Sunday, December 22, 2013
night, a hundred miles away, and I was lost. All I wanted and all Neal
wanted and all anybody wanted was some kind of penetration into the
heart of things where, like in a womb, we would curl up and sleep the
ecstatic sleep that Burroughs was experiencing with a good big mainline
shot of M and advertising executives were experiencing with twelve scotch & sodas in Stouffers before they made the drunkard’s train to
Westchester---but without hangovers. And I had many a romantic fancy
then, and sighed at my star. The truth of the matter is, you die, all
you do is die, and yet you live, yes you live, and that’s no Harvard
lie. In Pennsylvannia I had to get off the bus and steal apples in a
country-town store or starve. I staggered back East in search of my
stone, got home and ate everything in the icebox again, only now it was a
refrigerator, fruit of my 1947 labors, and that in some measure was the
progress of my life. Then came the big ship of the world: I went to
school and met Mrs. Holmes in the lobby, John Holmes’ mother whom I’d
just seen as I went through Tucson, and she said her son was seeing off
some friends of mine on the Queen Mary. I didn’t have a nickel. I walked
three miles to the pier and there were John Holmes, his wife and Ed
Stringham standing around waiting to be admitted to the gangplank. We
rushed on-board and found Ed White, Bob Burford and Frank Jeffries
drinking whiskey in their stateroom with Allen Ginsberg who had brought
it (together with his latest poems) and others. Not only that but Hal
Chase was on the ship, and the ship was so big that we never saw him;
and Lucien Carr was on the ship, but he was seeing another party of
people off and didn’t even know we were there. Mad Burford dared me to
stow away and go to France with them. I accepted the dare, I was drunk.
We held up the elevator and were told that Somerset Maugham, the famous
writer, was fuming because of this. We saw Truman Capote, supported by
two old ladies, staggering on the ship in tennis sneakers. Americans
rushed pell-mell through narrow corridors drunk. It was the Great Ship
of the World; it was too big; everybody was on it and everybody was
looking for everyone else and couldn’t find. Pier 69. John Holmes’ wife
insisted I would not stow away and dragged me off
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