SUNDAY! Left the Villa Borghese
a little before
Dropped in at the Cronstadts'
and they were eating too. A young chicken with wild rice. Pretended that I had eaten already, but I
could have torn the chicken from the baby's hands. This is not just false modesty - it's a kind
of perversion, I'm thinking. Twice they
asked me if I wouldn't join them.
No! No! Wouldn't even accept a cup
of coffee after the meal. I'm delicat, I am!
On the way out I cast a lingering glance at the bones lying on the
baby's plate - there was still meat on them.
Prowling around
aimlessly. A
beautiful day - so far. The Rue
de Buci is alive, crawling. The bars wide open and the curbs lined with
bicycles. All the meat and vegetable
markets are in full swing. Arms loaded
with truck bandaged in newspapers. A fine Catholic Sunday - in the morning, at least.
High noon and here I am standing on an
empty belly at the confluence of all these crooked lanes that reek with the
odour of food. Opposite me is the Hotel
de Louisiane. A grim old hostelry known to the bad boys of the Rue de Buci in the good old days. Hotels and food, and I'm
walking about like a leper with crabs gnawing at my entrails. On Sunday mornings there's a fever in the
streets. Nothing like it anywhere,
except perhaps on the
Pass the Square de Furstenberg. Looks different now, at
high noon. The other night when I
passed by it was deserted, bleak, spectral. In the middle of the square four black trees
that have not yet begun to blossom. Intellectual trees, nourished by the paving stones. Like T.S. Eliot's verse. Here, by God, if Marie Laurencin
ever brought her Lesbians out into the open, would be the place for them to
commune. Très lesbienne
ici.
Sterile, hybrid, dry as Boris' heart.
In the little garden adjoining the Eglise St. Germain are a few
dismounted gargoyles. Monsters
that jut forward with a terrifying plunge. On the benches other monsters - old people,
idiots, cripples, epileptics. Snoozing
there quietly, waiting for the dinner bell to ring. At the Galerie Zak across the way some imbecile has made a picture of the
cosmos - on the flat. A painter's
cosmos! Full of odds
and ends, bric-a-brac. In the
lower left-hand corner, however, there's an anchor - and a dinner bell. Salute!
Salute! O Cosmos!
Still prowling around. Guts rattling. Beginning to rain now. Notre-Dame rises tomblike from the
water. The gargoyles lean far out over
the lace facade. They hang there like an
idée fixe in the mind of a monomaniac. An old man with yellow whiskers approaches
me. Has some Jaworski
nonsense in his hand. Comes
up to me with his head thrown back and the rain splashing in his face turns the
golden sands to mud. Bookstore with some of Raoul Dufy's drawings in the window. Drawings of charwomen with
rosebushes between their legs. A treatise on the philosophy of Joan Miro. The philosophy, mind you!
In the same window: A Man Cut in
Slices! Chapter one: the man in the
eyes of his family. Chapter two: the
same in the eyes of his mistress.
Chapter three: - No chapter three.
Have to come back tomorrow for chapters three and four. Every day the window trimmer turns a fresh
page. A man cut in slices.... You
can't imagine how furious I am not to have thought of a title like that! Where is this bloke who writes "the same
in the eyes of his mistress ... the same in the eyes of ... the same
..."? Where is this guy? Who is he?
I want to hug him. I wish to
Christ I had had brains enough to think of a title like that - instead of Crazy
Cock and the other fool things I invented.
Well, fuck a duck! I congratulate
him just the same.
I wish him luck with his fine title. Here's another slice for you - for your next
book! Ring me up some day. I'm living at the Villa Borghese. We're all dead, or dying, or about to
die. We need good titles. We need meat - slices and slices of meat -
juicy tenderloins, porterhouse steaks, kidneys, mountain oysters, sweetbreads. Some
day, when I'm standing at the corner of
How
a man can wander about all day on an empty belly, and even get an erection once
in a while, is one of those mysteries which are too easily explained by the
"anatomists of the soul". On a
Sunday afternoon, when the shutters are down and the proletariat possesses the
street in a kind of dumb torpor, there are certain thoroughfares which remind
one of nothing less than a big chancrous cock laid open longitudinally. And it is just these highways, the Rue St.
Denis, for instance, or the Faubourg du Temple - which attract one irresistibly, much as in the
old days, around Union Square or the upper reaches of the Bowery, one was drawn
to the dime museums where in the show windows there were displayed wax
reproductions of various organs of the body eaten away by syphilis and other
venereal diseases. The city sprouts out
like a huge organism diseased in every part, the beautiful thoroughfares only a
little less repulsive because they have been drained of their pus.
At the Cité Nortier, somewhere near the Place du
Combat, I pause a few minutes to drink in the full squalor of the scene. It is a rectangular court like many another
which one glimpses through the low passageways that flank the old arteries of
Coming away my mind reverts to a book that
I was reading only the other day.
"The town was a shambles; corpses, mangled by butchers and stripped
by plunderers, lay thick in the streets; wolves sneaked from the suburbs to eat
them; the black death and other plagues crept in to keep them company, and the
English came marching on; the while the 'danse
macabre' whirled about the tombs in all the cemeteries...."
It was a Sunday afternoon, much like this,
when I first met Germaine. I was
strolling along the Boulevard Beaumarchais, rich by a
hundred francs or so which my wife had frantically cabled from
Germaine was different. There was nothing to tell me so from her
appearance. Nothing to
distinguish her from the other trollops who met each afternoon and evening at
the Café de l'Elephant. As I say, it was a spring day and the few
francs my wife had scraped up to cable me were jingling in my pocket. I had a sort of vague premonition that I
would not reach the Bastille without being taken in tow by one of these
buzzards. Sauntering along the boulevard
I had noticed her verging toward me with that curious trot-about air of a whore
and the run-down heels and cheap jewellery and the pasty look of their kind which
the rouge only accentuates. It was not
difficult to come to terms with her. We
sat in the back of the little tabac called l'Elephant and talked it over quickly. In a few minutes we were in a five franc room
on the Rue Amelot, the curtains drawn and the covers
thrown back. She didn't rush things,
Germaine. She sat on the bidet
soaping herself and talked to me pleasantly about this
and that; she liked the knickerbockers I was wearing. Très
chic! she thought.
They were once, but I had worn the seat out of them; fortunately the
jacket covered my ass. As she stood up
to dry herself, still talking to me pleasantly, suddenly she dropped the towel
and, advancing toward me leisurely, she commenced rubbing her pussy
affectionately, stroking it with her two hands, caressing it, patting it,
patting it. There was something about
her eloquence at that moment and the way she thrust that rosebush under my nose
which remains unforgettable; she spoke of it as if it were some extraneous
object which she had acquired at great cost, an object whose value had
increased with time and which now she prized above everything in the
world. Her words imbued it with a
peculiar fragrance; it was no longer just her private organ, but a treasure, a
magic, potent treasure, a God-given thing - and none the less so because she
traded it day in and day out for a few pieces of silver. As she flung herself on the bed, with legs
spread wide apart, she cupped it with her hands and stroked it some more,
murmuring all the while in that hoarse, croaked voice of hers that it was good,
beautiful, a treasure, a little treasure.
And it was good, that little pussy of hers! That Sunday afternoon, with its poisonous
breath of spring in the air, everything clicked again. As we stepped out of the hotel I looked over
her again in the harsh light of day and I saw clearly what a whore she was -
the gold teeth, the geranium in her hat, the run-down heels, etc., etc. Even
the fact that she had wormed a dinner out of me and cigarettes and taxi hadn't the
least disturbing effect upon me. I
encouraged it, in fact. I liked her so
well that after dinner we went back to the hotel again and took another shot at
it. "For
love," this time. And again
that big, bushy thing of hers worked its bloom and magic. It began to have an independent existence -
for me too. There was Germaine and there
was that rosebush of hers. I liked them
separately and I liked them together.
As I say, she was different,
Germaine. Later, when she discovered my
true circumstances, she treated me nobly - blew me to drinks, gave me credit,
pawned my things, introduced me to her friends, and so on. She even apologized for not lending me money,
which I understood quite well after her maquereau
had been pointed out to me. Night after
night I walked down the Boulevard Beaumarchais to the
little tabac where they all congregated and I
waited for her to stroll in and give me a few minutes of her precious time.
When some time later I came to write about
Claude, it was not Claude that I was thinking of but Germaine...."All the
men she's been with and now you, just you, and barges going by, masts and
hulls, the whole damned current of life flowing through you, through her,
through all the guys behind you and after you, the flowers and the birds and
the sun streaming in and the fragrance of it choking you, annihilating
you." That was for Germaine! Claude was not the same, though I admired her
tremendously - I even thought for a while that I loved her. Claude had a soul and a conscience; she had
refinement, too, which is bad - in a whore.
Claude always imparted a feeling of sadness; she left the impression,
unwittingly, of course, that you were just one more added to the stream which
fate had ordained to destroy her. Unwittingly,
I say, because Claude was the last person in the world who would consciously
create such an image in one's mind. She
was too delicate, too sensitive for that.
At bottom, Claude was just a good French girl of average breed and
intelligence whom life had tricked somehow; something in her there was which
was not tough enough to withstand the shock of daily experience. For her were meant those terrible words of
Louis-Philippe, "and a night comes when all is over, when so many jaws
have closed upon us that we no longer have the strength to stand, and our meat
hangs upon our bodies, as though it has been masticated by every
mouth." Germaine, on the other
hand, was a whore from the cradle; she was thoroughly satisfied with her role,
enjoyed it in fact, except when her stomach pinched or her shoes gave out,
little surface things of no account, nothing that ate into her soul, nothing
that created torment. Ennui! That
was the worst she ever felt. Days there
were, no doubt, when she had a bellyful, as we say - but no more than
that! Most of the time
she enjoyed it - or gave the illusion of enjoying it. It made a difference, of course, whom she went with - or came with. But the principal thing was a man. A man!
That was what she craved. A man
with something between his legs that could tickle her, that could make her
writhe in ecstasy, make her grab that bushy twat of hers with both hands and
rub it joyfully, boastfully, proudly, with a sense of connection, a sense of
life. That was the only place where she
experienced any life - down there where she clutched herself with both hands.
Germaine was a whore all the way through,
even down to her good heart, her whore's heart which is not really a good heart
but a lazy one, an indifferent, flaccid heart that can be touched for a moment,
a heart without reference to any fixed point within, a big flaccid whore's
heart that can detach itself for a moment from its true centre. However vile and circumscribed was that world
which she had created for herself, nevertheless she functioned in it
superbly. And that in itself is a tonic
thing. When, after we had become well
acquainted, her companions would twit me, saying that I was in love with
Germaine (a situation almost inconceivable to them), I would say:
"Sure! Sure, I'm in love with
her! And what's more, I'm going to be
faithful to her!" A lie, of course,
because I could no more think of loving Germaine than I could think of loving a
spider; and if I was faithful, it was not to Germaine but to that bushy
thing she carried between her legs.
Whenever I looked at another woman I thought immediately of Germaine, of
that flaming bush which she had left in my mind and which seemed
imperishable. It gave me pleasure to sit
on the terrasse of the little tabac and observe her as she plied her trade,
observe her as she resorted to the same grimaces, the same tricks, with others
as she had with me. "She's doing
her job!" - that's how I felt about it, and it
was with approbation that I regarded her transactions. Later, when I had taken up with Claude, and I
saw her night after night sitting in her accustomed place, her round little
buttocks chubbily ensconced in the plush settee, I
felt a sort of inexpressible rebellion toward her; a whore, it seemed to me,
had no right to be sitting there like a lady, waiting timidly for someone to
approach and all the while abstemiously sipping her chocolat. Germaine was a hustler. She didn't wait for you to come to her - she
went out and grabbed you. I remember so
well the holes in her stockings, and the torn ragged shoes; I remember too how
she stood at the bar and with blind, courageous defiance threw a strong drink
down her stomach and marched out again.
A hustler! Perhaps it wasn't so
pleasant to smell that boozy breath of hers, that breath compounded of weak
coffee, cognac, aperitifs, Pernods and all the
other stuff she guzzled between times, what to warm herself and what to summon
up strength and courage, but the fire of it penetrated her, it glowed down
there between her legs where women ought to glow, and there was established
that circuit which makes one feel the earth under his legs again. When she lay there with her legs apart and
moaning, even if she did moan that way for any and everybody, it was good, it
was a proper show of feeling. She didn't
stare up at the ceiling with a vacant look or count the bedbugs on the
wallpaper; she kept her mind on her business, she talked about the things a man
wants to hear when he's climbing over a woman.
Whereas Claude - well, with Claude there was always a certain delicacy,
even when she got under the sheets with you.
And her delicacy offended. Who
wants a delicate whore! Claude
would even ask you to turn your face away when she squatted over the bidet. All wrong!
A man, when he's burning up with passion, wants to see things; he wants
to see everything, even how they make water. And while it's all very nice to know that a
woman has a mind, literature coming from the cold corpse of a whore is the last
thing to be served in bed. Germaine had the
right idea: she was ignorant and lusty, she put her
heart and soul into her work. She was a
whore all the way through - and that was her virtue!