Tropic of Cancer

by

Henry Miller

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Pages 1-17 Quotes

I have no money, no resources, no hopes. I am the happiest man alive. A year ago, six months ago, I thought that I was an artist. I no longer think about it, I am. Everything that was literature has fallen from me. There are no more books to be written, thank God. This then? This is not a book. This is libel, slander, defamation of character. This is not a book, in the ordinary sense of the word. No, this is a prolonged insult, a gob of spit in the face of Art, a kick in the pants to God, Man, Destiny, Time, Love, Beauty... what you will.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

There is only one thing which interests me vitally now, and that is the recording of all that which is omitted in books. Nobody, so far as I can see, is making use of those elements in the air which give direction and motivation to our lives. Only the killers seem to be extracting from life some satisfactory measure of what they are putting into it. The age demands violence, but we are getting only abortive explosions.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:

A weird sort of contentment in those days. No appointments, no invitations for dinner, no program, no dough. The golden period, when I had not a single friend.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 30-38 Quotes

And while it's all very nice to know that a woman has a mind, literature coming from the cold corpse of a whore is the last thing to be served in bed. Germaine had the right idea: she was ignorant and lusty, she put her heart and soul into her work. She was a whore all the way through—and that was her virtue!

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker), Germaine , Claude
Page Number: 38
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 39-43 Quotes

"I hate Paris!" he whines. "All these stupid people playing cards all day... look at them! And this writing! What's the use of putting words together? I can be a writer without writing, can't I? What does it prove if I write a book? What do we want with books anyway? There are too many books already..."

Related Characters: Carl (speaker), Henry Miller
Page Number: 40
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 44-55 Quotes

It seems to me Papini misses something by a hair's breadth when he talks of the need to be alone. It is not difficult to be alone if you are poor and a failure. An artist is always alone – if he is an artist. No, what the artist needs is loneliness.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 53-54
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 56-63 Quotes

Art consists in going the full length. If you start with the drums you have to end with dynamite, or TNT.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 62
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 64-80 Quotes

As I listen to his tales of America I see how absurd it is to expect of Gandhi that miracle which will deroute the trend of destiny. India's enemy is not England, but America. India's enemy is the time spirit, the hand which cannot be turned back. Nothing will avail to offset this virus which is poisoning the whole world. America is the very incarnation of doom. She will drag the whole world down to the bottomless pit.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker), Young Hindu
Page Number: 76
Explanation and Analysis:

And so I think what a miracle it would be if this miracle which man attends eternally should turn out to be nothing more than these two enormous turds which the faithful disciple dropped in the bidet. What if at the last moment, when the banquet table is set and the cymbals clash, there should appear suddenly, and wholly without warning, a silver platter on which even the blind could see that there is nothing more, and nothing less, than two enormous lumps of [feces]. That, I believe would be more miraculous than anything which man has looked forward to. It would be miraculous because it would be undreamed of. It would be more miraculous than even the wildest dream because anybody could imagine the possibility but nobody ever has, and probably nobody ever again will.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 81-134 Quotes

"That guy," he begins, meaning Carl, "that guy's an artist. He described every detail minutely. He told it to me with such accuracy that I know it's all a god-damned lie... but I can't dismiss it from my mind. You know how my mind works!"

Related Characters: Van Norden (speaker), Henry Miller, Carl
Page Number: 95
Explanation and Analysis:

"I try all sorts of things," he explains to me. "I even count sometimes, or I begin to think of a problem in philosophy, but it doesn't work. It's like I'm two people, and one of them is watching me all the time. I get so god-damned mad at myself that I could kill myself... and in a way, that's what I do every time I have an orgasm. For one second like I obliterate myself. There's not even one me then... there's nothing […] It's like receiving communion.

Related Characters: Carl (speaker), Henry Miller
Page Number: 105
Explanation and Analysis:

Once out of his sight we began to laugh hysterically. The false teeth! […] There are people in this world who cut such a grotesque figure that even death renders them ridiculous. And the more horrible the death the more ridiculous they seem. It's no use trying to invest the end with a little dignity – you have to be a liar and a hypocrite to discover anything tragic in their going. And since we didn't have to put on a false front we could laugh about the incident to our heart's content.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker), Van Norden , Peckover
Related Symbols: False Teeth
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

They have a wonderful therapeutic effect upon me, these catastrophes which I proof-read. Imagine a state of perfect immunity, a charmed existence, a life of absolute security in the midst of poison bacilli. Nothing touches me, neither earthquakes nor explosions nor riots nor famine nor collisions nor wars nor revolutions. I am inoculated against every disease, every calamity, every sorrow and misery.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:

The wallpaper with which the men of science have covered the world of reality is falling to tatters. The grand whorehouse which they have made of life requires no decoration; it is essential only that the drains function adequately. Beauty, that feline beauty which has us by the balls in America, is finished. To fathom the new reality it is first necessary to dismantle the drains, to lay open the gangrened ducts which compose the genito-urinary system that supplies the excreta of art.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 133
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 135-149 Quotes

Now and then, it's true, I did think of Mona, not as of a person in a definite aura of time and space, but separately, detached, as though she had blown up into a great cloud-like form that blotted out the past. I couldn't allow myself to think about her very long; if I had I would have jumped off the bridge. It's strange. I had become so reconciled to this life without her, and yet if I thought about her only for a minute it was enough to pierce the bone and marrow of my contentment and shove me back again into the agonizing gutter of my wretched past. For seven years I went about, day and night, with only one thing on my mind — her.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker), Mona
Page Number: 143
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 150-167 Quotes

Sex everywhere: it was slopping over, a neap-tide that swept the props from under the city.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 164
Explanation and Analysis:

It's best to keep America just like that, always in the background, a sort of picture post-card which you look at in a weak moment. Like that, you imagine it's always there waiting for you, unchanged, unspoiled, a big patriotic open space with cows and sheep and tenderhearted men ready to bugger everything in sight, man, woman or beast. It doesn't exist, America. It's a name you give to an abstract idea...

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker), Fillmore , Collins
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 177-192 Quotes

There was nothing pressing, except to finish the book, and that didn't worry me much because I was already convinced that nobody would accept it anyway.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 177
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 193-208 Quotes

Often we sat by the fire drinking hot toddies and discussing the life back there in the States. We talked about it as if we never expected to go back there again. Fillmore had a map of New York City which he had tacked on the wall; we used to spend whole evenings discussing the relative virtues of Paris and New York. And inevitably there always crept into our discussions the figure of Whitman, that one lone figure which America has produced in the course of her brief life. In Whitman the whole American scene comes to life, her past and her future, her birth and her death. Whatever there is of value in America Whitman has expressed, and there is nothing more to be said.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker), Fillmore
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

Up to the present, my idea in collaborating with myself has been to get off the gold standard of literature.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 196
Explanation and Analysis:

When I look down into that crack I see an equation sign, the world at balance, a world reduced to zero and no trace of remainder. Not the zero on which Van Norden turned his flashlight, not the empty crack of the prematurely disillusioned man, but an Arabian zero rather, the sign from which spring endless mathematical worlds […]

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 200
Explanation and Analysis:

Once I thought that to be human was the highest aim a man could have, but I see now that it was meant to destroy me. To-day I am proud to say that I am inhuman, that I belong not to men and governments, that I have nothing to do with creeds and principles. I have nothing to do with the creaking machinery of humanity – I belong to the earth! I say that lying on my pillow and I can feel the horns sprouting from my temples.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 205
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 209-231 Quotes

Going back in a flash over the women I've known. It's like a chain which I've forged out of my own misery. Each one bound to the other. A fear of living separate, of staying born. The door of the womb always on the latch.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker)
Page Number: 231
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 232-256 Quotes

But do you know what saved me? So I think, at least. It was Faust. Yeah! Her old man happened to see it lying on the table. He asked me if I understood German. One thing led to another and before I knew it he was looking through my books. Fortunately I happened to have the Shakespeare open too. That impressed him like hell. He said I was evidently a very serious guy.

Related Characters: Carl (speaker)
Page Number: 233
Explanation and Analysis:

The sun is setting. I feel this river flowing through me – its past, its ancient soil, the changing climate. The hills gently girdle it about: its course is fixed.

Related Characters: Henry Miller (speaker), Fillmore , Ginette , Mona
Page Number: 256
Explanation and Analysis:
No matches.