|
The Perfect
High
Shel Silverstein
There once was a boy named
Gimme-Some-Roy
He was nothin' like me or
you,
'cause laying back and
getting high was all he
cared to do.
As a kid, he sat in the
cellar
sniffing airplane glue.
And then he smoked banana
peels, when that was the
thing to do.
He tried aspirin in
Coca-Cola, he breathed
helium on the sly,
-and his life became an
endless search to find the
perfect high.
But grass just made him
wanna lay back
and eat chocolate-chip pizza
all night,
and the great things he
wrote when he was stoned
looked like shit in the
morning light.
Speed made him wanna rap all
day, reds laid him too far
back,
Cocaine-Rose was sweet to his nose, but the price nearly broke his back.
He tried PCP, he tried THC,
but they never quite did the
trick.
Poppers nearly blew his
heart, mushrooms made him
sick.
Acid made him see the light,
but he couldn't remember it
long.
Hash was a little too weak,
and smack was a lot too
strong.
Quaaludes made him stumble,
booze just made him cry,
Then he heard of a cat named
Baba Fats who knew of the
perfect high.
Now, Baba Fats was a hermit
cat...lived high up in
Nepal,
High on a craggy mountain
top, up a sheer and icy
wall.
"Well, hell!" says Roy, "I'm
a healthy boy, and I'll
crawl or climb or fly,
Till I find that guru who'll
give me the clue as to
what's the perfect high."
So out and off goes Gimme-Some-Roy,
to the land that knows no
time, Up a trail no man
could conquer,
to a cliff no man could
climb.
For fourteen years he
climbed that cliff...back
down again he'd slide . . .
He'd sit and cry, then climb
some more, pursuing the
perfect high.
Grinding his teeth, coughing
blood, aching and shaking
and weak, Starving and sore,
bleeding and tore, he
reaches the mountain peak.
And his eyes blink red like
a snow-blind wolf, and he
snarls the snarl of a rat,
As there in repose, and
wearing no clothes, sits the
god-like Baba Fats.
"What's happenin', Fats?"
says Roy with joy, "I've
come to state my biz . . .
I hear you're hip to the
perfect trip... Please tell
me what it is.
"For you can see," says Roy
to he, "I'm about to die,
So for my last ride, tell
me, how can I achieve the
perfect high?"
"Well, dog my cats!" says
Baba Fats.
"Another burned out soul,
Who's lookin' for an
alchemist
to turn his trip to gold.
It isn't in a dealer's
stash, or on a druggist's
shelf...
Son, if you would find the
perfect high, find it in
yourself."
"Why, you jive
mother-fucker!"
says Roy, "I climbed through
rain and sleet,
I froze three fingers off my
hands, and four toes off my
feet!
I braved the lair of the
polar bear, I've tasted the
maggot's kiss.
Now, you tell me the high is
in myself? What kinda shit
is this?
My ears, before they froze
off," says Roy, "had heard
all kindsa crap;
But I didn't climb for
fourteen years to hear your
sophomore rap.
And I didn't climb up here
to hear that the high is on
the natch,
So you tell me where the
real stuff is, or I'll kill
your guru ass!"
"Okay...okay," says Baba
Fats, "You're forcin' it
outta me...
There is a land beyond the
sun that's known as Zabolee.
A wretched land of stone and
sand, where snakes and
buzzards scream,
And in this devil's garden
blooms the mystic Tzutzu
tree.
Now, once every ten years it
blooms one flower,
as white as the Key West
sky,
And he who eats of the
Tzutzu flower shall know the
perfect high.
For the rush comes on like a
tidal wave...hits like the
blazin' sun.
And the high? It lasts
forever, and the down don't
never come.
But, Zabolee Land is ruled
by a giant, who stands
twelve cubits high,
And with eyes of red in his
hundred heads, he awaits the
passer-by.
And you must slay the
red-eyed giant, and swim the
river of slime,
Where the mucous beasts
await to feast on those who
journey by.
And if you slay the giant
and beasts, and swim the
slimy sea,
There's a blood-drinking
witch who sharpens her teeth
as she guards the Tzutzu
tree."
"Well, to hell with your
witches and giants," says
Roy,
"To hell with the beasts of
the sea--
Why, as long as the Tzutzu
flower still blooms, hope
still blooms for me."
And with tears of joy in his
sun-blind eyes, he slips the
guru a five,
And crawls back down the
mountainside, pursuing the
perfect high.
"Well, that is that," says
Baba Fats,
sitting back down on his
stone, Facing another
thousand years
of talking to God, alone.
"Yes, Lord, it's always the
same...old men or
bright-eyed youth...
It's always easier to sell 'em
some shit
than it is to tell them the
truth."
Shel Silverstein
|