[Faith-talk] A funny read in intellectualism
Maureen Pranghofer
maureensmusic at comcast.net
Sun Jul 12 22:22:21 UTC 2015
Hi
Thanks for sharing
I read the book Without Feathers years ago in Braille from NLS and that was
my first introduction to Woody Allen, too funny and so oddly creative. I
remember he was saying he tried to write a suicide note but got his tongue
caught in the roller of the typewriter.
Maureen
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Subject: [Faith-talk] A funny read in intellectualism
It’s a short piece.
The Whore of Mensa
By Woody Allen
One thing about being a private investigator, you’ve got to learn to go
with your hunches. That’s why when a quivering pat of butter named Word
Babcock walked into my office and laid his cards on the table, I should have
trusted the cold chill that shot up my spine.
“Kaiser?” he said. “Kaiser Lupowitz?”
“That’s what it says on my license,” I owned up.
“You’ve got to help me. I’m being blackmailed. Please!”
He was shaking like the lead singer in a rumba band. I pushed a glass across
the desk top and a bottle of rye I keep handy for nonmedicinal purposes.
“Suppose you relax and tell me all about it.”
“You . . . you won’t tell my wife?”
“Level with me, Word. I can’t make any promises.”
He tried pouring a drink, but you could hear the clicking sound across the
street, and most of the stuff wound up in his shoes.
“I’m a working guy,” he said. “Mechanical maintenance. I build and service
joy buzzers You know—those little fun gimmicks that give people a shock when
they shake hands?”
“So?”
“A lot of your executives like ’em. Particularly down on Wall Street.”
“Get to the point.”
“I’m on the road a lot. You know how it is—lonely. Oh, not what you’re
thinking. See, Kaiser, I’m basically an intellectual. Sure, a guy can meet
all the bimbos he wants. But the really brainy women—they’re not so easy to
find on short notice.”
“Keep talking.”
“Well, I heard of this young girl. Eighteen years old. A Vassar student. For
a price, she’ll come over and discuss any subject—Proust, Yeats,
anthropology. Exchange of ideas. You see what I’m driving at?”
“Not exactly.”
“I mean, my wife is great, don’t get me wrong. But she won’t discuss Pound
with me. Or Eliot. I didn’t know that when I married her. See, I need a
woman who’s mentally stimulating, Kaiser. And I’m willing to pay for it. I
don’t want an involvement—I want a quick intellectual experience, then I
want the girl to leave. Christ, Kaiser, I’m a happily married man.”
“How long has this been going on?”
“Six months. Whenever I have that craving, I call Flossie. She’s a madam,
with a master’s in Comparative Lit. She sends me over an intellectual, see?”
So he was one of those guys whose weakness was really bright women. I felt
sorry for the poor sap. I figured there must be a lot of jokers in his
position, who were starved for a little intellectual communication with the
opposite sex and would pay through the nose for it.
“Now she’s threatening to tell my wife,” he said.
“Who is?”
“Flossie. They bugged the motel room. They got tapes of me discussing ‘The
Waste Land’ and ‘Styles of Radical Will,’ and, well, really getting into
some issues. They want ten grand or they go to Carla. Kaiser, you’ve got to
help me! Carla would die if she knew she didn’t turn me on up here.”
The old call-girl racket. I had heard rumors that the boys at headquarters
were on to something involving a group of educated women, but so far they
were stymied.
“Get Flossie on the phone for me.”
“What?”
“I’ll take your case, Word. But I get fifty dollars a day, plus expenses.
You’ll have to repair a lot of joy buzzers.”
“It won’t be ten Gs’ worth, I’m sure of that,” he said with a grin, and
picked up the phone and dialled a number. I took it from him and winked. I
was beginning to like him.
Seconds later, a silky voice answered, and I told her what was on my mind.
“I understand you can help me set up an hour of good chat,” I said.
“Sure, honey. What do you have in mind?”
“I’d like to discuss Melville.”
“ ‘Moby Dick’ or the shorter novels?”
“What’s the difference?”
“The price. That’s all. Symbolism’s extra.”
“What’ll it run me?”
“Fifty, maybe a hundred for ‘Moby Dick.’ You want a comparative
discussion—Melville and Hawthorne? That could be arranged for a hundred.”
“The dough’s fine,” I told her and gave her the number of a room at the
Plaza.
“You want a blonde or a brunette?”
“Surprise me,” I said, and hung up.
I shaved and grabbed some black coffee while I checked over the Monarch
College Outline series. Hardly an hour had passed before there was a knock
on my door. I opened it, and standing there was a young redhead who was
packed into her slacks like two big scoops of vanilla ice cream.
“Hi, I’m Sherry.”
They really knew how to appeal to your fantasies. Long straight hair,
leather bag, silver earrings, no makeup.
“I’m surprised you weren’t stopped, walking into the hotel dressed like
that,” I said. “The house dick can usually spot an intellectual.”
“A five-spot cools him.”
“Shall we begin?” I said, motioning her to the couch.
She lit a cigarette and got right to it. “I think we could start by
approaching ‘Billy Budd’ as Melville’s justification of the ways of God to
man, n’est-ce pas?”
“Interestingly, though, not in a Miltonian sense.” I was bluffing. I wanted
to see if she’d go for it.
“No. ‘Paradise Lost’ lacked the substructure of pessimism.” She did.
“Right, right. God, you’re right,” I murmured.
“I think Melville reaffirmed the virtues of innocence in a naïve yet
sophisticated sense—don’t you agree?”
I let her go on. She was barely nineteen years old, but already she had
developed the hardened facility of the pseudo-intellectual. She rattled off
her ideas glibly, but it was all mechanical. Whenever I offered an insight,
she faked a response: “Oh, yes, Kaiser. Yes, baby, that’s deep. A platonic
comprehension of Christianity—why didn’t I see it before?”
We talked for about an hour and then she said she had to go. She stood up
and I laid a C-note on her.
“Thanks, honey.”
“There’s plenty more where that came from.”
“What are you trying to say?”
I had piqued her curiosity. She sat down again.
“Suppose I wanted to—have a party?” I said.
“Like, what kind of party?”
“Suppose I wanted Noam Chomsky explained to me by two girls?”
“Oh, wow.”
“If you’d rather forget it . . .”
“You’d have to speak with Flossie,” she said. “It’d cost you.”
Now was the time to tighten the screws. I flashed my private-investigator’s
badge and informed her it was a bust.
“What!”
“I’m fuzz, sugar, and discussing Melville for money is an 802. You can do
time.”
“You louse!”
“Better come clean, baby. Unless you want to tell your story down at Alfred
Kazin’s office, and I don’t think he’d be too happy to hear it.”
She began to cry. “Don’t turn me in, Kaiser,” she said. “I needed the money
to complete my master’s. I’ve been turned down for a grant. Twice. Oh,
Christ . . .”
It all poured out—the whole story. Central Park West upbringing, Socialist
summer camps, Brandeis. She was every dame you saw waiting in line at the
Elgin or the Thalia, or pencilling the words “Yes, very true” into the
margin of some book on Kant. Only somewhere along the line she had made a
wrong turn.
“I needed cash. A girl friend said she knew a married guy whose wife wasn’t
very profound. He was into Blake. She couldn’t hack it. I said sure, for a
price I’d talk Blake with him. I was nervous at first. I faked a lot of it.
He didn’t care. My friend said there were others. Oh, I’ve been busted
before. I got caught reading Commentary in a parked car, and I was once
stopped and frisked at Tanglewood. Once more and I’m a three-time loser.”
“Then take me to Flossie.”
She bit her lip and said, “The Hunter College Book Store is a front.”
“Yes?”
“Like those bookie joints that have barbershops outside for show. You’ll
see.”
I made a quick call to headquarters and then said to her, “O.K., sugar.
You’re off the hook. But don’t leave town.”
She tilted her face up toward mine gratefully. “I can get you photographs of
Dwight Macdonald reading,” she said.
“Some other time.”
I walked into the Hunter College Book Store. The salesman, a young man with
sensitive eyes, came up to me. “Can I help you?” he said.
“I’m looking for a special edition of ‘Advertisements for Myself.’ I
understand the author had several thousand gold-leaf copies printed up for
friends.”
“I’ll have to check,” he said. “We have a WATS line to Mailer’s house.”
I fixed him with a look. “Sherry sent me,” I said.
“Oh, in that case, go on back,” he said. He pressed a button. A wall of
books opened, and I walked like a lamb into that bustling pleasure palace
known as Flossie’s.
Red flocked wallpaper and a Victorian décor set the tone. Pale, nervous
girls with black-rimmed glasses and blunt-cut hair lolled around on sofas,
riffling Penguin Classics provocatively. A blonde with a big smile winked at
me, nodded toward a room upstairs, and said, “Wallace Stevens, eh?” But it
wasn’t just intellectual experiences—they were peddling emotional ones, too.
For fifty bucks, I learned, you could “relate without getting close.” For a
hundred, a girl would lend you her Bartók records, have dinner, and then let
you watch while she had an anxiety attack. For one-fifty, you could listen
to FM radio with twins. For three bills, you got the works: A thin Jewish
brunette would pretend to pick you up at the Museum of Modern Art, let you
read her master’s, get you involved in a screaming quarrel at Elaine’s over
Freud’s conception of women, and then fake a suicide of your choosing—the
perfect evening, for some guys. Nice racket. Great town, New York.
“Like what you see?” a voice said behind me. I turned and suddenly found
myself standing face to face with the business end of a .38. I’m a guy with
a strong stomach, but this time it did a back flip. It was Flossie, all
right. The voice was the same, but Flossie was a man. His face was hidden by
a mask.
“You’ll never believe this,” he said, “but I don’t even have a college
degree. I was thrown out for low grades.”
“Is that why you wear that mask?”
“I devéised a complicated scheme to take over The New York Review of Books,
but it meant I had to pass for Lionel Trilling. I went to Mexico for an
operation. There’s a doctor in Juarez who gives people Trilling’s
features—for a price. Something went wrong. I came out looking like Auden,
with Mary McCarthy’s voice. That’s when I started working the other side of
the law.”
Quickly, before he could tighten his finger on the trigger, I went into
action. Heaving forward, I snapped my elbow across his jaw and grabbed the
gun as he fell back. He hit the ground like a ton of bricks. He was still
whimpering when the police showed up.
“Nice work, Kaiser,” Sergeant Holmes said. “When we’ re through with this
guy, the F.B.I. wants to have a talk with him. A little matter involving
some gamblers and an annotated copy of Dante’s ‘Inferno.’ Take him away,
boys.”
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