Scenes
From The Search For The Blue-Pink Great American West Night-The Ghost
Dance-Late 1969
Scene
Nine: The Ghost Dance-Late 1969
From
The Pen Of The Late Peter Paul Markin
Introduction
by Sam Lowell
Many
years ago, back in the 1970s (ouch!) many years ago, the late and long lamented
Peter Paul Markin, always known when I first meet him in the beginning of sixth
grade at Adamsville North Elementary School in the days when around
Massachusetts anyway sixth grade was considered elementary school-worthy as
just Markin and later in high school after Frankie Riley coined the moniker
“the Scribe,” wrote a series of eleven articles about his “search” for what he
called the great blue-pink American West night. That search fell between about
1966, 1967 when he had dropped out of Boston University to “find himself” and
headed the hitchhike road west and about 1974 just before he headed down Mexico
way, down into Sonora, then a very big center of the drug trade mostly
marijuana and cocaine, and met his too soon death from gunshot wounds after
what we heard was a botched drug deal. Most of the articles, which were printed
in the East Bay Other, a now defunct
alternative newspaper put out in Berkeley and which was widely read in northern
California, were about his early days, about his sense that things were in for
a big shake-up and in the not too distant future and he wanted to be there at
the creation, and about the early days on the road west looking, well, when all
was said and done, looking for something that he never found, maybe never could
find when the 1960s high points ebbed, ebbed very quickly leaving him high and
dry.
Most
of the early adventures heading west, or out West, were purely of Markin’s own making
but the reason that I am reprinting the article below is that I was actually
there at the ghost dance which is the subject of this piece. See Markin had
called all his high school corner boys from Tonio’s Pizza Parlor, or rather
from “holding up the wall” in front of that establishment, Tonio’s of blessed
memory during our high school days to head out to California and join him on
what he called a yellow brick road bus owned and operated by a guy called
Captain Crunch who was cruising up and down the coast partying and searching,
again that searching for what business was never clear. What was clear was that
the bus was a floating den of drugs, booze, women, sex and rock and roll.
Markin had begun calling his corner boys out something in late 1966, early 1967
and guys like Josh Breslin and Bart Webber were the first to go out sometime in
that latter year. Their adventures have been incorporated into some of those
early Markin articles.
Truthfully
I was a little square, was looking to break out of the poverty that my family,
my parents, had endured and so in those early years I was not interested hitchhiking
west, joining a traveling caravan or anything like that. When the Scribe would
begin with his monologue on how things were going to be turned upside down and
soon I dismissed that as so much Markin bullshit, could have given a rat’s ass
about some pipe dream. I was into the college grind looking to get good enough
grades to eventually get into law school and prosper. Then one night in early
1968 I was at a party in Boston, some students from around the town, and a guy
passed me a joint, marijuana. At first I said no but the second pass I said
what the hell. That’s when I “got religion,” started seeing that the grind was
not the place where I was happy and while I was still driven by the desire to
be a lawyer I began thinking that I could put that on hold for a while. So
after I graduated in June of that year I decided that I would join the Scribe
in the big ass search for something (and join Josh, Bart, and I think Frankie
Riley who were also there then).
Now
in those days people, ordinary young people in all kinds of garb and with all
kinds of travelling gear alongside, were on the road a lot, would hitchhike
places and so that was what I decided to do. At that time Markin had made one
of his hitchhike trips home to take a break from the yellow brick road bus and
to check on his draft status since the local draft board was harassing him
about trying to draft him (I had one leg shorter than the other, and was lame
as a result so I was 4-F unfit for military duty). He came at a time I was
getting ready to go west but had not finalized my plans. He decided to head
back west without me but told me that he was going to stop in Denver for a
while on the way back so I should go that route and meet him there, or if I was
too late someplace in Arizona. Which I wound up doing and along that way west
we got involved in that ghost dance. Markin, when we talked about it later, a
few years later after I had left the road and before I had lost contact with
him, told me that ghost dance experience was the highlight of his journey west,
had been what the “search” was all about.
He was right, right as the Scribe was ever right about anything.
S.L.
[The
Angelica mentioned in the first section below was a young woman whom Markin had
met when he was left off in Steubenville, Ohio by a truck-driver who was
supposed to be heading west to Chicago but decided to see his girlfriend there
first and left Markin off at the famous Dew Drop In Diner, the truck stop diner
where she was serving them off the arm for the summer. Markin had stopped in
for a short something to eat, they hit it off just fine, he wound up back at
her cabin that night and several days later, showing the tenor of the times,
Markin and Angelica headed west in search of, well, you know what they were in
search of if you have been paying attention. Angelica, as it turned out was
like many people not built for the road and so headed back to her school in
Indiana after some mishaps along the way in Omaha. That was the tenor of the
times too.]
*******
Damn,
already I missed Angelica, road-worthy, road-travel easy, easy on the eyes and
easy getting us a ride Angelica as I traveled down Interstate 80 onto the great
prairie Mid-American hitchhike road after we parted at the Omaha bus station,
she heading home East, at least Indiana east from Nebraska, and I to the savage
search for the blue-pink great American West night. And I will tell you true
that first ride and every ride after that, every miserable truck stopped or
sedan ride, it didn’t matter, made me utter that same missed Angelica oath.
Right
then though I was on my first connection ride out of Omaha and as luck would
have it this big bruiser, full tattoo armed with snakes, roses and lost loves
names, truck driver who was obviously benny-ed, benny-ed to perdition and was
talking a blue streak was driving right through to Denver, my next destination.
All I wanted was the ride but I knew enough of the road, enough of the truck
driver come-on part of it anyway to know that this guy’s blue streak was a small
price to pay for such a lucky break.
See,
some guys, some guys like Denver Slim, who left me off at that long ago (or it
seemed like long ago) Steubenville truck stop and Angelica (hey, now I know who
to blame for my miseries, if I ever get my hands on that damn Denver Slim… Yah,
yah, what are you going to do, big boy?), wanted to talk man to man. Back and
forth like real people, especially as I reminded him of his errant (read: hair
growing long , full-bearded hippie –swaying) son. Other guys are happy for the
company so they can, at seventy or seventy-five miles an hour with the engine
revved high and where conversation is made almost painful and chock-filled
with “what did you says?”, spout forth
on their homespun philosophy and their take on this wicked old world. With
these guys an occasional “Yah, that’s right,” or a timely “What did you mean by
that?” will stand you in good stead and you can nod out into your own thoughts.
And
that is exactly where I wanted be, as old Buck (where do they get these names
out in Mid-America anyway) droned on and on about how the government was doing,
or not doing this or that for, or to, the little guy who helped build up, not
tear down, the country like him. Thinking about what Aunt Betty, sweet Neola,
Iowa grandmotherly Aunt Betty, said as she left me off at the Interstate 80
entrance still rings in my ears. I was good for Angelica. Hell, I know I was.
Hell, if I had any sense I would admit what I know inside. Angelica was good
for me too. But see certain times were funny that way. No way in 1962, or ‘64,
or ’66, let’s say, that I would have run into an Angelica. I was strung out,
strung out hard on neurotic, long black-haired (although that was optional),
kind of skinny (not thin, not slender, skinny, wistfully skinny, I say),
bookish, Harvard Square, maybe a poet, kind of girls. If I said beatnik girls,
and not free-form, ethereal, butterfly breeze “hippie” girls you’d know what I
mean.
As
a kid I was cranked on pale, hell wan was more like it, dark-haired, hard Irish
Catholic girls, and I mean hard Irish Catholic girls with twelve novena books
in their hands, and unrequited lust in their hearts. So, I swear, when
Angelica’s number turned up I was clueless how to take just a plain-spoken,
says what she means, means what she says young woman who had dreams (unformed,
mainly, but dreams nevertheless) that also were plain-spoken. Ah, I can’t
explain it now, and I doubt I ever will. Just say I was stunted, stunned, and
smitten, okay and let me listen to old Buck’s drone.
Later.
I
have now put many a mile between me and Omaha and here I am well clear of that
prairie fire dream now in sweet winter desert night Arizona not far from some
old now run down, crumbling Native American dwellings that keep drawing my
attention and I still want to utter that oath, that Angelica oath. Sitting by
this night camp fire casting its weird ghost night-like shadows just makes it
worst. Old now well-traveled soldiers turned “hippies”, Jack and Mattie,
playing their new-found (at least to me) flute and penny whistle music mantra
to set the tone. And Sam Lowell, old corner boy, just joined us, finally,
finally on the road west, and finally after just missed Denver when we wanted
to get out before the early snows clogged up the high Rockies.
Hey,
I just remembered, sitting here wrapped up in Angelica and ancient primal
tribal memories out of the whistling black star-filled night that I haven’t
filled you in on where I have been, who I have seen (like John and Mattie), and
how I got here from that star-crossed Neola night, at least the past Denver
part. Jesus, and here we are only a few hundred miles from the ocean. I can
almost smell, smell that algae sea- churned smell, and almost see the
foam-flecked waves turn against the jagged-edged La Jolla rocks and mad, aging
surfer boys from another time looking for that perfect wave. Yah, another more
innocent time before all hell broke loose on us in America and crushed our
innocent youthful dreams in the rice paddies of Asia, our Angelica plain-spoken
dreams, but not our capacity to dream. That only makes the Angelica hurt worst
as I remember that she had never seen the ocean, the jagged edged, foam-flecked
ocean that I went on and on about. I was to be her Neptune on that voyage west
to the rim of the world. Well let me get to it, the filling you in part.
After
grabbing that straight ride from blue streak talkin’ old Buck I did tell you
about, and a short but scary two day delay by a serious snow squall
hurricane-wind tumult just before the Rocky Mountain foothills leading into
Denver I got there in good order. If I didn’t tell you before, and now that I
think about it I didn’t, I was to hook up with my now traveling companions, Sam,
Jack and Mattie, there for the final trip west to the ocean and serious
blue-pink visions. If you don’t remember Jack and Mattie, whom I did meet there
and Sam who was delayed in Illinois west of Chicago since his hitchhiking was
going slower than he expected, they are two guys that I picked up on the
Massachusetts highways heading south in the days when I had a car in the early
spring. We had some adventures going south, that I will tell you about another
time, before I left them off in Washington, D.C. so they could head west from
there. We agreed then to meet up in Denver later in the year where they
expected to stay for a while. My last contact with them in late summer had them
still there but when I arrived at the communal farm on the outskirts of Denver
where they had been staying I was informed that they had gotten nervous about
being stuck in the snow-bound Rockies and wanted to head south as fast as they
could. They had left a Phoenix address for me to meet them at. I stayed at the
commune for a few days to rest up, doing a little of this and that, mostly that,
and then headed out myself on what turned to be an uneventful and mercifully
short hitchhike road trip to Phoenix to connect with them. That is where Sam
caught up with us afterchecking out that Denver connection. Forward.
And
so here we are making that last push to the coast but not before we investigate
these Native American lands that, as it turns out, we all had been interested
in ever since our kid days watching cowboys and Indians on the old black and
white 1950s small screen television. You know Lone Ranger, Hop-along Cassidy,
Roy Rogers and their sidekicks’ fake, distorted, prettified Old West stuff.
Stuff where the rich Native American traditions got short shrift.
Earlier
today we had been over to Red Rock for an Intertribal celebration, a gathering
of what was left of the great, ancient warrior nations that roamed freely here
not all that long ago but who are now mere “cigar store” Indian characters to
the public eye. The sounds, the whispering shrill canyon sounds and all the
others, the sights, the colors radiant as they pulled out all the stops to
bring back the old days when they ruled this West, the spirit, ah, the spirit
of our own warrior shaman trances are still in our heads. I am still in some
shamanic-induced trance from the healing dances, from warrior tom-tom dances,
and from the primal scream-like sounds as they drove away the evil spirits that
gathered around them (not hard enough to drive the marauding “white devil” who
had broken their hearts, if not their spirits though). Not only that but we
scored some peyote buttons (strictly for religious purposes, as you will see)
and they have started to kick in along with the occasional hit from the old
bong hash pipe (again strictly for medicinal purposes).
So
right now in this dark, abyss dark, darker than I ever saw the night sky in the
East with all its lights at every corner to keep the bad element at bay but
forgetting whatever made us build a thing from which we had to run, though it
is star-filled, million star-filled, in this spitting flame-roared campfire
throwing shadow night along with tormented hash pipe-filled dreams of Angelica
I am embedded with the ghosts of ten thousand past warrior- kings and their
people. And if my ears don’t deceive me, and they don’t, beside Jack’s flute
and Mattie’s penny whistle I hear, and hear plainly, the muted gathering war
cries of ancient drums summoning paint-faced proud, bedecked warriors to avenge
their not so ancient loses, and their sorrows as well.
And
after more pipe-fillings that sound got louder, louder so that even Jack and
Mattie seem transfixed and begin to play their own instruments louder and
stronger to keep pace with the drums. Then, magically, magically it seemed
anyway, I swear, I swear on anything holy or unholy, on some sodden forebear
grave, on some unborn descendent that off the campfire- reflected red, red
sandstone, grey, grey sandstone, beige (beige for lack of better color
description), beige sandstone canyon echo walls I see the vague outlines of old
proud, feather-bedecked, slash mark-painted Apache warriors beginning, slowly
at first, to go into their ghost dance trance that I had heard got them revved
up for a fight. Suddenly, we four as Sam, head full of peyote, hash and who
knows what else, greedy to be high in this locale from his utterings, we four
television-sotted Indian warriors got up and started, slowly at first so we were
actually out of synch with the wall action to move to the rhythms of the
ghosts. Ay ya, ay ya, ay ya, ay ya,…..until we speed up to catch the real pace.
After what seems an eternity we were ready, ready as hell, to go seek revenge
for those white man injustices.
But
just as quickly the now flickering camp fire flame goes out, or goes to ember, since
in the trance nobody remembered to throw a few more logs or keep the flames
stoked the shadow ghost dance warriors are gone and we crumble in exhaustion to
the ground. So much for vengeance. We, after regaining some strength, all
decide that we had better push on, push on hard, to the ocean as soon as
possible the next morning. These ancient desert nights, sweet winter desert
nights or not, will do us in otherwise. But just for a moment, just for a weak
modern moment we, or at least I knew, what it was like for those ancient
warriors to seek their own blue-pink great American West night.
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