would have to be affixed - I
knew all that crap by heart - so I thought we might have a little snifter first
and in that way protract the serious business, because honestly, buying
insurance or buying anything was a real pleasure to me and gave me the feeling
that I was just like every other citizen, a man, what! and not a
monkey. So I got out a bottle of sherry
(which is all that was allowed me) and I poured out a generous glassful for
him, thinking to myself that it was fine to see the sherry going because maybe
the next time they'd buy something better for me. "I used to sell insurance too once upon
a time," I said, raising the glass
to my lips. "Sure, I can sell
anything. The only thing is - I'm
lazy. Take a day like today - isn't it
nicer to be indoors, reading a book or listening to the phonograph? Why should I go out and hustle for an
insurance company? If I had been working today you wouldn't have caught
me in - isn't that so? No, I think it's better
to take it easy and help people out when they come along ... like with you, for
instance. It's much nicer to buy things
than to sell them, don't you think? If
you have the money, of course! In
this house we don't need much money. As
I was saying, the piano comes to about thirty-nine cents a week, or forty-two
maybe, and the...."
"Excuse me, Mr. Miller," he
interrupted, "but don't you think we ought to get down to signing these
papers?"
"Why, of course," I said
cheerfully. "Did you bring them all
with you? Which one do you think we
ought to sign first? By the way, you
haven't got a fountain pen you'd like to sell me, have you?"
"Just sign right here," he
said, pretending to ignore my remarks.
"And here, that's it. Now
then, Mr. Miller, I think I'll say good day - and you'll be hearing from the
company in a few days."
"Better make it sooner," I
remarked, leading him to the door, "because I might change my mind and
commit suicide."
"Why, of course, why yes, Mr.
Miller, certainly we will. Good day now,
good day!"
Of course the instalment plan breaks
down eventually, even if you're an assiduous buyer such as I was. I certainly did my best to keep the
manufacturers and the advertising men of America busy, but they were
disappointed in me it seems. Everybody
was disappointed in me. But there was
one man in particular who was more disappointed in me than anyone and that was
a man who had really made an effort to befriend me and whom I had let
down. I think of him and the way he took
me on as his assistant - so readily and graciously - because later, when I was
hiring and firing like a forty-two horse calibre revolver, I was betrayed right
and left myself, but by that time I had become so inoculated that it didn't
matter a damn. But this man had gone out
of his way to show me that he believed in me.
He was the editor of a catalogue for a great mail order house. It was an enormous compendium of horseshit
which was put out once a year and which took the whole year to make ready. I hadn't the slightest idea what it was all
about and why I dropped into his office that day I don't know, unless it was
because I wanted to get warm, as I had been knocking about the docks all day
trying to get a job as a checker or some damned thing. It was cosy in his office and I made him a
long speech so as to get thawed out. I
didn't know what job to ask for - just a job, I said. He was a sensitive man and very
kind-hearted. He seemed to guess that I
was a writer, because soon he was asking me what I liked to read and what was
my opinion of this writer and that writer.
It just happened that I had a list of books in my pocket - books I was
searching for at the public library - and so I brought it out and showed it to
him. "Great Scott!" he
exclaimed, "do you really read these books?" I modestly shook my head in the affirmative,
and then as often happened to me when I was touched off by some silly remark
like that, I began to talk about Hamsun's Mysteries which I had just
been reading. From then on the man was
like putty in my hands. When he asked me
if I would like to be his assistant he apologized for offering me such a lowly
position; he said I could take my turn learning the ins and outs of the job, he
was sure it would be a cinch for me. And
then he asked me if he couldn't lend me some money, out of his own pocket,
until I got paid. Before I could say yes
or no he had fished out a twenty-dollar bill and thrust it in my hand. Naturally I was touched. I was ready to work like a son of a bitch for
him. Assistant editor - it sounded quite
good, especially to the creditors in the neighbourhood. And for a while I was do happy to be eating
roast beef and chicken and tenderloins of pork that I pretended I liked the
job. Actually it was difficult for me to
keep awake. What I had to learn I had learned
in a week's time. And after that? After that I saw myself doing penal servitude
for life. In order to make the best of
it I whiled away the time writing stories and essays and long letters to my
friends. Perhaps they thought I was
writing up new ideas for the company, because for quite a while nobody paid any
attention to me. I thought it was a
wonderful job. I had almost the whole
day to myself, for my writing, having learned to dispose of the company's work
in about an hour's time. I was so
enthusiastic about my own private work that I gave orders to my underlings not to
disturb me except at stipulated moments.
I was sailing along like a breeze, the company paying me regularly and
the slave drivers doing the work I had mapped out for them, when one day, just
when I am in the midst of an important essay on The Anti-Christ, a man
whom I had never seen before walks up to my desk, bends over my shoulder, and
in a sarcastic tone of voice begins to read aloud what I had just written. I didn't need to inquire who he was or what
he was up to - the only thought in my head was, and that I repeated to myself
frantically - Will I get an extra week's pay? When it came time to bid good-bye to my
benefactor I felt a little ashamed of myself, particularly when he said, right
off the bat like - "I tried to get you an extra week's pay but they
wouldn't hear of it. I wish there was
something I could do for you - you're only standing in your own way, you
know. To tell you the truth, I still
have the greatest faith in you - but I'm afraid you're going to have a hard
time of it, for a while. You don't fit
in anywhere. Some day you'll make a
great writer, I feel sure of it. Well,
excuse me," he added, shaking hands with me warmly, "I've got to see
the boss. Good luck to you!"
I felt a bit cut up about the
incident. I wished it had been possible
to prove to him then and there that his faith was justified. I wished I could have justified myself before
the whole world at that moment: I would have jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge if
it would have convinced people that I wasn't a heartless son of a bitch. I had a heart as big as a whale, as I was
soon to prove, but nobody was examining into my heart. Everybody was being let down hard - not only
the instalment companies, but the landlord, the butcher, the baker, the gas,
water and electricity devils, everybody.
If only I could get to believe in this business of work! To save my life I couldn't see it. I could only see that people were working their
balls off because they didn't know any better.
I thought of the speech I had made which won me the job. In some ways I was very much like Herr Nagel
myself. No telling from minute to minute
what I would do. No knowing whether I was
a monster or a saint. Like so many
wonderful men of our time, Herr Nagel was a desperate man - and it was this very
desperation which made him such a likeable chap. Hamsun didn't know what to make of this
character himself: he knew he existed, and he knew that there was something
more to him than a mere buffoon and a mystifier. I think he loved Herr Nagel more than any
other character he created. And
why? Because Herr Nagel was the
unacknowledged saint which every artist is - the man who is ridiculed because
his solutions, which are truly profound, seem too simple for the world. No man wants to be an artist - he is
driven to it because the world refuses to recognize his proper leadership. Work meant nothing to me, because the real
work to be done was being evaded. People
regarded me as lazy and shiftless, but on the contrary I was an exceedingly
active individual. Even if it was just
hunting for a piece of tail, that was something, and well worth while,
especially if compared to other forms of activity - such as making buttons or
turning screws, or even removing appendixes.
And why did people listen to me so readily when I applied for a
job? Why did they find me
entertaining? For the reason, no doubt,
that I had always spent my time profitably.
I brought them gifts - from my hours at the public library, from my idle
ramblings through the streets, from my intimate experiences with women, from my
afternoons at the burlesque, from my visits to the museum and the art
galleries. Had I been a dud, just a poor
honest bugger who wanted to work his balls off for so much a week, they
wouldn't have offered me the jobs they did, nor would they have handed me
cigars or taken me to lunch or lent me money, as they frequently did. I must have had something to offer which
perhaps unknowingly they prized beyond horsepower or technical ability. I didn't know myself what it was, because I
had neither pride, nor vanity, nor envy.
About the big issues I was clear, but confronted by the petty details of
life I was bewildered. I had to witness
this same bewilderment on a colossal scale before I could grasp what it was all
about. Ordinary men are often quicker in
sizing up the practical situation: their ego is commensurate with the demands
made upon it: the world is not very different from what they imagine it to be. But a man who is completely out of step with
the rest of the world is either suffering from a colossal inflation of his ego
or else the ego is so submerged as to be practically non-existent. Herr Nagel had to dive off the deep end in
search of his true ego; his existence was a mystery, to himself and to everyone
else. I couldn't afford to leave things
hanging in suspense that way - the mystery was too intriguing. Even if I had to rub myself like a cat
against every human being I encountered, I was going to get to the bottom of
it. Rub long enough and hard enough and
the spark will come!
The hibernation of animals, the
suspension of life practised by certain low forms of life, the marvellous
vitality of the bedbug which lies in wait endlessly behind the wallpaper, the
trance of the Yogi, the catalepsy of the pathologic individual, the mystic's
union with the cosmos, the immortality of cellular life, all these things the
artist learns in order to awaken the world at the propitious moment. The artist belongs to the X root race of man;
he is the spiritual microbe, as it were, which carries over from one root race
to another. He is not crushed by
misfortune, because he is not a part of the physical, racial scheme of
things. His appearance is always
synchronous with catastrophe and dissolution; he is the cyclical being which
lives in the epicycle. The experience
which he acquires is never used for personal ends; it serves the larger purpose
to which he is geared. Nothing is lost
on him, however trifling. If he is
interrupted for twenty-five years in the reading of a book he can go on from
the page where he left off as though nothing had happened in between. Everything that happens in between, which is
"life" to most people, is merely an interruption in his forward round. The eternality of his work, when he expresses
himself, is merely the reflection of the automatism of life in which he is
obliged to lie dormant, a sleeper on the back of sleep, waiting for the signal
which will announce the moment of birth.
This is the big issue, and this was always clear to me, even when I
denied it. The dissatisfaction which
drives one on from one word to another, one creation to another, is simply a
protest against the futility of postponement.
The more awake one becomes, as artistic microbe, the less desire one has
to do anything. Fully awake, everything
is just and there is no need to come out of the trance. Action, as expressed in creating a work of
art, is a concession to the automatic principle of death. Drowning myself in the Gulf of Mexico I was
able to partake of an active life which would permit the real self to hibernate
until I was ripe to be born. I
understood it perfectly, though I acted blindly and confusedly. I swam back into the stream of human activity
until I got to the source of all action and there I muscled in, calling myself
personnel director of a telegraph company, and allowed the tide of humanity to
wash over me like great white-capped breakers.
All this active life, preceding the final act of desperation, led me
from doubt to doubt, blinding me more and more to the real self which, like a
continent choked with the evidences of a great and thriving civilization, had
already sunk beneath the surface of the sea.
The colossal ego was submerged, and what people observed moving
frantically above the surface was the periscope of the soul searching for its
target. Everything that came within
range had to be destroyed, if I were ever to rise again and ride the
waves. This monster which rose now and
then to fix its target with deadly aim, which dove again and roved and
plundered ceaselessly would, when the time came, rise for the last time to
reveal itself as an ark, would gather unto itself a pair of each kind and at
last, when the floods abated, would settle down on the summit of a lofty
mountain peak thence to open wide its doors and return to the world what had
been preserved from the catastrophe.
If I shudder now and then, when I
think of my active life, if I have nightmares, possibly it is because I think
of all the men I robbed and murdered in my day sleep. I did everything which my nature bade me to
do. Nature is eternally whispering in
one's ear - "if you would survive you must kill!" Being human, you kill not like the animal but
automatically, and the killing is disguised and its ramifications are endless,
so that you kill without even thinking about it, you kill without need. The men who are the most honoured are the
greatest killers. They believe that they
are serving their fellowmen, and they are sincere in believing so, but they are
heartless murderers and at moments, when they come awake, they realize their
crimes and perform frantic, quixotic acts of goodness in order to expiate their
guilt. The goodness of man stinks more
than the evil which is in him, for the goodness is not yet acknowledged, not an
affirmation of the conscious self. Being
pushed over the precipice, it is easy at the last moment to surrender to one's
possessions, to turn and extend a last embrace to all who are left behind. How are we to stoop the blind rush? How are we to stop the automatic process,
each one pushing the other over the precipice?
As I sat at my desk, over which I had
put up a sign reading "Do not abandon all hope ye who enter here!" -
as I sat there saying Yes, No, Yes, No, I realized, with a despair that was
turning to white frenzy, that I was a puppet in whose hands society had placed
a Gatling gun. If I performed a good
deed it was no different, ultimately, than if I had performed a bad deed. I was like a equals sign through which the
algebraic swarm of humanity was passing.
I was a rather important, active equals sign, like a general in time of
war, but no matter how competent I were to become I could never change into a
plus or a minus sign. Nor could anyone
else, as far as I could determine. Our whole
life was built up on this principle of equation. The integers had become symbols which were
shuffled about in the interests of death.
Pity, despair, passion, hope, courage - these were the temporal
refractions caused by looking at equations from varying angles. To stop the endless juggling by turning one's
back on it, or by facing it squarely and writing about it, would be no help
either. In a hall of mirrors there is no
way to turn your back on yourself. I
will not do this. I will do some other
thing! Very good. But can you do nothing at all? Can you stop thinking about not doing
anything? Can you stop dead and, without
thinking, radiate the truth which you know?
That was the idea which lodged in the back of my head and which burned
and burned, and perhaps when I was most expansive, most radiant with energy,
most sympathetic, most willing, helpful, sincere, good, it was this fixed idea
which was shining through, and automatically I was saying - "why, don't
mention it ... nothing at all, I assure you ... no, please don't thank me, it's
nothing", etc. etc. From firing the
gun so many hundreds of times a day perhaps I didn't even notice the
detonations anymore; perhaps I thought I was opening pigeon traps and filling
the sky with milky white fowl. Did you
ever see a synthetic monster on the screen, a Frankenstein realized in flesh
and blood? Can you imagine how he might
be trained to pull a trigger and see pigeons flying at the same time? Frankenstein is not a myth: Frankenstein is a
very real creation born of the personal experience of a sensitive human
being. The monster is always more real
when it does not assume the proportions of flesh and blood. The monster of the screen is nothing compared
to the monster of the imagination; even the existent pathologic monsters who
find their way into the police station are but feeble demonstrations of the
monstrous reality which the pathologist lives with. But to be the monster and the pathologist at
the same time - that is reserved for certain species of men who, disguised as
artists, are supremely aware that sleep is an even greater danger than
insomnia. In order not to fall asleep,
in order not to become victims of that insomnia which is called "living",
they resort to the drug of putting words together endlessly. This is not an automatic process, they
say, because there is always present the illusion that they can stop it at
will. But they cannot stop; they have
only succeeded in creating an illusion, which is perhaps a feeble something,
but it is far from being wide awake and neither active nor inactive. I wanted to be wide awake without talking
or writing about it, in order to accept life absolutely. I mentioned the archaic men in the remote
places of the world with whom I was communicating frequently. Why did I think these "savages"
more capable of understanding me than the men and women who surrounded me? Was I crazy to believe such a thing? I don't think so in the least. These "savages" are the degenerate
remnants of earlier races of man who, I believe, must have had a greater hold
on reality. The immortality of the race
is constantly before our eyes in these specimens of the past who linger on in
withered splendour. Whether the human
race is immortal or not is not my concern, but the vitality of the race does
mean something to me, and that it should be active or dormant means even
more. As the vitality of the new race
banks down the vitality of the old race
manifests itself in the waking mind with greater and greater significance. The vitality of the old race lingers on even
in death, but the vitality of the new race which is about to die seems already
nonexistent. If a man were taking a
swarming hive of bees to the river to drown them.... That was the image I
carried about in me. If only I were the
man, and not the bee! In some vague,
inexplicable way I knew that I was the man, that I should not be drowned
in the hive, like the others. Always,
when we came forward in a group, I was signalled to stand apart; from birth I
was favoured that way, and, no matter what tribulations I went through, I knew
they were not fatal or lasting. Also,
another strange thing took place in me whenever I was called to stand forth. I knew that I was superior to the man who was
summoning me! The tremendous humility
which I practised was not hypocritical but a condition provoked by the
realization of the fateful character of the situation. The intelligence which I possessed, even as a
stripling, frightened me; it was the intelligence of a "savage", which
is always superior to that of civilized men in that it is more adequate to the
exigencies of circumstance. It is a life
intelligence, even though life has seemingly passed them by. I felt almost as if I had been shot forward
into a round of existence which for the rest of mankind had not yet attained
its full rhythm. I was obliged to mark
time if I were to remain with them and not be shunted off to another sphere of
existence. On the other hand, I was in
many ways lower than the human beings about me.
It was as though I had come out of the fires of hell not entirely
purged. I had still a tail and a pair of
horns, and when my passions were aroused I breathed a sulphurous poison which
was annihilating. I was always called a
"lucky devil". The good that
happened to me was called "luck", and the evil was always regarded as
a result of my shortcomings. Rather, as
the fruit of my blindness. Rarely did
anyone ever spot the evil in me! I was
as adroit, in this respect, as the devil himself. But that I was frequently blind, everybody
could see that. And at such times I was
left alone, shunned, like the devil himself.
Then I left the world, returned to the fires of hell - voluntarily. These comings and goings are as real to me,
more real, in fact, than anything that happened in between. The friends who think they know me know
nothing about me for the reason that the real me changed hands countless
times. Neither the men who thanked me,
nor the men who cursed me, knew with whom they were dealing. Nobody ever got on to a solid footing with
me, because I was constantly liquidating my personality. I was keeping what is called the
"personality" in abeyance for the moment when, leaving it to
coagulate, it would adopt a proper human rhythm. I was hiding my face until the moment when I
would find myself in step with the world.
All this was, of course, a mistake.
Even the role of artist is worth adopting, while marking time. Acting is important, even if it entails
futile activity. One should not say Yes,
No, Yes, No, even seated in the highest place.
One should not be drowned in the human tidal wave, even for the sake of
becoming a Master. One must beat with
his own rhythm - at any price. I
accumulated thousands of years of experience in a few short years, but the
experience was wasted because I had no need of it. I had already been crucified and marked by
the cross; I had been born free of the need to suffer - and yet I knew no other
way to struggle forward than to repeat the drama. All my intelligence was against it. Suffering is futile, my intelligence told me
over and over, but I went on suffering voluntarily. Suffering has never taught me a thing; for
others it may still be necessary, but for me it is nothing more than an
algebraic demonstration of spiritual inadaptability. The whole drama which the man of today is
acting out through suffering does not exist for me: it never did,
actually. All my Calvaries were rosy
crucifixions, pseudo-tragedies to keep the fires of hell burning brightly for
the real sinners who are in danger of being forgotten.
Another thing ... the mystery which
enveloped my behaviour grew deeper the nearer I came to the circle of uterine
relatives. The mother from whose loins I
sprang was a complete stranger to me. To
begin with, after giving birth to me she gave birth to my sister, whom I
usually refer to as my brother. My
sister was a sort of harmless monster, an angel who had been given the body of
an idiot. It gave me a strange feeling,
as a boy, to be growing up and developing side by side with this being who was
doomed to remain all her life a mental dwarf.
It was impossible to be a brother to her because it was impossible to
regard this atavistic hulk of a body as a "sister". She would have functioned perfectly, I
imagine, among the Australian primitives.
She might even have been raised to power and eminence among them, for,
as I said, she was the essence of goodness, she knew no evil. But so far as living the civilized life goes
she was helpless; she not only had no desire to kill but she had no desire to
thrive at the expense of others. She was
incapacitated for work, because even if they had been able to train her to make
caps for high explosives, for example, she might absent-mindedly throw her
wages in the river on the way home or she might give them to a beggar on the
street. Often in my presence she was
whipped like a dog for having performed some beautiful act of grace in her
absent-mindedness, as they called it.
Nothing was worse, I learned as a child, than to do a good deed without
reason. I had received the same
punishment as my sister, in the beginning, because I too had a habit of giving
things away, especially new things which had just been given me. I had even received a beating once, at the
age of five, for having advised my mother to cut a wart off her finger. She had asked me what to do about it one day
and, with my limited knowledge of medicine, I told her to cut it off with the
scissors, which she did, like an idiot.
A few days later she got blood poisoning and then she got hold of me and
she said - "you told me to cut it off, didn't you?" and she gave me a
sound trashing. From that day on I knew
that I was born in the wrong household.
From that day on I leaned like lightning. Talk about adaptation! By the time I was ten I had lived out the
whole theory of evolution. And there I
was, evolving through all the phases of animal life and yet chained to this
creature called my "sister" who was evidently a primitive being and
who would never, even at the age of ninety, arrive at a comprehension of the
alphabet. Instead of growing up like a
stalwart tree I began to lean to one side, in complete defiance of the law of
gravity. Instead of shooting out limbs
and leaves I grew windows and turrets.
The whole being, as it grew, was turning into stone, and the higher I
shot up the more I defied the law of gravity.
I was a phenomenon in the midst of the landscape, but one which
attracted people and elicited praise. If
the mother who bore us had only made another effort perhaps a marvellous white
buffalo might have been born and the three of us might have been permanently
installed in a museum and protected for life.
The conversations which took place between the leaning tower of Pisa,
the whipping post, the snoring machine and the pterodactyl in human flesh were,
to say the least, a bit queer. Anything
might be the subject of conversation - a bread crumb which the
"sister" had overlooked in brushing the tablecloth or Joseph's coat
of many colours which, in the old man's tailoring brain, might have been either
double-breasted or cutaway or frock. If
I came from the ice pond, where I had been skating all afternoon, the important
thing was not the ozone which I had breathed free of charge, nor the geometric
convolutions which were strengthening my muscles, but the little spot of rust
under the clamps which, if not rubbed off immediately, might deteriorate the
whole skate and bring about the dissolution of some pragmatic value which was
incomprehensible to my prodigal turn of thought. This little rust spot, to take a trifling
example, might entertain the most hallucinating results. Perhaps the "sister", in searching
for the kerosene can, might overturn the jar of prunes which were being stewed
and thus endanger all our lives by robbing us of the required calories in the
morrow's meal. A severe beating would
have to be given, not in anger, because that would disturb the digestive
apparatus, but silently and efficiently, as a chemist would beat up the white
of an egg in preparation for a minor analysis.
But the "sister", not understanding the prophylactic nature of
the punishment, would give vent to the most blood-curdling screams and this
would so affect the old man that he would go out for a walk and return two or
three hours later blind drunk and, what was worse, scratching a little paint of
the rolling doors in his blind staggers.
The little piece of paint that had been chipped off would bring on a
battle royal which was very bad for my dream life, because in my dream life I
frequently changed places with my sister, accepting the tortures inflicted upon
her and nourishing them with my supersensitive brain. It was in these dreams, always accompanied by
the sound of glass breaking, of shrieks, curses, groans and sobs, that I
gathered an unformulated knowledge of the ancient mysteries, of the rites of
initiation, of the transmigration of souls and so on. It might begin with a scene from real life -
the sister standing by the blackboard in the kitchen, the mother towering over
her with a ruler, saying two and two makes how much? and the sister screaming five. Bang! no, seven, Bang! no,
thirteen, eighteen, twenty! I would
be sitting at the table, doing my lessons, just as in real life during these
scenes, when by a slight twist or squirm, perhaps as I saw the ruler come down
on the sister's face, suddenly I would be in another realm where glass was
unknown, as it was unknown to the Kickapoos or the Lenni-Lenape. The faces of those about me were familiar -
they were my uterine relatives who, for some mysterious reason, failed to
recognize me in this new ambiance.
They were garbed in black and the colour of their skin was ash grey,
like that of the Tibetan devils. They
were all fitted out with knives and other instruments of torture: they belonged
to the caste of sacrificial butchers. I
seemed to have absolute liberty and the authority of a god, and yet by some
capricious turn of events the end would be that I would be lying on the
sacrificial block and one of my charming uterine relatives would be bending
over me which a gleaming knife to cut out my heart. In sweat and terror I would begin to recite
"my lessons" in a high, screaming voice, faster and faster, as I felt
the knife searching for my heart. Two
and two is four, five and five is ten, earth, air, fire, water, Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, Meocene, Pleocene, Eocene, the
Father, the Son, the Holy Ghost, Asia, Africa, Europe, Australia, red, blue,
yellow, the sorrel, the persimmon, the pawpaw, the catalpa ... faster and
faster ... Odin, Wotan, Parsifal, King Alfred, Frederick the Great, the Hanseatic
League, the Battle of Hastings, Thermopylae, 1492, 1776, 1812, Admiral
Farragut, Pickett's charge, The Light Brigade, we are gathered here today, the
Lord is my shepherd, I shall not, one and indivisible, no, 16, no, 27, help!
murder! police! - and yelling louder and louder and going faster and faster I
go completely off my nut and there is no more pain, no more terror, even though
they are piercing me everywhere with knives.
Suddenly I am absolutely calm and the body which is lying on the block,
which they are still gouging with glee and ecstasy, feels nothing because I,
the owner of it, have escaped. I have
become a tower of stone which leans over the scene and watches with scientific
interest. I have only to succumb to the
law of gravity and I will fall on them and obliterate them. But I do not succumb to the law of gravity
because I am too fascinated by the horror of it all. I am so fascinated, in fact, that I grow more
and more windows. And as the light
penetrates the stone interior of my being I can feel that my roots, which are
in the earth, are alive and that I shall one day be able to remove myself at
will from this trance in which I am fixed.
So much for the dream, in which I am
helplessly rooted. But in actuality,
when the dear uterine relatives come, I am as free as a bird and darting to and
fro like a magnetic needle. If they ask
me a question I give them five answers, each of which is better than the other;
if they ask me to play a waltz I play a double-breasted sonata for the left
hand; if they ask me to help myself to another leg of chicken I clean up the
plate, dressing and all; if they urge me to go out and play in the street I go
out and in my enthusiasm I cut my cousin's head open with a tin can; if they
threaten to give me a thrashing I say go to it, I don't mind! If they pat me on the head for my good
progress at school I spit on the floor to show that I have still something to
learn. I do everything they wish me to
do plus. If they wish me to be
quiet and say nothing I become as quiet as a rock: I don't hear when they speak
to me, I don't move when I'm touched, I don't cry when I'm pinched, I don't
budge when I'm pushed. If I complain
that I'm stubborn I become as pliant and yielding as rubber. If they wish me to get fatigued so that I
will not display too much energy I let them give me all kinds of work to do and
I do the jobs so thoroughly that I collapse on the floor finally like a sack of
wheat. If they wish me to be reasonable
I become ultra-reasonable, which drives them crazy. If they wish me to obey I obey to the letter,
which causes endless confusion. And all
this because the molecular life of brother and sister is incompatible with the
atomic weights which have been allotted to us.
Because she doesn't grow at all I grow like a mushroom; because she has
no personality I become a colossus; because she is free of evil I become a
thirty-two branched candelabra of evil; because she demands nothing of anyone I
demand everything; because she inspires ridicule everywhere I inspire fear and
respect; because she is humiliated and tortured I wreak vengeance upon
everyone, friend and foe alike; because she is helpless I make myself
all-powerful. The gigantism from which I
suffered was simply the result of an effort to wipe out the little stain of
rust which had attached itself to the family skate, so to speak. That little stain of rust under the clamps
made me a champion skater. It made me
skate so fast and furiously that even when the ice had melted I was still
skating, skating through mud, through asphalt, through brooks and rivers and
melon patches and theories of economics and so forth. I could skate through hell, I was that fast
and nimble.
But all this fancy skating was of no
use - Father Coxcox, the pan-American Noah, was always calling me back to the
Ark. Every time I stopped skating there
was a cataclysm - the earth opened up and swallowed me. I was a brother to every man and at the same
time a traitor to myself. I made the
most astounding sacrifices, only to find that they were of no value. Of what use was it to prove that I could be
what was expected of me when I did not want to be any of these things? Every time you come to the limit of what is
demanded of you, you are faced with the same problem - to be yourself! And with the first step you make in this
direction you realize that there is neither plus nor minus; you throw the
skates away and swim. There is no
suffering anymore because there is nothing which can threaten your
security. And there is no desire to be
of help to others even, because why rob them of a privilege which must be
earned? Life stretches out from moment
to moment in stupendous infinitude.
Nothing can be more real than what you suppose it to be. Whatever you think the cosmos to be it is and
it could not possibly be anything else as long as you are you and I am I. You live in the fruits of your action and
your action is the harvest of your thought.
Thought and action are one, because swimming you are in it and of it,
and it is everything you desire it to be, no more, no less. Every stroke counts for eternity. The heating and cooling system is one system,
and Cancer is separated from Capricorn only by an imaginary line. You don't become ecstatic and you are not
plunged into violent grief; you don't pray for rain, neither do you dance a
jig. You live like a happy rock in the
midst of the ocean: you are fixed while everything about you is in turbulent
motion. You are fixed in a reality which
permits the thought that nothing is fixed, that even the happiest and mightiest
rock will one day be utterly dissolved and fluid as the ocean from which it was
born.
This is the musical life which I was
approaching by first skating like a maniac through all the vestibules and
corridors which lead from the outer to the inner. My struggles never brought me near it, nor
did my furious activity, nor my rubbing elbows with humanity. All that was simply a movement from vector to
vector in a circle which, however the perimeter expanded, remained withal
parallel to the realm I speak of. The
wheel of destiny can be transcended at any moment because at every point of its
surface it touches the real world and only a spark of illumination is necessary
to bring about the miraculous, to transform the skater to a swimmer and the
swimmer to a rock. The rock is merely an
image of the act which stops the futile rotation of the wheel and plunges the
being into full consciousness. And full
consciousness is indeed like an inexhaustible ocean which gives itself to sun
and moon and also includes the sun and moon. Everything which is is born out of the
limitless ocean of light - even the night.
Sometimes, in the ceaseless
revolutions of the wheel, I caught a glimpse of the nature of the jump which it
was necessary to make. To jump clear of
the clockwork - that was the liberating thought. To be something more, something different,
than the most brilliant maniac of the earth!
The story of man on earth bored me.
Conquest, even the conquest of evil, bored me. To radiate goodness is marvellous, because it
is tonic, invigorating, vitalizing. But
just to be is still more marvellous, because it is endless and requires
no demonstration. To be is music, which
is a profanation of silence in the interest of silence, and therefore beyond
good and evil. Music is the manifestation
of action without activity. It is the
pure act of creation swimming on its own bosom.
Music neither goads nor defends, neither seeks nor explains. Music is the noiseless sound made by the
swimmer in the ocean of consciousness.
It is a reward which can only be given by oneself. It is the gift of the god which one is
because he has ceased thinking about God.
It is an auger of the god which everyone will become in due time, when
all that is will be beyond imagination.
CODA
Not long ago I was walking the streets
of New York. Dear Old Broadway. It was night and the sky was an Oriental
blue, as blue as the gold in the ceiling of the Pagode, rue de Babylone, when
the machine starts clicking. I was
passing exactly below the place where we first met. I stood there a moment looking up at the red
lights in the windows. The music sounded
as it always sounded - light, peppery, enchanting. I was alone and there were millions of people
around me. It came over me, as I stood
there, that I wasn't thinking of her anymore; I was thinking of this book which
I am writing, and the book had become more important to me than her, than all
that had happened to us. Will this book
be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help me God? Plunging into the crowd again I wrestled with
this question of "truth". For
years I have been trying to tell this story and always the question of truth
has weighed upon me like a nightmare.
Time and again I have related to others the circumstances of our life,
and I have always told the truth. But
the truth can also be a lie. The truth
is not enough. Truth is only the core of
a totality which is inexhaustible.
I remember that the first time we were
ever separated this idea of totality seized me by the hair. She pretended, when she left me, or maybe she
believed it herself, that it was necessary for our welfare. I knew in my heart that she was trying to be
free of me, but I was too cowardly to admit it to myself. But when I realized that she could do without
me, even for a limited time, the truth which I had tried to shut out began to
grow with alarming rapidity. It was more
painful than anything I had ever experienced before, but it was also
healing. When I was completely emptied,
when the loneliness had reached such a point that it could not be sharpened any
further, I suddenly felt that, to go on living, this intolerable truth had to
be incorporated into something greater than the frame of personal
misfortune. I felt that I had made an
imperceptible switch into another realm, a realm of tougher, more elastic
fibre, which the most horrible truth was powerless to destroy. I sat down to write her a letter telling her
that I was so miserable over the thought of losing her that I had decided to
begin a book about her, a book which would immortalize her. It would be a book, I said, such as no-one
had ever seen before. I rambled on
ecstatically, and in the midst of it I suddenly broke off to ask myself why I
was so happy.
Passing beneath the dance hall,
thinking again of this book, I realized suddenly that our life had come to an
end: I realized that the book I was planning was nothing more than a tomb in
which to bury her - and the me which had belonged to her. That was some time ago, and ever since I have
been trying to write it. Why is it so
difficult? Why? Because the idea of an "end" is
intolerable to me.
Truth lies in this knowledge of the
end which is ruthless and remorseless.
We can know the truth and accept it, or we can refuse the knowledge of
it and neither die nor be born again. In
this manner it is possible to live forever, a negative life as solid and
complete, or as dispersed and fragmentary, as the atom. And if we pursue this road far enough, even
this atomic eternity can yield to nothingness and the universe itself fall apart.
For years now I have been trying to tell
this story; each time I have started out I have chosen a different route. I am like an explorer who, wishing to
circumnavigate the globe, deems it unnecessary to carry even a compass. Moreover, from dreaming over it so long, the
story itself has come to resemble a vast, fortified city, and I who dream it
over and over am outside the city, a wanderer, arriving before one gate after
another too exhausted to enter. And as
with the wanderer, this city in which my story is situated eludes me
perpetually. Always in sight it
nevertheless remains unattainable, a sort of ghostly citadel floating in the
clouds. From the soaring, crenellated
battlements flocks of huge white geese swoop down in steady, wedge-shaped
formation. With the tips of their
blue-white wings they brush the dreams that dazzle my vision. My feet move confusedly; no sooner do I gain
a foothold than I am lost again. I
wander aimlessly, trying to gain a solid, unshakeable foothold whence I can
command a view of my life, but behind me there lies only a welter of
criss-crossed tracks, a groping, confused, encircling, the spasmodic gambit of
the chicken whose head has just been lopped off.
Whenever I try to explain to myself
the peculiar pattern which my life has taken, when I reach back to the first
cause, as it were, I think inevitably of the girl I first loved. It seems to me that everything dates from
that aborted affair. A strange,
masochistic affair it was, ridiculous and tragic at the same time. Perhaps I had the pleasure of kissing her two
or three times, the sort of kiss one reserves for a goddess. Perhaps I saw her alone several times. Certainly she could never have dreamed that
for over a year I walked past her home every night hoping to catch a glimpse of
her at the window. Every night after
dinner I would get up from the table and take the long route which led to her
home. She was never at the window when I
passed and I never had the courage to stand in front of the house and wait. Back and forth I passed, back and forth, but
never hide nor hair of her. Why didn't I
write her? Why didn't I call her
up? Once I remember summoning enough
pluck to invite her to the theatre. I
arrived at her home with a bunch of violets, the first and only time I ever
bought flowers for a woman. As we were
leaving the theatre the violets dropped from her corsage, and in my confusion I
stepped on them. I was thinking how
awkward I was - it was only long afterwards that I recalled the smile she had
given me as she stooped down to pick up the violets.
It was a complete fiasco. In the end I ran away. Actually I was running away from another
woman, but the day before leaving town I decided to see her once again. It was mid-afternoon and she came out to talk
to me in the street, in the little areaway which was fenced off. She was already engaged to another man; she
pretended to be happy about it but I could see, blind as I was, that she wasn't
as happy as she pretended to be. If I
had only said the word I am sure she would have dropped the other fellow;
perhaps she would even have gone away with me.
I preferred to punish myself. I
said good-bye nonchalantly and I went down the street like a dead man. The next morning I was bound for the Coast,
determined to start a new life.
The new life was also a fiasco. I ended up on a ranch in Chula Vista, the
most miserable man that ever walked the earth.
There was this girl I loved and there was the other woman, for whom I felt
only a profound pity. I had been living
with her for two years, this other woman, but it seemed like a lifetime. I was twenty-one and she admitted to be
thirty-six. Every time I looked at her I
said to myself - when I am thirty she will be forty-five, when I am forty she
will be fifty-five. She had fine
wrinkles under the eyes, laughing wrinkles, but wrinkles just the same. When I kissed her they were magnified a dozen
times. She laughed easily, but her eyes
were sad, terribly sad. They were
Armenian eyes. Her hair, which had been
red once, was now a peroxide blonde. Otherwise
she was adorable - a Venusian body, a Venusian soul, loyal, loveable, grateful,
everything a woman should be, except that she was fifteen years older. The fifteen years' difference drove me
crazy. When I went out with her I
thought only - how will it be ten years hence?
Or else, what age does she seem to have now? Do I look old enough for her? Once we got back to the house it was all
right. Climbing the stairs I would run
my finger up her crotch, which used to make her whinny like a horse. If her son, who was almost my age, were in
bed we would close the doors and lock ourselves in the kitchen. She'd lie on the narrow kitchen table and I'd
slough it into her. It was
marvellous. And what made it more
marvellous was that with each performance I would say to myself - This is
the last time ... tomorrow I will beat it!
And then, since she was the janitress, I would go down to the cellar and
roll the ash barrels out for her. In the
morning, when the son had left for work, I would climb up to the roof and air
the bedding. Both she and the son had
T.B.... Sometimes there were no table bouts.
Sometimes the hopelessness of it all got me by the throat and I would
put on my things and go out for a walk.
Now and then I forgot to return.
And when I did that I was more miserable than ever, because I knew that
she would be waiting for me with those large sorrowful eyes. I'd go back to her like a man who had a
sacred duty to perform. I'd lie down on
the bed and let her caress me; I'd study the wrinkles under her eyes and the
roots of her hair which were turning red.
Lying there like that, I would often think about the other one, the one
I loved, would wonder if she were lying down for it too, or ... Those long walks
I took three hundred and sixty-five days of the year! - I would go over them in
my mind lying beside the other woman.
How many times since have I relived these walks! The dreariest, bleakest, ugliest streets man
ever created. In anguish I relive these
walks, these streets, these first smashed hopes. The window is there, but no Melisande; the
garden too is there, but no sheen of gold.
Pass and repass, the window always vacant. The evening star hangs low; Tristan appears,
then Fidelio, and then Oberon. The
hydra-headed dog barks with all his mouths and though there are no swamps I
hear the frogs croaking everywhere. Same
houses, same car lines, same everything.
She is hiding behind the curtain, she is waiting for me to pass, she is
doing this or doing that.... but she is not there, never, never, never. Is it a grand opera or is it a hurdy-gurdy
playing? It is Amato bursting his golden
lung; it is the Rubaiyat, it is Mount Everest, it is a moonless night,
it is a sob at dawn, it is a boy making believe, it is Puss in the Boot, it is
Mauna Loa, it is fox or astrakhan, it is of no stuff and no time, it is endless
and it begins over and over, under the heart, in the back of the throat, in the
soles of the feet, and why not just once, just once, for the love of Christ,
just a shadow or a rustle of the curtain, or a breath on the windowpane,
something once, if only a lie, something to stop the pain, to stop this walking
up and down, up and down.... Walking homeward.
Same houses, same lampposts, same everything. I walk past my own home, past the cemetery,
past the gas tanks, past the car barns, past the reservoir, out into the open
country. I sit beside the road with my
head in my hands and sob. Poor bugger
that I am, I can't contract my heart enough to burst the veins. I would like to suffocate with grief but
instead I give birth to a rock.
Meanwhile the other one is
waiting. I can see her again as she sat
on the low stoop waiting for me, her eyes large and dolorous, her face pale and
trembling with eagerness. Pity I
always thought it was brought me back, but now as I walk toward her and see the
look in her eyes I don't know anymore what it is, only that we will go inside
and lie together and she will get up half weeping, half laughing, and she will
grow very silent and watch me, study me as I move about, and never ask me what
is torturing me, never, never, because that is the one thing she fears, the one
thing she dreads to know. I don't
love you! Can't she hear me
screaming it? I don't love you! Over and over I yell it, with lips tight,
with hatred in my heart, with despair, with hopeless rage. But the words never leave my lips. I look at her and I am tongue-tied. I can't do it.... Time, time, endless time on
our hands and nothing to fill it but lies.
Well, I don't want to rehearse the
whole of my life leading up to the fatal moment - it is too long and too
painful. Besides, did my life really
lead up to this culminating moment? I
doubt it. I think there were innumerable
moments when I had the chance the make a beginning, but I lacked the strength
and the faith. On the evening in
question I deliberately walked out on myself: I walked right out of the old
life and into the new. There wasn't the
slightest effort involved. I was thirty
then. I had a wife and child and what is
called a "responsible" position.
These are the facts and facts mean nothing. The truth is my desire was so great it became
a reality. At such a moment what a man does
is of no great importance, it's what he is that counts. It's at such a moment that a man becomes an
angel. That is precisely what happened
to me: I became an angel. It is
not the purity of an angel which is so valuable, as the fact it can fly. An angel can break the pattern anywhere at
any moment and find its heaven; it has the power to descend into the lowest
matter and to extricate itself at will.
The night in question I understood it perfectly. I was pure and inhuman, I was detached, I had
wings. I was depossessed of the past and
I had no concern about the future. I was
beyond ecstasy. When I left the office I
folded my wings and hid them beneath my coat.
The dance hall was just opposite the
side entrance of the theatre where I used to sit in the afternoons instead of
looking for work. It was a street of
theatres and I used to sit there for hours at a time dreaming the most violent
dreams. The whole theatrical life of New
York was concentrated in that one street, so it seemed. It was Broadway, it was success, fame,
glitter, paint, the asbestos curtain and the hole in the curtain. Sitting on the steps of the theatre I used to
stare at the dance hall opposite, at the string of red lanterns which even in
the summer afternoons were lit up. In
every window there was a spinning ventilator which seemed to waft the music
into the street, where it was broken by the jangled din of traffic. Opposite the other side of the dance hall was
a comfort station and here too I used to sit now and then, hoping either to
make a woman or make a touch. Above the
comfort station, on the street level, was a kiosk with foreign papers and
magazines; the very sight of these papers, of the strange languages in which
they were printed, was sufficient to dislocate me for the day.
Without the slightest premeditation I
climbed the stairs to the dance hall, went directly to the little window of the
booth where Nick, the Greek, sat with a roll of tickets in front of him. Like the urinal below and the steps of the
theatre, this hand of the Greek now seems to me a separate and detached thing -
the enormous hair hand of an ogre borrowed from some horrible Scandinavian
fairy tale. It was the hand which spoke
to me always, the hand which said "Miss Mara will not be here
tonight", or "Yes, Miss Mara is coming late tonight". It was this hand which I dreamt of as a child
when I slept in the bedroom with the barred window. In my fevered sleep suddenly this window
would light up, to reveal the ogre clutching at the bars. Night after night the hairy monster visited
me, clutching at the bars and gnashing its teeth. I would awake in a cold sweat, the house
dark, the room absolutely silent.
Standing at the edge of the dance
floor I notice her coming toward me; she is coming with sails spread, the large
full face beautifully balanced on the long, columnar neck. I see a woman perhaps eighteen, perhaps
thirty, with blue-black hair and a large white face, a full white face in which
the eyes shine brilliantly. She has on a
tailored blue suit of duveteen. I
remember distinctly now the fullness of her body, and that her hair was fine
and straight, parted on one side, like a man's.
I remember the smile she gave me - knowing, mysterious, fugitive - a
smile that sprang up suddenly, like a puff of wind.
The whole being was concentrated in
the face. I could have taken just the
head and walked home with it; I could have put it beside me at night, on a
pillow, and made love to it. The mouth
and the eyes, when they opened up, the whole being glowed from them. There was an illumination which came from
some unknown source, from a centre hidden deep in the earth. I could think of nothing but the face, the
strange, womblike quality of the smile, the engulfing immediacy of it. The smile was so painfully swift and fleeting
that it was like the flash of a knife.
This smile, this face, was borne aloft on a long white neck, the sturdy,
swanlike neck of the medium - and of the lost and the damned.
I stand on the corner under the red
lights, waiting for her to come down. It
is about two in the morning and she is signing off. I am standing on Broadway with a flower in my
buttonhole, feeling absolutely clean and alone.
Almost the whole evening we have been talking about Strindberg, about a
character of his named Henriette. I
listened with such tense alertness that I fell into a trance. It was as if, with the opening phrase, we had
started on a race - in opposite directions.
Henriette! Almost immediately the
name was mentioned she began to talk about herself, without ever quite losing
hold of Henriette. Henriette was
attached to her by a long, invisible string which she manipulated imperceptibly
with one finger, like the street hawker who stands a little removed from the
black cloth on the sidewalk, apparently indifferent to the little mechanism
which is jiggling on the cloth, but betraying himself by the spasmodic movement
of the little finger to which the black thread is attached. Henriette is me, my real self, she seemed to
be saying. She wanted me to believe that
Henriette was really the incarnation of evil.
She said it so naturally, so innocently, with an almost subhuman candour
- how was I to believe that she meant it?
I could only smile as though to show her I was convinced.
Suddenly I feel her coming. I turn my head. Yes, there she is coming full on, the sails
spread, the eyes glowing. For the first
time I see now what a carriage she has.
She comes forward like a bird, a human bird wrapped in a soft fur. The engine is going full steam: I want to
shout, to give a blast that will make the whole world cock its ears. What a walk!
It's not a walk, it's a glide.
Tall, stately, full-bodied, self-possessed, she cuts the smoke and jazz
and red-light glow like the queen mother of all the slippery Babylonian whores. On the corner of Broadway just opposite the
comfort station, this is happening.
Broadway - it's her realm. This
is Broadway, this is New York, this is America.
She's America on foot, winged and sexed.
She is the lubet, the abominate and the sublimate - with a dash of
hydrochloric acid, nitro-glycerine, laudanum and powdered onyx. Opulence she has, and magnificence; it's
America right or wrong, and the ocean on either side. For the first time in my life the whole
continent hits me full force, hits me between the eyes. This is America, buffaloes or no buffaloes,
America the enemy wheel of hope and disillusionment. Whatever made America made her, bone, blood,
muscle, eyeball, gait, rhythm, poise, confidence, brass and hollow gut. She's almost on top of me, the full face
gleaming like calcium. The big soft fur
is slipping from her shoulder. She
doesn't notice it. She doesn't seem to
care if her clothes should drop off. She
doesn't give a fuck about anything. It's
America moving like a streak of lightning toward the glass warehouse of
red-blooded hysteria. America, fur or no
fur, shoes or no shoes. America
C.O.D. And scram you bastards before
we plug you! It's got me in the
guts, I'm quaking. Something's coming to
me and there's no dodging it. She's
coming head on, through the plate glass window.
If she would only stop a second, if she would only let me be for just
one moment. But no, not a single moment
does she grant me. Swift, ruthless,
imperious, like Fate itself she is on me, a sword cutting me through and
through....
She has me by the hand, she holds it tight. I walk beside her without fear. Inside me the stars are twinkling' inside me
a great blue vault where a moment ago the engines were pounding furiously.
One can wait a whole lifetime for a
moment like this. The woman whom you
never hoped to meet now sits before you, and she talks and looks exactly like
the person you dreamed about. But
strangest of all is that you never realized before that you had dreamed about
her. Your whole past is like a long
sleep which would have been forgotten had there been no dream. And the dream too might have been forgotten
had there been no memory, but remembrance is there in the blood and the blood
is like an ocean in which everything is washed away but that which is new and
more substantial even than life: REALITY.
We are seated in a little booth in the
Chinese restaurant across the way. Out
of the corner of my eye I catch the flicker of the illuminated letters running
up and down the sky. She is still
talking bout Henriette, or maybe it is about herself. Her little black bonnet, her bag and fur are
lying beside her on the bench. Every few
minutes she lights a fresh cigarette which burns away as she talks. There is no beginning nor end; it spurts out
of her like a flame and consumes everything within reach. No knowing how or where she began. Suddenly she is in the midst of a long
narrative, a fresh one, but it is always the same. Her talk is as formless as dream: there are
no grooves, no walls, no exists, no stops.
I have the feeling of being drowned in a deep mesh of words, of crawling
painfully back to the top of the net, of looking into her eyes and trying to
find there some reflection of the significance of her words - but I can find
nothing, nothing except my own image wavering in a bottomless well. Though she speaks of nothing but herself I am
unable to form the slightest image of her being. She leans forward, with elbows on the table,
and her words inundate me; wave after wave rolling over me and yet nothing
builds up inside me, nothing that I can seize with my mind. She's telling me about her father, about the
strange life they led at the edge of Sherwood Forest where she was born, or at
least she was telling me about this, but now it's about Henriette again,
or is it Dostoyevsky? - I'm not sure - but anyway, suddenly I realize that
she's not talking about any of these anymore but about a man who took her home
one night and as they stood on the stoop saying goodnight he suddenly reached
down and pulled up her dress. She pauses
a moment as though to reassure me that this is what she means to talk
about. I look at her bewilderedly. I can't imagine by what route we got to this
point. What man? What had he been saying to her? I let her continue, thinking that she will
probably come back to it, but no, she's ahead of me again and now it seems the
man, this man, is already dead, a suicide, and she is trying to make me
understand that it was an awful blow to her, but what she really seems to
convey is that she is proud of the fact that she drove a man to suicide. I can't picture the man as dead; I can only
think of him as he stood on her stoop lifting her dress, a man without a name
but alive and perpetually fixed in the act of bending down to lift up her
dress. There is another man who was her
father and I see him with a string of race horses, or sometimes in a little inn
just outside Vienna; rather I see him on the roof of the inn flying kites to
while away the time. And between this
man who was her father and the man with whom she was madly in love I can make
no separation. He is someone in her life
about whom she would rather not talk, but just the same she comes back to him
all the time, and though I'm not sure that it was not the man who lifted
up her dress neither am I sure that it wasn't the man who committed
suicide. Perhaps it's the man whom she
started to talk about when we sat down to eat.
Just as we were sitting down I remember now that she began to talk
rather hectically about a man whom she had just seen entering the
cafeteria. She even mentioned his name,
but I forgot it immediately. But I
remember her saying that she had lived with him and that he had done something
which she didn't like - she didn't say what - and so she had walked out on him,
left him flat, without a word of explanation.
And then, just as we were entering the chop suey joint, they ran into
each other and she was still trembling over it as we sat down in the little
booth.... For one long moment I have the most uneasy sensation. Maybe every word she uttered was a lie! Not an ordinary lie, no, something worse,
something indescribable. Only sometimes
the truth comes out like that too, especially if you think you're never going
to see the person again. Sometimes you
can tell a perfect stranger what you would never dare reveal to your most
intimate friend. It's like going to
sleep in the midst of a party; you become so interested in yourself that you go
to sleep. And when you're sound asleep
you begin to talk to someone, someone who was in the same room with you all the
time and therefore understands everything even though you begin in the middle
of a sentence. And perhaps this other person
goes to sleep also, or was always asleep, and that's why it was so easy to
encounter him, and if he doesn't say anything to disturb you then you know that
what you are saying is real and true and that you are wide-awake and there is
no other reality except this being wide-awake asleep. Never before have I been so wide-awake and so
sound asleep at the same time. If the
ogre in my dreams had really pushed the bars aside and taken me by the hand I
would have been frightened to death and consequently now dead, that is, forever
asleep and therefore always at large, and nothing would be strange anymore, nor
untrue, even if what happened did not happen.
What happened must have happened long ago, in the night
undoubtedly. And what is now happening
is also happening long ago, in the night, and this is no more true than the
dream of the ogre and the bars which would not give, except that now the bars
are broken and she whom I feared has me by the hand and there is no difference
between that which I feared and what is, because I was asleep and now I am
wide-awake asleep and there is nothing more to fear, nor to expect, nor to hope
for, but just this which is and which knows no end.
She wants to go. To go.... Again her haunch, that slippery
glide as when she came down from the dance hall and moved into me. Again her words ... "suddenly for no
reason at all, he bent down and lifted up my dress". She's slipping the fur around her neck; the
little black bonnet sets her face off like a cameo. The round, full face, with Slavic
cheekbones. How could I dream this,
never having seen it? How could I know
that she would rise like this, close and full, the face full white and blooming
like a magnolia? I tremble as the
fullness of her thigh brushes me. She
seems even a little taller than I, though she is not. It's the way she holds her chin. She doesn't notice where she's walking. She walks over things, on, on, with
eyes wide open and staring into space.
No past, no future. Even the
present seems dubious. The self seems to
have left her, and the body rushes forward, the neck full and taut, white as
the face, full like the face. The talk
goes on, in that low, throaty voice. No
beginning, no end. I'm aware not of time
nor the passing of time, but of timelessness.
She's got the little womb in the throat hooked up to the big womb in the
pelvis. The cab is at the curb and she
is still chewing the cosmological chaff of the outer ego. I pick up the speaking tube and connect with
the double uterus. Hello, hello, are you
there? Let's go! Let's get on with it - cabs, boats, trains,
naphtha launches, beaches, bedbugs, highways, byways, ruins; relics, old world,
new world, pier, jetty; the high forceps, the swinging trapeze, the ditch, the
delta, the alligators, the crocodiles, talk, talk, and more talk; then roads
again and more dust in the eyes, more rainbows, more cloudbursts, more
breakfast foods, more creams, more lotions.
And when all the roads have been traversed and there is left only the
dust of our frantic feet there will still remain the memory of your large full
face so white, and the wide mouth with fresh lips parted, the teeth chalk white
and each one perfect, and in this remembrance nothing can possibly chance
because this, like you teeth, is perfect....
It is Sunday, the first Sunday of my
new life, and I am wearing the dog collar you fastened around my neck. A new life stretches before me. It begins with the day of rest. I lie back on a broad green leaf and I watch
the sun bursting in your womb. What a
clabber and clatter it makes! All this
expressly for me, what? If only you had
a million suns in you! If only I could
lie here forever enjoying the celestial fireworks!
I lie suspended over the surface of
the moon. The world is in a womblike
trance: the inner and the outer ego are in equilibrium. You promised me so much that if I never come
out of this it will make no difference.
It seems to me that it is exactly 25,960 years since I have been asleep
in the black womb of sex. It seems to me
that I slept perhaps 365 years too many. But at any rate I am now in the right house,
among the sixes, and what lies behind me is well and what lies ahead is
well. You come to me disguised as Venus,
but you are Lilith, and I know it. My
whole life is in the balance; I will enjoy the luxury of this for one day. Tomorrow I shall tip the scales. Tomorrow the equilibrium will be finished; if
I ever find it again it will be in the blood and not in the stars. It is well that you promise me so much. I need to be promised nearly everything, for
I have lived in the shadow of the sun too long.
I want light and chastity - and a solar fire in the guts. I want to be deceived and disillusioned so
that I may complete the upper triangle and not be continually flying off the
planet into space. I believe everything
you tell me, but I know also that it will all turn out differently. I take you as a star and a trap, as a stone
to tip the scales, as a judge that is blindfolded, as a hole to fall into, as a
path to walk, as a cross and an arrow.
Up to the present I travelled the opposite way of the sun; henceforth I
travel two ways, as sun and as moon.
Henceforth I take on two sexes, two hemispheres, two skies, two sets of
everything. Henceforth I shall be
double-jointed and double-sexed.
Everything that happens will happen twice. I shall be as a visitor to this earth,
partaking of its blessings and carrying off its gifts. I shall neither serve nor be served. I shall seek the end in myself.
I look out again at the sun - my first
full gaze. It is blood-red and men are
walking about on the rooftops.
Everything above the horizon is clear to me. It is like Easter Sunday. Death is behind me and birth too. I am going to live now among the life
maladies. I am going to live the
spiritual life of the pygmy, the secret life of the little man in the
wilderness of the bush. Inner and outer
have changed places. Equilibrium is no
longer the goal - the scales must be destroyed.
Let me hear you promise again all those sunny things you carry inside
you. Let me try to believe for one day,
while I rest in the open, that the sun brings good tidings. Let me rot in splendour while the sun bursts
in your womb. I believe all your lies
implicitly. I take you as the
personification of evil, as the destroyer of the soul, as the maharanee of the
night. Tack your womb up on my wall, so
that I may remember you. We must get
going. Tomorrow, tomorrow....
September
1938
Villa
Seurat, Paris