Jeez, Jack, some rich cat bought that great long Wall-of-China scroll of yours for two-and-a-half million bucks. But back then in 51 nobody wanted the thing. Well, okay, there were a couple of cats at publishing companies who wanted it, butthe nerve!they wanted to edit it. Make it into paragraphs, divide it up into chapters. Your baby, Jack. They wanted to slice up Big Bop Prosody Baby. Aw, they just didnt dig what you were into, Jack, King Ptolemy of the hallucinated brain-jangle geography. You, who were gone into the Holy Night in V-8 vertigo, pushing the speed limit of thought-per-second interiority in the plush interior of your automindmobile, that chrome-plated, shark-finned prairie schooner in search of a ghostly Moby Dick. How could they ever dig the onward-rushing word-blow that was the love-of-everything-in-itself in the pure Nowness of the moment: "Oh, smell the people," yelled Dean with his face out the window, sniffing. "Ah! God! Life!" And, still, there was that endless need of the brain, the wanting, wanting to get everything in and then the high, baby, where where where the the the the words words words swing swing swing in their syntactic orbits, man, like whole self-remembering worlds. The world-word thingI know you dug that, man, the jewel-eye center of the holy word, like an archaeology of the mind itself. Some days you can look into a word and fall all the way way way down to some bronze-age maniac watching fire dance in the wind and mumbling a little poem into existence that is that word.
Dher-3 To drone, murmur, buzz. 1. Germanic *duran- in Old English dore, fly, bumblebee. draen, male honeybee, drone. 2. Greek threnos, dirge, lament, threnody.
The word as poem. And your novel as all the unwritten poems that spool out the mysterious lives of roller-skating waitresses and all-night gas station attendants in the white light of highway signs. And all the vastness and moment-to-moment, thought-to-thought, interior brain-child-chant had to fit into that one word: AMERICA. Thats why it had to be a scrollit was a map of the expectations of the New World itself, what had happened to all those mid-Atlantic longings and everything that was lost in Americathe Sioux and the Blackfeet and the Buffalo and the crazed courriers du bois paddling through a mad dream of delirious vegetation and annihilating snow. All that America could have been through some malign enchantment had turned into the highway, the Holy Road. The only thing to do was to go. Get hip to this kinda trip, get your kicks on Route 66. CUE Track 2, Englands Newest Hitmakers, goes something like this: "Well, if you ever plan to motor west, the tracks aint my way, thats the highway, thats the best
it winds from Chicago to L.A., more than 2,000 miles all the way
." Nature magic of the buffalo-grazing endless plains, of 1,000-year-old redwoods, fantastically transformed into neon and honky-tonks, as if in the process America had turned itself inside out and now you could see its micro-thoughts pulsing, flashing, blinking, and luring you in like fluorescent Sirens of the Night. I mean, man, whither goest thou? Whither goest thou, America, in thy shiny car at night? And you and Cassady, the true "hallucinated Indians of the New Frontier" driving through it like Ishmael and Captain Ahab. And the whale? The whale is us, baby. The whale is a 49 Hudson, manprobably stolen. Probably? Cmon, Jack, get real, wheres Neal gonna come up with the bread for a new short, man? Put your life in crazy benzy-driven Dean Moriartys hands. Whats your road, man?holyboy road, madman road, rainbow road, guppy road. Its an anywhere road for anybody anyhow. Thats the fictional Cassady (on the scroll), but the real Neal was just as out there: We should realize what it would mean to us to UNDERSTAND that were REALLY not worrying about ANYTHING. This was before the fuzz got hip that cats who talk in capital letters and chicks who rake lizards off dead trees ought to be investigated. And driving on and onJack (who never liked to get nekkid in public) throwing it all to the winds and sitting there in the front seat with all the three of themLuAnne in the middle, between themwith no clothes on, the wind rushing through the rolled-down windows and truck drivers cutting across the white line as they look down, pop-eyed, on the children of the new Eden. Finally, they get to the edge of the world: "No more land!" Dean yelled, "We cant go any further cause there aint no more land!" And once you run out of road, theres only one place to go: Xanadu, baby, where Alph the sacred word-river runs through caverns measureless to man, down to a sunless sea. And thats the reason, O, my brothers and sisters, for the long and winding scroll. I looked up out of the dark swirl of my mind and I knew I was on a bed eight thousand feet above sea level, on a roof of the world, and I knew that I had lived a whole life and many others in the poor atomistic husk of my flesh, and I had all the dreams. The yearningness of anyone who hearsin the soundtrack spinning endlessly in their headthe fitful voice of what Kerouac called that inscrutable future Americans are always longing and longing for.
[Jack Kerouac, On the Road; Steven Watson, The Birth of the Beat Generation; Victor-Lévy Beaulieu, Jack Kerouac: a chicken essay]