Thursday, December 26, 2013
Grant Street in an old red brick roominghouse near a church. You went
down an alley, down some stone steps, opened a old raw door and went
through a kind of cellar till you came to his board door. It was like
the room of a Russian saint. One bed, a candle burning, stone walls that
oozed moisture, and a crazy makeshift ikon of some kind that he made
for the occasion. He read me his poetry. It was called “Denver
Doldrums.” Allen woke up in the morning and heard the “vulgar pigeons”
yakking in the streets outside his cell; he saw the “sad nightingales”
which reminded him of his mother nodding on the branches. A grey shroud
fell over the city. The mountains---the magnificent Rockies that you
could see to the west from any part of town---were “papier mache.” The
whole universe was crazy and cockeyed and extremely strange. He wrote of
Neal as a “child of the rainbow” who bore his torment in his agonized
cock. He referred to him as “Oedipus Eddie” who had to “scrape bubblegum
off windowpanes.” He referred to Brierly as “Dancingmaster Death.” He
brooded in his basement over a huge journal in which he was keeping
track of everything that happened everyday---everything Neal did and
said. Allen told me of his trip in a bus. “Coming through Missouri there
occurred a miraculous lightning storm that transformed the firmaments
into a great electrical frenzy. Everybody in the bus was frightened. I
said ‘Don’t be frightened, it’s only a Sign.’ Imagine Missouri---where
Burroughs and Lucien are from.” “That’s also where some of Neal’s folks
come from.” “I don’t know,” said Allen growing sad, “What shall I do?”
“Why don’t you go down to Texas and see Burroughs and Joan?” “I want
Neal to come with me.” “How can he do that with all his women?” “Oh, I
don’t know.” Neal came in at three in the morning. “Everything’s
straight,” he announced. “I’m going to divorce Louanne and marry Carolyn
and go live with her in San Francisco. But this is only after you and
I, dear Allen, go to Texas, dig Bill, that gone cat I’ve never met and
both of you’ve told me so much about, and then I’ll go to San Fran.”
Then they got down to business. They sat on the bed crosslegged and
looked straight at each other. I slouched in a nearby chair and saw all
of it. They began with
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