An odd (-er-than-usual for Mr. Miller) publishing history accompanies this work. Miller actually wrote it while simultaneously revising Tropic of Cancer, working on Tropic of Capricorn and completing a study of D.H. Lawrence. Hectic in its pace, a fitting end to the first great series of the man's life. The book was finally published a couple years after completion, in 1936, the same year as Tropic of Capricorn.
Aye, the great sun of syphilis is setting. Low visibility:
forecast for the Bronx, for America, for the whole modern world. Low
visibility accompanied by great gales of laughter. No new stars on the
horizon. Catastrophes ... only catastrophes!
I am thinking of that age to come when God is born again, when men
will fight and kill for God as now and for a long time to come men are
going to fight for food. I am thinking of that age when work will be
forgotten and books assume their true place in life, when perhaps there
will be no more books, just one great big book—a Bible. For me the
book is the man and my book is the man I am, the confused man, the
negligent man, the reckless man, the lusty, obscene, boisterous,
thoughtful, scrupulous, lying, diabolically truthful man that I am. I
am thinking that in that age to come I shall not be overlooked. Then my
history will become important and the scar which I leave upon the face
of the world will have significance. I can not forget that I am making
history, a history on the side which, like a chancre, will eat away the
other meaningless history. I regard myself not as a book, a record, a
document, but as a history of our time—a history of all time.
If I was unhappy in America, if I craved more room, more adventure,
more freedom of expression, it was because I needed these things. I am
grateful to America for having made me realize my needs. I served my
sentence there. At present I have no needs. I am a man without a past
and without a future. I am—that is all. I am not
concerned with your likes and dislikes; it doesn't matter to me whether
you are convinced that what I say is so or not. It is all the same to
me if you drop me here and now. I am not an atomizer from which you can
squeeze a thin spray of hope. I see America spreading disaster. I see
America as a black curse upon the world. I see a long night settling in
and that mushroom which has poisoned the world withering at the roots.
And so it is with a premonition of the end—be it tomorrow or three
hundred years hence—that I feverishly write this book. So it is too
that my thoughts sputter out now and then, that I am obliged to
rekindle the flame again and again, not with courage alone, but with
desperation—for there is no one I can trust to say these things for
me. My faltering and groping, my search for any and every means of
expression, is a sort of divine stuttering. I am dazzled by
the glorious collapse of the world!
Every evening, after dinner, I take the garbage down to the
courtyard. Coming up I stand with empty pail at the staircase window
gazing at the Sacre Coeur high up on the hill of Montmartre. Every
evening, when I take the garbage down, I think of myself standing out
on a high hill in resplendent whiteness. It is no sacred heart that
inspires me, no Christ I am thinking of. Something better than a
Christ, something bigger than a heart, something beyond God Almighty I
think of—myself. I am a man. That seems to me
sufficient.
I am a man of God and a man of the Devil. To each his due. Nothing
eternal, nothing absolute. Before me always the image of the body, our
triune god of penis and testicles. On the right, God the Father; on the
left and hanging a little lower, God the Son; and between and above
them the Holy Ghost. I can never forget that this holy trinity is
man-made, that it will undergo infinite changes—but as long as we come
out of wombs with arms and legs, as long as there are stars above us to
drive us mad and grass under our feet to cushion the wonder in us, just
so long will this body serve for all the tunes that we may whistle.
Today it is the third or fourth day of spring and I am sitting at the
Place Clichy in full sunshine. Today, sitting here in the sun, I tell
you it doesn't matter a damn whether the world is going to the dogs or
not; it doesn't matter whether the world is right or wrong, good or
bad. It is—and that suffices. The world is what it is and I am
what I am. I say it not like a squatting Buddha with legs crossed, but
out of a gay, hard wisdom, out of an inner security. This out there and
this in me, all this, everything, the resultant of inexplicable
forces. A chaos whose order is beyond comprehension. Beyond human
comprehension.
As a human being walking around at twilight, at dawn, at strange
hours, unearthly hours, the sense of being alone and unique fortifies
me to such a degree that when I walk with the multitude and seem no
longer to be a human being but a mere speck, a gob of spit, I begin to
think of myself alone in space, a single being surrounded by the most
magnificent empty streets, a human biped walking between the
skyscrapers when all the inhabitants have fled and I am alone walking,
singing, commanding the earth. I do not have to look in my vest pocket
to find my soul; it is there all the time, bumping against my ribs,
swelling, inflated with song. If I just left a gathering where it was
agreed that all is dead, now as I walk the streets, alone and identical
with God, I know that this is a lie. The evidence of death is before my
eyes constantly; but this death of the world, a death constantly going
on, does not move from the periphery in, to engulf me, this death is at
my very feet, moving from me outward, my own death a step in advance of
me always. The world is the mirror of myself dying, the world not dying
any more than I die, I more alive a thousand years from now than this
moment and this world in which I am now dying also more alive then than
now though dead a thousand years. When each thing is lived through to
the end there is no death and no regrets, neither is there a false
springtime; each moment lived pushes open a greater, wider horizon from
which there is no escape save living.
The dreamers dream from the neck up, their bodies securely strapped
to the electric chair. To imagine a new world is to live it daily, each
thought, each glance, each step, each gesture killing and recreating,
death always a step in advance. To spit on the past is not enough. To
proclaim the future is not enough. One must act as if the past
were dead and the future unrealizable. One must act as if the
next step were the last, which it is. Each step forward is the last,
and with it a world dies, one's self included. We are here of the earth
never to end, the past never ceasing, the future never beginning, the
present never ending. The never-never world which we hold in our hands
and see and yet is not ourselves. We are that which is never concluded,
never shaped to be recognized, all there is and yet not the whole, the
parts so much greater than the whole that only God the mathematician
can figure it out.