the ship by the ear. I played football among the warehouse crates. It
was the end of another era. It was the second ship I had missed in two
years, one on both coasts, the Korean ship and this Queen Mary
France-bound ship, and the reason for this was because I was doomed for
the road and the ragged investigation of my native country with the
crazy Neal. After all that happened you wouldn’t believe it, but it was I
that went and saved Neal in his hour of broken need within a matter of
months. It was worth it, for thereafter Neal became great.
BOOK THREE:-
In the Spring of 1949 I suddenly came into a wonderful thousand dollar
check from a New York company for the work I did. With this I tried to
move my family---that is to say, my mother, sister, brother-in-law and
their child---to a comfortable home in Denver. I myself traveled to
Denver to get the house, taking great pains not to spend over a dollar
for food all the way. In one day, hustling and sweating around the
May-time mountain town, and with the invaluable assistance of Justin W.
Brierly, I found the house, paid the first two months’ rent on it and
sent them a wire in New York telling them to come in. I paid the moving
bill, $350.00. But it all fell through. They didn’t like Denver and they
didn’t like living in the country. My mother was the first to go back;
then finally my sister and her husband went back. Here I made an attempt
to settle down those I love in a more or less permanent homestead from
which all human operations could be conducted to the satisfaction of all
parties concerned. I believed in a good home, in sane and sound living,
in good food, good times, work, faith and hope. I have always believed
in these things. It was with some amazement that I realized I was one of
the few people in the world who really believed in these things without
going around making a dull middle-class philosophy out of it. I was
suddenly left with nothing in my hands but a handful of crazy stars. For
this I had abstained from taking a long-promised voyage to France to
join the boys; for this I had put aside a number of secret desires of
mine, such as rejoining my wife in Detroit, or suddenly marrying a wild
Puerto Rican gal in New York and settling down to home life in the
tenements. Everything had happened and I was a thousand dol-
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