Jack Kerouac,
Interviewed by Ted Berrigan
Part One
The Paris
Review - The Art of Fiction No. 41
Toughts about
events in your own unchangeable way . . . Well, look, did you ever hear a guy
telling a long wild tale to a bunch of men in a bar and all are listening and
smiling, did you ever hear that guy stop to revise himself, go back to a
previous sentence to improve it, to defray its rhythmic thought impact. . . .
If he pauses to blow his nose, isn't he planning his next sentence? And when he
lets that next sentence loose, isn't it once and for all the way he wanted to
say it? Doesn't he depart from the thought of that sentence and, as Shakespeare
says, “forever holds his tongue” on the subject, since he's passed over it like
a part of a river that flows over a rock once and for all and never returns and
can never flow any other way in time? Incidentally, as for my bug against
periods, that was for the prose in October in the Railroad Earth, very experimental, intended to clack along all the way lThe Kerouacs
have no telephone. Ted Berrigan had contacted Kerouac some months earlier and
had persuaded him to do the interview. When he felt the time had come for their
meeting to take place, he simply showed up at the Kerouacs's house. Two
friends, poets Aram Saroyan and Duncan McNaughton, accompanied him. Kerouac
answered his ring; Berrigan quickly told him his name and the visit's purpose.
Kerouac welcomed the poets, but before he could show them in, his wife, a very
determined woman, seized him from behind and told the group to leave at once.
“Jack and I began talking simultaneously, saying 'Paris Review!' 'Interview!' etc.,” Berrigan recalls, “while Duncan and Aram began to
slink back toward the car. All seemed lost, but I kept talking in what I hoped
was a civilized, reasonable, calming, and friendly tone of voice, and soon Mrs.
Kerouac agreed to let us in for twenty minutes, on the condition that there be
no drinking.
“Once inside, as it became evident that we actually were in
pursuit of a serious purpose, Mrs. Kerouac became more friendly, and we were
able to commence the interview. It seems that people still show up constantly
at the Kerouacs's looking for the author of On the Road, and stay for days, drinking all the liquor and diverting Jack from his
serious occupations.
“As the evening progressed the atmosphere changed
considerably, and Mrs. Kerouac, Stella, proved a gracious and charming hostess.
The most amazing thing about Jack Kerouac is his magic voice, which sounds
exactly like his works. It is capable of the most astounding and disconcerting
changes in no time flat. It dictates everything, including this interview.
“After the interview, Kerouac, who had been sitting
throughout the interview in a President Kennedy-type rocker, moved over to a
big poppa chair and said, 'So you boys are poets, hey? Well, let's hear some of
your poetry.' We stayed for about an hour longer and Aram and I read some of
our things. Finally, he gave each of us a signed broadside of a recent poem of
his, and we left.”
INTERVIEWER
Could we put the footstool over here to put this on?
STELLA
Yes.
JACK KEROUAC
God, you're so inadequate there, Berrigan.
INTERVIEWER
Well, I'm no tape-recorder man, Jack. I'm just a big talker, like you.
OK, we're off.
KEROUAC
Okay? [Whistles.] Okay?
INTERVIEWER
Actually I'd like to start . . . The first book I ever read by you,
oddly enough, since most people first read On the Road . . . the first one I read was The Town and the City . . .
KEROUAC
Gee!
INTERVIEWER
I checked it out of the library . . .
KEROUAC
Gee! Did you read Doctor Sax? Tristessa?
INTERVIEWER
You better believe it. I even read Rimbaud. I have a copy of Visions of Cody that Ron Padgett bought in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
KEROUAC
Screw Ron Padgett! You know why? He started a little magazine called White Dove Review in Kansas City, was it? Tulsa? Oklahoma . . . yes. He wrote, “Start our
magazine off by sending us a great big poem.” So I sent him “The Thrashing
Doves.” And then I sent him another one and he rejected the second one because
his magazine was already started. That's to show you how punks try to make
their way by scratching down on a man's back. Aw, he's no poet. You know who's
a great poet? I know who the great poets are.
INTERVIEWER
Who?
KEROUAC
Let's see, is it . . . William Bissett of Vancouver. An Indian boy. Bill
Bissett, or Bissonnette.
SAROYAN
Let's talk about Jack Kerouac.
KEROUAC
He's not better than Bill Bissett, but he's very original.
INTERVIEWER
Why don't we begin with editors. How do you . . .
KEROUAC
OK. All my editors since Malcolm Cowley have had instructions to leave
my prose exactly as I wrote it. In the days of Malcolm Cowley, with On the Road and The
Dharma Bums, I had no power to stand
by my style for better or for worse. When Malcolm Cowley made endless revisions
and inserted thousands of needless commas like, say, “Cheyenne, Wyoming” (why
not just say “Cheyenne Wyoming” and let it go at that, for instance), why, I
spent five hundred dollars making the complete restitution of the Bums manuscript and got a bill from Viking Press called “Revisions.” Ha ho
ho. And so you asked about how do I work with an editor . . . well nowadays I
am just grateful to him for his assistance in proofreading the manuscript and
in discovering logical errors, such as dates, names of places. For instance, in
my last book I wrote Firth of Forth then looked it up, on the suggestion of my
editor, and found that I'd really sailed off the Firth of Clyde. Things like
that. Or I spelled Aleister Crowley “Alisteir,” or he discovered little
mistakes about the yardage in football games . . . and so forth. By not
revising what you've already written you simply give the reader the actual
workings of your mind during the writing itself: you confess your thouike a
steam engine pulling a one-hundred-car freight with a talky caboose at the end,
that was my way at the time and it still can be done if the thinking during the
swift writing is confessional and pure and all excited with the life of it. And
be sure of this, I spent my entire youth writing slowly with revisions and
endless rehashing speculation and deleting and got so I was writing one
sentence a day and the sentence had no FEELING. Goddamn it, FEELING is what I
like in art, not CRAFTINESS and the hiding of feelings.
INTERVIEWER
What encouraged you to use the “spontaneous” style of On the Road?
KEROUAC
I got the idea for the spontaneous style of On the Road from seeing how good old Neal Cassady wrote his letters to me, all first
person, fast, mad, confessional, completely serious, all detailed, with real
names in his case, however (being letters). I remembered also Goethe's
admonition, well Goethe's prophecy that the future literature of the West would
be confessional in nature; also Dostoyevsky prophesied as much and might have
started in on that if he'd lived long enough to do his projected masterwork, The Life of a Great Sinner. Cassady also began his early youthful writing with attempts at slow,
painstaking, and all-that-crap craft business, but got sick of it like I did,
seeing it wasn't getting out his guts and heart the way it felt coming out. But I got the flash from his style. It's a cruel lie for
those West Coast punks to say that I got the idea of On the Road from him. All his letters to me were about his younger days before I met
him, a child with his father, et cetera, and about his later teenage
experiences. The letter he sent me is erroneously reported to be a
thirteen-thousand-word letter . . . no, the thirteen-thousand-word piece was
his novel The
First Third, which he kept in his
possession. The letter, the main letter I mean, was forty thousand words long,
mind you, a whole short novel. It was the greatest piece of writing I ever saw,
better'n anybody in America, or at least enough to make Melville, Twain,
Dreiser, Wolfe, I dunno who, spin in their graves. Allen Ginsberg asked me to
lend him this vast letter so he could read it. He read it, then loaned it to a
guy called Gerd Stern who lived on a houseboat in Sausalito, California, in
1955, and this fellow lost the letter: overboard I presume. Neal and I called
it, for convenience, the Joan Anderson Letter . . . all about a Christmas
weekend in the pool halls, hotel rooms and jails of Denver, with hilarious
events throughout and tragic too, even a drawing of a window, with measurements
to make the reader understand, all that. Now listen: this letter would have
been printed under Neal's copyright, if we could find it, but as you know, it
was my property as a letter to me, so Allen shouldn't have been so careless
with it, nor the guy on the houseboat. If we can unearth this entire
forty-thousand-word letter Neal shall be justified. We also did so much fast
talking between the two of us, on tape recorders, way back in 1952, and
listened to them so much, we both got the secret of LINGO in telling a tale and
figured that was the only way to express the speed and tension and ecstatic
tomfoolery of the age . . . Is that enough?
INTERVIEWER
How do you think this style has changed since On the Road?
KEROUAC
What style? Oh, the style of On the Road. Well as I
say, Cowley riddled the original style of the manuscript there, without my power
to complain, and since then my books are all published as written, as I say,
and the style has varied from the highly experimental speed-writing of Railroad Earth to the ingrown toenail packed mystical style of Tristessa, theNotes from
Underground (by Dostoyevsky) confessional madness of The Subterraneans, the perfection of the three as one in Big Sur, I'd say, which tells a plain tale in a smooth buttery literate run, to Satori in Paris, which is really the first book I wrote with drink at my side (cognac
and malt liquor) . . . and not to overlook Book of Dreams, the style of a person half-awake from sleep and ripping it out in
pencil by the bed . . . yes, pencil . . . what a job! Bleary eyes, insaned mind
bemused and mystified by sleep, details that pop out even as you write them you
don't know what they mean, till you wake up, have coffee, look at it, and see
the logic of dreams in dream language itself, see? . . . And finally I decided
in my tired middle age to slow down and did Vanity of Duluoz in a more moderate style so that, having been so esoteric all these
years, some earlier readers would come back and see what ten years had done to
my life and thinking . . . which is after all the only thing I've got to offer,
the true story of what I saw and how I saw it.
INTERVIEWER
You dictated sections of Visions of Cody. Have you used
this method since?
KEROUAC
I didn't dictate sections of Visions of Cody. I typed up a
segment of taped conversation with Neal Cassady, or Cody, talking about his
early adventures in LA. It's four chapters. I haven't used this method since;
it really doesn't come out right, well, with Neal and with myself, when all
written down and with all the ahs and the ohs and the ahums and the fearful fact that the damn thing is turning and you're forced not to waste electricity or tape . . . Then again, I don't know, I might
have to resort to that eventually; I'm getting tired and going blind. This
question stumps me. At any rate, everybody's doing it, I hear, but I'm still
scribbling. McLuhan says we're getting more oral so I guess we'll all learn to
talk into the machine better and better.
INTERVIEWER
What is that state of “Yeatsian semi-trance” which provides the ideal
atmosphere for spontaneous writing?
KEROUAC
Well, there it is, how can you be in a trance with your mouth yapping
away . . . writing at least is a silent meditation even though you're going a
hundred miles an hour. Remember that scene in La Dolce Vita where the old priest is mad because a mob of maniacs has shown up to see
the tree where the kids saw the Virgin Mary? He says, “Visions are not
available in all this frenetic foolishness and yelling and pushing; visions are
only obtainable in silence and meditation.” Thar. Yup.
INTERVIEWER
You have said that haiku is not written spontaneously but is reworked
and revised. Is this true of all your poetry? Why must the method for writing
poetry differ from that of prose?
KEROUAC
No, first; haiku is best reworked and revised. I know, I tried. It has
to be completely economical, no foliage and flowers and language rhythm, it has
to be a simple little picture in three little lines. At least that's the way
the old masters did it, spending months on three little lines and coming up,
say, with:
In the abandoned boat,
The hail
Bounces about.
That's Shiki. But as for my regular English verse, I knocked it off fast
like the prose, using, get this, the size of the notebook page for the form and
length of the poem, just as a musician has to get out, a jazz musician, his
statement within a certain number of bars, within one chorus, which spills over
into the next, but he has to stop where the chorus pagestops. And finally,
too, in poetry you can be completely free to say anything you want, you don't
have to tell a story, you can use secret puns, that's why I always say, when
writing prose, “No time for poetry now, get your plain tale.”
[Drinks are
served.]
INTERVIEWER
How do you write haiku?
KEROUAC
Haiku? You want to hear haiku? You see you got to compress into three
short lines a great big story. First you start with a haiku situation—so you
see a leaf, as I told her the other night, falling on the back of a sparrow
during a great big October wind storm. A big leaf falls on the back of a little
sparrow. How you going to compress that into three lines? Now in Japanese you
got to compress it into seventeen syllables. We don't have to do that in
American—or English—because we don't have the same syllabic bullshit that your
Japanese language has. So you say: “Little sparrow”—you don't have to say little—everybody knows a sparrow is little because they fall so you say”
Sparrow
with big leaf on its back—
windstorm
No good, don't work, I reject it.
A little sparrow
when an autumn leaf suddenly sticks to its back
from the wind.
Hah, that does it. No, it's a little bit too long. See? It's already a
little bit too long, Berrigan, you know what I mean?
INTERVIEWER
Seems like there's an extra word or something, like when. How about leaving out when? Say:
A sparrow
an autumn leaf suddenly sticks to its back—
from the wind!
KEROUAC
Hey, that's all right. I think when was the extra
word. You got the right idea there, O'Hara! “A sparrow, an autumn leaf
suddenly”—we don't have to say suddenly do we?
A sparrow
an autumn leaf sticks to its back—
from the wind!
[Kerouac writes
final version into a spiral notebook.]
INTERVIEWER
Suddenly is absolutely
the kind of word we don't need there. When you publish that will you give me a
footnote saying you asked me a couple of questions?
KEROUAC
[writes] Berrigan noticed. Right?
INTERVIEWER
Do you write poetry very much? Do you write other poetry besides haiku?
KEROUAC
It's hard to write haiku. I write long silly Indian poems. You want to
hear my long silly Indian poem?
INTERVIEWER
What kind of Indian?
KEROUAC
Iroquois. As you know from looking at me. [Reads from notebook.]
On the lawn on the way to the store
forty-four years old for the neighbors to hear
hey, looka, Ma I hurt myself. Especially
with that squirt.
What's that mean?
INTERVIEWER
Say it again.
KEROUAC
Hey, looka, Ma, I hurt myself, while on the way to the store I hurt
myself I fell on the lawn I yell to my mother hey looka, Ma, I hurt myself. I
add, especially with that squirt.
INTERVIEWER
You fell over a sprinkler?
KEROUAC
No, my father's squirt into my Ma.
INTERVIEWER
From that distance?
KEROUAC
Oh, I quit. No, I know you wouldn't get that one. I had to explain it. [Opens notebook again and reads.]
Goy means joy.
INTERVIEWER
Send that one to Ginsberg.
KEROUAC
[Reads.]
Happy people so called are hypocrites—it means
the happiness wavelength can't work without
necessary deceit, without certain scheming and lies
and
hiding. Hypocrisy and deceit, no Indians. No
smiling.
INTERVIEWER
No Indians?
KEROUAC
The reason you really have a hidden hostility towards me, Berrigan, is
because of the French and Indian War.
INTERVIEWER
That could be.
SAROYAN
I saw a football picture of you in the cellar of Horace Mann. You were
pretty fat in those days.
STELLA
Tuffy! Here Tuffy! Come on, kitty . . .
KEROUAC
Stella, let's have another bottle or two. Yeah, I'm going to murder
everybody if they let me go. I did. Hot fudge sundaes! Boom! I used to have two
or three hot fudge sundaes before every game. Lou Little . . .
INTERVIEWER
He was your coach at Columbia?
KEROUAC
Lou Little was my coach at Columbia. My father went up to him and said,
“You sneaky long-nosed finagler . . .” He says, “Why don't you let my son, Ti
Jean, Jack, start in the Army game so he can get back at his great enemy from
Lowell?” And Lou Little says, “Because he's not ready.” “Who says he's not
ready?” “I say he's not ready.” My father says, “Why you long nose banana nose
big crook, get out of my sight!” And he comes stomping out of the office
smoking a big cigar. “Come out of here Jack, let's get out of here.” So we left
Columbia together. And also when I was in the United States Navy during the
war—1942—right in front of the admirals, he walked in and says, “Jack, you are
right! The Germans should not be our enemies. They should be our allies, as it
will be proven in time.” And the admirals were all there with their mouths
open, and my father would take no shit from nobody—my father didn't have
nothing but a big belly about this big [gestures with arms out in front of him] and he would go POOM! [Kerouac gets up and demonstrates, by puffing his belly out in front of
him with explosive force and saying “POOM!”] One time he was walking down the street with my mother, arm in arm,
down the Lower East Side. In the old days, you know, the 1940s. And here comes
a whole bunch of rabbis walking arm in arm . . . tee-dah tee-dah tee-dah . . .
and they wouldn't part for this Christian man and his wife. So my father went
POOM! And he knocked a rabbi right in the gutter. Then he took my mother and
walked on through.
Now, if you don't like that, Berrigan, that's the history of my family.
They don't take no shit from nobody. In due time I ain't going to take no shit
from nobody. You can record that.
Is this my wine?
INTERVIEWER
Was The
Town and the City written under
spontaneous composition principles?
KEROUAC
Some of it, sire. I also wrote another version that's hidden under the
floorboards, with Burroughs.
INTERVIEWER
Yes, I've heard rumors of that book. Everybody wants to get at that
book.
KEROUAC
It's called And
the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks. The hippos. Because Burroughs and I were sitting in a bar one night
and we heard a newscaster saying “ . . . and so the Egyptians attacked blah
blah . . . and meanwhile there was a great fire in the zoo in London and the
fire raced across the fields and the hippos were boiled in their tanks!
Goodnight everyone!” That's Bill, he noticed that. Because he notices them kind
of things.
INTERVIEWER
You really did type up his Naked Lunch manuscript for
him in Tangier?
KEROUAC
No . . . the first part. The first two chapters. I went to bed, and I
had nightmares . . . of great long bolognas coming out of my mouth. I had
nightmares typing up that manuscript . . . I said, “Bill!” He said, “Keep
typing it.” He said, “I bought you a goddamn kerosene stove here in North
Africa, you know.” Among the Arabs . . . it's hard to get a kerosene stove. I'd
light up the kerosene stove, and take some bedding and a little pot, or kef as
we called it there . . . or maybe sometimes hashish . . . there, by the way,
it's legal . . . and I'd go toke toke toke toke and when I went to bed at
night, these things kept coming out of my mouth. So finally these other guys
showed up like Alan Ansen and Allen Ginsberg, and they spoiled the whole
manuscript because they didn't type it up the way he wrote it.
INTERVIEWER
Grove Press has been issuing his Olympia Press books with lots of
changes and things added.
KEROUAC
Well, in my opinion Burroughs hasn't given us anything that would
interest our breaking hearts since he wrote like he did in Naked Lunch. Now all he does is that “breakup” stuff; it's called . . . where you
write a page of prose, you write another page of prose . . . then you fold it
over and you cut it up and you put it together . . . and shit like that . . .
INTERVIEWER
What about Junky, though?
KEROUAC
It's a classic. It's better than Hemingway—it's just like Hemingway but
even a little better too. It says: “Danny comes into my pad one night and says,
‘Hey, Bill, can I borrow your sap.’” Your sap—do you know what a sap is?
SAROYAN
A blackjack?
KEROUAC
It's a blackjack. Bill says, “I pulled out my underneath drawer, and
underneath some nice shirts I pulled out my blackjack. I gave it to Danny and
said, ‘Now don't lose it, Danny’—Danny says, ‘Don't worry I won't lose it.’ He
goes off and loses it.”
Sap . . . blackjack . . . that's me. Sap . . . blackjack.
INTERVIEWER
That's a haiku: Sap, blackjack, that's me. You better write that down.
KEROUAC
No.
INTERVIEWER
Maybe I'll write that down. Do you mind if I use that one?
KEROUAC
Up your ass with Mobil gas!
INTERVIEWER
You don't believe in collaborations? Have you ever done any
collaborations, other than with publishers?
KEROUAC
I did a couple of collaborations in bed with Bill Cannastra in lofts.
With blondes.
INTERVIEWER
Was he the guy that tried to climb off the subway train at Astor Place,
in Holmes's Go?
KEROUAC
Yes. Yeah, well he says, “Let's take all our clothes off and run around
the block” . . . It was raining you know. Sixteenth Street off Seventh Avenue.
I said, “Well, I'll keep my shorts on”—he says, “No, no shorts.” I said, “I'm
going to keep my shorts on.” He said, “All right, but I'm not going to wear
mine.” And we trot-trot-trot-trot down the block. Sixteenth to Seventeenth . .
. and we come back and run up the stairs—nobody saw us.
INTERVIEWER
What time of day?
KEROUAC
But he was absolutely naked . . . about three or four A.M. It rained.
And everybody was there. He was dancing on broken glass and playing Bach. Bill
was the guy who used to teeter off his roof—six flights up, you know? He'd go,
“You want me to fall?” We'd say, “No, Bill, no.” He was an Italian. Italians
are wild, you know.
INTERVIEWER
Did he write? What did he do?
KEROUAC
He says, “Jack, come with me and look down through this peephole.” We
looked down through the peephole, we saw a lot of things . . . into his toilet.
I said, “I'm not interested in that, Bill.” He said, “You're not
interested in anything.” Auden would come the next day, the next afternoon, for
cocktails. Maybe with Chester Kallman. Tennessee Williams.
INTERVIEWER
Was Neal Cassady around in those days? Did you already know Neal Cassady
when you were involved with Bill Cannastra?
KEROUAC
Oh yes, yes, ahem . . . he had a great big pack of pot. He always was a
pot happy man.
INTERVIEWER
Why do you think Neal doesn't write?
KEROUAC
He has written . . . beautifully! He has written better than I have.
Neal's a very funny guy. He's a real Californian. We had more fun than five
thousand Socony Gasoline Station attendants can have. In my opinion he's the most
intelligent man I've ever met in my life. Neal Cassady. He's a Jesuit by the
way. He used to sing in the choir. He was a choirboy in the Catholic churches
of Denver. And he taught me everything that I now do believe about anything
that there may be to be believed about divinity.
INTERVIEWER
About Edgar Cayce?
KEROUAC
No, before he found out about Edgar Cayce he told me all these things in
the section of the life he led when he was on the road with me—he said, “We
know God, don't we Jack?” I said, “Yessir boy.” He said, “Don't we know that
nothing's going to happen wrong?” “Yessir.” “And we're going to go on and on .
. . and hmmmmm ja-bmmmmmmm . . .” He was perfect. And he's always perfect.
Every time he comes to see me I can't get a word in edgewise.
INTERVIEWER
You wrote about Neal playing football in Visions of Cody.
KEROUAC
Yes, he was a very good football player. He picked up two beatniks that
time in blue jeans in North Beach, Frisco. He said, “I got to go, bang bang, do
I got to go?” He's working on the railroad . . . had his watch out . . .
“Two-fifteen, boy I got to be there by two-twenty. I tell you boys drive me
over down there so I be on time with my train . . . So I can get my train on
down to”—what's the name of that place—San Jose? They say, “Sure kid” and Neal
says, “Here's the pot.” So—“We maybe look like great beatniks with great beards
. . . but we are cops. And we are arresting you.”
So, a guy went to the jailhouse and interviewed him from the New York Post and he said, “Tell that Kerouac if he still believes in me to send me a
typewriter.” So I sent Allen Ginsberg one hundred dollars to get a typewriter
for Neal. And Neal got the typewriter. And he wrote notes on it, but they
wouldn't let him take the notes out. I don't know where the typewriter is.
Genet wrote all of Our
Lady of the Flowers in the
shithouse . . . the jailhouse. There's a great writer, Jean Genet. He kept
writing and kept writing until he got to a point where he was going to come by
writing about it . . . until he came into his bed—in the can. The French can.
The French jail. Prison. And that was the end of the chapter. Every chapter is
Genet coming off. Which I must admit Sartre noticed.
INTERVIEWER
You think that's a different kind of spontaneous writing?
KEROUAC
Well, I could go to jail and I could write every night a chapter about
Magee, Magoo, and Molly. It's beautiful. Genet is really the most honest writer
we've had since Kerouac and Burroughs. But he came before us. He's older. Well,
he's the same age as Burroughs. But I don't think I've been dishonest. Man,
I've had a good time! God, man, I rode around this country free as a bee. But
Genet is a very tragic and beautiful writer. And I give them the crown. And the
laurel wreath. I don't give the laurel wreath to Richard Wilbur! Or Robert Lowell. Give it to Jean Genet and William Seward Burroughs. And to Allen Ginsberg and to Gregory Corso, especially.
INTERVIEWER
Jack, how about Peter Orlovsky's writings. Do you like Peter's things?
KEROUAC
Peter Orlovsky is an idiot!! He's a Russian idiot. Not even Russian,
he's Polish.
INTERVIEWER
He's written some fine poems.
KEROUAC
Oh yeah. My . . . what poems?
INTERVIEWER
He has a beautiful poem called “Second Poem.”
KEROUAC
“My brother pisses in the bed . . . and I go in the subway and I see two
people kissing . . .”
INTERVIEWER
No, the poem that says “it's more creative to paint the floor than to
sweep it.”
KEROUAC
That's a lot of shit! That is the kind of poetry that was written
by another Polish idiot who was a Polish nut called Apollinaire. Apollinaire is
not his real name, you know.
There are some fellows in San Francisco that told me that Peter was an
idiot. But I like idiots, and I enjoy his poetry. Think about that, Berrigan.
But for my taste, it's Gregory.
Give me one of those.
INTERVIEWER
One of these pills?
KEROUAC
Yeah. What are they? Forked clarinets?
INTERVIEWER
They're called Obetrol. Neal is the one that told me about them.
KEROUAC
Overtones?
INTERVIEWER
Overtones? No, overcoats.
SAROYAN
What was that you said . . . at the back of the Grove anthology . . .
that you let the line go a little longer to fill it up with secret images that
come at the end of the sentence.
KEROUAC
He's a real Armenian! Sediment. Delta. Mud. It's where you start a poem
. . .
As I was walking down the street one day
I saw a lake where people were cutting off my rear,
17,000 priests singing like George Burns
and then you go on . . .
And I'm making jokes about me
and breaking my bones in the earth
and here I am the great John Armenian
coming back to earth
now you remember where you were in the beginning and you say . . .
Ahaha! Tatatatadooda . . . Screw Turkey!
See? You remembered the line at the end . . . you lose your mind in the
middle.
SAROYAN
Right.
KEROUAC
That applies to prose as well as poetry.
INTERVIEWER
But in prose you are telling a story . . .
KEROUAC
In prose you make the paragraph. Every paragraph is a poem.
INTERVIEWER
Is that how you write a paragraph?
KEROUAC
When I was running downtown there, and I was going to do this, and I was
laying there, with that girl there, and a guy took out his scissors and I took
him inside there, he showed me some dirty pictures. And I went out and fell
downstairs with the potato bags.
INTERVIEWER
Did you ever like Gertrude Stein's work?
KEROUAC
Never interested me too much. I liked “Melanctha” a little bit.
I should really go to school and teach these kids. I could make two
thousand bucks a week. You can't learn these things. You know why? Because you
have to be born with tragic fathers.
INTERVIEWER
You can only do that if you are born in New England.
KEROUAC
Incidentally, my father said your father wasn't tragic.
SAROYAN
I don't think my father is tragic.
KEROUAC
My father said that Saroyan . . . William Saroyan ain't tragic at all .
. . he's fulla shit. And I had a big argument with him. The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze is pretty tragic, I would say.
SAROYAN
He was just a young man then, you know.
KEROUAC
Yeah, but he was hungry, and he was on Times Square. Flying. A young man
on the flying trapeze. That was a beautiful story. It killed me when I was a
kid.
INTERVIEWER
Do you remember a story by William Saroyan about the Indian who came to
town and bought a car and got the little kid to drive it for him?
STELLA
A Cadillac.
KEROUAC
What town was that?
SAROYAN
Fresno. That was Fresno.
KEROUAC
Well, you remember the night I was taking a big nap and you came up
outside my window on a white horse . . .
SAROYAN
“The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse.”
KEROUAC
And I looked out the window and said, “What is this?” You said, “My name
is Aram. And I'm on a white horse.”
SAROYAN
Mourad.
KEROUAC
“My name is Mourad,” excuse me. No, my name is . . . I was Aram, you
were Mourad. You said, “Wake up!” I didn't want to wake up. I wanted to sleep. My Name Is Aram is the name of the book. You stole a white horse from a farmer and you
woke up me, Aram, to go riding with you.
SAROYAN
Mourad was the crazy one who stole the horse.
KEROUAC
Hey, what's that you gave me there?
INTERVIEWER
Obetrol.
KEROUAC
Oh, obies.
INTERVIEWER
What about jazz and bop as influences rather than . . . Saroyan,
Hemingway, and Wolfe?
KEROUAC
Yes, jazz and bop, in the sense of a, say, a tenor man drawing a breath
and blowing a phrase on his saxophone, till he runs out of breath, and when he
does, his sentence, his statement's been made . . . That's how I therefore
separate my sentences, as breath separations of the mind . . . I formulated the
theory of breath as measure, in prose and verse, never mind what Olson, Charles
Olson says, I formulated that theory in 1953 at the request of Burroughs and
Ginsberg. Then there's the raciness and freedom and humor of jazz instead of
all that dreary analysis and things like “James entered the room, and lit a
cigarette. He thought Jane might have thought this too vague a gesture . . .”
You know the stuff. As for Saroyan, yes I loved him as a teenager, he really
got me out of the nineteenth-century rut I was trying to study, not only with
his funny tone but also with his neat Armenian poetic—I don't know what . . .
he just got me . . . Hemingway was fascinating, the pearls of words on a white
page giving you an exact picture . . . but Wolfe was a torrent of American
heaven and hell that opened my eyes to America as a subject in itself.
INTERVIEWER
How about the movies?
KEROUAC
Yes, we've all been influenced by movies. Malcolm Cowley incidentally
mentioned this many times. He's very perceptive sometimes: he mentioned that Doctor Sax continually mentions urine, and quite naturally it does because I had no
other place to write it but on a closed toilet seat in a little tile toilet in
Mexico City so as to get away from the guests inside the apartment. There,
incidentally, is a style truly hallucinated, as I wrote it all on pot. No pun
intended. Ho ho.
INTERVIEWER
How has Zen influenced your work?
KEROUAC
What's really influenced my work is the Mahayana Buddhism, the original
Buddhism of Gautama ´Sàkyamuni, the Buddha himself, of the India of old . . .
Zen is what's left of his Buddhism, or Bodhi, after its passing into China and
then into Japan. The part of Zen that's influenced my writing is the Zen
contained in the haiku, like I said, the three-line, seventeen-syllable poems
written hundreds of years ago by guys like Basho[WITH FLAT LINE ON TOP
PLEASE!!], Issa, Shiki, and there've been recent masters. A sentence that's
short and sweet with a sudden jump of thought in it is a kind of haiku, and
there's a lot of freedom and fun in surprising yourself with that, let the mind
willy-nilly jump from the branch to the bird. But my serious Buddhism, that of
ancient India, has influenced that part in my writing that you might call
religious, or fervent, or pious, almost as much as Catholicism has. Original
Buddhism referred to continual conscious compassion, brotherhood, the dana paramita(meaning the perfection of charity), don't step on the bug, all that,
humility, mendicancy, the sweet sorrowful face of the Buddha (who was of Aryan
origin by the way, I mean of Persian warrior caste, and not Oriental as
pictured) . . . in original Buddhism no young kid coming to a monastery was
warned that “Here we bury them alive.” He was simply given soft encouragement
to meditate and be kind. The beginning of Zen was when Buddha, however,
assembled all the monks together to announce a sermon and choose the first
patriarch of the Mahayana church: instead of speaking, he simply held up a
flower. Everybody was flabbergasted except Ka´syapiya [FLAT THINGIES OVER FIRST
A AND I], who smiled. Kásyapiya [DITTO!!] was appointed the first patriarch. This
idea appealed to the Chinese, like the sixth patriarch Hui-Neng who said, “From
the beginning nothing ever was,” and wanted to tear up the records of Buddha's
sayings as kept in the sutras; sutras are “threads of discourse.” In a way,
then, Zen is a gentle but goofy form of heresy, though there must be some real
kindly old monks somewhere and we've heard about the nutty ones. I haven't been
to Japan. Your Maha Roshi Yoshi is simply a disciple of all this and not the
founder of anything new at all, of course. On The Johnny Carson Show he didn't
even mention Buddha's name. Maybe his Buddha is Mia.
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