Friday, December 20, 2013
him. He was reaching a pious frenzy. He sweated and sweated. The moment
we were in the new Chrysler and off to New York the poor man realized he
had contracted a ride with two maniacs, but he made the best of it and
in fact got used to us just as we passed the Briggs Stadium and talked
about next year’s Detroit Tigers. In the misty night we crossed Toledo
and went onward across old Ohio. I realized I was beginning to cross and
re-cross towns in America as though I was a traveling salesman---ragged
travellings, bad stock, rotten beans in the bottom of my bag of tricks,
nobody buying. The man got tired near Pennsylvania and Neal took the
wheel and drove clear the rest of the way to New York and we began to
hear the Symphony Sid show on the radio with all the latest bop and now
we entering the great and final city of America. We got there in early
morning. Times Square was being torn up, for NY never rests. We looked
for Hunkey automatically as we passed. In an hour we were out at my
mother’s new flat on Long Island where the Detroit man wanted to clean
up, and she herself was busily engaged with painters who were friends of
the family arguing with them about the price as we stumbled up the
stairs from San Francisco. “Jack” said my mother “Neal can stay here a
few days and after that he has to get out, do you understand me?” The
trip was over. Neal and I took a walk that night among the gas tanks and
railroad bridges and fog lamps of Long Island. I remember him standing
under a streetlamp. “Just as we passed that other lamp I was going to
tell you a further thing, Jack but now I am parenthetically continuing
with a new thought and by the time we reach the next I’ll return to the
original subject, agreed?” I certainly agreed. We were so used to
traveling we had to walk all over Long Island but there was no more
land, just the Atlantic Ocean and we could only go so far. We clasped
hands and agreed to be friends forever. Not five nights later we went to
a party in New York and I saw a girl called Diane and I told her I had a
friend with me that she ought to meet sometime. I was drunk and told
her he was a cowboy. “Oh I’ve always wanted to meet a cowboy.” “Neal? I
yelled across the party, which included Jose Garcia Villa the poet,
Walter Adams, Victor Tejeira the
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