Friday, December 27, 2013
the impossible complexities of Chicago traffic I took a bus to Joliet,
Illinois, went by the Joliet pen, and stationed myself just outside
town, after a walk through its leafy rickety streets behind, pointed my
way. All the way from New York to Joliet by bus in actuality, and I had
about 20 dollars left. My first ride was a dynamite truck with a red
flag, about thirty miles into the great green Illinois, the truckdriver
pointing out the place where Route 6 that we were on intersected Route
66 before they both shot west for incredible distances. Along about
three in the afternoon after an apple pie and ice cream in a roadside
stand a woman stopped for me in a little coupe. I had a twinge of hardon
joy as I ran after the car. But she was a middleaged woman, actually
the mother of sons my age, and wanted somebody to help her drive to
Iowa. I was all for it. Iowa! not so far from Denver, and once I got to
Denver I could relax. She drove the first few hours; at one point
insisted on visiting an old church somewhere, like as if we were
tourists, and then I took over the wheel, and though I'm not much of a
driver drove clear through the rest of Illinois to Davenport, Iowa, via
Rock Island. And here for the first time in my life I saw my beloved
Mississippi River---dry in the summer haze, lowwater, with its big rank
smell that smells like the raw body of America itself because it washes
it up. Rock Island----railroad tracks, shacks, small downtown section;
and over the bridge to Davenport, same kind of town, all smelling of
sawdust in the warm Midwest sun. Here the lady had to go on to her Iowa
hometown by another route; and I got out. The sun was going down. I
walked, after a few cold beers, to the edge of town, and it was a long
walk. All the men were driving home from work...wearing railroad hats,
baseball hats, all kinds of hats, just like afterwork in any town
anywhere. One of them gave me a ride up the hill and left me at a lonely
crossroads on the edge of the prairie. It was beautiful there. Across
the street was a Motel, the first of the many motels I was to see in the
west. The only cars that came by were farmer-cars, they gave me
suspicious looks, they clanked along, the cows were coming home. Not a
truck. A few cars zipped by. A hotrod kid came by with his scarf flying.
The sun
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