William S. Burroughs’ Cities Of the Red Night trilogy
was his most thematic literary project. The first novel in the series
used pirates as a central theme while the second, The Place
of Dead Roads, drew on cowboys,
outlaws, and
the Western genre. Both books portrayed the world as a rotten and
unjust place. The protagonists set out to establish utopia as a
solution to the problems of human existence. They also allude to the
need for humans to eventually escape from planet Earth since the
whole place is doomed to self-destruction. Since humans aren’t
physically or psychologically evolved for life in space, and possibly
never will be, the only means of escape from the rottenness of
humanity is in death. But for Burroughs, who actually had
a strong desire to live, the afterlife stands as the only option
available. That is where The Western Lands begins.
Only this time, the theme isn’t pirates or outlaws; it is Egyptian
mythology.
The
novel begins with the self-referential William Lee Hart, a solitary
writer living in a boxcar converted into a home on the bank of a
river. This should tell you immediately that the whole book is
autobiographical in the way that only William S. Burroughs can be
autobiographical. I actually would argue that all his novels are
autobiographical, but that is a matter for another essay.
The
concepts of ancient Egyptian religions
are introduced in the beginning too. According to The Book
Of the Dead via Norman Mailer’s
Ancient Evenings, every
living body has seven souls that perform various functions to whoever
they inhabit. One is the director or managers of the other souls, one
is a body double, another is a shadow self that hinders what the
other souls
are trying to accomplish. These souls are separate beings that don’t
always work together for a common purpose and in fact, sometimes they
are at war with one another.
The
discerning reader can recognize that the seven souls are represented
by different characters in this novel although Burroughs doesn’t
make it clear which characters match with which souls. True to the
nature of his writing, the links are slippery, ephemeral, and
difficult to grasp and hold on to. It doesn’t matter so much though
because the characters in his novels are rarely developed
beyond
what they do upon their initial appearance in the narratives. They
tend to be more like spirits or elements, floating through the world
in a haze of hallucinations which says a lot about how Burroughs
experienced the world. But what the seven souls and their
representation all come down to is the relationship between the
author and his
literary personas. The people written into the prose are all
personifications or projections of different sides of the author.
Jack Kerouac wrote about the different sides of his personality
through the brothers in The Town and the City, Ken
Kesey wrote about two sides of his personality with the two brothers
in Sometimes a Great Notion, and
Dostoyesky examined three sides of his psyche through the three main
characters in The Brothers Karamazov. Here
Burroughs is driving the point home that authors, with varying
degrees of self-consciousness, mostly only write about themselves.
This
novel also begins with some references back to early works of this
author. The passage where arguments break out in a film engineering
studio refers back to the subversievely
chaotic attempt at broadcasting the American national anthem fron a
television studio in Naked Lunch. The
gun fight that opens and closes The Place of Dead Roads is
rewritten here too. From there, the book goes on to examine themes
previously introduced and repeated throughout the entire catalog of
Burroughs’ writings. A rebel secret agent establishes an espionage
agency that acts independently of any nation. Their purpose is to sow
chaos throughout the world with riots, bombings, and assassinations.
An escaped Nazi officer runs black market operations, surviving by
impersonating Arabs, Jews, and Mexicans. Exotic
weaponry is described
excessively
in a way that could possibly be considered pornographic in its
details. Also there are
drugs, sex, inhuman
creatures produced asexually, sewers, violence, men who ejaculate
while being hung, hideous
centipedes, and everything
else you would associate with Burroughs by the end of his career.
One
memorable passage involves a team of seven men tangentially related
to the medical and veterinarian professions even though none of them
are actually doctors. But they all have skills that could be useful
for a medical experiment. One of them is an expert in building ships
in bottles. They are given the task of disassembling wild animals,
rearranging the parts, and then randomly putting them together with
the intention of creating new forms of nature. This is a kind of
self-satire in which Burroughs repurposes his cut up method of
writing by applying it to the unfortunate creatures in the
laboratory. This is emblematic of the author’s whole purpose: to
take the mind into inconceivable territories, dismantling reality,
and recreating it in new ways that would never be possible with with
conscious intent.
Another
memorable passage involves patients in a hospital burn ward who start
a riot because the uncaring doctors refuse to give them painkillers
as part of their treatments. This could be representative of
Burroughs’ experience of morphine or heroin withdrawal in a society
in which those drugs are illegal and sometimes unobtainable when the
pain of withdrawal is at its most intense.
Yet
another passage keys you in to Burroughs’ way of thinking by
writing about a literary critic as practicing black magic with the
intent to kill the author. The critic posts reviews of books without
reading them, but then a mysterious dog shows up and follows him
around. Soon after, he is dead. The same dog appears for a spy and a
member of high society. The dog is
revealed to be a spirit
from ancient Egyptian mythology who arrives
to lead an individual to the doorway of death. The critic reveals a
way of approaching Burroughs’ work by showing how he is both a
literary critic and a black magician at the same time. It’s like
seeing one man though two different angles so that the angles
interact and cut into each other, covering and revealing parts of the
man while making it possible to see the whole figure for what he is.
It’s like the paintings of Cezanne with his experiments in shifting
visual planes and angles.
Then
there is the Egyptian mythology itself. Some passages are scenes of a
pharaoh’s life and his interaction with Egyptian priests. Wars
between Pagans and monotheists break out because for the Pagans, life
after death is a privilege that has to be earned whereas for the
monotheistic religions that later turned into Judaism, Islam, and
Christianity, any person, no
matter how insignificant, is capable of attaining life in Heaven just
as long as they have faith in God. These monotheistic religions are
portrayed as a ruse to make human society more conformist and easier
to manage by the priests and kings whose ultimate goal is the
enslavement of the whole
human race. But the Pagan priests enslaved their societies too, just
in different ways. Burroughs doesn’t appear to take any definite
stance on which version of the afterlife is best although he does
express more contempt for the monotheistic religions. His comments on
Islam are quite harsh.
Then
there are the mummies. Burroughs explains how the process of
eviscerating, wrapping, and pickling dead bodies is a method of
making batteries. Yes, batteries. The soul that survives in the
afterlife needs a life force to sustain itself. Previous to death,
that life source
is the living body. Therefore the body is mummified to remain a
supplier of life force to the soul the way a rechargeable battery
keeps a light bulb shining. But since the mummified body is dead it
needs to draw life force from someplace else
and that source is the souls
of the living. Therefore mummies are a type of vampire that drains
life out of the living. If you ever want to read an anti-mummy rant,
look no further. No one ever argued that Burroughs isn’t unique.
After thinking through this, you might consider it to be another
commentary on drug addiction. A junky under the influence of opiates
is little more than a breathing mummy. A
junky in withdrawal is like a person having the life force sucked out
of them. The addiction is like a spirit that survives by sucking all
the life out of the junky.
At
some point, the narrative moves on from ancient Egypt to modern Cairo
and then off to the city of Waghda. Readers of the previous two books
in the trilogy will recognize Waghda as the last city out of seven
you must pass through before embarking on a journey to the Western
Lands, the land of the dead, the land of the afterlife, so called in
Egyptian mythology because the sun sets in the West. Waghda is
located near the crater where an alien spaceship once crashed,
unleashing the virus that infected the larynxes of primates and
evolved to become human language. The crater is now inhabited by a
tribe of people who can’t escape and are close to starvation but
sustain themselves by keeping their souls
alive by smoking an herb
and playing music. Mixed up in all this is a long explication of the
science of virology that reads like a university professor’s
lecture. It examines the links and similarities between viruses and
humans. This is typical of
Burroughs. He starts with a new train of thought and it ends in some
place you never could have predicted.
Waghda
is a city inhabited by a
large population of lower class people who indulge in all manners of
vice, especially those involving sex and drugs. A small population of
upper class puritans lives there and hopes to one day exterminate all
the lower class people who they regard as vermin. Yet again, this is
another place with exotic weapons and people with magic powers. One
man uses magic to find a guide to take him to the edge of the Western
Lands. But somewhere in
Waghda there are imprisoned animals and when a lion escapes it gets
out to the
edge of the city where it sneaks up behind a man. The man’s friend
tries to shoot the lion but shoots his friend instead. Then he goes
home and cries to his mother because he feels so guilty. It’s hard
not to see a parallel between this passage and Burroughs’ shooting
of his wife Joan Vollmer. It’s like the author is taking one last
literary opportunity
to express the misery he felt after killing his wife while
trying to diminish the responsibility he had in the accident.
Meanwhile, as the aforementioned individual is leaving the outskirts
of Waghda, he contemplates how the world is a violent, dangerous
place where somebody or something is always trying to kill you.
The
narrative circles back to William Lee Hart in his boxcar home,
writing and poring over books with pictures of wild animals. He
identifies with and admires the most unusual looking animals in the
book, a definite statement on how alien Burroughs felt as a member of
the human race. As an old
man, he begins to detach from the previous parts of his life, letting
go of memories of the dream
machine and pretending to be
an intergalactic secret agent as if they are nothing more than scraps
of ideas he no longer needs. Death
is a process of leaving behind former aspects of himself. The
tone is one of resignation and finding peace with himself in
solitude, away from the human
rabble, writing articles he
expects no one will ever read and not caring. Then a mysterious cat
appears and then disappears. Hart vanishes when he tries to find the
missing cat. The implication
is that the cat is a spirit who has come to lead him to the threshold
of death.
So
what The Western Lands
presents us with is an elderly author looking back on his life and
commenting on his literary works. It’s an exercise in
meta-narrative and self-reflection/explication
that is easier to see by readers familiar with his work and life, but
not necessarily easy to interpret.
An interpretation might be
more mundane than you would think considering how opaque a lot of
Burroughs’ writing is. Simply put, he sees human society as a
shithole and the older he gets, the less he wants to engage with it.
But he takes great delight in creating his own world, one in which
linear time and causality are irrelevant and anything, including
magic, is possible. To be trite about it, literature and art are the
ultimate means of liberation from the world and there isn’t any
alternative. “All is permitted, anything is possible,” are the
words he puts in the mouth of
Hassan I Sabbah, the Old Man
Of the Mountains and leader of the Ismailite
sect known as the Assassins
or the Hashishim as they are
sometimes called. Burroughs
explicitly says in this novel that he is an incarnation of Hassan I
Sabbah and he controls the characters in his writing the way the Old
Man Of the Mountain controlled his followers. He
is the Guiding Soul overseeing the other six literary souls, the
personas created by the author. As for the immortality of the author
in the Western Lands or the afterlife, isn’t this just another way
of saying that the author’s soul lives on after their death through
the books they write?
Life in the Western Lands is
a privilege to be gained after a lifetime of preparation in a human
body. The Book Of the Dead was
written to prepare the seeker for the journey to the afterlife and
The Western Lands is a
document that shows how the author did what he could to earn the
privilege of dwelling there.
The
novel’s biggest shortcoming is the way Burroughs introduces the
concept of the seven souls, starts to make it clear that different
characters represent different souls, and then dissolves the theme
into the chaos that happens throughout the rest of the book. Either
the theme just gets dropped altogether, or I just didn’t work hard
enough to draw connections between the souls and the characters. In
any case, that is a difficult task considering that so much of this
book is like being blasted in the face with a firehose of vomit,
diarrhea, animal guts, sewage, toxic sludge, and anal mucous. And
William Burroughs is the only
author I know of to date who has dedicated any serious literary space
to the subject of anal mucous, though I do think J.G. Ballard briefly
mentions
the subject in The Atrocity Exhibition.
Then again, Burroughs constantly expressed contempt for linearity in
narratives so this problem of
narrative dilution may be an
intentional writing
technique.
William
S. Burroughs died ten years after The Western Lands
was published. It not only closes out the themes introduced in the
Cities Of the Red Night trilogy,
but it also acts as a final statement about the man’s life and
works. It’s his last major effort to explain what all
of it was about, but
Burroughs being Burroughs, the explanation may be just as confusing
as what he wants to explain. Like his other books, all the disturbing
ideas and imagery are undercut by a mind that sees beauty in
nature, creativity, the
unfamiliar, and the incomprehensible, a
beauty that can only
be achieved through art and its interaction with the real world.
There is always a sad optimism in his writing that tells us a better
world is possible if only we listen to right people, find
the right formula, and mind
our own goddamn business. But
we do none of that
and so condemn ourselves to
the scumpits of human society instead. The tone at the end of this
book is one of clinical
detachment and resignation
with a bit of magic thrown in. One
thing is certain: there’s never been an author like William S.
Burroughs and there never will be again. If he was successful at
anything it was in creating new visions of the world and its
possibilities that you will never be able to access anywhere else.