Each man kills the thing that he loves.

 

-Oscar Wilde, “The Ballad of Reading Gaol”

 

And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks

is a novel

by Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs

written in 1945

the title I’m told

comes from a story Burroughs heard on the radio

seems a fire broke out at a circus one day

and the announcer was in near hysterics about it

“…the hippos”, he cried, “were boiled in their tanks…”

and my dad tells a story from around the same time

mid-to-late forties when he was a boy

he lived on a farm they had turkeys he says

turkeys apparently are not all that bright

and that year winter came

and brought snow and brought ice

and the turkeys he says were up in the trees

feet frozen to branches and waddles aquiver

and he and my grandfather had to take hatchets

and hack the poor turkeys out of the trees

and I have no idea what the boiling point for a hippo might be

or how low it must go before turkey feet freeze

but I know water boils

at two hundred and twelve degrees Fahrenheit

and steel will boil at 2900

and Kerouac I know died from years of hard living

and Burroughs lived a long life for a junkie

I know each man kills the thing that he loves

and I know why we always have ham at Thanksgiving.

 

 

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