The Dharma Bums

by

Jack Kerouac

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Japhy Ryder Character Analysis

Japhy is an alias for Gary Snyder, the poet, mountaineer, and scholar of Buddhism whose relationship with narrator Ray Smith (Jack Kerouac’s alias) is arguably the novel’s central focus. In fact, even when Japhy isn’t physically present, he’s almost always in Ray’s thoughts. Raised in a remote corner of the Oregon woods, Japhy studied Zen Buddhist philosophy and American Indian mythology in college. Then, he started writing poetry and living as a Dharma Bum, wandering around the vast open spaces of the American West and living off the land while studying and practicing Buddhism. Whereas Ray really only cares about Buddhism as a spiritual practice, Japhy is far more interested in its historical and literary traditions, especially in China and Japan. He reads and translates Chinese and Japanese poetry, including the works of Han Shan, and he dreams of going to Japan. In fact, near the end of the book, his dream comes true: he leaves to go study Buddhism in a Japanese monastery. Similarly, whereas Ray views Buddhism in strictly individual terms, Japhy is interested in how it can change the world: he disdains American culture’s consumerism and dreams of launching a “rucksack revolution” against it by getting thousands of young men to live as Dharma Bums, traveling around and meditating. In fact, because of this vision, Japhy’s friends (especially Ray and Alvah) view him as a kind of heroic messiah figure capable of transforming the world. In particular, they look up to his physical fitness, survival skills, and masculine self-confidence. Women also fawn over him, although he arguably mistreats his girlfriends Princess, Polly, and Psyche. Ray fawns over him as well—he frequently expresses his deep admiration and almost romantic love for Japhy, who teaches him about the history of Buddhism and the spiritual value of spending time in the wilderness. Their relationship shows how friendship can help people learn, grow, and define their values.

Japhy Ryder Quotes in The Dharma Bums

The The Dharma Bums quotes below are all either spoken by Japhy Ryder or refer to Japhy Ryder. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Enlightenment and Nature Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

I really believed in the reality of charity and kindness and humility and zeal and neutral tranquillity and wisdom and ecstasy, and I believed that I was an oldtime bhikku in modern clothes wandering the world (usually the immense triangular arc of New York to Mexico City to San Francisco) in order to turn the wheel of the True Meaning, or Dharma, and gain merit for myself as a future Buddha (Awakener) and as a future Hero in Paradise. I had not met Japhy Ryder yet, I was about to the next week, or heard anything about “Dharma Bums” although at this time I was a perfect Dharma Bum myself and considered myself a religious wanderer.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Page Number: 5
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

I wondered why Han Shan was Japhy's hero.

“Because,” said he, “he was a poet, a mountain man, a Buddhist dedicated to the principle of meditation on the essence of all things, a vegetarian too by the way though I haven't got on that kick from figuring maybe in this modern world to be a vegetarian is to split hairs a little since all sentient beings eat what they can. And he was a man of solitude who could take off by himself and live purely and true to himself.”

“That sounds like you too.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Han Shan
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

I'm telling you she was actually glad to do all this and told me “You know, I feel like I'm the mother of all things and I have to take care of my little children.”

“You're such a young pretty thing yourself.”

“But I'm the old mother of earth. I'm a Bodhisattva,” She was just a little off her nut but when I heard her say “Bodhisattva” I realized she wanted to be a big Buddhist like Japhy and being a girl the only way she could express it was this way, which had its traditional roots in the yabyum ceremony of Tibetan Buddhism, so everything was fine.

Alvah was immensely pleased and was all for the idea of “every Thursday night” and so was I by now.

“Alvah, Princess says she's a Bodhisattva.”

“Of course she is.”

“She says she's the mother of all of us.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Alvah Goldbrook (speaker), Princess (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Page Number: 30-31
Explanation and Analysis:

“You know when I was a little kid in Oregon I didn't feel that I was an American at all, with all that suburban ideal and sex repression and general dreary newspaper gray censorship of all our real human values but and when I discovered Buddhism and all I suddenly felt that I had lived in a previous lifetime innumerable ages ago and now because of faults and sins in that lifetime I was being degraded to a more grievous domain of existence and my karma was to be born in America where nobody has any fun or believes in anything, especially freedom. That's why I was always sympathetic to freedom movements, too, like anarchism in the Northwest, the oldtime heroes of Everett Massacre and all…”

Related Characters: Japhy Ryder (speaker), Ray Smith
Page Number: 31
Explanation and Analysis:

He was always being bugged by my little lectures on Samadhi ecstasy, which is the state you reach when you stop everything and stop your mind and you actually with your eyes closed see a kind of eternal multiswarm of electrical Power of some kind ululating in place of just pitiful images and forms of objects, which are, after all, imaginary.

[…]

“Don't you think it's much more interesting just to be like Japhy and have girls and studies and good times and really be doing something, than all this silly sitting under trees?”

“Nope,” I said, and meant it, and I knew Japhy would agree with me. “All Japhy's doing is amusing himself in the void.”

“I don't think so.”

“I bet he is. I'm going mountainclimbing with him next week and find out and tell you.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Alvah Goldbrook (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 33
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Japhy and I were kind of outlandish-looking on the campus in our old clothes in fact Japhy was considered an eccentric around the campus, which is the usual thing for campuses and college people to think whenever a real man appears on the scene—colleges being nothing but grooming schools for the middle-class non-identity which usually finds its perfect expression on the outskirts of the campus in rows of well-to-do houses with lawns and television sets in each living room with everybody looking at the same thing and thinking the same thing at the same time while the Japhies of the world go prowling in the wilderness to hear the voice crying in the wilderness, to find the ecstasy of the stars, to find the dark mysterious secret of the origin of faceless wonderless crapulous civilization.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 38-39
Explanation and Analysis:

Every time he said something he would turn and look at Japhy and deliver these rather brilliant inanities with a complete deadpan; I couldn't understand what kind of strange secret scholarly linguistic clown he really was under these California skies. Or Japhy would mention sleeping bags, and Morley would ramble in with “I'm going to be the possessor of a pale blue French sleeping bag, light weight, goose down, good buy I think, find 'em in Vancouver—good for Daisy Mae. Completely wrong type for Canada. Everyone wants to know if her grandfather was an explorer who met an Eskimo. I'm from the North Pole myself.”

“What's he talking about?” I'd ask from the back seat, and Japhy: “He's just an interesting tape recorder.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Henry Morley (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

The vision: it's pure morning in the high dry Sierras, far off clean firs can be seen shadowing the sides of rocky hills, further yet snowcapped pinpoints, nearer the big bushy forms of pines and there's Japhy in his little cap with a big rucksack on his back, clomping along, but with a flower in his left hand which is hooked to the strap of the rucksack at his breast; grass grows out between crowded rocks and boulders; distant sweeps of scree can be seen making gashes down the sides of morning, his eyes shine with joy, he's on his way, his heroes are John Muir and Han Shan and Shih-te and Li Po and John Burroughs and Paul Bunyan and Kropotkin; he's small and has a funny kind of belly […] because his spine curves a bit, but that's offset by the vigorous long steps he takes […] and his chest is deep and shoulders broad.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Han Shan
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

“I sit down and say, and I run all my friends and relatives and enemies one by one in this, without entertaining any an­gers or gratitudes or anything, and I say, like ‘Japhy Ryder, equally empty, equally to be loved, equally a coming Buddha,’ then I run on, say, to ‘David O. Selznick, equally empty, equally to be loved, equally a coming Buddha’ though I don’t use names like David O. Selznick, just people I know because when I say the words ‘equally a coming Buddha’ I want to be thinking of their eyes, like you take Morley, his blue eyes be­hind those glasses, when you think ‘equally a coming Buddha’ you think of those eyes and you really do suddenly see the true secret serenity and the truth of his coming Buddhahood. Then you think of your enemy’s eyes.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Henry Morley
Page Number: 68-69
Explanation and Analysis:

Once I opened my eyes and saw Japhy sitting there rigid as a rock and I felt like laughing he looked so funny. But the mountains were mighty solemn, and so was Japhy, and for that matter so was I, and in fact laughter is solemn.
It was beautiful. The pinkness vanished and then it was all purple dusk and the roar of the silence was like a wash of diamond waves going through the liquid porches of our ears, enough to soothe a man a thousand years. I prayed for Japhy, for his future safety and happiness and eventual Buddhahood. It was all completely serious, all completely hallucinated, all completely happy.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 71
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

“I've been reading Whitman, know what he says, Cheer up slaves, and horrify foreign despots, he means that's the attitude for the Bard, the Zen Lunacy bard of old desert paths, see the whole thing is a world full of rucksack wander­ers, Dharma Bums refusing to subscribe to the general de­mand that they consume production and therefore have to work for the privilege of consuming, all that crap they didn't really want anyway such as refrigerators, TV sets, cars, at least new fancy cars, certain hair oils and deodorants and general junk you finally always see a week later in the garbage anyway, all of them imprisoned in a system of work, produce, consume, work, produce, consume, I see a vision of a great rucksack revolution thousands or even millions of young Americans wandering around with rucksacks, going up to mountains to pray, making children laugh and old men glad, making young girls happy and old girls happier, all of 'em.”

Related Characters: Japhy Ryder (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 97-98
Explanation and Analysis:

“Yessir, that's what, a series of monasteries for fellows to go and monastate and meditate in, we can have groups of shacks up in the Sierras or the High Cascades or even Ray says down in Mexico and have big wild gangs of pure holy men getting to­gether to drink and talk and pray, think of the waves of salva­tion can flow out of nights like that, and finally have women, too, wives, small huts with religious families, like the old days of the Puritans. Who's to say the cops of America and the Republicans and Democrats are gonna tell everybody what to do?”

Related Characters: Japhy Ryder (speaker), Ray Smith
Related Symbols: Mountains, Alcohol
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

I wanted to get me a full pack complete with everything necessary to sleep, shelter, eat, cook, in fact a regular kitchen and bedroom right on my back, and go off somewhere and find perfect soli­tude and look into the perfect emptiness of my mind and be completely neutral from any and all ideas. I intended to pray, too, as my only activity, pray for all living creatures; I saw it was the only decent activity left in the world. […] I didn't want to have anything to do, really, either with Japhy's ideas about society (I figured it would be better just to avoid it altogether, walk around it) or with any of Alvah's ideas about grasping after life as much as you can because of its sweet sadness and because you would be dead some day.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Alvah Goldbrook
Page Number: 105-106
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25 Quotes

“It goes on and on, the disciples and the Masters go through the same thing, first they have to find and tame the ox of their mind essence, and then abandon that, then finally they attain to nothing, as represented by this empty panel, then having attained nothing they attain everything which is springtime blossoms in the trees so they end up com­ing down to the city to get drunk with the butchers like Li Po.” That was a very wise cartoon, it reminded me of my own experience, trying to tame my mind in the woods, then real­izing it was all empty and awake and I didn't have to do any­thing, and now I was getting drunk with the butcher Japhy. We played records and lounged around smoking then went out and cut more wood.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains, Alcohol
Page Number: 175
Explanation and Analysis:

Japhy said “Why do you sit on your ass all day?”

“I practice do-nothing.”

“What's the difference? Burn it, my Buddhism is activity,” said Japhy rushing off down the hill again. Then I could hear him sawing wood and whistling in the distance. He couldn't stop jiggling for a minute. His meditations were regular things, by the clock, he'd meditated first thing waking in the morning then he had his mid-afternoon meditation, only about three minutes long, then before going to bed and that was that. But I just ambled and dreamed around. We were two strange dissimilar monks on the same path.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Sean Monahan
Page Number: 175-176
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 29 Quotes

“Alvah says that while guys like us are all excited about being real Orientals and wearing robes, actual Orientals over there are reading surrealism and Charles Darwin and mad about Western business suits.”

“East'll meet West anyway. Think what a great world rev­olution will take place when East meets West finally, and it'll be guys like us that can start the thing. Think of millions of guys all over the world with rucksacks on their backs tramp­ing around the back country and hitchhiking and bringing the word down to everybody.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Alvah Goldbrook
Page Number: 203
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 34 Quotes

Suddenly a green and rose rainbow shafted right down into Starvation Ridge not three hundred yards away from my door, like a bolt, like a pillar: it came among steaming clouds and orange sun turmoiling.

What is a rainbow, Lord?

A hoop

For the lowly.

It hooped right into Lightning Creek, rain and snow fell simultaneous, the lake was milkwhite a mile below, it was just too crazy. I went outside and suddenly my shadow was ringed by the rainbow as I walked on the hilltop, a lovely-haloed mystery making me want to pray. “O Ray, the career of your life is like a raindrop in the illimitable ocean which is eternal awakenerhood. Why worry ever any more? Write and tell Japhy that.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 241
Explanation and Analysis:

And suddenly it seemed I saw that unimaginable little Chi­nese bum standing there, in the fog, with that expressionless humor on his seamed face. […] It was the realer-than-life Japhy of my dreams, and he stood there saying nothing. “Go away, thieves of the mind!” he cried down the hollows of the unbelievable Cascades. […] “Japhy,” I said out loud, “I don't know when we'll meet again or what'll happen in the future, but Desolation, Desolation, I owe so much to Desolation, thank you forever for guiding me to the place where I learned all. Now comes the sadness of com­ing back to cities and I've grown two months older and there's all that humanity of bars and burlesque shows and gritty love, all upsidedown in the void God bless them, but Japhy you and me forever we know, O ever youthful, O ever weeping.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 243-244
Explanation and Analysis:

And in keeping with Japhy's habit of always getting down on one knee and delivering a little prayer to the camp we left, to the one in the Sierra, and the others in Marin, and the little prayer of gratitude he had delivered to Sean's shack the day he sailed away, as I was hiking down the mountain with my pack I turned and knelt on the trail and said “Thank you, shack.” Then I added “Blah,” with a little grin, because I knew that shack and that mountain would understand what that meant, and turned and went on down the trail back to this world.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Sean Monahan
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 244
Explanation and Analysis:
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Japhy Ryder Quotes in The Dharma Bums

The The Dharma Bums quotes below are all either spoken by Japhy Ryder or refer to Japhy Ryder. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Enlightenment and Nature Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

I really believed in the reality of charity and kindness and humility and zeal and neutral tranquillity and wisdom and ecstasy, and I believed that I was an oldtime bhikku in modern clothes wandering the world (usually the immense triangular arc of New York to Mexico City to San Francisco) in order to turn the wheel of the True Meaning, or Dharma, and gain merit for myself as a future Buddha (Awakener) and as a future Hero in Paradise. I had not met Japhy Ryder yet, I was about to the next week, or heard anything about “Dharma Bums” although at this time I was a perfect Dharma Bum myself and considered myself a religious wanderer.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Page Number: 5
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

I wondered why Han Shan was Japhy's hero.

“Because,” said he, “he was a poet, a mountain man, a Buddhist dedicated to the principle of meditation on the essence of all things, a vegetarian too by the way though I haven't got on that kick from figuring maybe in this modern world to be a vegetarian is to split hairs a little since all sentient beings eat what they can. And he was a man of solitude who could take off by himself and live purely and true to himself.”

“That sounds like you too.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Han Shan
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

I'm telling you she was actually glad to do all this and told me “You know, I feel like I'm the mother of all things and I have to take care of my little children.”

“You're such a young pretty thing yourself.”

“But I'm the old mother of earth. I'm a Bodhisattva,” She was just a little off her nut but when I heard her say “Bodhisattva” I realized she wanted to be a big Buddhist like Japhy and being a girl the only way she could express it was this way, which had its traditional roots in the yabyum ceremony of Tibetan Buddhism, so everything was fine.

Alvah was immensely pleased and was all for the idea of “every Thursday night” and so was I by now.

“Alvah, Princess says she's a Bodhisattva.”

“Of course she is.”

“She says she's the mother of all of us.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Alvah Goldbrook (speaker), Princess (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Page Number: 30-31
Explanation and Analysis:

“You know when I was a little kid in Oregon I didn't feel that I was an American at all, with all that suburban ideal and sex repression and general dreary newspaper gray censorship of all our real human values but and when I discovered Buddhism and all I suddenly felt that I had lived in a previous lifetime innumerable ages ago and now because of faults and sins in that lifetime I was being degraded to a more grievous domain of existence and my karma was to be born in America where nobody has any fun or believes in anything, especially freedom. That's why I was always sympathetic to freedom movements, too, like anarchism in the Northwest, the oldtime heroes of Everett Massacre and all…”

Related Characters: Japhy Ryder (speaker), Ray Smith
Page Number: 31
Explanation and Analysis:

He was always being bugged by my little lectures on Samadhi ecstasy, which is the state you reach when you stop everything and stop your mind and you actually with your eyes closed see a kind of eternal multiswarm of electrical Power of some kind ululating in place of just pitiful images and forms of objects, which are, after all, imaginary.

[…]

“Don't you think it's much more interesting just to be like Japhy and have girls and studies and good times and really be doing something, than all this silly sitting under trees?”

“Nope,” I said, and meant it, and I knew Japhy would agree with me. “All Japhy's doing is amusing himself in the void.”

“I don't think so.”

“I bet he is. I'm going mountainclimbing with him next week and find out and tell you.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Alvah Goldbrook (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 33
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Japhy and I were kind of outlandish-looking on the campus in our old clothes in fact Japhy was considered an eccentric around the campus, which is the usual thing for campuses and college people to think whenever a real man appears on the scene—colleges being nothing but grooming schools for the middle-class non-identity which usually finds its perfect expression on the outskirts of the campus in rows of well-to-do houses with lawns and television sets in each living room with everybody looking at the same thing and thinking the same thing at the same time while the Japhies of the world go prowling in the wilderness to hear the voice crying in the wilderness, to find the ecstasy of the stars, to find the dark mysterious secret of the origin of faceless wonderless crapulous civilization.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 38-39
Explanation and Analysis:

Every time he said something he would turn and look at Japhy and deliver these rather brilliant inanities with a complete deadpan; I couldn't understand what kind of strange secret scholarly linguistic clown he really was under these California skies. Or Japhy would mention sleeping bags, and Morley would ramble in with “I'm going to be the possessor of a pale blue French sleeping bag, light weight, goose down, good buy I think, find 'em in Vancouver—good for Daisy Mae. Completely wrong type for Canada. Everyone wants to know if her grandfather was an explorer who met an Eskimo. I'm from the North Pole myself.”

“What's he talking about?” I'd ask from the back seat, and Japhy: “He's just an interesting tape recorder.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Henry Morley (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

The vision: it's pure morning in the high dry Sierras, far off clean firs can be seen shadowing the sides of rocky hills, further yet snowcapped pinpoints, nearer the big bushy forms of pines and there's Japhy in his little cap with a big rucksack on his back, clomping along, but with a flower in his left hand which is hooked to the strap of the rucksack at his breast; grass grows out between crowded rocks and boulders; distant sweeps of scree can be seen making gashes down the sides of morning, his eyes shine with joy, he's on his way, his heroes are John Muir and Han Shan and Shih-te and Li Po and John Burroughs and Paul Bunyan and Kropotkin; he's small and has a funny kind of belly […] because his spine curves a bit, but that's offset by the vigorous long steps he takes […] and his chest is deep and shoulders broad.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Han Shan
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

“I sit down and say, and I run all my friends and relatives and enemies one by one in this, without entertaining any an­gers or gratitudes or anything, and I say, like ‘Japhy Ryder, equally empty, equally to be loved, equally a coming Buddha,’ then I run on, say, to ‘David O. Selznick, equally empty, equally to be loved, equally a coming Buddha’ though I don’t use names like David O. Selznick, just people I know because when I say the words ‘equally a coming Buddha’ I want to be thinking of their eyes, like you take Morley, his blue eyes be­hind those glasses, when you think ‘equally a coming Buddha’ you think of those eyes and you really do suddenly see the true secret serenity and the truth of his coming Buddhahood. Then you think of your enemy’s eyes.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Henry Morley
Page Number: 68-69
Explanation and Analysis:

Once I opened my eyes and saw Japhy sitting there rigid as a rock and I felt like laughing he looked so funny. But the mountains were mighty solemn, and so was Japhy, and for that matter so was I, and in fact laughter is solemn.
It was beautiful. The pinkness vanished and then it was all purple dusk and the roar of the silence was like a wash of diamond waves going through the liquid porches of our ears, enough to soothe a man a thousand years. I prayed for Japhy, for his future safety and happiness and eventual Buddhahood. It was all completely serious, all completely hallucinated, all completely happy.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 71
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

“I've been reading Whitman, know what he says, Cheer up slaves, and horrify foreign despots, he means that's the attitude for the Bard, the Zen Lunacy bard of old desert paths, see the whole thing is a world full of rucksack wander­ers, Dharma Bums refusing to subscribe to the general de­mand that they consume production and therefore have to work for the privilege of consuming, all that crap they didn't really want anyway such as refrigerators, TV sets, cars, at least new fancy cars, certain hair oils and deodorants and general junk you finally always see a week later in the garbage anyway, all of them imprisoned in a system of work, produce, consume, work, produce, consume, I see a vision of a great rucksack revolution thousands or even millions of young Americans wandering around with rucksacks, going up to mountains to pray, making children laugh and old men glad, making young girls happy and old girls happier, all of 'em.”

Related Characters: Japhy Ryder (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 97-98
Explanation and Analysis:

“Yessir, that's what, a series of monasteries for fellows to go and monastate and meditate in, we can have groups of shacks up in the Sierras or the High Cascades or even Ray says down in Mexico and have big wild gangs of pure holy men getting to­gether to drink and talk and pray, think of the waves of salva­tion can flow out of nights like that, and finally have women, too, wives, small huts with religious families, like the old days of the Puritans. Who's to say the cops of America and the Republicans and Democrats are gonna tell everybody what to do?”

Related Characters: Japhy Ryder (speaker), Ray Smith
Related Symbols: Mountains, Alcohol
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

I wanted to get me a full pack complete with everything necessary to sleep, shelter, eat, cook, in fact a regular kitchen and bedroom right on my back, and go off somewhere and find perfect soli­tude and look into the perfect emptiness of my mind and be completely neutral from any and all ideas. I intended to pray, too, as my only activity, pray for all living creatures; I saw it was the only decent activity left in the world. […] I didn't want to have anything to do, really, either with Japhy's ideas about society (I figured it would be better just to avoid it altogether, walk around it) or with any of Alvah's ideas about grasping after life as much as you can because of its sweet sadness and because you would be dead some day.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Alvah Goldbrook
Page Number: 105-106
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25 Quotes

“It goes on and on, the disciples and the Masters go through the same thing, first they have to find and tame the ox of their mind essence, and then abandon that, then finally they attain to nothing, as represented by this empty panel, then having attained nothing they attain everything which is springtime blossoms in the trees so they end up com­ing down to the city to get drunk with the butchers like Li Po.” That was a very wise cartoon, it reminded me of my own experience, trying to tame my mind in the woods, then real­izing it was all empty and awake and I didn't have to do any­thing, and now I was getting drunk with the butcher Japhy. We played records and lounged around smoking then went out and cut more wood.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains, Alcohol
Page Number: 175
Explanation and Analysis:

Japhy said “Why do you sit on your ass all day?”

“I practice do-nothing.”

“What's the difference? Burn it, my Buddhism is activity,” said Japhy rushing off down the hill again. Then I could hear him sawing wood and whistling in the distance. He couldn't stop jiggling for a minute. His meditations were regular things, by the clock, he'd meditated first thing waking in the morning then he had his mid-afternoon meditation, only about three minutes long, then before going to bed and that was that. But I just ambled and dreamed around. We were two strange dissimilar monks on the same path.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Sean Monahan
Page Number: 175-176
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 29 Quotes

“Alvah says that while guys like us are all excited about being real Orientals and wearing robes, actual Orientals over there are reading surrealism and Charles Darwin and mad about Western business suits.”

“East'll meet West anyway. Think what a great world rev­olution will take place when East meets West finally, and it'll be guys like us that can start the thing. Think of millions of guys all over the world with rucksacks on their backs tramp­ing around the back country and hitchhiking and bringing the word down to everybody.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker), Alvah Goldbrook
Page Number: 203
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 34 Quotes

Suddenly a green and rose rainbow shafted right down into Starvation Ridge not three hundred yards away from my door, like a bolt, like a pillar: it came among steaming clouds and orange sun turmoiling.

What is a rainbow, Lord?

A hoop

For the lowly.

It hooped right into Lightning Creek, rain and snow fell simultaneous, the lake was milkwhite a mile below, it was just too crazy. I went outside and suddenly my shadow was ringed by the rainbow as I walked on the hilltop, a lovely-haloed mystery making me want to pray. “O Ray, the career of your life is like a raindrop in the illimitable ocean which is eternal awakenerhood. Why worry ever any more? Write and tell Japhy that.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 241
Explanation and Analysis:

And suddenly it seemed I saw that unimaginable little Chi­nese bum standing there, in the fog, with that expressionless humor on his seamed face. […] It was the realer-than-life Japhy of my dreams, and he stood there saying nothing. “Go away, thieves of the mind!” he cried down the hollows of the unbelievable Cascades. […] “Japhy,” I said out loud, “I don't know when we'll meet again or what'll happen in the future, but Desolation, Desolation, I owe so much to Desolation, thank you forever for guiding me to the place where I learned all. Now comes the sadness of com­ing back to cities and I've grown two months older and there's all that humanity of bars and burlesque shows and gritty love, all upsidedown in the void God bless them, but Japhy you and me forever we know, O ever youthful, O ever weeping.”

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder (speaker)
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 243-244
Explanation and Analysis:

And in keeping with Japhy's habit of always getting down on one knee and delivering a little prayer to the camp we left, to the one in the Sierra, and the others in Marin, and the little prayer of gratitude he had delivered to Sean's shack the day he sailed away, as I was hiking down the mountain with my pack I turned and knelt on the trail and said “Thank you, shack.” Then I added “Blah,” with a little grin, because I knew that shack and that mountain would understand what that meant, and turned and went on down the trail back to this world.

Related Characters: Ray Smith (speaker), Japhy Ryder, Sean Monahan
Related Symbols: Mountains
Page Number: 244
Explanation and Analysis: