Monday, December 23, 2013
who’s spent five years in jail can go to such maniacal helpless
extremes; beseeching at the very portals of the womb with a completely
physical realization of the sources of life-bliss; trying to get back in
there once and for all, while living, and adding to it the living
sexual frenzy and rhythm. This is the result of years looking at dirty
pictures behind bars; looking at the legs of women in magazines;
evaluating the hardness of steel halls and the softness of the woman who
is not there. Jail is where you promise yourself the right to live.
Neal had never seen his mother’s face. Every new girl, every new wife,
every new child was an addition to his cheap impoverishment. Where was
his father---old bum Neal Cassady the Barber, riding freights, working
as a scullion in railroad cook shacks, stumbling, down-crashing in wino
alley nights, expiring on coal piles, dropping his yellowed teeth one by
one in the gutters of the West. Neal had every right to die the sweet
deaths of complete love of his Louanne. Her own father was a cop in L.A.
who had many an incestuous hint. She showed me a picture; a little
mustache, slick hair, cruel eyes, polished belt and gun. I didn’t want
to interfere, I just wanted to follow. Allen came back at dawn and put
on his bathrobe. He wasn’t sleeping any more these days. “Ech!” he
screamed. He was going out of his mind from the confusion of the jam on
the floor, pants, dresses thrown hither, cigarette butts, dirty dishes,
open books---it was a great forum we were having. Every day the world
groaned to turn and we were making our appalling studies of the night.
Louanne was black and blue from a fight with Neal about something: his
face was scratched. It was time to go. We drove to my house, a whole
gang of ten, to get my bag and call Bill Burroughs in New Orleans from
the phone in the bar where Neal and I had our first talk years ago when
he came to my door to learn to write. We heard Bill’s whining voice
eighteen hundred miles away. “Say what do you boys expect me to do with
this Helen Hinkle? She’s been here two weeks now hiding in her room and
refusing to talk to either Joan or me. Have you got this character Al
Hinkle with you? For crissakes bring him down and get rid of her. She’s
sleeping in our best bedroom and’s run clear out of money. This ain’t a
hotel.”
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