Three Berkeley Trips 1
By a Goat, Sleep, and Abstinence
I had some wild times during my days
in Berkeley,
California. The
Sixties were long gone by the time I got there, but some of the spirit
lingered, and I sought it out. My three trippiest times there had nothing to do
with drugs. These three weird experiences were caused by, respectively, a goat,
sleep, and abstinence.
Trip 1, by a Goat
Or: Thurber’s World
I was visiting Marion Zimmer Bradley’s
house. After a few rounds of dilemma chess with the fantasy writer’s son, I
stepped out to their back yard for a stroll and a breath of fresh air.
It was evening; the zenith had
darkened to deep blue, the horizon glowed orange and red. A crescent moon
shone, and a few stars, and Venus too.
I stopped, amazed; for there in front
of me stood a goat. An Angora goat, waist-tall, with silky white hair… and a
single horn.
He was Lancelot, a successful animal-husbandry
experiment by Morning Glory and Otter Zell. At the goat’s birth, they had
surgically fused Lancelot’s two hornbuds together; the fused hornbud grew into
an imposing monohorn.
Lancelot was a unicorn. That
surgically-modified Angora goat looked like he had stepped out of a medieval
tapestry. Morning Glory and Otter Zell claimed that surgery like theirs was
entirely possible for the medievals; so perhaps unicorns had been real enough
all along.
Just then, in the evening twilight,
with Moon and Venus overhead, that unicorn looked more than real; for Lancelot
was eating Marion Zimmer Bradley’s rosebushes. Those of you who have read James
Thurber’s stories know the one about the unicorn eating the rosebushes. In that
surreal moment, I learned that a visit to Marion Zimmer Bradley’s place can put
you in a Thurber story.
I also learned that unicorn droppings
are about one centimeter long and about half a centimeter wide.