A Smith Corona Sterling portable typewriter exactly like
this one was my prized possession in 1967.
I pounded those keys with a furious passion sure that I was creating
timeless literature.
|
Note: Last week I
shared a short-short story from the 1967 edition of Apotheosis, the annual literary magazine of Niles West
High School in Skokie, Illinois. It was my senior year. The world around me was roiling with unrest
over Civil Rights, urban blight and poverty, and increasing resistance to a
faraway war in Asia. All of that had
grabbed my attention and led to the stirring of activism. I ventured into Chicago for the big anti-war
demonstrations and to march with Dr. King for Open Housing. The local group I belonged to, The Liberal
Youth of Niles Township quaintly known as LYNT and pronounced like the stuff
you had to clear off a drier filter organized a program called Uptight About the Draft? which I
certainly was. I even edited and
produced on a primitive chemical bath Photostat machine an “underground
newspaper” for the three Niles Township high schools called grandiosely The Promethian. In its densely typed columns I
pontificated on all of these maters with deadly earnestness.
But in the
school newspaper where I had an alleged humor column called The Wind from the West I produced
frothy commentary on student life. That
is until my 18th Birthday when I had to register for the draft and wrote a
blistering and bitter screed on facing war.
That aroused the ire of West Principal Nicholas T. Manos who stripped me
of some small scholarships I had been awarded from Thespians (drama), Forensics
(speech) and for my creative writing in Apotheosis.
But my
several contributions to the magazine that spring did not contain one overtly
political entry Each one was a
reflection of my personal obsession that year—to become a genuine blue ribbon,
award winning, critically fawned over Great American Writer. I spent more hours fantasizing about that than
I did at the typewriter actually writing.
I knew, or thought I did, that the way to become a literary star was to
write deeply about serious shit. And
what could me more serious than death?
Of course what could an 18 year old really know about death? Nothing that he hadn’t learned second had in
books and movies. Not that I let it stop
me. Two of my short stories in the
magazine had death themes. So did one
poem, maybe two. In retrospect I now
remind myself of that girl in Huckleberry
Finn who Mark Twain mocked for her saccharine, Romantic poems about tragic
death. You get the picture.
Here is one
of the stories which also reflected my fantasies about being a starving writer
and living la vie Boheme.
How I imagined my writer's room. I had seen one too many film noir. |
The Small “g” in God
I lay in bed running my hand over the
cool brass of the bedstead and watching the flashing shadows
of three different neon signs fight for a place on my wall.
I could
hear a guitar
being played badly down the hall, a toilet flushing and rattling and klerking, and the traffic moving outside
my window. But most clearly I could hear the Sleeping Beauty ballet
playing on Tanner's phonograph and
floating through the thin
wall.
Those thin walls were a symbol to us. We had made
the slum apartment building a kind of artist’s colony, and the unnecessary poverty of
our existence was proof to
us
of our own purity and dedication. We felt that by the very act
of rejecting middle-class comfort we were purging
our creative works of the
contamination of complacency. So no one ever complained
about the thin walls.
I lay in my bed and listened to
Tanner’s music—which I loved almost as much as he.
Tanner was our painter and my best friend.
He had
shown up in May with an Army duffle bag and a half dozen finished canvases
under his arm. The paintings
were mostly in cool blues and
greens with half-shadows of searching lost
souls. All of them had the
big bold signature—Tanner. Since then we
had known him
by no other name than Tanner.
He painted alone in his room or
out on the stoop, or on the fire escape, or on the roof, but always alone. He painted from the sound of music,
using only his own mind for a model. And most of time he used those same sad cool colors we had first seen him
with. But each of the paintings was different—one caught a different mood or
time of day or smell. We others could only begin to detect what was in them.
And his paintings
got better and
better while the
signature got smaller
and smaller.
Tanner had never sold
anything-he had
never tried to. He
had given a picture to each of
us in the building.
He called them
paintings pictures of our souls. Each was different and painted in the color and
style of our souls. He finished
mine last. It was in blue—bright and catching
but deep and dark. The brush strokes
were high and
sweeping, jerking down just a hit at the top as if to rush down
on the kneeling player of my soul. The signature was very tiny.
Tanner said it was the best thing he had ever done.
I was pleased, not just because it
was good, but because
it seemed to
say that Tanner thought
I was good. So I got a
frame and hung
my soul
on my wall.
I listened to the music and
I looked at it as I lay in my bed
and it was distorted by the flashing
electric fire of the city
at night. And I wrote a poem
in my mind
that would never find paper.
Tanner took the ballet off before it was finished. I had never heard him do this before
and I was angry because I liked the music. Then I heard—or maybe felt—electronic music.
It pierced and swayed
and rattled then pierced, pierced, pierced and shuttered and pierced
again. It swelled and rolled and tit,
tit, tit. It
engulfed, shattered, retreated,
and engulfed again. And I
did not understand it or Tanner.
Even through the distortion of the wall, the power of the music was irresistible. It thickened the air until I could not walk through the
room, but had to swim in it. And it went on and on and on. I heard the
record repeat itself—once, twice, three times. The third time I decided to go to Tanner’s room.
I knocked on the door and waited
a moment—not
for Tanner to come to the door, but to hear if he called not
to come in. We always
afforded each other that much privacy. When
he did not say anything, I opened the door.
Tanner’ s
room was much
the same as
mine, except the light
was on and the music was playing. In the
center of the room on an easel
was a painting I had never seen before. It swirled with fiery orange and red. I could see it and feel its heat and the cutting roughness of
its texture. In the center
black
exploded with a
violence
that was sudden
and gripping. The painting
had no signature at all. It was
Tanner’s own soul.
Tanner was in the corner already cold. The note was simple—“I saw myself. There is no more—”
—Pat Murfin
‘67
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