Memoirs of a Not Altogether Shy Pornographer. Bernard Wolfe. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Bernard Wolfe
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Биографии и Мемуары
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781940436258
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which is said to be an ominous sign. His one black eye appeared to be getting blacker.

      “All right,” he said. “I’m counting to five. I’d count to one but I’m not primarily a murderer. When I get to five should you not have your smart ass halfway down the stairs it’ll be leaving by this window—”

      I was in rapid transit. I was never to know just who had given him that black eye but there were all sorts of possibilities, any one of the Tijuana publishers he stole from, any one of the American cartoonists they stole from, any of the bright young men he gave his balloon-inflating tests to, the NAM (for the way he maligned a pillar-of-the-community capitalist like Daddy Warbucks), the American CP (for his demeaning of an honest proletarian like Popeye), come to think of it, even Little Orphan Annie, for assorted indignities.

      That man—when I picture him today I see him with argyle hair, too—did not know his own business. He was of the opinion that I lacked the golden touch for porno. Wait till you hear.

      Why did I keep going after jobs in the word industry? Well, what are you going to do when non-word industry up and down the land keeps slamming its doors in your face?

      One sector of it, the war plants (they were beginning to acquire a more amiable face by being called defense plants) was, if I can put it this way, going great guns. But every time I showed up they had to exert themselves to keep from leveling all those guns at me. My plight had something to do with my being a college graduate. That biographical detail was everywhere, and especially by people in hiring positions, taken to be an ID, not just a clue as to where I’d spent the four years after high school.

      They were good Manicheans, those personnel people, last-ditch dualists; where they saw any trace of psyche they wouldn’t allow for the merest soupçon of soma. Assuming that college had pumped my head too full, they also took it for granted that my body had somehow gotten lost in the cerebral shuffle and dropped off, and bodies were the items in short supply in their booming defense plants, and over-bred heads they were making short shrift (an organic-food variety of shortbread) of. Language was where I had to get some occupational footing because language was where I was dumped by the industrial body-snatchers.

      All the things I’ve just said are true but not the truth. There had been signs along the way that words and I were a good deal more than kissing cousins, were, indeed, as Damon to Pythias, Sears to Roebuck.

      Item. From any number of people who were around at the time, presumably with hands pressed to ears, had come the report that I was speaking whole sentences, loudly and firmly, before my first birthday. I’ll save my main comment on this noisy prodigality until later. Here I’ll record the one thought that at that time, somewhere along in 1916, I probably didn’t have much to say, just the urge to say it well, fully, emphatically—some well-chosen words, no doubt, as to how badly things were already going, and how much worse they could be expected to get, and how this was in no way my doing, indeed went counter to all my plans and objectives, and how the swarms of people out there on all sides whose doing this transparently was were all bobbing and weaving in the most disgusting manner to dodge the responsibility, and how they’d probably be getting away with their who-me act if I hadn’t been endowed with the set of tonsils to denounce them and itemize their assorted shoddinesses for the world to shudder at. A few such marginalia from a beginner with lynxy eyes and none of that existential passivity toward the given, the latest form of do-nothing stoicism.

      Item. An English teacher in New Haven’s Hillhouse High assigned us to write a page or two of description with a warning to avoid trite subjects like trees, snowflakes, flowers, bunny rabbits and sunsets. She seemed to take a particularly dim view of sunsets. I sat down and composed a piece of surging, singing prose about a nightfall to end all nightfalls, a lyrical accolade which was in one part a forerunner of today’s psychedelic light shows, in another an anticipation of Hiroshima.

      I was determined, you see, to get it established that for such as me no subject was trite, my flashing prose would make the most overdone matters all shiny and new. Somewhere in France at just about that time, and unknown to me, James Joyce was recording his immortal line, “I can do anything I want with words.” In this early essay, I see now, I was making the same statement.

      My aim, it has to be faced, was not altogether literary. This teacher, by name Nora, was very young, very blond, and luscious, which New England teachers of English at that time were conspicuously not. If I thought I could do anything with words one of the things I most meant to do was make her aware of my presence, pay attention. I thought it worked but I wasn’t sure. Nora did give my paper an “A.” She also wrote in the margin, “If we have more sunsets like this, sunrises are going to go out of business.”

      Item. As a result of such virtuosity I became president of the Hillhouse Writers Club, then editor of the class book and the literary annual. I can’t remember much about the first honor except that I somehow made use of it to get excused from gym, maybe on the grounds that in born writers the head has so overshadowed and sapped the body as to render it unfit for physical exertions. (A lesson about the literary life I’ve never forgotten: it can, if you work it right, get you exempted from lifting things, including yourself.)

      Unwilling to compromise on quality, I undertook to fill the pages of the literary magazine with the best prose around, my own. My first appearances in print were in this annual. One item was an essay entitled “On Being Lazy,” a treatise elaborating on all the delights of not working, designed, clearly, to annoy the many Yankee partisans of the work ethic who presided over the school. Another contribution was a short story about a gifted young student who has to work nights in a factory. He’s in a state of exhaustion. One night he sinks down on a comfortable leather belt to take a catnap, whereupon the belt is somehow activated to feed him into a grinding machine. The factory was pretty much modeled after the one my father worked in, and the high-potential young student had a variety of things in common with me, indicating, I suppose, how far back my paranoia about American industrialization took hold.

      This story was by all standards a piece of proletarian literature, though the term had not yet come into currency. Two short years later writers by the hundreds had shed their Brooks Brothers gabardines for blue denim work shirts and the Proletarian Novel was swamping the American literary scene. Nowhere, however, in that massive body of workingclass literature will you find one word acknowledging the highschool junior who sparked the movement. But that’s always the fate of the frontrunner. No prophet is so scorned in his own country as the one whose pioneering work is taken over lock, stock and barrel by his plagiaristic countrymen.

      I contented myself with the knowledge that of the 100 or so prolecult novels that flooded the bookstalls few came up to the literary level of my early effort, and practically none added anything to my innocent-victim thematization of the contest between nice young lads and carnivorous old free-enterprise machines.

      (That wasn’t meant cynically. I’m still of the opinion that our means of production are really consumers, savage meat-eaters, even, I would now add, when the social relations of production have been drastically changed—in form, anyhow. It has dawned on me, though, that young fellows who try to catch 40 winks on a shaft-driven transmission belt, no matter how worthy and no matter how tired, are, to put it mildly, mastication-prone.)

      Item. There was a national essay contest for high school seniors. I entered it and won it. My subject, since I was oriented toward science to get away from letters, rather, from the kinds of people who usually teach letters, was, the future of soil-conditioners in American farming. Or, “Whither Fertilizers?” Something in that line. I made up a joke about this contest—maybe you can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear but you sure can get together a big pile of horseshit and come up with a prizewinning essay.

      I was breathing hard in anticipation of some cold, hard cash. What they handed me was a leather-bound commemorative volume honoring a dean at Harvard who’d been helpful to several generations of incipient writers when they were undergraduates, among them John Dos Passos. The dean’s name was Riggs, or Briggs, or Griggs. I’m pretty sure it wasn’t Tetrazzini. I’ve never read that book. Not that I had anything against this dean—what put me off was that they should give me payment in kind, instead of the kind