illusion. I am really talking to myself, not to you. These are my decisions that Iâm speaking of I guess and projecting them to you. How true they are for you I donât know. But you are certainly advanced beyond my comprehension, when I try to comprehend or âhelpâ in a sacerdotal way, etc. etc.
I want to see you. I feel more and more at home with you now actually than ever before, I feel you more, actually more clarity, more confidence, more trust. I will be in Paterson for several weeks. Will you come in, at last?
Â
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Jack Kerouac [n.p., North Carolina?] to
Allen Ginsberg [Paterson, New Jersey]
ca. December 16, 1948
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Allen:
I am aware that Reginald Marsh, and his cool change from tense faults and naturalism, to Godâs-eye view of man in the God-real world, is great. (SPOKEN IN A DEEP VOICE.)
Not screaming over the telephoneâyou and Barbara [Hale] are queers.
You ought to go to the Rehn Gallery and dig âNew Gardens.â
Do you know what I think?âPeople in this century have been looking at people with a naturalistic eye, and this is the cause of all the trouble. I think women are beautiful goddesses and I always want to lay themâJoan [Adams], Barbara, allâand I think men are beautiful Gods including me, and I always want to put my arm around them as we walk somewhere.
Last night I wrote an apocalyptic letter to [Allan] Temko and I made a copy of it to show to you and maybe [John Clellon] Holmes. It is full of âfrighteningâ and inescapable predictions, scatalogically smeared with an evil leer sometimes, much as âold me, old spontaneous meâ is that way. All truthful words are that way . . . âSnake Hill was so-called for a very real, snaky reason.â âIf thatâs the case, then I am glad that shadow changes into bone.â
I said to TemkoââWhen we get out of the narrow âwhite lightâ of our surface rationalityâwhen we get out of the roomâwe will see that mystic makes no mud.â
However, I hate you. Because years ago you and Burrows [Burroughs] used to laugh at me because I saw people as godlike, and even, as a husky football man, walked around godlike like, and Hal [Chase] did that too, and still does. We long ago realized our flesh happily, while you and Bill used to sit under white lamps talking and leering at each other. I think you are full of shit, Allen, and at last I am going to tell you. You are like David Diamond 30 âyou confused your claw with the hand of a godly man; you confused affection. I am sick of you, I want you to change: why donât you die, give up, go mad, for once.
I have decided that I am dead, given up, gone mad. Thus I speak to you freely. I donât care any more. I may get married soon, tooâto Pauline maybe. Weâll run away. I am on the verge now of loving my geekish guilty-flesh selfâthus reverting to the original sanity of the Hal-days. The reason why I always dream of torturing and murdering Bill (as last night) is because he made me geekish in the name of something else. However, I wrote a big letter to Bill and am sending him Tea Party. I am lost. The only thing to do is to give upâI am giving up.
Thinking of getting a job in a gas station, I shudder as before. Iâm lost. If my book doesnât sell, what can I do? As I write this to you I am on the verge of falling dead from my chair. Just now I felt myself swooning. It is too much, too close to death, life. I must learn to accept the tightrope.
Do you know what Hal does? Like Julien Sorel, 31 the moment he enters a seminary, he says to himself, âThere are 383 seminarists in here, or rather, 383 e-ne-mies . . .â The only seminarist who befriends him is, therefore, âof the 383 enemies the one and greatest enemy.â I think Hal is full of shit.
I am full of shit too. Donât you see? weâre ALL full of shit, and therefore we can be saved.
In the
Elsa Day
Nick Place
Lillian Grant
Duncan McKenzie
Beth Kery
Brian Gallagher
Gayle Kasper
Cherry Kay
Chantal Fernando
Helen Scott Taylor