This morning super slick and sometimes nearly invisible black ice coats sidewalks and roads.
Note—Chicago and the Northern Boonies were brushed by an ice storm for the first time this year. Not as bad or thick as others in the past, but then a thin slick layer treacherous to pedestrians and motorists alike. The ice brings to mind another ice storm about 45 years ago.
It was on an Easter weekend sometime in the early ‘70’s. Chicago was in the grips of a monumental ice storm. A consultation on meteorological history and a table fixing the dates of that gypsy holiday would firmly fix the date. 1970 or ’71 would be my guess.
We slip-slided—literally since ice thickly coated the streets and sidewalks—over to my friend Penny Pixler’s place, a second floor apartment somewhere south of Armitage Avenue between Old Town and Halstead. The “we” were young Wobblies. The mission was to read aloud from James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake while sipping Jameson’s Irish Whiskey and ingesting some very powerful purple acid. We had a little grass as well, just to keep the edge off.
Most of us had this paperback edition of Finnegan's Wake published in 1968.It was probably Kathleen Taylor’s idea. She was our leading enthusiast for Irish culture. She knew the great old songs, played a small, dark Martin guitar, could beat a bodhrán, and blow a penny whistle in a pinch. Or it may have been Penny. She was quite literary. It may even have been my doing, hatched over too many beers at O’Rourke’s Pub on North Avenue where portraits of Joyce and other Irish scribes watched silently from the walls as newspaper types, writers, and a wannabes like me regaled each other with lies.
Maybe I was inspired for the gathering by the Old Town writer's hangout O'Roukes Pub. Large portraits of Joyce and other Irish scribes hung above the wooden booths to right.
I am a little unclear as to all of the participants. Young Dean Nolan, recently arrived from Portland was there. I can’t imagine that Leslie Fish and Mary Frohman—eccentric even in our circles—songwriter/singer/cat lady/lesbian/anarchists, missed the occasion. I am sure there were others.
We settled into the living room mostly sprawled on the floor. Kathy got us going with a rousing version of the old 19th Century Irish folk song—Joyce’s inspiration. We passed the Jameson’s and a joint. We started to read as the acid began its work. I can’t remember if we tried to start at the beginning or someplace else..
Mourners grieve around the coffin in the cabin while others drink and share tales. From an illustration for the song Finnegan's Wake.After a while, I remember watching the window in Penny’s living room as if it were a movie screen. The window stretched nearly the width of the room, which itself took up the whole front of the second story of the frame two-flat. It was no more than two or three feet high. Lying on the floor, I could see nothing but the three bare poplars, heavy with ice, swaying in the wind against a slate sky in time to the rhythms of Joycean nonsense.
Hours later we slid away in the dark, street lights shining reflections of the perfectly smooth ice. I kept falling. I was young then and could still bounce up. Perhaps I was immortal.
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