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Henry Miller. Tropic of Cancer
HENRY MILLER was born on December 26, 1891, in Manhattan and
grew up in Brooklyn. After a string of dreary jobs and a disastrous first
marriage, Miller left for Paris in 1930. Tropic of Cancer, published
when he was forty-three and immediately banned in all English-speaking
countries, is considered his most important book. Miller's works include
Black Spring (1936), Tropic of Capricorn (1939), The
Cosmological Eye (1939), The Colossus of Maroussi (1941), The
Time of the Assassins (1946), The Air-Conditioned Nightmare
(1945), and his autobiographical trilogy, The Rosy Crucifixion,
comprised of Sexus (1949), Plexus (1953), and Nexus
(1960). In 1940, Miller returned to America and settled in Big Sur,
California. A lusty romantic. Miller married five times, the last to
Japanese singer Hoki Tokuda. His courageous legal battle against the
censorship of Tropic of Cancer ended with a landmark 1964 Supreme
Court decision, which guaranteed a new freedom of expression to all American
writers. Generous and supportive of other artists throughout his life.
Henry Miller in his final years was surrounded by young admirers and old
friends. Writing, painting, and carrying on a voluminous correspondence
until the very end. Henry Miller died in June, 1980, in the arms of his
housekeeper.
HENRY MILLER
TROPIC OF CANCER
With an Introduction by Louise De Salvo
A SIGNET CLASSIC
SIGNET CLASSIC
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"These novels will give way, by and by, to diaries or
autobiographies--captivating books, if only a man knew how to choose among
what he calls his experiences that which is really his experience, and how
to record truth truly."
--ralph waldo emerson
Introduction to Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer by Louise DeSalvo
Henry Miller arrived in Paris on March 4, 1930, to try to become a
successful writer.1 He had ten dollars in his pocket (a loan from
his old friend Emil Schnellock), a trunkful of suits (from his tailor
father), which he knew he could pawn if he ran out of money, and carbon
copies of two novels he had written in New York and hoped to
revise--Moloch (about his first marriage and his job at Western
Union), and Crazy Cock (about his second marriage to June Miller and
her lesbian love affair, which had tormented him).2 Though he had
been writing seriously for six years, and had published a few small pieces,
Miller hadn't yet published a novel, hadn't yet fulfilled his dream of
becoming a "working-class Proust," the Proust of Brooklyn.3 His
wife, June, had persuaded him that Paris might be where he could perfect his
craft and become financially successful.
What really motivated June to urge her husband to leave New York, though,
was that he had become a burden to her and she wanted him (temporarily) out
of her life while she pursued another of her schemes to make money for both
of them. She was involved in a relationship with an older, wealthy "sugar
daddy," who makes a brief appearance in Tropic of Cancer as the
"fetus with a cigar in its mouth" standing opposite Miller's apartment,
watching him leave for Europe.
Though June had persuaded Miller to quit his job at Western Union to become
a writer, and had supported him through a variety of jobs--as a hostess, a
waitress, and a prostitute--she had lost confidence in him. Despite her
efforts, he showed no signs of becoming what she believed he would become:
a writer who would immortalize her in his work, who would extol her
self-sacrifice, who
viii
would reveal her to the world as the semi-mythic femme fatale she
believed herself to be--a Dostoyevsky heroine, who prowled the streets of
New York City in search of adventure.4
Miller's life with June formed the foundation of all his mature fiction. On
the night of May 21, 1927, in profound despair because June had tied to
Paris with her lover Jean Kronski, Miller outlined a magnum
ÎÐÈs that would recount the agony of his life with June. Though
June had kept in touch in her usual desultory way, with a few postcards of
the Eiffel Tower, the Arc de Triomphe, and Notre Dame, she hadn't responded
to his letters begging her to come back to him, and he sensed that his
marriage. if not over, would never be the same again.
Desperate with loneliness, and crazy with jealousy. Miller sat at the
typewriter in the office of the Parks Department in Queens where he was
working, to outline a novel that would recount his life with June and her
betrayal. He was thirty-six years old, and living with his parents because
he couldn't afford to live alone. It had been June's idea that he could
become a writer. The truth was, though he had always wanted to become a
writer, he was "afraid"; he didn't think he had the ability. He wasn't rich
or privileged or college educated, though he was extremely well read: he
had attended the City College of New York briefly, but soon left, "disgusted
with the curriculum" after a "hopeless encounter" with Spenser's The
Fairie Queene. As a working-class man, the son of first generation
German-Americans,' who had been born in New York on December 26, 1891,
Miller often said to himself, "Who was I to say I am a
writer?"6
On that night. Miller began to type out his notes for what would become a
lifelong literary project. The notes came "without effort"; he would
deal with his and his wife's "battles royal, debauches," her lies and
betrayals. He wrote a catalog of the "events and crises" they had endured.
He listed the manuscripts in his possession he could cannibalize, letters he
had written that he could mine for details. Everything he had lived,
everything he had written, would become the source for his art. When he
finished, early the next morning, he had a stack of thirty-two closely typed
pages, which he labeled "June."
ix
He had sketched the basis for much of his life's work, for Crazy
Cock, portions of Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of Capricorn, and
The Rosy Crucifixion. More importantly, he had fastened upon the
intensely autobiographical form that his life's work would take. From now
on, he would be both the author and subject of his life's work. He would
live his life as if it were the raw material for art;
then he would turn the life he had lived into art.7
When Henry Miller arrived in Paris in 1930, the city, like New York, was in
the midst of the Depression. His Paris was not the Paris of Ernest Hemingway
or of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Miller, because of his self-imposed poverty,
could describe a side of Paris that tourists (and even the expatriates who
lived there before him) never saw. It was a Paris not of exquisite meals,
but of hunger, of rancid butter and moldy cheese, of cheap hotels with
tattered wallpaper and bloodstained gray sheets crawling with bedbugs, of
old women sleeping in doorways, of whores with wooden stumps, of full slop
pails, of "angoisse and tristesse."
Tropic of Cancer recounts the story of Henry Miller's first two years
in Paris. It is perhaps the first novel that redefines the creative process
for the working-class writer. It is an (un)American, ungenteel, uneducated
(but not unlettered), no-holds-barred, middle-aged-man's version of A
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce (a writer whom
Miller despised, calling him a "pedagogic sadist,"8 but whom he
consciously emulated), or of Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel
Proust (a writer whom Miller adored). It is a meditation on both the profane
and divine aspects of an art that has its source in both lust and longing.
Many critics have commented upon the precedent-shattering descriptions of
sexuality in the novel. Yet another subject of Tropic of Cancer is
even more revolutionary: It shows what a working-class man must go through
to live the creative life, and how he must redefine himself to develop the
courage to write a novel about his own experiences in his own voice. "A year
ago, six months ago," the narrator tells us, "I thought that I was an
artist. I no longer think about it, I am." It is a work
xii
work-in-progrcss to remind himself of what still had to be written. Or he
consulted the lists of words he had copied from his dictionary that he
wanted to include in his novel He could work even when other people were
present. Of ten, he typed and talked simultaneously. (It is likely that at
limes he typed these conversations into the novel.) Sometimes "in the middle
of his work he would put on a record and listen to a piece of music. Or he
would burst into song himself. His work was done singing."13
After, he would go on long walks, taking his notebook with him. He would
find new streets to describe, new sights to incorporate, new denizens of the
street to include in his work. The "more squalid parts of Paris''14
fascinated him--the Cite Nortier, for example, near the Place du
Combat, with a courtyard bordered by rotting buildings, its flagstones
slippery with slime, a "human dump-heap" filled with garbage. Or he would
take a bicycle ride to the outlying parts of Paris.
After dinner (again, at the expense of friends). Miller would often go back
to work.
Though he was still married to June Miller throughout the composition of
Tropic of Cancer, this period was also the heyday of Miller's love
affair with Anais Nin, who was married to the banker Hugh Guiler. Miller was
introduced to AnaTs Nin in December 1931 through his friend Richard
Osbom.15
Miller came into Nin's life when she was ripe for sexual experimentation,
soon after she had published a book on D. H. Lawrence. Miller himself had
just published a review of Luis Bunuel's L'Age d'Or, and was working
on yet another revision of his novel Crazy Cock, about the adverse
effect of his wife's lesbian love affair upon his sanity.16 When
they met, Nin wrote into her diary: "I saw a man I liked. In his writing he
is flamboyant, virile, animal, magnificent. He's a man whom life makes
drunk, I thought. He is like me."17
At first, the two met to talk about their work, and to exchange ideas. But
when Nin met Miller's wife, June. the relationship became immediately
complicated. Nin fell in love with June, replicating the love triangle that
had caused Miller so much pain.
xiii
After June returned to the United States, Nin and Miller became lovers.
According to Nin's testimony, he was a wonderful lover, who awakened her
sensuality; he was passionate yet considerate, and he satisfied her in ways
she had never imagined possible. According to his testimony, she supported
him financially, and gave him the peace of mind and the courage to begin
Tropic of Cancer, the most important novel of his life. She
convinced him that his work was more important than Joyce's, and that he
should be as explosive and provocative in his work as he was in his talk.
She provided the secure base from which Miller felt free to experiment.
Nin and Miller remained lovers for years, spoke of marriage, shared a studio
apartment at the Villa Seurat, and conceived a child together (which Nin
aborted). Yet Nin never seriously considered leaving her husband for Miller,
though she urged Miller to leave June, and helped end his marriage by
letting June know that she and Miller were lovers. For one thing, it was
Nin's husband's money that financed her freewheeling lifestyle. She realized
that Miller could not be counted upon to support a wife. For another,
neither Nin nor Miller was inclined to monogamy. During their affair, Nin
was sexually involved, not only with Miller, but with her husband, her
cousin Eduardo Sanchez, and two of her analysts (Rene Allendy and Otto
Rank); Miller continued his dalliances with prostitutes. Though Miller
seemed accepting of Nin's behavior, Nin was often angry with Miller for
his.
Reading Nin's descriptions of Miller's behavior as a lover and as a man, in
her unexpurgated diaries (published as Henry and June and
Incest), and in her fiction (in Cities of the Interior)
against Miller's description of himself in Tropic of Cancer is
instructive. It illuminates the distance between the "real" Henry Miller,
and the persona Miller created for himself in his work. In Miller's
self-portrait, he presents himself as sexually rapacious, rough, tough,
woman hating, though he longs for his wife, Mona. In Nin's work, though.
Miller is a passionate and tender lover, respectful of her womanhood, though
timid, weak, and vulnerable as a man. Her portrait is nothing like the
tough-minded persona of Cancer, and suggests that Miller's creation
was largely compensatory.
xiv
Miller was, as Nin put it, "a child in need, ... a victim [of women] seeking
solace, ... a weakling seeking sustenance."18
Henry Miller developed the narrative of Tropic of Cancer from his
letters from Paris to his friend Emil Schnellock and those to Anais Nin
(especially the ones from Dijon describing his wretched teaching
experience),19 from the notes he made as he prowled the streets
of Paris, and from his conversations with friends about literature,
psychoanalysis (with Anai's Nin), sex (with Wambly Bald, the Parisian
columnist, who appears in the novel as the sex-obsessed Van Norden), death
(with Michael Fraenkel), and war. For the first time in his fiction, he
used what he called the "first person spectacular."20 It was a
point of view he had studiously avoided in his earlier attempts at fiction,
yet it suited him, for he was a magnetic teller and reteller of stories.
In one sense. Tropic of Cancer is about the healing of the damaged
self through stories, which magnify and mythicize his own and his friends'
escapades. Anai's Nin believed that Miller's work illuminated the workings
of the psyche more profoundly than James Joyce's and, in one important
sense, she was right. For as James Joyce records the contents of
consciousness. Miller's work shows the process by which the contents of
consciousness are created by the storytelling self. Miller's avowed aim, as
he states it in Cancer, is "to put down everything that goes on in my
noodle" without self-censorship. Miller shows how, by choosing the way you
describe your life, you can create the consciousness that you desire.
Without waiting for the world to change, you can change who you are by the
stories you tell yourself and others about who you are.
But his stories are not only healing, they are entertaining. Miller adopted
the pose of a modem-day jongleur, who turned self-display into an art
form, into a carnival performance, using a narrative voice uniquely and
authentically his, one that had not yet been written down.
Though in his novel Moloch, Miller wrote that no successful work of
literature could be located in Brooklyn, or have Brooklyn as its subject.
Tropic of Cancer is written
xv
in the voice of the Brooklyn boy. It is the voice of the wise-ass street
kid, who hangs out on the comer with his friends, who trades stories with
them about his exploits, and who uses one-upsmanship to gain status. It is
the voice of the man who hides his pain behind a string of curse words, who
vulgarizes women because it is unmanly to admit how much he needs them, and
who exaggerates how callous and tough he is so that he will not be
victimized. But his longing for Mona (his wife, June) is tenderly and
poignantly described, and it forms the emotional core of Cancer
against which his posture of viciousness toward women must be read. In
expressing his disgust at the cunt-obsessed Van Norden, the narrator
concludes that having sex without passion is like living in a state of war.
Though a habitue of the streets, a literary clochard, Miller's
narrator cannot manage to hide how learned he is. In Cancer, besides
drawing upon his experiences, Miller self-consciously used such models and
sources as Knut Hamsun's, D. H. Lawrence's, and Marcel Proust's
fiction,21 Shakespeare's and James Joyce's soliloquies, Francois
Rabelais' bawdy humor,22 Japanese shunga's and Indian sculpture's
explicitly profane yet sacred depiction of sex, Walt Whitman's celebratory
lists, Brassai's photography, Picasso's nudes, Anais Nin's self-reflective
diaries, and the techniques of the surrealists (including
assemblage),23 to name but a few. He describes how literature
and art can enrich the lives of the members of the working class, of people
without university degrees.
Tropic of Cancer was published in a small edition in Paris on
September 1, 1934, by Jack Kahane at the Obelisk Press with money provided
by Anais Nin, given to her by Otto Rank.24 Obscenity laws in
England and the United States prohibited publication, but "potentially
'obscene' books could be published in France if they were in
English."25 The cover of the first edition was designed by
Kahane's sixteen-year-old son to save money. It showed "a crab crushing a
nude female in its claws,"26 and Miller thought it was
"horrible." The jacket carried a warning to booksellers that Cancer
"must not be displayed in the window."27
Notes
1. Henry Miller, Letters to Emil, ed. by George Wickes (New York: New
Directions, 1989), p. 15.
2. Erica Jong, The Devil at Large (New York: Turtle Bay, 1993), p.
21; see J. Gerald Kennedy, Imagining Paris (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1993).
3. Jay Martin, Always Merry and Bright (Santa Barbara: Capra Press,
1978), p. 139: Robert Ferguson, Henry Miller (New York:
W. W. Norton, 1991), p. 14^; Mary V. Dearborn, Henry Miller (New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1991), p. 108; and the account in Louise DeSalvo,
Conceived with Malice (New York: Dutton, 1994).
4. Ferguson, p. 81.
5. Jong, p. 55.
6. Martin, p. 18, p. 129; Dearborn, pp. 100-1; Henry Miller, My Life and
Times (New York: Playboy Press, n.d.), p. 33.
7. For accounts of this event, see Martin, p. 520; Dearborn, p. 323; Miller,
My Life and Times, p. 50.
8. Henry Miller, Moloch (New York: Grove Press, 1992), p. 8.
9. Ferguson, p. 208.
10. Alfred Perles, My Friend Henry Miller (New York: John Day, 1956),
p. 70; Wambly Bald quoted in Ferguson, pp. 210-11.
11. See the account in Perles.
12. Perles, pp. 70-1.
13. Perles, p. 70.
14. Perles, p. 72.
15. See Noel Riley Fitch, "The Literate Passion of Anais Nin & Henry
Miller," in Whitney Chadwick and Isabelle de Courtivron, eds..
Significant Others (New York: Thames and Hudson, 1993), pp. 155-72.
16. Fitch, p. 155; see the account of Miller's writing Crazy Cock in
DeSalvo.
17. Anais Nin, Henry and June (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
1986), p. 6.
18. Anais Nin, Ladders to Fire, in Cities of the Interior
(Athens: Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, 1959, 1975), p. 48.
19. See Dearborn, p. 128, Ð. 149.
xx
20. Miller, Moloch, p. 65.
21. Ferguson, p. 69.
22. Perles, p. 112.
23. Ferguson, p. 181.
24. Martin, p. 303; Dearborn, p. 175.
25. Jong, p. 132.
26. Martin, p. 303.
27. Perles, p. 104.
28. Martin, p. 303.
29. Perles, p. 104; Dearborn, p. 173.
30. Perles, p. 142; Cendrars's review is provided in George Wickes, ed..
Henry Miller and the Critics (Carbondale: Southern Illinois
University Press, 1963).
31. Perles, p. 171; Ferguson, p. 346.
32. Dearborn, p. 241.
33. Perles, pp. 205-6.
34. Ferguson, p. 344.
35. Ferguson, p. 345.
36. Ferguson, p. 348.
37. Ferguson, p. 350.
38. Millett quoted in Jong, p. 29.
39. Anais Nin, The Diary of Anais Nin: 1931-1934, Volume One. ed. and
with an Introduction by Gunther Stuhlmann (New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, 1966), p. 66.
40. Dearborn, p. 34.
41. Jong, p. 26.
42. Jong, p. 26.
TROPIC OF CANCER
I am living at the Villa Borghese. There is not a crumb of dirt anywhere,
nor a chair misplaced. We are all alone here and we are dead.
Last night Boris discovered that he was lousy. 1 had to shave his armpits
and even then the itching did not stop. How can one get lousy in a beautiful
place like this? But no matter. We might never have known each other so
intimately, Boris and 1, had it not been for the lice.
Boris has just given me a summary of his views. He is a weather prophet. The
weather will continue bad, he says. There will be more calamities, more
death, more despair. Not the slightest indication of a change anywhere. The
cancer of time is eating us away. Our heroes have killed themselves, or are
killing themselves. The hero, then, is not Time, but Timelessness. We must
get in step, a lock step, toward the prison of death. There is no escape.
The weather will not change.
It is now the fall of my second year in Paris. I was sent here for a reason
I have not yet been able to fathom.
I have no money, no resources, no hopes. I am the happiest man alive. A
year ago, six months ago, I thought that I was an artist. I no longer think
about it, I am. Everything that was literature has fallen from me.
There are no more books to be written, thank God.
This then? This is not a book. This is libel, slander, defamation of
character. This is not a book, in the ordinary sense of the word. No, this
is a prolongeo insult, a gob of spit in the face of Art, a kick in the pants
to God, Man, Destiny, Time, Love, Beauty ... what you will. I am going to
sing for you, a little off key perhaps but I
24
will sing. I will sing while you croak, I will dance over your dirty corpse.
. . .
To sing you must first open your mouth. You must have a pair of lungs, and a
little knowledge of music. It is not necessary to have an accordion, or a
guitar. The essential thing is to want to sing. This then is a song.
I am singing.
It is to you, Tania, that I am singing. I wish that I could sing better,
more melodiously, but then perhaps you would never have consented to listen
to me. You have heard the others sing and they have left you cold. They sang
too beautifully, or not beautifully enough.
It is the twenty-somethingth of October. I no longer keep track of the date.
Would you say--my dream of the 14th November last? There are intervals, but
they are between dreams, and there is no consciousness of them left. The
world around me is dissolving, leaving here and there spots of time. The
world is a cancer eating itself away.... I am thinking that when the great
silence descends upon all and everywhere music will at last triumph. When
into the womb of time everything is again withdrawn chaos will be restored
and chaos is the score upon which reality is written. You, Tania, are my
chaos. It is why I sing. It is not even I, it is the world dying. shedding
the skin of time. I am still alive, kicking in your womb, a reality to write
upon.
Dozing off. The physiology of love. The whale with his six foot penis, in
repose. The bat--penis libre. Animals with a bone in the penis.
Hence, a bone on. ... "Happily," says Gourmont, "the bony structure
is lost in man." Happily? Yes, happily. Think of the human race walking
around with a bone on. The kangaroo has a double penis--one for weekdays
and one for holidays. Dozing. A letter from a female asking if I have found
a title for my book. Title? To be sure: "Lovely Lesbians."
Your anecdotal life! A phrase of M. Borowski's. It is on Wednesdays
that I have lunch with Borowski. His wife, who is a dried-up cow,
officiates. She is studying English now--her favourite word is "filthy." You
can see immediately what a pain in the ass the Borowskis are. But wait. ...
Borowski wears corduroy suits and plays the accordion. An invincible
combination, especially when you consider that he is not a bad artist. He
puts on that he is a Pole, but he is not, of course. He is a Jew, Borowski,
and his father was a philatelist. In fact, almost all Montparnasse is
Jewish, or half Jewish, which is worse. There's Carl and Paula, and
Cronstadt and Boris, and Tania and Sylvester, and Moldorf and Lucille. All
except Fillmore. Henry Jordan Oswald turned out to be a Jew also. Louis
Nichols is a Jew. Even Van Norden and Cherie are Jewish. Frances Blake is a
Jew, or a Jewess. Titus is a Jew. The Jews then are snowing me under. I am
writing this for my friend Carl whose father is a Jew. All this is important
to understand.
Of them all the loveliest Jew is Tania, and for her sake I too would become
a Jew. Why not? I already speak like a Jew. And I am as ugly as a Jew.
Besides, who hates the Jews more than the Jew?
Twilight hour. Indian blue water of glass, trees glistening and liquescent.
The rails fall away into the canal at Jaures. The long caterpillar with
lacquered sides dips like a roller-coaster. It is not Paris. It is not Coney
Island. It is a crepuscular melange of all the cities of Europe and Central
America. The railroad yards below me, the tracks black, webby, not ordered
by the engineer but cataclysmic in design, like those gaunt fissures in the
polar ice which the camera registers in degrees of black.
Food is one of the things I enjoy tremendously. And in this beautiful Villa
Borghese there is scarcely ever any evidence of food. It is positively
appalling at times. I have asked Boris time and again to order bread for
breakfast, but he always forgets. He goes out for breakfast, it seems. And
when he comes back he is picking his teeth and there is a little egg hanging
from his goatee. He eats in the restaurant, out of consideration for me. He
says it hurts to eat a big meal and have me watch him.
I like Van Norden but I do not share his opinion of himself. I do not agree,
for instance, that he is a philosopher, or a thinker. He is cunt-struck,
that's all. And he will never be a writer. Nor will Sylvester ever be a
writ-
26
er, though his name blaze in 50,000 candle power red lights. The only
writers about me for whom I have any respect, at present, arc Carl and
Boris. They are possessed. They glow inwardly with a white name. They are
mad and tone deaf. They are sufferers.
Moldorf, on the other hand, who suffers too in his peculiar way, is not
mad. Moldorf is word drunk. He has no veins or blood-vessels, no heart or
kidneys. He is a portable trunk filled with innumerable drawers and in the
drawers are labels written out in white ink, brown ink, red ink, blue ink,
vermilion, saffron, mauve, sienna, apricot, turquoise, onyx, Anjou,
herring. Corona, verdigris, gorgonzola. . . .
I have moved the typewriter into the next room where I can see myself'in the
mirror as I write.
Tania is like Irene. She expects fat letters. But there is another Tania, a
Tania like a big seed, who scatters pollen everywhere--or, let us say, a
little bit of Tolstoi, a stable scene in which the foetus is dug up. Tania
is a fever. too--les votes urinaires. Cafe de la Liberte, Place des
Vosges, bright neckties on the Boulevard Montparnasse, dark bathrooms, Porto
Sec, Abdullah cigarettes, the adagio sonata pathetique, aural
amplificators, anecdotal seances, burnt sienna breasts, heavy garters, what
time is it, golden pheasants stuffed with chestnuts, taffeta fingers,
vaporish twilights turning to ilex, acromegaly, cancer and delirium, warm
veils, poker chips, carpets of blood and soft thighs. Tania says so that
every one may hear: "I love him!" And while Boris scalds himself with whisky
she says: "Sit down here! 0 Boris ... Russia ... what'll I do? I'm
bursting with it!"
At night when I look at Boris' goatee lying on the pillow I get hysterical.
O Tania, where now is that warm cunt of yours, those fat, heavy garters,
those soft, bulging thighs? There is a bone in my prick six inches long. I
will ream out every wrinkle in your cunt, Tania, big with seed. I will send
you home to your Sylvester with an ache in your belly and your womb turned
inside out. Your Sylvester! Yes, he knows how to build a fire, but I know
how to inflame a cunt. I shoot hot bolts into you, Tania, I make your
ovaries incandescent. Your Sylvester is a little jealous now? He feels
something, does he? He feels
27
the remnants of my big prick. I have set the shores a little wider, I have
ironed out the wrinkles. After me you can take on stallions, bulls, rams,
drakes, St. Bernards. You can stuff toads, bats, lizards up your rectum. You
can shit arpeggios if you like, or string a zither across your navel. I am
fucking you, Tania, so that you'll stay fucked. And if you are afraid of
being fucked publicly I will fuck you privately. I will tear off a few hairs
from your cunt and paste them on Boris' chin. I will bite into your clitoris
and spit out two franc pieces....
Indigo sky swept clear of fleecy clouds, gaunt trees infinitely extended,
their black boughs gesticulating like a sleep-walker. Sombre, spectral
trees, their trunks pale as dear ash. A silence supreme and altogether
European. Shutters drawn, shops barred. A red glow here and there to mark a
tryst. Brusque the facades, almost forbidding;
immaculate except for the splotches of shadow cast by the trees. Passing by
the Orangerie I am reminded of another Paris, the Paris of Maugham, of
Gauguin, Paris of George Moore. I think of that terrible Spaniard who was
then startling the world with his acrobatic leaps from style to style. I
think of Spengler and of his terrible pronunciamentos, and I wonder if
style, style in the grand manner, is done for. I say that my mind is
occupied with these thoughts, but it is not true; it is only later, after I
have crossed the Seine, after I have put behind me the carnival of lights,
that I allow my mind to play with these ideas. For the moment I can think of
nothing--except that I am a sentient being stabbed by the miracle of these
waters that reflect a forgotten world. All along the banks the trees lean
heavily over the tarnished mirror; when the wind rises and fills them with a
rustling murmur they will shed a few tears and shiver as the water swirls
by. I am suffocated by it. No one to whom I can communicate even a fraction
of my feelings....
The trouble with Irene is that she has a valise instead of a cunt. She wants
fat letters to shove in her valise. Immense, avec des choses inouies.
Llona now, she had a cunt. I know because she sent us some hairs from down
below. Llona--a wild ass snuffing pleasure out of the wind. On every high
hill she played the harlot--and
28
sometimes in telephone booths and toilets. She bought a bed for King Carol
and a shaving mug with his initials on it. She lay in Tottenham Court Road
with her dress pulled up and fingered herself. She used candles, Roman
candles, and door knobs. Not a prick in the land big enough for her ...
not one. Men went inside her and curled up. She wanted extension
pricks, self-exploding rockets, hot boiling oil made of wax and creosote.
She would cut off your prick and keep it inside her forever, if you gave her
permission. One cunt out of a million, Llona! A laboratory cunt and no
litmus paper that could take her color. She was a liar, too, this Llona. She
never bought a bed for her King Carol. She crowned him with a whiskey bottle
and her tongue was full of lice and tomorrows. Pool Carol, he could only
curl up inside her and die. She drew a breath and he fell out--like a dead
clam.
Enormous, fat letters, avec des choses inouies. A valise without
straps. A hole without a key. She had a German mouth, French ears, Russian
ass. Cunt international. When the flag waved it was red all the way back to
the throat. You entered on the Boulevard Jules-Ferry and came out at the
Porte de la Villette. You dropped your sweetbreads into the tumbrils--red
tumbrils with two wheels, naturally. At the confluence of the Ourcq and
Mame, where the water sluices through the dykes and lies like glass under
the bridges. Llona is lying there now and the canal is full of glass and
splinters; the mimosas weep, and there is a wet, foggy fart on the
windowpanes. One cunt out of a million Llona! All cunt and a glass ass in
which you can read the history of the Middle Ages.
It is the caricature of a man which Moldorf first presents. Thyroid eyes.
Michelin lips. Voice like pea-soup. Under his vest he carries a little pear.
However you look at him it is always the same panorama; netsuke snuffbox,
ivory handle, chess piece, fan, temple motif. He has fermented so long now
that he is amorphous. Yeast despoiled of its vitamins. Vase without a
rubber plant.
The females were sired twice in the 9th century, and again during the
Renaissance. He was carried through the great dispersions under yellow
bellies and white. Long before the Exodus a Tatar spat in his blood.
29
His dilemma is that of the dwarf. With his pineal eye he sees in silhouette
projected on a screen of incommensurable size. His voice, synchronized to
the shadow of a pinhead, intoxicates him. He hears a roar where others hear
only a squeak.
There is his mind. It is an amphitheatre in which the actor gives a protean
performance. Moldorf, multiform and unerring, goes through his roles--clown,
juggler, contortionist, priest, lecher, mountebank. The amphitheatre is too
small. He puts dynamite to it. The audience is drugged. He scotches it.
I am trying ineffectually to approach Moldorf. It is like trying to approach
God, for Moldorf is God--he has never been anything else. I am merely
putting down words....
I have had opinions about him which I have discarded; I have had other
opinions which I am revising. I have pinned him down only to find that it
was not a dung-beetle I had in my hands, but a dragonfly. He has offended
me by his coarseness and then overwhelmed me with his delicacy. He has been
voluble to the point of suffocation, then quiet as the Jordan.
When I see him trotting forward to greet me, his little paws outstretched,
his eyes perspiring, I feel that I am meeting.... No, this is not the way to
go about it!
"Comme un oeuf dansant sur un jet d'eau."
He has only one cane--a mediocre one. In his pocket scraps of paper
containing prescriptions for Weltschmerz. He is cured now, and the little
German girl who washed his feet is breaking her heart. It is like Mr.
Nonentity toting his Gujurati dictionary everywhere. "Inevitable for
every one"--meaning, no doubt, indispensable. Borowski would find
all this incomprehensible. Borowski has a different cane for each day in
the week, and one for Easter.
We have so many points in common that it is like looking at myself in a
cracked mirror.
I have been looking over my manuscripts, pages scrawled with revisions.
Pages of literature. This frightens me a little. It is so much like
Moldorf. Only I am a gentile, and gentiles have a different way of
suffering. They suffer without neuroses and, as Sylvester says, a
30
man who has never been afflicted with a neurosis does not know the meaning
of suffering.
I recall distinctly how I enjoyed my suffering. It was like taking a cub to
bed with you. Once in a while he clawed you--and then you really were
frightened. Ordinarily you had no fear--you could always turn him loose, or
chop his head off.
There are people who cannot resist the desire to get into a cage with wild
beasts and be mangled. They go in even without revolver or whip. Fear makes
them fearless. .. For the Jew the world is a cage filled with wild beasts.
The door is locked and he is there without whip or revolver. His courage is
so great that he does not even smell the dung in the comer. The spectators
applaud but he does not hear. The drama, he thinks, is going on inside the
cage. The cage, he thinks, is the world. Standing there alone and helpless,
the door locked, he finds that the lions do not understand his language. Not
one lion has ever heard of Spinoza. Spinoza? Why they can't even get their
teeth into him. "Give us meat!" they roar, while he stands there petrified,
his ideas frozen, his Weltanschauung a trapeze out of reach. A
single blow of the lion's paw and his cosmogony is smashed.
The lions, too, are disappointed. They expected blood, bones, gristle,
sinews. They chew and chew, but the words are chicle and chicle is
indigestible. Chicle is a base over which you sprinkle sugar, pepsin, thyme,
licorice. Chicle, when it is gathered by chicleros, is O. K. The chicleros
came over on the ridge of a sunken continent. They brought with them an
algebraic language. In the Arizona desert they met the Mongols of the North,
glazed like eggplants. Time shortly after the earth had taken its gyroscopic
lean--when the Gulf Stream was parting ways with the Japanese current. In
the heart of the soil they found tufa rock. They embroidered the very bowels
of the earth with their language. They ate one another's entrails and the
forest closed in on them, on their bones and skulls, on their lace tufa.
Their language was lost. Here and there one still finds the remnants of a
menagerie, a brain plate covered with figures.
* * *
31
What has all this to do with you, Moldorf? The word in your mouth is
anarchy. Say it, Moldorf, I am waiting for it. Nobody knows, when we shake
hands, the rivers that pour through our sweat Whilst you are framing your
words, your lips half-parted, the saliva gurgling in your cheeks, I have
jumped halfway across Asia. Were I to take your cane, mediocre as it is,
and poke a lime hole in your side, I could collect enough material to fill
the British Museum. We stand on five minutes and devour centuries. You are
the sieve through which my anarchy strains, resolves itself into words.
Behind the word is chaos. Each word a stripe, a bar, but there are not and
never will be enough bars to make the mesh.
In my absence the window-curtains have been hung. They have the appearance
of Tyrolian tablecloths dipped in lysol. The room sparkles. I sit on the bed
in a daze, thinking about man before his birth. Suddenly bells begin to
toll, a weird, unearthly music, as if I had been translated to the steppes
of Central Asia. Some ring out with a long, lingering roll, some erupt
drunkenly, maudlinly. And now it is quiet again, except for a last note that
barely grazes the silence of the night--just a faint, high gong snuffed out
like a flame.
I have made a silent compact with myself not to change a line of what I
write. I am not interested in perfecting my thoughts, nor my actions.
Beside the perfection of Turgeniev I put the perfection of Dostoievski. (Is
there anything more perfect than The Eternal Husband?) Here, then, in
one and the same medium, we have two kinds of perfection. But in Van Gogh's
letters there is a perfection beyond either of these. It is the triumph of
the individual over art.
There is only one thing which interests me vitally now, and that is the
recording of all that which is omitted in books. Nobody, so far as I can
see, is making use of those elements in the air which give direction and
motivation to our lives. Only the killers seem to be extracting from life
some satisfactory measure of what they are putting into it. The age demands
violence, but we are getting only abortive explosions. Revolutions are
nipped in the bud, or else succeed too quickly. Passion is quickly
exhausted. Men fall back on ideas, comme d'habitude. Nothing is pro-
32
posed that can last more than twenty-four hours. We are living a million
lives in the space of a generation. In the study of entomology, or of deep
sea life, or cellular activity, we derive more. . . .
The telephone interrupts this thought which I should never have been able to
complete. Some one is coming to rent the apartment...
It looks as though it were finished, my life at the Villa Borghese. Well,
I'll take up these pages and move on. Things will happen elsewhere. Things
are always happening. It seems wherever I go there is drama. People are
like lice--they get under your skin and bury themselves there. You scratch
and scratch until the blood comes, but you can't get permanently deloused.
Everywhere I go people are making a mess of their lives. Everyone has his
private tragedy. It's in the blood now--misfortune, ennui, grief, suicide.
The atmosphere is saturated with disaster, frustration, futility. Scratch
and scratch--until there's no skin left. However, the effect upon me is
exhilarating. Instead of being discouraged, or depressed, I enjoy it. I am
crying for more and more disasters, for bigger calamities, for grander
failures. I want the whole world to be out of whack, I want every one to
scratch himself to death.
So fast and furiously am I compelled to live now that there is scarcely time
to record even these fragmentary notes. After the telephone call, a
gentleman and his wife arrived. I went upstairs to lie down during the
transaction. Lay there wondering what my next move would be. Surely not to
go back to the fairy's bed and toss about all night flicking bread crumbs
with my toes. That puking little bastard! If there's anything worse than
being a fairy it's being a miser. A timid, quaking little bugger who lived
in constant fear of going broke some day--the 18th of March perhaps, or the
25th of May precisely. Coffee without milk or sugar. Bread without butter.
Meat without gravy, or no meat at all. Without this and without that! The
dirty little miser! Open the bureau drawer one day and find money hidden
away in a sock. Over two thousand francs--and checks that he hadn't even
cashed. Even that I wouldn't have minded so much if there
33
weren't always coffee grounds in my beret and garbage on the floor, to say
nothing of the cold cream jars and the greasy towels and the sink always
stopped up. I tell you, the little bastard he smelled bad--except when he
doused himself with cologne. His ears were dirty, his eyes were dirty, his
ass was dirty. He was double-jointed, asthmatic, lousy, picayune, morbid. I
could have forgiven him everything if only he had handed me a decent
breakfast! But a man who has two thousand francs hidden away in a dirty sock
and refuses to wear a clean shirt or smear a little butter over his bread,
such a man is not just a fairy, nor even just a miser--he's an imbecile!
But that's neither here nor mere, about the fairy. I'm keeping an ear open
as to what's going on downstairs. It's a Mr. Wren and his wife who have
called to look at the apartment. They're talking about taking it. Only
talking about it, thank God. Mrs. Wren has a loose laugh--
complications ahead. Now Mister Wren is talking. His voice is
raucous, scraping, booming, a heavy blunt weapon that wedges its way through
flesh and bone and cartilage.
Boris calls me down to be introduced. He is rubbing his hands, like a
pawnbroker. They are talking about a story Mr. Wren wrote, a story about a
spavined horse.
"But I thought Mr. Wren was a painter?"
"To be sure," says Boris, with a twinkle in his eye, "but in the wintertime
he writes. And he writes well ... remarkably well."
I try to induce Mr. Wren to talk, to say something, anything, to talk about
the spavined horse, if necessary. But Mr. Wren is almost inarticulate. When
he essays to speak of those dreary months with the pen he becomes
unintelligible. Months and months he spends before setting a word to paper.
(And there are only three months of winter!) What does he cogitate all those
months and months of winter? So help me God, I can't see this guy as a
writer. Yet Mrs. Wren says that when he sits down to it the stuff just
pours out.
The talk drifts. It is difficult to follow Mr. Wren's mind because he says
nothing. He thinks as he goes along--so Mrs. Wren puts it. Mrs. Wren
puts everything about Mr. Wren in the loveliest light. "He thinks as he goes
34
along"--very charming, charming indeed, as Borowski would say, but really
very painful, particularly when the thinker is nothing but a spavined horse.
Boris hands me money to buy liquor. Going for the liquor I am already
intoxicated. I know just how I'll begin when I get back to the house.
Walking down the street it commences, the grand speech inside me that's
gurgling like Mrs. Wren's loose laugh. Seems to me she had a slight edge on
already. Listens beautifully when she's tight. Coming out of the wine-shop I
hear the urinal gurgling. Everything is loose and splashy. I want Mrs. Wren
to listen ...
Boris is rubbing his hands again. Mr. Wren is still stuttering and
spluttering. I have a bottle between my legs and I'm shoving the corkscrew
in. Mrs. Wren has her mouth parted expectantly. The wine is splashing
between my legs, the sun is splashing through the bay window, and inside my
veins there is a bubble and splash of a thousand crazy things that commence
to gush out of me now pell-mell. I'm telling them everything that comes to
mind, everything that was bottled up inside me and which Mrs. Wren's loose
laugh has somehow released. With that bottle between my legs and the sun
splashing through the window I experience once again the splendor of those
miserable days when I first arrived in Paris, a bewildered, poverty-stricken
individual who haunted the streets like a ghost at a banquet. Everything
comes back to me in a rush--the toilets that wouldn't work, the prince who
shined my shoes, the Cinema Splendide where I slept on the patron's
overcoat, the bars in the window, the feeling of suffocation, the fat
cockroaches, the drinking and carousing that went on between times. Rose
Cannaque and Naples dying in the sunlight. Dancing the streets on an empty
belly and now and then calling on strange people--Madame Delorme, for
instance. How I ever got to Madame Delorme's, I can't imagine any more. But
I got there, got inside somehow, past the butler, past the maid with her
little white apron, got right inside the palace with my corduroy trousers
and my hunting jacket-- and not a button on my fly. Even now I can taste
again the golden ambiance of that room where Madame Delorme sat upon a
throne in her mannish rig, the gold-
35
fish in the bowls, the maps of the ancient world, the beautifully bound
books; I can feel again her heavy hand resting upon my shoulder,
frightening me a little with her heavy Lesbian air. More comfortable down
below in that thick stew pouring into the Gare St. Lazare, the whores in the
doorways, seltzer bottles on every table; a thick tide of semen flooding the
gutters. Nothing better, between five and seven than to be pushed around in
that throng, to follow a leg or a beautiful bust, to move along with the
tide and everything whirling in your brain. A weird sort of contentment in
those days. No appointments, no invitations for dinner, no program, no
dough. The golden period, when I had not a single friend. Each morning the
dreary walk to the American Express, and each morning the inevitable answer
from the clerk. Dashing here and there like a bedbug, gathering butts now
and then, sometimes furtively, sometimes brazenly; sitting down on a bench
and squeezing my guts to stop the gnawing, or walking through the Jardin des
Tuileries and getting an erection looking at the dumb statues. Or wandering
along the Seine at night, wandering and wandering, and going mad with the
beauty of it, the trees leaning to, the broken images in the water, the rush
of the current under the bloody lights of the bridges, the women sleeping in
doorways, sleeping on newspapers, sleeping in the rain; everywhere the
musty porches of the cathedrals and beggars and lice and old hags full of
St. Vitus' dance; pushcarts stacked up like wine barrels in the side
streets, the smell of berries in the market-place and the old church
surrounded with vegetables and blue arc lights, the gutters slippery with
garbage and women in satin pumps staggering through the filth and vermin at
the end of an all-night souse. The Place St. Sulpice, so quiet and deserted,
where toward midnight there came every night the woman with the busted
umbrella and the crazy veil; every night she slept there on a bench under
her torn umbrella, the ribs hanging down, her dress turning green, her bony
fingers and the odor of decay oozing from her body; and in the morning I'd
be sitting there myself, taking a quiet snooze in the sunshine, cursing the
goddamned pigeons gathering up the crumbs everywhere. St. Sulpice! The fat
belfries, the garish posters over the door, the candles flaming in-
36
side. The Square so beloved of Anatole France, with that drone and buzz from
the altar, the splash of the fountain, the pigeons cooing, the crumbs
disappearing like magic and only a dull rumbling in the hollow of the guts.
Here I would sit day after day thinking of Germaine and that dirty little
street near the Bastille where she lived, and that buzz-buzz going on behind
the altar, the buses whizzing by, the sun beating down into the asphalt and
the asphalt working into me and Germaine, into the asphalt and all Paris in
the big fat belfries.
And it was down the Rue Bonaparte that only a year before Mona and I used to
walk every night, after we had taken leave of Borowski. St. Sulpice not
meaning much to me then, nor anything in Paris. Washed out with talk. Sick
of faces. Fed up with cathedrals and squares and menageries and what not.
Picking up a book in the red bedroom and the cane chair uncomfortable;
tired of sitting on my ass all day long, tired of red wallpaper, tired of
seeing so many people jabbering away about nothing. The red bedroom and the
trunk always open; her gowns lying about in a delirium of disorder. The red
bedroom with my goloshes and canes, the notebooks I never touched, the
manuscripts lying cold and dead. Paris! Meaning the Cafe Select, the D6me,
the Flea Market, the American Express. Paris! Meaning Borowski's canes,
Borowski's hats, Borowski's gouaches, Borowski's prehistoric fish--and
prehistoric jokes. In that Paris of '28 only one night stands out in my
memory--the night before sailing for America. A rare night, with Borowski
slightly pickled and a little disgusted with me because I'm dancing with
every slut in the place. But we're leaving in the morning! That's what I
tell every cunt I grab hold of--leaving in the morning! That's what
I'm telling the blonde with agate-colored eyes. And while I'm telling her
she takes my hand and sqeeezes it between her legs. In the lavatory I stand
before the bowl with a tremendous erection; it seems light and heavy at the
same time, like a piece of lead with wings on it. And while I'm standing
there like that two cunts sail in--Americans. I greet them cordially, prick
in hand. They give me a wink and pass on. In the vestibule, as I'm buttoning
my fly, I notice one of them waiting for her friend to come out of the can.
The music
37
is still playing and maybe Mona'll be coming to fetch me, or Borowski
with his gold-knobbed cane, but I'm in her arms now and she has hold of me
and I don't care who comes or what happens. We wriggle into the cabinet and
there I stand her up, slap up against the wall, and I try to get it into her
but it won't work and so we sit down on the seat and try it that way but it
won't work either. No matter how we try it it won't work. And all the while
she's got hold of my prick, she's clutching it like a life-saver, but it's
no use, we're too hot, too eager. The music is still playing and so we waltz
out of the cabinet into the vestibule again and as we're dancing there in
the shit-house I come all over her beautiful gown and she's sore as hell
about it. I stumble back to the table and there's Borowski with his ruddy
face and Mona with her disapproving eye. And Borowski says "Let's all go to
Brussels tomorrow," and we agree, and when we get back to the hotel I vomit
all over the place, in the bed, in the washbowl, over the suits and gowns
and the goloshes and canes and the notebooks I never touched and the
manuscripts lying cold and dead.
A few months later. The same hotel, the same room. We look out on the
courtyard where the bicycles are parked, and there is the little room up
above, under the attic, where some smart young Alee played the phonograph
all day long and repeated clever little things at the top of his voice. I
say "we" but I'm getting ahead of myself, because Mona has been away a long
time and it's just today that I'm meeting her at the Gare St. Lazare. Toward
evening I'm standing there with my face squeezed between the bars, but
there's no Mona, and I read the cable over again but it doesn't help any. I
go back to the Quarter and just the same I put away a hearty meal. Strolling
past the D6me and a little later suddenly I see a pale, heavy face and
burning eyes--and the little velvet suit that I always adored because under
the soft velvet there were always her warm breasts, the marble legs, cool,
firm, muscular. She rises up out of a sea of faces and embraces me,
embraces me passionately--a thousand eyes, noses, fingers, legs, bottles,
windows, purses, saucers all glaring at us and we in each other's arms
oblivious. I sit down beside her and she talks--a flood of talk. Wild
consumptive
38
notes of histeria, perversion, leprosy. I hear not a word because she is
beautiful and I love her and now I am happy and willing to die.
We walk down the Rue du Chateau, looking for Eugene. Walk over the railroad
bridge where I used to watch the trains pulling out and feel all sick inside
wondering where the hell she could be. Everything soft and enchanting as we
walk over the bridge. Smoke coming up between our legs, the tracks
creaking, semaphores in our blood. I feel her body close to mine--all mine
now--and I stop to rub my hands over the warm velvet. Everything around us
is crumbling, crumbling and the warm body under the warm velvet is aching
for me ...
Back in the very same room and fifty francs to the good, thanks to Eugene/ I
look out on the court but the phonograph is silent. The trunk is open and
her things are lying around everywhere just as before. She lies down on the
bed with her clothes on. Once, twice, three times, four times ... I'm afraid
she'll go mad ... in bed, under the blankets, how good to feel her body
again! But for how long? Will it last this time? Already I have a
presentiment that it won't.
She talks to me so feverishly--as if there will be no tomorrow. "Be quiet,
Mona! Just look at me ... don't talk!" Finally she drops off and I
pull my arm from under her. My eyes close. Her body is there beside me ...
it will be there till morning surely ... It was in February I pulled out of
the harbor in a blinding snowstorm. The last glimpse I had of her was in the
window waving good-bye to me. A man standing on the other side of the
street, at the comer, his hat pulled down over his eyes, his jowls resting
on his lapels. A foetus watching me. A foetus with a cigar in its mouth.
Mona at the window waving goodbye. White heavy face, hair streaming wild.
And now it is a heavy bedroom, breathing regularly through the gills, sap
still oozing from between her legs, a warm feline odor and her hair in my
mouth. My eyes are closed. We breathe warmly into each other's mouth. Close
together, America three thousand miles away. I never want to see it again.
To have her here in bed with me, breathing on me, her hair in my mouth--I
count that something of a miracle. Nothing can happen now till morning ...
39
I wake from a deep slumber to look at her. A pale light is trickling in. I
look at her beautiful wild hair. I feel something crawling down my neck. I
look at her again, closely. Her hair is alive! I pull back the sheet--more
of them. They are swarming over the pillow.
It is a little after daybreak. We pack hurriedly and sneak out of the hotel.
The cafes are still closed. We walk, and as we walk we scratch ourselves.
The day opens in milky whiteness, streaks of salmon-pink sky, snails leaving
their shells. Paris. Paris. Everything happens here. Old, crumbling walls
and the pleasant sound of water running in the urinals. Men licking their
moustaches at the bar. Shutters going up with a bang and little streams
purling in the gutters. Amer Picon in huge scarlet letters.
Zigzag. Which way will we go and why or where or what?
Mona is hungry, her dress is thin. Nothing but evening wraps, bottles of
perfume, barbaric earrings, bracelets, depilatories. We sit down in a
billiard parlor on the Avenue due Maine and order hot coffee. The toilet is
out of order. We shall have to sit some time before we can go to another
hotel. Meanwhile we pick bedbugs out of each other's hair. Nervous. Mona is
losing her temper. Must have a bath. Must have this. Must have that. Must,
must, must ...
"How much money have you left?"
Money! Forgot all about that.
Hotel des Etats-Unis. An ascenseur. We go to bed in broad daylight.
When we get up it is dark and the first thing to do is to raise enough dough
to send a cable to America. A cable to the fcetus with the long juicy cigar
in his mouth. Meanwhile there is the Spanish woman on the Boulevard
Raspail--she's always good for a warm meal. By morning something will
happen. At least we're going to bed together. No more bedbugs now. The rainy
season has commenced. The sheets are immaculate ...
A new life opening up for me at the Villa Borghese. Only ten o'clock
and we have already had breakfast and been out for a walk. We have an Elsa
here with us now. "Step softly for a few days," cautions Boris.
The day begins gloriously: a bright sky, a fresh wind, the houses newly
washed. On our way to the Post Office Boris and I discussed the book. The
Last Book--which is going to be written anonymously.
A new day is beginning. I felt it this morning as we stood before one of
Dufresne's glistening canvases, a sort of dejeuner intime in the 13th
century, sans vin. A fine, fleshy nude, solid, vibrant, pink as a
fingernail, with glistening billows of flesh; all the secondary
characteristics, and a few of the primary. A body that sings, that has the
moisture of dawn. A still life, only nothing is still, nothing dead here.
The table creaks with food; it is so heavy it is sliding out of the frame. A
13th century repast--with all the jungle notes that he has memorized so
well. A family of gazelles and zebras nipping the fronds of the palms.
And now we have Elsa. She was playing for us this morning while we were in
bed. Step softly for a few days ... Good! Elsa is the maid and I am
the guest. And Boris is the big cheese. A new drama is beginning. I'm
laughing to myself as I write this. He knows what is going to happen, that
lynx, Boris. He has a nose for things too. Step softly ...
Boris is on pins and needles. At any moment now his wife may appear on the
scene. She weighs well over 180 pounds, that wife of his. And Boris is only
a handful. There you have the situation. He tries to explain it to me on our
way home at night. It is so tragic and so ridiculous
41
at the same time that I am obliged to stop now and then and laugh in his
face. "Why do you laugh so?" he says gently, and then he commences himself,
with that whimpering, hysterical note in his voice, like a helpless wretch
who realizes suddenly that no matter how many frock coats he puts on he will
never make a man. He wants to run away, to take a new name. "She can have
everything, that cow, if only she leaves me alone," he whines. But first the
apartment has to be rented, and the deeds signed, and a thousand other
details for which his frock coat will come in handy. But the size of
her!--that's what really worries him. If we were to find her suddenly
standing on the doorstep when we arrive he would faint--that's how much he
respects her!
And so we've got to go easy with Elsa for a while. Elsa is only there to
make breakfast--and to show the apartment.
But Elsa is already undermining me. That German blood. Those melancholy
songs. Coming down the stairs this morning, with the fresh coffee in my
nostrils, I was humming softly ... "Es war' so schon gewesen." For
breakfast, that. And in a little while the English boy upstairs with his
Bach. As Elsa says--"he needs a woman." And Elsa needs something too. I can
feel it. I didn't say anything to Boris about it, but while he was cleaning
his teeth this morning Elsa was giving me an earful about Berlin, about the
women who look so attractive from behind, and when they turn round--wow,
syphilis!
It seems to me that Elsa looks at me rather wistfully. Something left over
from the breakfast table. This afternoon we were writing, back to back, in
the studio. She had begun a letter to her lover who is in Italy. The
machine got jammed. Boris had gone to look at a cheap room he will take as
soon as the apartment is rented. There was nothing for it but to make love
to Elsa. She wanted it. And yet I felt a little sorry for her. She had only
written the first line to her lover--I read it out of the comer of my eye as
I bent over her. But it couldn't be helped. That damned German music, so
melancholy, so sentimental. It undermined me. And then her beady little
eyes, so hot and sorrowful at the same time.
After it was over I asked her to play something for me.
She's a musician, Elsa, even though it sounded like broken pots and skulls
clanking. She was weeping, too, as she played. I don't blame her. Everywhere
the same thing, she says. Everywhere a man, and then she has to leave, and
then there's an abortion and then a new job and then another man and nobody
gives a fuck about her except to use her. All this after she's played
Schumann for me-- Schumann, that slobbery, sentimental German bastard!
Somehow I feel sorry as hell for her and yet I don't give a damn. A cunt who
can play as she does ought to have better sense than be tripped up by every
guy with a big putz who happens to come along. But that Schumann gets into
my blood. She's still sniffling, Elsa; but my mind is far away. I'm thinking
of Tania and how she claws away at her adagio. I'm thinking of lots of
things that are gone and buried. Thinking of a summer afternoon in
Greenpoint when the Germans were romping over Belgium and we had not yet
lost enough money to be concerned over the rape of a neutral country. A
time when we were still innocent enough to listen to poets and to sit around
a table in the twilight rapping for departed spirits. All that afternoon and
evening the atmosphere is saturated with German music; the whole
neighborhood is German, more German even than Germany. We were brought up on
Schumann and Hugo Wolf and Sauerkraut and Kummel and potato
dumplings. Toward evening we're sitting around a big table with the curtains
drawn and some fool two-headed wench is rapping for Jesus Christ. We're
holding hands under the table and the dame next to me has two fingers in my
fly. And finally we lie on the floor, behind the piano, while someone sings
a dreary song. The air is stifling and her breath is boozy. The pedal is
moving up and down, stiffly, automatically, a crazy, futile movement, like a
tower of dung that takes twenty-seven years to build but keeps perfect time.
I pull her over me with the sounding board in my ears; the room is dark and
the carpet is sticky with the Kiimmel that has been spilled about. Suddenly
it seems as if the dawn were coming: it is like water purling over ice and
the ice is blue with a rising mist, glaciers sunk in emerald green, chamois
and antelope, golden groupers, sea-cows
43
mouching along and the amber-jack leaping over the Arctic rim ...
Elsa is sitting in my lap. Her eyes are like little belly-buttons. I look at
her large mouth, so wet and glistening, and I cover it. She is humming now
... "Es war' so schon gewesen ..." Ah, Elsa, you don't know yet what
that means to me, your Trompeter von Sackingen. German Singing
Societies, Schwaben Hall, the Turnverein ... links um, rechts um ...
and then a whack over the ass with the end of a rope.
Ah, the Germans! They take you all over like an omnibus. They give you
indigestion. In the same night one cannot visit the morgue, the infirmary,
the zoo, the signs of the zodiac, the limbos of philosophy, the caves of
epistemology, the arcana of Freud and Stekel ... On the merry-go-round one
doesn't get anywhere, whereas with the Germans one can go from Vega to Lope
de Vega, all in one night, and come away as foolish as Parsifal.
As I say, the day began gloriously. It was only this morning that I became
conscious again of this physical Paris of which I have been unaware for
weeks. Perhaps it is because the book has begun to grow inside me. I am
carrying it around with me everywhere. I walk through the streets big with
child and the cops escort me across the street. Women get up to offer me
their seats. Nobody pushes me rudely any more. I am pregnant. I waddle
awkwardly; my big stomach pressed against the weight of the world.
It was this morning, on our way to the Post Office, that we gave the book
its final imprimatur. We have evolved a new cosmogony of literature,
Boris and I. It is to be a new Bible--The Last Book. All those who
have anything to say will say it here--anonymously. We will exhaust
the age. After us not another book--not for a generation, at least.
Heretofore we had been digging in the dark, with nothing but instinct to
guide us. Now we shall have a vessel in which to pour the vital fluid, a
bomb which, when we throw it, will set off the world. We shall put into it
enough to give the writers of tomorrow their plots, their dramas, their
poems, their myths, their sciences. The world will be able to feed on it for
a thousand years to
44
come. It is colossal in its pretentiousness. The thought of it almost
shatters us.
For a hundred years or more the world, our world, has been dying. And
not one man, in these last hundred years or so, has been crazy enough to put
a bomb up the ass-hole of creation and set it off. The world is
rotting away, dying piecemeal. But it needs the coup de grace, it
needs to be blown to smithereens. Not one of us is intact, and yet we have
in us all the continents and the seas between the continents and the birds
of the air. We are going to put it down--the evolution of this world which
has died but which has not been buried. We are swimming on the face of time
and all else has drowned, is drowning, or will drown. It will be enormous,
the Book. There will be oceans of space in which to move about, to
perambulate, to sing, to dance, to climb, to bathe, to leap somersaults, to
whine, to rape, to murder. A cathedral, a veritable cathedral, in the
building of which everybody will assist who has lost his identity. There
will be masses for the dead, prayers, confessions, hymns, a moaning and a
chattering, a sort of murderous insouciance; there will be rose windows and
gargoyles and acolytes and pallbearers. You can bring your horses in a
gallop through the aisles. You can butt your head against the walls--they
won't give. You can pray in any language you choose, or you can curl up
outside and go to sleep. It will last a thousand years, at least, this
cathedral, and there will be no replica, for the builders will be dead and
the formula too. We will have postcards made and organize tours. We will
build a town around it and set up a free commune. We have no need for
genius--genius is dead. We have need for strong hands, for spirits who are
willing to give up the ghost and put on flesh ...
The day is moving along at a fine tempo. I am up on the balcony at Tania's
place. The drama is going on down below in the drawing-room. The dramatist
is sick and from above his scalp looks more scabrous than ever. His hair is
made of straw. His ideas are straw. His wife too is straw, though still a
little damp. The whole house is made of straw. Here I am up on the balcony,
waiting for Boris to arrive. My last problem--breakfast--is gone. I
have
45
simplified everything. If there are any new problems I can carry them in my
rucksack, along with my dirty wash. I am throwing away all my sous. What
need have I for money? I am a writing machine. The last screw has been
added. The thing flows. Between me and the machine there is no
estrangement. I am the machine ...
They have not told me yet what the new drama is about, but I can sense it.
They are trying to get rid of me. Yet here I am for my dinner, even a little
earlier than they expected. I have informed them where to sit, what to do. I
ask them politely if I shall be disturbing them, but what I really mean, and
they know it well, is--wi7/ you be disturbing me? No, you blissful
cockroaches, you are not disturbing me. You are nourishing me. I see
you sitting there close together and I know there is a chasm between you.
Your nearness is the nearness of planets. I am the void between you. If I
withdraw there will be no void for you to swim in.
Tania is in a hostile mood--I can feel it. She resents my being filled with
anything but herself. She knows by the very calibre of my excitement that
her value is reduced to zero. She knows that I did not come this evening to
fertilize her. She knows there is something germinating inside me which will
destroy her. She is slow to realize, but she is realizing it ...
Sylvester looks more content. He will embrace her this evening at the dinner
table. Even now he is reading my manuscript, preparing to inflame my ego, to
set my ego against hers.
It will be a strange gathering this evening. The stage is being set. I hear
the tinkle of the glasses. The wine is being brought out. There will be
bumpers downed and Sylvester who is ill will come out of his illness.
It was only last night, at Cronstadt's, that we projected this setting. It
was ordained that the women must suffer, that off-stage there should be more
terror and violence, more disasters, more suffering, more woe and misery.
It is no accident that propels people like us to Paris. Paris is simply an
artificial stage, a revolving stage that permits the spectator to glimpse
all phases of the conflict. Of itself Paris initiates no dramas. They are
begun elsewhere. Paris is simply an obstetrical instrument that tears
46
the living embryo from the womb and puts it in the incubator. Paris is the
cradle of artificial births. Rocking here in the cradle each one slips back
into his soil: one dreams back to Berlin, New York, Chicago, Vienna, Minsk.
Vienna is never more Vienna than in Paris. Everything is raised to
apotheosis. The cradle gives up its babes and new ones take their places.
You can read here on the walls where Zola lived and Balzac and Dante and
Strindberg and everybody who ever was anything. Everyone has lived here
some time or other. Nobody dies here ...
They are talking downstairs. Their language is symbolic. The word
"struggle" enters into it. Sylvester, the sick dramatist, is saying: "I am
just reading the Manifesto." And Tania says--"Whose?" Yes,
Tania, I heard you. I am up here writing about you and you divine it well.
Speak more, that I may record you. For when we go to table I shall
not be able to make any notes ... Suddenly Tania remarks: "There is no
prominent hall in this place." Now what does that mean, if anything?
They are putting up pictures now. That, too, is to impress me. See, they
wish to say, we are at home here, living the conjugal life. Making the home
attractive. We will even argue a little about the pictures, for your
benefit. And Tania remarks again: "How the eye deceives one!" Ah, Tania,
what things you say! Go on, carry out this farce a little longer. I am here
to get the dinner you promised me; I enjoy this comedy tremendously. And now
Sylvester takes the lead. He is trying to explain one of Borowski's
gouaches. "Come here, do you see? One of them is playing the guitar;
the other is holding a girl in his lap." True, Sylvester. Very true.
Borowski and his guitars! The girls in his lap! Only one never quite knows
what it is he holds in his lap, or whether it is really a man playing the
guitar ...
Soon Moldorf will be trotting in on all fours and Boris with that helpless
little laugh of his. There will be a golden pheasant for dinner and Anjou
and short fat cigars. And Cronstadt, when he gets the latest news, will
live a little harder, a little brighter, for five minutes; and then he will
subside again into the humus of his ideology
47
and perhaps a poem will be born, a big golden bell of a poem without a
tongue.
Had to knock off for an hour or so. Another customer to look at the
apartment. Upstairs the bloody Englishman is practising his Bach. It is
imperative now, when someone comes to look at the apartment, to run
upstairs and ask the pianist to lay off for a while.
Elsa is telephoning the greengrocer. The plumber is putting a new seat on
the toilet bowl. Whenever the doorbell rings Boris loses his equilibrium.
In the excitement he has dropped his glasses; he is on his hands and knees,
his frock coat is dragging the floor. It is a little like the Grand
Guignol--the starving poet come to give the butcher's daughter lessons.
Every time the phone rings the poet's mouth waters. Mallarme sounds like a
sirloin steak, Victor Hugo like foie de veau. Elsa is ordering a
delicate little lunch for Boris--"a nice juicy little pork chop," she says.
I see a whole flock of pink hams lying cold on the marble, wonderful hams
cushioned in white fat. I have a terrific hunger though we've only had
breakfast a few minutes ago--it's the lunch that I'll have to skip. It's
only Wednesdays that I eat lunch, thanks to Borowski. Elsa is still
telephoning--she forgot to order a piece of bacon. "Yes, a nice little piece
of bacon, not too fatty," she says ... Zut alors! Throw in some
sweetbreads, throw in some mountain oysters and some psst clams! Throw in
some fried liverwurst while you're at it;
I could gobble up the fifteen hundred plays of Lope de Vega in one sitting.
It is a beautiful woman who has come to look at the apartment. An American,
of course. I stand at the window with my back to her watching a sparrow
pecking at a fresh turd. Amazing how easily the sparrow is provided for. It
is raining a bit and the drops are very big. I used to think a bird couldn't
fly if its wings got wet. Amazing how these rich dames come to Paris and
find all the swell studios. A little talent and a big purse. If it rains
they have a chance to display their brand new slickers. Food is nothing:
sometimes they're so busy gadding about that they haven't time for lunch.
Just a little sandwich, a wafer, at the Cafe de la Paix or the Ritz Bar.
"For the daugh-
48
ters of gentlefolk only"--that's what it says at the old studio of Puvis de
Chavannes. Happened to pass there the other day. Rich American cunts with
paint boxes slung over their shoulders. A little talent and a fat purse.
The sparrow is hopping frantically from one cobble-stone to another. Truly
herculean efforts, if you stop to examine closely. Everywhere there is food
lying about--in the gutter, I mean. The beautiful American woman is
inquiring about the toilet. The toilet! Let me show you, you velvet-snooted
gazelle! The toilet, you say? Par id, Madame. N'oubliez. pas que les
places numerotees sont reservees aux mutiles de la guerre.
Boris is rubbing his hands--he is putting the finishing touches to the deal.
The dogs are barking in the courtyard; they bark like wolves. Upstairs Mrs.
Melverness is moving the furniture around. She had nothing to do all day,
she's bored; if she finds a crumb of dirt anywhere she cleans the whole
house. There's a bunch of green grapes on the table and a bottle of
wine--vin de choix, 10 degrees. "Yes," says Boris, "I could make a
wash-stand for you, just come here, please. Yes, this is the toilet. There
is one upstairs too, of course. Yes, a thousand francs a month. You don't
care much for Utrillo, you say? No, this is it. It needs a new washer,
that's all ..."
She's going in a minute now. Boris hasn't even introduced me this time. The
son of a bitch! Whenever it's a rich cunt he forgets to introduce me. In a
few minutes I'll be able to sit down again and type. Somehow I don't feel
like it any more today. My spirit is dribbling away. She may come back in an
hour or so and take the chair from under my ass. How the hell can a man
write when he doesn't know where he's going to sit the next half hour? If
this rich bastard takes the place I won't even have a place to sleep. It's
hard to know, when you're in such a jam which is worse--not having a place
to sleep or not having a place to work. One can sleep almost anywhere, but
one must have a place to work. Even if it's not a masterpiece you're doing.
Even a bad novel requires a chair to sit on and a bit of privacy. These rich
cunts never think of a thing like that. Whenever they want to lower their
soft behinds there's always a chair standing ready for them ...
49
* * *
Last night we left Sylvester and his God sitting together before the
hearth. Sylvester in his pajamas, Moldorf with a cigar between his lips.
Sylvester is peeling an orange. He puts the peel on the couch-cover.
Moldorf draws closer to him. He asks permission to read again that brilliant
parody The Gates of Heaven. We are getting ready to go, Boris and I.
We are too gay for this sick-room atmosphere. Tania is going with us. She is
gay because she is going to escape. Boris is gay because the God in Moldorf
is dead. I am gay because it is another act we are going to put on.
Moldorf's voice is reverent. "Can I stay with you, Sylvester, until you go
to bed?" He has been staying with him for the last six days, buying
medicine, running errands for Tania, comforting, consoling, guarding the
portals against malevolent intruders like Boris and his scallywags. He is
like a savage who has discovered that his idol was mutilated during the
night. There he sits, at the idol's feet, with breadfruit and grease and
jabber-wocky prayers. His voice goes out unctuously. His limbs are already
paralyzed.
To Tania he speaks as if she were a priestess who had broken her vows. "You
must make yourself worthy. Sylvester is your God." And while Sylvester is
upstairs suffering (he has a little wheeze in the chest) the priest and the
priestess devour the food. "You are polluting yourself," he says, the gravy
dripping from his lips. He has the capacity for eating and suffering at the
same time. While he fends off the dangerous ones he puts out his fat little
paw and strokes Tania's hair. "I am beginning to fall in love with you. You
are like my Fanny."
In other respects it has been a fine day for Moldorf. A letter arrived from
America. Moe is getting A's in everything. Murray is learning to ride the
bicycle. The victrola was repaired. You can see from the expression on his
face that there were other things in the letter besides report cards and
velocipedes. You can be sure of it because this afternoon he bought 325
francs worth of jewelry for his Fanny. In addition he wrote her a
twenty-page letter. The garcon brought him page after page, filled
his fountain-pen, served his coffee and cigars, fanned him a little
50
when he perspired, brushed the crumbs from the table, lit his cigar when it
went out, bought stamps for him, danced on him, piroutted, salaamed ...
broke his spine damned near. The tip was fat. Bigger and fatter than a
Corona Corona. Moldorf probably mentioned it in his diary. It was for
Fanny's sake. The bracelet and the ear-rings, they were worth every sou he
spent. Better to spend it on Fanny than waste it on little strumpets like
Germaine and Odette. Yes, he told Tania so. He showed her his trunk. It is
crammed with gifts--for Fanny, and for Moe and Murray.
"My Fanny is the most intelligent woman in the world. I have been searching
and searching to find a flaw in her--but there's not one.
"She's perfect. I'll tell you what Fanny can do. She plays bridge like a
shark; she's interested in Zionism; you give her an old hat, for instance,
and see what she can do with it. A little twist here, a ribbon there, and
voila quelque chose de beau! Do you know what is perfect bliss? To
sit beside Fanny, when Moe and Murray have gone to bed, and listen to the
radio. She sits there so peacefully. I am rewarded for all my struggles and
heartaches in just watching her. She listens intelligently. When I think of
your stinking Montparnasse and then of my evenings in Bay Ridge with Fanny
after a big meal, I tell you there is no comparison. A simple thing like
food, the children, the soft lamps, and Fanny sitting there, a little tired,
but cheerful, contented, heavy with bread ... we just sit there for hours
without saying a word. That's bliss!
"Today she writes me a letter--not one of those dull stock report letters.
She writes me from the heart, in language that even my little Murray could
understand. She's delicate about everything, Fanny. She says that the
children must continue their education but the expense worries her. It
will cost a thousand bucks to send little Murray to school. Moe, of course,
will get a scholarship. But little Murray, that little genius, Murray, what
are we going to do about him? I wrote Fanny not to worry. Send Murray to
school, I said. What's another thousand dollars? I'll make more money this
year than ever before. I'll do it for little Murray--because he's a genius,
that kid."
I should like to be there when Fanny opens the trunk. "See, Fanny, this is
what I bought in Budapest from an old Jew ... This is what they wear in
Bulgaria--it's pure wool . .. This belonged to the Duke of something or
other--no, you don't wind it, you put it in the sun This I want you to wear,
Fanny, when we go to the Opera ... wear it with that comb I showed you ...
And this, Fanny, is something Tania picked up for me ... she's a little bit
on your type ..."
And Fanny is sitting there on the settee, just as she was in the oleograph,
with Moe on one side of her and little Murray, Murray the genius, on the
other. Her fat legs are a little too short to reach the floor. Her eyes have
a dull permanganate glow. Breasts like ripe red cabbage; they bobble a
little when she leans forward. But the sad thing about her is that the juice
has been cut off. She sits there like a dead storage battery; her face is
out of plumb--it needs a little animation, a sudden spurt of juice to bring
it back into focus. Moldorf is jumping around in front of her like a fat
toad. His flesh quivers. He slips and it is difficult for him to roll over
again on his belly. She prods him with her thick toes. His eyes protrude a
little further. "Kick me again. Fanny, that was good!" She gives him a good
prod this time--it leaves a permanent dent in his paunch. His face is close
to the carpet; the wattles are joggling in the nap of the rug. He livens up
a bit, flips around, springs from furniture to furniture. "Fanny, you are
marvellous!" He is sitting now on her shoulder. He bites a little piece from
her ear, just a little tip from the lobe where it doesn't hurt. But she's
still dead--all storage battery and no juice. He falls on her lap and lies
there quivering like a tooth-ache. He is all warm now and helpless. His
belly glistens like a patent-leather shoe. In the sockets of his eyes a pair
of fancy vest buttons. "Unbutton my eyes. Fanny, I want to see you better!"
Fanny carries him to bed and drops a little hot wax over his eyes.
She puts rings around his navel and a thermometer up his ass. She places him
and he quivers again. Suddenly he's dwindled, shrunk completely out of
sight. She searches all over for him, in her intestines, everywhere.
Something is tickling her--she doesn't know where exactly. The bed is full
of toads and fancy vest buttons.
52
"Fanny, where are you?" Something is tickling her--she can't say where. The
buttons are dropping off the bed. The toads are climbing the walls. A
tickling and a tickling. "Fanny, take the wax out of my eyes! I want to
look at you!" But Fanny is laughing, squirming with laughter. There is
something inside her, tickling and tickling. She'll die laughing if she
doesn't find it. "Fanny, the trunk is full of beautiful things. Fanny, do
you hear me?" Fanny is laughing, laughing like a fat worm. Her belly is
swollen with laughter. Her legs are getting blue. "O God, Morris, there is
something tickling me ... I can't help it!"
53
Sunday! Left the Villa Borghese a little before noon, just as Boris was
getting ready to sit down to lunch. I left out of a sense of delicacy,
because it really pains Boris to see me sitting there in the studio with an
empty belly. Why he doesn't invite me to lunch with him I don't know. He
says he can't afford it, but that's no excuse. Anyway, I'm delicate about
it. If it pains him to eat alone in my presence it would probably pain him
more to share his meal with me. It's not my place to pry into his secret
affairs.
Dropped in at the Cronstadts' and they were eating too. A young chicken with
wild rice. Pretended that I had eaten already, but I could have torn the
chicken from the baby's hands. This is not just false modesty--it's a kind
of perversion, I'm thinking. Twice they asked me if I wouldn't join them.
No! No! Wouldn't even accept a cup of coffee after the meal. I'm
delicat, I am! On the way out I cast a lingering glance at the bones
lying on the baby's plate--there was still meat on them.
Prowling around aimlessly. A beautiful day--so far. The Rue de Buci is
alive, crawling. The bars wide open and the curbs lined with bicycles. All
the meat and vegetable markets are in full swing. Arms loaded with truck
bandaged in newspapers. A fine Catholic Sunday--in the morning, at least.
High noon and here I am standing on an empty belly at the confluence of all
these crooked lanes that reek with the odor of food. Opposite me is the
Hotel de Louisiane. A grim old hostelry known to the bad boys of the Rue de
Boci in the good old days. Hotels and food, and I'm walking about like a
leper with crabs gnawing at my entrails. On Sunday mornings there's a fever
in the streets.
54
Nothing like it anywhere, except perhaps on the East Side, or down around
Chatham Square. The Rue de 1'Echaude is seething. The streets twist and
turn, at every angle a fresh hive of activity. Long queues of people with
vegetables under their arms, turning in here and there with crisp, sparkling
appetites. Nothing but food, food, food. Makes one delirious.
Pass the Square de Furstemberg. Looks different now, at high noon. The other
night when I passed by it was deserted, bleak, spectral. In the middle of
the square four black trees that have not yet begun to blossom.
Intellectual trees, nourished by the paving stones. Like T. S. Eliot's
verse. Here, by God, if Marie Laurencin ever brought her Lesbians out into
the open, would be the place for them to commune. Tres lesbienne id.
Sterile, hybrid, dry as Boris' heart.
In the little garden adjoining the Eglise St. Germain are a few dismounted
gargoyles. Monsters that jut forward with a terrifying plunge. On the
benches other monsters-- old people, idiots, cripples, epileptics. Snoozing
quietly, waiting for the dinner bell to ring. At the Galerie Zak across the
way some imbecile has made a picture of the cosmos--on the flat. A
painter's cosmos! Full of odds and ends, bric-a-brac. In the lower left-hand
comer, however, there's an anchor--and a dinner bell. Salute! Salute, O
Cosmos!
Still prowling around. Mid-aftemoon. Guts rattling. Beginning to rain now.
Notre-Dame rises tomb-like from the water. The gargoyles lean far out over
the lace facade. They hang there like an idee fixe in the mind of a
monomaniac. An old man with yellow whiskers approaches me. Has some
Jaworski nonsense in his hand. Comes up to me with his head thrown back and
the rain splashing in his face turns the golden sands to mud. Book store
with some of Raoul Dufy's drawings in the window. Drawings of charwomen with
rose bushes between their legs. A treatise on the philosophy of Joan Miro.
The philosophy, mind you!
In the same window: A Man Cut In Slices! Chapter one: the man in the
eyes of his family. Chapter two: the same in the eyes of his mistress.
Chapter three:--No chapter three. Have to come back tomorrow for chapters
55
three and four. Every day the window trimmer turns a fresh page. A man
cut in slices . . . You can't imagine how furious I am not to have
thought of a title like that! Where is this bloke who writes "the same in
the eyes of his mistress . . . the same in the eyes of ... the same . . ."?
Where is this guy? Who is he? I want to hug him. I wish to Christ I had had
brains enough to think of a title like that--instead of Crazy Cock
and the other fool things I invented. Well, fuck a duck! I congratulate him
just the same.
I wish him luck with his fine title. Here's another slice for you--for your
next book! Ring me up some day. I'm living at the Villa Borghese. We're all
dead, or dying, or about to die. We need good titles. We need meat--slices
and slices of meat--juicy tenderloins, porterhouse steaks, kidneys, mountain
oysters, sweetbreads. Some day, when I'm standing at the comer of 42nd
Street and Broadway, I'm going to remember this title and I'm going to put
down everything that goes on in my noodle--caviar, rain drops, axle-grease,
vermicelli, liverwurst--slices and slices of it. And I'll tell no one why,
after I had put everything down, I suddenly went home and chopped the baby
to pieces. Un acte gratuit pour vous, cher monsieur si bien coupe en
tranches!
How a man can wander about all day on an empty belly, and even get an
erection once in a while, is one of those mysteries which are too easily
explained by the "anatomists of the soul." On a Sunday afternoon, when the
shutters are down and the proletariat possesses the street in a kind of dumb
torpor, there are certain thoroughfares which remind one of nothing less
than a big chancrous cock laid open longitudinally. And it is just these
highways, the Rue St. Denis, for instance, or the Faubourg du Temple--which
attract one irresistibly, much as in the old days, around Union Square or
the upper reaches of the Bowery, one was drawn to the dime museums where in
the show-windows there were displayed wax reproductions of various organs
of the body eaten away by syphilis and other venereal diseases. The city
sprouts out like a huge organism diseased in every part, the beautiful
thoroughfares only a little less repulsive because they have been drained
of their pus.
56
At the Cite Nortier, somewhere near the Place du Combat, 1 pause a few
minutes to drink in the full squalor of the scene. It is a rectangular court
like many another which one glimpses through the low passageways that flank
the old arteries of Paris. In the middle of the court is a clump of decrepit
buildings which have so rotted away that they have collapsed on one another
and formed a sort of intestinal embrace. The ground is uneven, the flagging
slippery with slime. A sort of human dump-heap which has been filled in with
cinders and dry garbage. The sun is setting fast. The colors die. They shift
from purple to dried blood, from nacre to bistre, from cool dead grays to
pigeon shit. Here and there a lop-sided monster stands in the window
blinking like an owl. There is the shrill squawk of children with pale faces
and bony limbs, rickety little urchins marked with the forceps. A fetid odor
seeps from the walls, the odor of a mildewed mattress Europe--medieval,
grotesque, monstrous: a symphony in B mol. Directly across the street the
Cine Combat offers its distinguished clientele Metropolis.
Coming away my mind reverts to a book that I was reading only the other day.
"The town was a shambles; corpses, mangled by butchers and stripped by
plunderers, lay thick in the streets; wolves sneaked from the suburbs to eat
them; the black death and other plagues crept in to keep them company, and
the English came marching on; the while the danse macabre whirled
about the tombs in all the cemeteries ..." Paris during the days of Charles
the Silly! A lovely book! Refreshing, appetizing. I'm still enchanted by
it. About the patrons and prodromes of the Renaissance I know little, but
Madam Pimpernel, la belle boulangere, and Maitre Jehan Crapotte,
I'orfevre, these occupy my spare thoughts still. Not forgetting
Rodin, the evil genius of The Wandering Jew, who practised his
nefarious ways "until the day when he was enflamed and outwitted by the
octoroon Cecily." Sitting in the Square du Temple, musing over the doings of
the horse-knackers led by Jean Caboche, I have thought long and ruefully
over the. sad fate of Charles the Silly. A half-wit, who prowled
about the halls of his Hotel St. Paul, garbed in the filthiest rags, eaten
away by ulcers and vermin, gnawing a bone, when they flung him one, like a
mangy dog. At the Rue des
57
Lions I looked for the stones of the old menagerie where he once fed his
pets. His only diversion, poor dolt, aside from those card games with his
"low-born companion," Odette de Champsdivers.
It was a Sunday afternoon, much like this, when I first met Germaine. I was
strolling along the Boulevard Beaumarchais, rich by a hundred francs or so
which my wife had frantically cabled from America. There was a touch of
spring in the air, a poisonous, malefic spring that seemed to burst from the
man-holes. Night after night I had been coming back to this quarter,
attracted by certain leprous streets which only revealed their sinister
splendor when the light of day had oozed away and the whores commenced to
take up their posts. The Rue Pasteur-Wagner is one I recall in particular,
comer of the Rue Amelot which hides behind the boulevard like a slumbering
lizard. Here, at the neck of the bottle, so to speak, there was always a
cluster of vultures who croaked and flapped their dirty wings, who reached
out with sharp talons and plucked you into a doorway. Jolly, rapacious
devils who didn't even give you time to button your pants when it was over.
Led you into a little room off the street, a room without a window usually,
and, sitting on the edge of the bed with skirts tucked up gave you a quick
inspection, spat on your cock, and placed it for you. While you washed
yourself another one stood at the door and, holding her victim by one hand,
watched nonchalantly as you gave the finishing touches to your toilet.
Germaine was different. There was nothing to tell me so from her appearance.
Nothing to distinguish her from the other trollops who met each afternoon
and evening at the Cafe de 1'Elephant. As I say, it was a spring day and the
few francs my wife had scraped up to cable me were jingling in my pocket. I
had a sort of vague premonition that I would not reach the Bastille without
being taken in tow by one of these buzzards. Sauntering along the boulevard
I had noticed her verging towards me with that curious trot-about air of a
whore and the rundown heels and the cheap jewelry and the pasty look of
their kind which the rouge only accentuates. It was not difficult to come
to terms with her. We sat in the back of the little tabac called
L'Elephant and talked it over quickly.
58
In a few minutes we were in a five-franc room on the Rue Amelot, the
curtains drawn and the covers thrown back. She didn't rush things, Germaine.
She sat on the bidet soaping herself and talked to me pleasantly
about this and that; she liked the knickerbockers I was wearing. Tres
chic! she thought. They were once, but I had worn the seat out of them;
fortunately the jacket covered my ass. As she stood up to dry herself, still
talking to me pleasantly, suddenly she dropped the towel and, advancing
towards me leisurely, she commenced rubbing her pussy affectionately,
stroking it with her two hands, caressing it, patting it, patting it. There
was something about her eloquence at that moment and the way she thrust
that rose-bush under my nose which remains unforgettable; she spoke of it as
if it were some extraneous object which she had acquired at great cost, an
object whose value had increased with time and which now she prized above
everything in the world. Her words imbued it with a peculiar fragrance; it
was no longer just her private organ, but a treasure, a magic, potent
treasure, a God-given thing-- and none the less so because she traded it day
in and day out for a few pieces of silver. As she flung herself on the bed,
with legs spread wide apart, she cupped it with her hands and stroked it
some more, murmuring all the while in that hoarse, cracked voice of hers
that it was good, beautiful, a treasure, a little treasure. And it was
good, that little pussy of hers! That Sunday afternoon, with its
poisonous breath of spring in the air, everything clicked again. As we
stepped out of the hotel I looked her over again in the harsh light of day
and I saw clearly what a whore she was--the gold teeth, the geranium in her
hat, the run-down heels, etc., etc. Even the fact that she had wormed
a dinner out of me and cigarettes and taxi hadn't the least disturbing
effect upon me. I encouraged it, in fact. I liked her so well that after
dinner we went back to the hotel again and took another shot at it. "For
love," this time. And again that big, bushy thing of hers worked its bloom
and magic. It began to have an independent existence--for me too. There was
Germaine and there was that rose-bush of hers. I liked them separately and
I liked them together.
As I say, she was different, Germaine. Later, when she
59
discovered my true circumstances, she treated me nobly--blew me to drinks,
gave me credit, pawned my things, introduced me to her friends, and so on.
She even apologized for not lending me money, which I understood quite well
after her maquereau had been pointed out to me. Night after night I
walked down the Boulevard Beaumarchais to the little tabac where they
all congregated and I waited for her to stroll in and give me a few minutes
of her precious time.
When, some time later, I came to write about Claude it was not Claude that I
was thinking of, but Germaine.... "All the men she's been with and now you,
just you, and barges going by, masts and hulls, the whole damned current of
life flowing through you, through her, through all the guys behind you and
after you, the flowers and the birds and the sun streaming in and the
fragrance of it choking you, annihilating you." That was for Germaine!
Claude was not the same, though I admired her tremendously--I even thought
for a while that I loved her. Claude had a soul and a conscience; she had
refinement, too, which is bad--in a whore. Claude always imparted a
feeling of sadness; she left the impression, unwittingly, of course, that
you were just one more added to the stream which fate had ordained to
destroy her. Unwittingly, I say, because Claude was the last person
in the world who would consciously create such an image in one's mind. She
was too delicate, too sensitive for that. At bottom, Claude was just a good
French girl of average breed and intelligence whom life had tricked somehow;
something in her there was which was not tough enough to withstand the shock
of daily experience. For her were meant those terrible words of
Louis-Philippe: "and a night comes when all is over, when so many jaws have
closed upon us that we no longer have the strength to stand, and our meat
hangs upon our bodies, as though it had been masticated by every mouth."
Germaine, on the other hand, was a whore from the cradle; she was thoroughly
satisfied with her role, enjoyed it in fact, except when her stomach pinched
or her shoes gave out, little surface things of no account, nothing that ate
into her soul, nothing that created torment. Ennui! That was the
worst she ever felt. Days there were, no doubt, when she
60
had a bellyful, as we say--but no more than that! Most of the time she
enjoyed it--or gave the illusion of enjoying it. It made a difference of
course, whom she went with--or came with. But the principal thing was
a man. A man! That was what she craved. A man with something between
his legs that could tickle her, that could make her writhe in ecstasy, make
her grab that bushy twat of hers with both hands and rub it joyfully,
boastfully, proudly, with a sense of connection, a sense of life. That was
the only place where she experienced any life--down there where she clutched
herself with both hands.
Germaine was a whore all the way through, even down to her good heart, her
whore's heart which is not really a good heart but a lazy one, an
indifferent, flaccid heart that can be touched for a moment, a heart without
reference to any fixed point within, a big, flaccid whore's heart that can
detach itself for a moment from its true center. However vile and
circumscribed was that world which she had created for herself, nevertheless
she functioned in it su-perbly. And that in itself is a tonic thing. When,
after we had become well acquainted, her companions would twit me, saying
that I was in love with Germaine (a situation almost inconceivable to them),
I would say: "Sure! Sure, I'm in love with her! And what's more, I'm going
to be faithful to her!" A lie, of course, because I could no more think of
loving Germaine than I could think of loving a spider; and if I was
faithful, it was not to Germaine but to that bushy thing she carried between
her legs. Whenever I looked at another woman I thought immediately of
Germaine, of that flaming bush which she had left in my mind and which
seemed imperishable. It gave me pleasure to sit on the terrasse of
the little tabac and observe her as she plied her trade, observe her
as she resorted to the same grimaces, the same tricks, with others as she
had with me. "She's doing her job!"--that's how I felt about it, and it was
with approbation that I regarded her transactions. Later, when I had taken
up with Claude, and I saw her night after night sitting in her accustomed
place, her round little buttocks chubbily ensconced in the plush settee, I
felt a sort of inexpressible rebellion towards her;
a whore, it seemed to me, had no right to be sitting there like a lady,
waiting timidly for some one to approach and
61
all the while abstemiously sipping her chocolat. Germaine was a
hustler. She didn't wait for you to come to her--she went out and grabbed
you. I remember so well the holes in her stockings, and the torn ragged
shoes; I remember too how she stood at the bar and with blind, courageous
defiance threw a strong drink down her stomach and marched out again. A
hustler! Perhaps it wasn't so pleasant to smell that boozy breath of hers,
that breath compounded of weak coffee, cognac, aperitifs, pemods and
all the other stuff she guzzled between times, what to warm herself and what
to summon up strength and courage, but the fire of it penetrated her, it
glowed down there between her legs where women ought to glow, and there was
established that circuit which makes one feel the earth under his legs
again. When she lay there with her legs apart and moaning, even if she did
moan that way for any and everybody, it was good, it was a proper show of
feeling. She didn't stare up at the ceiling with a vacant look or count the
bedbugs on the wall-paper; she kept her mind on her business, she talked
about the things a man wants to hear when he's climbing over a woman.
Whereas Claude--well, with Claude there was always a certain delicacy, even
when she got under the sheets with you. And her delicacy offended me. Who
wants a delicate whore! Claude would even ask you to turn your face
away when she squatted over the bidet. All wrong! A man, when he's
burning up with passion, wants to see things; he wants to see
everything, even how they make water. And while it's all very nice to
know that a woman has a mind, literature coming from the cold corpse of a
whore is the last thing to be served in bed. Germaine had the right idea:
she was ignorant and lusty, she put her heart and soul into her work. She
was a whore all the way through--and that was her virtue!
Easter came in like a frozen hare--but it was fairly warm in bed. Today it
is lovely again and along the Champs-Elysees at twilight it is like an
outdoor seraglio choked with dark-eyed houris. The trees are in full
foliage and of a verdure so pure, so rich, that it seems as though they
were still wet and glistening with dew. From the Palais du Louvre to the
Etoile it is like a piece of music for the pianoforte. For five days I have
not touched the typewriter nor looked at a book; nor have I had a single
idea in my head except to go to the American Express. At nine this morning
I was there, just as the doors were being opened, and again at one o'clock.
No news. At four-thirty I dash out of the hotel, resolved to make a last
minute stab at it. Just as I turn the comer I brush against Walter Pach.
Since he doesn't recognize me, and since I have nothing to say to him, I
make no attempt to arrest him. Later, when I am stretching my legs in the
Tuileries his figure reverts to mind. He was a little stooped, pensive, with
a sort of serene yet reserved smile on his face. I wonder, as I look up at
this softly enamelled sky, so faintly tinted, which does not bulge today
with heavy rain clouds but smiles like a piece of old china, I wonder what
goes on in the mind of this man who translated the four thick volumes of
the History of Art when he takes in this blissful cosmos with his
drooping eye.
Along the Champs-Elysees, ideas pouring from me like sweat. I ought to be
rich enough to have a secretary to whom I could dictate as I walk, because
my best thoughts always come when I am away from the machine.
Walking along the Champs-Elysees I keep thinking of my really superb health.
When I say "health" I mean optimism, to be truthful. Incurably optimistic!
Still have one
63
foot in the 19th century. I'm a bit retarded, like most Americans.
Carl finds it disgusting, this optimism. "I have only to talk about a meal,"
he says, "and you're radiant!" It's a fact. The mere thought of a
meal--another meal--rejuvenates me. A meal! That means something to
go on--a few solid hours of work, an erection possibly. I don't deny it. I
have health, good, solid, animal health. The only thing that stands between
me and a future is a meal, another meal.
As for Carl, he's not himself these days. He's upset, his nerves are
jangled. He says he's ill, and I believe him, but I don't feel badly about
it.
I can't. In fact, it makes me laugh. And that offends him, of course.
Everything wounds him--my laughter, my hunger, my persistence, my
insouciance, everything. One day he wants to blow his brains out
because he can't stand this lousy hole of a Europe any more; the next day he
talks of going to Arizona "where they look you square in the eye."
"Do it!" I say. "Do one thing or the other, you bastard, but don't try to
cloud my healthy eye with your melancholy breath!"
But that's just it! In Europe one gets used to doing nothing. You sit on
your ass and whine all day. You get contaminated. You rot.
Fundamentally Carl is a snob, an aristocratic little prick who lives in a
dementia praecox kingdom all his own. "I hate Paris!" he whines. "All these
stupid people playing cards all day ... look at them! And this writing!
What's the use of putting words together? I can be a writer without
writing, can't I? What does it prove if I write a book? What do we want with
books anyway? There are too many books already ..."
My eye, but I've been all over that ground--years and years ago. I've lived
out my melancholy youth. I don't give a fuck any more what's behind me, or
what's ahead Of me. I'm healthy. Incurably healthy. No sorrows, no regrets.
No past, no future. The present is enough for me. Day by day. Today! Le
bel aujourd'hui!
He has one day a week off, Carl, and on that day he's more miserable, if you
can imagine it, than on any other day of the week. Though he professes to
despise food, the
64
only way he seems to enjoy himself on his day off is to order a big spread.
Perhaps he does it for my benefit--I don't know, and I don't ask. If he
chooses to add martyrdom to his list of vices, let him--it's O. K. with me.
Anyway, last Tuesday, after squandering what he had on a big spread, he
steers me to the D6me, the last place in the world I would seek on my day
off. But one not only gets acquiescent here--one gets supine.
Standing at the D6me bar is Marlowe, soused to the ears. He's been on a
bender, as he calls it, for the last five days. That means a continuous
drunk, a peregrination from one bar to another, day and night without
interruption, and finally a lay-off at the American Hospital. Marlowe's
bony emaciated face is nothing but a skull perforated by two deep sockets
in which there are buried a pair of dead clams. His back is covered with
sawdust--he has just had a little snooze in the water-closet. In his coat
pocket are the proofs for the next issue of his review, he was on his way to
the printer with the proofs, it seems, when some one inveigled him to have a
drink. He talks about it as though it happened months ago. He takes out the
proofs and spreads them over the bar; they are full of coffee stains and
dried spittle. He tries to read a poem which he had written in Greek, but
the proofs are undecipherable. Then he decides to deliver a speech, in
French, but the gerant puts a stop to it. Marlowe is piqued: his one
ambition is to talk a French which even the garcon will understand.
Of old French he is a master; of the Surrealists he has made excellent
translations; but to say a simple thing like "get the hell out of here, you
old prick!"--that is beyond him. Nobody understands Marlowe's French, not
even the whores. For that matter, it's difficult enough to understand his
English when he's under the weather. He blabbers and spits like a confirmed
stutterer ... no sequence to his phrases. "You pay!" that's one thing
he manages to get out clearly.
Even if he is fried to the hat some fine preservative instinct always warns
Marlowe when it is time to act. If there is any doubt in his mind as to how
the drinks are going to be paid he will be sure to put on a stunt. The usual
one is to pretend that he is going blind. Carl knows all his tricks by now,
and so when Marlowe suddenly
65
claps his hands to his temples and begins to act it out Carl gives him a
boot in the ass and says: "Come out of it, you sap! You don't have to do
that with me!"
Whether it is a cunning piece of revenge or not, I don't know, but at any
rate Marlowe is paying Carl back in good coin. Leaning over us
confidentially he relates in a hoarse, croaking voice a piece of gossip
which he picked . up in the course of his peregrinations from bar to bar.
Carl looks up in amazement. He's pale under the gills. Marlowe repeats the
story with variations. Each time Carl wilts a little more. "But that's
impossible!" he finally blurts out. "No, it ain't!" croaks Marlowe. "You're
gonna lose your job ... I got it straight." Carl looks at me in despair.
"Is he shifting me, that bastard?" he murmurs in my ear. And then
aloud--"What am I going to do now? I'll never find another job. It took me a
year to land this one."
This, apparently, is all that Marlowe has been waiting to hear. At last he
has found someone worse off than himself. "They be hard times!" he croaks,
and his bony skull glows with a cold, electric fire.
Leaving the Dome Marlowe explains between hiccups that he's got to return to
San Francisco. He seems genuinely touched now by Carl's helplessness. He
proposes that Carl and I take over the review during his absence. "I can
trust you, Carl," he says. And then suddenly he gets an attack, a real one
this time. He almost collapses in the gutter. We haul him to a
bistrot at the Boulevard Edgar Quinet and sit him down. This time
he's really got It--a blinding headache that makes him squeal and grunt and
rock himself to and fro like a dumb brute that's been struck by a
sledge-hammer. We spill a couple of Femet-Brancas down his throat, lay him
out on the bench and cover his eyes with his muffler. He lies there
groaning. In a little while we hear him snoring.
"What about his proposition?" says Carl. "Should we take it up? He says
he'll give me a thousand francs when he comes back. I know he won't, but
what about it?" He looks at Marlowe sprawled out on the bench, lifts the
muffler from his eyes, and puts it back again. Suddenly a mischievous grin
lights up his face. "Listen, Joe," he says, beckoning me to move closer,
"we'll take him up on
66
it. We'll take his lousy review over and we'll fuck him good and proper."
"What do you mean by that?"
"Why we'll throw out all the other contributors and we'll fill it with our
own shit--that's what!"
"Yeah, but what kind of shit?"
"Any kind ... he won't be able to do anything about it. We'll fuck him good
and proper. One good number and after that the magazine'll be finished. Are
you game, Joe?"
Grinning and chuckling we lift Marlowe to his feet and haul him to Carl's
room. When we turn on the lights there's a woman in the bed waiting for
Carl. "I forgot all about her," says Carl. We turn the cunt loose and shove
Marlowe into bed. In a minute or so there's a knock at the door. It's Van
Norden. He's all aflutter. Lost a plate of false teeth--at the Bal Negre, he
thinks. Anyway, we get to bed, the four of us. Marlowe stinks like a smoked
fish.
In the morning Marlowe and Van Norden leave to search for the false teeth.
Marlowe is blubbering. He imagines they are his teeth.
I
t is my last dinner at the dramatist's home. They have just rented a new
piano, a concert grand. I meet Sylvester coming out of the florist's with a
rubber plant in his arms. He asks me if I would carry it for him while he
goes for the cigars. One by one I've fucked myself out of all these free
meals which I had planned so carefully. One by one the husbands turn against
me, or the wives. As I walk along with the rubber plant in my arms I think
of that night a few months back when the idea first occurred to me. I was
sitting on a bench near the Coupole, fingering the wedding ring which I had
tried to pawn off on a garcon at the Dome. He had offered me six
francs for it and I was in a rage about it. But the belly was getting the
upper hand. Ever since I left Mona I had worn the ring on my pinkie. It was
so much a part of me that it had never occurred to me to sell it. It was one
of those orange-blossom affairs in white gold. Worth a dollar and a half
once, may be more. For three years we went along without a wedding ring and
then one day when I was going to the pier to meet Mona I happened to pass a
jewelry window on Maiden Lane and the whole window was staffed with wedding
rings. When I got to the pier Mona Was not to be seen. I waited for the last
passenger to descend the gangplank, but no Mona. Finally I asked to be
shown the passenger list. Her name was not on it. I slipped the wedding ring
on my pinkie and there it stayed. Once I left it in a public bath, but then
I got it back again. One of the orange blossoms had fallen off. Anyway, I
was sitting there on the bench with my head down, twiddling the ring, when
suddenly someone clapped me on the back. To make it brief, I got a meal and
a few francs besides. And then it occurred to me, like
68
a flash, that no one would refuse a man a meal if only he had the courage to
demand it. I went immediately to a cafe and wrote a dozen letters. "Would
you let me have dinner with you once a week? Tell me what day is most
convenient for you." It worked like a charm. I was not only fed ... I was
feasted. Every night I went home drunk. They couldn't do enough for me,
these generous once-a-week souls. What happened to me between times was none
of their affair. Now and then the thoughtful ones presented me with
cigarettes, or a little pin money. They were all obviously relieved when
they realized that they would see me only once a week. And they were still
more relieved when I said--"it won't be necessary any more." They never
asked why. They congratulated me, and that was all. Often the reason was I
had found a better host; I could afford to scratch off the ones who were a
pain in the ass. But that thought never occurred to them. Finally I had a
steady, solid program--a fixed schedule. On Tuesdays I knew it would be this
kind of a meal and on Fridays that kind. Cronstadt, I knew, would have
champagne for me and home-made apple pie. And Carl would invite me out, take
me to a different restaurant each time, order rare wines, invite me to the
theatre afterwards or take me to the Cirque Medrano. They were curious about
one another, my hosts. Would ask me which place I liked best, who was the
best cook, etc. I think I liked Cronstadt's joint best of all, perhaps
because he chalked the meal up on the wall each time. Not that it eased my
conscience to see what I owed him, because I had no intention of paying him
back nor had he any illusions about being requited. No, it was the odd
numbers which intrigued me. He used to figure it out to the last centime. If
I was to pay in full I would have had to break a sou. His wife was a
marvellous cook and she didn't give a fuck about those centimes Cronstadt
added up. She took it out of me in carbon copies. A fact! If I hadn't any
fresh carbons for her when I showed up, she was crestfallen. And for that I
would have to take the little girl to the Luxembourg next day, play with her
for two or three hours, a task which drove me wild because she spoke nothing
but Hungarian and French. They were a queer lot on the whole, my hosts ...
69
At Tania's I look down on the spread from the balcony. Moldorf is there,
sitting beside his idol. He is warming his feet at the hearth, a monstrous
look of gratitude in his watery eyes. Tania is running over the adagio. The
adagio says very distinctly: no more words of love! I am at the fountain
again, watching the turtles pissing green milk. Sylvester has just come back
from Broadway with a heart full of love. All night I was lying on a bench
outside the mall while the globe was sprayed with warm turtle piss and the
horses stiffened with priapic fury galloped like mad without ever touching
the ground. All night long I smell the lilacs in the little dark room where
she is taking down her hair, the lilacs that I bought for her as she went to
meet Sylvester. He came back with a heart full of love, she said, and the
lilacs are in her hair, her mouth, they are choking her armpits. The room is
swimming with love and turtle piss and warm lilacs and the horses are
galloping like mad. In the morning dirty teeth and scum on the
window-panes; the little gate that leads to the mall is locked. People
are going to work and the shutters are rat-ding like coats of mail. In the
book-store opposite the fountain is the story of Lake Tchad, the silent
lizards, the gorgeous gamboge tints. All the letters I wrote her, drunken
ones with a blunt stub, crazy ones with bits of charcoal, little pieces from
bench to bench, fire-crackers, doilies, tutti-frutti; they will be going
over them now, together, and he will compliment me one day. He will say, as
he flicks his cigar ash: "Really, you write quite well. Let's see, you're a
Surrealist, aren't you?" Dry, brittle voice, teeth full of dandruff, solo
for solar plexus, g for gaga.
Up on the balcony with the rubber plant and the adagio going on down below.
The keys are black and white, then black, then white, then white and black.
And you want to know if you can play something for me. Yes, play something
with those big thumbs of yours. Play the adagio since that's the only
god-damned thing you know. Play it, and then cut off your big thumbs.
That adagio! I don't know why she insists on playing it all the time. The
old piano wasn't good enough for her;
she had to rent a concert grand--for the adagio!. When I see her big thumbs
pressing the keyboard and that silly
70
rubber plant beside me I feel like that madman of the North who threw his
clothes away and, sitting naked in the wintry boughs, threw nuts down into
the herring-frozen sea. There is something exasperating about this movement,
something abortively melancholy about it, as if it had been written in lava,
as if it had the color of lead and milk mixed. And Sylvester, with his head
cocked to one side like an auctioneer, Sylvester says: "Play that other one
you were practising today." It's beautiful to have a smoking jacket, a good
cigar and a wife who plays the piano. So relaxing. So lenitive. Between the
acts you go out for a smoke and a breath of fresh air. Yes, her fingers are
very supple, extraordinarily supple. She does batik work too. Would you
like to try a Bulgarian cigarette? I say, pigeon-breast, what's that other
movement I like so well? The scherzo! Ah, yes, the scherzo! Excellent, the
scherzo! Count Waldemar von Schwisseneinzug speaking. Cool, dandruff eyes.
Halitosis. Gaudy socks. And crotons in the pea soup, if you please. We
always have pea soup Friday nights. Won't you try a little red wine? The red
wine goes with the meat, you know. A dry, crisp voice. Have a cigar, won't
you? Yes, I like my work, but I don't attach any importance to it. My next
play will involve a pluralistic conception of the universe. Revolving drums
with calcium lights. O'Neill is dead. I think, dear, you should lift your
foot from the pedal more frequently. Yes, that part is very nice ...
very nice, don't you think? Yes, the characters go around with
microphones in their trousers. The locale is in Asia, because the
atmospheric conditions are more conducive. Would you like to try a little
Anjou? We bought it especially for you ...
All through the meal this patter continues. It feels exactly as if he had
taken out that circumcised dick of his and was peeing on us. Tania is
bursting with the strain. Ever since he came back with a heart full of love
this monologue has been going on. He talks while he's undressing, she tells
me--a steady stream of warm piss, as though his bladder had been punctured.
When I think of Tania crawling into bed with this busted bladder I get
enraged. To think that a poor, withered bastard with those cheap Broadway
plays up his sleeve should be pissing on the woman I love. Calling for red
wine and revolving
drums and crotons in his pea soup! The cheek of him! To think that he can
lie beside that furnace I stoked for him and do nothing but make water! My
God, man, you ought to get down on your knees and thank me. Don't you see
that you have a woman in your house now? Can't you see she's
bursting? You telling me with those strangulated adenoids of yours--"well
now, I'll tell you ... there's .two ways of looking at that ..." Fuck your
two ways of looking at things! Fuck your pluralistic universe, and your
Asiatic acoustics! Don't hand me your red wine or your Anjou ... hand
her over ... she belongs to me! You ,go sit by the fountain, and let
me smell the lilacs! Pick the dandruff from out of your eyes .. . and
take that damned adagio and wrap it in a pair of flannel pants! And the
other little movement too ... all the little movements that you make with
your weak bladder. You smile at me so confidently, so calculatingly. I'm
flattering the ass off you, can't you tell? While I listen to your crap
she's got her hand on me--but you don't see that. You think I like to
suffer--that's my role, you say. O. K. Ask her about it! She'll tell you how
I suffer. "You're cancer and delirium," she said over the phone the other
day. She's got it now, the cancer and delirium, and soon you'll have to pick
the scabs. Her veins are bursting, I tell you, and your talk is all sawdust.
No matter how much you piss away you'll never plug up the holes. What did
Mr. Wren say? Words are loneliness, I left a couple of words for you
on the table-cloth last night--you covered them with your elbows.
He's put a fence around her as if she were a dirty, stinking bone of a
saint. If he only had the courage to say 'Take her!" perhaps a miracle would
occur. Just that. Take her! and I swear everything would come out all
right. Besides, maybe I wouldn't take her--did that ever occur to him, I
wonder? Or I might take her for a while and hand her back, improved.
But putting up a fence around her, that won't work. You can't put a fence
around a human being. It ain't done any more ... You think, you poor,
withered bastard, that I'm no good for her, that I might pollute her,
desecrate her. You don't know how palatable is a polluted woman, how a
change of semen can make a woman bloom! You think a heart full of love
is enough, and perhaps it is, for the right woman, but you haven't got a
heart any more ... you are nothing but a big, empty bladder. You are
sharpening your teeth and cultivating your growl. You run at her heels like
a watchdog and you piddle everywhere. She didn't take you for a watch-dog
... she took you for a poet. You were a poet once, she said. And now what
are you? Courage, Sylvester, courage! Take the microphone out of your pants.
Put your hind leg down and stop making water everywhere. Courage, I say,
because she's ditched you already. She's contaminated, I tell you, and you
might as well take down the fence. No use asking me politely if the coffee
doesn't taste like carbolic acid: that won't scare me away. Put rat poison
in the coffee, and a little ground glass. Make some boiling hot urine and
drop a few nutmegs in it ...
It is a communal life I have been living for the last few weeks. I have had
to share myself with others, principally with some crazy Russians, a drunken
Dutchman, and a big Bulgarian woman named Olga. Of the Russians there are
chiefly Eugene and Anatole.
It was just a few days ago that Olga got out of the hospital where she had
her tubes burned out and lost a little excess weight. However she doesn't
look as if she had gone through much suffering. She weighs almost as much as
a camel-backed locomotive; she drips with perspiration, has halitosis, and
still wears her Circassian wig that looks like excelsior. She has two big
warts on her chin from which there sprouts a clump of little hairs; she is
growing a moustache.
The day after Olga was released from the hospital she commenced making shoes
again. At six in the morning she is at her bench; she knocks out two pairs
of shoes a day. Eugene complains that Olga is a burden, but the truth is
that Olga is supporting Eugene and his wife with her two pairs of shoes a
day. If Olga doesn't work there is no food. So everyone endeavours to pull
Olga to bed on time, to give her enough food to keep going, etc.
Every meal starts off with soup. Whether it be onion soup, tomato soup,
vegetable soup, or what not, the soup always tastes the same. Mostly it
tastes as if a dish rag
73
had been stewed in it--slightly sour, mildewed, scummy. I see Eugene hiding
it away in the commode after the meal. It stays there, rotting away, until
the next meal. The butter, too, is hidden away in the commode; after three
days it tastes like the big toe of a cadaver.
The smell of rancid butter frying is not particularly appetizing,
especially when the cooking is done in a room in which there is not the
slightest form of ventilation. No sooner than I open the door I feel ill.
But Eugene, as soon as he hears me coming, usually opens the shutters and
pulls back the bed-sheet which is strung up like a fish-net to keep out the
sunlight. Poor Eugene! He looks about the room at the few sticks of
furniture, at the dirty bed-sheets and the wash basin with the dirty water
still in it, and he says: "I am a slave!" Every day he says it, not once,
but a dozen times. And then he takes his guitar from the wall and sings.
But about the smell of rancid butter ... There are good associations too.
When I think of this rancid butter, I see myself standing in a little,
old-world courtyard, a very Smelly, very dreary courtyard. Through the
cracks in the shutters strange figures peer out at me ... old women with
shawls, dwarfs, rat-faced pimps, bent Jews, midinettes, bearded idiots. They
totter out into the courtyard to draw water or to rinse the slop pails. One
day Eugene asked me if I would empty the pail for him. I took it to the
comer of the yard. There was a hole in the ground and some dirty paper lying
around the hole. The little well was slimy with excrement, which in English
is shit. I tipped the pail and there was a foul, gurgling spash
followed by another and unexpected splash. When I returned the soup was
dished out. All through the meal I thought of my toothbrush--it is getting
old and the bristles get caught in my teeth.
When I sit down to eat I always sit near the window. I am afraid to sit on
the other side of the table--it is too Close to the bed and the bed is
crawling. I can see bloodstains on the gray sheets if I look that way, but
I try not to look that way. I look out on the courtyard where they are
rinsing the slop pails.
The meal is never complete without music. As soon as the cheese is passed
around Eugene jumps up and reaches
74
for the guitar which hangs over the bed. It is always the same song. He says
he has fifteen or sixteen songs in his repertoire, but I have never heard
more than three. His favorite is Channant poeme d'amour. It is full
of angoisse and tristesse.
In the afternoon we go to the cinema which is cool and dark. Eugene sits at
the piano in the big pit and I sit on a bench up front. The house is empty,
but Eugene sings as if he had for audience all the crowned heads of Europe.
The garden door is open and the odor of wet leaves sops in and the rain
blends with Eugene's angoisse and tristesse. At midnight,
after the spectators have saturated the hall with perspiration and foul
breath, I return to sleep on a bench. The exit light, swimming in a halo of
tobacco smoke, sheds a faint light on the lower comer of the asbestos
curtain; I close my eyes every night on an artificial eye ...
Standing in the courtyard with a glass eye; only half the world
intelligible. The stones are wet and mossy and in the crevices are black
toads. A big door bars the entrance to the cellar; the steps are slippery
and soiled with bat-dung. The door bulges and sags, the hinges are falling
off, but there is an enamelled sign on it, in perfect condition, which
says: "Be sure to close the door." Why close the door? I can't make it out.
I look again at the sign but it is removed; in its place there is a pane of
colored glass. I take out my artificial eye, spit on it and polish it with
my handkerchief. A woman is sitting on a dais above an immense carven desk;
she has a snake around her neck. The entire room is lined with books and
strange fish swimming in colored globes; there are maps and charts on the
wall, maps of Paris before the plague, maps of the antique world, of Knossus
and Carthage, of Carthage before and after the salting. In a comer of the
room I see an iron bedstead and on it a corpse is lying; the woman gets up
wearily, removes the corpse from the bed and absent-mindedly throws it out
the window. She returns to the huge carven desk, takes a goldfish from the
bowl and swallows it. Slowly the room begins to revolve and one by one the
continents slide into the sea; only the woman is left, but her body is a
mass of geography. I lean out the
75
window and the Eiffel Tower is fizzing champagne; it is built entirely of
numbers and shrouded in black lace. The sewers are gurgling furiously. There
are nothing but roofs everywhere, laid out with execrable geometric cunning.
I have been ejected from the world like a cartridge. A deep fog has settled
down, the earth is smeared with frozen grease. I can feel the city
palpitating, as if it were a heart just removed from a warm body. The
windows of my hotel are festering and there is a thick, acrid stench as of
chemicals burning. Looking into the Seine I see mud and desolation, street
lamps drowning, men and women choking to death, the bridges covered with
houses, slaughter-houses of love. A man is standing against a wall with an
accordion strapped to his belly; his hands are cut off at the wrists, but
the accordion writhes between his stamps like a sack of snakes. The universe
has dwindled;
it is only a block long and there are no stars, no trees, no rivers. The
people who live here are dead; they make chairs which other people sit on in
their dreams. In the middle of the street is a wheel and in the hub of the
wheel a gallows is fixed. People already dead are trying frantically to
mount the gallows, but the wheel is turning too fast ...
Something was needed to put me right with myself. Last night I discovered
it: Papini. It doesn't matter to me whether he's a chauvinist, a
little Christer, or a nearsighted pedant. As a failure he's marvellous ...
The books he read--at eighteen! Not only Homer, Dante, Goethe, not only
Aristotle, Plato, Epictetus, not only Rabelais, Cervantes, Swift, not only
Walt Whitman, Edgar Allan Poe, Baudelaire, Villon, Carducci, Manzoni,
Lope de Vega, not only Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, Kant, Hegel, Darwin,
Spencer, Huxley--not only these but all the small fry in between. This on
page 18. Alors, ob page 232 he breaks down and confesses. I know
nothing, he admits. I know the titles, I have compiled bibliographies, I
have written critical essays, I have maligned and defamed ... I can talk for
five minutes or for five days, but then I give out, I am squeezed dry.
Follows this: "Everybody wants to see me. Everybody .insists on talking to
me. People pester me and they pester
76
others with inquiries about what I am doing. How am I? Am I quite well
again? Do I still go for my walks in the country? Am I working? Have I
finished my book? Will I begin another soon?
"A skinny monkey of a German wants me to translate his works. A wild-eyed
Russian girl wants me to write an account of my life for her. An American
lady wants the very latest news about me. An American gentleman will
send his carriage to take me to dinner--just an intimate, confidential talk,
you know. An old schoolmate and chum of mine, of ten years ago, wants me to
read him all that I write as fast as I write it. A painter friend I know
expects me to pose for him by the hour. A newspaper man wants my present
address. An acquaintance, a mystic, inquires about the state of my soul;
another, more practical, about the state of my pocketbook. The president of
my club wonders if I will make a speech for the boys! A lady, spiritually
inclined, hopes I will come to her house for tea as often as possible. She
wants to have my opinion of Jesus Christ, and--what do I think of that new
medium? ...
"Great God! what have I turned into? What right have you people to clutter
up my life, steal my time, probe my soul, suckle my thoughts, have me for
your companion, confidant, and information bureau? What do you take me for?
Am I an entertainer on salary, required every evening to play an
intellectual farce under your stupid noses? Am I a slave, bought and paid
for, to crawl on my belly in front of you idlers and lay at your feet all
that I do and all that I know? Am I a wench in a brothel who is called upon
to lift her skirts or take off her chemise at the bidding of the first man
in a tailored suit who comes along?
"I am a man who would live an heroic life and make the world more endurable
in his own sight: If, in some moment of weakness, of relaxation, of need, I
blow off steam--a bit of red-hot rage cooled off in words--a passionate
dream, wrapped and tied in imagery--well, take it or leave it ... but
don't bother me!
"I am a free man--and I need my freedom. I need to be alone. I need to
ponder my shame and my despair in seclusion; I need the sunshine and the
paving stones of the streets without companions, without conversation, face
to face with myself, with only the music of my heart
77
for company. What do you want of me? When I have something to say, I put it
in print. When I have something to give, I give it. Your prying curiosity
turns my stomach! Your compliments humiliate me! Your tea poisons me! I owe
nothing to any one. I would be responsible to God alone--if He existed!"
It seems to me Papini misses something by a hair's breadth when he talks of
the need to be alone. It is not difficult to be alone if you are poor and a
failure. An artist is always alone--if he is an artist. No, what the
artist needs is loneliness.
The artist, I call myself. So be it. A beautiful nap this afternoon that put
velvet between my vertebrae. Generated enough ideas to last me three days.
Chock full of energy and nothing to do about it. Decide to go for a walk.
In the street I change my mind. Decide to go to the movies. Can't go to the
movies--short a few sous. A walk then. At every movie house I stop and look
at the billboards, then at the price list. Cheap enough, these opium
joints, but I'm short just a few sous. If it weren't so late I might go back
and cash an empty bottle.
By the time I get to the Rue Amelie I've forgotten all about the movies. The
Rue Amelie is one of my favorite streets. It is one of those streets which
by good fortune the municipality has forgotten to pave. Huge cobblestones
spreading convexly from one side of the street to the other. Only one block
long and narrow. The Hotel Pretty is on this street. There is a little
church, too, on the Rue Amelie. It looks as though it were made especially
for the President of the Republic and his private family. It's good
occasionally to see a modest little church. Paris is full of pompous
cathedrals.
Pont Alexandre III. A great wind-swept space approaching the bridge. Gaunt
bare trees mathematically fixed in their iron grates; the gloom of the
Invalides welling out of the dome and overflowing the dark streets adjacent
to the Square. The morgue of poetry. They have him where they want him now,
the great warrior, the last big man of Europe. He sleeps soundly in his
granite bed. No fear of him turning over in his grave. The doors are well
bolted, the lid is on tight. Sleep, Napoleon! It was not your ideas they
wanted, it was only your corpse!
78
The river is still swollen, muddy, streaked with lights. I don't know what
it is rushes up in me at the sight of this dark, swift-moving current, but a
great exultation lifts me up, affirms the deep wish that is in my never to
leave this land. I remember passing this way the other morning on my way to
the American Express, knowing in advance that there would be no mail for me,
no check, no cable, nothing, nothing. A wagon from the Galeries Lafayette
was rumbling over the bridge. The rain had stopped and the sun breaking
through the soapy clouds touched the glistening rubble of roofs with a cold
fire. I recall now how the driver leaned out and looked up the river towards
Passy way. Such a healthy, simple, approving glance, as if he were saying to
himself: "Ah, spring is coming!" And God knows, when spring comes to Paris
the humblest mortal alive must feel that he dwells in paradise. But it was
not only this--it was the intimacy with which his eye rested upon the scene.
It was his Paris. A man does not need to be rich, nor even a citizen,
to feel this way about Paris. Paris is filled with poor people--the proudest
and filthiest lot of beggars that ever walked the earth, it seems to me. And
yet they give the illusion of being at home. It is that which distinguishes
the Parisian from all other metropolitan souls.
When I think of New York I have a very different feeling. New York makes
even a rich man feel his unimportance. New York is cold, glittering, malign.
The buildings dominate. There is a sort of atomic frenzy to the activity
going on; the more furious the pace, the more diminished the spirit. A
constant ferment, but it might just as well be going on in a test-tube.
Nobody knows what it's all about. Nobody directs the energy. Stupendous.
Bizarre. Baffling. A tremendous reactive urge, but absolutely
uncoordinated.
When I think of this city where I was born and raised, this Manhattan that
Whitman sang of, a blind, white rage licks my guts. New York! The white
prisons, the sidewalks swarming with maggots, the bread lines, the opium
joints that are built like palaces, the kikes that are there, the lepers,
the thugs, and above all, the ennui, the monotony of faces, streets,
legs, houses, skyscrapers, meals, posters, jobs, crimes, loves ... A whole
city erected over
79
a hollow pit of nothingness. Meaningless. Absolutely meaningless. And
Forty-Second Street! The top of the world, they call it. Where's the bottom
then? You can walk along with your hand out and they'll put cinders in your
cap. Rich or poor, they walk along with head thrown back and they almost
break their necks looking up at their beautiful white prisons. They walk
along like blind geese and the searchlights spray their empty faces with
flecks of ecstasy.
"Life," said Emerson, "consists in what a man is thinking all day." If that
be so, then my life is nothing but a big intestine. I not only think about
food all day, but I dream about it at night.
But I don't ask to go back to America, to be put in double harness again, to
work the treadmill. No, I prefer to be a poor man of Europe. God knows, I am
poor enough; it only remains to be a man. Last week I thought the problem of
living was about to be solved, thought I was on the way to becoming
self-supporting. It happened that I ran across another Russian--Serge is his
name. He lives in Suresnes where there is a little colony of emigres
and run-down artists. Before the revolution Serge was a captain in the
Imperial Guard; he stands six foot three in his stockinged feet and drinks
vodka like a fish. His father was an admiral, or something like that, on the
battleship Potemkin.
I met Serge under rather peculiar circumstances. Sniffing about for food I
found myself towards noon the other day in the neighborhood of the Folies
Bergere--the back entrance, that is to say, in the narrow little lane with
an iron gate at one end. I was dawdling about the stage entrance, hoping
vaguely for a casual brush with one of the butterflies, when an open truck
pulls up to the sidewalk. Seeing me standing there with my hands in my
pockets the driver, who was Serge, asks me if I would give him a hand
unloading the iron barrels. When he learns that I am an American and that
I'm broke he almost weeps with joy. He has been looking high and low for an
English teacher, it seems. I help him roll the barrels of insecticide inside
and I look my fill at the butterflies fluttering about the wings. The
incident takes on strange proportions to
81
me--the empty house, the sawdust dolls bouncing in the wings, the barrels of
germicide, the battleship Potemkin--above all. Serge's gentleness. He is big
and tender, a man every inch of him, but with a woman's heart.
In the cafe nearby--Cafe des Artistes--he proposes immediately to put me up;
says he will put a mattress on the floor in the hallway. For the lessons he
says he will give me a meal every day, a big Russian meal, or if for any
reason the meal is lacking then five francs. It sounds wonderful to
me--wonderful. The only question is, how will I get from Suresnes to
the American Express every day.
Serge insists that we begin at once--he gives me the car fare to get out to
Suresnes in the evening. I arrive a little before dinner, with my knapsack,
in order to give Serge a lesson. There are some guests on hand already--
seems as though they always eat in a crowd, everybody chipping in.
There are eight of us at the table--and three dogs. The dogs eat first. They
eat oatmeal. Then we commence. We eat oatmeal too--as an hors-d'oeuvre.
"Chez. nous," says Serge, with a twinkle in his eye, "c'est pour
les chiens, les Quaker Oats. Ici pour le gentleman. Ca va." After the
oatmeal, mushroom soup and vegetables; after that bacon omelette, fruit, red
wine, vodka, coffee, cigarettes. Not bad, the Russian meal. Everyone talks
with his mouth fall. Toward the end of the meal Serge's wife who is a lazy
slut of an Armenian, flops on the couch and begins to nibble bonbons. She
fishes around in the box with her fat fingers, nibbles a tiny piece to see
if there is any juice inside, and then throws it on the floor for the dogs.
The meal over, the guests rush away. They rush away precipitously, as if
they feared a plague. Serge and I are left with the dogs--his wife has
fallen asleep on the couch. Serge moves about unconcernedly, scraping the
garbage together for the dogs. "Dogs like very much," be says. "Very good
for dogs. Little dog he has worms ... he too young yet." He bends down to
examine some white worms lying on the carpet between the dog's paws. Tries
to explain about the worms in English, but his vocabulary is lacking.
Finally he consults the dictionary.
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"Ah," he says, looking at me exultantly, "tape-worms!" My response is
evidently not very intelligent. Serge is confused. He gets down on his hands
and knees to examine them better. He picks one up and lays it on the table
beside the fruit. "Huh, him not very beeg," he grunts. "Next lesson you
learn me worms, no? You are gude teacher. I make progress with you ..."
Lying on the mattress in the hallway the odor of the germicide stifles me. A
pungent, acrid odor that seems to invade every pore of my body. The food
begins to repeat on me--the quaker oats, the mushrooms, the bacon, the fried
apples. I see the little tape-worm lying beside the fruit and all the
varieties of worms that Serge drew on the tablecloth to explain what was the
matter with the dog. I see the empty pit of the Folies Bergere and in every
crevice there are cockroaches and lice and bedbugs; I see people scratching
themselves frantically, scratching and scratching until the blood comes. I
see the worms crawling over the scenery like an army of red ants, devouring
everything in sight. I see the chorus girls throwing away their gauze
tunics and running through the aisles naked; I see the spectators in the pit
throwing off their clothes also and scratching each other like monkeys.
I try to quiet myself. After all, this is a home I've found, and there's a
meal waiting for me every day. And Serge is a brick, there's no doubt about
that. But I can't sleep. It's like going to sleep in a morgue. The mattress
is saturated with embalming fluid. It's a morgue for lice, bedbugs,
cockroaches, tape-worms. I can't stand it. I won't stand it. After
all I'm a man, not a louse.
In the morning I wait for Serge to load the truck. I ask him to take me in
to Paris. I haven't the heart to tell him I'm leaving. I leave the knapsack
behind, with the few things that were left me. When we get to the Place
Pereire I jump out. No particular reason for getting off here. No particular
reason for anything. I'm free--that's the main thing . . .
Light as a bird I flit about from one quarter to another. It's as though I
had been released from prison. I look at the world with new eyes. Everything
interests me profoundly. Even trifles. On the Rue du Faubourg Poissonniere
I stop before the window of a physical culture
establishment. There are photographs showing specimens of manhood "before
and after." All frogs. Some of them are nude, except for a pince-nez or a
beard. Can't understand how these birds fall for parallel bars and
dumb-bells. A frog should have just a wee bit of a paunch, like the Baron de
Charlus. He should wear a beard and a pince-nez, but he should never be
photographed in the nude. He should wear twinkling patent-leather boots and
in the breast pocket of his sack coat there should be a white handkerchief
protruding about three-quarters of an inch above the vent. If possible, he
should have a red ribbon in his lapel, through the button-hole. He should
wear pajamas on going to bed.
Approaching the Place Clichy toward evening I pass the little whore with the
wooden stump who stands opposite the Gaumont Palace day in and day out. She
doesn't look a day over eighteen. Has her regular customers, I suppose.
After midnight she stands there in her black rig rooted to the spot. Back of
her is the little alleyway that blazes like an inferno. Passing her now with
a light heart she reminds me somehow of a goose tied to a stake, a goose
with a diseased liver, so that the world may have its pate de foie
gras. Must be strange taking that wooden stump to bed with you. One
imagines all sorts of things-- splinters, etc. However, every man to his
taste!
Going down the Rue des Dames I bump into Peckover, another poor devil who
works on the paper. He complains of getting only three or four hours' sleep
a night--has to get up at eight in the morning to work at a dentist's
office. It isn't for the money he's doing it, so he explains-- it's for to
buy himself a set of false teeth. "It's hard to read proof when you're
dropping with sleep," he says. "The wife, she thinks I've got a cinch of it.
What would we do if you lost your job? she says." But Peckover doesn't give
a damn about the job; it doesn't even allow him spending money. He has to
save his cigarette butts and use them for pipe tobacco. His coat is held
together with pins. He has halitosis and his hands sweat. And only three
hours' sleep a night. "It's no way to treat a man," he says. "And that boss
of mine, he bawls the piss out of me if I miss a semi-colon." Speaking of
his wife he adds:
"That woman of mine, she's got no fucking gratitude, I tell you!"
In parting I manage to worm a franc fifty out of him. I try to squeeze
another fifty centimes out of him but it's impossible. Anyway I've got
enough for a coffee and croissants. Near the Gare St. Lazare there's
a bar with reduced prices.
As luck would have it I find a ticket in the lavabo for a concert.
Light as a feather now I go there to the Salle Gaveau. The usher looks
ravaged because I overlook giving him his little tip. Every time he passes
me he looks at me inquiringly, as if perhaps I will suddenly remember.
It's so long since I've sat in the company of well dressed people that I
feel a bit panic-stricken. I can still smell the formaldehyde. Perhaps Serge
makes deliveries here too. But nobody is scratching himself, thank God. A
faint odor of perfume ... very faint. Even before the music begins there is
that bored look on people's faces. A polite form of self-imposed torture,
the concert. For a moment, when the conductor raps with his little wand,
there is a tense spasm of concentration followed almost immediately by a
general slump, a quiet vegetable sort of repose induced by the steady,
uninterrupted drizzle from the orchestra. My mind is curiously alert; it's
as though my skull had a thousand mirrors inside it. My nerves are taut,
vibrant! the notes are like glass balls dancing on a million jets of water.
I've never been to a concert before on such an empty belly. Nothing escapes
me, not even the tiniest pin falling. It's as though I had no clothes on and
every pore of my body was a window and all the windows open and the light
flooding my gizzards. I can feel the light curving under the vault of my
ribs and my ribs hang there over a hollow nave trembling with
reverberations. How long this lasts I have no idea; I have lost all sense of
time and place. After what seems like an eternity there follows an interval
of semiconsciousness balanced by such a calm that I feel a great lake inside
me, a lake of iridescent sheen, cool as jelly; and over this lake, rising in
great swooping spirals, there emerge great flocks of birds, huge birds of
passage with long slim legs and brilliant plumage. Flock after flock surge
up from the cool, still surface of the lake and, passing under my
clavicles, lose
85
themselves in the white sea of space. And then slowly, very slowly, as if an
old woman in a white cap were going the rounds of my body, slowly the
windows are closed and my organs drop back into place. Suddenly the lights
flare up and the man in the white box whom I had taken for a Turkish officer
turns out to be a woman with a flower-pot on her head.
There is a buzz now and all those who want to cough cough to their heart's
content. There is the noise of feet shuffling and seats slamming, the
steady, frittering noise of people moving about aimlessly, of people
fluttering their programs and pretending to read and then dropping their
programs and scuffling under their seats, thankful for even the slightest
accident which will prevent them from asking themselves what they were
thinking about because if they knew they were thinking about nothing they
would go mad. In the harsh glare of the lights they look at each other
vacuously and there is a strange tenseness with which they stare at one
another. And the moment the conductor raps again they fall back into a
cataleptic state--they scratch themselves unconsciously or they remember
suddenly a show-window in which there was displayed a scarf or a hat; they
remember every detail of that window with amazing clarity, but where it was
exactly, that they can't recall; and that bothers them, keeps them wide
awake, restless, and they listen now with redoubled attention because they
are wide awake and no matter how wonderful the music is they will not lose
consciousness of that show-window and that scarf that was hanging there, or
the hat.
And this fierce attentiveness communicates itself; even the orchestra seems
galvanized into an extraordinary alertness. The second number goes off like
a top--so fast indeed that when suddenly the music ceases and the lights go
up some are stuck in their seats like carrots, their jaws working
convulsively, and if you suddenly shouted in their ear Brahms, Beethoven,
Mendeleieff, Herzegovina, they would answer without thinking--4, 967,
289.
By the time we get to the Debussy number the atmosphere is completely
poisoned. I find myself wondering what it feels like, during intercourse, to
be a woman-- whether the pleasure is keener, etc. Try to imagine some-
86
thing penetrating my groin, but have only a vague sensation of pain. I try
to focus, but the music is too slippery. I can think of nothing but a vase
slowly turning and the figures dropping off into space. Finally there is
only light turning, and how does light turn, I ask myself. The man next to
me is sleeping soundly. He looks like a broker, with his big paunch and his
waxed moustache. I like him thus. I like especially that big paunch and all
that went into the making of it. Why shouldn't he sleep soundly? If he wants
to listen he can always rustle up the price of a ticket. I notice that the
better dressed they are the more soundly they sleep. They have an easy
conscience, the rich. If a poor man dozes off, even for a few seconds, he
feels mortified; he imagines that he has committed a crime against the
composer.
In the Spanish number the house was electrified. Everybody sat on the edge
of his seat--the drums woke them up. I thought when the drums started it
would keep up forever. I expected to see people fall out of the boxes or
throw their hats away. There was something heroic about it and he could have
driven us stark mad. Ravel, if he had wanted to. But that's not Ravel.
Suddenly it all died down. It was as if he remembered, in the midst of his
antics, that he had on a cut-away suit. He arrested himself. A great
mistake, in my humble opinion. Art consists in going the full length. If
you start with the drums you have to end with dynamite, or TNT. Ravel
sacrificed something for form, for a vegetable that people must digest
before going to bed.
My thoughts are spreading. The music is slipping away from me, now that the
drums have ceased. People everywhere are composed to order. Under the exit
light is a Werther sunk in despair; he is leaning on his two elbows, his
eyes are glazed. Near the door, huddled in a big cape, stands a Spaniard
with a sombrero in his hand. He looks as if he were posing for the Balzac of
Rodin. From the neck up he suggests Buffalo Bill. In the gallery opposite
me, in the front row, sits a woman with her legs spread wide apart; she
looks as though she had lock-jaw, with her neck thrown back and dislocated.
The woman with the red hat who is dozing over the rail--marvellous if she
87
were to have a hemorrhage! if suddenly she spilled a bucketful on those
stiff shirts below. Imagine these bloody no-accounts going home from the
concert with blood on their dickies!
Sleep is the keynote. No one is listening any more. Impossible to think and
listen. Impossible to dream even when the music itself is nothing but a
dream. A woman with white gloves holds a swan in her lap. The legend is that
when Leda was fecundated she gave birth to twins. Everybody is giving birth
to something--everybody but the Lesbian in the upper tier. Her head is
uptilted, her throat wide open; she is all alert and tingling with the
shower of sparks that burst from the radium symphony. Jupiter is piercing
her ears. Little phrases from California, whales with big fins, Zanzibar,
the Alcazar. When along the Guadalquivir there were a thousand mosques
a-shimmer. Deep in the icebergs and the days all lilac. The Money Street
with two white hitching-posts. The gargoyles ... the man with the Jaworski
nonsense ... the river lights ... the ...
In America I had a number of Hindu friends, some good, some bad, some
indifferent. Circumstances had placed me in a position where fortunately I
could be of aid to them; I secured jobs for them, I harbored them, and I fed
them when necessary. They were very grateful, I must say, so much so, in
fact, that they made my life miserable with their attentions. Two of them
were saints, if I know what a saint is; particularly Gupte who was found one
morning with his throat cut from ear to ear. In a little boarding-house in
Greenwich Village he was found one morning stretched out stark naked on the
bed, his flute beside him, and his throat gashed, as I say, from ear to ear.
It was never discovered whether he had been murdered or whether he had
committed suicide. But that's neither here nor there ...
I'm thinking back to the chain of circumstances which has brought me finally
to Nanantatee's place. Thinking how strange it is that I should have
forgotten all about Nanantatee until the other day when lying in a shabby
hotel room on the Rue Cels. I'm lying there on the iron bed thinking what a
zero I have become, what a cipher, what a nullity, when, bango! out pops the
word: NONENTITY! That's what we called him in New York--Nonentity.
Mister Nonentity.
I'm lying on the floor now in that gorgeous suite of rooms he boasted of
when he was in New York. Nanantatee is playing the good Samaritan; he has
given me a pair of itchy blankets, horse blankets they are, in which I curl
up on the dusty floor. There are little jobs to do every hour of the
day--that is, if I am foolish enough to remain indoors. In the morning he
wakes me rudely in order to have me prepare the vegetables for his lunch:
onions, gar-
lic, beans, etc. His friend. Kepi, warns me not to eat the food--he
says it's bad. Bad or good what difference? Food! That's all that
matters. For a little food I am quite willing to sweep his carpets with a
broken broom, to wash his clothes and to scrape the crumbs off the floor as
soon as he has finished eating. He's become absolutely immaculate since my
arrival: everything has to be dusted now, the chairs must be arranged a
certain way, the clock must ring, the toilet must flush properly ... A crazy
.Hindu if ever there was one! And parsimonious as a string bean. I'll have a
great laugh over it when I get out of his clutches, but just now I'm a
prisoner, a man without caste, an untouchable...
If I fail to come back at night and roll up in the horse blankets he says
to me on .arriving: "Oh, so you didn't die then? I thought you had died."
And though he knows I'm absolutely penniless he tells me every day about
some cheap room he has just discovered in the neighborhood. "But I can't
take a room yet, you know that," I say. And then, blinking his eyes like a
Chink, he answers smoothly: "Oh, yes, I forgot that you had no money. I am
always forgetting, Endree ... But when the cable comes ... when Miss Mona
sends you the money, then you will come with me to look for a room, eh?" And
in the next breath he urges me to stay as long as I wish--"six months ...
seven months, Endree ... you are very good for me here."
Nanantatee is one of the Hindus I never did anything for in America. He
represented himself to me as a wealthy merchant, a pearl merchant, with a
luxurious suite of rooms on the Rue Lafayette, Paris, a villa in Bombay, a
bungalow in Darjeeling. I could see from the first glance that he was a
half-wit, but then half-wits sometimes have the genius to amass a fortune. I
didn't know that he paid his hotel bill in New York by leaving a couple of
fat pearls in the proprietor's hands. It seems amusing to me now that this
little duck once swaggered
about the lobby of that hotel in New York with an ebony Cane, bossing the
bell-hops around, ordering luncheons for his guests, calling up the porter
for theatre tickets, Denting a taxi by the day, etc., etc., all without a
sou in his pocket. Just a string of fat pearls around his neck which
90
he cashed one by one as time wore on. And the fatuous way he used to pat me
on the back, thank me for being so good to the Hindu boys--"they are all
very intelligent boys, Endree ... very intelligent!" Telling me that the
good lord so-and-so would repay me for my kindness. That explains now why
they used to giggle so, these intelligent Hindu boys, when I suggested that
they touch Nanantatee for a five-spot.
Curious now how the good lord so-and-so is requiting me for my benevolence.
I'm nothing but a slave to this fat little duck. I'm at his beck and call
continually. He needs me here--he tells me so to my face. When he goes to
the crap-can he shouts: "Endree, bring me a pitcher of water, please. I must
wipe myself." He wouldn't think of using toilet paper, Nanantatee. Must be
against his religion. No, he calls for a pitcher of water and a rag. He's
delicate, the fat little duck. Sometimes when I'm drinking a cup of
pale tea in which he has dropped a rose-leaf he comes alongside of me and
lets a loud fart, right in my face. He never says "Excuse me!" The word must
be missing from his Gujurati dictionary.
The day I arrived at Nanantatee's apartment he was in the act of performing
his ablutions, that is to say, he was standing over a dirty bowl trying to
work his crooked arm around toward the back of his neck. Beside the bowl was
a brass goblet which he used to change the water. He requested me to be
silent during the ceremony. I sat there silently, as I was bidden, and
watched him as he sang and prayed and spat now and then into the wash-bowl.
So this is the wonderful suite of rooms he talked about in New York! The Rue
Lafayette! It sounded like an important street to me back there in New York.
I thought only millionaires and pearl merchants inhabited the street. It
sounds wonderful, the Rue Lafayette, when you're on the other side of the
water. So does Fifth Avenue, when you're over here. One can't imagine what
dumps there are on these swell streets. Anyway, here I am at last, sitting
in the gorgeous suite of rooms on the Rue Lafayette. And this crazy duck
with his crooked arm is going through the ritual of washing himself. The
chair on which I'm sitting is broken, the bedstead is falling apart, the
wall-paper is in tatters, there is an open valise under the
bed crammed with dirty wash. From where I sit I can glance at the miserable
courtyard down below where the aristocracy of the Rue Lafayette sit and
smoke their clay pipes. I wonder now, as he chants the doxology, what that
bungalow in Darjeeling looks like. It's interminable, his chanting and
praying.
He explains to me that he is obliged to wash in a certain prescribed
way--his religion demands it. But on Sundays he takes a bath in the tin
tub--the Great I AM will wink at that, he says. When he's dressed he goes to
the cupboard, kneels before a little idol on the third shelf, and repeats
the mumbojumbo. If you pray like that every day, he says, nothing will
happen to you. The good lord what's his name never forgets an obedient
servant. And then he shows me the crooked arm which he got in a taxi
accident on a day doubtless when he had neglected to rehearse the complete
song and dance. His arm looks like a broken compass; it's not an arm any
more, but a knuckle-bone with a shank attached. Since the arm has been
repaired he has developed a pair of swollen glands in the armpit--fat little
glands, exactly like a dog's testicles. While bemoaning his plight he
remembers suddenly that the doctor had recommended a more liberal diet. He
begs me at once to sit down and make up a menu with plenty of fish and meat.
"And what about oysters, Endree--for le petit frere?" But all this is
only to make an impression on me. He hasn't the slightest intention of
buying himself oysters, or meat, or fish. Not as long as I am there, at
least. For the time being we are going to nourish ourselves on lentils and
rice and all the dry foods he has stored away, in the attic. And the butter
he bought last week, that won't go to waste either. When he commences to
cure the butter the smell is unbearable. I used to run out at first, when he
started frying the butter, but now I stick it out. He'd be only too
delighted if he could make me vomit up my meal--that would be something else
to put away in the cupboard along with the dry bread and the mouldy cheese
and the little grease cakes that he makes himself out of the stale milk and
the rancid butter.
For the last five years, so it seems, he hasn't done a stroke of work,
hasn't turned over a penny. Business has gone to smash. He talks to me about
pearls in the Indian
92
ocean--big fat ones on which you can live for a lifetime. The Arabs are
ruining the business, he says. But meanwhile he prays to the lord so-and-so
every day, and that sustains him. He's on a marvellous footing with the
deity:
knows just how to cajole him, how to wheedle a few sous out of him. It's a
pure commercial relationship. In exchange for that flummery before the
cabinet every day he gets his ration of beans and garlic, to say nothing of
the swollen testicles under his arm. He is confident that everything will
turn out well in the end. The pearls will sell again some day, maybe five
years hence, maybe twenty-- when the Lord Boomaroom wishes it. "And when the
business goes, Endree, you will get ten per cent--for writing the letters.
But first, Endree, you must write the letter to find out if we can get
credit from India. It will take about six months for an answer, maybe seven
months ... the boats are not fast in India." He has no conception of time at
all, the little duck. When I ask him if he has slept well he will say: "Ah,
yes, Endree, I sleep very well ... I sleep sometimes ninety-two hours in
three days."
Mornings he is usually too weak to do any work. His arm! That poor broken
crutch of an arm! I wonder sometimes when I see him twisting it around the
back of his neck how he will ever get it into place again. If it weren't for
that little paunch he carries he'd remind me of one of those contortionists
at the Cirque Medrano. All he needs is to break a leg. When he sees me
sweeping the carpet, when he sees what a cloud of dust I raise, he begins to
cluck like a pygmy. "Good! Very good, Endree. And now I will pick up the
knots." That means that there are a few crumbs of dust which I have
overlooked; it is a polite way he has of being sarcastic.
Afternoons there are always a few cronies from the pearl market dropping in
to pay him a visit. They're all very suave, butter-tongued bastards with
soft, doelike eyes; they sit around the table drinking the perfumed tea with
a loud, hissing noise while Nanantatee jumps up and down like a
jack-in-the-box or points to a crumb on the floor and says in his smooth
slippery voice--"Will you
93
please to pick that up, Endree." When the guests arrive he goes unctuously
to the cupboard and gets out the dry crusts of bread which he toasted maybe
a week ago and which taste strongly now of the mouldy wood. Not a crumb is
thrown away. If the bread gets too sour he takes it downstairs to the
concierge who, so he says, has been very kind to him. According to him, the
concierge is delighted to get the stale bread--she makes bread pudding with
it.
One day my friend Anatole came to see me. Nanantatee was delighted.
Insisted that Anatole stay for tea. Insisted that he try little grease
cakes and the stale bread. "You must come every day," he says, "and teach me
Russian. Fine language, Russian ... I want to speak it. How do you say that
again, Endree--borscht? You will write that down for me, please,
Endree ..." And I must write it on the typewriter, no less, so that he can
observe my technique. He bought the typewriter, after he had collected on
the bad arm, because the doctor recommended it as a good exercise. But he
got tired of the typewriter shortly--it was an English typewriter.
When he learned that Anatole played the mandolin he said: "Very good! You
must come every day and teach me the music. I will buy a mandolin as soon as
business is better. It is good for my arm." The next day he borrows a
phonograph from the concierge. "You will please teach me to dance, Endree.
My stomach is too big." I am hoping that he will buy a porterhouse steak
some day so that I can say to him: "You will please bite it for me.
Mister Nonentity. My teeth are not strong!"
As I said a moment ago, ever since my arrival he has become extraordinarily
meticulous. "Yesterday," he says, "you made three mistakes, Endree. First,
you forgot to close the toilet door and so all night it makes boom-boom;
second, you left the kitchen window open and so the window is cracked this
morning. And you forgot to put out the milk bottle! Always you will put out
the milk bottle please, before you go to bed, and in the morning you will
please bring in the bread."
Every day his friend Kepi drops in to see if any visitors have arrived from
India. He waits for Nanantatee to go out and then he scurries to the
cupboard and devours the
94
sticks of bread that are hidden away in a glass jar. The food is no good, he
insists, but he puts it away like a rat. Kepi is a scrounger, a sort of
human tick who fastens himself to the hide of even the poorest compatriot.
From Kepi's standpoint they are all nabobs. For a Manila cheroot and the
price of a drink he will suck any Hindu's ass. A Hindu's mind you, but not
an Englishman's. He has the address of every whore-house in Paris, and the
rates. Even from the ten-franc points he gets his little commission. And he
knows the shortest way to any place you want to go. He will ask you first if
you want to go by taxi; if you say no, he will suggest the bus, and if that
is too high then the tramway or the metro. Or he will offer to walk you
there and save a franc or two, knowing very well that it will be necessary
to pass a tabac on the way and that you will please be so good as to
buy me a little cheroot.
Kepi is interesting, in a way, because he has absolutely no ambition except
to get a fuck every night. Every penny he makes, and they are damned few, he
squanders in the dance-halls. He has a wife and eight children in Bombay,
but that does not prevent him from proposing marriage to any little femme
de chambre who is stupid and credulous enough to be taken in by him. He
has a little room on the Rue Condorcet for which he pays sixty francs a
month. He papered it all himself. Very proud of it, too. He uses
violet-colored ink in his fountain-pen because it lasts longer. He shines
his own shoes, presses his own pants, does his own laundry. For a little
cigar, a cheroot, if you please, he will escort you all over Paris. If you
stop to look at a shirt or a collar-button his eyes flash. "Don't buy it
here," he will say. "They ask too much. I will show you a cheaper place."
And before you have time to think about it he will whisk you away and
deposit you before another shop-window where there are the same des and
shirts and collar-buttons--maybe it's the very same store! but you don't
know the difference. When Kepi hears that you want to buy something his soul
becomes animated. He will ask you so many questions and drag you to so many
places that you are bound to get thirsty and ask him to have a drink,
whereupon you will discover to your amazement that you are again standing
95
in a tabac--maybe the same tabac!--and Kepi is saying
again in that small unctuous voice: "Will you please be so good as to buy me
a little cheroot?" No matter what you propose doing, even if it's only to
walk around the comer. Kepi will economize for you. Kepi will show you the
shortest way, the cheapest place, the biggest dish, because whatever you
have to do you must pass a tabac, and whether there is a
revolution or a lock-out or a quarantine Kepi must be at the Moulin Rouge
or the Olympia or the Ange Rouge when the music strikes up.
The other day he brought a book for me to read. It was about a famous suit
between a holy man and the editor of an Indian paper. The editor, it seems,
had openly accused the holy man of leading a scandalous life; he went
further, and accused the holy man of being diseased. Kepi says it must have
been the great French pox, but Nanantatee avers that it was the Japanese
clap. For Nanantatee everything has to be a little exaggerated. At any rate,
says Nanantatee cheerily: "You will please tell me what it says, Endree. I
can't read the book--it hurts my arm." Then, by way of encouraging me--"it
is a fine book about the fucking, Endree. Kepi has brought it for you. He
thinks about nothing but the girls. So many girls he fucks--just like
Krishna. We don't believe in that business, Endree ..."
A little later he takes me upstairs to the attic which is loaded down with
tin cans and crap from India wrapped in burlap and firecracker paper. "Here
is where I bring the girls," he says. And then rather wistfully: "I am not a
very good fucker, Endree. I don't screw the girls any more. I hold them in
my arms and I say the words. I like only to say the words now." It isn't
necessary to listen any further: I know that he is going to tell me about
his arm. I can see him lying there with that broken hinge dangling from the
side of the bed. But to my surprise he adds: "I am no good for the fucking,
Endree. I never was a very good fucker. My brother, he is good! Three times
a day, every day! And Kepi, he is good--just like Krishna."
His mind is fixed now on the "fucking business." Downstairs, in the little
room where he kneels before the open cabinet, he explains to me how it was
when he was
96
rich and his wife and children were here. On holidays he would take his wife
to the House of All Nations and hire a room for the night. Every room was
appointed in a different style. His wife liked it there very much. "A
wonderful place for the fucking, Endree. I know all the rooms ..."
The walls of the little room in which we are sitting are crammed with
photographs. Every branch of the family is represented, it is like a
cross-section of the Indian empire. For the most part the members of this
genealogical tree look like withered leaves: the women are frail and they
have a startled, frightened look in their eyes: the men have a keen,
intelligent look, like educated chimpanzees. They are all there, about
ninety of them, with their white bullocks, their dung-cakes, their skinny
legs, their old-fashioned spectacles; in the background, now and then, one
catches a glimpse of the parched soil, of a crumbling pediment, of an idol
with crooked arms, a sort of human centipede. There is something so
fantastic, so incongruous about this gallery that one is reminded
inevitably of the great spawn of temples which stretch from the Himalayas
to the tip of Ceylon, a vast jumble of architecture, staggering in beauty
and at the same time monstrous, hideously monstrous because the fecundity
which seethes and ferments in the myriad ramifications of design seems to
have exhausted the very soil of India itself. Looking at the seething hive
of figures which swarm the facades of the temples one is overwhelmed by the
potency of these dark, handsome people who mingled their mysterious streams
in a sexual embrace that has lasted thirty centuries or more. These frail
men and women with piercing eyes who stare out of the photographs seem like
the emaciated shadows of those virile, massive figures who incarnated
themselves in stone and fresco from one end of India to the other in order
that the heroic myths of the races who here intermingled should remain
forever entwined in the hearts of their countrymen. When I look at only a
fragment of these spacious dreams of stone, these toppling, sluggish
edifices studded with gems, coagulated with human sperm, I am overwhelmed by
the dazzling splendor of those imaginative flights which enabled half
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a billion people of diverse origins to thus incarnate the most fugitive
expressions of their longing.
It is a strange, inexplicable medley of feelings which assails me now as
Nanantatee prattles on about the sister who died in child-birth. There she
is on the wall, a frail, timid thing of twelve or thirteen clinging to the
arm of a dotard. At ten years of age she was given in wedlock to this old
roue who had already buried five wives. She had seven children, only one of
whom survived her. She was given to the aged gorilla in order to keep the
pearls in the family. As she was passing away, so Nanantatee puts it, she
whispered to the doctor: "I am tired of this fucking ... I don't want to
fuck any more, doctor." As he relates this to me he scratches his head
solemnly with his withered arm. "The fucking business is bad, Endree," he
says. "But I will give you a word that will always make you lucky; you must
say it every day, over and over, a million times you must say it. It is the
best word there is, Endree ... say it now ... OOMAHARUMOOMA!"
"OOMARABOO ..."
"No, Endree ... like this ... OOMAHARUMOOMA!"
"OOMAMABOOMBA ..."
"No, Endree ... like this ...
"... but what with the murky light, the botchy print, the tattered cover,
the jigjagged page, the fumbling fingers, the foxtrotting fleas, the
lie-a-bed lice, the scum on his tongue, the drop in his eye, the lump in his
throat, the drink in his pottle, the itch in his palm, the wail of his wind,
the grief from his breath, the fog of his brainfag, the tic of his
conscience, the height of his rage, the gush of his fundament, the fire in
his gorge, the tickle of his tail, the rats in his garret, the hullabaloo
and the dust in his ears, since it took him a month to steal a march, he was
hardset to memorize more than a word a week."
I suppose I would never have gotten out of Nanantatee's clutches if fate
hadn't intervened. One night, as luck would have it. Kepi asked me if I
wouldn't take one of his clients to a whore-house near by. The young man had
just come from India and he had not very much money to spend. He was one of
Gandhi's men, one of that little band who made the historic march to the sea
during the
98
salt trouble. A very gay disciple of Gandhi's I must say, despite the vows
of abstinence he had taken. Evidently he hadn't looked at a woman for ages.
It was all I could do to get him as far as the Rue Lafemere; he was like a
dog with his tongue hanging out. And a pompous, vain little devil to boot!
He had decked himself out in a corduroy suit, a beret, a cane, a Windsor
tie; he had bought himself two fountain-pens, a kodak, and some fancy
underwear. The money he was spending was a gift from the merchants of
Bombay; they were sending him to England to spread the gospel of Gandhi.
Once inside Miss Hamilton's joint he began to lose his sang-froid.
When suddenly he found himself surrounded by a bevy of naked women he looked
at me in consternation. "Pick one out," I said. "You can have your choice."
He had become so rattled that he could scarcely look at them. "You do it for
me," he murmured, blushing violently. I looked them over coolly and picked
out a plump young wench who seemed full of feathers. We sat down in the
reception room and waited for the drinks. The madame wanted to know why I
didn't take a girl also. "Yes, you take one too," said the young Hindu. "I
don't want to be alone with her." So the girls were brought in again and I
chose one for myself, a rather tall, thin one with melancholy eyes. We were
left alone, the four of us, in the reception room. After a few moments my
young Gandhi leans over and whispers something in my ear. "Sure, if you like
her better, take her," I said, and so, rather awkwardly and considerably
embarrassed, I explained to the girls that we would like to switch. I saw at
once that we had made a faux pas, but by now my young friend had
become gay and lecherous and nothing would do but to get upstairs quickly
and have it over with.
We took adjoining rooms with a connecting door between. I think my
companion had in mind to make another switch once he had satisfied his
sharp, gnawing hunger. At any rate, no sooner had the girls left the room to
prepare themselves than I hear him knocking on the door. "Where is the
toilet, please?" he asks. Not thinking that it was anything serious I urge
him to do in the bidet. The girls return with towels in their hands.
I hear him giggling in the next room.
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As I'm putting on my pants suddenly I hear a commotion in the next room.
The girl is bawling him out, calling him a pig, a dirty little pig. I can't
imagine what he has done to warrant such an outburst. I'm standing there
with one foot in my trousers listening attentively. He's trying to explain
to her in English, raising his voice louder and louder until it becomes a
shriek.
I hear a door slam and in another moment the madame bursts into my room, her
face as red as a beet, her arms gesticulating wildly. "You ought to be
ashamed of yourself," she screams, "bringing a man like that to my place!
He's a barbarian ... he's a pig ... he's a ... !" My companion is standing
behind her, in the doorway, a look of utmost discomfiture on his face. "What
did you do?" I ask.
"What did he do?" yells the madame. "I'll show you ... Come here!" And
grabbing me by the arm she drags me into the next room. "There! There!" she
screams, pointing to the bidet.
"Come on, let's get out," says the Hindu boy.
"Wait a minute, you can't get out as easily as all that."
The madame is standing by the bidet, fuming and spitting. The girls
are standing there too, with towels in their hands. The five of us are
standing there looking at the bidet. There are two enormous turds
floating in the water. The madame bends down and puts a towel over it.
"Frightful! Frightful!" she wails. "Never have I seen anything like this! A
pig! A dirty little pig!"
The Hindu boy looks at me reproachfully. "You should have told me!" he says.
"I didn't know it wouldn't go down. I asked you where to go and you told me
to use that." He is almost in tears.
Finally the madame takes me to one side. She has become a little more
reasonable now. After all, it was a mistake. Perhaps the gentlemen would
like to come downstairs and order another drink--for the girls. It was a
great shock to the girls. They are not used to such things. And if the good
gentlemen will be so kind as to remember ttiefemme de chambre ... It
is not so pretty for me femme de chambre--that mess, that ugly mess.
She shrugs her shoulders and winks her eye. A lamentable incident. But an
accident. If the gentlemen will wait here a
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few moments the maid will bring the drinks. Would the gentlemen like to have
some champagne? Yes?
"I'd like to get out of here," says the Hindu boy weakly.
"Don't you feel so badly about it," says the madame. "It is all over now.
Mistakes will happen sometimes. Next time you will ask for the toilet." She
goes on about the toilet--one on every floor, it seems. And a bathroom too.
"I have lots of English clients," she says. "They are all gentlemen. The
gentleman is a Hindu? Charming people, the Hindus. So intelligent. So
handsome."
When we get into the street the charming young gentleman is almost weeping.
He is sorry now that he bought a corduroy suit and the cane and the
fountain-pens. He talks about the eight vows that he took, the control of
the palate, etc. On the march to Dandi even a plate of ice cream it was
forbidden to take. He tells me about the spinning wheel--how the little band
of Satyagrahists imitated the devotion of their master. He relates with
pride how he walked beside the master and conversed with him. I have the
illusion of being in the presence of one of the twelve disciples.
During the next few days we see a good deal of each other; there are
interviews to be arranged with the newspaper men and lectures to be given
to the Hindus of Paris. It is amazing to see how these spineless devils
order one another about; amazing also to see how ineffectual they are in all
that concerns practical affairs. And the jealousy and the intrigues, the
petty, sordid rivalries. Wherever there are ten Hindus together there is
India with her sects and schisms, her racial, lingual, religious, political
antagonisms. In the person of Gandhi they are experiencing for a brief
moment the miracle of unity, but when he goes there will be a crash, an
utter relapse into that strife and chaos so characteristic of the Indian
people.
The young Hindu, of course, is optimistic. He has been to America and he has
been contaminated by the cheap idealism of the Americans, contaminated by
the ubiquitous bath-tub, the five and ten cent store bric-a-brac, the
bustle, the efficiency, the machinery, the high wages, the free libraries,
etc., etc. His ideal would be to americanize India. He is not at all pleased
with Gandhi's retrogressive
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mania. Forward, he says, just like a Y. M. C. A. man. As I listen to
his tales of America I see how absurd it is to expect of Gandhi that miracle
which will deroute the trend of destiny. India's enemy is not England, but
America. India's enemy is the time spirit, the hand which cannot be turned
back. Nothing will avail to offset this virus which is poisoning the whole
world. America is the very incarnation of doom. She will drag the whole
world down to the bottomless pit.
He thinks the Americans are a very gullible people. He tells me about the
credulous souls who succored him there--the Quakers, the Unitarians, the
Theosophists, the New Thoughters, the Seventh Day Adventists, etc. He knew
where to sail his boat, this bright young man. He knew how to make the tears
come to his eyes at the right moment; he knew how to take up a collection,
how to appeal to the minister's wife, how to make love to the mother and
daughter at the same time. To look at him you would think him a saint. And
he is a saint, in the modem fashion; a contaminated saint who talks in one
breath of love, brotherhood, bath-tubs, sanitation, efficiency, etc.
The last night of his sojourn in Paris is given up to "the fucking
business." He has had a full program all day-- conferences, cablegrams,
interviews, photographs for the newspapers, affectionate farewells, advice
to the faithful, etc., etc. At dinner time he decides to lay aside his
troubles. He orders champagne with the meal, he snaps his fingers at the
garcon and behaves in general like the boorish little peasant that he
is. And since he has had a bellyful of all the good places he suggests now
that I show him something more primitive. He would like to go to a very
cheap place, order two or three girls at once. I steer him along the
Boulevard de la Chapelle, warning him all the while to be careful of his
pocket-book. Around Aubervilliers we duck into a cheap dive and immediately
we've got a flock of them on our hands. In a few minutes he's dancing with a
naked wench, a huge blonde with creases in her jowls. I can see her ass
reflected a dozen times in the mirrors that line the room-- and those dark,
bony fingers of his clutching her tenaciously. The table is full of beer
glasses, the mechanical piano is wheezing and gasping. The girls who are
un-
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occupied are sitting placidly on the leather benches, scratching themselves
peacefully just like a family of chimpanzees. There is a sort of subdued
pandemonium in the air, a note of repressed violence, as if the awaited
explosion required the advent of some utterly minute detail, something
microscopic but thoroughly unpremeditated, completely unexpected. In that
sort of half-reverie which permits one to participate in an event and yet
remain quite aloof, the little detail which was lacking began obscurely but
insistently to coagulate, to assume a freakish, crystalline form, like the
frost which gathers on the window-pane. And like those frost patterns which
seem so bizarre, so utterly free and fantastic in design, but which are
nevertheless determined by the most rigid laws, so this sensation which
commenced to take form inside me seemed also to be giving obedience to
ineluctable laws. My whole being was responding to the dictates of an
ambiance which it had never before experienced; that which I could call
myself seemed to be contracting, condensing, shrinking from the stale,
customary boundaries of the flesh whose perimeter knew only the modulations
of the nerve ends.
And the more substantial, the more solid the core of me became, the more
delicate and extravagant appeared the close, palpable reality out of which I
was being squeezed. In the measure that I became more and more metallic, in
the same measure the scene before my eyes became inflated. The state of
tension was so finely drawn now that the introduction of a single foreign
particle, even a microscopic particle, as I say, would have shattered
everything. For the fraction of a second perhaps I experienced that utter
clarity which the epileptic, it is said, is given to know. In that moment I
lost completely the illusion of time and space: the world unfurled its drama
simultaneously along a meridian which had no axis. In this sort of
hair-trigger eternity I felt that everything was justified, supremely
justified; I felt the wars inside me that had left behind this pulp and
wrack; I felt the crimes that were seething here to emerge tomorrow in
blatant screamers; I felt the misery that was grinding itself out with
pestle and mortar, the long dull misery that dribbles away in dirty
handkerchiefs. On the meridian of time there is no injustice: there
103
is only the poetry of motion creating the illusion of truth and
drama. If at any moment anywhere one comes face to face with the absolute
that great sympathy which makes men like Gautama and Jesus seem divine
freezes away;
the monstrous thing is not that men have created roses out of this
dung-heap, but that, for some reason or other, they should want
roses. For some reason or other man looks for the miracle, and to accomplish
it he will wade through blood. He will debauch himself with ideas, he will
reduce himself to a shadow if for only one second of his life he can close
his eyes to the hideousness of reality. Everything is endured, disgrace,
humiliation, poverty, war, crime, ennui--in the belief that overnight
something will occur, a miracle, which will render life tolerable. And all
the while a meter is running inside and there is no hand that can reach in
there and shut it off. All the while someone is eating the bread of life and
drinking the wine, some dirty fat cockroach of a priest who hides away in
the cellar guzzling it, while up above in the light of the street a phantom
host touches the lips and the blood is pale as water. And out of the endless
torment and misery no miracle comes forth, no microscopic vestige even of
relief. Only ideas, pale, attenuated ideas which have to be fattened by
slaughter; ideas which come forth like bile, like the guts of a pig when the
carcass is ripped open.
And so I think what a miracle it would be if this miracle which man attends
eternally should turn out to be nothing more than these two enormous turds
which the faithful disciple dropped in the bidet. What if at the last
moment, when the banquet table is set and the cymbals clash, there should
appear suddenly, and wholly without warning, a silver platter on which even
the blind could see that there is nothing more, and nothing less, than two
enormous lumps of shit. That, I believe would be more miraculous than
anything which man has looked forward to. It would be miraculous because it
would be undreamed of. It would be more miraculous than even the wildest
dream because anybody could imagine the possibility but nobody ever
has, and probably nobody ever again will.
Somehow the realization that nothing was to be hoped
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for had a salutary effect upon me. For weeks and months, for years, in fact,
all my life I had been looking forward to something happening, some
extrinsic event that would alter my life, and now suddenly, inspired by the
absolute hopelessness of everything, I felt relieved felt as though a great
burden had been lifted from my shoulders. At dawn I parted company with the
young Hindu, after touching him for a few francs, enough for a room.
Walking toward Montparnasse I decided to let myself drift with the tide, to
make not the least resistance to fate, no matter in what form it presented
itself. Nothing that had happened to me thus far had been sufficient to
destroy me; nothing had been destroyed except my illusions. I myself was
intact. The world was intact. Tomorrow there might be a revolution, a
plague, an earthquake; tomorrow there might not be left a single soul to
whom one could turn for sympathy, for aid, for faith. It seemed to me that
the great calamity had already manifested itself, that I could be no more
truly alone than at this very moment. I made up my mind that I would hold on
to nothing, that I would expect nothing, that henceforth I would live as an
animal, a beast of prey, a rover, a plunderer. Even if war were declared,
and it were my lot to go, I would grab the bayonet and plunge it, plunge it
up to the hilt. And if rape were the order of the day then rape I would, and
with a vengeance. At this very moment, in the quiet dawn of a new day, was
not the earth giddy with crime and distress? Had one single element of man's
nature been altered, vitally, fundamentally altered, by the incessant march
of history? By what he calls the better part of his nature, man has been
betrayed, that is all. At the extreme limits of his spiritual being man
finds himself again naked as a savage. When he finds God, as it were, he has
been picked clean: he is a skeleton. One must burrow into life again in
order to put on flesh. The word must become flesh; the soul thirsts. On
whatever crumb my eye fastens, I will pounce and devour. If to live is the
paramount thing, then I will live, even if I must become a cannibal.
Heretofore I have been trying to save my precious hide, trying to preserve
the few pieces of meat that hid my bones. I am done with that. I have
reached the limits of endurance. My back is to the wall; I can retreat no
fur-
105
ther. As far as history goes I am dead. If there is something beyond I
shall have to bounce back. I have found God, but he is insufficient. I am
only spiritually dead. Physically I am alive. Morally I am free. The world
which I have departed is a menagerie. The dawn is breaking on a new world,
a jungle world in which the lean spirits roam with sharp claws. If I am a
hyena I am a lean and hungry one: I go forth to fatten myself.
A
t one-thirty I called on Van Norden, as per agreement. He had warned me that
if he didn't answer it would mean that he was sleeping with some one,
probably his Georgia cunt.
Anyway, there he was, tucked away comfortably, but with an air of weariness
as usual. He wakes up, cursing himself, or cursing the job, or cursing life.
He wakes up utterly bored and discomfited, chagrined to think that he did
not die overnight.
I sit down by the window and give him what encouragement I can. It is
tedious work. One has to actually coax him out of bed. Mornings--he means by
mornings anywhere between one and five p.m.--mornings, as I say, he gives
himself up to reveries. Mostly it is about the past he dreams. About his
"cunts." He endeavors to recall how they felt, what they said to him at
certain critical moments, where he laid them, and so on. And as he lies
there, grinning and cursing, he manipulates his fingers in that curious,
bored way of his, as though to convey the impression that his disgust is too
great for words. Over the bedstead hangs a douche-bag which he keeps for
emergencies--for the virgins whom he tracks down like a sleuth. Even
after he has slept with one of these mythical creatures he will still refer
to her as a virgin, and almost never by name. "My virgin," he will say, just
as he says "my Georgia cunt." When he goes to the toilet he says:
"If my Georgia cunt calls tell her to wait. Say I said so. And listen, you
can have her if you like. I'm tired of her."
He takes a squint at the weather and heaves a deep sigh. If it's rainy he
says: "God damn this fucking climate, it makes one morbid." And if the sun
is shining brightly he says: "God damn that fucking sun, it makes
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you blind." As he starts to shave he suddenly remembers that there is no
clean towel. "God damn this fucking hotel, they're too stingy to give you a
clean towel every day!" No matter what he does or where he goes things are
out of joint. Either it's the fucking country or the fucking job, or else
it's some fucking cunt who's put him on the blink.
"My teeth are all rotten," he says, gargling his throat. "It's the fucking
bread they give you to eat here." He opens his mouth wide and pulls his
lower lip down. "See that? Pulled out six teeth yesterday. Soon I'll have to
get another plate. That's what you get working for a living. When I was on
the bum I had all my teeth, my eyes were bright and clear. Look at me now!
It's a wonder I can make a cunt any more. Jesus, what I'd like is to find
some rich cunt--like that cute little prick, Carl. Did he ever show you the
letters she sends him? Who is she, do you know? He wouldn't tell me her
name, the bastard ... he's afraid I might take her away from him." He
gargles his throat again and then he takes a long look at the cavities.
"You're lucky," he says ruefully. "You've got friends, at least. I haven't
anybody, except that cute little prick who drives me bats about his rich
cunt."
"Listen," he says, "do you happen to know a cunt by the name of Norma? She
hangs around the Dome all day. I think she's queer. I had her up here
yesterday, tickling her ass. She wouldn't let me do a thing. I had her on
the bed ... I even had her drawers off ... and then I got disgusted. Jesus,
I can't bother struggling that way any more. It isn't worth it. Either they
do or they don't--it's foolish to waste time wrestling with them. While
you're struggling with a little bitch like that there may be a dozen cunts
on the terrasse just dying to be laid. It's a fact. They all come
over here to get laid. They think it's sinful here ... the poor
boobs! Some of these school-teachers from out West, they're honestly
virgins ... I mean it! They sit around on their can all day thinking about
it. You don't have to work over them very much. They're dying for it. I had
a married woman the other day who told me she hadn't had a lay for six
months. Can you imagine that? Jesus, she was hot! I thought she'd tear the
cock off me. And groaning all the time. 'Do you? Do
108
you?' She kept saying that all the time, like she was nuts. And you
know what that bitch wanted to do? She wanted to move in here. Imagine that!
Asking me if I loved her. I didn't even know her name. I never know their
names ... I don't want to. The married ones! Christ, if you saw all the
married cunts I bring up here you'd never have any more illusions. They're
worse than the virgins, the married ones. They don't wait for you to start
things--they fish it out for you themselves. And then they talk about love
afterwards. It's disgusting. I tell you, I'm actually beginning to hate
cunt!"
He looks out the window again. It's drizzling. It's been drizzling this way
for the last five days.
"Are we going to the Dome, Joe?" I call him Joe because he calls me Joe.
When Carl is with us he is Joe too. Everybody is Joe because it's easier
that way. It's also a pleasant reminder not to take yourself too seriously.
Anyway, Joe doesn't want to go to the Dome--he owes too much money there.
He wants to go to the Coupole. Wants to take a little walk first around the
block.
"But it's raining, Joe."
"I know, but what the hell! I've got to have my constitutional. I've got to
wash the dirt out of my belly." When he says this I have the impression that
the whole world is wrapped up there inside his belly, and that it's rotting
there.
As he's putting on his things he falls back again into a semi-comatose
state. He stands there with one arm in his coat sleeve and his hat on
ass-ways and he begins to dream aloud--about the Riviera, about the sun,
about lazing one's life away. "All I ask of life," he says, "is a bunch of
books, a bunch of dreams, and a bunch of cunt." As he mumbles this
meditatively he looks at me with the softest, the most insidious smile. "Do
you like that smile?" he says. And then disgustedly--"Jesus, if I could only
find some rich cunt to smile at that way!"
"Only a rich cunt can save me now," he says with an air of utmost weariness.
"One gets tired of chasing after new cunts all the time. It gets mechanical.
The trouble is, you see, I can't fall in love. I'm too much of an egoist.
Women only help me to dream, that's all. It's a vice, like drink or opium.
I've got to have a new one every day; if
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I don't I get morbid. I think too much. Sometimes I'm amazed at myself, how
quick I pull it off--and how little it really means. I do it automatically
like. Sometimes I'm not thinking about a woman at all, but suddenly I notice
a woman looking at me and then bango! it starts all over again. Before I
know what I'm doing I've got her up to the room. I don't even remember what
I say to them. I bring them up to the room, give them a pat on the ass, and
before I know what it's all about it's over. It's like a dream ... Do you
know what I mean?"
He hasn't much use for the French girls. Can't stand them. "Either they want
money or they want you to marry them. At bottom they're all whores. I'd
rather wrestle with a virgin," he says. "They give you a little illusion.
They put up a fight at least." Just the same, as we glance over the
terrasse there is hardly a whore in sight whom he hasn't fucked at
some time or other. Standing at the bar he points them out to me, one by
one, goes over them anatomically, describes their good points and their bad.
"They're all frigid," he says. And then begins to mould his hands, thinking
of the nice, juicy virgins who are just dying for it.
In the midst of his reveries he suddenly arrests himself, and grabbing my
arm excitedly he points to a whale of a woman who is just lowering herself
into a seat. "There's my Danish cunt," he grunts. "See that ass?
Danish. How that woman loves it! She just begs me for it. Come over
here ... look at her now, from the side! Look at that ass, will you? It's
enormous. I tell you, when she climbs over me I can hardly get my arms
around it. It blots out the whole world. She makes me feel like a little bug
crawling inside her I don't know why I fall for her--I suppose it's that
ass. It's so incongruous like. And the creases in it! You can't forget an
ass like that. It's a fact ... a solid fact. The others, they may bore you,
or they may give you a moment's illusion, but this one--with her
ass!--zowie, you can't obliterate her ... it's like going to bed with a
monument on top of you."
The Danish cunt seems to have electrified him. He's lost all his
sluggishness now. His eyes are popping out of his head. And of course one
thing reminds him of another. He wants to get out of the fucking hotel
because
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the noise bothers him. He wants to write a book too so as to have something
to occupy his mind. But then the goddamned job stands in the way. "It takes
it out of you, that fucking job! I don't want to write about Montparnasse
... I want to write my life, my thoughts. I want to get the dirt out of my
belly ... Listen, get that one over there! I had her a long time ago. She
used to be down near Les Halles. A funny bitch. She lay on the edge of the
bed and pulled her dress up. Ever try it that way? Not bad. She didn't hurry
me either. She just lay back and played with her hat while I slugged away at
her. And when I come she says sort of bored like--Are you through? Like it
didn't make any difference at all. Of course, it doesn't make any
difference, I know that god-damn well ... but the cold blooded way she had
... I sort of liked it ... it was fascinating, you know? When she goes to
wipe herself she begins to sing. Going out of the hotel she was still
singing. Didn't even say Au revoir! Walks off swinging her hat and
humming to herself like. That's a whore for you! A good lay though. I think
I liked her better than my virgin. There's something depraved about
screwing a woman who doesn't give a fuck about it. It heals your blood ..."
And then, after a moment's meditation--"Can you imagine what she'd be like
if she had any feelings?"
"Listen," he says, "I want you to come to the Club with me tomorrow
afternoon ... there's a dance on." "I can't tomorrow, Joe. I promised to
help Carl out..." "Listen, forget that prick! I want you to do me a favor.
It's like this"--he commences to mould his hands again. "I've got a cunt
lined up ... she promised to stay with me on my night off. But I'm not
positive about her yet. She's got a mother you see ... some shit of a
painter, she chews my ear off every time I see her. I think the truth is,
the mother's jealous. I don't think she'd mind so much if I gave her a lay
first. You know how it is ... Anyway, I thought maybe you wouldn't mind
taking the mother ... she's not so bad ... if I hadn't seen the daughter I
might have considered her myself. The daughter's nice and young, fresh like,
you know what I mean? There's a clean smell to her ..."
"Listen, Joe, you'd better find somebody else ..." "Aw, don't take it like
that! I know how you feel about
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it. It's only a little favor I'm asking you to do for me. I don't know how
to get rid of the old hen. I thought first I'd get her drunk and ditch
her--but I don't think the young one'd like that. They're sentimental like.
They come from Minnesota or somewhere. Anyway, come around tomorrow and wake
me up, will you? Otherwise I'll oversleep. And besides, I want you to help
me find a room. You know I'm helpless. Find me a room in a quiet street,
somewhere near here. I've got to stay around here ... I've got credit here.
Listen, promise me you'll do that for me. I'll buy you a meal now and then.
Come around anyway, because I go nuts talking to these foolish cunts. I want
to talk to you about Havelock Ellis. Jesus, I've had the book out for three
weeks now and I haven't looked at it. You sort of rot here. Would you
believe it, I've never been to the Louvre--nor the Comedie Francaise. Is it
worth going to those joints? Still, it sort of takes your mind off things, I
suppose. What do you do with yourself all day? Don't you get bored? What do
you do for a lay? Listen ... come here! Don't run away yet ... I'm lonely.
Do you know something--if this keeps up another year I'll go nuts. I've got
to get out of this fucking country. There's nothing for me here. I know it's
lousy now, in America, but just the same ... You go queer over here ... all
these cheap shits sitting on their ass all day bragging about their work and
none of them is worth a stinking damn. They're all failures--that's why they
come over here. Listen, Joe, don't you ever get homesick? You're a funny guy
... you seem to like it over here. What do you see in it... I wish you'd
tell me. I wish to Christ I could stop thinking about myself. I'm all
twisted up inside ... it's like a knot in there ... Listen, I know I'm
boring the shit out of you, but I've got to talk to someone. I can't talk to
those guys upstairs ... you know what those bastards are like ... they all
take a by-line. And Carl, the little prick, he's so god-damned selfish. I'm
an egotist, but I'm not selfish. There's a difference. I'm a neurotic, I
guess. I can't stop thinking about myself. It isn't that I think myself so
important.... I simply can't think about anything else, that's all. If I
could fall in love with a woman that might help some. But I can't find a
woman who interests me. I'm in a mess,
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you can see that can't you? What do you advise me to do? What would you do
in my place? Listen, I don't want to hold you back any longer, but wake me
up tomorrow--at one-thirty--will you? I'll give you something extra if
you'll shine my shoes. And listen, if you've got an extra shirt, a clean
one, bring it along, will you? Shit, I'm grinding my balls off on that job,
and it doesn't even give me a clean shirt. They've got us over here like a
bunch of niggers. Ah, well, shit! I'm going to take a walk ... wash the dirt
out of my belly. Don't forget, tomorrow'."
For six months or more it's been going on, this correspondence with the
rich cunt, Irene. Recently I've been reporting to Carl every day in order to
bring the affair to a head, because as far as Irene is concerned this thing
could go on indefinitely. In the last few days there's been a perfect
avalanche of letters exchanged; the last letter we dispatched was almost
forty pages long, and written in three languages. It was a
pot-pourri. the last letter--tag ends of old novels, slices from the
Sunday supplement,. reconstructed versions of old letters to Llona and
Tania, garbled transliterations of Rabelais and Petronius--in short, we
exhausted ourselves. Finally Irene decides to come out of her shell. Finally
a letter arrives giving a rendez-vous at her hotel. Carl is pissing in his
pants. It's one thing to write letters to a woman you don't know; it's
another thing entirely to call on her and make love to her. At the last
moment he's quaking so that I almost fear I'll have to substitute for him.
When we get out of the taxi in front of her hotel he's trembling so much
that I have to walk him around the block first. He's already had two
Pernods, but they haven't made the slightest impression on him. The sight of
the hotel itself is enough to crush him: it's a pretentious place with one
of those huge empty lobbies in which Englishwomen sit for hours with a blank
look. In order to make sure that he wouldn't run away I stood by while the
porter telephoned to announce him. Irene was there, and she was waiting for
him. As he got into the lift he threw me a last despairing glance, one of
those mute appeals which a dog makes when you put a
noose around its neck. Going through the revolving door I thought of Van
Norden ...
I go back to the hotel and wait for a telephone call. He's only got an
hour's time and he's promised to let me know the results before going to
work. I look over the carbons of the letters we sent her. I try to imagine
the situation as it actually is, but it's beyond me. Her letters are much
better than ours--they're sincere, that's plain. By now they've sized each
other up. I wonder if he's still pissing in his pants.
The telephone rings. His voice sounds queer, squeaky, as though he were
frightened and jubilant at the same time. He asks me to substitute for him
at the office. "Tell the bastard anything! Tell him I'm dying ..."
"Listen, Carl ... can you tell me ...?"
"Hello! Are you Henry Miller?" It's a woman's voice. It's Irene. She's
saying hello to me. Her voice sounds beautiful over the phone ... beautiful.
For a moment I'm in a perfect panic. I don't know what to say to her. I'd
like to say: "Listen, Irene, I think you're beautiful ... I think you're
wonderful." I'd like to say one true thing to her, no matter how
silly it would sound, because now that I hear her voice everything is
changed. But before I can gather my wits Carl is on the phone again and he's
saying in that queer squeaky voice: "She likes you, Joe. I told her all
about you ..."
At the office I have to hold copy for Van Norden. When it comes time for the
break he pulls me aside. He looks glum and ravaged.
"So he's dying, is he, the little prick? Listen, what's the low-down on
this?"
"I think he went to see his rich cunt," I answer calmly.
"What! You mean he called on her?" He seems beside himself. "Listen,
where does she live? What's her name?" I pretend ignorance. "Listen," he
says, "you're a decent guy. Why the hell don't you let me in on this
racket?"
In order to appease him I promise finally that I'll tell him everything as
soon as I get the details from Carl. I can hardly wait myself until I see
Carl.
Around noon next day I knock at his door. He's up already and lathering his
beard. Can't tell a thing from the
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expression on his face. Can't even tell whether he's going to tell me the
truth. The sun is streaming in through the open window, the birds are
chirping, and yet somehow, why it is I don't know, the room seems more
barren and poverty-stricken than ever. The floor is slathered with lather,
and on the rack there are the two dirty towels which are never changed. And
somehow Carl isn't changed either, and that puzzles me more than anything.
This morning the whole world ought to be changed, for bad or good, but
changed, radically changed. And yet Carl is standing there lathering his
face and not a single detail is altered.
"Sit down ... sit down there on the bed," he says. "You're going to hear
everything ... but wait first ... wait a little." He commences to lather his
face again, and then to hone his razor. He even remarks about the water ...
no hot water again.
"Listen, Carl, I'm on tenter-hooks. You can torture me afterwards, if you
like, but tell me now, tell me one thing ... was it good or bad?"
He turns away from the mirror with brush in hand and gives me a strange
smile. "Wait! I'm going to tell you everything ..."
"That means it was a failure."
"No," he says, drawing out his words. "It wasn't a failure, and it wasn't a
success either ... By the way, did you fix it up for me at the office? What
did you tell them?"
I see it's no use trying to pull it out of him. When he gets good and ready
he'll tell me. Not before. I lie back on the bed, silent as a clam. He goes
on shaving.
Suddenly, apropos of nothing at all, he begins to talk-- disconnectedly at
first, and then more and more clearly, emphatically, resolutely. It's a
struggle to get it out, but he seems determined to relate everything; he
acts as if he were getting something off his conscience. He even reminds me
of the look he gave me as he was going up the elevator shaft. He dwells on
that lingeringly, as though to imply that everything were contained in that
last moment, as though, if he had to the power to alter things, he would
never have put foot outside the elevator.
She was in her dressing sack when he called. There was a bucket of champagne
on the dresser. The room was
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rather dark and her voice was lovely. He gives me all the details about the
room, the champagne, how the garcon opened it, the noise it made, the
way her dressing sack rustled when she came forward to greet him--he tells
me everything but what I want to hear.
It was about eight when he called on her. At eight-thirty he was nervous,
thinking about the job. "It was about nine when I called you, wasn't it?" he
says. "Yes, about that." "I was nervous, see ..." "I know that. Go on ..." I
don't know whether to believe him or not, especially after those letters we
concocted. I don't even know whether I've heard him accurately, because what
he's telling me sounds utterly fantastic. And yet it sounds true too,
knowing the sort of guy he is. And then I remember his voice over the
telephone, that strange mixture of fright and jubilation. But why isn't he
more jubilant now? He keeps smiling all the time, smiling like a rosy little
bed-bug that has had its fill. "It was nine o'clock," he says once again,
"when I called you up, wasn't it?" I nod my head wearily. Yes, it was nine
o'clock. He is certain now that it was nine o'clock because he remembers
having taken out his watch. Anyway, when he looked at his watch again it
was ten o'clock. At ten o'clock she was lying on the divan with her boobies
in her hands. That's the way he gives it to me--in driblets. At eleven
o'clock it was all settled; they were going to run away, to Borneo. Fuck the
husband! She never loved him anyway. She would never have written the first
letter if the husband wasn't old and passionless. "And then she says to me:
'But listen, dear, how do you know you won't grow tired of me?' "
At this point I burst out laughing. This sounds preposterous to me, I can't
help it. "And you said?"
"What did you expect me to say? I said: how could anyone ever grow tired of
you?"
And then he describes to me what happened after that, how he bent down and
kissed her breasts, and how, after he had kissed them fervidly, he stuffed
them back into her
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corsage, or whatever it is they call these things. And after that another
coupe of champagne.
Around midnight the garcon arrives with beer and sandwiches--caviar
sandwiches. And all the while, so he says, he has been dying to take a leak.
He had one hard-on, but it faded out. All the while his bladder is fit to
burst, but he imagines, the cute little prick that he is, that the situation
calls for delicacy.
At one-thirty she's for hiring a carriage and driving through the Bois. He
has only one thought in his head-- how to take a leak? "I love you ... I
adore you," he says. "I'll go anywhere you say--Istamboul, Singapore,
Honolulu. Only I must go now ... It's getting late."
He tells me all this in his dirty little room, with the sun pouring in and
the birds chirping away like mad. I don't yet know whether she was beautiful
or not. He doesn't know himself, the imbecile. He rather thinks she wasn't.
The room was dark and then there was the champagne and his nerves all
frazzled.
"But you ought to know something about her--if this isn't all a god-damned
lie!"
"Wait a minute," he says. "Wait ... let me think! No, she wasn't beautiful.
I'm sure of that now. She had a streak of gray hair over her forehead ... I
remember that. But that wouldn't be so bad--I had almost forgotten it you
see. No, it was her arms--they were thin ... they were thin and brittle." He
begins to pace back and forth.--Suddenly, he stops dead. "If she were only
ten years younger!" he exclaims. "If she were ten years younger I might
overlook the streak of gray hair ... and even the brittle arms. But she's
too old. You see, with a cunt like that every year counts now. She won't be
just one year older next year--she'll be ten years older. Another year hence
and she'll be twenty years older. And I'll be getting younger looking all
the time--at least for another five years ..."
"But how did it end?" I interrupt.
"That's just it ... it didn't end. I promised to see her Tuesday around five
o'clock. That's bad, you know! There were lines in her face which will look
much worse in daylight. I suppose she wants me to fuck her Tuesday. Fucking
in the day-time--you don't do it with a cunt like
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that. Especially in a hotel like that. I'd rather do it on my night off ...
but Tuesday's not my night off. And that's not all. I promised her a letter
in the meantime. How am I going to write her a letter now? I haven't
anything to say ... Shit! If only she were ten years younger. Do you think I
should go with her ... to Borneo or wherever it is she wants to take me?
What would I do with a rich cunt like that on my hands? I don't know how to
shoot. I am afraid of guns and all that sort of thing. Besides, she'll be
wanting me to fuck her night and day ... nothing but hunting and fucking
all the time ... I can't do it!"
"Maybe it won't be so bad as you think. She'll buy you ties and all sorts of
things ..."
"Maybe you'll come along with us, eh? I told her all about you ..."
"Did you tell her I was poor? Did you tell her I needed things?"
"I told her everything. Shit, everything would be fine, if she were just a
few years younger. She said she was turning forty. That means fifty or
sixty. It's like fucking your own mother ... you can't do it ... it's
impossible."
"But she must have had some attractiveness ... you were kissing her breasts,
you said."
"Kissing her breasts--what's that? Besides it was dark, I'm telling you."
Putting on his pants a button falls off. "Look at that, will you. It's
falling apart, the god-damned suit. I've worn it for seven years now ... I
never paid for it either. It was a good suit once, but it stinks now. And
that cunt would buy me suits too, all I wanted most likely. But that's what
I don't like, having a woman shell out for me. I never did that in my life.
That's your idea. I'd rather live alone. Shit, this is a good room,
isn't it? What's wrong with it? Its a damned sight better than her room,
isn't it? I don't like her fine hotel. I'm against hotels like that. I told
her so. She said she didn't care where she lived ... said she'd come and
live with me if I wanted her to. Can you picture her moving in here with her
big trunks and her hat-boxes and all that crap she drags around with her?
She has too many things--too many dresses and bottles and all that. It's
like a clinic, her room. If she gets a little scratch on her finger it's
serious.
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And then she has to be massaged and her hair has to be waved and she mustn't
eat this and she mustn't eat that. Listen, Joe, she'd be all right if she
were just a little younger. You can forgive a young cunt anything. A young
cunt doesn't have to have any brains. They're better without brains. But an
old cunt, even if she's brilliant, even if she's the most charming woman in
the world, nothing makes any difference. A young cunt is an investment; an
old cunt is a dead loss. All they can do for you is buy you things. But that
doesn't put meat on their arms or juice between the legs. She isn't bad,
Irene. In fact, I think you'd like her. With you it's different. You don't
have to fuck her. You can afford to like her. Maybe you wouldn't like all
those dresses and the bottles and what not, but you could be tolerant. She
wouldn't bore you, that I can tell you. She's even interesting, I might say.
But she's withered. Her breasts are all right yet--but her arms! I told her
I'd bring you around some day. I talked a lot about you ... I didn't know
what to say to her. Maybe you'd like her, especially when she's dressed. I
don't know ..."
"Listen, she's rich, you say? I'll like her! I don't care how old she is, so
long as she's not a hag ..."
"She's not a hag! What are you talking about? She's charming, I tell you.
She talks well. She looks well too ... only her arms ..."
"All right, if that's how it is, I'll fuck her--if you don't want to.
Tell her that. Be subtle about it, though. With a woman like that you've got
to do things slowly. You bring me around and let things work out for
themselves. Praise the shit out of me. Act jealous like ... Shit, maybe
we'll fuck her together ... and we'll go places and we'll eat together ...
and we'll drive and hunt and wear nice things. If she wants to go to Borneo
let her take us along. I don't know how to shoot either, but that doesn't
matter. She doesn't care about that either. She just wants to be fucked
that's all. You're talking about her arms all the time. You don't have to
look at her arms all the time, do you? Look at this bedspread! Look at the
mirror! Do you call this living? Do you want to go on being delicate and
live like a louse all your life? You can't even pay your hotel bill ... and
you've got a job too. This is no way to
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live. I don't care if she's seventy years old--it's better than this .. ."
"Listen, Joe, you fuck her for me . . . then everything'll be fine. Maybe
I'll fuck her once in a while too ... on my night off. It's four days now
since I've had a good shit. There's something sticking to me, like grapes .
. ."
"You've got the piles, that's what."
"My hair's falling out too ... and I ought to see the dentist. I feel as
though I were falling apart. I told her what a good guy you are ... You'll
do things for me, eh? You're not too delicate, eh? If we go to Borneo I
won't have haemorrhoids any more. Maybe I'll develop something else ...
something worse ... fever perhaps ... or cholera. Shit, it is better to die
of a good disease like that than to piss your life away on a newspaper with
grapes up your ass and buttons falling off your pants. I'd like to be rich,
even if it were only for a week, and then go to a hospital with a good
disease, a fatal one, and have flowers in the room and nurses dancing
around and telegrams coming. They take good care of you if you're rich. They
wash you with cotton batting and they comb your hair for you. Shit, I know
all that. Maybe I'd be lucky and not die at all. Maybe I'd be a cripple all
my life .. . maybe I'd be paralyzed and have to sit in a wheel-chair. But
then I'd be taken care of just the same ... even if I had no more money. If
you're an invalid--a real one--they don't let you starve. And you get
a clean bed to lie in ... and they change the towels every day. This way
nobody gives a fuck about you, especially if you have a job. They think a
man should be happy if he's got a job. What would you rather do--be a
cripple all your life, or have a job ... or marry a rich cunt? You'd rather
marry a rich cunt, I can see that. You only think about food. But supposing
you married her and then you couldn't get a hard-on any more--that happens
sometimes--what would you do then? You'd be at her mercy. You'd have to eat
out of her hand, like a little poodle dog. You'd like that, would you? Or
maybe you don't think of those things? / think of everything. I
think of the suits I'd pick out and the places I'd like to go to, but I also
think of the other thing. That's the important thing. What good are the
fancy ties and the fine suits if you can't get a hard-on any more? You
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couldn't even betray her--because she'd be on your heels all the time. No,
the best thing would be to marry her and then get a disease right away. Only
not syphilis. Cholera, let's say, or yellow fever. So that if a miracle did
happen and your life was spared you'd be a cripple for the rest of your
days. Then you wouldn't have to worry about fucking her any more, and you
wouldn't have to worry about the rent either. She'd probably buy you a fine
wheel-chair with rubber tires and all sorts of levers and what not. You
might even be able to use your hands--I mean enough to be able to write. Or
you could have a secretary, for that matter. That's it--that's the best
solution for a writer. What does a guy want with his arms and legs? He
doesn't need arms and legs to write with. He needs security ... peace ...
protection. All those heroes who parade in wheel-chairs--it's too bad
they're not writers. If you could only be sure, when you go off to war,
that you'd have only your legs blown off ... if you could be sure of that
I'd say let's have a war tomorrow. I wouldn't give a fuck about the
medals--they could keep the medals. All I'd want is a good wheel-chair and
three meals a day. Then I'd give them something to read, those pricks!"
The following day, at one-thirty, I call on Van Norden. It's his day off, or
rather his night off. He has left word with Carl that I am to help him move
today.
I find him in a state of unusual depression. He hasn't slept a wink all
night, he tells me. There's something on his mind, something that's eating
him up. It isn't long before I discover what it is; he's been waiting
impatiently for me to arrive in order to spill it.
"That guy," he begins, meaning Carl, "that guy's an artist. He described
every detail minutely. He told it to me with such accuracy that I know it's
all a god-damned lie ... but I can't dismiss it from my mind. You know how
my minds works!"
He interrupts himself to inquire if Carl has told me the whole story. There
isn't the least suspicion in his mind that Carl may have told me one thing
and him another. He seems to think that the story was invented expressly to
torture him. He doesn't seem to mind so much that it's a
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fabrication. It's the "images," as he says, which Carl left in his mind,
that get him. The images are real, even if the whole story is false. And
besides, the fact that there actually is a rich cunt on the scene and that
Carl actually paid her a visit, that's undeniable. What actually happened is
secondary; he takes it for granted that Carl put the boots to her. But what
drives him desperate is the thought that what Carl has described to him
might have been possible.
"It's just like that guy," he says, "to tell me he put it to her six or
seven times. I know that's a lot of shit and I don't mind that so much, but
when he tells me that she hired a carriage and drove him out to the Bois and
that they used the husband's fur-coat for a blanket, that's too much. I
suppose he told you about the chauffeur waiting respectfully ... and listen,
did he tell you how the engine purred all the time? Jesus, he built that up
wonderfully. It's just like him to think of a detail like that ... it's one
of those little details which makes a thing psychologically real ... you
can't get it out of your head afterwards. And he tells it to me so smoothly,
so naturally ... I wonder, did he think it up in advance or did it just pop
out of his head like that, spontaneously? He's such a cute little liar you
can't walk away from him ... it's like he's writing you a letter, one of
those flower-pots that he makes overnight. I don't understand how a guy can
write such letters ... I don't get the mentality behind it ... it's a form a
masturbation ... what do you think?"
But before I have an opportunity to venture an opinion, or even to laugh in
his face, Van Norden goes on with his monologue.
"Listen, I suppose he told you everything ... did he tell you how he stood
on the balcony in the moonlight and kissed her? That sounds banal when you
repeat it, but the way that guy describes it ... I can just see the little
prick standing there with the woman in his arms and already he's writing
another letter to her, another flower-pot about the roof-tops and all that
crap he steals from his French authors. That guy never says a thing that's
original, I found that out. You have to get a clue like ... find out whom
he's been reading lately ... and it's hard to do that because he's so damned
secretive. Listen, if I didn't know that you went there with him, I wouldn't
believe
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that the woman existed. A guy like that could write letters to himself. And
yet he's lucky . . . he's so damned tiny, so frail, so romantic-looking,
that women fall for him now and then ... they sort of adopt him ... they
feel sorry for him, I guess. And some cunts like to receive flower-pots ...
it makes them feel important . . . But this woman's an intelligent woman, so
he says. You ought to know, you've seen her letters. What do you suppose a
woman like that saw in him? I can understand her falling for the letters ...
but how do you suppose she felt when she saw him?
"But listen, all that's beside the point. What I'm getting at is the way he
tells it to me. You know how he embroiders things ... well, after that scene
on the balcony--he gives me that like an hors d'oeuvre, you know--after
that, so he says, they went inside and he unbuttoned her pajamas. What are
you smiling for? Was he shifting me about that?"
"No, no! You're giving it to me exactly as he told me. Go ahead ..."
"After that"--here Van Norden has to smile himself-- "after that, mind you,
he tells me how she sat in the chair with her legs up ... not a stitch on
... and he's sitting on the floor looking up at her, telling her how
beautiful she looks ... did he tell you that she looked like a Matisse ...
Wait a minute ... I'd like to remember exactly what he said. He had some
cute little phrase there about an odalisque ... what the hell's an
odalisque anyway? He said it in French, that's why it's hard to remember the
fucking thing ... but it sounded good. It sounded just like the sort of
thing he might say. And she probably thought it was original with him ... I
suppose she thinks he's a poet or something. But listen, all this is nothing
... I make allowance for his imagination. It's what happened after that
that drives me crazy. All night long I've been tossing about, playing with
these images he left in my mind. I can't get it out of my head. It sounds so
real to me that if it didn't happen I could strangle the bastard. A guy has
no right to invent things like that. Or else he's diseased ...
"What I'm getting at is that moment when, he says, he got down on his knees
and with those two skinny fingers of his he spread her cunt open. You
remember that? He says she was sitting there with her legs dangling over the
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arms of the chair and suddenly, he says, he got an inspiration. This was
after he had given her a couple of lays already . . . after he had made that
little spiel about Matisse. He gets down on his knees--get this!--and
with his two fingers ... just the tips of them, mind you ... he opens the
little petals ... squish-squish ... just like that. A sticky little
sound ... almost inaudible. Squish-squish! Jesus, I've been hearing
it all night long! And then he says--as if that weren't enough for me--then
he tells me he buried his head in her muff. And when he did that, so help me
Christ, if she didn't swing her legs around his neck and lock him there.
That finished me! Imagine it! Imagine a fine, sensitive woman like
that swinging her legs around his neck\ There's something poisonous
about it. It's so fantastic that it sounds convincing. If he had only told
me about the champagne and the ride in the Bois and even that scene on the
balcony I could have dismissed it. But this thing is so incredible that it
doesn't sound like a lie, any more. I can't believe that he ever read
anything like that anywhere, and I can't see what could have put the idea
into his head unless there was some truth in it. With a little prick like
that, you know, anything can happen. He may not have fucked her at all, but
she may have let him diddle her ... you never know with these rich cunts
what they might expect you to do ..."
When he finally pulls himself out of bed and starts to shave the afternoon
is already well advanced. I've finally succeeded in switching his mind to
other things, to the moving principally. The maid comes in to see if he's
ready--he's supposed to have vacated the room by noon. He's just in the act
of slipping into his trousers. I'm a little surprised that he doesn't
excuse himself, or turn away. Seeing him standing there nonchalantly
buttoning his fly as he gives her orders I begin to titter. "Don't mind
her," he says, throwing her a look of supreme contempt, "she's just a big
sow. Give her a pinch in the ass, if you like. She won't say anything." And
then addressing her, in English, he says: "Come here, you bitch, put your
hand on this!" At this I can't restrain myself any longer. I burst out
laughing, a fit of hysterical laughter which infects the maid also, though
she doesn't know what it's all about.
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The maid commences to take down the pictures and photographs, mostly of
himself, which line the walls. "You," he says, jerking his thumb,
"come here! Here's something to remember me by"--ripping a photograph off
the wall--"when I go you can wipe your ass with it. See," he says, turning
to me, "she's a dumb bitch. She wouldn't look any more intelligent if I said
it in French." The maid stands there with her mouth open; she is evidently
convinced that he is cracked. "Hey!" he yells at her as if she were hard of
healing. "Hey, you! Yes, you! Like this ... !" and he takes
the photograph, his own photograph, and wipes his ass with it. "Comme
ca! Savvy? You've got to draw pictures for her," he says, thrusting his
lower lip forward in absolute disgust.
He watches her helplessly as she throws his things into the big valises.
"Here, put these in too," he says, handing her a tooth-brush and the
douche-bag. Half of his belongings are lying on the floor. The valises are
crammed full and there is nowhere to put the paintings and the books and the
bottles that are half empty. "Sit down a minute," he says. "We've got plenty
of time. We've got to think this thing out. If you hadn't come around I'd
never have gotten out of here. You see how helpless I am. Don't let me
forget to take the bulbs out ... they belong to me. That waste-basket
belongs to me too. They expect you to live like pigs, these bastards." The
maid has gone downstairs to get some twine ... "Wait till you see ...
she'll charge me for the twine even if it's only three sous. They wouldn't
sew a button on your pants here without charging for it. The lousy, dirty
scroungers!" He takes a bottle of Calvados from the mantelpiece and nods to
me to grab the other. "No use carrying these to the new place. Let's finish
them off now. But don't give her a drink! That bastard, I wouldn't
leave her a piece of toilet-paper. I'd like to ruin the joint before I go.
Listen ... piss on the floor, if you like. I wish I could take a crap in the
bureau drawer." He feels so utterly disgusted with himself and everything
else that he doesn't know what to do by way of venting his feelings. He
walks over to the bed with the bottle in his hand and pulling back the
covers he sprinkles Calvados over the mattress. Not content with that he
digs his heel into the mattress. Unfortunately there's no mud
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on his heels. Finally he takes the sheet and cleans his shoes with it.
"That'll give them something to do," he mutters vengefully. Then, taking a
good swig, he throws his head back and gargles his throat, and after he's
gargled it good and proper he spits it out on the mirror. "There, you cheap
bastards! Wipe that off when I go!" He walks back and forth mumbling to
himself. Seeing his torn socks lying on the floor he picks them up and tears
them to bits. The paintings enrage him too. He picks one up--a portrait of
himself done by some Lesbian he knew and he puts his foot through it. "That
bitch! You know what she had the nerve to ask me? She asked me to turn over
my cunts to her after I was through with them. She never gave me a sou for
writing her up. She thought I honestly admired her work. I wouldn't have
gotten that painting out of her if I hadn't promised to fix her up with that
cunt from Minnesota. She was nuts about her ... used to follow us around
like a dog in heat ... we couldn't get rid of the bitch! She bothered the
life out of me. I got so that I was almost afraid to bring a cunt up here
for fear that she'd bust in on me. I used to creep up here like a burglar
and lock the door behind me as soon as I got inside ... She and that Georgia
cunt--they drive me nuts. The one is always in heat and the other is always
hungry. I hate fucking a woman who's hungry. It's like you push a feed
inside her and then you push it out again ... Jesus, that reminds me of
something ... where did I put that blue ointment? That's important. Did you
ever have those things? It's worse than having a dose. And I don't know
where I got them from either. I've had so many women up here in the last
week or so I've lost track of them. Funny too, because they all smelled so
fresh. But you know how it is ..."
The maid has piled his things up on the sidewalk. The patron looks on
with a surly air. When everything has been loaded into the taxi there is
only room for one of us inside. As soon as we commence to roll Van Norden
gets out a newspaper and starts bundling up his pots and pans;
in the new place all cooking is strictly forbidden. By the time we reach our
destination all his luggage has come undone; it wouldn't be quite so
embarrassing if the madame had not stuck her head out of the doorway just as
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we rolled up. "My God!" she exclaims, "what in the devil is all this? What
does it mean?" Van Norden is so intimidated that he can think of nothing
more to say than "C'est moi ... c'est moi, madame!" And turning to me
he mumbles savagely: "That cluck! Did you notice her face? She's going to
make it hard for me."
The hotel lies back of a dingy passage and forms a rectangle very much on
the order of a modem penitentiary. The bureau is large and gloomy, despite
the brilliant reflections from the tile walls. There are bird cages hanging
in the windows and little enamel signs everywhere begging the guests in an
obsolete language not to do this and not to forget that. It is almost
immaculately clean but absolutely poverty-stricken, threadbare, woe-begone.
The upholstered chairs are held together with wired thongs;
they remind one unpleasantly of the electric chair. The room he is going to
occupy is on the fifth floor. As we climb the stairs Van Norden informs me
that Maupassant once lived here. And in the same breath he remarks that
there is a peculiar odor in the hall. On the fifth floor a few window-panes
are missing; we stand a moment gazing at the tenants across the court. It
is getting toward dinner-time and people are straggling back to their rooms
with that weary, dejected air which comes from earning a living honestly.
Most of the windows are wide open: the dingy rooms have the appearance of so
many yawning mouths. The occupants of the rooms are yawning too, or else
scratching themselves. They move about listlessly and apparently without
much purpose; they might just as well be lunatics.
As we turn down the corridor towards room 57, a door suddenly opens in front
of us and an old hag with matted hair and the eyes of a maniac peers out.
She startles us so that we stand transfixed. For a full minute the three of
us stand there powerless to move or even to make an intelligent gesture.
Back of the old hag I can see a kitchen table and on it lies a baby all
undressed, a puny little brat no bigger than a plucked chicken. Finally the
old one picks up a slop-pail by her side and makes a move forward. We stand
aside to let her pass and as the door closes behind her the baby lets out a
piercing scream. It
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is room number 56, and between 56 and 57 is the toilet where the old hag is
emptying her slops.
Ever since we have mounted the stairs Van Norden has kept silence. But his
looks are eloquent. When he opens the door of 57 I have for a fleeting
moment the sensation of going mad. A huge mirror covered with green gauze
and tipped at an angle of 45 degrees hangs directly opposite the entrance
over a baby-carriage which is filled with books. Van Norden doesn't even
crack a smile; instead he walks nonchalantly over to the baby-carriage and
picking up a book begins to skim it through, much as a man would enter the
public library and go unthinkingly to the rack nearest to hand. And perhaps
this would not seem so ludicrous to me if I had not espied at the same time
a pair of handle-bars resting in the corner. They look so absolutely
peaceful and contented, as if they had been dozing there for years, that
suddenly it seems to me as if we had been standing in this room, in exactly
this position, for an incalculably long time, that it was a pose we had
struck in a dream from which we never emerged, a dream which the least
gesture, the wink of an eye even, will shatter. But more remarkable still is
the remembrance that suddenly floats up of an actual dream which occurred
only the other night, a dream in which I saw Van Norden in just such a comer
as is occupied now by the handle-bars, only instead of the handle-bars there
was a woman crouching with her legs drawn up. I see him standing over the
woman with that alert, eager look in his eye, which comes when he wants
something badly. The street in which this is going on is blurred--only the
angle made by two walls is clear, and the cowering figure of the woman. I
can see him going at her in that quick, animal way of his, reckless of
what's going on about him, determined only to have his way. And a look in
his eye as though to say--"you can kill me afterwards, but just let me get
it in ... I've got to get it in!" And there he is, bent over her, their
heads knocking against the wall, he has such a tremendous erection that it's
simply impossible to get it in her. Suddenly, with that disgusted air which
he knows so well how to summon, he picks himself up and adjusts his clothes.
He is about to walk away when suddenly he notices that his penis is lying
on the sidewalk. It
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is about the size of a sawed-off broom-stick. He picks it up nonchalantly
and slings it under his arm. As he walks off I notice two huge bulbs, like
tulip bulbs, dangling from the end of the broom-stick, and I can hear him
muttering to himself "flower-pots ... flower-pots."
The garcon arrives panting and sweating. Van Norden looks at him
uncomprehendingly. The madame now marches in and walking straight up to Van
Norden she takes the book out of his hand, thrusts it in the baby-carriage,
and without saying a word, wheels the baby-carriage into the hallway.
"This is a bug-house," says Van Norden, smiling distressedly. It is such a
faint, indescribable smile that for a moment the dream feeling comes back
and it seems to me that we are standing at the end of a long corridor at the
end of which is a corrugated mirror. And down this corridor, swinging his
distress like a dingy lantern. Van Norden staggers, staggers in and out as
here and there a door opens and a hand yanks him in or a hoof pushes him
out. And the further off he wanders the more lugubrious is his distress; he
wears it like a lantern which the cyclists hold between their teeth on a
night when the pavement is wet and slippery. In and out of the dingy rooms
he wanders, and when he sits down the chair collapses, when he opens his
valise there is only a tooth-brush inside. In every room there is a mirror
before which he stands attentively and chews his rage, and from the
constant chewing, from the grumbling and mumbling and the muttering and
cursing his jaws have gotten unhinged and they sag badly and, when he rubs
his beard, pieces of his jaw crumble away and he's so disgusted with himself
that he stamps on his own jaw, grinds it to bits with his big heels.
Meanwhile the luggage is being hauled in. And things begin to look crazier
even than before--particularly when he attaches his exerciser to the
bedstead and begins his Sandow exercises. "I like this place," he says,
smiling at the garcon. He takes his coat and vest off. The
gacfon is watching him with a puzzled air; he has a valise in one
hand and the douche-bag in the other. I'm standing apart in the ante-chamber
holding the mirror with the green gauze. Not a single object seems to
possess a practical
129
use. The ante-chamber itself seems useless, a sort of vestibule to a barn.
It is exactly the same sort of sensation which I get when I enter the
Comedie Francaise or the Palais Royal Theatre; it is a world of bric-a-brac,
of trapdoors, of arms and busts and waxed floors, of candelabras and men in
armor, of statues without eyes and love letters lying in glass cases.
Something is going on, but it makes no sense; it's like finishing the
half-empty bottle of Calvados because there's no room in the valise.
Climbing up the stairs, as I said a moment ago, he had mentioned the fact
that Maupassant used to live here. The coincidence seems to have made an
impression upon him. He would like to believe that it was in this very room
that Maupassant gave birth to some of those gruesome tales on which his
reputation rests. "They lived like pigs, those poor bastards," he says. We
are sitting at the round table in a pair of comfortable old arm-chairs that
have been trussed up with thongs and braces; the bed is right beside as, so
close indeed that we can put our feet on it. The armoire stands in a
comer behind us, also conveniently within reach. Van Norden has emptied his
dirty wash on the table; we sit here with our feet buried in his dirty socks
and shirts, and smoke contentedly. The sordidness of the place seems to have
worked a spell on him: he is content here. When I get up to switch on the
light he suggests that we play a game of cards before going out to
eat. And so we sit there by the window, with the dirty wash strewn
over the floor and the Sandow exerciser hanging from the chandelier, and we
play a few rounds of two-handed pinochle. Van Norden has put away his pipe
and packed a wad of snuff on the under side of his lower lip. Now and then
he spits out of the window, big healthy gobs of brown juice which resound
with a smack on the pavement below. He seems content now.
"In America," he says, "you wouldn't dream of living in a joint like this.
Even when I was on the bum I slept in better rooms than this. But here it
seems natural--it's like the books you read. If I ever go back there I'll
forget all about this life, just like you forget a bad dream. I'll probably
take up the old life again just where I left off... if I ever get back.
Sometimes I lie in bed dreaming about the past and it's so vivid to me that
I have to shake my-
130
self in order to realize where I am. Especially when I have a woman beside
me; a woman can set me off better than anything. That's all I want of
them--to forget myself. Sometimes I get so lost in my reveries that I can't
remember the name of the cunt or where I picked her up. That's funny, eh?
It's good to have a fresh warm body beside you when you wake up in the
morning. It gives you a clean feeling. You get spiritual like ... until they
start pulling that mushy crap about love et cetera. Why do all these cunts
talk about love so much, can you tell me that? A good lay isn't enough for
them apparently ... they want your soul too ..."
Now this word soul, which pops up frequently in Van Norden's soliloquies,
used to have a droll effect upon me at first. Whenever I heard the word soul
from his lips I would get hysterical; somehow it seemed like a false coin,
more particularly because it was usually accompanied by a gob of brown
juice which left a trickle down the comer of his mouth. And as I never
hesitated to laugh in his face it happened invariably that when this little
word bobbed up Van Norden would pause just long enough for me to burst into
a cackle and then, as if nothing had happened, he would resume his
monologue, repeating the word more and more frequently and each time with a
more caressing emphasis. It was the soul of him that women were trying to
possess--that he made clear to me. He had explained it over and over again,
but he comes back to it afresh each time like a paranoiac to his obsession.
In a sense Van Norden is mad, of that I'm convinced. His one fear is to be
left alone, and this fear is so deep and so persistent that even when he is
on top of a woman, even when he has welded himself to her, he cannot escape
the prison which he has created for himself. "I try all sorts of things," he
explains to me. "I even count sometimes, or I begin to think of a problem in
philosophy, but it doesn't work. It's like I'm two people, and one of them
is watching me all the time. I get so god-damned mad at myself that I could
kill myself ... and in a way, that's what I do every time I have an orgasm.
For one second like I obliterate myself. There's not even one me then ...
there's nothing ... not even the cunt. It's like receiving communion.
Honest, I mean that. For a few sec-
131
onds afterwards I have a fine spiritual glow . . . and maybe it would
continue that way indefinitely--how can you tell?--if it weren't for the
fact that there's a woman beside you and then the douche-bag and the water
running ... all those little details that make you desperately
self-conscious, desperately lonely. And for that one moment of freedom you
have to listen to all that love crap ... it drives me nuts sometimes ... I
want to kick them out immediately ... I do now and then. But that doesn't
keep them away. They like it, in fact. The less you notice them the more
they chase after you. There's something perverse about women . . . they're
all masochists at heart."
"But what is it you want of a woman, then?" I demand.
He begins to mould his hands; his lower lip droops. He looks completely
frustrated. When eventually he succeeds in stammering out a few broken
phrases it's with the conviction that behind his words lies an overwhelming
futility. "I want to be able to surrender myself to a woman," he blurts
out. "I want her to take me out of myself. But to do that, she's got to be
better than I am; she's got to have a mind, not just a cunt. She's got to
make me believe that I need her, that I can't live without her. Find me a
cunt like that, will you? If you could do that I'd give you my job. I
wouldn't care then what happened to me:
I wouldn't need a job or friends or books or anything. If she could only
make me believe that there was something more important on earth than
myself. Jesus, I hate myself! But I hate these bastardly cunts even
more--because they're none of them any good.
"You think I like myself," he continues. "That shows how little you know
about me. I know I'm a great guy ... I wouldn't have these problems if there
weren't something to me. But what eats me up is that I can't express
myself. People think I'm a cunt-chaser. That's how shallow they are, these
high-brows who sit on the terrasse all day chewing the psychologic
cud ... That's not so bad, eh--psychologic cud? Write it down for me. I'll
use it in my column next week ... By the way, did you ever read Stekel? Is
he any good? It looks like nothing but case histories to me. I wish to
Christ I could get up enough nerve to visit an analyst... a good one, I
mean. I don't want to
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see these little shysters with goatees and frock coats, like your friend
Boris. How do you manage to tolerate those guys? Don't they bore you stiff?
You talk to anybody, I notice. You don't give a god-damn. Maybe you're
right. I wish I weren't so damned critical. But these dirty little Jews who
hang around the Dome, Jesus, they give me the creeps. They sound just like
textbooks. If I could talk to you every day maybe I could get things off my
chest. You're a good listener. I know you don't give a damn about me, but
you're patient. And you don't have any theories to exploit. I suppose you
put it all down afterwards in that notebook of yours. Listen, I don't mind
what you say about me, but don't make me out to be a cunt-chaser--it's too
simple. Some day I'll write a book about myself, about my thoughts. I don't
mean just a piece of introspective analysis ... I mean that I'll lay myself
down on the operating table and I'll expose my whole guts ... every
god-damned thing. Has anybody ever done that before?--What the hell are you
smiling at? Does it sound naif?"
I'm smiling because whenever we touch on the subject of this book which he
is going to write some day things assume an incongruous aspect. He has only
to say "my book" and immediately the world shrinks to the private dimensions
of Van Norden and Co. The book must be absolutely original, absolutely
perfect. That is why, among other things, it is impossible for him to get
started on it. As soon as he gets an idea he begins to question it. He
remembers that Dostoievski used it, or Hamsun, or somebody else. "I'm not
saying that I want to be better than them, but I want to be different," he
explains. And so, instead of tackling his book, he reads one author after
another in order to make absolutely certain that he is not going to tread
on their private property. And the more he reads the more disdainful he
becomes. None of them are satisfying; none of them arrive at that degree of
perfection which he has imposed on himself. And forgetting completely that
he has not written as much as a chapter he talks about them condescendingly,
quite as though there existed a shelf of books bearing his name, books which
everyone is familiar with and the titles of which it is therefore
superfluous to mention. Though he has never
133
overtly lied about this fact, nevertheless it is obvious that the people
whom he buttonholes in order to air his private philosophy, his criticism,
and his grievances, take it for granted that behind his loose remarks there
stands a solid body of work. Especially the young and foolish virgins whom
he lures to his room on the pretext of reading to them his poems, or on the
still better pretext of asking their advice. Without the least feeling of
guilt or self-consciousness he will hand them a piece of soiled paper on
which he has scribbled a few lines--the basis of a new poem, as he puts
it--and with absolute seriousness demand of them an honest expression of
opinion. As they usually have nothing to give by way of comment, wholly
bewildered as they are by the utter senselessness of the lines. Van Norden
seizes the occasion to expound to them his view of art, a view, needless to
say, which is spontaneously created to suit the event. So expert has he
become in this role that the transition from Ezra Pound's cantos to the bed
is made as simply and naturally as a modulation from one key to another; in
fact, if it were not made there would be a discord, which is what happens
now and then when he makes a mistake as regards those nit-wits whom he
refers to as "push-overs." Naturally, constituted as he is, it is with
reluctance that he refers to these fatal errors of judgment. But when he
does bring himself to confess to an error of this kind it is with absolute
frankness; in fact, he seems to derive a perverse pleasure in dwelling upon
his inaptitude. There is one woman, for example, whom he has been trying to
make for almost ten years now--first in America, and finally here in Paris.
It is the only person of the opposite sex with whom he has a cordial,
friendly relationship. They seem not only to like each other, but to
understand each other. At first it seemed to me that if he could really make
this creature his problem might be solved. All the elements for a
successful union were there--except the fundamental one. Bessie was almost
as unusual in her way as himself. She had as little concern about giving
herself to a man as she has about the dessert which follows the meal.
Usually she singled out the object of her choice and made the proposition
herself. She was not bad-looking, nor could one say that she was
good-looking either. She had a fine
134
body, that was the chief thing--and she liked it, as they say.
They were so chummy, these two, that sometimes, in order to gratify her
curiosity (and also in the vain hope of inspiring her by his prowess). Van
Norden would arrange to hide her in his closet during one of his seances.
After it was over Bessie would emerge from her hiding-place and they would
discuss the matter casually, that is to say, with an almost total
indifference to everything except "technique." Technique was one of her
favorite terms, at least in those discussions which I was privileged to
enjoy. "What's wrong with my technique?" he would say. And Bessie would
answer: "You're too crude. If you ever expect to make me you've got to
become more subtle."
There was such a perfect understanding between them, as I say, that often
when I called for Van Norden at one-thirty, I would find Bessie sitting on
the bed, the covers thrown back and Van Norden inviting her to stroke his
penis ... "just a few silken strokes," he would say, "so as I'll have the
courage to get up." Or else he would urge her to blow on it, or failing
that, he would grab hold of himself and shake it like a dinner-bell, the two
of them laughing fit to die. "I'll never make this bitch," he would say.
"She has no respect for me. That's what I get for taking her into my
confidence." And then abruptly he might add: "What do you make of that
blonde I showed you yesterday?" Talking to Bessie, of course. And Bessie
would jeer at him, telling him he had no taste. "Aw, don't give me that
line," he would say. And then playfully, perhaps for the thousandth time,
because by now it had become a standing joke between them--"Listen, Bessie,
what about a quick lay? Just one little lay ... no." And when this had
passed off in the usual manner he would add, in the same tone: "Well, what
about him'] Why don't you give him a lay?"
The whole point about Bessie was that she couldn't, or just wouldn't, regard
herself as a lay. She talked about passion, as if it were a brand new word.
She was passionate about things, even a little thing like a lay. She had to
put her soul into it.
"I get passionate too sometimes," Van Norden would say.
135
"Oh, you," says Bessie. You're just a worn-out satyr. You don't know
the meaning of passion. When you get an erection you think you're
passionate."
"All right, maybe it's not passion . . . but you can't get passionate
without having an erection, that's true isn't it?"
All this about Bessie, and the other women whom he drags to this room day in
and out, occupies my thoughts as we walk to the restaurant. I have adjusted
myself so well to his monologues that without interrupting my own reveries I
make whatever comment is required automatically, the moment 1 hear his
voice die out. It is a duet, and like most duets moreover in that one
listens attentively only for the signal which announces the advent of one's
own voice. As it is his night off, and as 1 have promised to keep him
company, I have already dulled myself to his queries. I know that before the
evening is over I shall be thoroughly exhausted; if I am lucky, that is, if
I can worm a few francs out of him on some pretext or other, I will duck him
the moment he goes to the toilet. But he knows my propensity for slipping
away, and, instead of being insulted, he simply provides against the
possibility by guarding his sous. If I ask him for money to buy cigarettes
he insists on going with me to purchase them. He will not be left alone, not
for a second. Even when he has succeeded in grabbing off a woman, even then
he is terrified to be left alone with her. If it were possible he would have
me sit in the room while he puts on the performance. It would be like asking
me to wait while he took a shave.
On his night off Van Norden generally manages to have at least fifty francs
in his pocket, a circumstance which does not prevent him from making a touch
whenever he encounters a prospect. "Hello," he says, "give me twenty francs
... I need it." He has a way of looking panic-stricken at the same time. And
if he meets with a rebuff he becomes insulting. "Well, you can buy a drink
at least." And when he gets his drink he says more graciously--"Listen, give
me five francs then ... give me two francs ..." We go from bar to bar
looking for a little excitement and always accumulating a few more francs.
136
At the Coupole we stumble into a drunk from the newspaper. One of the
upstairs guys. There's just been an accident at the office, he informs us.
One of the proofreaders fell down the elevator shaft. Not expected to live.
At first Van Norden is shocked, deeply shocked. But when he learns that it
was Peckover, the Englishman, he looks relieved. "The poor bastard," he
says, "he's better off dead than alive. He just got his false teeth the
other day too ..."
The allusion to the false teeth moves the man upstairs to tears. He relates
in a slobbery way a little incident connected with the accident. He is
upset about it, more upset about this little incident than about the
catastrophe itself. It seems that Peckover, when he hit the bottom of the
shaft, regained consciousness before anyone could reach him. Despite the
fact that his legs were broken and his ribs busted, he had managed to rise
to all fours and grope about for his false teeth. In the ambulance he was
crying out in his delirium for the teeth he had lost. The incident was
pathetic and ludicrous at the same time. The guy from upstairs hardly knew
whether to laugh or to weep as he related it. It was a delicate moment
because with a drunk like that one false move and he'd crash a bottle over
your skull. He had never been particularly friendly with Peckover--as a
matter of fact, he had scarcely ever set foot in the proof-reading
department: there was an invisible wall between the guys upstairs and the
guys down below. But now, since he had felt the touch of death, he wanted to
display his comradeship. He wanted to weep, if possible, to show that he was
a regular guy. And Joe and I, who knew Peckover well and who knew also that
he wasn't worth a good god-damn, even a few tears, we felt annoyed with this
drunken sentimentality. We wanted to tell him so too, but with a guy like
that you can't afford to be honest; you have to buy a wreath and go to the
funeral and pretend that you're miserable. And you have to congratulate him
too for the delicate obituary he's written. He'll be carrying his delicate
little obituary around with him for months, praising the shit out of himself
for the way he handled the situation. We felt all that, Joe and I, without
saying a word to each other. We just stood
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there and listened with a murderous, silent contempt. And as soon as we
could break away we did so; we left him there at the bar blubbering to
himself over his Pernod.
Once out of his sight we began to laugh hysterically. The false teeth! No
matter what we said about the poor devil, and we said some good things about
him too, we always came back to the false teeth. There are people in this
world who cut such a grotesque figure that even death renders them
ridiculous. And the more horrible the death the more ridiculous they seem.
It's no use trying to invest the end with a little dignity--you have to be a
liar and a hypocrite to discover anything tragic in their going. And since
we didn't have to put on a false front we could laugh about the incident to
our heart's content. We laughed all night about it, and in between times, we
vented our scorn and disgust for the guys upstairs, the fat-heads who were
trying to persuade themselves, no doubt, that Peckover was a fine fellow and
that his death was a catastrophe. All sorts of funny recollections came to
our minds--the semicolons that he overlooked and for which they bawled the
piss out of him. They made his life miserable with their rucking little
semi-colons and the fractions which he always got wrong. They were even
going to fire him once because he came to work with a boozy breath. They
despised him because he always looked so miserable and because he had
eczema and dandruff. He was just a nobody, as far as they were concerned,
but, now that he was dead, they would all chip in lustily and buy him a huge
wreath and they'd put his name in big type in the obituary column. Anything
to throw a little reflection on themselves;
they'd make him out to be a big shit if they could. But
unfortunately, with Peckover, there was little they could invent about
him. He was a zero, and even the fact that he was dead wouldn't add a cipher
to his name.
"There's only one good aspect to it," says Joe. "You may get his job. And if
you have any luck, maybe you'll fall down the elevator shaft and break your
neck too. We'll buy you a nice wreath, I promise you that."
Towards dawn we're sitting on the terrasse of the D6me. We've
forgotten about poor Peckover long ago.
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We've had a little excitement at the Bal Negre and Joe's mind has slipped
back to the eternal preoccupation: cunt. It's at this hour, when his night
off is almost concluded, that his restlessness mounts to a fever pitch. He
thinks of the women he passed up earlier in the evening and of the steady
ones whom he might have had for the asking, if it weren't that he was fed up
with them. He is reminded inevitably of his Georgia cunt--she's been
hounding him lately, begging him to take her in, at least until she can find
herself a job. "I don't mind giving her a feed once in a while," he says,
"but I couldn't take her on as a steady thing . .. she'd ruin it for my
other cunts." What gripes him most about her is that she doesn't put on any
flesh. "It's like taking a skeleton to bed with you," he says. "The other
night I took her on--out of pity--and what do you think the crazy bitch had
done to herself? She had shaved it clean ... not a speck of hair on it! Did
you ever have a woman who shaved her twat? It's repulsive, ain't it? And
it's funny, too. Sort of mad like. It doesn't look like a twat any more:
it's like a dead clam or something." He describes to me how, his curiosity
aroused, he got out of bed and searched for his flashlight. "I made her
hold it open and I trained the flashlight on it. You should have seen me
... it was comical. I got so worked up about it that I forgot all about her.
I never in my life looked at a cunt so seriously. You'd imagine I'd never
seen one before. And the more I looked at it the less interesting it became.
It only goes to show that there's nothing to it after all, especially when
it's shaved. It's the hair that makes it mysterious. That's why a statue
leaves you cold. Only once I saw real cunt on a statue--that was by Rodin.
You ought to see it some time ... she has her legs spread wide apart ... I
don't think there was any head on it. Just a cunt you might say. Jesus, it
looked ghastly. The thing is this--they all look alike. When you look at
them with their clothes on you imagine all sorts of things; you give them an
individuality like, which they haven't got, of course. There's just a crack
there between the legs and you get all steamed up about it--you don't even
look at it half the time. You know it's there and all you think about is
getting your ramrod in-
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side; it's as though your penis did the thinking for you. It's an illusion!
You get all burned up about nothing ... about a crack with hair on it, or
without hair. It's so absolutely meaningless that it fascinated me to look
at it. I must have studied it for ten minutes or more. When you look at it
that way, sort of detached like, you get funny notions in your head. All
that mystery about sex and then you discover that it's nothing, just a
blank. Wouldn't it be funny if you found a harmonica inside ... or a
calendar? But there's nothing there ... nothing at all. It's disgusting. It
almost drove me mad ... Listen, do you know what I did afterwards? I gave
her a quick lay and then I turned my back on her. Yeah, I picked up a book
and I read. You can get something out of a book, even a bad book ... but a
cunt, it's just a sheer loss of time ..."
It just so happened that as he was concluding his speech a whore gave us the
eye. Without the slightest transition he says to me abruptly: "Would you
like to give her a tumble? It won't cost much ... she'll take the two of us
on." And without waiting for a reply he staggers to his feet and goes over
to her. In a few minutes he comes back. "It's all fixed," he says. "Finish
your beer. She's hungry. There's nothing doing any more at this hour ...
she'll take the both of us for fifteen francs. We'll go to my room ... it'll
be cheaper."
On the way to the hotel the girl is shivering so that we have to stop and
buy her a coffee. She's a rather gentle sort of creature and not at all bad
to look at. She evidently knows Van Norden, knows there's nothing to
expect from him but the fifteen francs. "You haven't got any dough," he
says, mumbling to me under his breath. As I haven't a centime in my pocket I
don't quite see the point of this, until he bursts out "For Christ's sake,
remember that we're broke. Don't get tenderhearted when we get upstairs.
She's going to ask you for a little extra--I know this cunt! I could get her
for ten francs, if I wanted to. There's no use spoiling them ..."
"Il est mechant, celui-la," she says to me, gathering the
drift of his remarks in her dull way.
"Non, il n'est pas mechant, il est tres gentil."
She shakes her head laughingly. "Je le connais bien, ce
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type." And then she commences a hard luck story, about the hospital
and the back rent and the baby in the country. But she doesn't overdo it.
She knows that our ears are stopped; but the misery is there inside her,
like a stone, and there's no room for any other thoughts. She isn't trying
to make an appeal to our sympathies--she's just shifting this big weight
inside her from one place to another. I rather like her. I hope to Christ
she hasn't got a disease ...
In the room she goes about her preparations mechanically. "There isn't a
crust of bread about by any chance?" she inquires, as she squats over the
bidet. Van Norden laughs at this. "Here, take a drink," he says,
shoving a bottle at her. She doesn't want anything to drink; her stomach's
already on the bum, she complains.
"That's just a line with her," says Van Norden. "Don't let her work on your
sympathies. Just the same. I wish she'd talk about something else. How the
hell can you get up any passion when you've got a starving cunt on your
hands?"
Precisely! We haven't any passion either of us. And as for her, one might as
well expect her to produce a diamond necklace as to show a spark of
passion. But there's the fifteen francs and something has to be done about
it. It's like a state of war; the moment the condition is precipitated
nobody thinks about anything but peace, about getting it over with. And yet
nobody has the courage to lay down his arms, to say, "I'm fed up with it ...
I'm through." No, there's fifteen francs somewhere, which nobody gives a
damn about any more and which nobody is going to get in the end anyhow, but
the fifteen francs is like the primal cause of things and rather than listen
to one's own voice, rather than walk out of the primal cause, one surrenders
to the situation, one goes on butchering and butchering and the more
cowardly one feels the more heroically does he behave, until a day when the
bottom drops out and suddenly all the guns are silenced and the
stretcher-bearers pick up the maimed and bleeding heroes and pin medals on
their chest. Then one has the rest of his life to think about the fifteen
francs. One hasn't any eyes or arms or legs, but he has the consolation of
dreaming for the rest of his days about the fifteen francs which everybody
has forgotten.
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It's exactly like a state of war--I can't get it out of my head. The way she
works over me, to blow a spark of passion into me, makes me think what a
damned poor soldier I'd be if I was ever silly enough to be trapped like
this and dragged to the front. I know for my part that I'd surrender
everything, honor included, in order to get out of the mess. I haven't any
stomach for it, and that's all there is to it. But she's got her mind set on
the fifteen francs and if I don't want to fight about it she's going to make
me fight. But you can't put fight into a man's guts if he hasn't any fight
in him. There are some of us so cowardly that you can't even make heroes of
us, not even if you frighten us to death. We know too much, maybe. There are
some of us who don't live in the moment, who live a little ahead, or a
little behind. My mind is on the peace treaty all the time. I can't forget
that it was the fifteen francs which started all the trouble. Fifteen
francs! What does fifteen francs mean to me, particularly since it's not my
fifteen francs?
Van Norden seems to have a more normal attitude about it. He doesn't care a
rap about the fifteen francs either now; it's the situation itself which
intrigues him. It seems to call for a show of mettle--his manhood is
involved. The fifteen francs are lost, whether we succeed or not. There's
something more involved--not just manhood perhaps, but will. It's like a man
in the trenches again: he doesn't know any more why he should go on living,
because if he escapes now he'll only be caught later, but he goes on just
the same, and even though he has the soul of a cockroach and has admitted as
much to himself, give him a gun or a knife or even just his bare nails, and
he'll go on slaughtering and slaughtering, he'd slaughter a million men
rather than stop and ask himself why.
As I watch Van Norden tackle her, it seems to me that I'm looking at a
machine whose cogs have slipped. Left to themselves, they could go on this
way forever, grinding and slipping, without ever anything happening. Until
a hand shuts the motor off. The sight of them coupled like a pair of goats
without the least spark of passion, grinding and grinding away for no reason
except the fifteen francs, washes away every bit of feeling I have, except
the inhuman one of satisfying my curiosity. The girl is lying on
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the edge of the bed and Van Norden is bent over her like a satyr with his
two feet solidly planted on the floor. I am sitting on a chair behind him,
watching their movements with a cool, scientific detachment; it doesn't
matter to me if it should last forever. It's like watching one of those
crazy machines which throw the newspaper out, millions and billions and
trillions of them with their meaningless head-lines. The machine seems more
sensible, crazy as it is, and more fascinating to watch, than the human
beings and the events which produced it. My interest in Van Norden and the
girl is nil; if I could sit like this and watch every single performance
going on at this minute all over the world my interest would be even less
than nil. I wouldn't be able to differentiate between this phenomenon and
the rain falling or a volcano erupting. As long as that spark of passion is
missing there is no human significance in the performance. The machine is
better to watch. And these two are like a machine which has slipped its
cogs. It needs the touch of a human hand to set it right. It needs a
mechanic.
I get down on my knees behind Van Norden and I examine the machine more
attentively. The girl throws, her head on one side and gives me a despairing
look. "It's no use," she says. "It's impossible." Upon which Van Norden sets
to work with renewed energy, just like an old billy goat. He's such an
obstinate cuss that he'll break his horns rather than give up. And he's
getting sore now because I'm tickling him in the rump.
"For God's sake, Joe, give it up! You'll kill the poor girl."
"Leave me alone," he grunts. "I almost got it in that time."
The posture and the determined way in which he blurts this out suddenly
brings to my mind, for the second time, the remembrance of my dream. Only
now it seems as though that broomstick, which he had so nonchalantly slung
under his arm, as he walked away, is lost forever. It is like the sequel to
the dream--the same Van Norden, but minus the primal cause. He's like a hero
come back from the war, a poor maimed bastard living out the reality of his
dreams. Wherever he sits himself the chair collapses; whatever door he
enters the room is empty; what-
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ever he puts in his mouth leaves a bad taste. Everything is just the same as
it was before; the elements are unchanged, the dream is no different than
the reality. Only, between the time he went to sleep and the time he woke
up, his body was stolen. He's like a machine throwing out newspapers,
millions and billions of them every day, and the front page is loaded with
catastrophes, with riots, murders, explosions, collisions, but he doesn't
feel anything. If somebody doesn't turn the switch off he'll never know
what it means to die; you can't die if your own proper body has been stolen.
You can get over a cunt and work away like a billy-goat until eternity; you
can go to the trenches and be blown to bits; nothing will create that spark
of passion if there isn't the intervention of a human hand. Somebody has to
put his hand into the machine and let it be wrenched off if the cogs are to
mesh again. Somebody has to do this without hope of reward, without concern
over the fifteen francs; somebody whose chest is so thin that a medal would
make him hunchbacked. And somebody has to throw a feed into a starving cunt
without fear of pushing it out again. Otherwise this show'll go on forever.
There's no way out of the mess ...
After sucking the boss's ass for a whole week--it's the thing to do here--I
managed to land Peckover's job. He died all right, the poor devil, a few
hours after he hit the bottom of the shaft. And just as I predicted, they
gave him a fine funeral, with solemn mass, huge wreaths, and everything.
Tout compris. And after the ceremonies they regaled themselves, the
upstairs guys, at a bistrot. It was too bad Peckover couldn't have
had just a little snack--he would have appreciated it so much to sit with
the men upstairs and hear his own name mentioned so frequently.
I must say, right at the start, that I haven't a thing to complain about.
It's like being in a lunatic asylum, with permission to masturbate for the
rest of your life. The world is brought right under my nose and all that is
requested of me is to punctuate the calamities. There is nothing in which
these slick guys upstairs do not put their fingers: no joy, no misery passes
unnoticed. They live among the hard facts of life, reality, as it is called.
It is the reality of a swamp and they are like frogs who have
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nothing better to do than to croak. The more they croak the more real life
becomes. Lawyer, priest, doctor, politician, newspaper man--these are the
quacks who have their fingers on the pulse of the world. A constant
atmosphere of calamity. It's marvellous. It's as if the barometer never
changed, as if the flag were always at half-mast. One can see now how the
idea of heaven takes hold of men's consciousness, how it gains ground even
when all the props have been knocked from under it. There must be another
world beside this swamp in which everything is dumped pell-mell. It's hard
to imagine what it can be like, this heaven that men dream about. A frog's
heaven, no doubt. Miasma, scum, pond lilies, stagnant water. Sit on a
lily-pad unmolested and croak all day. Something like that, I imagine.
They have a wonderful therapeutic effect upon me, these catastrophes which I
proof-read. Imagine a state of perfect immunity, a charmed existence, a life
of absolute security in the midst of poison bacilli. Nothing touches me,
neither earthquakes nor explosions nor riots nor famine nor collisions nor
wars nor revolutions. I am inoculated against every disease, every
calamity, every sorrow and misery. It's the culmination of a life of
fortitude. Seated at my little niche all the poisons which the world gives
off each day pass through my hands. Not even a finger-nail gets stained. I
am absolutely immune. I am even better off than a laboratory attendant,
because there are no bad odors here, just the smell of lead burning. The
world can blow up--I'll be here just the same to put in a comma or a
semi-colon. I may even touch a little overtime, for with an event like that
there's bound to be a final extra. When the world blows up and the final
edition has gone to press the proof-readers will quietly gather up all
commas, semi-colons, hyphens, asterisks, brackets, parentheses, periods,
exclamation marks, etc., and put them in a little box over the editorial
chair. Comme, ca tout est regle . . .
None of my companions seem to understand why I appear so contented. They
grumble all the time, they have ambitions, they want to show their pride and
spleen. A good proof-reader has no ambitions, no pride, no spleen. A good
proof-reader is a little like God Almighty, he's in
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the world but not of it. He's for Sundays only. Sunday is his night off. On
Sundays he steps down from his pedestal and shows his ass to the faithful.
Once a week he listens in on all the private grief and misery of the world;
it's enough to last him for the rest of the week. The rest of the week he
remains in the frozen winter marshes, an absolute, an impeccable absolute,
with only a vaccination mark to distinguish him from the immense void.
The greatest calamity for a proof-reader is the threat of losing his job.
When we get together in the break the question that sends a shiver down our
spines is: what'll you do if you lose your job? For the man in the paddock,
whose duty it is to sweep up the manure, the supreme terror is the
possibility of a world without horses. To tell him that it is disgusting to
spend one's life shoveling up hot turds is a piece of imbecility. A man can
get to love shit if his livelihood depends on it, if his happiness is
involved.
This life which, if I were still a man with pride, honor, ambition and so
forth, would seem like the bottom rung of degradation, I welcome now, as an
invalid welcomes death. It's a negative reality, just like death--a sort of
heaven without the pain and terror of dying. In this chthonian world the
only thing of importance is orthography and punctuation. It doesn't matter
what the nature of the calamity is, only whether it is spelled right.
Everything is on one level, whether it be the latest fashion for evening
gowns, a new battleship, a plague, a high explosive, an astronomic
discovery, a bank run, a railroad wreck, a bull market, a hundred to one
shot, an execution, a stick-up, an assassination, or what. Nothing escapes
the proofreader's eye, but nothing penetrates his bullet-proof vest. To the
Hindoo Agha Mir, Madame Scheer (formerly Miss Esteve) writes saying she is
quite satisfied with his work. "I was married June 6th and I thank you. We
are very happy and I hope that thanks to your power it will be so forever. I
am sending you by telegraph money order the sum of ... to reward you ..."
The Hindoo Agha Mir foretells your future and reads all your thoughts in a
precise and inexplicable way. He will advise you, will help you rid
yourself of all your worries and troubles of all kinds, etc. Call or
write 20 Avenue Mac-Mahon, Paris.
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He reads all your thoughts in a marvellous way! I take it, that means
without exception, from the most trivial thoughts to the most shameless. He
must have a lot of time on his hands, this Agha Mir. Or does he only
concentrate on the thoughts of those who send money by telegraph money
order? In the same edition I notice a headline announcing that "the universe
is expanding so fast it may burst" and underneath it is the photograph of a
splitting headache. And then there is a spiel about the pearl, signed Tecla.
The oyster produces both, he informs all and sundry. Both the "wild" or
Oriental pearl, and the "cultured" pearl. On the same day, at the Cathedral
of Trier, the Germans are exhibiting the Coat of Christ; it's the first time
it's been taken out of the moth-balls in forty-two years. Nothing said about
the pants and vest. In Salzburg, also the same day, two mice were born in a
man's stomach, believe it or not. A famous movie actress is shown with her
legs crossed: she is taking a rest in Hyde Park, and underneath a well-known
painter remarks "I'll admit that Mrs. Coolidge has such charm and
personality that she would have been one of the 12 famous Americans, even
had her husband not been President." From an interview with Mr. Humhal, of
Vienna, I glean the following ... "Before I stop," said Mr. Humhal, "I'd
like to say that faultless cut and fit does not suffice; the proof of good
tailoring is seen in the wearing. A suit must bend to the body, yet keep its
line when the wearer is walking or sitting." And whenever there is an
explosion in a coal mine--a British coal mine--notice please that the
King and Queen always send their condolences promptly, by telegraph.
And they always attend the important races, though the other day, according
to the copy, it was at the Derby, I believe, "heavy rains began to fall,
much to the surprise of the King and Queen." More heartrending, however, is
an item like this: "It is claimed in Italy that the persecutions are not
against the Church, but nevertheless they are conducted against the most
exquisite parts of the Church. It is claimed that they are not against the
Pope, but they are against the very heart and eyes of the Pope."
I had to travel precisely all around the world to find just such a
comfortable, agreeable niche as this. It seems
147
incredible almost. How could I have foreseen, in America, with all those
firecrackers they put up your ass to give you pep and courage, that the
ideal position for a man of my temperament was to look for orthographic
mistakes? Over there you think of nothing but becoming President of the
United States some day. Potentially every man is presidential timber. Here
it's different. Here every man is potentially a zero. If you become
something or somebody it is an accident, a miracle. The chances are a
thousand to one that you will never leave your native village. The chances
are a thousand to one that you'll have your legs shot off or your eyes blown
out. Unless the miracle happens and you find yourself a general or a
rear-admiral.
But it's just because the chances are all against you, just because there is
so little hope, that life is sweet over here. Day by day. No yesterdays and
no to-morrows. The barometer never changes, the flag is always at halfmast.
You wear a piece of black crape on your arm, you have a little ribbon in
your button-hole, and, if you are lucky enough to afford it, you buy
yourself a pair of artificial light-weight limbs, aluminium preferably.
Which does not prevent you from enjoying an aperitif or looking at
the animals in the zoo or flirting with the vultures who sail up and down
the boulevards always on the alert for fresh carrion. Time passes. If you're
a stranger and your papers are in order you can expose yourself to infection
without fear of being contaminated. It is better, if possible, to have a
proof-reader's job. Comme ca, tout s'arrange. That means, that if you
happen to be strolling home at three in the morning and you are intercepted
by the bicycle cops, you can snap your fingers at them. In the mom-ing,
when the market is in swing, you can buy Belgian eggs, at fifty centimes a
piece. A proof-reader doesn't get up usually until noon, or a little after.
It's well to choose a hotel near a cinema, because if you have a tendency to
oversleep the bells will wake you up in time for the matinee. Or if you
can't find a hotel near a cinema, choose one near a cemetery, it comes to
the same thing. Above all, never despair. Il ne faut jamais
desesperer.
Which is what I try to din into Carl and Van Norden every night. A world
without hope, but no despair. It's as
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though I had been converted to a new religion, as though I were making an
annual novena every night to Our Lady of Solace. I can't imagine what there
would be to gain if I were made editor of the paper, or even President of
the United States. I'm up a blind alley, and it's cosy and comfortable.
With a piece of copy in my hand I listen to the music around me, the hum and
drone of voices, the tinkle of the linotype machines, as if there were a
thousand silver bracelets passing through a wringer; now and then a rat
scurries past our feet or a cockroach descends the wall in front of us,
moving nimbly and gingerly on his delicate legs. The events of the day are
slid under your nose, quietly, unostentatiously, with, now and then, a
by-line to mark the presence of a human hand, an ego, a touch of vanity. The
procession passes serenely, like a cortege entering the cemetery gates. The
paper under the copy desk is so thick that it almost feels like a carpet
with a soft nap. Under Van Norden's desk it is stained with brown juice.
Around eleven o'clock the peanut vendor arrives, a half-wit of an Armenian
who is also content with his lot in life.
Now and then I get a cablegram from Mona saying that she's arriving on me
next boat. "Letter following," it always says. It's been going on like this
for nine months, but I never see her name in the list of boat arrivals, nor
does the garcon ever bring me a letter on a silver platter. I haven't
any more expectations in that direction either. If she ever does arrive she
can look for me downstairs, just behind the lavatory. She'll probably tell
me right away mat it's unsanitary. That's the first thing that strikes an
American woman about Europe--that it's unsanitary. Impossible for them to
conceive of a Paradise without modem plumbing. If they find a bed-bug they
want to write a letter immediately to the Chamber of Commerce. How am I ever
going to explain to her that I'm contented here? She'll say I've become a
degenerate. I know her line from beginning to end. She'll want to look for a
studio with a garden attached--and a bath-tub to be sure. She wants to be
poor in a romantic way. I know her. But I'm prepared for her this time.
There are days, nevertheless, when the sun is out and I get off the beaten
path and think about her hungrily.
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Now and then, despite my grim satisfaction, I get to thinking about another
way of life, get to wondering if it would make a difference having a young,
restless creature by my side. The trouble is I can hardly remember what she
looks like, nor even how it feels to have my arms around her. Everything
that belongs to the past seems to have fallen into the sea; I have memories,
but the images have lost their vividness, they seem dead and desultory, like
time-bitten mummies stuck in a quagmire. If I try to recall my life in New
York I get a few splintered fragments, nightmarish and covered with
verdigris. It seems as if my own proper existence had come to an end
somewhere, just where exactly I can't make out. I'm not an American any
more, nor a New Yorker, and even less a European, or a Parisian. I haven't
any allegiance, any responsibilities, any hatreds, any worries, any
prejudices, any passion. I'm neither for nor against. I'm neutral.
When we walk home of a night, the three of us, it often happens after the
first spasms of disgust that we get to talking about the condition of things
with the enthusiasm which only those who bear no active part in life can
muster. What seems strange to me sometimes, when I crawl into bed, is that
all this enthusiasm is engendered just to kill time, just to
annihilate the three-quarters of an hour which it requires to walk from the
office to Montparnasse. We might have the most brilliant, the most feasible
ideas for the amelioration of this or that, but there is no vehicle to hitch
them to. And what is more strange is that the absence of any relationship
between ideas and living causes us no anguish, no discomfort. We have become
so adjusted that, if to-morrow we were ordered to walk on our hands, we
would do so without the slightest protest. Provided, of course, that the
paper came out as usual. And that we touched our pay regularly. Otherwise
nothing matters. Nothing. We have become Orientalized. We have become
coolies, white collar coolies, silenced by a handful of rice each day. A
special feature in American skulls, I was reading the other day, is the
presence of the epactal bone, or os Incae, in the occiput. The
presence of this bone, so the savant went on to say, is due to a
persistence of the transverse occiputal suture which is usually closed in
foetal life. Hence it is a sign of arrested devel-
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opment and indicative of an inferior race. "The average cubical capacity of
the American skull," so he went on to say, "falls below that of the white,
and rises above that of the black race. Taking both sexes, the Parisians of
to-day have a cranial capacity of 1.448 cubic centimeters; the Negroes 1.344
centimeters: the American Indians 1.376." From all of which I deduce nothing
because I am an American and not an Indian. But it's cute to explain things
that way, by a bone, an os Incae, for example. It doesn't disturb his
theory at all to admit that single examples of Indian skulls have yielded
the extraordinary capacity of 1.920 cubic centimeters, a cranial capacity
not exceeded in any other race. What I note with satisfaction is that the
Parisians, of both sexes, seem to have a normal cranial capacity. The
transverse occiputal suture is evidently not so persistent with them. They
know how to enjoy an aperitif and they don't worry if the houses are
unpainted. There's nothing extraordinary about their skulls, so far as
cranial indices go. There must be some other explanation for the art of
living which they have brought to such a degree of perfection.
At Monsieur Paul's, the bistrot across the way, there is a back room
reserved for the newspapermen where we can eat on credit. It is a pleasant
little room with saw-dust on the floor and flies in season and out. When I
say that it is reserved for the newspapermen I don't mean to imply that we
eat in privacy; on the contrary, it means that we have the privilege of
associating with the whores and pimps who form the more substantial element
of Monsieur Paul's clientele. The arrangement suits the guys upstairs to a
T, because they're always on the look-out for tail, and even those who have
a steady little French girl are not averse to making a switch now and then.
The principal thing is not to get a dose; at times it would seems as if an
epidemic had swept the office, or perhaps it might be explained by the fact
that they all sleep with the same woman. Anyhow, it's gratifying to observe
how miserable they can look when they are obliged to sit beside a pimp who,
despite the little hardships of his profession, lives a life of luxury by
comparison.
I'm thinking particularly now of one tall, blonde fellow who delivers the
Havas messages by bicycle. He is al-
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ways a little late for his meal, always perspiring profusely and his face
covered with grime. He has a fine, awkward way of strolling in, saluting
everybody with two fingers and making a bee line for the sink which is just
between the toilet and the kitchen. As he wipes his face he gives the
edibles a quick inspection; if he sees a nice steak lying on the slab he
picks it up and sniffs it, or he will dip the ladle into the big pot and try
a mouthful of soup. He's like a fine bloodhound, his nose to the ground all
the time. The preliminaries over, having made pipi and blown his nose
vigorously, he walks nonchalantly over to his wench and gives her a big,
smacking kiss together with an affectionate pat on the rump. Her, the wench,
I've never seen look anything but immaculate--even at three a.m., after an
evening's work. She looks exactly as if she had just stepped out of a
Turkish Bath. It's a pleasure to look at such healthy brutes, to see such
repose, such affection, such appetite as they display. It's the evening
meal I'm speaking of now, the little snack that she takes before entering
upon her duties. In a little while she will be obliged to take leave of her
big blonde brute, to flop somewhere on the boulevard and sip her
digestif. If the job is irksome or wearing or exhaustive, she
certainly doesn't show it. When the big fellow arrives, hungry as a wolf,
she puts her arms around him and kisses him hungrily--his eyes, nose,
cheeks, hair, the back of his neck ... she'd kiss his ass if it could be
done publicly. She's grateful to him, that's evident. She's no wage-slave.
All through the meal she laughs convulsively. You wouldn't think she had a
care in the world. And now and then, by way of affection, she gives him a
resounding slap in the face, such a whack as would knock a proofreader
spinning.
They don't seem to be aware of anything but themselves and the food that
they pack away in shovelsful. Such perfect contentment, such harmony, such
mutual understanding, it drives Van Norden crazy to watch them. Especially
when she slips her hand in the big fellow's fly and caresses it, to which he
generally responds by grabbing her teat and squeezing it playfully.
There is another couple who arrive usually about the same time and they
behave just like two married people.
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They have their spats, they wash their linen in public and after they've
made things disagreeable for themselves and everybody else, after threats
and curses and reproaches and recriminations, they make up for it by billing
and cooing, just like a pair of turtle doves. Lucienne, as he calls her, is
a heavy, platinum blonde with a cruel, saturnine air. She has a full
under-lip which she chews venomously when her temper runs away with her.
And a cold, beady eye, a sort of faded china blue, which makes him sweat
when she fixes him with it. But she's a good sort, Lucienne, despite the
condor-like profile which she presents to us when the squabbling begins.
Her bag is always full of dough, and if she deals it out cautiously, it is
only because she doesn't want to encourage him in his bad habits. He has a
weak character; that is, if one takes Lucienne's tirades seriously. He will
spend fifty francs of an evening while waiting for her to get through. When
the waitress comes to take his order he has no appetite. "Ah, you're not
hungry again!" growls Lucienne. "Humpf! You were waiting for me, I suppose,
on the Faubourg Montmartre. You had a good time, I hope, while I slaved for
you. Speak, imbecile, where were you?"
When she flares up like that, when she gets enraged, he looks up at her
timidly and then, as if he had decided that silence was the best course, he
lets his head drop and he fiddles with his napkin. But this little gesture,
which she knows so well and which of course is secretly pleasing to her
because she is convinced now that he is guilty, only increases Lucienne's
anger. "Speak, imbecile!" she shrieks. And with a squeaky, timid
little voice he explains to her woefully that while waiting for her he got
so hungry that he was obliged to stop off for a sandwich and glass of beer.
It was just enough to ruin his appetite--he says it dolefully, though it's
apparent that food just now is the least of his worries. "But"--and he tries
to make his voice sound more convincing--"I was waiting for you all the
time," he blurts out.
"Liar!" she screams. "Liar! Ah, fortunately, I too am a liar ... a good
liar. You make me ill with your petty little lies. Why don't you tell me
a big lie?"
He hangs his head again and absent-mindedly he gathers a few crumbs and
puts them to his mouth. Whereupon
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she slaps his hand. "Don't do that! You make me tired. You're such an
imbecile. Liar! Just you wait! I have more to say. I am a liar too, but I am
not an imbecile."
In a little while, however, they are sitting close together, their hands
locked, and she is murmuring softly:
"Ah, my little rabbit, it is hard to leave you now. Come here, kiss me! What
are you going to do this evening? Tell me the truth, my little one ... I am
sorry that I have such an ugly temper." He kisses her timidly, just like a
little bunny with long pink ears; gives her a little peck on the lips as if
he were nibbling a cabbage leaf. And at the same time his bright round eyes
fall caressingly on her purse which is lying open beside her on the bench.
He is only waiting for the moment when he can graciously give her the slip;
he is itching to get away, to sit down in some quiet cafe on the Rue du
Faubourg-Montmartre.
I know him, the innocent little devil, with his round, frightened eyes of a
rabbit. And I know what a devil's street is the Faubourg Montmartre with its
brass plates and rubber goods, the lights twinkling all night and sex
running through the street like a sewer. To walk from the Rue Lafayette to
the boulevard is like running the gauntlet; they attach themselves to you
like barnacles, they eat into you like ants, they coax, wheedle, cajole,
implore, beseech, they try it out in German, English, Spanish, they show
you their torn hearts and their busted shoes, and long after you've chopped
the tentacles away, long after the fizz and sizzle has died out, the
fragrance of the lavabo clings to your nostrils--it is the odor of
the Parfum de Danse whose effectiveness is guaranteed only for
a distance of twenty centimeters. One could piss away a whole lifetime in
that little stretch between the boulevard and the Rue Lafayette. Every bar
is alive, throbbing, the dice loaded; the cashiers are perched like vultures
on their high stools and the money they handle has a human stink to it.
There is no equivalent in the Banque de France for the blood money that
passes currency here, the money that glistens with human sweat, that passes
like a forest fire from hand to hand and leaves behind it a smoke and
stench. A man who can walk through the Faubourg Montmartre at night without
panting or sweating, without a prayer or a curse on his
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lips, a man like that has no balls, and if he has, then he ought to be
castrated.
Supposing the timid little rabbit does spend fifty francs of an evening
while waiting for his Lucienne? Supposing he does get hungry and buy a
sandwich and a glass of beer, or stop and chat with somebody else's trollop?
You think he ought to be weary of that round night after night? You think it
ought to weigh on him, oppress him, bore him to death? You don't think that
a pimp is inhuman, I hope? A pimp has his private grief and misery too,
don't you forget. Perhaps he would like nothing better than to stand on the
corner every night with a pair of white dogs and watch them piddle. Perhaps
he would like it if, when he opened the door, he would see her there reading
the Paris-Soir, her eyes already a little heavy with sleep. Perhaps
it isn't so wonderful, when he bends over his Lucienne, to taste another
man's breath. Better maybe to have only three francs in your pocket and a
pair of white dogs that piddle on the corner than to taste those bruised
lips. Bet you, when she squeezes him tight, when she begs for that little
package of love which only he knows how to deliver, bet you he fights like a
thousand devils to pump it up, to wipe out that regiment that has marched
between her legs. Maybe when he takes her body and practises a new tune,
maybe it isn't all passion and curiosity with him, but a fight in the dark,
a fight singlehanded against the army that rushed the gates, the army that
walked over her, trampled her, that left her with such a devouring hunger
that not even a Rudolph Valentine could appease her. When I listen to the
reproaches that are levelled against a girl like Lucienne, when I hear her
being denigrated or despised because she is cold and mercenary, because she
is too mechanical, or because she's in too great a hurry, or because this or
because that, I say to myself, hold on there bozo, not so fast! Remember
that you're far back in the procession; remember that a whole army corps
has laid siege to her, that she's been laid waste, plundered and pillaged. I
say to myself, listen, bozo, don't begrudge the fifty francs you hand her
because you know her pimp is pissing it away in the Faubourg Montmartre.
It's her money and her pimp. It's blood money. It's money
that'll never be
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taken out of circulation because there's nothing in the Banque de Prance to
redeem it with.
That's how I think about it often when I'm seated in my little niche
juggling the Havas reports or untangling the cables from Chicago, London,
and Montreal. In between the rubber and silk markets and the Winnipeg
grains there oozes a little of the fizz and sizzle of the Faubourg
Montmartre. When the bonds go weak and spongy and the pivotals balk and the
volatiles effervesce, when the grain market slips and slides and the bulls
commence to roar, when every fucking calamity, every ad, every sport item
and fashion article, every boat arrival, every travelogue, every tag of
gossip has been punctuated, checked, revised, pegged and wrung through the
silver bracelets, when I hear the front page being hammered into whack and
see the frogs dancing around like drunken squibs, I think of Lucienne
sailing down the boulevard with her wings outstretched, a huge silver condor
suspended over the sluggish tide of traffic, a strange bird from the tips
of the Andes with a rose-white belly and a tenacious little knob. Sometimes
I walk home alone and I follow her through the dark streets, follow her
through the court of the Louvre, over the Pont des Arts, through the arcade,
through the fents and slits, the somnolence, the drugged whiteness, the
grill of the Luxembourg, the tangled boughs, the snores and groans, the
green slats, the strum and tinkle, the points of the stars, the spangles,
the jetties, the blue and white striped awnings that she brushed with the
tips of her wings.
In the blue of an electric dawn the peanut shells look wan and crumpled;
along the beach at Montpamasse the waterlilies bend and break. When the tide
is on the ebb and only a few syphilitic mermaids are left stranded in the
muck, the Dome looks like a shooting gallery that's been struck by a
cyclone. Everything is slowly dribbling back to the sewer. For about an hour
there is a death-like calm during which the vomit is mopped up. Suddenly the
trees begin to screech. From one end of the boulevard to the other a
demented song rises up. It is like the signal that announces the close of
the exchange. What hopes there were are swept up. The moment has come to
void
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the last bagful of usine. The day is sneaking in like a leper ...
One of the things to guard against when you work nights is not to break your
schedule; if you don't get to bed before the birds begin to screech it's
useless to go to bed at all. This morning, having nothing better to do, I
visited the Jardin des Plantes. Marvellous pelicans here from
Chapultepec and peacocks with studded fans that look at you with silly eyes.
Suddenly it began to rain.
Returning to Montpamasse in the bus I noticed a little French woman opposite
me who sat stiff and erect as if she were getting ready to preen herself.
She sat on the edge of the seat as if she feared to crush her gorgeous tail.
Marvellous, I thought, if suddenly she shook herself and from her
derriere there sprung open a huge studded fan with long silken
plumes.
At the Cafe de l'Avenue, where I stop for a bite, a woman with a swollen
stomach tries to interest me in her condition. She would like me to go to a
room with her and while away an hour or two. It is the first time I have
ever been propositioned by a pregnant woman: I am almost tempted to try it.
As soon as the baby is born and handed over to the authorities she will go
back to her trade, she says. She makes hats. Observing that my interest is
waning she takes my hand and puts it on her abdomen, I feel something
stirring inside. It takes my appetite away.
I have never seen a place like Paris for varieties of sexual provender. As
soon as a woman loses a front tooth or an eye or a leg she goes on the
loose. In America she'd starve to death if she had nothing to recommend her
but a mutilation. Here it is different. A missing tooth or a nose eaten away
or a fallen womb, any misfortune that aggravates the natural homeliness of a
female, seems to be regarded as an added spice, a stimulant for the jaded
appetites of the male.
I am speaking naturally of that world, which is peculiar to the big cities,
the world of men and women whose last drop of juice has been squeezed out by
the machine--the martyrs of modem progress. It is this mass of bones and
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collar buttons which the painter finds so difficult to put flesh on.
It is only later, in the afternoon, when I find myself in an art gallery on
the Rue de Seze, surrounded by the men and women of Matisse, that I am drawn
back again to the proper precincts of the human world. On the threshold of
that big hall whose walls are now ablaze, I pause a moment to recover from
the shock which one experiences when the habitual gray of the world is rent
asunder and the color of life splashes forth in song and poem. I find myself
in a world so natural, so complete, that I am lost. I have the sensation of
being immersed in the very plexus of life, focal from whatever place,
position or attitude I take my stance. Lost as when once I sank into the
quick of a budding grove and seated in the dining room of that enormous
world of Balbec, I caught for the first time the profound meaning of those
interior stills which manifest their presence through the exorcism of sight
and touch. Standing on the threshold of that world which Matisse has created
I re-experienced the power of that revelation which had permitted Proust to
so deform the picture of life that only those who, like himself, are
sensible to the alchemy of sound and sense, are capable of transforming the
negative reality of life into the substantial and significant outlines of
art. Only those who can admit the light into their gizzards can translate
what is there in the heart. Vividly now I recall how the glint and sparkle
of light caroming from the massive chandeliers splintered and ran blood,
flecking the tips of the waves that beat monotonously on the dull gold
outside the windows. On the beach, masts and chimneys interlaced, and like a
fuliginous shadow the figure of Albertine gliding through the surf, fusing
into the mysterious quick and prism of a protoplasmic realm, uniting her
shadow to the dream and harbinger of death. With the close of day, pain
rising like a mist from the earth, sorrow closing in, shuttering the endless
vista of sea and sky. Two waxen hands lying list-lessly on the bedspread and
along the pale veins the fluted murmur of a shell repeating the legend of
its birth.
In every poem by Matisse there is the history of a particle of human flesh
which refused the consummation of death. The whole run of flesh, from hair
to nails, ex-
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presses the miracle of breathing, as if the inner eye, in its thirst for a
greater reality, had converted the pores of the flesh into hungry seeing
mouths. By whatever vision one passes there is the odor and the sound of
voyage. It is impossible to gaze at even a comer of his dreams without
feeling the lift of the wave and the cool of the flying spray. He stands at
the helm peering with steady blue eyes into the portfolio, of time. Into
what distant corners has he not thrown his long, slanting gaze? Looking down
the vast promontory of his nose he has beheld everything--the Cordilleras
falling away into the Pacific, the history of the diaspora done in vellum,
shutters fluting the froufrou of the beach, the piano curving like a conch,
corollas giving out diapasons of light, chameleons squirming under the
book-press, seraglios expiring in oceans of dust, music issuing like fire
from the hidden chromosphere of pain, spore and madrepore fructifying the
earth, navels vomiting their bright spawn of anguish ... He is a bright
sage, a dancing seer who, with a sweep of the brush, removes the ugly
scaffold to which the body of a man is chained by the incontrovertible facts
of life. He it is, if any man to-day possesses the gift, who knows where to
dissolve the human figure, who has the courage to sacrifice an harmonious
line in order to detect the rhythm and murmur of the blood, who takes the
light that has been refracted inside him and lets it flood the keyboard of
color. Behind the minutiae, the chaos, the mockery of life, he detects the
invisible pattern; he announces his discoveries in the metaphysical pigment
of space. No searching for formulae, no crucifixion of ideas, no compulsion
other than to create. Even as the world goes to smash there is one man who
remains at the core, who becomes more solidly fixed and anchored, more
centrifugal as the process of dissolution quickens.
More and more the world resembles an entomologist's dream. The earth is
moving out of its orbit, the axis has shifted; from the north the snow blows
down in huge knife-blue drifts. A new ice age is setting in, the transverse
sutures are closing up and everywhere throughout the corn belt the foetal
world is dying, turning to dead mastoid. Inch by inch the deltas are drying
out and the river-beds are smooth as glass. A new day is dawning, a
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metallurgical day, when the earth shall clink with showers of bright yellow
ore. As the thermometer drops, the form of the world grows blurred; osmosis
there still is, and here and there articulation, but at the periphery the
veins are all varicose, at the periphery the light-waves bend and the sun
bleeds like a broken rectum.
At the very hub of this wheel which is falling apart, is Matisse. And he
will keep on rolling until everything that has gone to make up the wheel has
disintegrated. He has already rolled over a goodly portion of the globe,
over Persia and India and China, and like a magnet he has attached to
himself microscopic particles from Kurd, Beluchistan, Timbuctoo, Somaliland,
Angkor, Tierra del Fuego. The odalisques he has studded with malachite and
jasper, their flesh veiled with a thousand eyes, perfumed eyes dipped in the
sperm of whales. Wherever a breeze stirs there are breasts as cool as jelly,
white pigeons come to flutter and rut in the ice-blue veins of the
Himalayas.
The wallpaper with which the men of science have covered the world of
reality is falling to tatters. The grand whorehouse which they have made of
life requires no decoration; it is essential only that the drains function
adequately. Beauty, that feline beauty which has us by the balls in
America, is finished. To fathom the new reality it is first necessary to
dismantle the drains, to lay open the gangrened ducts which compose the
genito-urinary system that supplies the excreta of art. The odor of the day
is permanganate and formaldehyde. The drains are clogged with strangled
embryos.
The world of Matisse is still beautiful in an old-fashioned bedroom way.
There is not a ball-bearing in evidence, nor a boiler-plate, nor a piston,
nor a monkey-wrench. It is the same old world that went gayly to the Bois in
the pastoral days of wine and fornication. I find it soothing and refreshing
to move amongst these creatures with live, breathing pores whose background
is stable and solid as light itself. I feel it poignantly when I walk along
the Boulevard de la Madeleine and the whores rustle beside me, when just to
glance at them causes me to tremble. Is it because they are exotic or
well-nourished? No, it is rare to find a beautiful woman along the Boulevard
de la Madeleine. But in Matisse, in the ex-
160
ploration of his brush, there is the trembling glitter of a worid which
demands only the presence of the female to crystallize the most fugitive
aspirations. To come upon a woman offering herself outside a urinal, where
there are advertised cigarette papers, rum, acrobats, horse-races, where the
heavy foliage of the trees breaks the heavy mass of walls and roofs, is an
experience that begins where the boundaries of the known world leave off. In
the evening now and then, skirting the cemetery walls, I stumble upon the
phantom odalisques of Matisse fastened to the trees, their tangled manes
drenched with sap. A few feet away, removed by incalculable aeons of time,
lies the prone and mummy-swathed ghost of Baudelaire, of a whole world that
will belch no more. In the dusky comers of cafes are men and women with
hands locked, their loins slather-flecked; nearby stands the garcon with his
apron full of sous, waiting patiently for the entr'acte in order to fall
upon his wife and gouge her. Even as the worid falls apart the Paris that
belongs to Matisse shudders with bright, gasping orgasms, the air itself is
steady with a stagnant sperm, the trees tangled like hair. On its wobbly
axle the wheel rolls steadily downhill; there are no brakes, no
ball-bearings, no balloon tires. The wheel is falling apart, but the
revolution is intact ...
*
Out of a clear sky there comes one day a letter from Boris whom I
have not seen for months and months. It is a strange document and I don't
pretend to understand it all clearly. "What happened between us--at any
rate, as far as I go--is that you touched me, touched my life, that is, at
the one point where I am still alive: my death. By the emotional flow I went
through another immersion. I lived again, alive. No longer by reminiscence,
as I do with others, but alive."
That's how it began. Not a word of greeting, no date, no address. Written in
a thin, pompous scrawl on ruled paper torn out of a blank book. "That is
why, whether you like me or not--deep down I rather think you hate me--you
are very close to me. By you I know how I died: I see myself dying again: I
am dying. That is something. More than to be dead simply. That may
be the reason why I am so afraid to see you: you may have played the trick
on me, and died. Things happen so fast nowadays."
I'm reading it over, line by line, standing by the stones. It sounds nutty
to me, all this palaver about life and death and things happening so fast.
Nothing is happening that I can see, except the usual calamities on the
front page. He's been living all by himself for the last six months, tucked
away in a cheap little room--probably holding telepathic communication with
Cronstadt. He talks about the line falling back, the sector evacuated, and
so on and so forth, as though he were dug into a trench and writing a report
to headquarters. He probably had his frock coat on when he sat down to pen
his missive, and he probably rubbed his hands a few times as he used to do
when a customer was calling to rent the apartment. "The reason
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I wanted you to conumt suicide ..." he begins again. At tnat I burst out
laughing. He used to walk up and down with one hand stuck in the tail-flap
of his frock coat at the Villa Borghese, or at Cronstadt's--wherever there
was deck space, as it were--and reel off this nonsense about living and
dying to his heart's content. I never understood a word of it, I must
confess, but it was a good show and, being a Gentile, I was naturally
interested in what went on in that menagerie of a brain-pan. Sometimes he
would lie on his couch fall length, exhausted by the surge of ideas that
swept through his noodle. His feet just grazed the book rack where he kept
his Plato and Spinoza--he couldn't understand why I had no use for them. I
must say he made them sound interesting, though what it was all about I
hadn't the least idea. Sometimes I would glance at a volume furtively, to
check up on these wild ideas which he imputed to them--but the connection
was frail, tenuous. He had a language all his own, Boris, that is, when I
had him alone; but when I listened to Cronstadt it seemed to me that Boris
had plagiarized his wonderful ideas. They talked a sort of higher
mathematics, these two. Nothing of flesh and blood ever crept in; it was
weird, ghostly, ghoulishly abstract. When they got on to the dying business
it sounded a little more concrete: after all, a cleaver or a meat-axe has to
have a handle. I enjoyed those sessions immensely. It was the first time in
my life that death had ever seemed fascinating to me--all these abstract
deaths which involved a bloodless sort of agony. Now and then they would
compliment me on being alive, but in such a way that I felt embarrassed.
They made me feel that I was alive in the nineteenth century, a sort of
atavistic remnant, a romantic shred, a soulful pithecanthropus
erectus. Boris especially seemed to get a great kick out of touching me:
he wanted me to be alive so that he could die to his heart's content. You
would think that all those millions in the street were nothing but dead cows
the way he looked at me and touched me. But the letter ... I'm forgetting
the letter ...
"The reason why I wanted you to commit suicide that evening at the
Cronstadts', when Moldorf became God, was that I was very close to you then.
Perhaps closer than I shall ever be. And I was afraid, terribly afraid, that
163
some day you'd go back on me, die on my hands. And I would be left high and
dry with my idea of you simply, and nothing to sustain it. I should never
forgive you for that."
Perhaps you can visualize him saying a thing like that! Myself it's not
clear what his idea of me was, or at any rate, it's clear that I was just
pure idea, an idea that kept itself alive without food. He never attached
much importance, Boris, to the food problem. He tried to nourish me with
ideas. Everything was idea. Just the same, when he had his heart set on
renting the apartment, he wouldn't forget to put a new washer in the toilet.
Anyway, he didn't want me to die on his hands. "You must be life for me to
the very end," so he writes. "That is the only way in which you can sustain
my idea of you. Because you have gotten, as you see, tied up with something
so vital to me, I do not think I shall ever shake you off. Nor do I wish to.
I want you to live more vitally every day, as I am dead. That is why, when I
speak of you to others, I am just a bit ashamed. It's hard to talk of one's
self so intimately."
You would imagine perhaps that he was anxious to see me, or that he would
like to know what I was doing--but no, not a line about the concrete or the
personal, except in this living-dying language, nothing but this little
message from the trenches, this whiff of poison gas to apprise all and
sundry that the war was still on. I sometimes ask myself how it happens that
I attract nothing but crack-brained individuals, neurasthenics, neurotics,
psychopaths--and Jews especially. There must be something in a healthy
Gentile that excites the Jewish mind, like when he sees sour black bread.
There was Moldorf, for example, who had made himself God, according to
Boris and Cronstadt. He positively hated me, the little viper--yet he
couldn't stay away from me. He came round regularly for his little dose of
insults--it was like a tonic to him. In the beginning, it's true, I was
lenient with him; after all, he was paying me to listen to him. And though I
never displayed much sympathy I knew how to be silent when it involved a
meal and a little pin money. After a while, however, seeing what a masochist
he was, I permitted myself to laugh in his face now and then; that was like
a
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whip for him, it made the grief and agony gush forth with renewed vigor. And
perhaps everything would have gone smoothly between us if he had not felt it
his duty to protect Tania. But Tania being a Jewess, that brought up a
moral question. He wanted me to stick to Mlle. Claude for whom, I must
admit, I had a genuine affection. He even gave me money occasionally to
sleep with her. Until he realized that I was a hopeless lecher.
I mention Tania now because she's just got back from Russia--just a few days
ago. Sylvester remained behind to worm his way into a job. He's given up
literature entirely. He's dedicated himself to the new Utopia. Tania wants
me to go back there with her, to the Crimea preferably, and start a new
life. We had a fine drinking bout up in Carl's room the other day,
discussing the possibilities. I wanted to know what I could do for a living
back there--if I could be a proof-reader, for example. She said I didn't
need to worry about what I would do--they would find a job for me as long as
I was earnest and sincere. I tried to look earnest, but I only succeeded in
looking pathetic. They don't want to see sad faces, in Russia;
they want you to be cheerful, enthusiastic, light-hearted, optimistic. It
sounded very much like America to me. I wasn't bom with this kind of
enthusiasm. I didn't let on to her, of course, but secretly I was praying to
be left alone, to go back to my little niche, and to stay there until the
war breaks out. All this hocus-pocus about Russia disturbed me a little.
She got so excited about it, Tania, that we finished almost a half dozen
bottles of vin ordinaire. Carl was jumping about like a cockroach. He
has just enough Jew in him to lose his head over an idea like Russia.
Nothing would do but to many us off--immediately. "Hitch up!" he says, "you
have nothing to lose!" And then he pretends to run a little errand so that
we can pull off a fast one. And while she wanted it all right, Tania, still
that Russia business had gotten so solidly planted in her skull that she
pissed the interval away chewing my ear off, which made me somewhat grumpy
and ill at ease. Anyway, we had to think about eating and getting to the
office, so we piled into a taxi on the Boulevard Edgar-Quinet, just a
stone's throw away from the cemetery, and off we whizzed. It was just a nice
hour to spin through
Paris in an open cab, and the wine rolling around in our tanks made it seem
even more lovely than usual. Carl was sitting opposite us, on the
strapontin, his face as red as a beet. He was happy, the poor
bastard, thinking what a glorious new life he would lead on the other side
of Europe. And at the same time he felt a bit wistful, too--I could see
that. He didn't really want to leave Paris, any more than I did. Paris
hadn't been good to him, any more than it had to me, or to anybody, for that
matter, but when you've suffered and endured things here it's then that
Paris takes hold of you, grabs you by the balls, you might say, like some
lovesick bitch who'd die rather than let you get out of her hands. That's
how it looked to him, I could see that. Rolling over the Seine he had a big
foolish grin on his face and he looked around at the buildings and the
statues as though he were seeing them in a dream. To me it was like a dream
too: I had my hand in Tania's bosom and I was squeezing her titties with all
my might and I noticed the water under the bridge and the barges and Notre
Dame down below, just like the post-cards show it, and I was thinking
drunkenly to myself that's how one gets fucked, but I was sly about it too
and I knew I wouldn't ever trade all this whirling about my head for Russia
or heaven or anything on earth. It was a fine afternoon, I was thinking to
myself, and soon we'd be pushing a feed down our bellies and what could we
order as a special treat, some good heavy wine that would drown out all
this Russia business. With a woman like Tania, full of sap and everything,
they don't give a damn what happens to you once they get an idea in their
heads. Let them go far enough and they'll pull the pants off you, right in
the taxi. It was grand though, milling through the traffic, our faces all
smudged with rouge and the wine gurgling like a sewer inside us, especially
when we swung into the Rue Laffitte which is just wide enough to frame the
little temple at the end of the street and above it the Sacre-Coeur, a kind
of exotic jumble of architecture, a lucid French idea that gouges right
through your drunkenness and leaves you swimming helplessly in the past, in
a fluid dream that makes you wide awake and yet
doesn't jar your nerves.
* * *
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With Tania back on the scene, a steady job, the drunken talk about Russia,
the walks home at night, and Paris in full summer, life seems to lift its
head a little higher. That's why perhaps, a letter such as Boris sent me
seems absolutely cock-eyed. Most every day I meet Tania around five o'clock,
to have a Porto with her, as she calls it. I let her take me to places I've
never seen before, the swell bars around the Champs-Elysees where the sound
of jazz and baby voices crooning seems to soak right through the mahogany
woodwork. Even when you go to the lavabo these pulpy, sappy strains
pursue you, come floating into the cabinet through the ventilators and make
life all soft soap and iridescent bubbles. And whether it's because
Sylvester is away and she feels free now, or whatever it is, Tania certainly
tries to behave like an angel. "You treated me lousy just before I went
away," she says to me one day. "Why did you want to act that way? I never
did anything to hurt you, did I?" We were getting sentimental, what with the
soft lights and that creamy, mahogany music seeping through the place. It
was getting near time to go to work and we hadn't eaten yet. The stubs were
lying there in front of us--six francs, four-fifty, seven francs,
two-fifty--I was counting them up mechanically and wondering too at the same
time if I would like it better being a bartender. Often like that, when she
was talking to me, gushing about Russia, the future, love, and all that
crap, I'd get to thinking about the most irrelevant things, about shining
shoes or being a lavatory attendant, particularly I suppose because it was
so cosy in these joints that she dragged me to and it never occurred to me
that I'd be stone sober and perhaps old and bent ... no, I imagined always
that the future, however modest, would be in just this sort of ambiance,
with the same tunes playing through my head and the glasses clinking and
behind every shapely ass a trail of perfume a yard wide that would take the
stink out of life, even downstairs in the lavabo.
The strange thing is it never spoiled me trotting around to the swell bars
with her like that. It was hard to leave her, certainly. I used to lead her
around to the porch of a church near the office and standing there in the
dark we'd take a last embrace, she whispering to me "Jesus, what
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am I going to do now?" She wanted me to quit the job so as I could make love
night and day; she didn't even care about Russia any more, just so long as
we were together. But the moment I left her my head cleared. It was another
kind of music, not so croony but good just the same, which greeted my ears
when I pushed through the swinging door. And another kind of perfume, not
just a yard wide, but omnipresent, a sort of sweat and patchouli that seemed
to come from the machines. Coming in with a skinful, as I usually did, it
was like dropping suddenly to a low altitude. Generally I made a beeline for
the toilet-- that braced me up rather. It was a little cooler there, or else
the sound of water running made it seem so. It was always a cold douche, the
toilet. It was real. Before you got inside you had to pass a line of
Frenchmen peeling off their clothes. Ugh! but they stank, those devils! And
they were well paid for it, too. But there they were, stripped down, some in
long underwear, some with beards, most of them pale, skinny rats with lead
in their veins. Inside the toilet you could take an inventory of their idle
thoughts. The walls were crowded with sketches and epithets, all of them
jocosely obscene, easy to understand, and on the whole rather jolly and
sympathetic. It must have required a ladder to reach certain spots, but I
suppose it was worth while doing it even looking at it from just the
psychological viewpoint. Sometimes, as I stood there taking a leak, I
wondered what an impression it would make on those swell dames whom I
observed passing in and out of the beautiful lavatories on the
Champs-Elysees. I wondered if they would carry their tails so high if they
could see what was thought of an ass here. In their world, no doubt,
everything was gauze and velvet--or they made you think so with the fine
scents they gave out, swishing past you. Some of them hadn't always been
such fine ladies either; some of them swished up and down like that just to
advertise their trade. And maybe, when they were left alone with
themselves, when they talked out loud in the privacy of their boudoirs,
maybe some strange things fell out of their mouths too; because in that
world, just as in every world, the greater part of what happens is just muck
and
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filth, sordid as any garbage can, only they are lucky enough to be able to
put covers over the can.
As I say, that afternoon life with Tania never had any bad effect upon me.
Once in a while I'd get too much of a skinful and I'd have to stick my
finger down my throat--because it's hard to read proof when you're not all
there. It requires more concentration to detect a missing comma than to
epitomize Nietzche's philosophy. You can be brilliant sometimes, when you're
drunk, but brilliance is out of place in the proof-reading department.
Dates, fractions, semi-colons--these are the things that count. And these
are the things that are most difficult to track down when your mind is all
ablaze. Now and then I made some bad blunders, and if it weren't that I had
learned how to kiss the boss's ass, I would have been fired, that's certain.
I even got a letter one day from the big mogul upstairs, a guy I never even
met, so high up he was, and between a few sarcastic phrases about my more
than ordinary intelligence, he hinted pretty plainly that I'd better learn
my place and toe the mark or there'd be what's what to pay. Frankly, that
scared the shit out of me. After that I never used a polysyllabic word in
conversation; in fact, I hardly ever opened my trap all night. I played the
high-grade moron, which is what they wanted of us. Now and then, to sort of
flatter the boss, I'd go up to him and ask him politely what such and such a
word might mean. He liked that. He was a sort of dictionary and time-table,
that guy. No matter how much beer he guzzled during the break--and he made
his own private breaks too, seeing as how he was running the show--you could
never trip him up on a date or a definition. He was born to the job. My only
regret was that I knew too much. It leaked out now and then, despite all the
precautions I took. If I happened to come to work with a book under my arm
this boss of ours would notice it, and if it were a good book it made him
venomous. But I never did anything intentionally to displease him; I liked
the job too well to put a noose around my neck. Just the same it's hard to
talk to a man when you have nothing in common with him; you betray yourself,
even if you use only monosyllabic words. He knew god-damn well, the boss,
that I didn't take the least bit of interest in his yams; and yet,
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explain it how you will, it gave him pleasure to wean me away from my dreams
and fill me full of dates and historical events. It was his way of taking
revenge, I suppose.
The result was that I developed a bit of a neurosis. As soon as I hit the
air I became extravagant. It wouldn't matter what the subject of
conversation happened to be, as we started back to Montparnasse in the early
morning, I'd soon turn the fire-hose on it, squelch it, in order to trot out
my perverted dreams. I liked best talking about those things which none of
us knew anything about. I had cultivated a mild sort of insanity, echolalia,
I think it's called. All the tag-ends of a night's proofing danced on the
tip of my tongue. Dalmatia--I had held copy on an ad for that
beautiful jewelled resort. All right, Dalmatia. You take a train and
in the morning your pores are perspiring and the grapes are bursting their
skins. I could reel it off about Dalmatia from the grand boulevard to
Cardinal Mazarin's palace, further, if I chose to. I don't even know where
it is on the map, and I don't want to know ever, but at three in the morning
with all that lead in your veins and your clothes saturated with sweat and
patchouli and the clink of bracelets passing through the wringer and those
beer yams that I was braced for, little things like geography, costume,
speech, architecture don't mean a god-damn thing. Dalmatia belongs to a
certain hour of the night when those high goings are snuffed out and the
court of the Louvre seems so wonderfully ridiculous that you feel like
weeping for no reason at all, just because it's so beautifully silent, so
empty, so totally unlike the front page and the guys upstairs rolling the
dice. With that little piece of Dalmatia resting on my throbbing nerves like
a cold knife-blade I could experience the most wonderful sensations of
voyage. And the funny thing is again that I could travel all around the
globe but America would never enter my mind; it was even further lost than
a lost continent, because with the lost continents I felt some mysterious
attachment, whereas with America I felt nothing, nothing at all. Now and
then, it's true, I did think of Mona, not as of a person in a definite aura
of time and space, but separately, detached, as though she had blown up into
a great cloud-like form that blotted out the past. I couldn't allow myself
to think about her very
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long; if I had I would have jumped off the bridge. It's strange. I had
become so reconciled to this life without her, and yet if I thought about
her only for a minute it was enough to pierce the bone and marrow of my
contentment and shove me back again into the agonizing gutter of my
wretched past.
For seven years I went about, day and night, with only one thing on my
mind--her. Were there a Christian so faithful to his God as I was to
her we would all be Jesus Christs to-day. Day and night I thought of her,
even when I was deceiving her. And now sometimes, in the very midst of
things, sometimes when I feel that I am absolutely free of it all,
suddenly, in rounding a comer perhaps, there will bob up a little square, a
few trees and a bench, a deserted spot where we stood and had it out, where
we drove each other crazy with bitter, jealous scenes. Always some deserted
spot, like the Place de l'Estrapade, for example, or those dingy, mournful
streets off the Mosque or along that open tomb of an Avenue de Breteuil
which at ten o'clock in the evening is so silent, so dead, that it makes
one think of murder or suicide, anything that might create a vestige of
human drama. When I realize that she is gone, perhaps gone forever, a great
void opens up and I feel that I am falling, falling, falling into deep,
black space. And this is worse than tears, deeper than regret or pain or
sorrow; it is the abyss into which Satan was plunged. There is no climbing
back, no ray of light, no sound of human voice or human touch of hand.
How many thousand times, in walking through the streets at night, have I
wondered if the day would ever come again when she would be at my side: all
those yearning looks I bestowed on the buildings and statues, I had looked
at them so hungrily, so desperately, that by now my thoughts must have
become a part of the very buildings and statues, they must be saturated with
my anguish. I could not help but reflect also that when we had walked side
by side through these mournful, dingy streets now so saturated with my dream
and longing, she had observed nothing, felt nothing: they were like any
other streets to her, a little more sordid perhaps, and that is all. She
wouldn't remember that at a certain comer I had
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stopped to pick up her hairpin, or that, when I bent down to tie her laces,
I remarked the spot on which her foot had rested and that it would remain
there forever, even after the cathedrals had been demolished and the whole
Latin civilization wiped out forever and ever.
Walking down the Rue Lhomond one night in a fit of unusual anguish and
desolation, certain things were revealed to me with poignant clarity.
Whether it was that I had so often walked this street in bitterness and
despair or whether it was the remembrance of a phrase which she had dropped
one night as we stood at the Place Lucien-Herr I do not know. "Why don't you
show me that Paris," she said, "that you have written about?" One thing I
know, that at the recollection of these words I suddenly realized the
impossibility of ever revealing to her that Paris which I had gotten to
know, the Paris whose arrondissements are undefined, a Paris that has
never existed except by virtue of my loneliness, my hunger for her. Such a
huge Paris! It would take a lifetime to explore it again. This Paris, to
which I alone had the key, hardly lends itself to a tour, even with the best
of intentions; it is a Paris that has to be lived, that has to be
experienced each day in a thousand different forms of torture, a Paris that
grows inside you like a cancer, and grows and grows until you are eaten away
by it.
Stumbling down the Rue Mouffetard, with these reflections stirring in my
brain, I recalled another strange item out of the past, out of that
guide-book whose leaves she had asked me to turn but which, because the
covers were so heavy, I then found impossible to pry open. For no reason at
all--because at the moment my thoughts were occupied with Salavin in whose
sacred precincts I was now meandering--for no reason at all, I say, there
came to mind the recollection of a day when, inspired by the plaque which I
passed day in and day out, I impulsively entered the Pension Orfila and
asked to see the room Strindberg had occupied. Up to that time nothing very
terrible had befallen me, though I had already lost all my worldly
possessions and had known what it was to walk the streets in hunger and in
fear of the police. Up to then I had not found a single friend in Paris, a
circumstance which was not so much depressing as bewildering, for
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wherever I have roamed in this world the easiest thing for me to discover
has been a friend. But in reality, nothing very terrible had happened to me
yet. One can live without friends, as one can live without love, or even
without money, that supposed sine qua non. One can live in Paris--I
discovered that!--on just grief and anguish. A bitter nourishment--perhaps
the best there is for certain people. At any rate, I had not yet come to the
end of my rope. I was only flirting with disaster. I had time and sentiment
enough to spare to peep into other people's lives, to dally with the dead
stuff of romance which, however morbid it may be, when it is wrapped between
the covers of a book, seems deliciously remote and anonymous. As I was
leaving the place I was conscious of an ironic smile hovering over my lips,
as though I were saying to myself "Not yet, the Pension Orfila!
Since then, of course, I have learned what every madman in Paris discovers
sooner or later--that there are no ready-made infernos for the tormented.
It seems to me I understand a little better now why she took such huge
delight in reading Strindberg. I can see her looking up from her book after
reading a delicious passage and, with tears of laughter in her eyes,
saying to me: "You're just as mad as he was ... you want to be
punished!" What a delight that must be to the sadist when she discovers her
own proper masochist! When she bites herself, as it were, to test the
sharpness of her teeth. In those days, when I first knew her, she was
saturated with Strindberg. That wild carnival of maggots which he revelled
in, that eternal duel of the sexes, that spiderish ferocity which had
endeared him to the sodden oafs of the northland, it was that which had
brought us together. We came together in a dance of death and so quickly was
I sucked down into the vortex that when I came to the surface again I could
not recognize the world. When I found myself loose the music had ceased; the
carnival was over and I had been picked clean ...
After leaving the Pension Orfila that afternoon I went to the library and
there, after bathing in the Ganges and pondering over the signs of the
zodiac, I began to reflect on the meaning of that inferno which Strindberg
had so mercilessly depicted. And, as I ruminated, it began to
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grow clear to me, the mystery of his pilgrimage, the flight which the poet
makes over the face of the earth and then, as if he had been ordained to
re-enact a lost drama, the heroic descent to the very bowels of the earth,
the dark and fearsome sojourn in the belly of the whale, the bloody struggle
to liberate himself, to emerge clean of the past, a bright, gory sun-god
cast up on an alien shore. It was no mystery to me any longer why he and
others (Dante, Rabelais, Van Gogh, etc., etc.) had made their pilgrimage to
Paris. I understood then why it is that Paris attracts the tortured, the
hallucinated, the great maniacs of love. I understood why it is that here,
at the very hub of the wheel, one can embrace the most fantastic, the most
impossible theories, without finding them in the least strange; it is here
that one reads again the books of his youth and the enigmas take on new
meanings, one for every white hair. One walks the streets knowing that he
is mad, possessed, because it is only too obvious that these cold,
indifferent faces are the visages of one's keepers. Here all boundaries fade
away and the world reveals itself for the mad slaughter-house that it is.
The treadmill stretches away to infinitude, the hatches are closed down
tight, logic runs rampant, with bloody cleaver flashing. The air is chill
and stagnant, the language apocalyptic. Not an exit sign anywhere; no issue
save death. A blind alley at the end of which is a scaffold.
An eternal city, Paris! More eternal than Rome, more splendorous than
Nineveh. The very navel of the world to which, like a blind and faltering
idiot, one crawls back on hands and knees. And like a cork that has drifted
finally to the dead center of the ocean, one floats here in the scum and
wrack of the seas, listless, hopeless, heedless even of a passing Columbus.
The cradles of civilization are the putrid sinks of the world, the
charnel-house to which the stinking wombs confide their bloody packages of
flesh and bone.
The streets were my refuge. And no man can understand the glamor of the
streets until he is obliged to take refuge in them, until he has become a
straw that is tossed here and there by every zephyr that blows. One passes
along a street on a wintry day and, seeing a dog for sale, one is moved to
tears. While across the way, cheerful as
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a cemetery, stands a miserable hut that calls itself "H6tel du Tombeau des
Lapins." That makes one laugh, laugh fit to die. Until one notices that
there are hotels everywhere, for rabbits, dogs, lice, emperors, cabinet
ministers, pawnbrokers, horse-knackers, and so on. And almost every other
one is an "H6tel de 1'Avenir." Which makes one more hysterical still. So
many hotels of the future! No hotels in the past participle, no subjunctive
modes, no conjunctivitis. Everything is hoary, grisly, bristling with
merriment, swollen with the future, like a gumboil. Drunk with this
lecherous eczema of the future, I stagger over to the Place Violet, the
colors all mauve and slate, the doorways so low that only dwarfs and
goblins could hobble in; over the dull cranium of Zola the chimneys are
belching pure coke, while the Madonna of Sandwiches listens with cabbage
ears to the bubbling of the gas tanks, those beautiful bloated toads which
squat by the roadside.
Why do I suddenly recollect the Passage des Thermopyples? Because that day a
woman addressed her puppy in the apocalyptic language of the
slaughter-house, and the little bitch, she understood what this greasy slut
of a midwife was saying. How that depressed me! More even than the sight of
those whimpering curs that were being sold on the Rue Brancion, because it
was not the dogs which filled me so with pity, but the huge iron railing,
those rusty spikes which seemed to stand between me and my rightful life. In
the pleasant little lane near the Abattoir de Vaugirard (Abattoir
Hippophagique), which is called the Rue des Perichaux, I had noticed here
and there signs of blood. Just as Strindberg in his madness had recognized
omens and portents in the very flagging of the Pension Orfila, so, as I
wandered aimlessly through this muddy lane bespattered with blood, fragments
of the past detached themselves and floated listlessly before my eyes,
taunting me with the direst forebodings. I saw my own blood being spilled,
the muddy road stained with it, as far back as I could remember, from the
very beginning doubtless. One is ejected into the world like a dirty little
mummy; the roads are slippery with blood and no one knows why it should be
so. Each one is travelling his own way and, though the earth be rotting with
good things, there is no time to pluck the fruits; the procession scram-
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bles toward the exit sign, and such a panic is there, such a sweat to
escape, that the weak and the helpless are trampled into the mud and their
cries are unheard.
My world of human beings had perished; I was utterly alone in the world and
for friends I had the streets, and the streets spoke to me in that sad,
bitter language compounded of human misery, yearning, regret, failure,
wasted effort. Passing under the viaduct along the Rue Broca, one night
after I had been informed that Mona was ill and starving, I suddenly
recalled that it was here in the squalor and gloom of this sunken street,
terrorized perhaps by a premonition of the future, that Mona clung to me
and with a quivering voice begged me to promise that I would never leave
her, never, no matter what happened. And, only a few days later, I stood on
the platform of the Gare St. Lazare and I watched the train pull out, the
train that was bearing her away; she was leaning out of the window, just as
she had leaned out of the window when I left her in New York, and there was
that same, sad, incrustable smile on her face, the last-minute look which is
intended to convey so much, but which is only a mask that is twisted by a
vacant smile. Only a few days before, she had clung to me desperately and
then something happened, something which is not even clear to me now, and
of her own volition she boarded the train and she was looking at me again
with that sad, enigmatic smile which baffles me, which is unjust, unnatural,
which I distrust with all my soul. And now it is I, standing in the shadow
of the viaduct, who reach out for her, who cling to her desperately and
there is that same inexplicable smile on my lips, the mask that I have
clamped down over my grief. I can stand here and smile vacantly, and no
matter how fervid my prayers, no matter how desperate my longing, there is
an ocean between us; there she will stay and starve, and here I shall walk
from one street to the next, the hot tears scalding my face.
It is that sort of cruelty which is embedded in the streets, it is
that which stares out from the walls and terrifies us when suddenly
we respond to a nameless fear, when suddenly our souls are invaded by a
sickening panic. It is that which gives the lampposts their ghoulish
twists, which makes them beckon to us and lure us to
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their strangling grip; it is that which makes certain houses appear
like the guardians of secret crimes and their blind windows like the empty
sockets of eyes that have seen too much. It is that sort of thing, written
into the human physiognomy of the streets which makes me flee when overhead
I suddenly see inscribed "Impasse Satan." That which makes me shudder when
at the very entrance to the Mosque I observe that it is written: "Mondays
and Thursdays tuberculosis; Wednesdays and Fridays syphilis."
In every Metro station there are grinning skulls that greet you with
"Defendez-vous centre la syphilis!" Wherever there are walls, there
are posters with bright venomous crabs heralding the approach of cancer. No
matter where you go, no matter what you touch, there is cancer and syphilis.
It is written in the sky; it flames and dances, like an evil portent. It has
eaten into our souls and we are nothing but a dead thing like the moon.
*
I think it was the fourth of July when they took the chair from under my ass
again. Not a word of warning. One of the big mucky-mucks from the other side
of the water had decided to make economies; cutting down on proofreaders
and helpless little dactylos enabled him to pay the expenses of his
trips back and forth and the palatial quarters he occupied at the Ritz.
After paying what little debts I had accumulated among the linotype
operators and a good-will token at the bistrot across the way, in
order to preserve my credit, there was scarcely anything left out of my
final pay. I had to notify the patron of the hotel that I would be
leaving; I didn't tell him why because he'd have been worried about his
measly two hundred francs.
"What'11 you do if you lose your job?" That was the phrase that rung in my
ears continually. Ca y est maintenant! Ausgespielt! Nothing to
do but get down into the street again, walk, hang around, sit on benches,
kill time. By now, of course, my face was familiar in Montparnasse; for a
while I could pretend that I was still working on the paper. That would make
it a little easier to bum a breakfast or a dinner. It was Summer time and
the tourists were pouring in. I had schemes up my sleeve for mulcting mem.
"What'll you do ... ?" Well, I wouldn't starve, that's one thing. If I
should do nothing else but concentrate on food that would prevent me from
falling to pieces. For a week or two I could still go to Monsieur Paul's and
have a square meal every evening; he wouldn't know whether I was working or
not. The main thing is to eat. Trust to Providence for the rest!
Naturally, I kept my ears open for anything that sounded like a little
dough. And I cultivated a whole new set of acquaintances--bores whom I had
sedulously
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avoided heretofore, drunks whom I loathed, artists who had a little money,
Guggenheim prize men, etc. It's not hard to make friends when you squat on a
terrasse twelve hours a day. You get to know every sot in
Montparnasse. They cling to you like lice, even if you have nothing to offer
them but your ears.
Now that I had lost my job Carl and Van Norden had a new phrase for me:
"What if your wife should arrive now?" Well, what of it? Two mouths to feed,
instead of one. I'd have a companion in misery. And, if she hadn't lost her
good looks, I'd probably do better in double harness than alone: the world
never permits a good-looking woman to starve. Tania I couldn't depend on to
do much for me; she was sending money to Sylvester. I had thought at first
that she might let me share her room, but she was afraid of compromising
herself; besides, she had to be nice to her boss.
The first people to turn to when you're down and out are the Jews. I had
three of them on my hands almost at once. Sympathetic souls. One of them was
a retired fur merchant who had an itch to see his name in the papers;
he proposed that I write a series of articles under his name for a Jewish
daily in New York. I had to scout around the Dome and the Coupole searching
for prominent Jews. The first man I picked on was a celebrated
mathematician; he couldn't speak a word of English. I had to write about the
theory of shock from the diagrams he left on the paper napkins; I had to
describe the movements of the astral bodies and demolish the Einsteinian
conception at the same time. All for twenty-five francs. When I saw my
articles in the newspaper I couldn't read them; but they looked impressive,
just the same, especially with the pseudonym of the fur merchant attached.
I did a lot of pseudonymous writing during this period. When the big new
whorehouse opened up on the Boulevard Edgar-Quinet, I got a little
rake-off, for writing the pamphlets. That is to say, a bottle of champagne
and a free fuck in one of the Egyptian rooms. If I succeeded in bringing a
client I was to get my commission, just like Kepi got his in the old days.
One night I brought Van Norden; he was going to let me earn a little money
by enjoying himself upstairs. But when the Madame learned
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that he was a newspaper man she wouldn't hear of taking money from him; it
was a bottle of champagne again and a free fuck. I got nothing out of it. As
a matter of fact, I had to write the story for him because he couldn't think
how to get round the subject without mentioning the kind of place it was.
One thing after another like that. I was getting fucked good and proper.
The worst job of all was a thesis I undertook to write for a deaf and dumb
psychologist. A treatise on the care of crippled children. My head was full
of diseases and braces and work-benches and fresh air theories; it took
about six weeks off and on, and then, to rub it in, I had to
proof-read the god-damned thing. It was in French, such a French as I've
never in my life seen or heard. But it brought me in a good breakfast every
day, an American breakfast, with orange juice, oatmeal, cream, coffee, now
and then, ham and eggs for a change. It was the only period of my Paris
days that I ever indulged in a decent breakfast, thanks to the crippled
children of Rockaway Beach, the East Side, and all the coves and inlets
bordering on these sore points.
Then one day I fell in with a photographer; he was making a collection of
the slimy joints of Paris for some degenerate in Munich. He wanted to know
if I would pose for him with my pants down, and in other ways. I thought of
those skinny little runts, who look like bell-hops and messenger boys, that
one sees on pornographic post-cards in little book-shop windows
occasionally, the mysterious phantoms who inhabit the Rue de la Lune and
other malodorous quarters of the city. I didn't like very much the idea of
advertising my physog in the company of these elite. But, since I was
assured that the photographs were for a strictly private collection, and
since it was destined for Munich, I gave my consent. When you're not in your
home town you can permit yourself little liberties, particularly for such a
worthy motive as earning your daily bread. After all, I hadn't been so
squeamish, come to think of it, even in New York. There were nights when I
was so damned desperate, back there, that I had to go out right in my own
neighborhood and panhandle.
We didn't go to the show places familiar to the tourists,
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but to the little joints where the atmosphere was more congenial, where we
could play a game of cards in the afternoon before getting down to work. He
was a good companion, the photographer. He knew the city inside out, the
walls particularly; he talked to me about Goethe often, and the days of the
Hohenstaufen, and the massacre of the Jews during the reign of the Black
Death. Interesting subjects, and always related in some obscure way to the
things he was doing. He had ideas for scenarios too, astounding ideas, but
nobody had the courage to execute them. The sight of a horse split-open like
a saloon door, would inspire him to talk of Dante or Leonardo da Vinci or
Rembrandt; from the slaughter-house at Villette he would jump into a cab and
rush me to the Trocadero Museum, in order to point out a skull or a mummy
that had fascinated him. We explored the 5th, the 13th, the 19th and the
20th arrondissements thoroughly. Our favorite resting places were
lugubrious little spots such as the Place Nationale, Place des Peupliers,
Place Contrescarpe, Place Paul-Verlaine. Many of these places were already
familiar to me, but all of them I now saw in a different light owing to the
rare flavor of his conversation. If today I should happen to stroll down
the Rue du Chateau-des-Renders, for example, inhaling the fetid stench of
the hospital beds with which the 13th arrondissement reeks, my
nostrils would undoubtedly expand with pleasure, because, compounded with
that odor of stale piss and formaldehyde, there would be the odors of our
imaginative voyages through the charnel house of Europe which the Black
Death had created.
Through him I got to know a spiritual-minded individual named Kruger, who
was a sculptor and painter. Kruger took a shine to me for some reason or
other; it was impossible to get away from him once he discovered that I was
willing to listen to his "esoteric" ideas. There are people in this world
for whom the word "esoteric" seems to act as a divine ichor. Like "settled"
for Herr Peeperkorn of the Magic Mountain. Kruger was one of those
saints who have gone wrong, a masochist, an anal type whose law is
scrupulousness, rectitude and conscientiousness, who on an off day would
knock a man's teeth down his throat without a qualm. He seemed to think I
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was ripe to move on to another plane, "a higher plane," as he put it.
I was ready to move on to any plane he designated, provided that one didn't
eat less or drink less. He chewed my head off about the "threadsoul," the
"causal body," "ablation," the Upanishads, Plodnus, Krishnamurti, "the
Karmic vestiture of the soul," "the nirvanic consciousness," all that
flapdoodle which blows out of the East like a breath from the plague.
Sometimes he would go into a trance and talk about his previous
incarnations, how he imagined them to be, at least. Or he would relate his
dreams which, so far as I could see, were thoroughly insipid, prosaic,
hardly worth even the attention of a Freudian, but, for him, there were vast
esoteric marvels hidden in their depths which I had to aid him to decipher.
He had turned himself inside out, like a coat whose nap is worn off.
Little by little, as I gained his confidence, I wormed my way into his
heart. I had him at such a point that he would come running after me, in the
street, to inquire if he could lend me a few francs. He wanted to hold me
together in order to survive the transition to a higher plane. I acted like
a pear that is ripening on the tree. Now and then I had relapses and I would
confess my need for more earthly nourishment--a visit to the Sphinx or the
Rue St. Apolline where I knew he repaired in weak moments when the demands
of the flesh had become too vehement.
As a painter he was nil; as a sculptor less than nil. He was a good
housekeeper, that I'll say for him. And an economical one to boot. Noming
went to waste, not even the paper that meat was wrapped in. Friday nights he
threw open his studio to his fellow artists; there was always plenty to
drink and good sandwiches, and if by chance there was anything left over I
would come round the next day to polish it off.
Back of the Bal Bullier was another studio I got into the habit of
frequenting--the studio of Mark Swift. If he was not a genius he was
certainly an eccentric, this caustic Irishman. He had for a model a Jewess
whom he had been living with for years; he was now tired of her and was
searching for a pretext to get rid of her. But as he had eaten up me dowry
which she had originally brought with her, he was puzzled as to how to
disembarrass himself of
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her without making restitution. The simplest thing was to so antagonize her
that she would choose starvation rather than support his cruelties.
She was rather a fine person, his mistress; the worst that one could say
against her was that she had lost her shape, and her ability to
support him any longer. She was a painter herself and, among those who
professed to know, it was said that she had far more talent than he. But no
matter how miserable he made life for her she was just; she would never
allow anyone to say that he was not a great painter. It was because he
really has genius, she said, that he was such a rotten individual. One never
saw her canvases on the wall--only his. Her things were stuck away in the
kitchen. Once it happened, in my presence, that someone insisted on seeing
her work. The result was painful. "You see this figure," said Swift,
pointing to one of her canvases with his big foot. "The man standing in the
doorway there is just about to go out for a leak. He won't be able to find
his way back because his head is on wrong ... Now take that nude over there
... It was all right until she started to paint the cunt. I don't know what
she was thinking about, but she made it so big that her brush slipped and
she couldn't get it out again."
By way of showing us what a nude ought to be like he hauls out a huge canvas
which he had recently completed. It was a picture of her, a splendid
piece of vengeance inspired by a guilty conscience. The work of a madman--
vicious, petty, malign, brilliant. You had the feeling that he had spied on
her through the keyhole, that he had caught her in an off moment, when she
was picking her nose absent-mindedly, or scratching her ass. She sat there
on the horsehair sofa, in a room without ventilation, an enormous room
without a window; it might as well have been the anterior lobe of
the pineal gland. Back of her ran the zigzag stairs leading to the
balcony; they were covered with a bilious-green carpet, such a green as
could only emanate from a universe that had been pooped out. The most
prominent thing was her buttocks, which were lop-sided and full of scabs;
she seemed to have slightly raised her ass from the sofa, as if to let a
loud fart. Her face he had idealized:
it looked sweet and virginal, pure as a cough-drop. But her bosom was
distended, swollen with sewer-gas; she seemed
to be swimming in a menstrual sea, an enlarged foetus with the dull, syrupy
look of an angel.
Nevertheless one couldn't help but like him. He was an indefatigable worker,
a man who hadn't a single thought in his head but paint. And cunning as a
lynx withal. It was he who put it into my head to cultivate the friendship
of Fillmore, a young man in the diplomatic service who had found his way
into the little group that surrounded Kruger and Swift. "Let him help you,"
he said. "He doesn't know what to do with his money."
When one spends what he has on himself, when one has a thoroughly good time
with his own money, people are apt to say "he doesn't know what to do with
his money." For my part, I don't see any better use to which one can put
money. About such individuals one can't say that they're generous or stingy.
They put money into circulation--that's the principal thing. Fillmore knew
that his days in France were limited; he was determined to enjoy them. And
as one always enjoys himself better in the company of a friend it was only
natural that he should turn to one like myself, who had plenty of time on
his hands, for that companionship which he needed. People said he was a
bore, and so he was, I suppose, but when you're in need of your food you can
put up with worse things than being bored. After all, despite the fact that
he talked incessantly, and usually about himself or the authors whom he
admired slavishly--such birds as Anatole France and Joseph Conrad--he
nevertheless made my nights interesting in other ways. He liked to dance, he
liked good wines, and he liked women. That he liked Byron also, and Victor
Hugo, one could forgive; he was only a few years out of college and he had
plenty of time ahead of him to be cured of such tastes. What he had that I
liked was a sense of adventure.
We got even better acquainted, more intimate, I might say, due to a peculiar
incident that occurred during my brief sojourn with Kruger. It happened just
after the arrival of Collins, a sailor whom Fillmore had got to know on the
way over from America. The three of us used to meet regularly on the
terrasse of the Rotonde before going to dinner. It was always
Pernod, a drink which put Collins in good humor and provided a base, as it
were,
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for the wine and beer and fines, etc., which had to be guzzled
afterwards. All during Collins's stay in Paris I lived like a duke; nothing
but fowl and good vintages and desserts that I hadn't even heard of before.
A month of this regimen and I should have been obliged to go to Baden-Baden
or Vichy or Aix-les-Bains. Meanwhile Kruger was putting me up at his studio.
I was getting to be a nuisance because I never showed up before three a.m.
and it was difficult to rout me out of bed before noon. Overtly Kruger never
uttered a word of reproach but his manner indicated plainly enough that I
was becoming a bum.
One day I was taken ill. The rich diet was taking effect upon me. I don't
know what ailed me, but I couldn't get out of bed. I had lost all my
stamina, and with it whatever courage I possessed. Kruger had to look after
me, had to make broths for me, and so on. It was a trying period for him,
more particularly because he was just on the verge of giving an important
exhibition at his studio, a private showing to some wealthy connoisseurs
from whom he was expecting aid. The cot on which I lay was in the studio;
there was no other room to put me in.
The morning of the day he was to give his exhibition, Kruger awoke
thoroughly disgruntled. If I had been able to stand on my feet I know he
would have given me a clout in the jaw and kicked me out. But I was
prostrate, and weak as a cat. He tried to coax me out of bed, with the idea
of locking me up in the kitchen upon the arrival of his visitors. I realized
that I was making a mess of it for him. People can't look at pictures and
statues with enthusiasm when a man is dying before their eyes. Kruger
honestly thought I was dying. So did I. That's why, despite my feeling of
guilt, I couldn't muster any enthusiasm when he proposed calling for the
ambulance and having me shipped to the American Hospital. I wanted to die
there, comfortably, right in the studio; I didn't want to be urged to get up
and find a better place to die in. I didn't care where I died, really, so
long as it wasn't necessary to get up.
When he heard me talk this way Kruger became alarmed. Worse than having a
sick man in his studio should the visitors arrive, was to have a dead man.
That would completely ruin his prospects, slim as they were. He didn't
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put it that way to me, of course, but I could see from his agitation that
that was what worried him. And that made me stubborn. I refused to let him
call the hospital. I refused to let him call a doctor. I refused everything.
He got so angry with me finally that, despite my protestations, he began to
dress me. I was too weak to resist. All I could do was to murmur
weakly--"you bastard, you!" Though it was warm outdoors I was shivering like
a dog.--After he had completely dressed me he flung an overcoat over me and
slipped outside to telephone. "I won't go! I won't go!" I kept saying but he
simply slammed the door on me. He came back in a few minutes and, without
addressing a word to me, busied himself about the studio. Last minute
preparations. In a little while there was a knock on the door. It was
Fillmore. Collins was waiting downstairs, he informed me.
The two of them, Fillmore and Kruger, slipped their arms under me and
hoisted me to my feet. As they dragged me to the elevator Kruger softened
up. "It's for your own good," he said. "And besides, it wouldn't be fair to
me. You know what a struggle I've had all these years. You ought to think
about me too." He was actually on the point of tears.
Wretched and miserable as I felt, his words almost made me smile. He was
considerably older than I, and even though he was a rotten painter, a rotten
artist all the way through, he deserved a break--at least once in a
lifetime.
"I don't hold it against you," I muttered. "I understand how it is."
"You know I always liked you," he responded. "When you get better you can
come back here again ... you can stay as long as you like."
"Sure, I know ... I'm not going to croak yet," I managed to get out.
Somehow, when I saw Collins down below my spirits revived. If ever any one
seemed to be thoroughly alive, healthy, joyous, magnanimous, it was he. He
picked me up as if I were a doll and laid me out on the seat of the
cab--gently too, which I appreciated after the way Kruger had manhandled me.
When we drove up to the hotel--the hotel that Collins was stopping at--there
was a bit of a discussion with the
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proprietor, during which I lay stretched out on the sofa in the bureau. I
could hear Collins saying to the patron that it was nothing ... just
a little breakdown ... be all right in a few days. I saw him put a crisp
bill in the man's hands and then, turning swiftly and lithely, he came back
to where I was and said: "Come on, buck up! Don't let him think you're
croaking." And with that, he yanked me to my feet and, bracing me with one
arm, escorted me to the elevator.
Don't let him think you're croaking! Obviously it was bad taste to
die on people's hands. One should die in the bosom of his family, in
private, as it were. His words were encouraging. I began to see it all as a
bad joke. Upstairs, with the door closed, they undressed me and put me
between the sheets. "You can't die now, god-damn it!" said Collins warmly.
"You'll put me in a hole ... Besides, what the hell's the matter with you?
Can't stand good living? Keep your chin up! You'll be eating a porterhouse
steak in a day or two. You think you're ill! Wait, by Jesus until you get a
dose of syphilis! That's something to make you worry ..." And he began to
relate, in a humorous way, his trip down the Yangtsze-Kaing, with hair
falling out and teeth rotting away. In the feeble state that I was in, the
yam that he spun had an extraordinarily soothing effect upon me. It took me
completely out of myself. He had guts, this guy. Perhaps he put it on a bit
thick, for my benefit, but I wasn't listening to him critically at the
moment. I was all ears and eyes. I saw the dirty yellow mouth of the river,
the lights going up at Hankow, the sea of yellow faces, the sampans shooting
down through the gorges and the rapids flaming with the sulphurous breath of
the dragon. What a story! The coolies swarming around the boat each day,
dredging for the garbage that was flung overboard, Tom Slattery rising up on
his death-bed to take a last look at the lights of Hankow, the beautiful
Eurasian who lay in a dark room and filled his veins with poison, the
monotony of blue jackets and yellow faces, millions and millions of them
hollowed out by famine, ravaged by disease, subsisting on rats and dogs and
roots, chewing the grass off the earth, devouring their own children. It was
hard to imagine that this man's body had once been a mass of sores, that he
had been
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shunned like a leper; his voice was so quiet and gentle, it was as though
his spirit had been cleansed by all the suffering he had endured. As he
reached for his drink his face grew more and more soft and his words
actually seemed to caress me. And all the while China hanging over us like
Fate itself. A China rotting away, crumbling to dust like a huge dinosaur,
yet preserving to the very end the glamor, the enchantment, the mystery, the
cruelty of her hoary legends.
I could no longer follow his story; my mind had slipped back to a Fourth of
July when I bought my first package of firecrackers and with it the long
pieces of punk which break so easily, the punk that you blow on to get a
good red glow, the punk whose smell sticks to your fingers for days and
makes you dream of strange things. The Fourth of July the streets are
littered with bright red paper stamped with black and gold figures and
everywhere there are tiny firecrackers which have the most curious
intestines; packages and packages of them, all strung together by their
thin, flat, little gutstrings, the color of human brains. All day long there
is the smell of powder and punk and the gold dust from the bright red
wrappers sticks to your fingers. One never thinks of China, but it is there
all the time on the tips of your fingers and it makes your nose itchy; and
long afterwards, when you have forgotten almost what a firecracker smells
like, you wake up one day with gold-leaf choking you and the broken pieces
of punk waft back their pungent odor and the bright red wrappers give you a
nostalgia for a people and a soil you have never known, but which is in your
blood, mysteriously there in your blood, like the sense of time or space, a
fugitive, constant value to which you turn more and more as you get old,
which you try to seize with your mind, but ineffectually, because in
everything Chinese there is wisdom and mystery and you can never grasp it
with two hands or with your mind but you must let it rub off, let it stick
to your fingers, let it slowly infiltrate your veins.
A few weeks later, upon receipt of a pressing invitation from Collins who
had returned to Le Havre, Fillmore and I boarded the train one morning,
prepared to spend the
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week-end with him. It was the first time I had been outside of Paris since
my arrival here. We were in fine fettle, drinking Anjou all the way to the
coast. Collins had given us the address of a bar where we were to meet; it
was a place called Jimmie's Bar, which everyone in Le Havre was supposed to
know.
We got into an open barouche at the station and started on a brisk trot for
the rendez-vous; there was still a half bottle of Anjou left which we
polished off as we rode along. Le Havre looked gay, sunny; the air was
bracing, with that strong salty tang which almost made me homesick for New
York. There were masts and hulls cropping up everywhere, bright bits of
bunting, big open squares and high-ceilinged cafes such as one only sees in
the provinces. A fine impression immediately; the city was welcoming us with
open arms.
Before we ever reached the bar we saw Collins coming down the street on a
trot, heading for the station, no doubt, and a little late as usual.
Fillmore immediately suggested a Pernod; we were all slapping each other on
the back, laughing and spitting, drunk already from the sunshine and the
salt sea air. Collins seemed undecided about the Pernod at first. He had a
little dose of clap, he informed us. Nothing very serious--"a strain" most
likely. He showed us a bottle he had in his pocket-- "Venetienne" it was
called, if I remember rightly. The sailors' remedy for clap.
We stopped off at a restaurant to have a little snack before repairing to
Jimmie's place. It was a huge tavern with big, smoky rafters and tables
creaking with food. We drank copiously of the wines that Collins
recommended. Then we sat down on a terrasse and had coffee and
liqueurs. Collins was talking about the Baron de Charlus, a man after his
own heart, he said. For almost a year now he had been staying at Le Havre,
going through the money that he had accumulated during his bootlegging days.
His tastes were simple--food, drink, women and books. And a private bath!
That he insisted on.
We were still talking about the Baron de Charlus when we arrived at Jimmie's
Bar. It was late in the afternoon and the place was just beginning to fill
up. Jimmie was there, his face red as a beet, and beside him was his
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spouse, a fine, buxom Frenchwoman with glittering eyes. We were given a
marvellous reception all around. There were Pernods in front of us again,
the gramophone was shrieking, people were jabbering away in English and
French and Dutch and Norwegian and Spanish, and Jimmie and his wife, both of
them looking very brisk and dapper, were slapping and kissing each other
heartily and raising their glasses and clinking them--altogether such a
bubble and blabber of merriment that you felt like pulling off your clothes
and doing a war dance. The women at the bar had gathered around like flies.
If we were friends of Collins that meant we were rich. It didn't matter that
we had come in our old clothes; all Anglais dressed like that. I
hadn't a sou in my pocket, which didn't matter, of course, since I was the
guest of honor. Nevertheless I felt somewhat embarrassed with two
stunning-looking whores hanging on my arms waiting for me to order
something. I decided to take the bull by the horns. You couldn't tell any
more which drinks were on the house and which were to be paid for. I had to
be a gentleman, even if I didn't have a sou in my pocket.
Yvette--that was Jimmie's wife--was extraordinarily gracious and friendly
with us. She was preparing a little spread in our honor. It would take a
little while yet. We were not to get too drunk--she wanted us to
enjoy the meal. The gramophone was going like wild and Fillmore had begun to
dance with a beautiful mulatto who had on a tight velvet dress that revealed
all her charms. Collins slipped over to my side and whispered a few words
about the girl at my side. "The madame will invite her to dinner,"
he said, "if you'd like to have her." She was an ex-whore who owned a
beautiful home on the outskirts of the city. The mistress of a sea captain
now. He was away and there was nothing to fear. "If she likes you she'll
invite you to stay with her," he added.
That was enough for me. I turned at once to Marcelle and began to flatter
the ass off her. We stood at the corner of the bar, pretending to dance,
and mauled each other ferociously. Jimmie gave me a big horse-wink and
nodded his head approvingly. She was a lascivious bitch, this Marcelle, and
pleasant at the same time. She soon got rid of the other girl, I noticed,
and then we settled
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down for a long and intimate conversation which was interrupted
unfortunately by the announcement that dinner was ready.
There were about twenty of us at the table, and Marcelle and I were placed
at one end opposite Jimmie and his wife. It began with the popping of
champagne corks and was quickly followed by drunken speeches, during the
course of which Marcelle and I played with each other under the table. When
it came my turn to stand up and deliver a few words I had to hold the napkin
in front of me. It was painful and exhilarating at the same time. I had to
cut the speech very short because Marcelle was tickling me in the crotch all
the while.
The dinner lasted until almost midnight. I was looking forward to spending
the night with Marcelle in that beautiful home up on the cliff. But it was
not to be. Collins had planned to show us about and I couldn't very well
refuse. "Don't worry about her," he said. "You'll have a bellyful of it
before you leave. Tell her to wait here for you until we get back."
She was a bit peeved at this, Marcelle, but when we informed her that we
had several days ahead of us she brightened up. When we got outdoors
Fillmore very solemnly took us by the arm and said he had a little
confession to make. He looked pale and worried.
"Well, what is it?" said Collins cheerfully. "Spit it out!"
Fillmore couldn't spit it out like that, all at once. He hemmed and hawed
and finally he blurted out--"Well, when I went to the closet just a minute
ago I noticed something ..."
"Then you've got it!" said Collins triumphantly, and with that he flourishes
the bottle of "Venetienne." "Don't go to a doctor," he added venomously.
"They'll bleed you to death, the greedy bastards. And don't stop drinking
either. That's all hooey. Take this twice a day ... shake it well before
using. And nothing's worse than worry, do you understand? Come on now. I'll
give you a syringe and some permanganate when we get back."
And so we started out into the night, down towards the waterfront where
there was the sound of music and shouts and drunken oaths, Collins talking
quietly all the while
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about this and that, about a boy he had fallen in love with, and the devil's
time he had to get out of the scrape when the parents got wise to it. From
that he switched back to the Baron de Charlus and then to Kurtz who had gone
up the river and got lost. His favorite theme. I liked the way Collins moved
against this background of literature continuously; it was like a
millionaire who never stepped out of his Rolls Royce. There was no
intermediate realm for him between reality and ideas. When we entered the
whorehouse on the Quai Voltaire, after he had flung himself on the divan and
rung for girls and for drinks, he was still paddling up the river with
Kurtz, and only when the girls had flopped on the bed beside him and stuffed
his mouth with kisses did he cease his divagations. Then, as if he had
suddenly realized where he was, he turned to the old mother who ran the
place and gave her an eloquent spiel about his two friends who had come down
from Paris expressly to see the joint. There were about half a dozen girls
in the room, all naked and all beautiful to look at, I must say. They hopped
about like birds while the three of us tried to maintain a conversation
with the grandmother. Finally the latter excused herself and told us to make
ourselves at home. I was altogether taken in by her, so sweet and amiable
she was, so thoroughly gentle and maternal. And what manners! If she had
been a little younger I would have made overtures to her. Certainly you
would not have thought that we were in a "den of vice," as it is called.
Anyway we stayed there an hour or so, and as I was the only one in condition
to enjoy the privileges of the house, Collins and Fillmore remained
downstairs chattering with the girls. When I returned I found the two of
them stretched out on the bed; the girls had formed a semi-circle about the
bed and were singing with the most angelic voices the chorus of Roses in
Picardy. We were sentimentally depressed when we left the house--
Fillmore particularly. Collins swiftly steered us to a rough joint which was
packed with drunken sailors on shore leave and there we sat awhile enjoying
the homosexual rout that was in full swing. When we sallied out we had to
pass through the red-light district where there were more grandmothers with
shawls about their necks sitting
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on the doorsteps fanning themselves and nodding pleasantly to the
passersby. All such good-looking, kindly souls, as if they were keeping
guard over a nursery. Little groups of sailors came swinging along and
pushed their way noisily inside the gaudy joints. Sex everywhere: it was
slopping over, a neap-tide that swept the props from under the city. We
piddled along at the edge of the basin where everything was jumbled and
tangled; you had the impression that all these ships, these trawls and
yachts and schooners and barges, had been blown ashore by a violent storm.
In the space of forty-eight hours so many things had happened that it seemed
as if we had been in Le Havre a month or more. We were planning to leave
early Monday morning, as Fillmore had to be back on the job. We spent Sunday
drinking and carousing, clap or no clap. That afternoon Collins confided to
us that he was thinking of returning to his ranch in Idaho; he hadn't been
home for eight years and he wanted to have a look at the mountains again
before making another voyage East, We were sitting in a whorehouse at the
time, waiting for a girl to appear; he had promised to slip her some
cocaine. He was fed up with Le Havre, he told us. Too many vultures hanging
around his neck. Besides, Jimmie's wife had fallen in love with him and she
was making things hot for him with her jealous fits. There was a scene
almost every night. She had been on her good behavior since we arrived, but
it wouldn't last, he promised us. She was particularly jealous of a Russian
girl who came to the bar now and then when she got tight. A troublemaker. On
top of it all he was desperately in love with this boy whom he had told us
about the first day. "A boy can break your heart," he said. "He's so damned
beautiful! And so cruel!" We had to laugh at this. It sounded preposterous.
But Collins was in earnest.
Around midnight Sunday Fillmore and I retired; we had been given a room
upstairs over the bar. It was sultry as the devil, not a breath of air
stirring. Through the open windows we could hear them shouting downstairs
and the gramophone going continually. All of a sudden a storm broke--a
regular cloudburst. And between the thunderclaps and the squalls that
lashed the window-panes there
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came to our ears the sound of another storm raging downstairs at the bar.
It sounded frightfully close and sinister;
the women were shrieking at the tops of their lungs, bottles were crashing,
tables were upset and there was that familiar, nauseating thud that the
human body makes when it crashes to the floor.
About six o'clock Collins stuck his head in the door. His face was all
plastered and one arm was stuck in a sling. He had a big grin on his face.
"Just as I told you," he said. "She broke loose last night. Suppose you
heard the racket?"
We got dressed quickly and went downstairs to say good-bye to Jimmie. The
place was completely demolished, not a bottle left standing, not a chair
that wasn't broken. The mirror and the show-window were smashed to bits.
Jimmie was making himself an egg-nog.
On the way to the station we pieced the story together. The Russian girl had
dropped in after we toddled off to bed and Yvette had insulted her promptly,
without even waiting for an excuse. They had commenced to pull each other's
hair and in the midst of it a big Swede had stepped in and given the Russian
girl a sound slap in the jaw--to bring her to her senses. That started the
fireworks. Collins wanted to know what right this big stiff had to
interfere in a private quarrel. He got a poke in the jaw for an answer, a
good one that sent him flying to the other end of the bar. "Serves you
right!" screamed Yvette, taking advantage of the occasion to swing a bottle
at the Russian girl's head. And at that moment the thunderstorm broke loose.
For a while there was a regular pandemonium, the women all hysterical and
hungry to seize the opportunity to pay off private grudges. Nothing like a
nice bar-room brawl ... so easy to stick a knife in a man's back or club him
with a bottle when he's lying under a table. The poor Swede had found
himself in a hornet's nest; everyone in the place hated him, particularly
his shipmates. They wanted to see him done in. And so they locked the door
and pushing the tables aside they made a little space in front of the bar
where the two of them could have it out. And they had it out! They had to
cany the poor devil to the hospital when it was over. Collins had come off
rather lucky--nothing more than a
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sprained wrist and a couple of fingers out of joint, a bloody nose and a
black eye. Just a few scratches, as he put it. But if he ever signed up with
that Swede he was going to murder him. It wasn't finished yet. He promised
us that.
And that wasn't the end of the fracas either. After that Yvette had to go
out and get liquored up at another bar. She had been insulted and she was
going to put an end to things. And so she hires a taxi and orders the driver
to ride out to the edge of the cliff overlooking the water. She was going to
kill herself, that's what she was going to do. But then she was so drunk
that when she tumbled out of the cab she began to weep and before any one
could stop her she had begun to peel her clothes off. The driver brought her
home that way, half-naked, and when Jimmie saw the condition she was in he
was so furious with her that he took his razorstrop and he belted the piss
out of her, and she liked it, the bitch that she was. "Do it some more!" she
begged, down on her knees as she was and clutching him around the legs with
her two arms. But Jimmie had enough of it. "You're a dirty old sow!" he said
and with his foot he gave her a shove in the guts that took the wind out of
her and--a bit of her sexy nonsense too.
It was high time we were leaving. The city looked different in me early
morning light. The last thing we talked about, as we stood there waiting for
the train to pull out, was Idaho. The three of us were Americans. We came
from different places, each of us, but we had something in common--a whole
lot, I might say. We were getting sentimental, as Americans do when it comes
time to part. We were getting quite foolish about the cows and sheep and the
big open spaces where men are men and all that crap. If a boat had swung
along instead of the train we'd have hopped aboard and said good-bye to it
all. But Collins was never to see America again, as I learned later; and
Fillmore ... well, Fillmore had to take his punishment too, in a way that
none of us could have suspected then. It's best to keep America just like
that, always in the background, a sort of picture post-card which you look
at in a weak moment. Like that, you imagine it's always there waiting for
you, unchanged, unspoiled, a big
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patriotic open space with cows and sheep and tenderhearted men ready to
bugger everything in sight, man, woman or beast. It doesn't exist, America.
It's a name you give to an abstract idea ...
*
Paris is like a whore. From a distance she seems ravishing, you can't wait
until you have her in your arms. And five minutes later you feel empty,
disgusted with yourself. You feel tricked.
I returned to Paris with money in my pocket--a few hundred francs, which
Collins had shoved in my pocket just as I was boarding the train. It was
enough to pay for a room and at least a week's good rations. It was more
than I had had in my hands at one time for several years. I felt elated, as
though perhaps a new life was opening before me. I wanted to conserve it
too, so I looked up a cheap hotel over a bakery on the Rue du Chateau, just
off the Rue de Vanves, a place that Eugene had pointed out to me once. A few
yards away was the bridge that spans the Montparnasse tracks. A familiar
quarter.
I could have had a room here for a hundred francs a month, a room without
any conveniences to be sure-- without even a window--and perhaps I would
have taken it, just to be sure of a place to flop for a while, had it not
been for the fact that in order to reach this room I would have been obliged
to first pass through the room of a blind man. The thought of passing his
bed every night had a most depressing effect upon me. I decided to look
elsewhere. I went over to the Rue Cels, just behind the cemetery, and I
looked at a sort of rat-trap there with balconies, running around the
court-yard. There were bird-cages suspended from the balcony too, all along
the lower tier. A cheerful sight perhaps, but to me it seemed like the
public ward in a hospital. The proprietor didn't seem to have all his wits
either. I decided to wait for the night, to have a good look around, and
then choose some attractive little joint in a quiet side street.
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At dinner time I spent fifteen francs for a meal, just about twice the
amount I had planned to allot myself. That made me so wretched that I
wouldn't allow myself to sit down for a coffee, even despite the fact that
it had begun to drizzle. No, I would walk about a bit and then go quietly to
bed, at a reasonable hour. I was already miserable, trying to husband my
resources this way. I had never in my life done it; it wasn't in my nature.
Finally it began to come down in bucketsful. I was glad. That would give me
the excuse I needed to duck somewhere and stretch my legs out. It was still
too early to go to bed. I began to quicken my pace, heading back towards the
Boulevard Raspail. Suddenly a woman comes up to me and stops me, right in
the pouring rain. She wants to know what time it is. I told her I didn't
have a watch. And then she bursts out, just like this: "Oh, my good sir, do
you speak English by chance?" I nod my head. It's coming down in torrents
now. "Perhaps, my dear good man, you would be so kind as to take me to a
cafe. It is raining so and I haven't the money to sit down anywhere. You
will excuse me, my dear sir, but you have such a kind face ... I knew you
were English right away." And with this she smiles at me, a strange,
half-demented smile. "Perhaps you could give me a little advice, dear sir.
I am all alone in the world ... my God, it is terrible to have no money ..."
This "dear sir" and "kind sir" and "my good man," etc., had me on the verge
of hysteria. I felt sorry for her and yet I had to laugh. I did laugh. I
laughed right in her face. And then she laughed too, a weird, high-pitched
laugh, off-key, an altogether unexpected piece of cachinnation. I caught her
by the arm and we made a bolt for it to the nearest cafe. She was still
giggling when we entered the bistrot. "My dear good sir," she began
again, "perhaps you think I am not telling you the truth. I am a good girl
... I come of a good family. Only"--and here she gave me that wan, broken
smile again--"only I am so misfortunate as not to have a place to sit down."
At this I began to laugh again. I couldn't help it--the phrases she used,
the strange accent, the crazy hat she had on, that demented smile ...
"Listen," I interrupted, "what nationality are you?"
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"I'm English," she replied. "That is, I was born in Poland, but my father
is Irish."
"So that makes you English?"
"Yes," she said, and she began to giggle again, sheepishly, and with a
pretense of being coy.
"I suppose you know a nice little hotel where you could take me?" I said
this, not because I had any intention of going with her, but just to spare
her the usual preliminaries.
"Oh, my dear sir," she said, as though I had made the most grievous error,
"I'm sure you don't mean that! I'm not that kind of a girl. You were joking
with me, I see that. You're so good ... you have such a kind face. I would
not dare to speak to a Frenchman as I did to you. They insult you right away
..."
She went on in this vein for some time. I wanted to break away from her. But
she didn't want to be left alone. She was afraid--her papers were not in
order. Wouldn't I be good enough to walk her to her hotel? Perhaps I could
"lend" her fifteen or twenty francs, to quiet the patron? I walked
her to the hotel where she said she was stopping and I put a fifty francs
bill in her hand. Either she was very clever, or very innocent--it's hard to
tell sometimes--but, at any rate, she wanted me to wait until she ran to
the bistrot for change. I told her not to bother. And with that she
seized my hand impulsively and raised it to her lips. I was flabbergasted. I
felt like giving her every damned thing I had. That touched me, that crazy
little gesture. I thought to myself, it's good to be rich once in a while,
just to get a new thrill like that. Just the same, I didn't lose my head.
Fifty francs! That was quite enough to squander on a rainy night. As I
walked off she waved to me with that crazy little bonnet which she didn't
know how to wear. It was as though we were old playmates. I felt foolish and
giddy. "My dear kind sir ... you have such a gentle face ... you are so
good, etc." I felt like a saint.
When you feel all puffed up inside it isn't so easy to go to bed right away.
You feel as though you ought to atone for such unexpected bursts of
goodness. Passing the "Jungle" I caught a glimpse of the dance floor; women
with bare backs and ropes of pearls choking them--or so it
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looked--were wiggling their beautiful bottoms at me. Walked right up to the
bar and ordered a coupe of champagne. When the music stopped, a
beautiful blonde--she looked like a Norwegian--took a seat right beside me.
The place wasn't as crowded or as gay as it had appeared from outside. There
were only a half dozen couples in the place--they must have all been dancing
at once. I ordered another coupe of champagne in order not to let my
courage dribble away.
When I got up to dance with the blonde there was no one on the floor but us.
Any other time I would have been self-conscious, but the champagne and the
way she clung to me, the dimmed lights and the solid feeling of security
which the few hundred francs gave me, well ... We had another dance
together, a sort of private exhibition, and then we fell into conversation.
She had begun to weep-- that was how it started. I thought possibly she had
had too much to drink, so I pretended not to be concerned. And meanwhile I
was looking around to see if there was any other timber available. But the
place was thoroughly deserted.
The thing to do when you're trapped is to breeze--at once. If you don't,
you're lost. What retained me, oddly enough, was the thought of paying for a
hat check a second time. One always lets himself in for it because of a
trifle.
The reason she was weeping, I discovered soon enough, was because she had
just buried her child. She wasn't Norwegian either, but French, and a
midwife to boot. A chic midwife, I must say, even with the tears running
down her face. I asked her if a little drink would help to console her,
whereupon she very promptly ordered a whisky and tossed it off in the wink
of an eye. "Would you like another?" I suggested gently. She thought she
would, she felt so rotten, so terribly dejected. She thought she would like
a package of Camels too. "No, wait a minute," she said, "I think I'd rather
have les Pall Mall." Have what you like, I thought, but stop
weeping, for Christ's sake, it gives me the willies. I jerked her to her
feet for another dance. On her feet she seemed to be another person. Maybe
grief makes one more lecherous, I don't know. I murmured something about
breaking
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away. "Where to?" she said eagerly. "Oh, anywhere. Some quiet place where we
can talk."
I went to the toilet and counted the money over again. I hid the hundred
franc notes in my fob pocket and kept a fifty franc note and the loose
change in my trousers pocket. I went back to the bar determined to talk
turkey.
She made it easier for me because she herself introduced the subject. She
was in difficulties. It was not only that she had just lost her child, but
her mother was home, ill, very ill, and there was the doctor to pay and
medicine to be bought, and so on and so forth. I didn't believe a word of
it, of course. And since I had to find a hotel for myself, I suggested that
she come along with me and stay the night. A little economy there, I thought
to myself. But she wouldn't do that. She insisted on going home, said she
had an apartment to herself--and besides she had to look after her mother.
On reflection I decided that it would be still cheaper sleeping at her
place, so I said yes and let's go immediately. Before going, however, I
decided it was best to let her know just how I stood, so that there
wouldn't be any squawking at the last minute. I thought she was going to
faint when I told her how much I had in my pocket. "The likes of it!" she
said. Highly insulted she was. I thought there would be a scene ...
Undaunted, however, I stood my ground. "Very well, then, I'll leave you," I
said quietly. "Perhaps I've made a mistake."
"I should say you have!" she exclaimed, but clutching me by the sleeve at
the same time. "Ecoute, cheri... sois raisonnable!" When I heard that
all my confidence was restored. I knew that it would be merely a question of
promising her a little extra and everything would be O. K. "All right," I
said wearily, "I'll be nice to you, you'll see."
"You were lying to me, then?" she said.
"Yes," I smiled, "I was just lying ..."
Before I had even put my hat on she had hailed a cab. I heard her give the
Boulevard de Clichy for an address. That was more than the price of a room,
I thought to myself. Oh well, there was time yet ... we'd see. I don't know
how it started any more but soon she was raving to me about Henry Bordeaux.
(I have yet to meet a whore
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who doesn't know of Henry Bordeaux!) But this one was genuinely inspired;
her language was beautiful now, so tender, so discerning, that I was
debating how much to give her. It seemed to me that I had heard her say--
"quand il n'y aura plus de temps." It sounded like that, anyway. In
the state I was in, a phrase like that was worth a hundred francs. I
wondered if it was her own or if she had pulled it from Henry Bordeaux.
Little matter. It was just the right phrase with which to roll up to the
foot of Montmartre. "Good evening, mother," I was saying to myself,
"daughter and I will look after you--quand il n 'y aura plus de
temps!" She was going to show me her diploma, too, I remembered that.
She was all aflutter, once the door had closed behind us. Distracted.
Wringing her hands and striking Sarah Bernhardt poses, half undressed too,
and pausing between times to urge me to hurry, to get undressed, to do this
and do that. Finally, when she had stripped down and was poking about with a
chemise in her hand, searching for her kimono, I caught hold of her and gave
her a good squeeze. She had a look of anguish on her face when I released
her. "My God! My God! I must go downstairs and have a look at mother!" she
exclaimed. "You can take a bath if you like, cheri. There! I'll be
back in a few minutes." At the door I embraced her again. I was in my
underclothes and I had a tremendous erection. Somehow all this anguish and
excitement, all the grief and histrionics, only whetted my appetite. Perhaps
she was just going downstairs to quiet her maquereau. I had a feeling
that something unusual was happening, some sort of drama which I would read
about in the morning paper. I gave the place a quick inspection. There were
two rooms and a bath, not badly furnished. Rather coquettish. There was her
diploma on the wall--"first class," as they all read. And there was the
photograph of a child, a little girl with beautiful locks, on the dresser. I
put the water on for a bath, and then I changed my mind. If something were
to happen and I were found in the tub ... I didn't like the idea. I paced
back and forth, getting more and more uneasy as the minutes rolled by.
When she returned she was even more upset than before. "She's going to die
... she's going to die!" she kept
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wailing. For a moment I was almost on the point of leaving. How the hell
can you climb over a woman when her mother's dying downstairs, perhaps right
beneath you? I put my arms around her, half in sympathy and half determined
to get what I had come for. As we stood thus she murmured, as if in real
distress, her need for the money I had promised her. It was for
"maman." Shit, I didn't have the heart to haggle about a few francs
at that moment. I walked over to the chair where my clothes were lying and
I wiggled a hundred franc note out of my fob pocket, carefully keeping my
back turned to her just the same. And, as a further precaution, I placed my
pants on the side of the bed where I knew I was going to flop. The hundred
francs wasn't altogether satisfactory to her, but I could see from the
feeble way that she protested that it was quite enough. Then, with an energy
that astonished me, she flung off her kimono and jumped into bed. As soon as
I had put my arms around her and pulled her to me she reached for the switch
and out went the lights. She embraced me passionately, and she groaned as
all French cunts do when they get you in bed. She was getting me
frightfully roused with her carrying-on; that business of turning out the
lights was a new one to me ... it seemed like the real thing. But I was
suspicious too, and as soon as I could manage conveniently I put my hand out
to feel if my trousers were still there on the chair.
I thought we were settled for the night. The bed felt very comfortable,
softer than the average hotel bed--and the sheets were clean, I had noticed
that. If only she wouldn't squirm so! You would think she hadn't slept with
a man for a month. I wanted to stretch it out. I wanted full value for my
hundred francs. But she was mumbling all sorts of things in that crazy bed
language which goes to your blood even more rapidly when it's in the dark. I
was putting up a stiff fight, but it was impossible with her groaning and
gasping going on, and her muttering: "Vite cheri! Vite cheri! Oh, c'est
bon! Oh, oh! Vite, vite, cheri!" I tried to count but it was like a fire
alarm going off. "Vile, cheri!" and this time she gave such a gasping
shudder that bango! I heard the stars chiming and there was my hundred
francs gone and the fifty that I had forgotten all about and the lights were
on
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again and with the same alacrity that she had bounced into bed she was
bouncing out again and grunting and squealing like an old sow. I lay back
and puffed a cigarette, gazing ruefully at my pants the while; they were
terribly wrinkled. In a moment she was back again, wrapping the kimono
around her, and telling me in that agitated way which was getting on my
nerves that I should make myself at home. "I'm going downstairs to see
mother," she said. "Mais faites comme chez vous, cheri. Je reviens tout
de suite."
After a quarter of an hour had passed I began to feel thoroughly restless. I
went inside and I read through a letter that was lying on the table. It was
nothing on any account--a love letter. In the bathroom I examined all the
bottles on the shelf; she had everything a woman requires to make herself
smell beautiful. I was still hoping that she would come back and give me
another fifty francs' worth. But time dragged on and there was no sign of
her. I began to grow alarmed. Perhaps there was someone dying
downstairs. Absent-mindedly, out of a sense of self-preservation, I suppose,
I began to put my things on. As I was buckling my belt it came to me like a
flash how she had stuffed the hundred franc note into her purse. In the
excitement of the moment she had thrust the purse in the wardrobe, on the
upper shelf. I remembered the gesture she made--standing on her tip-toes
and reaching for the shelf. It didn't take me a minute to open the wardrobe
and feel around for the purse. It was still there. I opened it hurriedly and
saw my hundred franc note lying snugly between the silk coverlets. I put the
purse back just as it was, slipped into my coat and shoes, and then I went
to the landing and listened intently. I couldn't hear a sound. Where she had
gone to, Christ only knows. In a jiffy I was back at the wardrobe and
fumbling with her purse. I pocketed the hundred francs and all the loose
change besides. Then, closing the door silently. I tip-toed down the stairs
and when once I had hit the street I walked just as fast as my legs would
cany me. At the Cafe Boudon I stopped for a bite. The whores there having a
gay time pelting a fat man who had fallen asleep over his meal. He was sound
asleep; snoring, in fact, and yet his jaws were working away mechanically.
The place was in an uproar.
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There were shouts of "All aboard!" and then a concerted banging of knives
and forks. He opened his eyes for a moment, blinked stupidly, and then his
head rolled forward again on his chest. I put the hundred franc bill
carefully away in my fob pocket and counted the change. The din around me
was increasing and I had difficulty to recall exactly whether I had seen
"first-class" on her diploma or not. It bothered me. About her mother I
didn't give a damn. I hoped she had croaked by now. It would be strange if
what she had said were true. Too good to believe. Vite cheri ... vite.
vite! And that other half-wit with her "my good sir" and "you have such
a kind face"! I wondered if she had really taken a room in that hotel we
stopped by.
*
It was along toward the close of Summer when Fillmore invited me to come and
live with him. He had a studio apartment overlooking the cavalry barracks
just off the Place Dupleix. We had seen a lot of each other ever since the
little trip to Le Havre. If it hadn't been for Fillmore I don't know where I
should be to-day--dead, most likely.
"I would have asked you long before," he said, "if it hadn't been for that
little bitch Jackie. I didn't know how to get her off my hands."
I had to smile. It was always like that with Fillmore. He had a genius for
attracting homeless bitches. Anyway, Jackie had finally cleared out of her
own accord. The rainy season was coming on the long, dreary stretch of
grease and fog and squirts of rain that make you damp and miserable. An
execrable place in the winter, Paris! A climate that eats into your soul,
that leaves you bare as the Labrador coast. I noticed with some anxiety
that the only means of heating the place was the little stove in the studio.
However, it was still comfortable. And the view from the studio window was
superb.
In the morning Fillmore would shake me roughly and leave a ten franc note on
the pillow. As soon as he had gone I would settle back for a final snooze.
Sometimes I would lie abed till noon. There was nothing pressing, except to
finish the book, and that didn't worry me much because I was already
convinced that nobody would accept it anyway. Nevertheless, Fillmore was
much impressed by it. When he arrived in the evening with a bottle under
his arm the first thing he did was to go to the table and see how many pages
I had knocked off. At first I enjoyed the show of enthusiasm but later, when
I was
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running dry, it made me devilishly uneasy to see him poking around,
searching for the pages that were supposed to trickle out of me like water
from a tap. When there was nothing to show I felt exactly like some bitch
whom he had harbored. He used to say about Jackie, I remembered--"it would
have been all right if only she had slipped me a piece of ass once in a
while." If I had been a woman I would have been only too glad to slip him a
piece of ass: it would have been much easier than to feed him the pages
which he expected.
Nevertheless, he tried to make me feel at ease. There was always plenty of
food and wine, and now and then he would insist that I accompany him to a
dancing. He was fond of going to a nigger joint on the Rue d'Odessa
where there was a good-looking mulatto who used to come home with us
occasionally. The one thing that bothered him was that he couldn't find a
French girl who liked to drink. They were all too sober to satisfy him-- He
liked to bring a woman back to the studio and guzzle it with her before
getting down to business. He also liked to have her think that he was an
artist. As the man from whom he had rented the place was a painter, it was
not difficult to create an impression; the canvases which we had found in
the armoire were soon stuck about the place and one of the unfinished
ones conspicuously mounted on the easel. Unfortunately they were all of a
Surrealistic quality and the impression they created was usually
unfavorable. Between a whore, a concierge and a cabinet minister there is
not much difference in taste where pictures are concerned. It was a matter
of great relief to Fillmore when Mark Swift began to visit us regularly with
the intention of doing my portrait. Fillmore had a great admiration for
Swift. He was a genius, he said. And though there was something ferocious
about everything he tackled nevertheless when he painted a man or an object
you could recognize it for what it was.
At Swift's request I had begun to grow a beard. The shape of my skull, he
said, required a beard. I had to sit by the window with the Eiffel Tower in
back of me because he wanted the Eiffel Tower in the picture too. He also
wanted the typewriter in the picture. Kruger got the habit of dropping in
too about this time; he maintained
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that Swift knew nothing about painting. It exasperated him to see things out
of proportion. He believed in Nature's laws, implicitly. Swift didn't give
a fuck about Nature; he wanted to paint what was inside his head. Anyway,
there was Swift's portrait of me stuck on the easel now, and though
everything was out of proportion, even a cabinet minister could see that it
was a human head, a man with a beard. The concierge, indeed, began to take a
great interest in the picture; she thought the likeness was striking. And
she liked the idea of showing the Eiffel Tower in the background.
Things rolled along this way peacefully for about a month or more. The
neighborhood appealed to me, particularly at night when the full squalor
and lugubriousness of it made itself felt. The little Place, so charming and
tranquil at twilight, could assume the most dismal, sinister character when
darkness came on. There was that long, high wall covering one side of the
barracks against which there was always a couple embracing each other
furtively--often in the rain. A depressing sight to see two lovers squeezed
against a prison wall under a gloomy street light: as if they had been
driven right to the last bounds. What went on inside the enclosure was also
depressing. On a rainy day I used to stand by the window and look down on
the activity below, quite as if it were something going on on another
planet. It seemed incomprehensible to me. Everything done according to
schedule, but a schedule that must have been devised by a lunatic. There
they were, floundering around in the mud, the bugles blowing, the horses
charging--all within four walls. A sham battle. A lot of tin soldiers who
hadn't the least interest in learning how to kill or how to polish their
boots or curry-comb the horses. Utterly ridiculous the whole thing, but part
of the scheme of things. When they had nothing to do they looked even more
ridiculous; they scratched themselves, they walked about with their hands in
their pockets, they looked up at the sky. And when an officer came along
they clicked their heels and saluted. A madhouse, it seemed to me. Even the
horses looked silly. And then sometimes the artillery was dragged out and
they went clattering down the street on parade and people stood and gaped
and admired the fine uniforms. To me
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they always looked like an army corps in retreat; something shabby,
bedraggled, crestfallen about them, their uniforms too big for their bodies,
all the alertness, which as individuals they possess to such a remarkable
degree, gone now.
When the sun came out, however, things looked different. There was a ray of
hope in their eyes, they walked more elastically, they showed a little
enthusiasm. Then the color of things peeped out graciously and there was
that fuss and bustle so characteristic of the French; at the bistrot
on the comer they chattered gaily over their drinks and the officers seemed
more human, more French, I might say. When the sun comes out, any spot in
Paris can look beautiful; and if there is a bistrot with an awning
rolled down, a few tables on the sidewalk and colored drinks in the glasses,
then people look altogether human. And they are human--the finest
people in the world when the sunshines! So intelligent, so indolent, so
carefree! It's a crime to herd such a people into barracks, to put them
through exercises, to grade them into privates and sergeants and colonels
and what not.
As I say, things were rolling along smoothly. Now and then Carl came along
with a job for me, travel articles which he hated to do himself. They only
paid fifty francs a piece, but they were easy to do because I had only to
consult the back issues and revamp the old articles. People only read these
things when they were sitting on a toilet or killing time in a waiting
room. The principal thing was to keep the adjectives well furbished--the
rest was a matter of dates and statistics. If it was an important article
the head of the department signed it himself; he was a half-wit who couldn't
speak any language well, but who knew how to find fault. If he found a
paragraph that seemed to him well written he would say--"Now that's the way
I want you to write! That's beautiful. You have my permission to use it in
your book." These beautiful paragraphs we sometimes lifted from the
encyclopaedia or an old guide book. Some of them Carl did put into his
book--they had a Surrealistic character.
Then one evening, after I had been out for a walk, I open the door and a
woman springs out of the bed-room. "So you're the writer!" she exclaims at
once, and she
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looks at my beard as if to corroborate her impression. "What a horrid
beard!" she says. "I think you people must be crazy around here." Fillmore
is trailing after her with a blanket in his hand. "She's a princess," he
says, smacking his lips as if he had just tasted some rare caviar. The two
of them were dressed for the street; I couldn't understand what they were
doing with the bed-clothes. And then it occurred to me immediately that
Fillmore must have dragged her into the bed-room to show her his laundry
bag. He always did that with a new woman, especially if she was a
Francaise. "No tickee, no shirtee!" that's what was stitched on the
laundry bag, and somehow Fillmore had an obsession for explaining this motto
to every female who arrived. But this dame was not a Francaise--he
made that clear to me at once. She was Russian--and a princess, no less.
He was bubbling over with excitement, like a child that has just found a new
toy. "She speaks five languages!" he said, obviously overwhelmed by such an
accomplishment.
"Non, four!" she corrected promptly.
"Well, four then ... Anyway, she's a damned intelligent girl. You ought to
hear her speak."
The princess was nervous--she kept scratching her thigh and rubbing her
nose. "Why does he want to make his bed now?" she asked me abruptly. "Does
he think he will get me that way? He's a big child. He behaves
disgracefully. I took him to a Russian restaurant and he danced like a
nigger." She wiggled her bottom to illustrate. "And he talks too much. Too
loud. He talks nonsense." She swished about the room, examining the
paintings and the books, keeping her chin well up all the time but
scratching herself intermittently. Now and then she wheeled around like a
battleship and delivered a broadside. Fillmore kept following her about with
a bottle in one hand and a glass in the other. "Stop following me like
that!" she exclaimed. "And haven't you anything to drink but this? Can't you
get a bottle of champagne? I must have some champagne. My nerves! My
nerves!"
Fillmore tries to whisper a few words in my ear. "An actress ... a movie
star ... some guy jilted her and she can't get over it ... I'm going to get
her cockeyed ..."
"I'll clear out then," I was saying, when the princess
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interrupted us with a shout. "Why do you whisper like that?" she cried,
stamping her foot. "Don't you know that's not polite? And you, I
thought you were going to take me out? I must get drunk to-night, I have
told you that already."
"Yes, yes," said Fillmore, "we're going in a minute. I just want another
drink."
"You're a pig!" she yelled. "But you're a nice boy too. Only you're loud.
You have no manners." She turned to me. "Can I trust him to behave himself?
I must get drunk to-night but I don't want him to disgrace me. Maybe I will
come back here afterwards. I would like to talk to you. You seem more
intelligent."
As they were leaving the princess shook my hand cordially and promised to
come for dinner some evening-- "when I will be sober," she said.
"Fine!" I said. "Bring another princess along--or a countess, at least. We
change the sheets every Saturday."
About three in the morning Fillmore staggers in ... alone. Lit up like an
ocean liner, and making a noise like a blind man with his cracked cane. Tap,
tap, tap, down the weary lane ... "Going straight to bed," he says, as he
marches past me. 'Tell you all about it to-morrow." He goes inside to his
room and throws back the covers. I hear him groaning--"what a woman! what a
woman!" In a second he's out again, with his hat on and the cracked cane in
his hand. "I knew something like that was going to happen. She's crazy!"
He rummages around in the kitchen a while and then comes back to the studio
with a bottle of Anjou. I have to sit up and down a glass with him.
As far as I can piece the story together the whole thing started at the
Rond-Point des Champs Elysees where he had dropped off for a drink on his
way home. As usual at that hour the terrasse was crowded with
buzzards. This one was sitting right on the aisle with a pile of saucers in
front of her; she was getting drunk quietly all by herself when Fillmore
happened along and caught her eye. "I'm drunk," she giggled, "won't you sit
down?" And then, as though it were the most natural thing in the world to
do, she began right off the bat with the yam about her movie
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director, how he had given her the go-by and how she had thrown herself in
the Seine and so forth and so on. She couldn't remember any more which
bridge it was, only that there was a crowd around when they fished her out
of the water. Besides, she didn't see what difference it made which bridge
she threw herself from--why did he ask such questions? She was laughing
hysterically about it, and then suddenly she had a desire to be off--she
wanted to dance. Seeing him hesitate she opens her bag impulsively and pulls
out a hundred francs note. The next moment, however, she decided that a
hundred francs wouldn't go very far. "Haven't you any money at all?" she
said. No, he hadn't very much in his pocket, but he had a checkbook at home.
So they made a dash for the checkbook and then, of course, I had to happen
in just as he was explaining to her the "No tickee, no shirtee" business.
On the way home they had stopped off at the Poisson d'Or for a little snack
which she had washed down with a few vodkas. She was in her element there
with everyone kissing her hand and murmuring Princesse, Princesse.
Drunk as she was, she managed to collect her dignity. "Don't wiggle your
behind like that!" she kept saying, as they danced.
It was Fillmore's idea, when he brought her back to the studio, to stay
there. But, since she was such an intelligent girl and so erratic, he had
decided to put up with her whims and postpone the grand event. He had even
visualized the prospect of running across another princess and bringing the
two of them back. When they started out for the evening, therefore, he was
in a good humor and prepared, if necessary, to spend a few hundred francs
on her. After all, one doesn't run across a princess every day.
This time she dragged him to another place, a place where she was still
better known and where there would be no trouble in cashing a check, as she
said. Everybody was in evening clothes and there was more spine-breaking,
hand-kissing nonsense as the waiter escorted them to a table.
In the middle of a dance she suddenly walks off the floor, with tears in her
eyes. "What's the matter?" he said, "what did I do this time?" and
instinctively he put his
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hand to his backside, as though perhaps it might still be wiggling. "It's
nothing," she said. "You didn't do anything. Come, you're a nice boy," and
with that she drags him on to the floor again and begins to dance with
abandon. "But what's the matter with you?" he murmured. "It's nothing," she
repeated. "I saw somebody, that's all." And then, with a sudden spurt of
anger--"why do you get me drunk? Don't you know it makes me crazy?"
"Have you got a check?" she says. "We must get out of here." She called the
waiter over and whispered to him in Russian. "Is it a good check?" she
asked, when the waiter had disappeared. And then, impulsively: "Wait for me
downstairs in the cloak-room. I must telephone somebody."
After the waiter had brought the change Fillmore sauntered leisurely
downstairs to the cloak-room to wait for her. He strode up and down, humming
and whistling softly, and smacking his lips in anticipation of the caviar to
come. Five minutes passed. Ten minutes. Still whistling softly. When twenty
minutes had gone by and still no princess he at last grew suspicious. The
cloak-room attendant said that she had left long ago. He dashed outside.
There was a nigger in livery standing there with a big grin on his face. Did
the nigger know where she had breezed to? Nigger grins. Nigger says: "Ah
heerd Coupole, dassall sir!"
At the Coupole, downstairs, he finds her sitting in front of a cocktail with
a dreamy, trance-like expression on her face. She smiles when she sees him.
"Was that a decent thing to do," he says, "to run away like that? You might
have told me that you didn't like me ..."
She flared up at this, got theatrical about it. And after a lot of gushing
she commenced to whine and slobber. "I'm crazy," she blubbered. "And you're
crazy too. You want me to sleep with you, and I don't want to sleep with
you." And then she began to rave about her lover, the movie director whom
she had seen on the dance floor. That's why she had to run away from the
place. That's why she took drugs and got drunk every night. That's why she
threw herself in the Seine. She babbled on this way about how crazy she was
and then suddenly she had an idea. "Let's go to
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Bricktop's!" There was a man there whom she knew ... he had promised her a
job once. She was certain he would help her.
"What's it going to cost?" asked Fillmore cautiously.
It would cost a lot, she let him know that immediately. "But listen, if you
take me to Bricktop's, I promise to go home with you." She was honest enough
to add that it might cost him five or six hundred francs. "But I'm worth it!
You don't know what a woman I am. There isn't another woman like me in all
Paris ..."
"That's what you think!" His Yankee blood was coming to the fore.
"But I don't see it. I don't see that you're worth anything. You're just a
poor crazy son-of-a-bitch. Frankly, I'd rather give fifty francs to some
poor French girl; at least they give you something in return."
She hit me ceiling when he mentioned the French girls. "Don't talk to me
about those women! I hate them! They're stupid ... they're ugly ... they're
mercenary. Stop it, I tell you!"
In a moment she had subsided again. She was on a new tack. "Darling," she
murmured, "you don't know what I look like when I'm undressed. I'm
beautiful!." And she held her breasts with her two hands.
But Fillmore remained unimpressed. "You're a bitch!" he said coldly. "I
wouldn't mind spending a few hundred francs on you, but you're crazy. You
haven't even washed your face. Your breath stinks. I don't give a damn
whether you're a princess or not ... I don't want any of your high-assed
Russian variety. You ought to get out in the street and hustle for it.
You're no better than any little French girl. You're not as good. I wouldn't
piss away another sou on you. You ought to go to America--that's the place
for a blood-sucking leech like you ..."
She didn't seem to be at all put out by this speech. "I think you're just a
little afraid of me," she said.
"Afraid of you? Of you?'
"You're just a lime boy," she said. "You have no manners. When you know me
better you will talk differently ... Why don't you try to be nice? If you
don't want to go with me to-night, very well. I will be at the Rond-Point
to-morrow between five and seven. I like you."
"I don't intend to be at the Rond-Point to-morrow, or
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any other night. I don't want to see you again ... ever. I'm through with
you. I'm going out and find myself a nice little French girl. You can go to
hell!"
She looked at him and smiled wearily. "That's what you say now. But wait!
Wait until you've slept with me. You don't know yet what a beautiful body I
have. You think the French girls know how to make love ... wait! I will make
you crazy about me. I like you. Only you're uncivilized. You're just a boy.
You talk too much ..."
"You're crazy," said Fillmore. "I wouldn't fall for you if you were
the last woman on earth. Go home and wash your face." He walked off without
paying for the drinks.
In a few days, however, the princess was installed. She's a genuine
princess, of that we're pretty certain. But she has the clap. Anyway, life
is far from dull here. Fillmore had bronchitis, the princess, as I was
saying, has the clap, and I have the piles. Just exchanged six empty bottles
at the Russian epicene across the way. Not a drop went down my
gullet. No meat, no wine, no rich game, no women. Only fruit and paraffin
oil, arnica drops and adenalin ointment. And not a chair in the joint that's
comfortable enough. Right now, looking at the princess, I'm propped up like
a pasha. Pasha! That reminds me of her name: Macha. Doesn't sound so damned
aristocratic to me. Reminds me of The Living Corpse.
At first I thought it was going to be embarrassing, a menage a trois,
but not at all. I thought when I saw her move in that it was all up with me
again, that I should have to find another place, but Fillmore soon gave me
to understand that he was only putting her up until she got on her feet.
With a woman like her I don't know what an expression like that means; as
far as I can see she's been standing on her head all her life. She says the
revolution drove her out of Russia, but I'm sure if it hadn't been the
revolution it would have been something else. She's under the impression
that she's a great actress; we never contradict her in anything she says
because it's time wasted. Fillmore finds her amusing. When he leaves for the
office in the morning he drops ten francs on her pillow and ten francs on
mine; at night the three of us go to the Russian restaurant down below. The
neighborhood is full of Russians and Macha has already found a place
where she can run up a little credit. Naturally ten francs a day isn't
anything for a princess; she wants caviar now and then and champagne, and
she needs a complete new wardrobe in order to get a job in the movies again.
She has nothing to do now except to kill time. She's putting on fat.
This morning I had quite a fright. After I had washed my face I grabbed her
towel by mistake. We can't seem to train her to put her towel on the right
hook. And when I bawled her out for it she answered smoothly: "My dear, if
one can become blind from that I would have been blind years ago."
And then there's the toilet, which we all have to use. I try speaking to her
in a fatherly way about the toilet seat. "Oh zut!" she says. "If you are so
afraid I'll go to a cafe." But it's not necessary to do that, I explain.
Just use ordinary precautions. "Tut tut!" she says, "I won't sit down then
... I'll stand up."
Everything is cockeyed with her around. First she wouldn't come across
because she had the monthlies. For eight days that lasted. We were beginning
to think she was faking it. But no, she wasn't faking. One day, when I was
trying to put the place in order, I found some cotton batting under the bed
and it was stained with blood. With her everything goes under the bed:
orange peel, wadding, corks, empty bottles, scissors, used condoms, books,
pillows ... She makes the bed only when it's time to retire. Most of the
time she lies abed reading her Russian papers. "My dear," she says to me,
"if it weren't for my papers I wouldn't get out of bed at all." That's it
precisely! Nothing but Russian newspapers. Not a scratch of toilet paper
around--nothing but Russian newspapers with which to wipe your ass.
Anyway, speaking of her idiosyncrasies, after the menstrual flow was over,
after she had rested properly and put a nice layer of fat around her belt,
still she wouldn't come across. Pretended that she only liked women. To take
on a man she had to first be properly stimulated. Wanted us to take her to a
bawdy house where they put on the dog and man act. Or better still, she
said, would be Leda and the swan: the flapping of the wings excited
her terribly.
One night, to test her out, we accompanied her to a
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place that she suggested. But before we had a chance to broach the subject
to the madame, a drunken Englishman, who was sitting at the next table, fell
into a conversation with us. He had already been upstairs twice but he
wanted another try at it. He had only about twenty francs in his pocket, and
not knowing any French, he asked us if we would help him to bargain with the
girl he had his eye on. Happened she was a negress, a powerful wench from
Martinique, and beautiful as a panther. Had a lovely disposition too. In
order to persuade her to accept the Englishman's remaining sous, Fillmore
had to promise to go with her himself soon as she got through with the
Englishman. The princess looked on, heard everything that was said, and
then got on her high horse. She was insulted. "Well," said Fillmore, "you
wanted some excitement-- you can watch me do it!" She didn't want to watch
him-- she wanted to watch a drake. "Well, by Jesus," he said, "I'm as good
as a drake any day ... maybe a little better." Like that, one word led to
another, and finally the only way we could appease her was to call one of
the girls over and let them tickle each other ... When Fill-more came back
with the negress her eyes were smouldering. I could see from the way
Fillmore looked at her that she must have given an unusual performance and I
began to feel lecherous myself. Fillmore must have sensed how I felt, and
what an ordeal it was to sit and look on all night, for suddenly he pulled a
hundred franc note out of his pocket and slapping it in front of me, he
said: "Look here, you probably need a lay more than any of us. Take that and
pick someone out for yourself." Somehow that gesture endeared him more to me
than anything he had ever done for me, and he had done considerable. I
accepted the money in the spirit it was given and promptly signalled to the
negress to get ready for another lay. That enraged the Princess more than
anything, it appeared. She wanted to know if there wasn't anyone in the
place good enough for us except this negress. I told her bluntly NO. And it
was so--the negress was the queen of the harem. You had only to look at her
to get an erection. Her eyes seemed to be swimming in sperm. She was drunk
with all the demands made upon her. She couldn't walk straight any more--at
least, it seemed that
217
way to me. Going up the narrow winding stairs behind her I couldn't resist
the temptation to slide my hand up her crotch; we continued up the stairs
that way, she looking back at me with a cheerful smile and wiggling her ass
a bit when it tickled her too much.
It was a good session all around. Everyone was happy. Macha seemed to be in
a good mood too. And so the next evening, after she had had her ration of
champagne and caviar, after she had given us another chapter out of the
history of her life, Fillmore went to work on her. It seemed as though he
was going to get his reward at last. She had ceased to put up a fight any
more. She lay back with her legs apart and she let him fool around and fool
around and then, just as he was climbing over her, just as he was going to
slip it in, she informs him nonchalantly that she has a dose of clap. He
rolled off her like a log. I heard him fumbling around in the kitchen for
the black soap he used on special occasions, and in a few moments he was
standing by my bed with a towel in his hands and saying--"can you beat that?
that son-of-a-bitch of a princess has the clap!" He seemed pretty well
scared about it. The princess meanwhile was munching an apple and calling
for her Russian newspapers. It was quite a joke to her. 'There are worse
things than that," she said, lying there in her bed and talking to us
through the open door. Finally Fillmore began to see it as a joke too and
opening another bottle of Anjou he poured out a drink for himself and
quaffed it down. It was only about one in the mom-ing and so he sat there
talking to me for a while. He wasn't going to be put off by a thing like
that, he told me. Of course, he had to be careful... there was the old dose
which had come on in Le Havre. He couldn't remember any more how that
happened. Sometimes when he got drunk he forgot to wash himself. It wasn't
anything very terrible, but you never knew what might develop later. He
didn't want any one massaging his prostate gland. No, that he didn't relish.
The first dose he ever got was at college. Didn't know whether the girl had
given it to him or he to the girl; there was so much funny work going on
about the campus you didn't know whom to believe. Nearly all the co-eds had
been knocked up some time or other. Too damned ignorant... even the profs
were igno-
218
rant. One of the profs had himself castrated, so the rumor went ...
Anyway, the next night he decided to risk it--with a condom. Not much risk
in that, unless it breaks. He had bought himself some of the long fish-skin
variety--they were the most reliable, he assured me. But then, that didn't
work either. She was too tight. "Jesus, there's nothing abnormal about me,"
he said. "How do you make that out? Somebody got inside her all right to
give her that dose. He must have been abnormally small."
So, one thing after another failing, he just gave it up altogether. They
lie there now like brother and sister, with incestuous dreams. Says Macha,
in her philosophic way: "In Russia it often happens that a man sleeps with a
woman without touching her. They can go on that way for weeks and weeks and
never think anything about it. Until paff! once he touches her ... paff!
paff! After that it's paff, paff, paff!"
All efforts are concentrated now on getting Macha into shape. Fillmore
thinks if he cures her of the clap she may loosen up. A strange idea. So
he's bought her a douche bag, a stock of permanganate, a whirling syringe
and other little things which were recommended to him by a Hungarian doctor,
a little quack of an abortionist over near the Place d'Aligre. It seems his
boss had knocked up a sixteen year old girl once and she had introduced him
to the Hungarian; and then after that the boss had a beautiful chancre and
it was the Hungarian again. That's how one gets acquainted in
Paris--genito-urinary friendships. Anyway, under our strict supervision,
Macha is taking care of herself. The other night, though, we were in a
quandary for a while. She stuck the suppository inside her and then she
couldn't find the string attached to it. "My God!" she was yelling, "where
is that string? My God! I can't find the string!"
"Did you look under the bed?" said Fillmore. Finally she quieted down. But
only for a few minutes. The next thing was: "My God! I'm bleeding again. I
just had my period and now there are gouttes again. It must be that
cheap champagne you buy. My God, do you want me to bleed to death?" She
comes out with a kimono on and
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a towel stuck between her legs, trying to look dignified as usual. "My whole
life is just like that," she says. "I'm a neurasthenic. The whole day
running around and at night I'm drunk again. When I came to Paris I was
still an innocent girl. I read only Villon and Beaudelaire. But as I had
then 300,000 Swiss francs in the bank I was crazy to enjoy myself, because
in Russia they were always strict with me. And as I was even more beautiful
then than I am now I had all the men falling at my feet." Here she hitched
up the slack which had accumulated around her belt. "You mustn't think I had
a stomach like that when I came here ... that's from all the poison I was
given to drink ... those horrible aperitifs which the French are so
crazy to drink ... So then I met my movie director and he wanted that I
should play a part for him. He said I was the most gorgeous creature in the
world and he was begging me to sleep with him every night. I was a foolish
young virgin and so I permitted him to rape me one night. I wanted to be a
great actress and I didn't know that he was full of poison. So he gave me
the clap ... and now I want that he should have it back again. It's all his
fault that I committed suicide in the Seine ... Why are you laughing? Don't
you believe that I committed suicide? I can show you the newspapers ...
there is my picture in all the papers. I will show you the Russian papers
some day ... they wrote about me wonderfully ... But darling, you know that
first I must have a new dress. I can't vamp this man with these dirty rags I
am in. Besides, I still owe my dressmaker 12,000 francs ..."
From here on it's a long story about the inheritance which she is trying to
collect. She has a young lawyer, a Frenchman, who is rather timid, it seems,
and he is trying to win back her fortune. From time to time he used to give
her a hundred francs or so on account. "He's stingy, like all the French
people," she says. "And I was so beautiful, too, that he couldn't keep his
eyes off me. He kept begging me always to fuck him. I got so sick and tired
of listening to him that one night I said yes, just to keep him quiet, and
so as I wouldn't lose my hundred francs now and then." She paused a moment
to laugh hysterically. "My dear," she continued, "it was too funny for words
what happened to him. He calls me up on the phone one
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day and he says: "I must see you right away ... it's very important." And
when I see him he shows me a paper from the doctor--and it's gonorrhea! My
dear, I laughed in his face. How should I know that I still had the clap?
"You wanted to fuck me and so I fucked you!" That made him quiet. That's how
it goes in life: you don't suspect anything, and then all of a sudden paff,
paff, paff! He was such a fool that he fell in love with me all over again.
Only he begged me to behave myself and not run around Montparnasse all night
drinking and fucking. He said I was driving him crazy. He wanted to marry me
and then his family heard about me and they persuaded him to go to
Indo-China ..."
From this Macha calmly switches to an affair she had with a Lesbian. "It was
very funny, my dear, how she picked me up one night. I was at the 'Fetiche'
and I was drunk as usual. She took me from one place to the other and she
made love to me under the table all night until I couldn't stand it any
more. Then she took me to her apartment and for two hundred francs I let her
suck me off. She wanted me to live with her but I didn't want to have her
suck me off every night ... it makes you too weak. Besides, I can tell you
that I don't care so much for Lesbians as I used to. I would rather sleep
with a man even though it hurts me. When I get terribly excited I can't hold
myself back any more ... three, four, five times ... just like that! Paff,
paff, paff! And then I bleed and that is very unhealthy for me because I am
inclined to be anaemic. So you see why once in a while I must let myself be
sucked by a Lesbian ..."
When the cold weather set in the princess disappeared. It was getting
uncomfortable with just a little coal stove in the studio; the bed-room was
like an ice-box and the kitchen was hardly any better. There was just a
little space around the stove where it was actually warm. So Macha had found
herself a sculptor who was castrated. She told us about him before she left.
After a few days she tried coming back to us, but Fillmore wouldn't hear of
it. She complained that the sculptor kept her awake all night kissing her.
And then there was no hot water for her douches. But finally she decided
that it was just as well she didn't come back. "I won't have that
candle-stick next to me any more," she said. "Always that candlestick ...
it made me nervous. If you had only been a fairy I would have stayed with
you ..."
With Macha gone our evenings took on a different character. Often we sat by
the fire drinking hot toddies and discussing the life back there in the
States. We talked about it as if we never expected to go back there again.
Fillmore had a map of New York City which he had tacked on the wall; we used
to spend whole evenings discussing the relative virtues of Paris and New
York. And inevitably there always crept into our discussions the figure of
Whitman, that one lone figure which America has produced in the course of
her brief life. In Whitman the whole American scene comes to life, her past
and her future, her birth and her death. Whatever there is of value in
America Whitman has expressed, and there is nothing more to be said. The
future belongs to the machine, to the robots. He was the Poet of the Body
and the Soul, Whitman. The first and the last poet. He is almost
undecipherable today, a monument covered with rude hiero-
222
glyphs for which there is no key. It seems strange almost to mention his
name over here. There is no equivalent in the languages of Europe for the
spirit which he immortalized. Europe is saturated with art and her soil is
full of dead bones and her museums are bursting with plundered treasures,
but what Europe has never had is a free, healthy spirit, what you might call
a MAN. Goethe was the nearest approach, but Goethe was a stuffed shirt, by
comparison. Goethe was a respectable citizen, a pedant, a bore, a universal
spirit, but stamped with the German trade-mark, with the double eagle. The
serenity of Goethe, the calm, Olympian attitude, is nothing more than the
drowsy stupor of a German bourgeois deity. Goethe is an end of something.
Whitman is a beginning.
After a discussion of this sort I would sometimes put on my things and go
for a walk, bundled up in a sweater, a spring overcoat of Fillmore's and a
cape over that. A foul, damp cold against which there is no protection
except a strong spirit. They say America is a country of extremes, and it
is true that the thermometer registers degrees of cold which are practically
unheard of here; but the cold of a Paris winter is a cold unknown to
America, it is psychological, an inner as well as an outer cold. If it never
freezes here it never thaws either. Just as the people protect themselves
against the invasion of their privacy, by their high walls, their bolts and
shutters, their growling, evil-tongued, slatternly concierges, so they have
learned to protect themselves against the cold and heat of a bracing,
vigorous climate. They have fortified themselves: protection is the
keyword. Protection and security. In order that they may rot in comfort. On
a damp winter's night it is not necessary to look at the map to discover the
latitude of Paris. It is a northern city, an outpost erected over a swamp
filled in with skulls and bones. Along the boulevards there is a cold
electrical imitation of heat. Tout Va Bien in ultraviolet rays that
make the clients of the Dupont chain cafes look like gangrened cadavers.
Tout Via Bien! That's the motto that nourishes the forlorn beggars
who walk up and down all night under the drizzle of the violet rays.
Wherever there are lights there is a little heat. One gets warm from
watching the fat, secure bastards down their grogs, their steaming black
coffees.
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Where the lights are there are people on the sidewalks, jostling one
another, giving off a little animal heat through their dirty underwear and
their foul, cursing breaths. Maybe for a stretch of eight or ten blocks
there is a semblance of gaiety, and then it tumbles back into night, dismal,
foul, black night like frozen fat in a soup tureen. Blocks and blocks of
jagged tenements, every window closed tight, every shop front barred and
bolted. Miles and miles of stone prisons without the faintest glow of
warmth; the dogs and the cats are all inside with the canary birds. The
cockroaches and the bedbugs too are safely incarcerated. Tout Va
Bien. If you haven't a sou why just take a few old newspapers and make
yourself a bed on the steps of a cathedral. The doors are well bolted and
there will be no draughts to disturb you. Better still is to sleep outside
the Metro doors; there you will have company. Look at them on a rainy night,
lying there stiff as mattresses--men, women, lice, all huddled together and
protected by the newspapers against spittle and the vermin that walks
without legs. Look at them under the bridges or under the market sheds. How
vile they look in comparison with the clean, bright vegetables stacked up
like jewels. Even the dead horses and the cows and sheep hanging from the
greasy hooks look more inviting. At least we will eat these to-morrow and
even the intestines will serve a purpose. But these filthy beggars lying in
the rain, what purpose do they serve? what good can they do us? They make us
bleed for five minutes, that's all.
Oh, well, these are night thoughts produced by walking in the rain after two
thousand years of Christianity. At least now the birds are well provided
for, and the cats and dogs. Every time I pass the concierge's window and
catch the full icy impact of her glance I have an insane desire to throttle
all the birds in creation. At the bottom of every frozen heart there is a
drop or two of love--just enough to feed the birds.
Still I can't get it out of my mind what a discrepancy there is between
ideas and living. A permanent dislocation, though we try to cover the two
with a bright awning. And it won't go. Ideas have to be wedded to action; if
there is no sex, no vitality in them, there is no action. Ideas cannot exist
alone in the vacuum of the mind. Ideas
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are related to living: liver ideas, kidney ideas, interstitial ideas, etc.
If it were only for the sake of an idea Copernicus would not have smashed
the existent macrocosm and Columbus would have foundered in the Sargasso
Sea. The aesthetics of the idea breeds flower-pots and flower-pots you put
on the window-sill. But if there be no rain or sun of what use putting
flower-pots outside the window?
Fillmore is full of ideas about gold. The "mythos" of gold, he calls it. I
like "mythos" and I like the idea of gold, but I am not obsessed by the
subject and I don't see why we should make flower-pots, even of gold. He
tells me that the French are hoarding their gold away in watertight
compartments deep below the surface of the earth;
he tells me that there is a little locomotive which runs around in these
subterranean vaults and corridors. I like the idea enormously. A profound,
uninterrupted silence in which the gold softly snoozes at a temperature of
17 ^ degrees Centigrade. He says an army working 46 days and 37 hours would
not be sufficient to count all the gold that is sunk beneath the Bank of
France, and that there is a reserve supply of false teeth, bracelets,
wedding rings, etc. Enough food also to last for eighty days and a lake on
top of the gold pile to resist the shock of high explosives. Gold, he says,
tends to become more and more invisible, a myth, and no more defalcations.
Excellent! I am wondering what will happen to the world when we go off the
gold standard in ideas, dress, morals, etc. The gold standard of
love!
Up to the present, my idea in collaborating with myself has been to get off
the gold standard of literature. My idea briefly has been to present a
resurrection of the emotions, to depict the conduct of a human being in the
stratosphere of ideas, that is, in the grip of delirium. To paint a
pre-Socratic being, a creature part goat, part Titan. In short, to erect a
world on the basis of the omphalos, not on an abstract idea nailed to
a cross. Here and there you may have come across neglected statues, oases
untapped, windmills overlooked by Cervantes, rivers that run uphill, women
with five and six breasts ranged longitudinally along the torso. (Writing to
Gauguin, Strindberg said: "J'ai vu des arbres que ne retrouverait
aucun
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botaniste, des animaux que Cuvier n'a jamais soupconnes et des hommes que
vous seul avez pu creer.")
When Rembrandt hit par he went below with the gold ingots and the pemmican
and the portable beds. Gold is a night word belonging to the chthonian mind:
it has dream in it and mythos. We are reverting to alchemy, to that fake
Alexandrian wisdom which produced our inflated symbols. Real wisdom is
being stored away in the sub-cellars by the misers of learning. The day is
coming when they will be circling around in the middle air with magnetizers;
to find a piece of ore you will have to go up ten thousand feet with a pair
of instruments--in a cold latitude preferably--and establish telepathic
communication with the bowels of the earth and the shades of the dead. No
more Klondikes. No more bonanzas. You will have to learn to sing and caper a
bit, to read the zodiac and study your entrails. All the gold that is being
tucked away in the pockets of the earth will have to be re-mined;
all this symbolism will have to be dragged out again from the bowels of men.
But first the instruments must be perfected. First it is necessary to
invent better airplanes, to distinguish where the noise comes from
and not go daffy just because you hear an explosion under your ass. And
secondly it will be necessary to get adapted to the cold layers of the
stratosphere, to become a cold-blooded fish of the air. No reverence. No
piety. No longing. No regrets. No hysteria. Above all, as Philippe Datz
says--"NO DISCOURAGEMENT!"
These are sunny thoughts inspired by a Vermouth Cassis at the Place de la
Trinite. A Saturday afternoon and a "misfire" book in my hands. Everything
swimming in a divine mucopus. The drink leaves a bitter herbish taste in my
mouth, the lees of our great Western civilization, rotting now like the
toe-nails of the saints. Women are passing by--regiments of them--all
swinging their asses in front of me; the chimes are ringing and the buses
are climbing the sidewalk and bussing one another. The garcon wipes the
table with a dirty rag while the patronne tickles the cash-register
with fiendish glee. A look of vacuity on my face, blotto, vague in acuity,
biting the asses that brush by me. In the belfry opposite a hunchback
strikes with a golden mallet and the pigeons scream
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alarum. I open the book--the book which Nietzsche called "the best German
book there is"--and it says:
"MEN WILL BECOME MORE CLEVER AND MORE ACUTE; BUT NOT BETTER, HAPPIER, AND
STRONGER IN ACTION----OR, AT LEAST, ONLY AT EPOCHS. I FORESEE THE TIME WHEN
GOD WILL HAVE NO MORE JOY IN THEM, BUT WILL BREAK UP EVERYTHING FOR A
RENEWED CREATION. I AM CERTAIN THAT EVERYTHING IS PLANNED TO THIS END, AND
THAT THE TIME AND HOUR IN THE DISTANT FUTURE FOR THE OCCURRENCE OF THIS
RENOVATING EPOCH ARE ALREADY FIXED. BUT A LONG TIME WILL ELAPSE FIRST, AND
WE MAY STILL FOR THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS OF YEARS AMUSE OURSELVES ON THIS
DEAR OLD SURFACE."
Excellent! At least a hundred years ago there was a man who had vision
enough to see that the world was pooped out. Our Western world!--When
I see the figures of men and women moving listlessly behind their prison
walls, sheltered, secluded for a few brief hours, I am appalled by the
potentialities for drama that are still contained in these feeble bodies.
Behind the gray walls there are human sparks, and yet never a conflagration.
Are these men and women, I ask myself, or are these shadows, shadows of
puppets dangled by invisible strings? They move in freedom apparently, but
they have nowhere to go. In one realm only are they free and there they may
roam at will--but they have not yet learned how to take wing. So far there
have been no dreams that have taken wing. Not one man has been born light
enough, gay enough, to leave the earth! The eagles who flapped their
mighty pinions for a while came crashing heavily to earth. They made us
dizzy with the flap and whir of their wings. Stay on the earth, you eagles
of the future! The heavens have been explored and they are empty. And what
lies under the earth is empty too, filled with bones and shadows. Stay on
the earth and swim another few hundred thousand years!
And now it is three o'clock in the morning and we have a couple of trollops
here who are doing somersaults on the bare floor. Fillmore is walking around
naked with a goblet in his hand, and that paunch of his is drumtight, hard
as a fistula. All the Pernod and champagne and cognac and Anjou which he
guzzled from three in the afternoon on, is gurgling in his trap like a
sewer. The girls are
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putting their ears to his belly as if it were a music-box. Open his mouth
with a button-hook and drop a slug in the slot. When the sewer gurgles I
hear the bats flying out of the belfry and the dream slides into artifice.
The girls have undressed and we are examining the floor to make sure that
they won't get any splinters in their ass. They are still wearing their
high-heeled shoes. But the ass! The ass is worn down, scraped, sandpapered,
smooth, hard, bright as a billiard ball or the skull of a leper. On the wall
is Mona's picture: she is facing northeast on a line with Cracow written in
green ink. To the left of her is the Dordogne, encircled with a red pencil.
Suddenly I see a dark, hairy crack in front of me set in a bright, polished
billiard ball; the legs are holding me like a pair of scissors. A glance at
that dark, unstitched wound and a deep fissure in my brain opens up: all the
images and memories that had been laboriously or absent-mindedly assorted,
labelled, documented, filed, sealed and stamped break forth pellmell like
ants pouring out of a crack in the sidewalk; the world ceases to revolve,
time stops, the very nexus of my dreams is broken and dissolved and my guts
spill out in a grand schizophrenic rush, an evacuation that leaves me face
to face with the Absolute. I see again the great sprawling mothers of
Picasso, their breasts covered with spiders, their legend hidden deep in the
labyrinth. And Molly Bloom lying on a dirty mattress for eternity. On the
toilet door red chalk cocks and the madonna uttering the diapason of woe. I
hear a wild, hysterical laugh, a room full of lockjaw, and the body that was
black glows like phosphorus. Wild, wild, utterly uncontrollable laughter,
and that crack laughing at me too, laughing through the mossy whiskers, a
laugh that creases the bright, polished surface of the billiard ball. Great
whore and mother of man with gin in her veins. Mother of all harlots, spider
rolling us in your logarithmic grave, insatiable one, fiend whose laughter
rives me! I look down into that sunken crater, world lost and without
traces, and I hear the bells chiming, two nuns at the Palace Stanislas and
the smell of rancid butter under their dresses, manifesto never printed
because it was raining, war fought to further the cause of plastic surgery,
the Prince of Wales flying around the world decorating
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the graves of unknown heroes. Every bat flying out of the belfry a lost
cause, every whoop-la a groan over the radio from the private trenches of
the damned. Out of that dark, unstitched wound, that sink of abominations,
that cradle of black-thronged cities where the music of ideas is drowned in
cold fat, out of strangled Utopias is born a clown, a being divided between
beauty and ugliness, between light and chaos, a clown who when he looks
down and sidelong is Satan himself and when he looks upward sees a buttered
angel, a snail with wings.
When I look down into that crack I see an equation sign, the world at
balance, a world reduced to zero and no trace of remainder. Not the zero on
which Van Norden turned his flashlight, not the empty crack of the
prematurely disillusioned man, but an Arabian zero rather, the sign from
which spring endless mathematical worlds, the fulcrum which balances the
stars and the light dreams and the machines lighter than air and the
light-weight limbs and the explosives that produced them. Into that crack I
would like to penetrate up to the eyes, make them waggle ferociously, dear,
crazy, metallurgical eyes. When the eyes waggle then will I hear again
Dostoievski's words, hear them rolling on page after page, with minutest
observation, with maddest introspection, with all the undertones of misery
now lightly, humorously touched, now swelling like an organ note until the
heart bursts and there is nothing left but a blinding, scorching light, the
radiant light that carries off the fecundating seeds of the stars. The story
of art whose roots lie in massacre.
When I look down into this fucked-out cunt of a whore I feel the whole world
beneath me, a world tottering and crumbling, a world used up and polished
like a leper's skull. If there were a man who dared to say all that he
thought of this world there would not be left him a square foot of ground to
stand on. When a man appears the world bears down on him and breaks his
back. There are always too many rotten pillars left standing, too much
festering humanity for man to bloom. The superstructure is a lie and the
foundation is a huge quaking fear. If at intervals of centuries there does
appear a man with a desperate, hungry look in his eye, a man who would turn
the world upside down in order to create a new race, the love
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that he brings to the world is turned to bile and he becomes a scourge. If
now and then we encounter pages that explode, pages that wound and sear,
that wring groans and tears and curses, know that they come from a man with
his back up, a man whose only defense left are his words and his words are
always stronger than the lying, crushing weight of the world, stronger than
all the racks and wheels which the cowardly invent to crush out the miracle
of personality. If any man ever dared to translate all that is in his
heart, to put down what is really his experience, what is truly his truth, I
think then the world would go to smash, that it would be blown to
smithereens and no god, no accident, no will could ever again assemble the
pieces, the atoms, the indestructible elements that have gone to make up the
world.
In the four hundred years since the last devouring soul appeared, the last
man to know the meaning of ecstasy, there has been a constant and steady
decline of man in art, in thought, in action. The world is pooped out: there
isn't a dry fart left. Who that has a desperate, hungry eye can have the
slightest regard for these existent governments, laws, codes, principles,
ideals, ideas, totems, and taboos? If anyone knew what it meant to read the
riddle of that thing which to-day is called a "crack" or a "hole," if any
one had the least feeling of mystery about the phenomena which are labelled
"obscene," this world would crack asunder. It is the obscene horror, the
dry, fucked-out aspect of things which makes this crazy civilization look
like a crater. It is this great yawning gulf of nothingness which the
creative spirits and mothers of the race carry between their legs. When a
hungry, desperate spirit appears and makes the guinea pigs squeal it is
because he knows where to put the live wire of sex, because he knows that
beneath the hard carapace of indifference there is concealed the ugly gash,
the wound that never heals. And he puts the live wire right between the
legs; he hits below the belt, scorches the very gizzards. It is no use
putting on rubber gloves; all that can be coolly and intellectually handled
belongs to the carapace and a man who is intent on creation always dives
beneath, to the open wound, to the festering obscene horror. He hitches his
dynamo to the tenderest parts; if only blood and pus
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gush forth, it is something. The dry, fucked-out crater is obscene. More
obscene than anything is inertia. More blasphemous than the bloodiest oath
is paralysis. If there is only a gaping wound left then it must gush forth
though it produce nothing but toads and bats and homunculi.
Everything is packed into a second which is either consummated or not
consummated. The earth is not an arid plateau of health and comfort, but a
great sprawling female with velvet torso that swells and heaves with ocean
billows; she squirms beneath a diadem of sweat and anguish. Naked and sexed
she rolls among the clouds in the violet light of the stars. All of her,
from the generous breasts to her glearning thighs, blazes with furious
ardor. She moves amongst the seasons and the years with a grand whoop-la
that seizes the torso with paroxysmal fury, that shakes the cobwebs out of
the sky; she subsides on her pivotal orbits with volcanic tremors. She is
like a doe at times, a doe that has fallen into a snare and lies waiting
with beating heart for the cymbals to crash and the dogs to bark. Love and
hate, despair, pity, rage, disgust--what are these amidst the fornications
of the planets? What is war, disease, cruelty, terror, when night presents
the ecstasy of myriad blazing suns? What is this chaff we chew in our sleep
if it is not the remembrance of fang-whorl and star cluster?
She used to say to me, Mona, in her fits of exaltation, "you're a great
human being," and though she left me here to perish, though she put beneath
my feet a great howling pit of emptiness, the words that lie at the bottom
of my soul leap forth and they light the shadows below me. I am one who was
lost in the crowd, whom the fizzing lights made dizzy, a zero who saw
everything about him reduced to mockery. Passed me men and women ignited
with sulphur, porters in calcium livery opening the jaws of hell, fame
walking on crutches, dwindled by the skyscrapers, chewed to a frazzle by
the spiked mouth of the machines. I walked between the tall buildings
towards the cool of the river and I saw the lights shoot up between the ribs
of the skeletons like rockets. If I was truly a great human being, as she
said, then what was the meaning of this slavering idiocy about me? I was
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a man with body and soul, I had a heart that was not protected by a steel
vault. I had moments of ecstasy and I sang with burning sparks. I sang of
the Equator, her red-feathered legs and the islands dropping out of sight.
But nobody heard. A gun fired across the Pacific falls into space because
the earth is round and pigeons fly upside down. I saw her looking at me
across the table with eyes turned to grief; sorrow spreading inward
flattened its nose against her spine; the marrow churned to pity had turned
liquid. She was light as a corpse that floats in the Dead Sea. Her fingers
bled with anguish and the blood turned to drool. With the wet dawn came the
tolling of bells and along the fibres of my nerves the bells played
ceaselessly and their tongues pounded in my heart and clanged with iron
malice. Strange that the bells should toll so, but stranger still the body
bursting, this woman turned to night and her maggot words gnawing through
the mattress. I moved along under the Equator, heard the hideous laughter
of the green-jawed hyaena, saw the jackal with silken tail and the dick-dick
and the spotted leopard, all left behind in the Garden of Eden. And then her
sorrow widened, like the bow of a dreadnought and the weight of her sinking
flooded my ears. Slime-wash and sapphires slipping, sluicing through the gay
neurones, and the spectrum spliced and the gunwales dipping. Soft as
lion-pad I heard the gun-carriages turn, saw them vomit and drool:
the firmament sagged and all the stars turned black. Black ocean bleeding
and the brooding stars breeding chunks of fresh-swollen flesh while overhead
the birds wheeled and out of the hallucinated sky fell the balance with
mortar and pestle and the bandaged eyes of justice. All that is here related
moves with imaginary feet along the parallels of dead orbs; all that is seen
with the empty sockets bursts like flowering grass. Out of nothingness
arises the sign of infinity; beneath the ever-rising spirals slowly sinks
the gaping hole. The land and the water make numbers joined, a poem written
with flesh and stronger than steel or granite. Through endless night the
earth whirls towards a creation unknown ...
To-day I awoke from a sound sleep with curses of joy on my lips, with
gibberish on my tongue, repeating to myself like a litany--"Fay ce que
vouldras! ... fay ce
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que vouldras!" Do anything, but let it produce joy. Do anything, but
let it yield ecstasy. So much crowds into my head when I say this to myself:
images, gay ones, terrible ones, maddening ones, the wolf and the goat, the
spider, the crab, syphilis with her wings outstretched and the door of the
womb always on the latch, always open, ready like the tomb. Lust, crime,
holiness: the lives of my adored ones, the failures of my adored ones, the
words they left behind them, the words they left unfinished; the good they
dragged after them and the evil, the sorrow, the discord, the rancor, the
strife they created. But above all, the ecstasy!
Things, certain things about my old idols bring the tears to my eyes: the
interruptions, the disorder, the violence, above all, the hatred they
aroused. When I think of their deformities, of the monstrous styles they
chose, of the flatulence and tediousness of their works, of all the chaos
and confusion they wallowed in, of the obstacles they heaped up about them,
I feel an exaltation. They were all mired in their own dung. All men who
over-elaborated. So true is it that I am almost tempted to say:
"Show me a man who over-elaborates and I will show you a great man!" What is
called their "over-elaboration" is my meat: it is the sign of struggle, it
is struggle itself with all the fibres clinging to it, the very aura and
ambiance of the discordant spirit. And when you show me a man who expresses
himself perfectly I will not say that he is not great, but I will say that I
am unattracted ... I miss the cloying qualities. When I reflect that the
task which the artist implicitly sets himself is to overthrow existing
values, to make of the chaos about him an order which is his own, to sow
strife and ferment so that by the emotional release those who are dead may
be restored to life, then it is that I run with joy to the great and
imperfect ones, their confusion nourishes me, their stuttering is like
divine music to my ears. I see in the beautifully bloated pages that follow
the interruptions the erasure of petty intrusions, of the dirty foot-prints,
as it were, of cowards, liars, thieves, vandals, calumniators. I see in the
swollen muscles of their lyric throats the staggering effort that must be
made to turn the wheel over, to pick up the pace where one has left off. I
see that behind the daily an-
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noyances and intrusions, behind the cheap, glittering malice of the feeble
and inert, there stands the symbol of life's frustrating power, and that he
who would create order, he who would sow strife and discord, because he is
imbued with will, such a man must go again and again to the stake and the
gibbet. I see that behind the nobility of his gestures there lurks the
spectre of the ridiculousness of it all--that he is not only sublime, but
absurd.
Once I thought that to be human was the highest aim a man could have, but I
see now that it was meant to destroy me. To-day I am proud to say that I am
inhuman, that I belong not to men and governments, that I have
nothing to do with creeds and principles. I have nothing to do with the
creaking machinery of humanity--I belong to the earth! I say that lying on
my pillow and I can feel the horns sprouting from my temples. I can see
about me all those cracked forbears of mine dancing around the bed,
consoling me, egging me on, lashing me with their serpent tongues, grinning
and leering at me with their skulking skulls. / am inhuman! I say it
with a mad, hallucinated grin, and I will keep on saying it though it rains
crocodiles. Behind my words are all those grinning, leering, skulking
skulls, some dead and grinning a long time, some grinning as if they had
lock-jaw, some grinning with the grimace of a grin, the foretaste and
aftermath of what is always going on. Clearer man all I see my own grinning
skull, see the skeleton dancing in the wind, serpents issuing from the
rotted tongue and the bloated pages of ecstasy slimed with excrement. And I
join my slime, my excrement, my madness, my ecstasy to the great circuit
which flows through the subterranean vaults of the flesh. All this unbidden,
unwanted, drunken vomit will flow on endlessly through the minds of those to
come in the inexhaustible vessel that contains the history of the race. Side
by side with the human race there runs another race of beings, the inhuman
ones, the race of artists who, goaded by unknown impulses, take the lifeless
mass of humanity and by the fever and ferment with which they imbue it turn
this soggy dough into bread and the bread into wine and the wine into song.
Out of the dead compost and the inert slag they breed a song that
contaminates. I see this other race of individuals ransacking the universe,
turning everything upside down, their feet always moving
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in blood and tears, their hands always empty, always clutching and grasping
for the beyond, for the god out of reach: slaying everything within reach in
order to quiet the monster that gnaws at their vitals. I see that when they
tear hair with the effort to comprehend, to seize this, forever
unattainable, I see that when they bellow like crazed beasts and rip and
gore, I see that this is right, that there is no other path to pursue. A man
who belongs to this race must stand up on the high place with gibberish in
his mouth and rip out his entrails. It is right and just, because he must!
And anything that falls short of this frightening spectacle, anything less
shuddering, less terrifying, less mad, less intoxicated, less
contaminating, is not art. The rest is counterfeit. The rest is human. The
rest belongs to life and lifelessness.
When I think of Stavrogin for example, I think of some divine monster
standing on a high place and flinging to us his torn bowels. In The
Possessed the earth quakes: it is not the catastrophe that befalls the
imaginative individual, but a cataclysm in which a large portion of humanity
is buried, wiped out for ever. Stavrogin was Dostoievski and Dostoievski was
the sum of all those contradictions which either paralyze a man or lead him
to the heights. There was no world too low for him to enter, no place too
high for him to fear to ascend. He went the whole gamut, from the abyss to
the stars. It is a pity that we shall never again have the opportunity to
see a man placed at the very core of mystery and, by his flashes,
illuminating for us the depth and immensity of the darkness.
To-day I am aware of my lineage. I have no need to consult my horoscope or
my genealogical chart. What is written in the stars, or in my blood, I know
nothing of. I know that I spring from the mythological founders of the race.
The man who raises the holy bottle to his lips, the criminal who kneels in
the market-place, the innocent one who discovers that all corpses
stink, the madman who dances with lightning in his hands, the friar who
lifts his skirts to pee over the world, the fanatic who ransacks libraries
in order to find the Word--all these are fused in me, all these make my
confusion, my ecstasy. If I am inhuman it is because my world has slopped
over its human bounds, because to be human seems like a poor, sorry,
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miserable affair, limited by the senses, restricted by moralities and
codes, defined by platitudes and isms. I am pouring the juice of the grape
down my gullet and I find wisdom in it, but my wisdom is not born of the
grape, my intoxication owes nothing to wine....
I want to make a detour of those lofty arid mountain ranges where one dies
of thirst and cold, that "extra-temporal" history, that absolute of time and
space where there exists neither man, beast, nor vegetation, where one goes
crazy with loneliness, with language that is mere words, where everything is
unhooked, ungeared, out of joint with the times. I want a world of men and
women, of trees that do not talk (because there is too much talk in the
world as it is!) of rivers that carry you to places, not rivers that are
legends, but rivers that put you in touch with other men and women, with
architecture, religion, plants, animals--rivers that have boats on them and
in which men drown, drown not in myth and legend and books and dust of the
past, but in time and space and history. I want rivers that make oceans
such as Shakespeare and Dante, rivers which do not dry up in the void of the
past. Oceans, yes! Let us have more oceans, new oceans that blot out the
past, oceans that create new geological formations, new topographical vistas
and strange, terrifying continents, oceans that destroy and preserve at the
same time, oceans that we can sail on, take off to new discoveries, new
horizons. Let us have more oceans, more upheavals, more wars, more
holocausts. Let us have a world of men and women with dynamos between their
legs, a world of natural fury, of passion, action, drama, dreams, madness, a
world that produces ecstasy and not dry farts. I believe that to-day more
than ever a book should be sought after even if it has only one great
page in it: we must search for fragments, splinters, toe-nails, anything
that has ore in it, anything that is capable of resuscitating the body and
soul.
It may be that we are doomed, that there is no hope for us, any of
us, but if that is so then let us set up a last agonizing,
blood-curdling howl, a screech of defiance, a war-whoop! Away with
lamentation! Away with elegies and dirges! Away with biographies and
histories, and libraries and museums! Let the dead eat the dead. Let us
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living ones dance about the rim of the crater, a last expiring dance. But a
dance!
"I love everything that flows," said the great blind Milton of our times. I
was thinking of him this morning when I awoke with a great bloody shout of
joy: I was thinking of his rivers and trees and all that world of night
which he is exploring. Yes, I said to myself, I too love everything that
flows: rivers, sewers, lava, semen, blood, bile, words, sentences. I love
the amniotic fluid when it spills out of the bag. I love the kidney with its
painful gallstones, its gravel and what-not; I love the urine that pours out
scalding and the clap that runs endlessly; I love the words of hysterics and
the sentences that flow on like dysentery and mirror all the sick images of
the soul; I love the great rivers like the Amazon and the Orinoco, where
crazy men like Moravagine float on through dream and legend in an open boat
and drown in the blind mouths of the river. I love everything that flows,
even the menstrual flow that carries away the seed unfecund. I love scripts
that flow, be they hieratic, esoteric, perverse, polymorph, or unilateral. I
love everything that flows, everything that has time in it and becoming,
that brings us back to the beginning where there is never end: the violence
of the prophets, the obscenity that is ecstasy, the wisdom of the fanatic,
the priest with his rubber litany, the foul words of the whore, the spittle
that floats away in the gutter, the milk of the breast and the bitter honey
that pours from the womb, all that is fluid, melting, dissolute and
dissolvent, all the pus and dirt that in flowing is purified, that loses its
sense of origin, that makes the great circuit toward death and dissolution.
The great incestuous wish is to flow on, one with time, to merge the great
image of the beyond with the here and now. A fatuous, suicidal wish that is
constipated by words and paralyzed by thought.
*
It was close to dawn on Christmas Day when we came home from the Rue
d'Odessa with a couple of negresses from the telephone company. The fire was
out and we were all so tired that we climbed into bed with our clothes on.
The one I had, who had been like a bounding leopard all evening, fell sound
asleep as I was climbing over her. For a while I worked over her as one
works over a person who has been drowned or asphyxiated. Then I gave it up
and fell sound asleep myself.
All during the holidays we had champagne morning, noon and night--the
cheapest and the best champagne. With the turn of the year I was to leave
for Dijon where I had been offered a trivial post as exchange professor of
English, one of those Franco-American amity arrangements which is supposed
to promote understanding and good will between sister republics. Fillmore
was more elated than I by the prospect--he had good reason to be. For me it
was just a transfer from one purgatory to another. There was no future
ahead of me; there wasn't even a salary attached to the job. One was
supposed to consider himself fortunate to enjoy the privilege of spreading
the gospel of Franco-American amity. It was a job for a rich man's son.
The night before I left we had a good time. About dawn it began to snow: we
walked about from one quarter to another taking a last look at Paris.
Passing through the Rue St. Dominique we suddenly fell upon a little square
and there was the Eglise Ste. Clotilde. People were going to mass. Fillmore,
whose head was still a little cloudy, was bent on going to mass too. "For
the fun of it!" as he put it. I felt somewhat uneasy about it; in the first
place I had never attended a mass, and in the second
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place I looked seedy and felt seedy. Fillmore, too, looked rather battered,
even more disreputable than myself; his big slouch hat was on assways and
his overcoat was still full of sawdust from the last joint we had been in.
However, we marched in. The worst they could do would be to throw us out.
I was so astounded by the sight that greeted my eyes that I lost all
uneasiness. It took me a little while to get adjusted to the dim light. I
stumbled around behind Fillmore, holding his sleeve. A weird, unearthly
noise assailed my ears, a sort of hollow drone that rose up out of the cold
flagging. A huge, dismal tomb it was with mourners shuffling in and out. A
sort of ante-chamber to the world below. Temperature about 55 or 60
Fahrenheit. No music except this undefinable dirge manufactured in the
sub-cellar--like a million heads of cauliflower wailing in the dark. People
in shrouds were chewing away with that hopeless, dejected look of beggars
who hold out their hands in a trance and mumble an unintelligible appeal.
That this sort of thing existed I knew, but then one also knows that there
are slaughterhouses and morgues and dissecting rooms. One instinctively
avoids such places. In the street I had often passed a priest with a little
prayer book in his hands laboriously memorizing his lines. Idiot, I
would say to myself, and let it go at that. In the street one meets with all
forms of dementia and the priest is by no means the most striking. Two
thousand years of it has deadened us to the idiocy of it. However, when you
are suddenly transported to the very midst of his realm, when you see the
little world in which the priest functions like an alarm clock, you are apt
to have entirely different sensations.
For a moment all this slaver and twitching of the lips almost began to have
a meaning. Something was going on, some kind of dumb show which, not
rendering me wholly stupefied, held me spellbound. All over the world,
wherever there are these dim-lit tombs, you have this incredible
spectacle--the same mean temperature, the same crepuscular glow, the same
buzz and drone. All over Christendom, at certain stipulated hours, people in
black are grovelling before the altar where the priest stands up
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with a little book in one hand and a dinner bell or atomizer in the other
and mumbles to them in a language which, even if it were comprehensible, no
longer contains a shred of meaning. Blessing them, most likely. Blessing the
country, blessing the ruler, blessing the firearms and the battleships and
the ammunition and the hand grenades. Surrounding him on the altar are
little boys dressed like angels of the Lord who sing alto and soprano.
Innocent lambs. All in skirts, sexless, like the priest himself who is
usually flat-footed and nearsighted to boot. A fine epicene caterwauling.
Sex in a jock-strap, to the tune of J.-mol.
I was taking it in as best I could in the dim light. Fascinating and
stupefying at the same time. All over the civilized world, I thought to
myself. All over the world. Marvelous. Rain or shine, hail, sleet, snow,
thunder, lightning, war, famine, pestilence--makes not the slightest
difference. Always the same mean temperature, the same mumbo-jumbo, the same
high-laced shoes and the little angels of the Lord singing soprano and alto.
Near the exit a little slot-box--to carry on the heavenly work. So that
God's blessing may rain down upon king and country and battleships and high
explosives and tanks and aeroplanes, so that the worker may have more
strength in his arms, strength to slaughter horses and cows and sheep,
strength to punch holes in iron girders, strength to sew buttons on other
people's pants, strength to sell carrots and sewing machines and
automobiles, strength to exterminate insects and clean stables and unload
garbage cans and scrub lavatories, strength to write headlines and chop
tickets in the subway. Strength ... strength. All that lip-chewing and
horn-swoggling just to furnish a little strength!
We were moving about from one spot to another, surveying the scene with
that clearheadedness which comes after an all-night session. We must have
made ourselves pretty conspicuous shuffling about that way with our coat
collars turned up and never once crossing ourselves and never once moving
our lips except to whisper some callous remark. Perhaps everything would
have passed off without notice if Fillmore hadn't insisted on walking past
the altar in the midst of the ceremony. He was looking for the exit, and he
thought while he was at it, I suppose, that
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he would take a good squint at the holy of holies, get a close-up on it, as
it were. We had gotten safely by and were marching toward a crack of light
which must have been the way out when a priest suddenly stepped out of the
gloom and blocked our path. Wanted to know where we were going and what we
were doing. We told him politely enough that we were looking for the exit.
We said "exit" because at the moment we were so flabbergasted that we
couldn't think of the French for exit. Without a word of response he took us
firmly by the arm and, opening the door, a side door it was, he gave us a
push and out we tumbled into the blinding light of day. It happened so
suddenly and unexpectedly that when we hit the sidewalk we were in a daze.
We walked a few paces, blinking our eyes, and then instinctively we both
turned round; the priest was still standing on the steps, pale as a ghost
and scowling like the devil himself. He must have been sore as hell. Later,
thinking back on it, I couldn't blame him for it. But at that moment, seeing
him with his long skirts and the little skull cap on his cranium, he looked
so ridiculous that I burst out laughing. I looked at Fillmore and he began
to laugh too. For a full minute we stood there laughing right in the poor
bugger's face. He was so bewildered, I guess, that for a moment he didn't
know what to do; suddenly, however, he started down the steps on the run,
shaking his fist at us as if he were in earnest. When he swung out of the
enclosure he was on the gallop. By this time some preservative instinct
warned me to get a move on. I grabbed Fillmore by the coat sleeve and
started to run. He was saying, like an idiot: "No, no! I won't run!"--"Come
on!" I yelled, "we'd better get out of here. That guy's mad clean through."
And off we ran, beating it as fast as our legs would carry us.
On the way to Dijon, still laughing about the affair, my thoughts reverted
to a ludicrous incident, of a somewhat similar nature, which occurred during
my brief sojourn in Florida. It was during the celebrated boom when, like
thousands of others, I was caught with my pants down. Trying to extricate
myself I got caught, along with a friend of mine, in the very neck of the
bottle. Jacksonville, where we were marooned for about six weeks, was
practically in a state of siege. Every bum on earth, and a
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lot of guys who had never been bums before, seemed to have drifted into
Jacksonville. The Y.M.C.A., the Salvation Army, the fire houses and police
stations, the hotels, the lodging houses, everything was full up.
Complet absolutely, and signs everywhere to that effect. The
residents of Jacksonville had become so hardened that it seemed to me as if
they were walking around in coats of mail. It was the old business of food
again. Food and a place to flop. Food was coming up from below in
trainloads--oranges and grapefruit and all sorts of juicy edibles. We used
to pass by the freight sheds looking for rotten fruit--but even that was
scarce.
One night, in desperation, I dragged my friend Joe to a synagogue, during
the service. It was a reformed congregation and the rabbi impressed me
rather favorably. The music got me too--that piercing lamentation of the
Jews. As soon as the service was over I marched to the rabbi's study and
requested an interview with him. He received me decently enough--until I
made clear my mission. Then he grew absolutely frightened. I had only asked
him for a hand-out on behalf of my friend Joe and myself. You would have
thought, from the way he looked at me, that I had asked to rent the
synagogue as a bowling alley. To cap it all, he suddenly asked me
point-blank if I was a Jew or not. When I answered no, he seemed perfectly
outraged. Why, pray, had I come to a Jewish pastor for aid? I told him
naively that I had always had more faith in the Jews than in the Gentiles. I
said it modestly, as if it were one of my peculiar defects. It was the truth
too. But he wasn't a bit flattered. No, siree. He was horrified. To get rid
of me he wrote out a note to the Salvation Army people. "That's the place
for you to address yourself," he said, and brusquely turned away to tend his
flock.
The Salvation Army, of course, had nothing to offer us. If we had had a
quarter apiece we might have rented a mattress on the floor. But we hadn't a
nickel between us. We went to the park and stretched ourselves out on a
bench. It was raining and so we covered ourselves with newspapers. Weren't
there more than a half hour, I imagine, when a cop came along and, without
a word of warning, gave us such a sound fanning that we were up and on
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our feet in a jiffy, and dancing a bit too, though we weren't in any mood
for dancing. I felt so goddamned sore and miserable, so dejected, so lousy,
after being whacked over the ass by that half-witted bastard, that I could
have blown up the City Hall.
The next morning, in order to get even with these hospitable sons of
bitches, we presented ourselves bright and early at the door of a Catholic
priest. This time I let Joe do the talking. He was Irish and he had a bit of
brogue. He had very soft, blue eyes, too, and he could make them water a bit
when he wanted to. A sister in black opened the door for us; she didn't ask
us inside, however. We were to wait in the vestibule until she went and
called for the good father. In a few minutes he came, the good father,
puffing like a locomotive. And what was it we wanted disturbing his likes at
that hour of the morning? Something to eat and a place to flop, we answered
innocently. And where did we hail from, the good father wanted to know at
once. From New York. From New York, eh? Then ye'd better be gettin' back
there as fast as ye kin, me lads, and without another word the big, bloated
turnip-faced bastard shoved the door in our face.
About an hour later, drifting around helplessly like a couple of drunken
schooners, we happened to pass by the rectory again. So help me God if the
big, lecherous-looking turnip wasn't backing out of the alley in a
limousine! As he swung past us he blew a cloud of smoke into our eyes. As
though to say--"That for you!" A beautiful limousine it was, with a
couple of spare tires in the back, and the good father sitting at the wheel
with a big cigar in his mouth. Must have been a Corona-Corona, so fat and
luscious it was. Sitting pretty he was, and no two ways about it. I couldn't
see whether he had skirts on or not. I could only see the gravy trickling
from his lips-- and the big cigar with that fifty cent aroma.
All the way to Dijon I got to reminiscing about the past. I thought of all
the things I might have said and done, which I hadn't said or done, in the
bitter, humiliating moments when just to ask for a crust of bread is to
make yourself less than a worm. Stone sober as I was, I was still smarting
from those old insults and injuries. I could sdll feel that whack over the
ass which the cop
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gave me in the park--though that was a mere bagatelle, a little dancing
lesson, you might say. All over the States I wandered, and into Canada and
Mexico. The same story everywhere. If you want bread you've got to get in
harness, get in lock-step. Over all the earth a gray desert, a carpet of
steel and cement. Production! More nuts and bolts, more barbed wire, more
dog-biscuits, more lawn-mowers, more ball-bearings, more high explosives,
more tanks, more poison gas, more soap, more tooth-paste, more newspapers,
more education, more churches, more libraries, more museums. Forward!
Time presses. The embryo is pushing through the neck of the womb, and
there's not even a gob of spit to ease the passage, A dry, strangulating
birth. Not a wail, not a chirp. Salut au monde! Salute of twenty-one
guns bombinating from the rectum. "I wear my hat as I please, indoors or
out," said Walt. That was a time when you could still get a hat to fit your
head. But time passes. To get a hat that fits now you have to walk to the
electric chair. They give you a skull cap. A tight fit, what? But no matter!
It fits.
You have to be in a strange country like France, walking the meridian that
separates the hemispheres of life and death, to know what incalculable
vistas yawn ahead. The body electric! The democratic soul!
Flood-tide! Holy Mother of God, what does this crap mean? The earth is
parched and cracked. Men and women come together like broods of vultures
over a stinking carcass, to mate and fly apart again. Vultures who drop from
the clouds like heavy stones. Talons and beak, that's what we are! A huge
intestinal apparatus with a nose for dead meat. Forward! Forward
without pity, without compassion, without love, without forgiveness. Ask no
quarter and give none! More battleships, more poison gas, more high
explosives! More gonococci! More streptococci! More bombing machines! More
and more of it--until the whole fucking works is blown to smithereens, and
the earth with it!
Stepping off the train I knew immediately that I had made a fatal mistake.
The Lycee was a little distance from the station; I walked down the main
street in the early dusk of winter, feeling my way towards my destination.
A light snow was falling, the trees sparkled with frost. Passed a couple of
huge, empty cafes that looked
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like dismal waiting rooms. Silent, empty gloom--that's how it impressed me.
A hopeless, jerk-water town where mustard is turned out in carload lots, in
vats and tuns and barrels and pots and cute-looking little jars.
The first glance at the Lycee sent a shudder through me. I felt so undecided
that at the entrance I stopped to debate whether I would go in or not. But
as I hadn't the price of a return ticket there wasn't much use debating the
question. I thought for a moment of sending a wire to Fillmore, but then I
was stomped to know what excuse to make. The only thing to do was to walk in
with my eyes shut.
It happened that M. le Proviseur was out--his day off, so they said. A
little hunchback came forward and offered to escort me to the office of M.
le Censeur, second in charge. I walked a little behind him, fascinated by
the grotesque way in which he hobbled along. He was a little monster, such
as can be seen on the porch of any half-assed cathedral in Europe.
The office of M. le Censeur was large and bare. I sat down in a stiff chair
to wait while the hunchback darted off to search for him. I almost felt at
home. The atmosphere of the place reminded me vividly of certain charity
bureaus back in the States where I used to sit by the hour waiting for some
mealy-mouthed bastard to come and cross-examine me.
Suddenly the door opened and, with a mincing step, M. le Censeur came
prancing in. It was all I could do to suppress a titter. He had on just such
a frock coat as Boris used to wear, and over his forehead there hung a bang,
a sort of spitcurl such as Smerdiakov might have worn. Grave and brittle,
with a lynx-like eye, he wasted no words of cheer on me. At once he brought
forth the sheets on which were written the names of the students, the hours,
the classes, etc., all in a meticulous hand. He told me how much coal and
wood I was allowed and after that he promptly informed me that I was at
liberty to do as I pleased in my spare time. This last was the first good
thing I had heard him say. It sounded so reassuring that I quickly said a
prayer for France--for the army and navy, the educational system, the
bistrots, the whole goddamned works.
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This fol-de-rol completed, he rang a little bell, whereupon the hunchback
promptly appeared to escort me to the office of M. 1'Econome. Here
the atmosphere was somewhat different. More like a freight-station,
with bills of lading and rubber stamps everywhere, and pasty-faced clerks
scribbling away with broken pens in huge, cumbersome ledgers. My dole of
coal and wood portioned out, off we marched, the hunchback and I, with a
wheelbarrow, towards the dormitory. I was to have a room on the top floor,
in the same wing as the pions. The situation was taking on a humorous
aspect. I didn't know what the hell to expect next. Perhaps a spittoon. The
whole thing smacked very much of preparation for a campaign; the only things
missing were a knapsack and rifle--and a brass slug.
The room assigned to me was rather large, with a small stove to which was
attached a crooked pipe that made an elbow just over the iron cot. A big
chest for the coal and wood stood near the door. The windows gave out on a
row of forlorn little houses all made of stone in which lived the grocer,
the baker, the shoemaker, the butcher, etc.--all imbecilic-looking
clodhoppers. I glanced over the rooftops towards the bare hills where a
train was clattering. The whistle of the locomotive screamed mournfully
and hysterically.
After the hunchback had made the fire for me I inquired about the grub. It
was not quite time for dinner. I flopped on the bed, with my overcoat on,
and pulled the covers over me. Beside me was the eternal rickety night table
in which the piss pot is hidden away. I stood the alarm on the table and
watched the minutes ticking off. Into the well of the room a bluish light
filtered in from the street. I listened to the trucks rattling by as I gazed
vacantly at the stove pipe, at the elbow where it was held together with
bits of wire. The coal chest intrigued me. Never in my life had I occupied a
room with a coal chest. And never in my life had I built a fire or taught
children. Nor, for that matter, never in my life had I worked without pay.
I felt free and chained at the same time--like one feels just before
election, when all the crooks have been nominated and you are beseeched to
vote for the right man. I felt like a hired man, like a jack-of-all-trades,
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like a hunter, like a rover, like a galley-slave, like a pedagogue, like a
worm and a louse. I was free, but my limbs were shackled. A democratic soul
with a free meal ticket, but no power of locomotion, no voice. I felt like a
jelly-fish nailed to a plank. Above all, I felt hungry. The hands were
moving slowly. Still ten more minutes to kill before the fire alarm would go
off. The shadows in the room deepened. It grew frightfully silent, a tense
stillness that tautened my nerves. Little dabs of snow clung to the
window-panes. Far away a locomotive gave out a shrill scream. Then a dead
silence again. The stove had commenced to glow, but there was no heat
coming from it. I began to fear that I might doze off and miss the dinner.
That would mean lying awake on an empty belly all night. I got
panic-stricken.
Just a moment before the gong went off I jumped out of bed and, locking the
door behind me, I bolted downstairs to the courtyard. There I got lost. One
quadrangle after another, one staircase after another. I wandered in and out
of the buildings searching frantically for the refectory. Passed a long
line of youngsters marching in a column to God knows where; they moved along
like a chain-gang, with a slave-driver at the head of the column. Finally I
saw an energetic-looking individual, with a derby, heading towards me. I
stopped him to ask the way to the refectory. Happened I stopped the right
man. It was M. le Proviseur, and he seemed delighted to have stumbled on
me. Wanted to know right away if I were comfortably settled, if there was
anything more he could do for me. I told him everything was O. K. Only it
was a bit chilly, I ventured to add. He assured me that it was rather
unusual, this weather. Now and then the fogs came on and a bit of snow, and
then it became unpleasant for a while, and so on and so forth. All the while
he had me by the arm, guiding me towards the refectory. He seemed like a
very decent chap. A regular guy, I thought to myself. I even went so far as
to imagine that I might get chummy with him later on, that he'd invite me to
his room on a bitter cold night and make a hot grog for me. I imagined all
sorts of friendly things in the few moments it required to reach the door of
the refectory. Here, my mind racing on at a mile a minute, he suddenly shook
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hands with me and, doffing his hat, bade me good night. I was so bewildered
that I tipped my hat also. It was the regular thing to do, I soon found out.
Whenever you pass a prof, or even M. 1'Econome, you doff the hat. Might pass
the same guy a dozen times a day. Makes no difference. You've got to give
the salute, even though your hat is worn out. It's the polite thing to do.
Anyway, I had found the refectory. Like an East Side clinic it was, with
tiled walls, bare light, and marble-topped tables. And of course a big stove
with an elbow-pipe. The dinner wasn't served yet. A cripple was running in
and out with dishes and knives and forks and bottles of wine. In a comer
several young men conversing animatediy. I went up to them and introduced
myself. They gave me a most cordial reception. Almost too cordial, in fact.
I couldn't quite make it out. In a jiffy the room began to fill up; I was
presented from one to the other quickly. Then they formed a circle about me
and, filling the glasses, they began to sing....
"L'autre soir 1'idee m'est venue Cre nom de Zeus d'enculer un pendu;
Le vent se leve sur la potence, Voila. mon pendu qui se balance, J'ai du
1'enculer en sautant, Cre nom de Zeus, on est jamais content.
"Baiser dans un con trop petit, Cre nom de Zeus, on s'ecorche le vit;
Baiser dans un con trop large, On ne sail pas oil 1'on decharge;
Se branler etant bien emmerdant, Cre nom de Zeus, on est jamais content."
With this, Quasimodo announced the dinner. They were a cheerful group,
les surveillants. There was Kroa who belched like a pig and always
let out a loud fart when he sat down to table. He could fart thirteen times
in succession, they informed me. He held the record. Then there was Monsieur
le Prince, an athlete who was fond of wearing a tuxedo in the evening when
he went to town;
he had a beautiful complexion, just like a girl, and never
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touched the wine nor read anything that might tax his brain. Next him sat
Petit Paul, from the Midi, who thought of nothing but cunt all the time; he
used to say every day--"a partir de jeudi je ne parlerai plus de
femmes." He and Monsieur le Prince were inseparable. Then there was
Passeleau, a veritable young scallywag who was studying medicine and who
borrowed right and left; he talked incessantly of Ronsard, Villon and
Rabelais. Opposite me sat Mollesse, agitator and organizer of the
pions, who insisted on weighing the meat to see if it wasn't short a
few grams. He occupied a little room in the infirmary. His supreme enemy was
Monsieur 1'Econome, which was nothing particularly to his credit since
everybody hated this individual. For companion Mollesse had one called Le
Penible, a dour-looking chap with a hawk-like profile who practised the
strictest economy and acted as money-lender. He was like an engraving by
Albrecht Durer--a composite of all the dour, sour, morose, bitter,
unfortunate, unlucky and introspective devils who compose the pantheon of
Germany's medieval knights. A Jew, no doubt. At any rate, he was killed in
an automobile accident shortly after my arrival, a circumstance which left
me twenty-three francs to the good. With the exception of Renaud who sat
beside me, the others have faded out of my memory; they belonged to that
category of colorless individuals who make up the world of engineers,
architects, dentists, pharmacists, teachers, etc. There was nothing to
distinguish them from the clods whom they would later wipe their boots on.
They were zeros in every sense of the word, ciphers who form the nucleus of
a respectable and lamentable citizenry. They ate with their heads down and
were always the first to clamor for a second helping. They slept soundly and
never complained; they were neither gay nor miserable. The indifferent ones
whom Dante consigned to the vestibule of Hell. The upper-crusters.
It was the custom after dinner to go immediately to town, unless one was on
duty in the dormitories. In the center of town were the cafes--huge, dreary
halls where the somnolent merchants of Dijon gathered to play cards and
listen to music. It was warm in the cafes, that is the best I can say for
them. The seats were fairly comfort-
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able, too. And there were always a few whores about who, for a glass of beer
or a cup of coffee, would sit and chew the fat with you. The music, on the
other hand, was atrocious. Such music! On a winter's night, in a dirty hole
like Dijon, nothing can be more harassing, more nerve-racking, than the
sound of a French orchestra. Particularly one of those lugubrious female
orchestras with everything coming in squeaks and farts, with a dry,
algebraic rhythm and the hygienic consistency of tooth-paste. A wheezing and
scraping performed at so many francs the hour--and the devil take the
hindmost! The melancholy of it! As if old Euclid had stood up on his hind
legs and swallowed Prussic acid. The whole realm of Idea so thoroughly
exploited by the reason that there is nothing left of which to make music
except the empty slats of the accordion, through which the wind whistles and
tears the ether to tatters. However, to speak of music in connection with
this outpost is like dreaming of champagne when you are in the death-cell.
Music was the least of my worries. I didn't even think of cunt, so dismal,
so chill, so barren, so gray was it all. On the way home the first night I
noticed on the door of a cafe an inscription from the Gargantua.
Inside the cafe it was like a morgue. However, forward!
I had plenty of time on my hands and not a sou to spend. Two or three hours
of conversational lessons a day, and that was all. And what use was it,
teaching these poor bastards English? I felt sorry as hell for them. All
morning plugging away on John Gilpin's Ride, and in the afternoon
coming to me to practise a dead language. I thought of the good time I had
wasted reading Vergil or wading through such incomprehensible nonsense as
Hermann und Dorotea. The insanity of it! Learning, the empty
bread-basket! I thought of Carl who can recite Faust backwards, who
never writes a book without praising the shit out of his immortal,
incorruptible Goethe. And yet he hadn't sense enough to take on a rich cunt
and get himself a change of underwear. There's something obscene in this
love of the past which ends in bread-lines and dug-outs. Something obscene
about this spiritual racket which permits an idiot to sprinkle holy water
over Big Berthas and dreadnoughts and high explosives. Every
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man with a bellyful of the classics is an enemy to the human race.
Here was I, supposedly to spread the gospel of Franco-American amity--the
emissary of a corpse who, after he had plundered right and left, after he
had caused untold suffering and misery, dreamed of establishing universal
peace. Pfui! What did they expect me to talk about, I wonder? About
Leaves of Grass, about the tariff walls, about the Declaration of
Independence, about the latest gang war? What? Just what, I'd like to know.
Well, I'll tell you--I never mentioned these things. I started right off the
bat with a lesson in the physiology of love. How the elephants make
love--that was it! It caught like wildfire. After the first day there were
no more empty benches. After that first lesson in English they were standing
at the door waiting for me. We got along swell together. They asked all
sorts of questions, as though they had never learned a damned thing. I let
them fire away. I taught them to ask still more ticklish questions. Ask
anything!--that was my motto. I'm here as a plenipotentiary from the
realm of free spirits. I'm here to create a fever and a ferment. "In some
way," says an eminent astronomer, "the material universe appears to be
passing away like a tale that is told, dissolving into nothingness like a
vision." That seems to be the general feeling underlying the empty
bread-basket of learning. Myself, I don't believe it. I don't believe a
fucking thing these bastards try to shove down our throats.
Between sessions, if I had no book to read, I would go upstairs to the
dormitory and chat with the pions. They were delightfully ignorant of
all that was going on-- especially in the world of art. Almost as ignorant
as the students themselves. It was as if I had gotten into a private little
madhouse with no exit signs. Sometimes I snooped around under the arcades,
watching the kids marching along with huge hunks of bread stuck in their
dirty mugs. I was always hungry myself, since it was impossible for me to
go to breakfast which was handed out at some ungodly hour of the morning,
just when the bed was getting toasty. Huge bowls of blue coffee with chunks
of white bread and no butter to go with it. For lunch, beans or lentils with
bits of meat thrown in to
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make it look appetizing. Food fit for a chain-gang, for rock-breakers. Even
the wine was lousy. Things were either diluted or bloated. There were
calories, but no cuisine. M. 1'Econome was responsible for it all. So they
said. I don't believe that, either. He was paid to keep our heads just above
the water line. He didn't ask if we were suffering from piles or carbuncles;
he didn't inquire if we had delicate palates or the intestines of wolves.
Why should he? He was hired at so many grams the plate to produce so many
kilowatts of energy. Everything in terms of horse power. It was all
carefully reckoned in the fat ledgers which the pasty-faced clerks scribbled
in mom-ing, noon and night. Debit and credit, with a red line down the
middle of the page.
Roaming around the quadrangle with an empty belly most of the time I got to
feel slightly mad. Like Charles the Silly, poor devil--only I had no Odette
Champsdivers with whom to play stink-finger. Half the time I had to grub
cigarettes from the students, and during the lessons sometimes I munched a
bit of dry bread with them. As the fire was always going out on me I soon
used up my allotment of wood. It was the devil's own time coaxing a little
wood out of the ledger clerks. Finally I got so riled up about it that I
would go out in the street and hunt for firewood, like an Arab. Astonishing
how little firewood you could pick up in the streets of Dijon. However,
these little foraging expeditions brought me into strange precincts: Got to
know the little street named after a M. Philibert Papillon--a dead musician,
I believe--where there was a cluster of whorehouses. It was always more
cheerful hereabouts; there was the smell of cooking, and wash hanging out to
dry. Once in a while I caught a glimpse of the poor half-wits who lounged
about inside. They were better off than the poor devils in the center of
town whom I used to bump into whenever I walked through a department store.
I did that frequently in order to get warm. They were doing it for the same
reason, I suppose. Looking for someone to buy them a coffee. They looked a
little crazy, with the cold and the loneliness. The whole town looked a bit
crazy when the blue of evening settled over it. You could walk up and down
the main drive any Thursday in the week till doomsday and
never meet an expansive soul. Sixty or seventy thousand people--perhaps
more--wrapped in woolen underwear and nowhere to go and nothing to do.
Turning out mustard by the carload. Female orchestras grinding out The
Merry Widow. Silver service in the big hotels. The ducal palace rotting
away, stone by stone, limb by limb. The trees screeching with frost. A
ceaseless clatter of wooden shoes. The University celebrating the death of
Gcethe, or the birth, I don't remember which. (Usually it's the deaths that
are celebrated.) Idiotic affair, anyway. Everybody yawning and stretching.
Coming through the high driveway into the quadrangle a sense of abysmal
futility always came over me. Outside bleak and empty; inside, bleak and
empty. A scummy sterility hanging over the town, a fog of book-learning.
Slag and cinders of the past. Around the interior courts were ranged the
class rooms, little shacks such as you might see in the North woods, where
the pedagogues gave free rein to their vices. On the black-board the futile
abracadabra which the future citizens of the republic would have to spend
their lives forgetting. Once in a while the parents were received in the big
reception room just off the driveway, where there were busts of the heroes
of antiquity, such as Moliere, Racine, Corneille, Voltaire, etc., all the
scarecrows whom the cabinet ministers mention with moist lips whenever an
immortal is added to the waxworks. (No bust of Villon, no bust of Rabelais,
no bust of Rimbaud.) Anyway, they met here in solemn conclave, the parents
and the stuffed shirts whom the State hires to bend the minds of the young.
Always this bending process, this landscape gardening to make the mind more
attractive. And the youngsters came too, occasionally--the little sunflowers
who would soon be transplanted from the nursery in order to decorate the
municipal grassplots. Some of them were just rubber plants easily dusted
with a torn chemise. All of them jerking away for dear life in the
dormitories as soon as night came on. The dormitories! where the red lights
glowed, where the bell rang like a fire-alarm, where the treads were
hollowed out in the scramble to reach the educational cells.
Then there were the profs! During the first few days I
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got so far as to shake hands with a few of them, and of course there was
always the salute with the hat when we passed under the arcades. But as for
a heart-to-heart talk, as for walking to the comer and having a drink
together, nothing doing. It was simply unimaginable. Most of them looked as
though they had had the shit scared out of them. Anyway, I belonged to
another hierarchy. They wouldn't even share a louse with the likes of me.
They made me so damned irritated, just to look at them, that I used to curse
them under my breath when I saw them coming. I used to stand there, leaning
against a pillar, with a cigarette in the comer of my mouth and my hat down
over my eyes, and when they got within hailing distance I would let squirt a
good gob and up with the hat I didn't even bother to open my trap and bid
them the time of the day. Under my breath I simply said: "Fuck you, Jack!"
and let it go at that.
After a week it seemed as if I had been here all my life. It was like a
bloody, fucking nightmare that you can't throw off. Used to fall into a coma
thinking about it. Just a few days ago I had arrived. Nightfall. People
scurrying home like rats under the foggy lights. The trees glittering with
diamond-pointed malice. I thought it all out, a thousand times or more.
From the station to the Lycee it was like a promenade through the Danzig
Corridor, all deckle-edged, crannied, nerve-ridden. A lane of dead bones, of
crooked, cringing figures buried in shrouds. Spines made of sardine bones.
The Lycee itself seemed to rise up out of a lake of thin snow, an inverted
mountain that pointed down toward the center of the earth where God or the
Devil works always in a strait-jacket grinding grist for that paradise which
is always a wet dream. If the sun ever shone I don't remember it. I remember
nothing but the cold greasy fogs that blew in from the frozen marshes over
yonder where the railroad tracks burrowed into the lurid hills. Down near
the station was a canal, or perhaps it was a river, hidden away under a
yellow sky, with little shacks pasted slap-up against the rising ledge of
the banks. There was a barracks too somewhere, it struck me, because every
now and then I met little yellow men from Cochin-China--squirmy, opium-faced
runts peeping out of their baggy uniforms like dyed skeletons packed in ex-
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celsior. The whole god-damned medievalism of the place was infernally
ticklish and restive, rocking back and forth with low moans, jumping out at
you from the eaves, hanging like broken-necked criminals from the gargoyles.
I kept looking back all the time, kept walking like a crab that you prong
with a dirty fork. All those fat little monsters, those slab-like effigies
pasted on the facade of the Eglise St. Michel, they were following me down
the crooked lanes and around comers. The whole facade of St. Michel seemed
to open up like an album at night, leaving you face to face with the horrors
of the printed page. When the lights went out and the characters faded away
flat, dead as words, then it was quite magnificent, the fa9ade; in every
crevice of the old gnarled front there was the hollow chant of the nightwind
and over the lacy rubble of cold stiff vestments there was a cloudy
absinthe-like drool of fog and frost.
Here, where the church stood, everything seemed turned hind side front. The
church itself must have been twisted off its base by centuries of progress
in the rain and snow. It lay in the Place Edgar-Quinet, squat against the
wind, like a dead mule. Through the Rue de la Monnaie the wind rushed like
white hair streaming wild:
it whirled around the white hitching posts which obstructed the free
passage of omnibuses and twenty-mule teams. Swinging through this exit in
the early morning hours I sometimes stumbled upon Monsieur Renaud who,
wrapped in his cowl like a gluttonous monk, made overtures to me in the
language of the 16th century. Falling in step with Monsieur Renaud, the moon
busting through the greasy sky like a punctured balloon, I fell immediately
into the realm of the transcendental. M. Renaud had a precise speech, dry as
apricots, with a heavy Brandenburger base. Used to come at me full tilt from
Goethe or Fichte, with deep base notes that rumbled in the windy comers of
the Place like claps of last year's thunder. Men of Yucatan, men of
Zanzibar, men of Tierra del Fuego, save me from this glaucous hog-rind! The
North piles up about me, the glacial fjords, the blue-tipped spines, the
crazy lights, the obscene Christian chant that spread like an avalanche from
Aetna to the Aegean. Everything frozen tight as scum, the mind locked and
rimed
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with frost, and through the melancholy bales of chitterwit the choking
gargle of louse-eaten saints. White I am and wrapped in wool, swaddled,
fettered, ham-strung, but in this I have no part. White to the bone, but
with a cold alkali base, with saffron-tipped fingers. White, aye, but no
brother of learning, no Catholic heart. White and ruthless, as the men
before me who sailed out of the Elbe. I look to the sea, to the sky, to what
is unintelligible and distantly near.
The snow under foot scurries before the wind, blows, tickles, stings, lisps
away, whirls aloft, showers, splinters, sprays down. No sun, no roar of
surf, no breaker's surge. The cold north wind pointed with barbed shafts,
icy, malevolent, greedy, blighting, paralyzing. The streets turn away on
their crooked elbows; they break from the hurried sight, the stem glance.
They hobble away down the drifting lattice-work, wheeling the church hind
side front, mowing down the statues, flattening the monuments, uprooting
the trees, stiffening the grass, sucking the fragrance out of the earth.
Leaves dull as cement:
leaves no dew can bring to glisten again. No moon will ever silver their
listless plight. The seasons are come to a stagnant stop, the trees blench
and wither, the wagons roll in the mica ruts with slithering harp-like
thuds. In the hollow of the white-tipped hills, lurid and boneless Dijon
slumbers. No man alive and walking through the night except the restless
spirits moving southward towards the sapphire grids. Yet I am up and about,
a walking ghost, a white man terrorized by the cold sanity of this
slaughter house geometry. Who am I? What am I doing here? I fall between the
cold walls of human malevolence, a white figure fluttering, sinking down
through the cold lake, a mountain of skulls above me. I settle down to the
cold latitudes, the chalk steps washed with indigo. The earth in its dark
corridors knows my step, feels a foot abroad, a wing stirring, a gasp and a
shudder. I hear the learning chaffed and chuzzled, the figures mounting
upward, bat-slime dripping aloft and clanging with pasteboard golden wings;
I hear the trains collide, the chains rattle, the locomotive chugging,
snorting, sniffing, steaming and pissing. All things come to me through the
clear fog with the odor of repetition, with yellow
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hangovers and gadzooks and whettikins. In the dead center, far below Dijon,
far below the hyperborean regions, stands God Ajax, his shoulders strapped
to the mill wheel, the olives crunching, the green marsh water alive with
croaking frogs.
The fog and snow, the cold latitude, the heavy learning, the blue coffee,
the unbuttered bread, the soup and lentils, the heavy pork-packer beans, the
stale cheese, the soggy chow, the lousy wine has put the whole penitentiary
into a state of constipation. And just when everyone has become shit-tight
the toilet pipes freeze. The shit piles up like ant-hills; one has to move
down from the little pedestals and leave it on the floor. It lies there
stiff and frozen, waiting for the thaw. On Thursdays the hunchback comes
with his little wheelbarrow, shovels the cold, stiff turds with a broom and
pan, and trundles off dragging his withered leg. The corridors are littered
with toilet paper; it sticks to your feet like fly-paper. When the weather
moderates the odor gets ripe; you can smell it in Winchester forty miles
away. Standing over that ripe dung in the morning, with a toothbrush, the
stench is so powerful that it makes your head spin. We stand around in red
flannel shirts, waiting to spit down the hole; it is like an aria from one
of Verdi's operas--an anvil chorus with pulleys and syringes. In the night,
when I am taken short, I rush down to the private toilet of M. le Censeur,
just off the driveway. My stool is always full of blood. His toilet doesn't
flush either but at least there is the pleasure of sitting down. I leave my
little bundle for him as a token of esteem.
Towards the end of the meal each evening the veilleur de nuit drops
in for his bit of cheer. This is the only human being in the whole
institution with whom I feel a kinship. He is a nobody. He carries a lantern
and a bunch of keys. He makes the rounds through the night, stiff as an
automaton. About the time the stale cheese is being passed around, in he
pops for his glass of wine. He stands there, with paw outstretched, his hair
stiff and wiry, like a mastiff's, his cheeks ruddy, his moustache gleaming
with snow. He mumbles a word or two and Quasimodo brings him the bottle.
Then, with feet solidly planted, he
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throws back his head and down it goes, slowly in one long draught. To me
it's like he's pouring rubies down his gullet. Something about this gesture
which seizes me by the hair. It's almost as if he were drinking down the
dregs of human sympathy, as if all the love and compassion in the world
could be tossed off like that, in one gulp--as if that were all that could
be squeezed together day after day. A little less than a rabbit they have
made him. In the scheme of things he's not worth the brine to pickle a
herring. He's just a piece of live manure. And he knows it. When he looks
around after his drink and smiles at us, the world seems to be falling to
pieces. It's a smile thrown across an abyss. The whole stinking civilized
world lies like a quagmire at the bottom of the pit, and over it, like a
mirage, hovers this wavering smile.
It was the same smile which greeted me at night when I returned from my
rambles. I remember one such night when, standing at the door waiting for
the old fellow to finish his rounds, I had such a sense of well-being that I
could have waited thus forever. I had to wait perhaps half an hour before he
opened the door. I looked about me calmly and leisurely, drank everything
in, the dead tree in front of the school with its twisted rope branches, the
houses across the street which had changed color during the night, which
curved now more noticeably, the sound of a train rolling through the
Siberian wastes, the railings painted by Utrillo, the sky, the deep
wagon-ruts. Suddenly, out of nowhere, two lovers appeared; every few yards
they stopped and embraced, and when I could no longer follow them with my
eyes I followed the sound of their steps, heard the abrupt stop, and then
the slow, meandering gait. I could feel the sag and slump of their bodies
when they leaned against a rail, heard their shoes creak as the muscles
tightened for the embrace. Through the town they wandered, through the
crooked streets, towards the glassy canal where the water lay black as
coal. There was something phenomenal about it. In all Dijon not two like
them.
Meanwhile the old fellow was making the rounds; I could hear the jingle of
his keys; the crunching of his boots, the steady, automatic tread. Finally I
heard him coming through the driveway to open the big door, a
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monstrous, arched portal without a moat in front of it. I heard him fumbling
at the lock, his hands stiff, his mind numbed. As the door swung open
I saw over his head a brilliant constellation crowning the chapel. Every
door was locked, every cell bolted. The books were closed. The night hung
close, dagger-pointed, drunk as a maniac. There it was, the infinitude of
emptiness. Over the chapel, like a bishop's mitre, hung the constellation,
every night, during the winter months, it hung there low over the chapel.
Low and bright, a handful of dagger points, a dazzle of pure emptiness. The
old fellow followed me to the turn of the drive. The door closed silently.
As I bade him good night I caught that desperate, hopeless smile again, like
a meteoric flash over the rim of a lost world. And again I saw him standing
in the refectory, his head thrown back and the rubies pouring down his
gullet. The whole Mediterranean seemed to be buried inside him-- the orange
groves, the cypress trees, the winged statues, the wooden temples, the blue
sea, the stiff masks, the mystic numbers, the mythological birds, the
sapphire skies, the eaglets, the sunny coves, the blind bards, the bearded
heroes. Gone all that. Sunk beneath the avalanche from the North. Buried,
dead forever. A memory. A wild hope.
For just a moment I linger at the carriageway. The shroud, the pall, the
unspeakable, clutching emptiness of it all. Then I walk quickly along the
gravel path near the wall, past the arches and columns, the iron staircases,
from one quadrangle to the other. Everything is locked tight. Locked for the
winter. I find the arcade leading to the dormitory. A sickish light spills
down over the stairs from the grimy, frosted windows. Everywhere the paint
is peeling off. The stones are hollowed out, the bannister creaks; a damp
sweat oozes from the flagging and forms a pale, fuzzy aura pierced by the
feeble red light at the head of the stairs. I mount the last flight, the
turret, in a sweat and terror. In pitch darkness I grope my way through the
deserted corridor, every room empty, locked, moulding away. My hand slides
along the wall seeking the keyhole. A panic comes over me as I grasp the
door-knob. Always a hand at my collar ready to yank me back. Once inside the
room I bolt the door. It's a miracle which
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I perform each night, the miracle of getting inside without being strangled,
without being struck down by an axe. I can hear the rats scurrying through
the corridor, gnawing away over my head between the thick rafters. The light
glares like burning sulphur and there is the sweet, sickish stench of a room
which is never ventilated. In the comer stands the coal-box, just as I left
it. The fire is out. A silence so intense that it sounds like Niagara Falls
in my ears.
Alone, with a tremendous empty longing and dread. The whole room for my
thoughts. Nothing but myself and what I think, what I fear. Could think the
most fantastic thoughts, could dance, spit, grimace, curse, wail--nobody
would ever know, nobody would ever hear. The thought of such absolute
privacy is enough to drive me mad. It's like a clean birth. Everything cut
away. Separate, naked, alone. Bliss and agony simultaneously. Time on your
hands. Each second weighing on you like a mountain. You drown in it.
Deserts, seas, lakes, oceans. Time beating away like a meat-axe.
Nothingness. The world. The me and the not-me. Oomaharamooma.
Everything has to have a name. Everything has to be learned, tested,
experienced. Faites comme chez. vous, cheri.
The silence descends in volcanic chutes. Yonder, in the barren hills,
rolling onward towards the great metallurgical regions, the locomotives are
pulling their merchant products. Over steel and iron beds they roll, the
ground sown with slag and cinders and purple ore. In the baggage car, kelps,
fishplate, rolled iron, sleepers, wire rods, plates and sheets, laminated
articles, hot rolled hoops, splints and mortar carriages, and Zores ore. The
wheels U-80 millimetres or over. Pass splendid specimens of Anglo-Norman
architecture, pass pedestrians and pederasts, open hearth furnaces, basic
Bessemer mills, dynamos and transformers, pig iron castings and steel
ingots. The public at large, pedestrians and pederasts, gold-fish and
spun-glass palm trees, donkeys sobbing, all circulating freely through
quincuncial alleys. At the Place du Bresil a lavender eye.
Going back in a flash over the women I've known. It's like a chain which
I've forged out of my own misery. Each one bound to the other. A fear of
living separate, of
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staying born. The door of the womb always on the latch. Dread and longing.
Deep in the blood the pull of Paradise. The beyond. Always the beyond. It
must have all started with the navel. They cut the umbilical cord, give you
a slap on the ass, and presto! you're out in the world, adrift, a ship
without a rudder. You look at the stars and then you look at your navel. You
grow eyes everywhere--in the armpits, between your lips, in the roots of
your hair, on the soles of your feet. What is distant becomes near, what is
near becomes distant. Inner-outer, a constant flux, a shedding of skins, a
turning inside out. You drift around like that for years and years, until
you find yourself in the dead center, and there you slowly rot, slowly
crumble to pieces, get dispersed again. Only your name remains.
*
It was spring before I managed to escape from the penitentiary, and then
only by a stroke of fortune. A telegram from Carl informed me one day that
there was a vacancy "upstairs;" he said he would send me the fare back if I
decided to accept. I telegraphed back at once and as soon as the dough
arrived I beat it to the station. Not a word to M. le Proviseur or anyone.
French leave, as they say.
I went immediately to the hotel at 1 bis, where Carl was staying. He
came to the door stark naked. It was his night off and there was a cunt in
the bed as usual. "Don't mind her," he says, "she's asleep. If you need a
lay you can take her on. She's not bad." He pulls the covers back to show me
what she looks like. However, I wasn't thinking about a lay right away. I
was too excited. I was like a man who has just escaped from jail. I just
wanted to see and hear things. Coming from the station it was like a long
dream. I felt as though I had been away for years.
It was not until I had sat down and taken a good look at the room that I
realized I was back again in Paris. It was Carl's room and no mistake about
it. Like a squirrel-cage and shit-house combined. There was hardly room on
the table for the portable machine he used. It was always like that, whether
he had a cunt with him or not. Always a dictionary lying open on a
gilt-edged volume of Faust, always a tobacco pouch, a beret, a bottle
of vin rouge, letters, manuscripts, old newspapers, water colors,
teapot, dirty socks, toothpicks, Kruschen Salts, condoms, etc. In the
bidet were orange peels and the remnants of a ham sandwich.
"There's some food in the closet," he said. "Help yourself! I was just
going to give myself an injection."
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I found the sandwich he was talking about and a piece of cheese that he had
nibbled at beside it. While he sat on the edge of the bed, dosing himself
with his argyrol, I put away the sandwich and cheese with the aid of a
little wine.
"I liked that letter you sent me about Goethe," he said, wiping his prick
with a dirty pair of drawers.
"I'll show you the answer to it in a minute--I'm putting it in my book. The
trouble with you is that you're not a German. You have to be German to
understand Goethe. Shit, I'm not going to explain it to you now. I've put it
all in the book ... By the way, I've got a new cunt now-- not this one--this
one's a half-wit. At least, I had her until a few days ago. I'm not sure
now whether she'll come back or not. She was living here with me all the
time you were away. The other day her parents came and took her away. They
said she was only fifteen. Can you beat that? They scared the shit out of me
too...."
I began to laugh. It was like Carl to get himself into a mess like that.
"What are you laughing for?" he said. "I may go to prison for it. Luckily, I
didn't knock her up. And that's funny, too, because she never took care of
herself properly. But do you know what saved me? So I think, at least. It
was Faust. Yeah! Her old man happened to see it lying on the table.
He asked me if I understood German. One thing led to another and before I
knew it he was looking through my books. Fortunately I happened to have the
Shakespeare open too. That impressed him like hell. He said I was evidently
a very serious guy."
"What about the girl--what did she have to say?"
"She was frightened to death. You see, she had a little watch with her when
she came; in the excitement we couldn't find the watch, and her mother
insisted that the watch be found or she'd call the police. You see how
things are here. I turned the whole place upside down-- but I couldn't find
the god-damned watch. The mother was furious. I liked her too, in spite of
everything. She was even better-looking than the daughter. Here--I'll show
you a letter I started to write her. I'm in love with her ..."
"With the mother?"
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"Sure. Why not? If I had seen the mother first I'd never have looked at the
daughter. How did I know she was only fifteen? You don't ask a cunt how old
she is before you lay her. do you?"
"Joe, there's something funny about this. You're not shifting me, are you?"
"Am I shitting you? Here--look at this!" And he shows me the water colors
the girl had made--cute little things--a knife and a loaf of bread, the
table and teapot, everything running uphill. "She was in love with me," he
said. "She was just like a child. I had to tell her when to brush her teeth
and how to put her hat on. Here--look at the lollypops! I used to buy her a
few lollypops every day--she liked them."
"Well, what did she do when her parents came to take her away? Didn't she
put up a row?"
"She cried a little, that's all. What could she do? She's under
age.... I had to promise never to see her again, never to write her either.
That's what I'm waiting to see now--whether she'll stay away or not. She was
a virgin when she came here. The thing is, how long will she be able to go
without a lay? She couldn't get enough of it when she was here. She almost
wore me out."
By this time the one in bed had come to and was rubbing her eyes. She
looked pretty young to me, too. Not bad looking, but dumb as hell. Wanted to
know right away what we were talking about.
"She lives here in the hotel," said Carl. "On the third floor. Do you want
to go to her room? I'll fix it up for you."
I didn't know whether I wanted to or not, but when I saw Carl mushing it up
with her again I decided I did want to. I asked her first if she was too
tired. Useless question. A whore is never too tired to open her legs. Some
of them can fall asleep while you diddle them. Anyway, it was decided we
would go down to her room. Like that I wouldn't have to pay the
patron for the night.
In the morning I rented a room overlooking the little park down below where
the sandwich-board men always came to eat their lunch. At noon I called for
Carl to have breakfast with him. He and Van Norden had developed a new habit
in my absence--they went to the Coupole for
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breakfast every day. "Why the Coupole?" I asked. "Why the Coupole?" says
Carl. "Because the Coupole serves porridge at all hours and porridge makes
you shit."--"I see," said I.
So it's just like it used to be again. The three of us walking back and
forth to work. Petty dissensions, petty rivalries. Van Norden still
belly-aching about his cunts and about washing the dirt out of his belly.
Only now he's found a new diversion. He's found that it's less annoying to
masturbate. I was amazed when he broke the news to me. I didn't think it
possible for a guy like that to find any pleasure in jerking himself off. I
was still more amazed when he explained to me how he goes about it. He had
"invented" a new stunt, so he put it. "You take an apple," he says, "and you
bore out the core. Then you rub some cold cream on the inside so as it
doesn't melt too fast. Try it some time! It'll drive you crazy at first.
Anyway, it's cheap and you don't have to waste much time."
"By the way," he says, switching the subject, "that friend of yours,
Fillmore, he's in the hospital. I think he's nuts. Anyway, that's what his
girl told me. He took on a French girl, you know, while you were away. They
used to fight like hell. She's a big, healthy bitch--wild like. I wouldn't
mind giving her a tumble, but I'm afraid she'd claw the eyes out of me. He
was always going around with his face and hands scratched up. She looks
bunged up too once in a while--or she used to. You know how these French
cunts are--when they love they lose their minds."
Evidently things had happened while I was away. I was sorry to hear about
Fillmore. He had been damned good to me. When I left Van Norden I jumped a
bus and went straight to the hospital.
They hadn't decided yet whether he was completely off his base or not, I
suppose, for I found him upstairs in a private room, enjoying all the
liberties of the regular patients. He had just come from the bath when I
arrived. When he caught sight of me he burst into tears. "It's all over," he
says immediately. "They say I'm crazy--and I may have syphilis too. They say
I have delusions of grandeur." He fell over onto the bed and wept quietly.
After he had wept a while he lifted his head up and smiled--
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just like a bird coming out of a snooze. "Why do they put me in such an
expensive room?" he said. "Why don't they put me in the ward--or in the
bughouse? I can't afford to pay for this. I'm down to my last five hundred
dollars."
'That's why they're keeping you here," I said. "They'll transfer you quickly
enough when your money runs out. Don't worry."
My words must have impressed him, for I had no sooner finished than he
handed me his watch and chain, his wallet, his fraternity pin, etc. "Hold on
to them," he said. "These bastards'll rob me of everything I've got." And
then suddenly he began to laugh, one of those weird, mirthless laughs which
makes you believe a guy's goofy whether he is or not. "I know you'll think
I'm crazy," he said, "but I want to atone for what I did. I want to get
married. You see, I didn't know I had the clap. I gave her the clap and then
I knocked her up. I told the doctor I don't care what happens to me, but I
want him to let me get married first. He keeps telling me to wait until I
get better---but I know I'm never going to get better. This is the end."
I couldn't help laughing myself, hearing him talk that way. I couldn't
understand what had come over him. Anyway, I had to promise him to see the
girl and explain things to her. He wanted me to stick by her, comfort her.
Said he could trust me, etc. I said yes to everything in order to soothe
him. He didn't seem exactly nuts to me-- just caved-in like. Typical
Anglo-Saxon crisis. An eruption of morals. I was rather curious to see the
girl, to get the lowdown on the whole thing.
The next day I looked her up. She was living in the Latin Quarter. As soon
as she realized who I was she became exceedingly cordial. Ginette she
called herself. Rather big, raw-boned, healthy, peasant type with a front
tooth half-eaten away. Full of vitality and a kind of crazy fire in her
eyes. The first thing she did was to weep. Then, seeing that I was an old
friend of her Jo-Jo--that was how she called him--she ran downstairs and
brought back a couple of bottles of white wine. I was to stay and have
dinner with her--she insisted on it. As she drank she became by turns gay
and maudlin. I didn't have to
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ask her any questions--she went on like a self-winding machine. The thing
that worried her principally was-- would he get his job back when he was
released from the hospital? She said her parents were well off, but they
were displeased with her. They didn't approve of her wild ways. They didn't
approve of him particularly--he had no manners, and he was an American. She
begged me to assure her that he would get his job back, which I did without
hesitancy. And then she begged me to know if she could believe what he
said--that he was going to marry her. Because now, with a child under her
belt, and a dose of clap besides, she was in no position to strike a
match--with a Frenchman anyway. That was clear, wasn't it? Of course, I
assured her. It was all clear as hell to me--except how in Christ's name
Fillmore had ever fallen for her. However, one thing at a time. It was my
duty now to comfort her, and so I just filled her up with a lot of baloney,
told her everything would turn out all right and that I would stand
godfather to the child, etc. Then suddenly it struck me as strange that she
should have the child at all--especially as it was likely to be born blind.
I told her that as tactfully as I could. "It doesn't make any difference,"
she said. "I want a child by him."
"Even if it's blind?" I asked.
"Mon Dieu, ne dites pas ca!" she groaned. "Ne dites pas ca!"
Just the same, I felt it was my duty to say it. She got hysterical and began
to weep like a walrus, poured out more wine. In a few moments she was
laughing boisterously. She was laughing to think how they used to fight
when they got in bed. "He liked me to fight with him," she said. "He was a
brute."
As we sat down to eat a friend of hers walked in--a little tart who lived
at the end of the hall. Ginette immediately sent me down to get some more
wine. When I came back they had evidently had a good talk. Her friend,
Yvette, worked in the police department. A sort of stool pigeon, as far as I
could gather. At least that was what she was trying to make me believe. It
was fairly obvious that she was just a little whore. But she had an
obsession about the police and their doings. Throughout the meal
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they were urging me to accompany them to a bal musette. They wanted
to have a gay time--it was so lonely for Ginette with Jo-Jo in the hospital.
I told them I had to work, but that on my night off I'd come back and take
them out. I made it clear too that I had no dough to spend on them. Ginette,
who was really thunderstruck to hear this, pretended that that didn't matter
in the least. In fact, just to show what a good sport she was, she insisted
on driving me to work in a cab. She was doing it because I was a friend of
Jo-Jo's. And therefore I was a friend of hers. "And also," thought I to
myself, "if anything goes wrong with your Jo-Jo you'll come to me on the
double-quick. Then you'll see what a friend I can be!" I was as nice as pie
to her. In fact, when we got out of the cab in front of the office, I
permitted them to persuade me into having a final Pernod together. Yvette
wanted to know if she couldn't call for me after work. She had a lot of
things to tell me in confidence, she said. But I managed to refuse without
hurting her feelings. Unfortunately I did unbend sufficiently to give her my
address.
Unfortunately, I say. As a matter of fact, I'm rather glad of it when
I think back on it. Because the very next day things began to happen. The
very next day, before I had even gotten out of bed, the two of them called
on me. Jo-Jo had been removed from the hospital--they had incarcerated him
in a little chateau in the country, just a few miles out of Paris. The
chateau, they called it. A polite way of saying "the bughouse." They
wanted me to get dressed immediately and go with them. They were in a panic.
Perhaps I might have gone alone--but I just couldn't make up my mind to go
with these two. I asked them to wait for me downstairs while I got dressed,
thinking that it would give me time to invent some excuse for not going.
But they wouldn't leave the room. They sat there and watched me wash and
dress, just as if it were an everyday affair. In the midst of it, Carl
popped in. I gave him the situation briefly, in English, and then we hatched
up an excuse that I had some important work to do. However, to smooth things
over, we got some wine in and we began to amuse them by showing them a book
of dirty drawings. Yvette had already lost all desire to go to the
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chateau. She and Carl were getting along famously. When it came time to go
Carl decided to accompany them to the chateau. He thought it would be funny
to see Fillmore walking around with a lot of nuts. He wanted to see what it
was like in the nuthouse. So off they went, somewhat pickled, and in the
best of humor.
All the time that Fillmore was at the chateau I never once went to see him.
It wasn't necessary, because Ginette visited him regularly and gave me all
the news. They had hopes of bringing him around in a few months, so she
said. They thought it was alcoholic poisoning-- nothing more. Of course, he
had a dose--but that wasn't difficult to remedy. So far as they could see,
he didn't have syphilis. That was something. So, to begin with, they used
the stomach pump on him. They cleaned his system out thoroughly. He was so
weak for a while that he couldn't get out of bed. He was depressed, too. He
said he didn't want to be cured--he wanted to die. And he kept repeating
this nonsense so insistently that finally they grew alarmed. I suppose it.
wouldn't have been a very good recommendation if he had committed suicide.
Anyway, they began to give him mental treatment. And in between times they
pulled out his teeth, more and more of them, until he didn't have a tooth
left in his head. He was supposed to feel fine after that, yet strangely he
didn't. He became more despondent than ever. And then his hair began to fall
out. Finally he developed a paranoid streak--began to accuse them of all
sorts of things, demanded to know by what right he was being detained, what
he had done to warrant being locked up, etc. After a terrible fit of
despondency he would suddenly become energetic and threaten to blow up the
place if they didn't release him. And to make it worse, as far as Ginette
was concerned, he had gotten all over his notion of marrying her. He told
her straight up and down that he had no intention of marrying her, and that
if she was crazy enough to go and have a child then she could support it
herself.
The doctors interpreted all this as a good sign. They said he was coming
round. Ginette, of course, thought he was crazier than ever, but she was
praying for him to be released so that she could take him to the country
where it would be quiet and peaceful and where he would
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come to his right senses. Meanwhile her parents had come to Paris on a visit
and had even gone so far as to visit the future son-in-law at the chateau.
In their canny way they had probably figured it out that it would be better
for their daughter to have a crazy husband than no husband at all. The
father thought he could find something for Fillmore to do on the farm. He
said that Fillmore wasn't such a bad chap at all. When he learned from
Ginette that Fillmore's parents had money he became even more indulgent,
more understanding.
The thing was working itself out nicely all around. Ginette returned to the
provinces for a while with her parents. Yvette was coming regularly to the
hotel to see Carl. She thought he was the editor of the paper. And little by
little she became more confidential. When she got good and tight one day,
she informed us that Ginette had never been anything but a whore, that
Ginette was a blood-sucker, that Ginette never had been pregnant and was not
pregnant now. About the other accusations we hadn't much doubt, Carl and I,
but about not being pregnant, that we weren't so sure of.
"How did she get such a big stomach, then?" asked Carl.
Yvette laughed. "Maybe she uses a bicycle pump," she said. "No, seriously,"
she added, "the stomach comes from drink. She drinks like a fish, Ginette.
When she comes back from the country, you will see, she will be blown up
still more. Her father is a drunkard. Ginette is a drunkard. Maybe she had
the clap, yes--but she is not pregnant."
"But why does she want to marry him? Is she really in love with him?"
"Love? Pfoboh! She has no heart, Ginette. She wants someone to look
after her. No Frenchman would ever marry her--she has a police record. No,
she wants him because he's too stupid to find out about her. Her parents ,
don't want her any more--she's a disgrace to them. But if she can get
married to a rich American, then everything will be all right.... You think
maybe she loves him a little, eh? You don't know her. When they were living
together at the hotel, she had men coming to her room while he was at work.
She said he didn't give her enough
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spending money. He was stingy. That fur she wore--she told him her parents
had given it to her, didn't she? Innocent fool! Why, I've seen her bring a
man back to the hotel right while he was there. She brought the man to the
floor below. I saw it with my own eyes. And what a man! An old derelict! He
couldn't get an erection!"
If Fillmore, when he was released from the chateau, had returned to Paris,
perhaps I might have tipped him off about his Ginette. While he was still
under observation I didn't think it well to upset him by poisoning his mind
with Yvette's slanders. As things turned out, he went directly from the
chateau to the home of Ginette's parents. There, despite himself, he was
inveigled into making public his engagement. The banns were published in
the local papers and a reception was given to the friends of the family.
Fillmore took advantage of the situation to indulge in all sorts of
escapades. Though he knew quite well what he was doing he pretended to be
still a little daffy. He would borrow his father-in-law's car, for example,
and tear about the countryside all by himself; if he saw a town that he
liked he would plank himself down and have a good time until Ginette came
searching for him. Sometimes the father-in-law and he would go off
together--on a fishing trip, presumably--and nothing would be heard of them
for days. He became exasperatingly capricious and exacting. I suppose he
figured he might as well get what he could out of it.
When he returned to Paris with Ginette he had a complete new wardrobe and a
pocketful of dough. He looked cheerful and healthy, and had a fine coat of
tan. He looked sound as a berry to me. But as soon as we had gotten away
from Ginette he opened up. His job was gone and his money had all run out.
In a month or so they were to be married. Meanwhile the parents were
supplying the dough. "Once they've got me properly in their clutches," he
said, "I'll be nothing but a slave to them. The father thinks he's going to
open up a stationery store for me. Ginette will handle the customers, take
in the money, etc., while I sit in the back of the store and write--or
something. Can you picture me sitting in the back of a stationery store
for the rest of my life? Ginette thinks it's an
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excellent idea. She likes to handle money. I'd rather go back to the chateau
than submit to such a scheme."
For the time being, of course, he was pretending that everything was
hunky-dory. I tried to persuade him to go back to America but he wouldn't
hear of that. He said he wasn't going to be driven out of France by a lot of
ignorant peasants. He had an idea that he would slip out of sight for a
while and then take up quarters in some outlying section of the city where
he'd not be likely to stumble upon her. But we soon decided that that was
impossible: you can't hide away in Prance as you can in America.
"You could go to Belgium for a while," I suggested. "But what'll I do for
money?" he said promptly. "You can't get a job in these god-damned
countries."
"Why don't you marry her and get a divorce, then?" I asked.
"And meanwhile she'll be dropping a kid. Who's going to take care of the
kid, eh?"
"How do you know she's going to have a kid?" I said, determined now that the
moment had come to spill the beans.
"How do I know?" he said. He didn't quite seem to know what I was
insinuating.
I gave him an inkling of what Yvette had said. He listened to me in
complete bewilderment. Finally he interrupted me. "It's no use going on
with that," he said. "I know she's going to have a kid, all right. I've felt
it kicking around inside. Yvette's a dirty little slut. You see, I didn't
want to tell you, but up until the time I went to the hospital I was
shelling out for Yvette too. Then when the crash came I couldn't do any more
for her. I figured out that I had done enough for the both of them.... I
made up my mind to look after myself first. That made Yvette sore. She told
Ginette that she was going to get even with me.... No, I wish it were true,
what she said. Then I could get out of this thing more easily. Now I'm in a
trap. I've promised to marry her and I'll have to go through with it. After
that I don't know what'll happen to me. They've got me by the balls now."
Since he had taken a room in the same hotel with me I was obliged to see
them frequently, whether I wanted to
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or not. Almost every evening I had dinner with them, preceded, of course,
by a few Pernods. All through the meal they quarrelled noisily. It was
embarrassing because I had sometimes to take one side and sometimes the
other. One Sunday afternoon, for example, after we had had lunch together,
we repaired to a cafe on the comer of the Boulevard Edgar-Quinet. Things
had gone unusually well this time. We were sitting inside at a little table,
one alongside the other, our backs to a mirror. Ginette must have been
passionate or something for she had suddenly gotten into a sentimental mood
and was fondling him and kissing him in front of everybody, as the French do
so naturally. They had just come out of a long embrace when Fillmore said
something about her parents which she interpreted as an insult. Immediately
her cheeks flushed with anger. We tried to mollify her by telling her that
she had misunderstood the remark and then, under his breath, Fillmore said
something to me in English--something about giving her a little soft soap.
That was enough to set her completely off the handle. She said we were
making fun of her. I said something sharp to her which angered her still
more and then Fillmore tried to put in a word. "You're too quicktempered,"
he said, and he tried to pat her on the cheek. But she, thinking that he had
raised his hand to slap her face, she gave him a sound crack in the jaw with
that big peasant hand of hers. For' a moment he was stunned. He hadn't
expected a wallop like that, and it stung. I saw his face go white and the
next moment he raised himself from the bench and with the palm of his hand
he gave her such a crack that she almost fell off her seat. "There! that'll
teach you how to behave!" he said--in his broken French. For a moment there
was a dead silence. Then, like a storm breaking, she picked up the cognac
glass in front of her and hurled it at him with all her might. It smashed
against the mirror behind us. Fillmore had already grabbed her by the arm,
but with her free hand she grabbed the coffee glass and smashed it on the
floor. She was squirming around like a maniac. It was all we could do to
hold her down. Meanwhile, of course, the patron had come running in
and ordered us to beat it. "Loafers!" he called us. "Yes, loafers; That's
it!" screamed Ginette. "Dirty foreigners! Thugs! Gangsters! Striking a
pregnant
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woman!" We were getting black looks all around. A poor Frenchwoman with two
American toughs. Gangsters. I was wondering how the hell we'd ever get out
of the place without a fight. Fillmore, by this time, was as silent as a
clam. Ginette was bolting it through the door, leaving us to face the music.
As she sailed out she turned back with fist upraised and shouted; "I'll pay
you back for this, you brute! You'll see! No foreigner can treat a decent
Frenchwoman like that! Ah, no! Not like that!"
Hearing this the patron, who had now been paid for his drinks and his
broken glasses, felt it incumbent to show his gallantry toward a splendid
representative of French motherhood such as Ginette, and so, without more
ado, he spat at our feet and shoved us out of the door. "Shit on you, you
dirty loafers!" he said, or some such pleasantry.
Once in the street and nobody throwing things after us, I began to see the
funny side of it. It would be an excellent idea, I thought to myself, if
the whole thing were properly aired in court. The whole thing! With
Yvette's little stories as a side dish. After all, the French have a sense
of humor. Perhaps the judge, when he heard Fillmore's side of the story,
would absolve him from marriage.
Meanwhile, Ginette was standing across the street brandishing her fist and
yelling at the top of her lungs. People were stopping to listen in, to take
sides, as they do in street brawls. Fillmore didn't know what to do--
whether to walk away from her, or to go over to her and try to pacify her.
He was standing in the middle of the street with his arms outstretched,
trying to get a word in edgewise. And Ginette still yelling: "Gangster!
Brute! Tu verras, salaud!" and other complimentary things. Finally
Fillmore made a move towards her and she, probably thinking that he was
going to give her another good cuff, took it on a trot down the street.
Fillmore came back to where I was standing and said: "Come on, let's follow
her quietly." We started off with a thin crowd of stragglers behind us.
Every once in a while she turned back towards us and brandished her fist.
We made no attempt to catch up with her, just followed her leisurely down
the street to see what she would do. Finally she slowed up her pace and we
crossed over to the other side of the
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street. She was quiet now. We kept walking behind her, getting closer and
closer. There were only about a dozen people behind us now--the others had
lost interest. When we got near the comer she suddenly stopped and waited
for us to approach. "Let me do the talking," said Fillmore, "I know how to
handle her."
The tears were streaming down her face as we came up to her. Myself, I
didn't know what to expect of her. I was somewhat surprised therefore when
Fillmore walked up to her and said in an aggrieved voice: "Was that a nice
thing to do? Why did you act that way?" Whereupon she threw her arms around
his neck and began to weep like a child, calling him her little this and her
little that. Then she turned to me imploringly. "You saw how he struck me,"
she said. "Is that the way to behave towards a woman?" I was on the point of
saying yes when Fillmore took her by the arm and started leading her off.
"No more of that," he said. "If you start again I'll crack you right here in
the street."
I thought it was going to start up all over again. She had fire in her eyes.
But evidently she was a bit cowed, too, for it subsided quickly. However, as
she sat down at the cafe she said quietly and grimly that he needn't think
it was going to be forgotten so quickly; he'd hear more about it later on
... perhaps to-night.
And sure enough she kept her word. When I met him the next day his face and
hands were all scratched up. Seems she had waited until he got to bed and
then, without a word, she had gone to the wardrobe and, dumping all his
things out on the floor, she took them one by one and tore them to ribbons.
As this had happened a number of times before, and as she had always sewn
them up afterwards, he hadn't protested very much. And that made her
angrier than ever. What she wanted was to get her nails into him, and she
did, to the best of her ability. Being pregnant she had a certain advantage
over him.
Poor Fillmore! It was no laughing matter. She had him terrorized. If he
threatened to run away she retorted by a threat to kill him. And she said it
as if she meant it. "If you go to America," she said, "I'll follow you! You
won't get away from me. A French girl always knows how to get vengeance."
And the next moment she would be
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coaxing him to be "reasonable," to be "sage," etc. Life would be so
nice once they had the stationery store. He wouldn't have to do a stroke of
work. She would do everything. He could stay in back of the store and
write--or whatever he wanted to do.
It went on like this, back and forth, a seesaw, for a few weeks or so. I was
avoiding them as much as possible, sick of the affair and disgusted with the
both of them. Then one fine summer's day, just as I was passing the Credit
Lyonnais, who comes marching down the steps but Fillmore. I greeted him
warmly, feeling rather guilty because I had dodged him for so long. I asked
him, with more than ordinary curiosity, how things were going. He answered
me rather vaguely and with a note of despair in his voice.
"I've just gotten permission to go to the bank," he said, in a peculiar,
broken, abject sort of way. "I've got about half an hour, no more. She keeps
tabs on me." And he grasped my arm as if to hurry me away from the spot.
We were walking down towards the Rue de Rivoli. It was a beautiful day,
warm, clear, sunny--one of those days when Paris is at its best. A mild
pleasant breeze blowing, just enough to take that stagnant odor out of your
nostrils. Fillmore was without a hat. Outwardly he looked the picture of
health--like the average American tourist who slouches along with money
jingling in his pockets.
"I don't know what to do any more," he said quietly. "You've got to do
something for me. I'm helpless. I can't get a grip on myself. If I could
only get away from her for a little while perhaps I'd come round all right.
But she won't let me out of her sight. I just got permission to run to the
bank--I had to draw some money. I'll walk around with you a bit and then I
must hurry back--she'll have lunch waiting for me."
I listened to him quietly, thinking to myself that he did need someone to
pull him out of the hole he was in. He had completely caved in, there wasn't
a speck of courage left in him. He was just like a child--like a child who
is beaten every day and doesn't know any more how to behave, except to
cower and cringe. As we turned under the colonnade of the Rue de Rivoli he
burst out into a long
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diatribe against France. He was fed up with the French. "I used to rave
about them," he said, "but that was all literature. I know them now ... I
know what they're really like. They're cruel and mercenary. At first it
seems wonderful, because you have a feeling of being free. After a while it
palls on you. Underneath it's all dead: there's no feeling, no sympathy, no
friendship. They're selfish to the core. The most selfish people on earth!
They think of nothing but money, money, money. And so god-damned
respectable, so bourgeois! That's what drives me nuts. When I see her
mending my shirts I could club her. Always mending, mending. Saving,
saving. Faut faire des economies! That's all I hear her say all day
long. You hear it everywhere. Sois raisonnable, mon cheri! Sois
raisonnable! I don't want to be reasonable and logical. I hate it! I
want to bust loose, I want to enjoy myself. I want to do something. I
don't want to sit in a care and talk all day long. Jesus, we've got our
faults--but we've got enthusiasm. It's better to make mistakes than not do
anything. I'd rather be a bum in America than to be sitting pretty here.
Maybe it's because I'm a Yankee. I was born in New England and I belong
there, I guess. You can't become a European overnight. There's something in
your blood that makes you different. It's the climate--and everything. We
see things with different eyes. We can't make ourselves over, however much
we admire the French. We're Americans and we've got to remain Americans.
Sure, I hate those puritanical buggers back home--I hate 'em with all my
guts. But I'm one of them myself. I don't belong here. I'm sick of it."
All along the arcade he went on like this. I wasn't saying a word. I let
him spill it all out--it was good for him to get it off his chest. Just the
same,-! was thinking how strange it was that this same guy, had it been a
year ago, would have been beating his chest like a gorilla and saying:
"What a marvellous day! What a country! What a people!" And if an American
had happened along and said one word against France Fillmore would have
flattened his nose. He would have died for France--a year ago. I never saw
a man who was so infatuated with a country, who was so happy under a foreign
sky. It wasn't natural. When he said France it meant wine, women,
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money in the pocket, easy come, easy go. It meant being a bad boy, being on
a holiday. And then, when he had had his fling, when the tent-top blew off
and he had a good look at the sky, he saw that it wasn't just a circus, but
an arena, just like everywhere. And a damned grim one. I often used to
think, when I heard him rave about glorious France, about liberty and all
that crap, what it would have sounded like to a French workman, could he
have understood Fillmore's words. No wonder they think we're all crazy. We
are crazy to them. We're just a pack of children. Senile idiots.
What we call life is a five-and-ten-cent store romance. That enthusiasm
underneath--what is it? That cheap optimism which turns the stomach of any
ordinary European? It's illusion. No, illusion's too good a word for it.
Illusion means something. No, it's not that-- it's delusion. It's
sheer delusion, that's what. We're like a herd of wild horses with blinders
over our eyes. On the rampage. Stampede. Over the precipice. Bango! Anything
that nourishes violence and confusion. On! On! No matter where. And foaming
at the lips all the while. Shouting Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Why? God
knows. It's in the blood. It's the climate. It's a lot of things. It's the
end, too. We're pulling the whole world down about our ears. We don't know
why. It's our destiny. The rest is plain shit....
At the Palais Royal I suggested that we stop and have a drink. He hesitated
a moment. I saw that he was worrying about her, about the lunch, about the
bawling out he'd get.
"For Christ's sake," I said, "forget about her for a while. I'm going to
order something to drink and I want you to drink it. Don't worry, I'm going
to get you out of this fucking mess." I ordered two stiff whiskies.
When he saw the whiskies coming he smiled at me just like a child again.
"Down it!" I said, "and let's have another. This is going to do you good. I
don't care what the doctor says-- this time it'll be all right. Come on,
down with it!"
He put it down all right and while the garcon disappeared to fetch
another round he looked at me with brimming eyes, as though I were the last
friend in the world. His lips were twitching a bit, too. There was something
278
he wanted to say to me and he didn't quite know how to begin. I looked at
him easily, as though ignoring the appeal and, shoving the saucers aside, I
leaned over on my elbow and I said to him earnestly: "Look here, Fillmore,
what is it you'd really like to do? Tell me!"
With that the tears gushed up and he blurted out: "I'd like to be home with
my people. I'd like to hear English spoken." The tears were streaming down
his face. He made no effort to brush them away. He just let everything gush
forth. Jesus, I thought to myself, that's fine to have a release like that.
Fine to be a complete coward at least once in your life. To let go that way.
Great! Great! It did me so much good to see him break down that way that I
felt as though I could solve any problem. I felt courageous and resolute. I
had a thousand ideas in my head at once.
"Listen," I said, bending still closer to him, "if you mean what you said
why don't you do it ... why don't you go? Do you know what I would do, if I
were in your shoes? I'd go to-day. Yes, by Jesus, I mean it ... I'd go right
away, without even saying good-bye to her. As a matter of fact that's the
only way you can go--she'd never let you say good-bye. You know that."
The gar f on came with the whiskies. I saw him reach forward with a
desperate eagerness and raise the glass to his lips. I saw a glint of hope
in his eyes--far-off, wild, desperate. He probably saw himself swimming
across the Atlantic. To me it looked easy, simple as rolling off a log. The
whole thing was working itself out rapidly in my mind. I knew just what each
step would be. Clear as a bell, I was.
"Whose money is that in the bank?" I asked. "Is it her father's or is it
yours?"
"It's mine!" he exclaimed. "My mother sent it to me. I don't want any of her
god-damned money."
"That's swell!" I said. "Listen, suppose we hop a cab and go back there.
Draw out every cent. Then we'll go to the British Consulate and get a visa.
You're going to hop the train this afternoon for London. From London you'll
take the first boat to America. I'm saying that because then you won't be
worried about her trailing you. She'll never suspect that you went via
London. If she goes
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searching for you she'll naturally go to Le Havre first, or Cherbourg....
And here's another thing--you're not going back to get your things. You're
going to leave everything here. Let her keep them. With that French mind of
hers she'll never dream that you scooted off without bag or baggage. It's
incredible. A Frenchman would never dream of doing a thing like that ...
unless he was as cracked as you are."
"You're right!" he exclaimed. "I never thought of that. Besides, you might
send them to me later on--if she'll surrender them! But that doesn't matter
now. Jesus, though, I haven't even got a hat!"
"What do you need a hat for? When you get to London you can buy everything
you need. All you need now is to hurry. We've got to find out when the train
leaves."
"Listen," he said, reaching for his wallet, "I'm going to leave everything
to you. Here, take this and do whatever's necessary. I'm too weak.... I'm
dizzy."
I took the wallet and emptied it of the bills he had just drawn from the
bank. A cab was standing at the curb. We hopped in. There was a train
leaving the Gare du Nord at four o'clock, or thereabouts. I was figuring it
out--the bank, the Consulate, the American Express, the station. Fine! Just
about make it.
"Now buck up!" I said, "and keep your shirt on! Shit, in a few hours you'll
be crossing the channel. Tonight you'll be walking around in London and
you'll get a good bellyful of English. To-morrow you'll be on the open
sea--and then, by Jesus, you're a free man and you needn't give a fuck what
happens. By the time you get to New York this'll be nothing more than a bad
dream."
This got him so excited that his feet were moving convulsively, as if he
were trying to run inside the cab. At the bank his hand was trembling so
that he could hardly sign his name. That was one thing I couldn't do for
him--sign his name. But I think, had it been necessary, I could have sat him
on the toilet and wiped his ass. I was determined to ship him off, even if I
had to fold him up and put him in a valise.
It was lunch hour when we got to the British Consulate, and the place was
closed. That meant waiting until two o'clock. I couldn't think of anything
better to do, by
280
way of killing time, than to eat. Fillmore, of course, wasn't hungry. He was
for eating a sandwich. "Fuck that!" I said. "You're going to blow me to a
good lunch. It's the last square meal you're going to have over here-- maybe
for a long while." I steered him to a cosy little restaurant and ordered a
good spread. I ordered the best wine on the menu, regardless of price or
taste. I had all his money in my pocket--oodles of it, it seemed to me.
Certainly never before had I had so much in my fist at one time. It was a
treat to break a thousand-franc note. I held it up to the lights first to
look at the beautiful watermark. Beautiful money! One of the few things the
French make on a grand scale. Artistically done, too, as if they cherished
a deep affection even for the symbol.
The meal over, we went to a cafe. I ordered Chartreuse with the coffee. Why
not? And I broke another bill--a five-hundred-franc note this time. It was a
clean, new, crisp bill. A pleasure to handle such money. The waiter handed
me back a lot of dirty old bills that had been patched up with strips of
gummed paper; I had a stack of five and ten-franc notes and a bagful of
chicken feed. Chinese money, with holes in it. I didn't know in which pocket
to stuff the money any more. My trousers were bursting with coins and bills.
It made me slightly uncomfortable also, hauling all that dough out in
public. I was afraid we might be taken for a couple of crooks.
When we got to the American Express, there wasn't a devil of a lot of time
left. The British, in their usual fumbling, farting way, had kept us on
pins and needles. Here everybody was sliding around on castors. They were so
speedy that everything had to be done twice. After all the checks were
signed and clipped together in a neat little holder, it was discovered that
he had signed in the wrong place. Nothing to do but start all over again. I
stood over him, with one eye on the clock, and watched every stroke of the
pen. It hurt to hand over the dough. Not all of it, thank God--but a good
part of it. I had roughly about 2,500 francs in my pocket. Roughly, I say. I
wasn't counting by francs any more. A hundred, or two hundred, more or
less--it didn't mean a god-damned thing to me. As for him, he was going
through the whole transaction in a daze. He didn't know how much money he
had. All he
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knew was that he had to keep something aside for Ginette. He wasn't certain
yet how much--we were going to figure that out on the way to the station.
In the excitement we had forgotten to change all the money. We were already
in the cab, however, and there wasn't any time to be lost. The thing was to
find out how we stood. We emptied our pockets quickly and began to whack it
up. Some of it was lying on the floor, some of it was on the seat. It was
bewildering. There was French, American and English money. And all that
chicken feed besides. I felt like picking up the coins and chucking them out
of the window--just to simplify matters. Finally we sifted it all out; he
held on to the English and American money, and I held on to the French
money.
We had to decide quickly now what to do about Ginette--how much to give her,
what to tell her, etc. He was trying to fix up a yam for me to hand
her--didn't want her to break her heart and so forth. I had to cut him
short.
"Never mind what to tell her," I said. "Leave that to me. How much are you
going to give her, that's the thing? Why give her anything?"
That was like setting a bomb under his ass. He burst into tears. Such tears!
It was worse than before. I thought he was going to collapse on my hands.
Without stopping to think, I said: "All right, let's give her all this
French money. That ought to last her for a while." "How much is it?" he
asked feebly. "I don't know--about 2,000 francs or so. More than she
deserves anyway."
"Christ! Don't say that!" he begged. "After all, it's a rotten break I'm
giving her. Her folks'11 never take her back now. No, give it to her. Give
her the whole damned business.... I don't care what it is."
He pulled a handkerchief out to wipe the tears away. "I can't help it," he
said. "It's too much for me." I said nothing. Suddenly he sprawled himself
out full length--I thought he was taking a fit or something--and he said:
"Jesus, I think I ought to go back. I ought to go back and face the music.
If anything should happen to her I'd never forgive myself." That was a rude
jolt for me. "Christ!" I shouted, "you
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can't do that! Not now. It's too late. You're going to take the train and
I'm going to tend to her myself. I'll go see her just as soon as I leave
you. Why, you poor boob, if she ever thought you had tried to run away from
her she'd murder you, don't you realize that? You can't go back any more.
It's settled."
Anyway, what could go wrong? I asked myself. Kill herself? Tant
mieux.
When we rolled up to the station we had still about twelve minutes to kill.
I didn't dare to say good-bye to him yet. At the last minute, raided as he
was, I could see him jumping off the train and scooting back to her.
Anything might swerve him. A straw. So I dragged him across the street to a
bar and I said: "Now you're going to have a Pernod--your last Pernod
and I'm going to pay for it ... with your dough."
Something about this remark made him look at me uneasily. He took a big
gulp of the Pernod and then, turning to me like an injured dog, he said: "I
know I oughtn't to trust you with all that money, but... but.... Oh, well,
do what you think best. I don't want her to kill herself, that's all."
"Kill herself?" I said. "Not her! You must think a hell of a lot of
yourself if you can believe a thing like that. As for the money, though I
hate to give it to her, I promise you I'll go straight to the post office
and telegraph it to her. I wouldn't trust myself with it a minute longer
than is necessary." As I said this I spied a bunch of post cards in a
revolving rack. I grabbed one off--a picture of the Eiffel Tower it was--and
made him write a few words. "Tell her you're sailing now. Tell her you love
her and that you'll send for her as soon as you arrive.... I'll send it by
pneumatique when I go to the post office. And tonight I'll see her.
Everything'll be Jake, you'll see."
With that we walked across the street to the station. Only two minutes to
go. I felt it was safe now. At the gate I gave him a slap on the back and
pointed to the train. I didn't shake hands with him--he would have slobbered
all over me. I just said: "Hurry! She's going in a minute." And with that I
turned on my heel and marched off. I didn't even look round to see if he was
boarding the train. I was afraid to.
283
* * *
I hadn't really thought, all the while I was bundling him off, what I'd do
once I was free of him. I had promised a lot of things--but that was only
to keep him quiet. As for facing Ginette, I had about as little courage for
it as he had. I was getting panicky myself. Everything had happened so
quickly that it was impossible to grasp the nature of the situation in full.
I walked away from the station in a kind of delicious stupor--with the post
card in my hand. I stood against a lamp-post and read it over. It sounded
preposterous. I read it again, to make sure that I wasn't dreaming, and then
I tore it up and threw it in the gutter.
I looked around uneasily, half expecting to see Ginette coming after me with
a tomahawk. Nobody was following me. I started walking leisurely towards
the Place Lafayette. It was a beautiful day, as I had observed earlier.
Light, puffy clouds above, sailing with the wind. The awnings flapping.
Paris had never looked so good to me; I almost felt sorry that I had shipped
the poor bugger off. At the Place Lafayette I sat down facing the church and
stared at the clock tower; it's not such a wonderful piece of architecture,
but that blue in the dial face always fascinated me. It was bluer than ever
to-day. I couldn't take my eyes off it.
Unless he were crazy enough to write her a letter, explaining everything,
Ginette need never know what had happened. And even if she did learn that he
had left her 2,500 francs or so she couldn't prove it. I could always say
that he imagined it. A guy who was crazy enough to walk off without even a
hat was crazy enough to invent the 2,500 francs, or whatever it was. How
much was it, anyhow, I wondered. My pockets were sagging with the weight of
it. I hauled it all out and counted it carefully. There was exactly 2,875
francs and 35 centimes. More than I had thought. The 75 francs and 35
centimes had to be gotten rid of. I wanted an even sum--a clean 2,800
francs. Just then I saw a cab pulling up to the curb. A woman stepped out
with a white poodle dog in her hands;
the dog was peeing over her silk dress. The idea of taking a dog for a ride
got me sore. I'm as good as her dog, I said to myself, and with that I gave
the driver a sign and
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told him to drive me through the Bois. He wanted to know where exactly.
"Anywhere," I said. "Go through the Bois, go all around it--and take your
time, I'm in no hurry." I sank back and let the houses whizz by, the jagged
roofs, the chimney pots, the colored walls, the urinals, the dizzy
carrefours. Passing the Rond-Point I thought I'd go downstairs and
take a leak. No telling what might happen down there. I told the driver to
wait. It was the first time in my life I had let a cab wait while I took a
leak. How much can you waste that way? Not very much. With what I had in my
pocket I could afford to have two taxis waiting for me.
I took a good look around but I didn't see anything worth while. What I
wanted was something fresh and unused--something from Alaska or the Virgin
Islands. A clean fresh pelt with a natural fragrance to it. Needless to say,
there wasn't anything like that walking about. I wasn't terribly
disappointed. I didn't give a fuck whether I found anything or not. The
thing is, never to be too anxious. Everything comes in due time.
We drove on past the Arc de Triomphe. A few sightseers were loitering
around the remains of the Unknown Soldier. Going through the Bois I looked
at all the rich cunts promenading in their limousines. They were whizzing
by as if they had some destination. Do that, no doubt, to look important--to
show the world how smooth run their Rolls Royces and their Hispano Suizas.
Inside me things were running smoother than any Rolls Royce ever ran. It was
just like velvet inside. Velvet cortex and velvet vertebrae. And velvet axle
grease, what! It's a wonderful thing, for half an hour, to have money in
your pocket and piss it away like a drunken sailor. You feel as though the
world is yours. And the best part of it is, you don't know what to do with
it. You can sit back and let the meter run wild, you can let the wind blow
through your hair, you can stop and have a drink, you can give a big tip,
and you can swagger off as though it were an everyday occurrence. But you
can't create a revolution. You can't wash all the dirt out of your
belly.
When we got to the Porte d'Auteuil I made him head for the Seine. At the
Pont de Sevres I got out and started walking along the river, toward the
Auteuil Viaduct. It's
285
about the size of a creek along here and the trees come right down to the
river's bank. The water was green and glassy, especially near the other
side. Now and then a scow chugged by. Bathers in tights were standing in the
grass sunning themselves. Everything was close and pal-pitant, and vibrant
with the strong light.
Passing a beer garden I saw a group of cyclists sitting at a table. I took a
seat nearby and ordered a demi. Hearing them jabber away I thought
for a moment of Ginette. I saw her stamping up and down the room, tearing
her hair, and sobbing and bleating, in that beast-like way of hers. I saw
his hat on the rack. I wondered if his clothes would fit me. He had a raglan
that I particularly liked. Well, by now he was on his way. In a little while
the boat would be rocking under him. English! He wanted to hear English
spoken. What an idea!
Suddenly it occurred to me that if I wanted I could go to America myself. It
was the first time the opportunity had ever presented itself. I asked
myself--"do you want to go?" There was no answer. My thoughts drifted out,
towards the sea, towards the other side where, taking a last look back, I
had seen the skyscrapers fading out in a flurry of snowflakes. I saw them
looming up again, in that same ghostly way as when I left. Saw the lights
creeping through their ribs. I saw the whole city spread out, from Harlem to
the Battery, the streets choked with ants, the elevated rushing by, the
theatres emptying. I wondered in a vague way what had ever happened to my
wife.
After everything had quietly sifted through my head a great peace came over
me. Here, where the river gently winds through the girdle of hills, lies a
soil so saturated with the past that however far back the mind roams one can
never detach it from its human background. Christ, before my eyes there
shimmered such a golden peace that only a neurotic could dream of turning
his head away. So quietly flows the Seine that one hardly notices its
presence. It is always there, quiet and unobtrusive, like a great artery
running through the human body. In the wonderful peace that fell over me it
seemed as if I had climbed to the top of a high mountain; for a little while
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I would be able to look around me, to take in the meaning of the landscape.
Human beings make a strange fauna and flora. From a distance they appear
negligible; close up they are apt to appear ugly and malicious. More than
anything they need to be surrounded with sufficient space--space even more
than time.
The sun is setting. I feel this river flowing through me--its past, its
ancient soil, the changing climate. The hills gently girdle it about: its
course is fixed.
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