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Jim with Babe Hill and Max Fink. Bahamas, 1970.
He had the intelligence to know that madness leads to more madness. And it had no constructive end to it, in that he could come out the other side and say, “I proved something” or “I did something.” That would be courageous to know that at the end of it all was just madness, death and destruction. Maybe he was emulating Rimbaud’s theory that a disarrangement of the senses leads to... But I don’t think Rimbaud was like that, I think Rimbaud was misunderstood. I think Jim was maybe emulating the popular belief of what Rimbaud did: “Rimbaud’s Legend” you might say. Jim might have been reliving that, but Rimbaud didn’t live up to his legend.
— Babe Hill on Jim Morrison.
Babe Hill & Jim Morrison photographed by Edmund Teske, c. 1969.
Jim and Babe Hill.
Jim and Babe Hill.
https://vimeo.com/143548274