Monday, December 23, 2013
her. We were suddenly driving along the blue waters of the Gulf for the
fair and at the same time a momentous mad thing began on the radio: it
was the Chicken Jazz n’ Gumbo disc jockey show from New Orleans, all mad
jazz records, colored records, with the disc jockey saying don’t worry
’bout NOTHING!” We saw New Orleans in the night ahead of us with joy.
Neal runned his hands over the wheel. “Now we’re going to get our
kicks!” At dusk we were coming into the humming streets of New Orleans.
“Oh smell the people!” yelled Neal with his face out the window
sniffing. “Ah! God! Life!” He swung around a trolley. “Yes!” He darted
the car into the traffic of Canal Street. “Wheee!” He staggered the car
and looked in every direction for girls. “Look at her!” The air was so
sweet in New Orleans it seemed to come in soft bandanas; and you could
smell the river, and really smell the people, and muds, and molasses and
every kind of tropical exfoliation with your nose suddenly removed from
the dry-ices of a northern winter. We bounced in our seats. “And dig
her!” yelled Neal pointing at another woman. “Oh I love, love, love
women! I think women are wonderful! I live women!” He spat out the
window; he groaned; he clutched his head. Great beads of sweat fell from
his forehead from pure excitement and exhaustion. We bounced the car up
on the Algiers ferry and found ourselves crossing the Mississippi river
by boat. “Now we must all get out and dig the river and the people and
smell the world” said Neal bustling with his sunglasses and cigarettes
and leaping out of the car like a jack-in-the-box. We followed. On rails
we leaned and looked at the great brown father of waters rolling down
from mid-America like the torrent of broken souls---bearing Montana logs
and Dakota muds and Iowa-vales and every cundrum clear to Three Forks
where the secret began in ice. Smoky New Orleans receded on one side;
old sleepy Algiers with its warped wood sides bumped us on the other.
Negroes were working in the hot afternoon stoking the ferry furnaces
that burned red and made our tires smell. Neal dug them hopping up and
down in the heat. He rushed around the deck and upstairs with his baggy
pants hanging halfway down his belly. Suddenly I saw him eagering on the
flying bridge. I expected
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