This space is dedicated to the proposition that we need to know the history of the struggles on the left and of earlier progressive movements here and world-wide. If we can learn from the mistakes made in the past (as well as what went right) we can move forward in the future to create a more just and equitable society. We will be reviewing books, CDs, and movies we believe everyone needs to read, hear and look at as well as making commentary from time to time. Greg Green, site manager
On Internment of Japanese Americans In World War II
(Quote of the Week)
Amid widespread outrage over the incarceration of immigrants in detention centers, the Democrats cynically pretend that such barbarity is unique to the racist Trump administration. During World War II, some 120,000 people of Japanese descent, the vast majority U.S. citizens, were savagely uprooted and thrown into concentration camps in a calculated atrocity ordered by the Democratic administration of liberal icon Franklin Roosevelt.
The Stalinist Communist Party expelled all of their Japanese American members in a grotesque example of their support to the “democratic” imperialists in the war. The then-Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party, facing persecution themselves for opposing U.S. imperialist war aims, were among the very few—including the Quakers—who courageously campaigned against the repression of Japanese Americans. We print below an excerpt from an article they wrote shortly after the roundups began.
A minority problem as acute as any in Europe is being created by the forced removal of Japanese-Americans from the Pacific Coast.
In a move unprecedented in U.S. history, American citizens are being taken from their homes and transported to hastily constructed concentration camps....
Evacuations are being enforced by army officials acting under a presidential decree empowering them to bar from certain areas any person they consider undesirable. The army command has power to declare any district a restricted area and to order the removal of any residents. No reason need be given for the evacuation, and American citizenship is no protection.
So far the measure has been applied only to Japanese-Americans and to enemy aliens: but militant workers, liberals or “uncooperative” citizens could be ousted similarly.
After Pearl Harbor, the press whipped up an hysterical picture of a West Coast invasion aided by Japanese-American residents. The administration had to make a decisive move to show West Coast residents it was alert to their danger. The FBI rounded up all suspected enemy agents in the first few days of the war, but this was not demonstrative enough to give the effect of energetic preparedness the administration was seeking to offset Pearl Harbor.
Considerable pressure for the ousting of Japanese-Americans came, however, from California Chambers of Commerce, the Bank of America, and the reactionary Associated Farmers. These groups see in the Japanese-American farmer not a military menace, but an obstacle to their complete domination of California agriculture. Taking advantage of the situation to demand their ousting in the name of “national defense,” California bankers hope to seize control of the truck gardening fields vacated by the Japanese-Americans....
And so the story of the Japanese-American evacuations stands today—a repressive measure, based purely on racial discrimination and motivated chiefly by the desire of Big Business for additional profits, which is presented as a necessary part of the “war for democracy.”
—“Behind the West Coast Evacuations: Bankers Profit from Driving Japanese-American Citizens into Concentration Camps,” Militant (30 May 1942)
“The Set-Up”-With
The Detective Fiction Writer Dashiell Hammett In Mind
By Zack
James
Alexander
Slater had always been ever since he was a kid, maybe ten or eleven if not
before, a big fan of hard-boiled detective novels and films based on those
novels by guys like Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Rich O’Connor, Sid
Stein, and Lanny Drew. Had spent many a Riverdale hometown Saturday afternoon
in the late 1950s in the faded run-down, gum-strewn on the floor, cobwebs in
the balcony seats, toilet in the men’s room a relic of plumbing around the time
of the original Cranes who made their fortunes providing such hard-wear to the
growing population in need of indoor plumbing and whose castle overlooked
Crane’s Beach up north of Riverdale about seventy-five miles away,
old-fashioned popcorn cooker which always, always provided burnt kernels at the
bottom of the box Majestic Theater on Mooney Street just off of the downtown
shopping area watching re-runsof the
classics like The Maltese Falcon, The Big
Sleep, The Lady In The Lake, The whole Thin
Man series, The Last Kiss, Girl Hunt,
and The Lost Ones. That downtown area
also beginning to fade as the stores, Doc’s Drugstore, the 5&10, Morley’s
Clothing store, Sam’s Furniture store and the like that used to cater to the
town’s needs moved out to the strip malls or all-purpose malls out on Route One
a few miles from downtown.
Of course as
a kid all Alexander cared about, along with his regular crew of Saturday
matinee double-feature companions, Skip James, Jack Callahan, Johnny Rizzo,
Five-Fingers Murphy, Frank Riley and sometimes before his family moved out of
town so his father could take a job in the emerging computer industry at
Honeywell about forty miles away along Route 128, was that they had enough
money to cover the admission (trying as boys universally would then, probably still
do, to get the under twelve reduced admission price long after they had entered
their teens), were being “grounded” for some silly home or school infraction ,
and, maybe, just maybe, that for once the popcorn although always with burnt
offerings was not stale. So Alexander had through the marvels of cinematic
technology and the printed page been able to form a very distinct idea about
what a private detective should be like, what he looked like and how he handled
himself in the rough spots.
That ideal
was probably epitomized by Sam Slade in The
Maltese Falcon on the screen (the 1940s one that made Humphrey Bogart,
Bogie, famous not the two earlier ones which he had never seen until a few
years ago via Netflix he had ordered the pair online and was seriously
disappointed in those efforts, as was his wife Mary who while not nearly as
much a fan of the private detective did love the Bogie version of the Falcon) and in some short stories done
by Hammett by scrambling through a few libraries and second-hand bookstores
looking for compilations. In a word a guy and it was always guys then still were
a lot now although he had read a few interesting female detective stories,
working class guys, tough, tough enough to by sheer will and pluck to outsmart
his well-organized criminal opponents, hard-boiled no question, no sap for
anybody even women which every guys knows is easy enough to become when the
skirts going swishing by, with a code, a beautiful code of honor that he
follows as best he can, maybe not to the letter but as best he can in the
spirit, hard-drinking which somehow focused the senses whenever the bottle in
the lower desk draw came out, and a rough and ready sense of justice, of
tilting after windmills for the good of the cause.
And there
that image stayed for a fairly long time until Alexander went out into the
world of work after high school. He had taken shop classes in school, printing
shop and so immediately after high school he had taken a full-time job with
Mister Calder, the best commercial printer in town, whom he worked for after
school and on weekends in high school. In due course after a few years in the
dreaded Army in Vietnam which took a certain toll on him when he came back to
the “real” world, a few years “finding himself” through dope, rock and roll,
and following the hitchhike road that many guys of his generation took for a
while when Mister Calder retired he took over the shop located in the first
floor of the Tappan Building on Lancaster Street right off of downtown (in the
opposite direction from the now long gone old Majestic if you were familiar
with Riverdale back in the 1970s or earlier).
At one time,
back in the 1940s, early 1950s, the eight story Tappan Building was what they
would call today the anchor of the downtown business section. Was the pride of
Riverdale what with prosperous small law firms, a few doctors’ offices when
doctors had their own private practices more, a couple of dentists, a few
reputable insurance companies, nothing big, no Fortune 500 firms but substantial, solid professional. As those
firms and professionals drifted out to the strip malls or were eaten up by
larger firms elsewhere the once glorious Tappan Building began a long decline
into “seen better days.” The owners kind of gave up on the place, not keeping
it up with leaking faucets in the restrooms, un-waxed public area floors,
unreliable elevators, and the sanctified smell of decay that follows such
downward spiraling enterprises. Alexander had taken over for Mister Calder well
into the decline of the building but since the leasing arrangements with the
owners provided for cheap terms and the fact that his printing business was not
one in need of a “good front” he never felt the need to move, probably a wise
move once the high-tech moguls made self-printing for most occasions a
worthwhile effort.
Alexander
thus observed the decline of the Tappan Building first-hand as the type of
businesses switched from prosperous professionals to shady characters. A couple
of “repo” men, a few failed dentists whom you would not want within fifty feet
of your mouth, maybe farther away, a couple of chiropractors, some no-name
insurance firms, a notary public, a least a few guys who were running some
kinds of scams out of their offices, and a detective agency. Fred Sims’
Detective Agency although all the years that he knew Fred he was the sole
detective.
Fred had
been in the building since the mid-1960s but between Alexander’s military
service and his wanderlust he did not meet Fred until he took over for Mister
Calder. Once they met, met in Dolly’s Diner across the street from the Tappan,
a place that is still there although Dolly’s granddaughter runs the place now
and has changed it from a smoked-filled ham and eggs, coffee and crullers place
to more healthful food and clean atmosphere for those who own the condos that
had been created as a result of converting many of the old buildings, schools
and churches in the area, they hit it off from the beginning although Fred was
a good decade older than Alexander.
Fred, let’s
be clear, was not, hear this, was not, and probably never would be Alexander
image of a private detective build up from childhood (although in fairness to
Fred he was the very first P.I. he had run into in person). Short, bald, with
unkempt side hairs sticking out of the baseball cap that he wore indoors and
out, and almost never took off, an old Robert Hall’s, if you remember that name
in men’s clothing from another age, shaggy sport’s jacket, one of three he
owned and alternated, threadbare socks, turned at the heel shoes, black, and
many days, many no client days, a fair amount of stubble on his face. His
office on the fifth floor reflected that persona, no real “front.”A hand-printed cardboard sign advertising his
name and business on the front door, a small waiting room (which made Alexander
laugh for all the years that he knew Fred he never saw anybody in that room),
dust in the corners, a well beyond its prime coatrack of uncertain steadiness,
a couple of mismatched chairs, a small end table with magazines describing the
first Apollo landing in 1969, an office area with a snarled desk, unmatched
chair, and a few, too few file cabinets if Fred was prosperous which he was
not. Later when they were easier to figure out he did purchase a computer but
otherwise over the years the place had, and would continue to have, that
beleaguered downward spiral look.
Alexander
one time early on remarked, no, made the mistake and remarked, that Fred was no
Bogie while they were sitting at the counter of Dolly’s having their coffee
and. Apparently this kind of remark was Fred’s pet peeve because he commenced
to rail against the popular notion of what a private detective looks like, what
his office looks like, and the real cases that he handles. They are not the
murder cases of cinematic and book renown, the public cops, detectives handle
that, well or poorly, but in some then twenty years in the business he had
never seen any private detective brought in to solve a murder and only once had
heard that a very rich guy who had the dough to do so and was frustrated with
the public coppers and their inability to solve the kidnapping/murder of his
young daughter actually had a private detective savvy enough to solve the
crime, after two years on the trail.
No the real work was bullshit stuff. Some
barber from Gloversville whose wife ran off with a salesman and he wanted her
back her, fast, maybe three days, and not too many expenses. Some “repo” work
the average repo guys wouldn’t handle or wouldn’t be allowed by the insurance
companies to handle. Back in the day a few Peeping Tom snooping around motels
cases looking for adultery when the grounds for a civil divorce were harder to
find. A lost dog or other pet once in a while if somebody was attached to the
animal, although they usually found their ways home on their own or were never
seen again. Looking for long lost relatives, usually fruitless since those
relatives wanted to be lost from view. Maybe checking out a scam or two,
flimflam stuff. Definitely not looking for lost falcons filled with riches and
history with dead bodies and greedy people hovering around. Definitely not
taking on some high-powered criminal gang when an old general with wild
daughters one of whose husband is missing. Definitely not being employed by
some man-mountain to find his long lost and wants to stay lost Velma.
Definitely not trying to find some eccentric rich inventor guy whose thin
shadow had disappeared in the mist and somebody liked that idea.
So that day Alexander got his comeuppance, got
a first-hand real- world view of what private investigation was all about.
Thereafter Fred, when the met for their coffee and at Dolly’s or sometimes when
Alexander after work would go up to Fred’s office for a shot of whiskey from
that bottle he kept in the bottom drawer of that snarled desk (and one of the
few commonalities between real and film detectives) Fred would tell him stories
about his previous cases, or cases that he had heard about from other P.I.s
around the area when they ran into each other at some meeting or on a spree.
Except the one time when Alexander became a moving part in a case that Fred
would wind up getting involved in before the coppers stepped in.
One day a
guy, an ordinary looking guy, about thirty, fairly well-dressed, a sports coat
and tie, trimmed hair and short beard, not from around Riverdale but with a New
England accent, probably Maine, came in Alexander’s print shop looking for a
customized job, a small job but in those days as people were self-printing more
extensively the small jobs were drying up (fortunately the big commercial
orders were still coming in at their normal pace). He wanted fifty copies of
what he called a missing person’s poster, you know with photo of the person and
description of last known place, who to contact and so on, done on the press
and not the copy machine. No problem. Alexander handled the order while this
young guy waited.
A few weeks
later the person who had come in with missing person photograph turned up dead,
very dead along the bank of the Waban River. Not only very dead but very
murdered from the bullet holes through his mangled soggy shirt. Chief Powers of
the Riverdale Police came into Alexander’s print shop to find out what he knew
about the situation since in the dead man’s back pocket there was a
water-logged copy of the missing person poster that had his print shop mark on
the right corner. Alexander told the Chief what he knew, said he wanted to help
any way he could but the young guy was just a young guy and his description and
demeanor would have fit a million young guys. As had the guy he was looking
for. That pretty much ended Alexander’s involvement in the case, probably the
case would go into those cold files that most murder cases go into if somebody
doesn’t jump up and confess with all hands open.
Or so he
thought. A few weeks later a young woman, Lara Barstow was the name she gave
him, came into Alexander’s printing shop with a shopworn copy of the poster he
had created for the murdered young man, and asked to see the proprietor. Since
he was that person he introduced himself and asked how he could help her although
he was a little suspicious that an average young good-looking woman like Lara
would have any connection with the crime, or crimes associated with the young
man for whom he had done the work or the young man on the poster. Lara soon
cleared things up, “I have been to the police and they told me what happened to
my brother Emmet, how he was found murdered out on the riverbank. They said
that as far as they were concerned the case was still open but that they had no
further leads to work on so that unless they got something that is probably
where the case would stand.” [The police did not mention “cold case” file but Lara
said she knew what they meant]. Lara then started to cry a bit and Alexander
not knowing what to do offered his handkerchief and asked if he should call his
wife to assist her in her time of troubles. Lara stiffened at that and told
Alexander that she did not need that kind of help but that she was determined
to find out who had killed her brother and asked if he had any ideas. Then
Alexander, secretly thrilled at the prospect, told her that on the fifth floor
of the building that they were standing in his friend, Fred, a private
detective, had his office and that maybe he could look into the matter. Lara
said that she did not have any serious resources (her word), meaning money but
that if Fred as able to do something to find the murderer and clear up a legal
situation then she would be coming into some funds. Alexander thinking to
himself that this was starting to be something out of the movies let that
statement ride only saying, “Let’s see what Fred says,” and led her to the
elevator and the fifth- floor office. (On the way up she did not comment on the
urine smell in the foyer, the seedy dilapidated aspect of the elevator and its
slowness, or the condition of the outside building windows, broken panes
letting the weathers in as they left the elevator that made him a little more wary
since her whole demeanor was of some old-fashioned gentile upbringing but he
figured she was desperate, concentrated on her task, or indifferent to such
matter.
Fred,
despite the seedy condition of his office, already commented on by Alexander
and nothing had changed since the last time he had been up in the office for a
few drinks so no further comment is necessary, was smooth affable charm itself
when greeting and listening to Lara’s story. And listen he, they did for the
story really did have a Hollywood feel to it.
“Emmet
Barstow is, ah, was, my older brother, who had gotten into a lot of trouble
when he was in prep school at Exeter Academy several years ago. I don’t know if
I should tell you the nature of the trouble since it was a rather delicate
matter.” Fred stopped her right there and said he needed to know everything,
everything in this weak fact case, or he would not be able to help her. She
continued, “Well, ah, see there was this other boy, this Prescott Devine, a
pervert, you know, a homosexual, who tricked Emmet into having sex with him,
having sex and taking photographs as it turned out.” [Fred and Alexander gave
each other knowing eyes about what was to follow.] You know what happened next,
Prescott forced my brother to continue with his wicked designs while in school
and later asked for money to avoid a public scandal in our household. So Emmett
paid, or rather my father paid before he died and after that Mr. Sidney, the
lawyer who has handled our estate until we come of age, paid. Then Prescott
fade from view for a couple of years until several months ago after my father
died he showed up at our door looking for more money. Emmett gave him what he
could but somehow he got wind of my father dying and remembered that Emmett was
to inherit a large sum of money upon his death, something he had told Prescott
when he was in the throes of love at the beginning [said bitterly]. The terms
of the will were that Emmett would inherit almost everything when he turned
twenty-five as long as he was alive, and if he were not then I would inherit.
But only inherit if there was no cloud over his death. That part had been added
only a few months before my father’s death, so he must have had a premonition
of something happening.” She paused, then continued, “Emmett had been trying to
find Prescott for a while after he had come to our house in order to tell him
that he was no longer afraid of any scandal, that he would take his chances
with society, our society which might be able to overlook what could be a
youthful indiscretion, and maybe just a bout of loneliness. Somebody whom they
went to school with told Emmett that Prescott was in this area living in
Gloversville and that was why he had the posters made. He was going to
distribute them around and the thousand dollars for information figured to draw
somebody out who might know his whereabouts. That’s all I know until the police
called to have me come and identify the body. The police have kind of let it go
to hell and I need your help.
Fred wise to
the ways of the world although not used to dealing with upper middle-class
young women, as clients anyway except once he had a girlfriend from the leafy
suburbs but the parents practically imprisoned her when they found out he did
not have three names in his moniker, you know Ward Stewart Lawrence, stuff like
that the Brahmins go for, told Lara he needed a one hundred dollar cash
retainer before he could represent her in her time of sorrows. She opened her
pocketbook, pulled out five Jacksons and they were in business.
Fred said
later that he sensed something was wrong from that moment, the moment she gave
him the cash like she expected him to ask for cash rather than haggle over a
check or something but Alexander said that was just Fred’s wishful thinking
after the fact when the whole thing blew up in his face and the cops had to
pull him out of the line of fire. To leave the reader in no suspense at this
point Fred went out and did several days of investigation trying to locate the
guy who told her brother that Prescott was in the area. He did locate him
finally but the lad, a young man whom Fred using the old- time expression was
“light on his feet,” and fearful to say anything at all. Fred pressed the issue
though and the kid (Fred did not use that word) folded. It seems the kid, Fred
said he would not use his name in order to get the information he wanted, also
fell under the spell of Prescott, had his pants down more than once over the
“crush” he called it, and had done Prescott’s bidding telling Emmett that
Prescott was in Gloversville. A couple of days late Fred traced Prescott to a
bed and breakfast place outside Gloversville. He figured that he would just go
in and talk to Prescott but before he could enter the door to Prescott’s room
there was a volley of gunfire aimed his way through the door. He got on the
ground first and worked his way back to the kitchen where he called the cops,
called the sheriff’s office because he was not sure Gloversville had its own
police department. The sheriff came with a few deputies, and a few
sharpshooters from the State Police SWAT team. After a couple of futile
attempts at coaxing Prescott out they went in full blazes (Alexander said if
anybody wanted to know the details of the firefight check with the Norfolk
County Sheriff’s Office they would have all the details). After a few minutes
the firing from Prescott’s room stopped. The cops went into the room and
recovered the body, recovered two bodies really, for the other body belonged to
one Lara Barstow.
The way
things figured out later piecing together everything found in Prescott’s room
and later at Lara’ house what happened is when Prescott came to confront Emmett
for dough he somehow caught Lara’s eyes, gave her a tumble or two, maybe more
(whether he was bisexual or not who knows maybe the dough gave him some weird
sexual energy if he was completely gay). Whether he was just working the scam
of a lifetime for a lowlife like him or he had some affection for Lara who
knows. What is known from some legal papers found at Lara’s house is they
formed a scheme to kill Emmett and have her inherit the family money (when she
turned twenty-five as well a lawyer handling the trust before that time).
Prescott must have known from that scared kid that Emmett was on his trail. They
probably met somewhere and Prescott put a couple of nasty slugs in him and
shipped him off down the Waban River and easy street. What fouled the whole
thing up was the part about having to know the cause of Emmett’s death before
the trust could even be touched in the future. The whole Lara tall tale story
in Fred’s office was to see if they could find a fall guy, maybe some hobo or
something. Not every criminal, smart or stupid always figures things out right
but that what it looked like. Maybe Lara thought just hiring Fred would satisfy
the terms of the trust. Who knows. But when Fred was able to find Prescott he,
they panicked. And that was that. So Alexander forever after will be able to
say he way part of solving a private detective-type crime. He was just glad,
glad as hell that he had not accompanied Fred when he had asked him to go to
Prescott’s room. He thought save that part for the movies.
Lost In The Rain On Desolation Row -With
Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited In
Mind
By Jack
Callahan
“I’ve met
Einstein disguised as Robin Hood, I’ve been in the tower with Ezra Pound and
T.S. Eliot, “declared Robert South to no one in particular although Jake Devine
was the only one in the room at the time. With those words Jake, Jake known as
Jake since childhood to distinguish him from John Devine, Senior although his
father a genial Irishman addicted to sports betting and drinking whiskey not
always in that order was more the slap on the back Jake type while Jake in the
throes of his high hippie moments was trying to shed that moniker for his new
identity one Be-Bop Benny but old habits die hard and his old high school
friends called him Jake and when he went on the hitchhike road west with them
in 1965,1966 the name stuck whether he liked it or not, knew that Robert was
two things-one, high as a kite on either speed or LSD just then the drug of
choice among the “hip” (not always the same as Hippie but Jake did not want to
argue the fine points on that one since he himself had been on a two day black
beauty speed high-low) on the mind-expanding conscious West Coast cohort of the
brethren and two, Robert had been listening to the whole of Bob Dylan’s Desolation Row at least once, probably
more than once if he was high since he would not have had the stamina to switch
the sound system that Captain Crunch had installed in their “digs” now that
they were off the road for the winter and settled into Pablo’s mansion. By the
way in compensationfor being called
Jake by one and all on the bus, of which more in a minute, he had gathered some
sense of respect because his latest flame, a serious “hippie chick” met on the
road at Big Sur as they were heading south, Frilly Jilly, called him Be-Bop
Benny,called him a few other things
once they high on grass, you know marijuana,got down to the “do the do,” a term the guys still carried with them
from the corner days in Riverdale after they had heard the bluesman Howlin’
Wolf do a song with those words in it, those words meaning hitting the sheets,
having sex, what she called him in her high hormonal moments was left to
them.
Yeah, Robert, Jimmy Jenkins, Frank Riley, and
a guy, Josh Breslin, they met from a mill town in Maine on Russian Hill in San
Francisco where they were camped out in a small park when he stopped by the bus
and asked for a joint had been on quite a ride since coming West to see what it
was all about and were learning quickly it was all about “drugs, sex and rock
and roll” at its core but also about getting out from under the old ways of
thinking and living. So when they hit Frisco they headed like lemmings to the
sea to Golden Gate Park where all the hell was breaking loose met a few guys
who “turned them on,” got them invited to a few parties, including one Captain
Crunch was throwing around the new yellow brick road bus that he had just
purchased (allegedly in a trade for a big sack of dope but all the time they
were on the bus they never had that rumor confirmed by the Captain or anybody
else and mainly it didn’t matter by then). This bus was nothing but an old
school bus that had been turned into a moving commune after the seats had been
torn out, mattresses thrown down, a storage area for family living material
like utensils, dishes, and pots and pans, the thing had been repainted in every
day-glopsychedelic color under the sun
and best of all hooked up with a great sound system Dippy Mike, the guy who did
the sound system for Fillmore West and the Dead, put together for any trips
they would take.
And almost
from the start at Golden Gate Park the trips began once Captain had selected
the Riverdale boys as part of his crew to head south with him. The reason for
that heading south, the reason Robert was holding forth those lines from Desolation Row was to “house-sit” here
in La Jolla at this mansion that belonged to Pablo Rios, a friend of the
Captain’s and a serious south of the border drug dealer who was in Mexico for
the winter and the Captain had agreed to doing the sitting as we got into “winter
quarters.” Now that the bus was not being used, was being refitted with a new
engine and so not useable, the sound system had been transferred to the house
for the weekly parties the Captain threw for his friends (and whoever happened
to hear about the event and knew where to find the place, not as easy as it
sounds when stoned in hideaway between the cliffs La Jolla).
Robert, once
settled in, once he got his own room with his lady-friend, Lavender Minnie, got
heavily into the dope, got heavily into listening to the amped up music and
Jake thought he had begun, like they had all heard about with kids who did too
much dope, to go over the edge.
Just as Jake
thought that thought Robert rag out again with “they’re selling postcards of
the hanging, they’re painting the passports brown,” and Jake knew that Robert
had gone for the next plus minutes to his own world. Eleven plus minutes if he
was lucky, since more than once Robert had decided that he needed to give his
own take on what the whole thing meant, what the various references meant to
him. For example that business with Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot, the two exile
poets who almost single-handedly broke from the old forms and created modern
poetry and were treated like gods among the hip at one point was Dylan throwing
on the gauntlet, telling those guys a new sheriff was in town. Well, maybe, if
you think Dylan was a lyric poet rather than a song-writer, or maybe put the
two together. For example that postcards of the hanging stuff was his political
moment like Billie Holiday had with Strange
Fruit about the scandalous open lynching of black men in the South put
together with a new sense of masculinity turned in on itself with sailor boys
caught out on the seven seas who transformed themselves in boy-girls with those
all male crews. For example that stuff about Ophelia, you know Hamlet’s chick
and how she was giving up the ghost (committing suicide) not because of some
lost love but because she was pregnant and was not sure who the father was.
For
example….but Jake knew Robert was merely babbling, merely going through the
numbers and beside, taking another sweet swift hit of meth to jet fuel those
two black beauties that had kicked in hours ago he had his own “take” on those
lyrics and with the “fake” wisdom brought on by the speed, which would bring
hours of high and low thoughts he started to write some stuff down (he would
say later so he would not forget it since the thoughts were flying fast and
furious just then) and as he drifted into himself here is what came out on
those stained yellow legal pad sheets that held whatever was written on
them….
I have to
admit Robert was on to something, something sinister and devilish in the
American psyche but he was dead wrong on what that “postcards of the hanging”
was about, who was being hanged and for what reason. Sure, Billie sang her
blessed, goddamn blessed junkie heart out and not just on Strange Fruit, sang her heart out until near the end and the dope, the
hop got the best of her voice and her psyche. Sure I would have seen the fixer man for her
if she would just sing one more song to chase my blues away, make them sail
into this freaking Pacific wind to the China seas reminding me that many a lost
high white note found its way along that path blowing out from North Beach
joints but Strange Fruits that dirge
to what the fuck was going on in the damn Mister James Crow South during her
times, hell ours too since there is a loss of train of thought when Billie
couldn’t squeeze anymore life out of the needle and put the lights of New Jack
City out in the shade and my running around in cracker North Adamsville trying to
drum up books, can you believe this, books for little black kids, then Negro, now
Afro-American is gaining currency, but black, black as night like Billie with
that sweet orchid hair in god-forsaken Alabama where goddam, Nina Simone was
right, goddam hell was breaking loose and Mississippi was burning, burning
white stick crosses and white steepled churches, Baptist churches too but it
might as well have been some mongrel Buddha swings congregation because the
flame was going down in Negro-town.
Yeah, Billie
sang it right, sang about that lonely stick figure, black, black as coal
swinging in the wind, head bent from that awful snapped neck which could be
heard back in the far reaches of the crowd where the children, the very white
children stood to learn about who was boss and who was crap, hell, shit in
Mister James Crow’s house and about how that lonely stick figure would provide
a brisk short-term trade in Mister Brady’s photograph emporium among the
fucking hillbilly white trash come to see yet another black man put to the
ground, going to see his maker if the fuckin n---ers [edited by Greg Green to
conform with publication policy around that “word” and its implications when
white guys, even white guys who scratched and cajoled around white bread, white bread, white trash
North Adamsville to get books, can you believe books for black schoolchildren
in heathen Alabama] had a maker, had their very own high Jehovah black as night
maker. No Mr. Bob, Mr. Dylan taking a righteous war name from drunken sot and
Welsh poet, maybe a welcher at the bar tab in the Village too meant to take a
look at some hand-press printed postcards of the hanging of the avenging angel,
the righteous son of that high Jehovah that made him and those sullen black
Baptists too, John Brown, Captain John Brown late of Kansas prairie fires and
Harpers Ferry fight(never sure whether there is an apostrophe between the “r”
and the “s” on Harpers so no) against the same bastards, against the fathers
and grandfathers of those white trash (and not just white trash either once you
took the hoods off if they bothered to put them on just to hang a lonely stick
figure n—ger, and you know what that coded word means for Miss Scarlett O’Hara
and her beau sweet boy Rhett, or her children, all who could be seen swarming
around those barren trees), and maybe great-grandfathers of those later
photographs per Mr. Brady who watched in heated glean at yet another example of
the rightness of keeping Mister James Crow’s laws in place, maybe forever…
…Hell, I
don’t know what to make of that “painting the passports brown” so somebody else
can figure that one out, maybe and I don’t think I would be that far off he was
just holy goof trying to get lyrical and maybe was too stoned to see that there
were no passports from those hanging trees…
Leave it to
Robert to get the sex stuff all mixed up, “the beauty parlors are filled with
sailors” part although he knew, flat out knew and I don’t know where from about
what really goes on in isolated male society [again by publication policy maybe
“isolated female society” like on the isle
of Lesbos), aboard ships with cozy dark bunks and several watches to do
whatever had to be done with sore asses and sore mouths a cause for doctor
looks when on land), in prisons where the cells are small and the lights are
dim with the howl of someone, some fresh young boy getting his baptism, his
deflowering, and of course, honey to the bee what they call in England public
schools but here for some reason private school where half of the British
ruling class, half the literati got their own de-flowerings. What he didn’t know,
maybe couldn’t know although we spent some time down in P-town, excuse me,
Provincetown, the kingdom of those guys who are “light on their feet,” fags,
sissies (the site manager said he would let this go even though it was a close
call) where we drunk as skunks would bash a few for sport for looking at us
with those hungry ravenous eyes was that the whole expression was coded, was
some Jean Genet Our Lady of the Flowersreference to “dilly boys,” the guys who hung
around the darkened wharves, the low-light taverns frequented by home-bound
sailors looking for a change of pace, looking for fresh new faces once they had
been deflowered, once they had had their share of sore, asses, sore mouths,
damn, sore cocks. What he didn’t realize was that not only sailors were lusting
for a workout with dilly boys but those public- school graduates were as well,
were searching for some rough trade. Here is what nobody knew, nobody wanted to
know running the whole show, running those dilly boys through their paces was none
other that Sherlock Holmes, yeah, the so-called parlor pink detective who
couldn’t open a bottle of wine without a page of instructions and his honey,
his girlfriend if that is the right way to say it [today husband if
married-boyfriend if not but that is what Josh wrote back then so onward] Doc
Watson, not the famous blind or whatever you call guy who lost his sight late
bluegrass star but some stumblebum backwater quack. They ran the rackets, dope,
robberies, women, dilly boys, art heists, everything that ran through London
while the public relations firm they hired to cover their asses, ha, literally,
shilled the story about how they were true blue to king and country (to the
stately queens of England too-another coded reference) fighting the much maligned
and heterosexual Doc Moriarty who almost thwarted these bastards before they
killed him.
The rumor
was that the whole thing started, the whole Holmes-Watson criminal enterprise
which was protected by men in high places in government, business and society,
you know those fellow public-school boys who worked the political racket when
Doc Watson went to the beauty parlor to get a fresh do so he would look nice
for Sherlock when they went on vacation to Scotland, some islands off the
coast, and ran into a couple of pretty sailors just off HMS Pinafore or some
such ship and were getting their do’s to look pretty for the rough trade
running through the notorious Black Lantern tavern, public house, okay, near
the notorious Clapper wharves. Doc pressed a couple of their buttons, showed
them some opium he was in legal possession of and they were off to the tavern.
That is where to his delight Doc learned about dilly boys and about looking
“pretty” checked out some of the merchandise and came home to Holmes who was
reportedly frantic with the Doc’s genetic sore ass, sore mouth and sore cock.
Sherlock, intrigued, always intrigued I will say that for him after he calmed
down went with Doc to the Black Lantern, feasted on the boys, including those
two pretty sailors who escorted Doc to that location and the rest is history.
Fuck I have
been in that place, have been down the hellish parts of the row, maybe better
called the River Styx after old opium-eater Sam Coleridge started seeing
sunless seas and went off the deep end about it forgetting Wordsworth’s advice
to smoke that madness bong in freaking moderation. Typical junkie’s remorse,
lament, you pick the word but don’t give me some twelve step higher power
bullshit. Been down there by myself, alone, and with every kind of woman,
lately Frilly Jilly, like that moniker, she curls my toes, likes to swallow my
cum when she giving me a blowjob, says the stuff is filled with protein which
we don’t get enough of doing serious dope, serious speed which takes away the
hungers, food hungers anyway and so she will suck me dry, and it is okay with
me except once she tried to kiss me with a load in her mouth, wanted me to
taste my own cum, wanted to French kiss with that freaking mouth, I freaked
out. Jesus. I was just thinking that when we hung around the corner, hung
around Riverdale waiting for something to happen we would speculate, boredom I
guess, about who, which girls we knew, if they gave head, you know blowjobs
would they swallow or spit. Frankie Kelly, who left us a few days ago to head
back to Riverdale to check about his draft status and about how to get out of
the thing somehow what with the war raging, was the first guy to bring it up
and while we knew all about blowjobs we at first thought about the question it
seemed strange, seemed kind of esoteric and who gives a fuck but Frankie said
that if a girl spit that meant she didn’t like your cum, didn’t have any kinky
traits and so maybe was not going to go the distance. Like I say Jilly is a
swallower and when I mentioned that conversation she said girls, her girlfriends
anyway, talked about the same thing except since it concerned them more they
took it seriously and Jilly said the first time she gave a guy a blowjob back
in junior high school a couple of years ago when she started getting sexy thoughts
and wanted to do something about it, to experiment, she didn’t like it and spit
it out. The guy, older, went crazy when she did that. That is when she talked to
some girlfriends, the ones who were sexually active or wanted to be, one who
told her to swallow fast and it would be okay, which she did the next time with
the guy she still didn’t like it but got it down okay and so she has been a
swallower ever since. She said she only started to like it, to feel better about
taking it when she read last year about the protein and that made her thing of
it like a vitamin, a supplement and that was why she liked to suck a guy dry to
get as much protein as possible. (By the
way we never even considered that crazy joint swallow Jilly was into who said
she learned it from a college guy who was worried about losing his cum to the
bed or wherever they did it and she got hooked on doing it, did it with a girl
once when they were in a motel room with two guys and the other girl, not the
guys though, was interested. But these day Jilly was mostly about the protein,
was about swallowing the cum to keep her energy up, and about curling my toes).
Some women
really do like to take it on the wild side. Jilly does, has ever since we
picked her up on the Pacific Coast Highway around Carlsbad, maybe Oceanside
where the freaking Marines do their blow-up stuff. Likes to give blowjobs and
is good at it although since she is only sixteen and does not want to get “in
the family way” that is as far as she will go, maybe a sneak hand-job when we
are riding along on the bus but I am getting away from what I was thinking
about, about circuses, about Lilly Ann, about Madame LaRue ‘s daughter Lilly
Ann, who shilled for the Madame, brought in the customers for mother’s
fortune-telling racket (with Lilly Ann grabbingly wallets in the dark but I
didn’t know that until later, until she, Lilly Ann trusted me enough to believe
that I would not turn her in. Jesus, a snitch, no fucking way, excuse my English
if I haven’t said that, excuse me, before). Lilly Ann and mother, Madame came
to Riverdale with Jim Calhoun’s Mighty Midget Circus, that was how it was
billed on the posters and advertisements around town. Jim had been coming to
town and I had been threatening when things got tense at home to leave with the
operation once they folded up their tents and split, although I never did. That
tells you how tense things were at times in the house with wild woman mother
and four older brothers crowding me out. The year I am talking about was the
year I met Lilly Ann when I was sixteen, she said she was also sixteen but she
was really thirteen, going on fourteen she said when she told me the truth
after she told me about the wallet-snatching operations that provided the real
dough for her and the Madame (Lilly always called her Madame as did everybody
else including me).
That was the
year, not with her, that would come later, when I first had sex with a girl, a
girl from school who you would never think was into sex, had been since doing
since twelve when an older brother’s friend “broke her in” she called it when
she made me promise not to tell anybody or else she would tell her mother what
I had done and get me in serious trouble, was into moaning and groaning and who
would scream when she came, screamed right in my ear. Got all wet, sweated some
she moved her hips and stomach so much while she was in heat, while she was
getting ready to climax (which the first time she did it I didn’t realize that
women could do, couldn’t understand why she was so wet). In those days, funny
that was just a few years ago but since I have been on the West Coast, since I
have been “riding with the king” as Captain Crunch calls it, we, meaning all
the corner boys, Robert too were totally interested in getting blowjobs and
maybe regular sex, what some girl told me was called the missionary position
which she did not like, did not like the weight on top of her and liked to be
on top where she could move her hips frantically which was alright with me and
made me realize how square we were in high school with our little regular
missionary position lack of imagination, if that was available but most of us
agreed that a blowjob was easier to figure, easier to get, and less hassle than
figuring out how and where to “do the do” our expression for what we called
going all the way. I tried to get this girl to give me some head but she
balked, she balked as I put my cock near her mouth. Said that thing, my penis,
was nasty, she didn’t want it in her mouth. Had tasted some guy’s come after
giving him a hand-job and didn’t like the taste, hated it. So no sale. Some
young girls are funny you think like with Jilly they would be more worried
about getting pregnant than worried about the taste of cum in their mouths. I
wish I knew that protein line Jilly mentioned then maybe she would have gone
for that, she was a science whizz.
Lilly Ann
was actually easy to make, to get in the rack once I won her a doll at Skeets,
my favorite game at circuses and amusement parks. When I asked her for a
blowjob one afternoon down by the beach she put the towel over us and went to
work. Not as good as Jilly since she bared her teeth too much, not enough
tongue-lashingand stopped when I proved to take longer than
expected before she started up again but beforehand she had asked me if I liked
a girl to swallow or to spit out when she was done. I asked her which she
preferred, and she said she didn’t care-if it tasted good she would swallow, if
not spit it out. So girls are different in that regard. Lilly Ann was the first
girl though who said that if she liked a guy and his cum didn’t taste good and
he wanted her to swallow but she had spit it out the next time she would chew
gum or something to kill the taste. A girlfriend had told her that when she was
younger after some guy almost slugged her for spitting out. Liked to use bubble
gum she said so she could make bubbles afterwards and we laughed about that.
She sucked me dry said I tasted like maple syrup. We went together for the
three weeks the circus was in town and once again home life had me hankering to
go on the road when the circus left town, go with Lilly Ann and all the kid
stuff romance ideas attached to that. Then one day I went into their trailer
and there on the couch Lilly Ann was fucking Mr. Leonard, the city permit guy
who okayed Jim’s permit for the city grounds used by the circus. Seems Lilly
Ann was the graft for Leonard’s okay. Fuck. I ran out and maybe ran out of
naiveite. Never saw Lilly Ann again and lost my taste for circuses- for a
while.
I don’t even
want to talk about riot squads, coppers after all the hassles I, we have had
between the corner in Riverdale where the cops had seven eyes each on us
instead of checking out real crime and criminals and the few demonstrations
against the freaking Vietnam War we got knocked aroundin at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco
topped off by about seven stops of our home, of Captain Crunch’s cruising
yellow brick road bus looking not for dope, not for sanitary violations or
something stupid like that which would be the usual excuse to stop us although
our ace driver Chuck Cassady has everything under control but whether we have
underage girls, presumably girls, hidden away with mothers and fathers wondering
frantically where their wandering charges were and whether they have been
deflowered, nice word, the latter really of concern since they, those parents didn’t
want to have to send their young things to the mythical “Aunt Emma” if and when
they get pregnant by who knows who. That Aunt Emma thing code for sending the girl
away to someplace maybe never to be seen in town again to avoid the obvious stigma
of pregnancy not for the girl who after all was just doing what came naturally to
humans, having sexual feelings and doing something about it. As I write this
Frilly Jilly said if she was ever picked up when the cops stopped us she would
take them in back and give them the best blowjobs they ever had, would suck
them dry until it hurt. She said a girlfriend of her ’s, maybe the first one
who told her guys like it better overall when you swallow their cum, shows that
you are part of them the girlfriend said, told she had to do that once and
everything came out fine. Had made sure both cops were there even though she
felt funny with one cop watching so that she had them cornered if they tried to
take her in. One cop said sorry to bother her after. The cops didn’t know she
was only fourteen years old so she had something on them. Smart girl. Smart
girl Jilly too since she would use the same ruse although I hope she doesn’t
have to use it when I am around, or she is around me. I know it has to be done
but I am still smarting from Lilly Ann way back having to get out of tight spot
by fucking some guy’s brains out.
Jesus this
screed in turning into a sex story, amale fantasy sex story and not staying on the skids of what the bard was
getting to and then he lays this Cinderella meeting some charming prince, or
some sidewalk Lothario anyway and he gives us the whole thing in a short
expression, Cinderella although it could have been Snow White, could have been
the Fairie Queen from John Dryden or was it Pope, Alexander Pope, could, well,
could have been any fairy tale is easy which turns this whole section into
another free for all. Stick with me this Cinderella story is kind of cute, our
girl is working the hard life for some bitch mother and her sisters, half-
sisters I guess…
No, this screed
is getting too weird, getting again into another sex thing Cinderella, Snow
White whoever had to “do the do” to get out from under some horrible situation
by giving herself, by getting de-flowered one night to some prince, or a guy who claimed
to be a prince. We have been down this road before, so finis. Well not finis
since Frilly Jilly read what I had written and said it got her kind of horny,
got her thinking about “playing the flute” as she called it lately after one of
the young women we partied with a few days ago told her what she called it.
That girl also said that Jilly should, well you figure it out, figure out Desolation Row lyrics too