Tuesday, December 24, 2013
talked on the phone. She wanted to know how Al was. She was all
concerned about his happiness. “How did you get from Tucson to New
Orleans?” I asked. She said she wired home for money and took a bus. She
was determined to catch up with Al because she loved him. I went
upstairs and told Big Al. He sat in the chair with a worried look.
“Alright now,” said Neal suddenly waking up and leaping out of bed “what
we must do is eat, at once; Louanne rustle around the kitchen see what
there is; Jack you and I go downstairs and call Allen; Al you see what
you can do straightening out the house.” I followed Neal bustling
downstairs. The guy who ran the drugstore said “You just got another
call…this one from San Francisco…for a guy called Neal Cassady. I said
there wasn’t anybody by that name.” It was Carolyn calling Neal. The
drugstore man, Sam, a tall calm friend of mine, looked at me and
scratched his head. “Geez, what are you running, an international
whorehouse?” Neal tittered maniacally. “I dig you man!” He leaped into
the phone booth and called Frisco collect. Then we called Allen at his
home in New Jersey and told him to come in. Allen arrived two hours
later. Meanwhile Neal and I got ready for our return trip alone to North
Carolina to pick up the rest of the furniture and bring my mother back.
Allen Ginsberg came, poetry under his arm, and sat in an easy chair
watching us with beady eyes. For the first half hour he refused to say
anything, or that is, he refused to commit himself. He had quieted down
since the Denver Doldrum days; the Dakar Doldrums had done it. In Dakar,
wearing a beard, he had wandered the backstreets with little children
who led him to a witchdoctor who told him his fortune. He had snapshots
of crazy streets with grass huts, the hip back-end of Dakar. He said he
almost jumped off the ship like Hart Crane on the way back. It was the
first time he was seeing Neal since they parted in Houston. Neal sat on
the floor with a music box and listened with tremendous amazement at the
little song it played… “A Fine Romance” - - “Little tinkling whirling
doodlebells. Ah! Listen! We’ll all bend down together and look into the
center of the music box till we learn about the
secrets…tinklydoodlebell, whee.” Al Hinkle was also sitting on the
floor; he
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