"In the Forest of Tombolo” is love story inspired by the tales told by a native of Auburn, a veteran of the Second World War. After the war, John Schillace published The Tragic Forest; Tales of the Forest of Tombolo. The small, beautiful work sold only a few copies and John himself is now long gone. My version of those stories is both a tribute to his tales and a work of imagination.
James Monroe High School in the Bronx
I met John at James Monroe High School
near the end of his career as an English teacher, a great story teller but a poor
teacher by the arbitrary standards of the 1970s. More than one principal at Monroe High School had made
an effort to fire him, but he fended them all off with repeated
promises of retirement.
High school English teachers spend their lives immersed in works of literature, and second only to complaining about the administration or the students, their favorite topics of conversation are the great writers, from Shakespeare to Salinger. This is why I was so surprised that I knew John for years before he happened to mention his friendship with Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, and how he came to know Ezra Pound.
High school English teachers spend their lives immersed in works of literature, and second only to complaining about the administration or the students, their favorite topics of conversation are the great writers, from Shakespeare to Salinger. This is why I was so surprised that I knew John for years before he happened to mention his friendship with Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, and how he came to know Ezra Pound.
Black GI's in Italy, 1944
None
of those big names mattered to the character I have called John Squillace. The story that I imagine him telling me is
not about literature but about love, an all-consuming love for the
woman he met in Italy during the closing days of the war. Michelina
Colonna was herself the mother of one of the Beat poets, but she had
abandoned her son as an infant and fled from an abusive husband back
to Italy in the early 1930s. By the time John met her, he had
deserted from the American army after witnessing a massacre and ended
up with a group of renegades and deserters inhabiting a tract of
wasteland near Pisa, the forest of Tombolo. The band consisted mostly
of Black GI's who had deserted in the face of the overwhelming
prejudice they faced in their own army. A number of Italian women,
including Michelina, had joined them in the marshes and woods along
the coast between Pisa and Livorno, and there was also a small camp
of German soldiers left behind when their forces retreated northward.
Together, this collection of outcasts survived as thieves and middle
men in the thriving black market. When the outlaw camp was finally
broken up by a raid led by American MPs and the local carabinieri,
the story was front page news throughout Italy. (A 1948 film by Federico Fellini, "Senza Pieta," drew on these events at Tombolo in its depiction of the love between a Black American deserter and an Italian prostitute.)
Ezra Pound
At
the same time, the American poet Ezra Pound was arrested for treason,
having spent the war making broadcasts for Fascist Italy, and
imprisoned under harsh circumstances at a detention center near Pisa.
This is where John first met him, and as far as he was concerned, the
poet's incoherent and deeply anti-Semitic ranting marked him as no
more than an old madman. “Just plain nuts is how I saw him,” is
what John said. Then a line of poetry emerged from the endless and
vile monologue, words that brought to John's mind the woman he
thought he had lost forever: “What thou lovest well remains, all
the rest is dross.” Against orders, he spoke to the disgraced poet
and came to know him as he was composing the “Pisan Cantos,”
considered by many scholars as the best section of Pound's largely
obscure grand opus.
An
English teacher might be inclined to quote Shakespeare that “the
course of true love never doth run smooth,” and that of Michelina
and John certainly did not. He was sent to the Pacific, and then back
home, and it was many years before he could afford to go back to
Italy to find his lost love. Returning to the United States
together, they searched in vain for the son she had abandoned. It was
only after becoming friendly with a young Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and their
fellow Beats that they found her son.
Allen Ginsberg in the early 1950s
Jack Kerouac
It
was when he told me about Michelina's son that I had to question
John's story. He said that the boy's name was Gregory Corso, a
protege of Allen's who became well known in the world of American
poetry and died in 2001. The details John provided certainly
correspond with Corso's life except when it came to the eventual
reunion of mother and son. I cannot account for the discrepancy other
than to think that the memory of Michelina was too painful for John
to be completely honest about how their love ended.
Gregory Corso
I
cannot provide any evidence for the accuracy of John's account of
Pound at Pisa, or later at St. Elizabeth's mental hospital, but
neither does anything he said contradict the historical record. His
accounts of conversations with Allen and Jack Kerouac at the West End
Bar, and at William S. Burrough's apartment in Greenwich Village,
also correspond to what many others have reported of those days. The
exception might be the quotations from Allen's “Howl” and Jack's
“On the Road,” which literary researchers do not believe were
written as early as John claims to have heard them. Perhaps both
writers were already working on versions of those major works earlier
than is generally believed.
Gregory Corso, Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs in the 60s
The prototype for John Squillace, the John I knew, was a man who overcame many of the limits of his
early life. A high school dropout and a less than heroic soldier, he
became a man capable of great love.
Seventy years after the events in this story, the swamps and woods of Tombolo are now an Italian nature preserve, still home perhaps to the ghosts of Caesar, Buffalo, Washington, Fritz, Concetta, Lucilla, Luigi, Michelina and John.
Excerpt from the novel: A scene in William S. Burroughs' apartment near Washington Square around 1951. Gregory Nunzio Corso has no idea that he is talking to the mother who abandoned him as an infant.
When
the hashish pipe made its rounds, I took a puff just to be sociable
but she declined. I must have fallen asleep on the couch because when
I came to, I saw Nunzio and Michelina sitting on the floor chattering
away.
“My old man is dead to me, the bastard,” he was saying. “He dumped me in a bunch of foster homes and only took me back in '41. He thought that if he had a kid living with him, they wouldn't draft him, but they did.”
“Oh, poor boy. Who took care of you then?” she was leaning toward him, and I could see she was fighting hard not to throw her arms around him.
“I was on my own. Tito at the Vesuvio bakery would give me bread every morning and the guys with the fruit carts gave me apples or oranges, and that kept me going. I went to school, as if nothing had happened. I got pretty good grades, too. The nuns loved me. But before long, the landlord kicked me out of the apartment. So, I slept on the subways and kept going to school. I became an altar boy just so I could sneak into the church at night and sleep there when it got cold.”
I could see how his story was tearing Michelina apart, but he was so caught up in it that he didn't notice the effect he was having on her. Kids are like that, of course. Their own life is the biggest deal ever.
“I'd never stolen anything at that point, and I only got into trouble when a man asked me to deliver a toaster for him. Somebody offered to buy it off me, and I took the deal because my clothes were so ragged they were falling off me. I bought myself a nice white shirt and a tie and went to see a movie. It was “The Song of Bernadette,” about the Blessed Mother appearing to a girl in France. Do you know that movie? You see, I was looking for a miracle too. I wanted to find my mother.”
Michelina shook her head, and he continued without noticing her tears. She wiped them away as best she could.
“The cops were waiting outside the theater and nabbed me for petty larceny. I was a thirteen year old kid, a good kid, but they threw me in the Tombs. I was in a cell with a maniac, a man who had killed his wife with a screw driver. I had nobody to put up the fifty bucks bail so I was locked away for two weeks with that nut, thinking every night would be my last. Finally, my old man's mother showed up but I couldn't take living with her, she was too quick with her hands, so I went back to sleeping on the subway. It must have been in the winter of '44 I started to sneak back into the school and sleep there. When the priest caught me, he blamed me for a string of thefts I never did and it was back to the Tombs. This time I was in such a panic I ended up in the psych ward at Bellevue.”
“Your mother...I..” Michelina almost told him then and there that she was his mother, but he didn't catch on.
“Yeah, by then I'd accepted that my mother was dead like my old man said she was. I was growing up and interested in girls. That's what got me into real trouble. I asked this girl out and since I needed decent clothes, I broke into a tailor shop on Orchard Street. The suit was too big for me but I put it on anyway and headed for the corner where I was going to meet the girl. We were keeping our date a secret from her parents because they thought I was a bum. Anyway, I didn't get three blocks before the cops grabbed me. This time, it was no more youthful offender status. With two priors, they gave me a three year sentence to Dannamora. You ever hear of it?”
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