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From The Unknown: Paris Miller, Dublin, Dirk is Cuchulainn

Paris Miller

Paris is exactly as Henry Miller described it. By the time we get to Paris I’m burning with passion and fire in my soul and turgidity in my loins and Frank is here he’s handling everything he’s handling my appearances he’s handling my publicity he’s even handling the women fate would throw my way as a consequence of my now being a celebrated and translated international author and I don’t give a Tennessee holler or an Arkansas hoot because I’m in Paris and I know some French and I’ve read Rimbaud and Verlaine and Jim Morrison and Rabelais and I’m in Paris and the night is screaming for me because I’m in Paris and I want to fuck the world. It’s a blur of red wines and cancan dancers and poets and newspapermen and hookers from Alsace and well-bred women from London and banker-women from Amsterdam. Long sweaty nights with way too much wine in dangerous bars with gangsters speaking French and jazz wafting out all over the Left Bank and I’m eating fucking snails for breakfast lunch and dinner and loving it. I want to live right now, and then fuck it. The whole wad today. I want to tear the bone from the leg of the world and crack it open and suck the marrow from it, baby, gobble it down, I’m in Paris and I’m having lots of anonymous sex and I’m the featured guest at orgies and I’m convincing my friends to ditch their girlfriends that they just got pregnant telling them they should go somewhere and write and I’m taking the money that they give me give to the girl that they left behind and I’m spending it on absinthe and guzzling it up and down the Champs-Elysées and under the Eiffel Tower and I’m swilling it at Montparnasse and then I’m fucking her too and walking and talking and the sky is torn up with globules of sweet flesh dripping from the moon. Rodin and Moliere and Voltaire are raising their arms up to me and there I am riding my way into the arms of three or four women half my age and twice my age black and yellow and brown and blue. We rut. I’m fucking everything and everyone. I’m fucking the whole fucking city. It’s Paris and I’m still young. I’m virile and I’m hungry and I’m cadging drinks. I’m scum and I’m beautiful. It’s Paris and I’m here right now—you can start—and right now I don’t give a fuck about The Unknown. Here’s the unknown, the real unknown. I smell it, I taste it. It’s dribbling from my tongue. The sweat that this city is giving off, the shit and the piss on the streets and the wine and the pheasants dripping blood in the marketplace and the bread which I tear in hunks and dip in the grease and let run down my chin and the bars I get kicked out of and the smell of her gorgeous blue panties laid out on yellow silk sheets, or hers in my teeth, or hers in the boulangerie. I’m fucking the unknown, boys, fucking it crazy. I’m using a bidet to wash my ass of shit. Smoking hash and eating croissants. Fucking women in foreign tongues. It’s me and the sky and the whole jellyroll and a box of crackers too. I’m fucking the whole idea of France. I’m fucking all of Europe. It’s Paris. It’s beautiful. It’s my world and I’m fucking it crazy, fucking it crazy cock crazy, fucking tropic of cancer type fucking fertile ripe fruit fucking from the vine sweet juice honey oil social fucking fucking outdoors fucking in a garret fucking at a cocktail party fucking at a theatre fucking constantly, constantly fucking. I’m fucking Anais Nin. I love it. We love. We fucking love fucking. It fucking we love. I her fucking me fucking her we fucking constant fucking, fucking, fucking…

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Dublin

Who was going to do what? He was having a vision, that much was clear.

Right there in Mulligan’s public house, over his pint of Guinness. Again, who’s going to do what? William looks at me and I look at Scott and Scott looks at William. To wake from a vision is as painful perhaps as being born, we know this from Dirk, so we’re standing there with our hands at our sides. William goes off to get us another round. Our stouts are low.

A crowd gathers, talkative Irish, speculating on the experience.

—My love, wait, I’ll join you, says one rather buxom red-haired Molly.

—Salute, says a dark-haired fellow.

—Where’s the light, where’s the light, slurs a gray-bearded old chap.

—A vision is folly, he’s thinking of his dolly, and how he’d like her to suck, and how he’d like her to, chants a fresh faced boy who’s cuffed on his head before he can finish by a man who looks like his father.

Dirk begins to move.

He wanders out of the pub and most of the people in it follow, carrying their stouts to the protestations of the barkeeps. He wanders over the River Liffey, or one of its bridges, past Trinity College, past a shop advertising fish and taters, and everybody’s following him. He appears to be drifting, and pulls a yarmulke from his pocket and a lemon, and puts the yarmulke on his head, and tosses the lemon in the air and catches it.

Somebody among the thirty or so of us following behind begins to chant.

—Sweet are the sweets, sweet is the sin, sweet are the sweets, sweet is the sin.

It’s an altogether clear night and glancing at the sky a star happens to shoot by and I make a wish.

—Sweet are the sweets, sweet is the sin, sweet are the sweets, sweet is the sin.

My stout’s getting low. I look around for William and see his head bobbing up and down, almost as if he’s floating in water. Scott’s holding two stouts and seems to be offering it to Dirk, or holding it at his ready, walking to Dirk’s right. Passersby look on curiously and several join the crowd. The person who’d been chanting is now quiet, we’re all a little hushed, looking on, following, as if being among the crowd is an alibi for some future crime, as if part of some regiment punishment for desertion which is automatic court-martial or demotion to scullerymaid. The only apparent noise, save the clopping of a horse’s hooves, is a blues guitar, which grows closer with each step. Dirk, having released the crowd from his mesmerizing visionary power, but still, apparently, in the vision, enters a men’s room, and shuts and locks the door.

Because suddenly we’re at another bar, I can’t see the name. Everybody seems relieved, as if released from an unpleasant duty, the alibi complete, and there’s a surge that takes me up a flight of stairs into a square room where a blues band does its best to make blues music. I find myself squished in a booth next to a dark-haired woman, and William, who smells of booze and body, pushes next to me. My hand finds the woman’s thigh and she looks at me and I look at her and she says,

—An Irish man would never do that.

Apparently, she knows who I am; people like literature in Ireland. The reading the night before at Trinity College had been packed with hecklers and serious literary readers and young men and women taking hits from bottles of whiskey, even the police were there at some point, although I was too drunk to pay them much mind by then, stealing, as I heard the story in the morning, whiskey from the young men and women.

The band is just awful. It plays out of time and the instruments don’t make sense together.

It’s loud, too, so that when the Irish woman must yell as she takes my hand.

—Your love line and your life line are far apart, but don’t worry, over time, the lines can change.

Scott, I notice, has disappeared. And William seems to be elsewhere, now, too. They’re always leaving me alone, I think. Fuckers.

The band stops. I’m aware of the redheaded woman, the one waiting for me in San Francisco, the one I loved. I’m aware I’m supposed to call her. I’m aware I’m flirting with an attractive Irish girl. Someone hands me a Guinness. I’m not soothed.

A new group, dressed like the Blues Brothers, steps up to the stage. Everybody falls silent. Everybody, suddenly, stares. It’s eerie. It’s the way they take the stage, the way they stand, holding their instruments. It reminds me, a little, of last night: the Trinity College reading, the command we felt when we had the stage, each individually, which we discussed into the early morning hours in the room we’d taken at Issac’s Hostel, cheap bunks, over a bottle of Power’s and another of Jameson. Command, we decided, was a kind of power, not absolute, not corrupted, but a power that came with clarity, that derived from thought, from whatever time we’d individually dedicated to thinking out what each of us in our separate rooms from our separate minds in whatever hours of loneliness and after passing through various and acute moments of ambiguity and uncertainty and weakness and fear, when all we really wanted was the unconditional and unwavering love of each other, our family, and the strangers that greeted us wherever we happened to be whenever we happened to be there, strangers who themselves felt as intensely or moreso what we felt, and different things, unknown things, from all of this we’d drawn and stood on stage with some communally created or individually created or uncreated manuscript and read it like we were insane, this was our power. It wasn’t us. It wasn’t anything we had that others lacked. It was what we lacked, perhaps, that others had. Or perhaps simply what was and what could be. We transmitted it and in transmitting made others know it could be transmitted, and this was power. Power was the human capacity to dream. It was the capacity to do what humans did, and to feel it—feel that it was being done. So I think somewhere in me I understood something was happening, and that’s why it was silent, and somebody, crazily, yelled out,

—Rudy!

Dirk looked on unseeing into the eyes of everyone in the audience. William, eyes closed, held his drumsticks above the drums, like a cat looking intently at a bird hidden in a bush. Scott, his diamond and ruby ring flashing on his finger, held the neck of his guitar loosely, an ivory pick in his hand, a white handkerchief peeking from his vest.

Dirk lifted his hand, flicked thrice at his beard, and there was a kind of roar—we all knew the vision was complete, that we were it, that its completion was about to manifest itself in celebration. The cheer was the moment before the moment we knew we were going to get what we wanted but hadn’t realized we’d anticipated it and wanted it forever. It was a kind of conversion. We were all members.

Of what were we members?

Who could say with absolute certitude. It was a membership and by dint of being where we were on the precipice of an explosive moment of community, if that’s what we had, or human brother and sisterhood, which we did have, we were members.

And what about the insecurity in each and every one of the members of the audience?

It was and would continue to be profound but all defenses dropped, as Dirk began singing and strumming his bass and several of us in the audience reached for their horns and began blowing and Scott began strumming and William began banging away and Dirk sang:

—Do you know how you make a wish sandwich?

What is a wish sandwich?

Dirk continued:

—A wish sandwich is when you’ve got two pieces of bread, and you wish you had some meat.

—Ba ba ba da da . . .

And the bar just roared. Who was going to do what? We were going to party and we were going to get drunk and I took the Irish woman up next to me and started dancing a dance I had never danced before.

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Dirk is Cuchulainn

Dirk’s powers were well manifest in Dublin. Most eerie was the resemblance between what Cuchulainn went through during his warp spasms, and how Dirk describes the most frightful of his psychic journeys into the unknown territory of telepathic supernatural investigations. And I don’t just mean mushrooms.

Dirk puts it like this:

When the first vision hits me, it’s an out-of-body jolt, wham! right away. It seizes me and I see myself, and I am different. It makes me into a monstrous thing, hideous and shapeless, unheard of. My shanks and joints, every knuckle and angle and organ from head to foot, shakes like a tree or a reed in the stream. My body makes a furious twist inside my skin, so that my feet and shins and knees switch from the rear and my heels and calves switch to the front. On my head, the temple-sinews stretch to the nape of my neck, a mighty, measureless knob as big as the head of a month-old child. My face and features become a red bowl: I suck in one eye so deep into my head that a wild crane couldn’t peck it onto my cheek out of the depths of my skull; the other eye falls along my cheek. My mouth is weirdly distorted: my cheeks peel back from my jaws until my gullet shows, my lung and liver flapping in my mouth and throat, my lower jaw strikes the upper a lion-killing blow, and fiery flakes large as a ram’s ass reach my mouth from my throat. My heart booms loud in my breast like the baying of a dog at its feed or the sound of a lion among lambs. Malignant mists and arcs of fire flicker red in the vaporous clouds that rise boiling above my head. The hair of my head twists like the tangle of a thornbush stuck in a gap, then rises up from the dead center of my skull a straight spout of black blood darkly and magically smoking like the smoke from the Vatican when a new Pope is anointed.

Sure you guys are jealous of my psychic powers, my luck with women, the oversized size of my fan population. But you would not want to be in my shoes. Trust me.

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