
Kerouac has been revered by his readers, who see a deeply spiritual nature manifest in him. In return, he was reviled, laughed at, attacked with sticks, had to dodge stones thrown his way. There is a mythical Buddhist figure called Never Disparaging Buddha, who in his practice as a compassionate bodhisattva told everyone he saw that they were a Buddha. John of the Cross had in his love of the Lord. He was saintly in his empathy and power to see divinity in all the very alive American people he met on the road. Lines which remarkably presaged Kerouac, who was as pure a product of America as has ever been. Kerouac loved America with the intensity St. When he leaves her, she tells him she’ll be coming to New York in a few weeks time, but he instinctly knows that that won’t be the case and is, I felt, strangely detached writing about his leaving – which is probably indicitive of his character and the problems he had with women and relationships in general.William Carlos Williams, in 1923, a year after Kerouac was born, published "To Elise," with its opening lines,

He wants to get to know them all, from the Mexicans he meets through Bea, to the people from Nebraska and Oklahoma they meet picking cotton, and the people he sees on LA’s Skid Row. What becomes obvious once again in his writing in this part is the interest in most of the people he encounters, at least at that stage of his life. But the lifestyle they are leading in these few short weeks is naturally very appealing to him, sleeping in tents, cheap motels/hotels, in a barn. But like most of his relationships with women it can’t last, mainly due to familiar reasons on her and economic reasons on both sides.


And I am’) is endlessly intrigued with her. It’s not an easy time, he feels head over heels in love with her, and as she is Mexican, and therefore one of the people he calls ‘the fellaheen’, with which he always felt a close bond with (‘They thought I was an Mexican of course. I have just been reading the part in On The Road where Jack Kerouac meets Bea in Bakersfield and has a few intense weeks with her and her extended family.
