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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer



I have just finished rereading Henry Miller’s first published book, Tropic of Cancer. About 50 years ago, the first time I read the Tropic of Cancer I skipped around, looking for the “good parts.” Actually, there are very few “good parts” and those that exist are very tame in comparison with today’s literature.

Henry Miller, 1933
This time I read Tropic of Cancer all the way through. Henry Miller was an excellent writer, bringing to life time (late 1920s) and place (Paris) with color and remarkable insights. Today, for me, Miller’s words and remarkable insights are the “good parts.”

Henry Miller, like Jack Kerouac, writes about what he sees, what he hears, and what he experiences. He writes about the Paris where he lived for 10 years—years during which the Great Depression began. For much of that time he had no income, only what he earned from small writing assignments. For much of that time, he depended on friends to survive.

The Paris in which Miller lives is not a beautiful place. There is wretchedness and poverty with which he became well acquainted. He does not attack this wretchedness, but reports it and accepts it. Only on occasion—such as the last passage I quote in this blog post—does Henry Miller play off severe poverty with the cold-heartedness of the bourgeoisie.

So, without further words, I should like to share just a few of the remarkable insights I discovered during my second reading of Tropic of Cancer:

It is now my second full year in Paris. I was sent here for a reason I have not yet been able to fathom. I have no money, no resources. I am the happiest man alive. 

Up to that time nothing very terrible at all of me, though I had already lost all my worldly possessions and had known what it was like to walk the streets in hunger and in fear of the police. 

One can live without friends, as one can live without love, or even without money, that supposed sine qua nonOne can live in Paris—I discovered that!—on just grief and anguish. A bitter nourishment—perhaps the best there is for certain people. At any rate, I had not come to the end of my rope. I was only flirting with disaster. I had time and sentiment enough to spare to peep into other people’s lives, to dally with the dead stuff of romance which, however morbid it may be, when it is wrapped between the covers of a  book, seems deliciously remote and anonymous. 

My world of human beings perished; I was utterly alone in the world and for friends I had the streets, and the street spoke to me in that sad, bitter language compounded of human misery, yearning, regret, failure, wasted effort. 

An eternal city, Paris! More eternal than Rome, more splendid than Nineveh. The varying navel of the world to which, like a blind and faltering idiot, one crawled back on hands and needs. And like a cork that has drifted to the dead center of the ocean, one floats here in this scum and the wrack of the seas, listless, hopeless, heedless even to a passing Columbus. The cradles of civilization are the putrid sinks of the world, the charnel house in which the stinking wombs can find their bloody packages of flesh and bone. 

The streets were my refuge. And no man can understand the glamour of the streets until he is obliged to take refuge in them, until he has become a straw that is tossed here and there by every specter that blows. 

… these filthy beggars lying in the rain, what purpose do they serve? What good can they do us? They make us bleed for five minutes, that’s all. Oh, well, these are night thoughts produced by walking in the rain after two thousand years of Christianity. At least now the birds are well provided for, and the cats and dogs…. At the bottom of every frozen heart there is a drop or two of love—just enough to feed the birds. 

Henry Miller. c 1958



10 comments:

  1. I though that the Tropic of Cancer was just porn. I suppose it is if one is a rich Parisian.

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    1. Interesting observation, Fiona. Miller doesn't seem to have too much of a regard for the wealthy.

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  2. Impressive, SSN. "the street spoke to me in that sad, bitter language compounded of human misery, yearning, regret, failure, wasted effort." Very impressive.

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    1. Many of Miller's words are impressive -- and many of his observations hit me right in my gut!

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  3. " At the bottom of every frozen heart there is a drop or two of love—just enough to feed the birds." Sad.

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    1. Yes, Bridgett, it is. Love for the lower classes is something Miller didn't find in his Paris.

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  4. Thank you, SIr. I shall now read the books of Henry Miller.

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  5. I like the way Henry Miller uses words...true literature.

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    1. Me, too, Robyn. In the forward to the edition of the Tropic of Caner that I read, Henry Miller was called "America's greatest living author." He's dead now, but I think his greatness will continue, especially if future generations discover his writing as I so recently did.

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