Thursday, December 19, 2013
for work in the fields; they smiled at us. Neal stared at them with
rocky eyes. “Damn” he said under his breath “Ooh! This is too great to
be true. Gurls, gurls. And particularly right in my stage and condition
Jack I am digging the interiors of these homes as we pass them---these
gone doorways and you look inside and see beds of straw and little brown
kids sleeping and stirring to wake, and the mothers cooking up
breakfast in iron pots and dig them shutters they have for windows and
the old men, the old men are so cool and grand and not bothered by
anything. There’s no suspicion here, nothing like that. Everybody’s
cool, everybody looks at you with such straight brown eyes and they
don’t say anything, just look and in that look all of the human
qualities are soft and subdued and still there. Dig all the foolish
stories you read about Mexico and the humble peasant and all that
crap---and crap about greasers and so on---and all it is, people here
are straight and kind and don’t put down any bullshit. I’m so amazed by
this.” Schooled in the raw road night Neal was come in to the world to
see it. He bent over the wheel and looked both ways and rolled along
slowly. We stopped for gas the other side of Sabinas Hidalgo. Here a
congregation of local straw-hatted ranchers with handlebar mustaches
growled and whooped in front of antique gas pumps. Across the fields an
old man plodded with a burro in front of his switch stick. The sun rose
pure on pure & ancient activities of human life. Now we resumed to
Monterrey. The great mountains rose snowcapped before us; we bowled
right for them. A gap widened and wound up a pass and we went with it.
In a matter of minutes we were out of the mesquite desert and climbing
among cool airs in a road with a stonewall along the precipice side and
great whitewashed names of presidents on the cliff sides---“ALEMÁN!” We
met nobody on this high road. It wound among the clouds and took us to
the great plateau on top. Across this plateau the big manufacturing town
of Monterrey sent smoke to the blue skies with their enormous Gulf
clouds written across the bowl of day like fleece. Entering Monterrey
was like entering Detroit, among great long walls of factories, except
for the burros that sunned in the grass before them, and the barefoot
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