did; I was like a little child, I guess; I couldn’t believe it was
real. There were candles and music but not just candles, the
candleholders were so beautiful, silver, crafted, antique, old,
so old, I thought they must have come right from Jerusalem.
There were about twenty people altogether. The men were
mostly painters, mostly famous, pretty old. They talked and
told jokes. The girls were painters too but they didn’t say
much except for one or two who talked sometimes and they
were real young, mostly. There was a man and a girl and a
man and a girl all around the table. There was all these wines
and all these famous men asking you if you wanted more. Y ou
had the feeling you could ask for anything and these great
men, one o f them or all o f them, would turn heaven and earth
to get it for you. I was shy, I didn’t know what to say; I
certainly wasn’t no great artist
yet
and I wanted to keep my
dreams private in my heart. I said I was writing stories. I said I
was against the War. The men said, one by one, that you
couldn’t be political and an artist at the same time but they
didn’t argue or get mad at me; it was more like how you would
correct a child who had made an embarrassing mistake. One
o f them took me aside and asked me if I remembered him. He
looked so familiar, as if I should reach out and touch his face. I
said hadn’t we seen a movie together once. He said we had
made love and I was on mescaline and hadn’t I liked it and
didn’t I remember him. He was real nice about it and I said oh
yes, o f course, and it was nice, and there were a lot o f colors.
He didn’t seem to get mad. I smiled all night, because I was
nearly awed. The men had this vitality, they were sort o f
glowing. I never knew such a thing could happen. Y ou
listened to them, because they might say something about art.
One talked to me about death. He was a real famous painter.
He said that both him and me were artists. He said artists were
the only people who faced death without lying. He said that
was the reason to make love— because you had looked death in
the face and then you defied it. He said the others didn’t
understand that but he did and I did and so would I come with
him. And I laughed. I didn’t go with him but I laughed, he
made me happy, I laughed, I felt it was such beautiful bullshit
and I laughed. I thought it was a real nice thing for him to say.
It was a new year. I was drinking champagne. I w asn’t alone. I
wasn’t outside. I was safe. It was so much— beauty and life and
gracious ease; it was so surprising, so completely wonderful
and new; it was glittering and sparkling, it was small and
warm, it was new and scary and exciting and real fine. I started
having this dream over and over. It was N ew Y ork, streets I
knew, usually down in the Village, around Washington
Square, sometimes on Fifth Avenue above the Square. It was
very dark. The dark was almost a person, a character in the
dream. The dark had a kind o f depth, almost a smell, and it
was scary and dense and it was over everything, you almost
couldn’t see anything through it. The dream was somewhere
in the Village, sometimes near those big impersonal buildings
on Fifth Avenue, but even i f it’s deeper in the Village the
buildings are stone, big, impersonal, not the town houses or
brownstones o f the Village, but the impersonal Fifth Avenue
buildings, a cold rich city made o f cold stone. Som ehow I go
into one and it opens into this huge feast, this giant party in this
giant ballroom, physically it’s almost underground as if you
are going down inside the ground but there is this grand
ballroom and the women have gow ns and jew els and the men
are shiny and pretty in black suits and ruffled silk shirts but no
one makes me leave, at first I’m afraid but no one makes me
leave, there’s lots o f noise and there’s music and there’s food,
all sorts o f weird kinds o f food, cocktail food and real food and
drinks and it’s warm and friendly and in the dream I say yes,
I’ve been here before, it’s waiting, it’s always here, it’s just part
o f N ew Y ork , you don’t have to ever be afraid, hidden aw ay
there’s always something like this, you ju st have to find it, and
it fades, the dream fades, and I wake up feeling flushed and
tired and happy and I think it’s out there if only I can
remember where it is and it’s not until I’m out on the streets
that I understand I just dreamed it, I wasn’t really there, not
just last night but ever, but still I think N ew Y ork is full o f
such places, only I don’t know where they are. But after N ew
Year it just was colder and harder; there’s not a lot o f magic in
the world, no beautiful fairy godmother to wave her wand so
you can stop sifting through ashes and go to the ball. I slept
outside the kitchen in m y old friend’s apartment; I wrote
stories, slow, real slow, over and over, a sentence again and
again, I did peace stuff against the War, I got food from bars
mostly. Y ou go during happy hour and you only need one
drink. Y ou can get a man to get it for you or if you have the
change you can do it and then there’s warm food and you can
eat; they make it real fatty usually but it’s good, heavy and
warm and they bring out more and more until happy hour’s
over. I met the actor and his wife and she took me everywhere,
all around. Sometime I moved into the loony’s room with the
carnivorous plants and I wrote stories, slow, real slow, word
by word, then starting over. I had nothing and I was nothing
and I couldn’t tell no one how I was hurt from being married.
And I kept drinking with the painters. I liked the noisy bars
and the people all excited with drinking and art and all the love
affairs going on all around, with all the torment, because it
wasn’t m y torment, it didn’t come near m y torment. It was
distracting, a kind o f static that interrupted the pain I was
carrying. I got the peace group to give me seventy-five dollars
a week and I worked every morning for them, making phone
calls, writing leaflets, mimeographing, typing, doing shit. I
said I was a writer i f someone asked. I worked on m y stories,
slow; I stayed alive as best I could; I waited through long
nights, I waited. N o w it’s bitter cold; a bitter cold night;
unusual in N ew Y ork; with the temperature under zero; with
the wind blowing about fifteen miles an hour, trying to kill
you, cutting you in half and then in half again, you can’t
withstand it, there’s nothing can keep it from running through
you like a knife. I’m in m y little room, the loon y’s room; I’m
staying calm; I don’t like being alone, it’s hard, but I’ m