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George The Beast Is Gone

September 23, 2008

That’s George.  George the Beast Howell, King of the Baby Beatniks, Roarer of Upper Grant Avenue, the Great Yawp, friend of my North Beach youth – he died at a quarter to six this morning in an intensive care unit at West Anaheim Medical Center in Anaheim, California.  I was always going to get down to see him at his sister’s place in Clear Lake.  But I never did.

It’s the only picture I have of George.  I took it in Gary and Sue Parma’s living room, 3265 Sacramento Street, San Francisco, California, in July 1962.  I didn’t think the portrait quite worked and never printed it.  But I kept the test strip, and here it is, still good forty-six years later, preserved by that good San Francisco State photo lab fix.  But I feel like a part of me is fading this morning.

His body was shot.  He had a lot of adventures, did a lot of drugs.  And smoked a lot of Camels.

He wasn’t a Luminary of the Haight-Ashbury.  By the time that scene gelled, George had already found his calling.  He was living in a village in Mexico learning to be a weaver.  Eventually, weaving evolved into dealing – finding , restoring and selling fine antique rugs.  He got rich.  He had his own shop in a fashionable San Francisco neighborhood.  He had a driver.  His profits, most of them, went right up his nose or into his arm.  He was a man of big hungers and little caution.  He went bankrupt, fled to Hawaii to clean up.

I don’t know his whole story, just bits and pieces he told me during our long conversations over the phone during the last six months after we reconnected again.  I thought there was plenty of time.  We’d get together and hang out and talk for days until I had his whole story.  That was my plan.

His sister Sue cared for him besides holding down her day job, and bless you for it, Sue.  He didn’t like being dependent on her.  He was dependent on an oxygen tank.  He didn’t like that either. He had diverticulitis and couldn’t eat.  He was down to 130 pounds. He walked his dogs in their garden when he could.  He grew his own vegetables until it got to be too much for him.

George was a hero to me, although we were the same age.  His character was bigger than his body and spilled into the streets around him.  We spent long foggy nights walking from Mike’s Pool Hall to the Hot Dog Palace and back, looking for friends, finding them and standing on the corner together till Officer Bigarini walked by and told us to beat it.  We were in love with the same girl.  We laughed about it.  We were both nineteen, then twenty, then twenty-one and we wanted to be beatniks.  It seemed like the only sensible career, and still does.  George turned me on to The Outsider by Colin Wilson. The book puts an intellectual structure around how we felt, it justified and clarified our inchoate feelings of being completely alienated from the larger society around us.  I read it, thought about it, and moved on.  But George kept it nearby.  For him, it was the book that made sense. He was rereading it again this summer just before he hit his final bump in the road.

George, how can I come see you now?

People I loved have been dying on me my whole life and it’s a dirty trick.  I still want to go see everybody.  I don’t really care about this world any more.  It will never compare.  I’m left here to walk down the beach in my overcoat at the end of time.  And write it all down for no one.  So that’s what I’ll do.

Everyone’s leaving.

But Sunny Skies has to stay behind.

8 comments

  1. No my friend. You don’t write for no one. The love for your pal George is one of those eternal things that you gave him and give away every time you connect with people. Writing about it, out in the cyber-ether of today, makes it a part of forever too. The world, you are right, is not something to care for. Eternity is, well, forever.

    “I’m lookin’ out my window
    I watch the clouds go by
    I look to see eternity
    The endless rolling sky

    You cannot think of eternity
    Think of it like time
    You try to think, you try to count
    You just mess up your mind

    Eternity, eternity
    Honey, I love you, you love me
    Let’s love each other through eternity

    Since before man could see
    There was eternity
    After man is come and gone
    Eternity lingers on, eternity lingers on

    Everything crawl, creep, or fly
    Just live until they die
    I love you, honey you love me
    Let’s love each other through eternity

    Eternity, eternity
    I love you, you love me
    Let’s love each other through eternity
    Through eternity

    Well I think about life, we don’t know
    Whether it all could be in vain
    Look through time, it’s for sure
    It’s the greatest gift to man

    Music and Love, you can’t explain
    Try and understand
    The greatest thing could ever be
    We make love through eternity
    Make love through eternity

    When the world think our defeat
    Think that we are gone
    We’ll still have our place of peace
    Our love will linger on, linger on

    We won’t care just what who said
    If it’s truth or lie
    We’ll still have our greatest gift
    Our love won’t ever die
    Love won’t ever die
    Love won’t ever die”

    -Willie Dixon/Bob Weir 1995


  2. Thank you, Chris, for returning George to us with your writing and your friendship. You made George live again for me. Your photo is so prophetic — there is the Beast smoking a Camel, already laying the seeds of his ultimate downfall.

    I am glad George made money and got rich. The summer we hung out together, we were so poor we had to panhandle for bus fare and coffee money. George was good company, articulate and funny. I’m glad he’s not suffering anymore.

    Here’s another poem for George. Poems may be the only way to understand the great mystery of death.

    When Death Comes

    When death comes
    like the hungry bear in autumn;
    when death comes and takes all the bright coins from his purse

    to buy me, and snaps the purse shut;
    when death comes
    like the measle-pox

    when death comes
    like an iceberg between the shoulder blades,

    I want to step through the door full of curiosity, wondering:
    what is it going to be like, that cottage of darkness?

    And therefore I look upon everything
    as a brotherhood and a sisterhood,
    and I look upon time as no more than an idea,
    and I consider eternity as another possibility,

    and I think of each life as a flower, as common
    as a field daisy, and as singular,

    and each name a comfortable music in the mouth,
    tending, as all music does, toward silence,

    and each body a lion of courage, and something
    precious to the earth.

    When it’s over, I want to say all my life
    I was a bride married to amazement.
    I was the bridegroom, taking the world into my arms.

    When it’s over, I don’t want to wonder
    if I have made of my life something particular, and real.

    I don’t want to find myself sighing and frightened,
    or full of argument.

    I don’t want to end up simply having visited this world.

    Mary Oliver


  3. Under the circumstances, I get to say anything that I want. A correction: the location was West Anaheim Medical Center, no affiliation with Anaheim General Hospital, both in the city of Anaheim, Calif.
    I love life. I love death. It’s all the same. Like good photographers say, it’s all the point from which you view. It’s where you stand to form the composition for the picture. In the darkroom, photographers can tweak the light & darkness, if either were lacking when the shutter clicked. (Christopher, the photo rocks,it’s the light & shade, don’t you know.) We’ve lived one helluva script & we sure have had some adventures. I believe that George was @ peace & I kind of figured that he might be on the up escalator when I left a message for him with the nurse on Sun. It’s the way that the nurse responded to me & how he (the nurse) made a comment. On Sep 12, I received a long letter from George. He indicated that he was not up for visitors, so I was waiting for the o.k. to go visit him. And that I’ll surely do, some time, I’m certain.
    Right now, in my senior citizen apartment, I’m going to make a pot of English tea, listen to classical music, & watch the Los Angeles sunset thru the eucalyptus trees, where no one can see my tears & runny nose.
    You had a great ride, George. I’m glad to have met up with you. Carry on, kiddo.
    love, lulu p. king


  4. Thanks, Lulu P. – I just fixed the story. Thank goodness for facts. Sometimes they’re like finding a piece of driftwood to hang on to when you’re drowning. Hey, save the letter – I know you will. I wish we were hanging out right now watching the sun set together and trading George The Beast stories. Stay healthy!


  5. Chris, This tribute to George, is so beautifully written. The photograph also is wonderful. The image is rather dark, with the only highlighted images his cigarette and the peace symbol.

    Thank you for sharing your memory of George.


  6. I’m very sorry to hear about your friend too – he sounds like someone I would have liked to have known. We will never stop missing those we lose – but knowing that when they were well (and often even when they were ill) they lived their lives to the fullest and were true to themselves – gives a sort of comfort and reminds us to do the same.

    My thoughts and prayers are with you, and his family and friends…Peggi


  7. Ah , dear Beast,

    I Fringled a Gnu
    You said.
    Can you fringle me too? (Whatever that means)
    Said I.
    And joy, oh joy, you taught me so
    And continue to lead,
    Tho tis true that
    I no longer trot along behind
    But, forever in awe,
    Hobble slowly in your wake.

    The sweet words that none of us
    Had the courage to give in our hazy youth
    Tumbled forth and swirled around us so full and easy
    We drowned the rhythm of the life/breath machine
    And I blew bubbles for you – floating us back
    To days of magic, wonder and crazy hope
    When the self proclaimed
    (and generally acknowledged) Grand Beast,
    The master of doggerel, penned in iambic pentameter, and Romolar Julie lead the daily processional from Page street to collect the Hub Specials
    and Jefferson P. added his profane middle name.

    None of us really had a clue,
    But you, dear beast,
    Managed to pull some of us thru anyway,
    And I am eternally grateful.

    Never for a moment have I stopped loving you,
    and I suppose I never will.

    Margarita


  8. Chris,

    I’ve known people like George. Thanks for eulogizing him. He’ll represent all my Georges.

    God bless, my friend.

    Hector.



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