Thursday, December 26, 2013
hatred for a local prowlcop car they went to Neal to do their revenge;
he stole the prowlcar and wrecked it, or otherwise damaged it. Soon he
was back in reform school and Brierly washed his hands of him. They
became in fact tremendous ironical enemies. In the past winter in N.Y.
Neal had tried one last crack for Brierly’s influence; Allen Ginsberg
wrote several poems, Neal signed his name to them and they were mailed
to Brierly. Taking his annual trip to N.Y., Brierly faced all of us one
evening in Livingston lobby on the Columbia campus. There was Neal,
Allen, myself and Ed White and Hal Chase. Said Brierly “These are very
interesting poems you’ve sent me, Neal. May I say that I was surprised.”
“Ah well,” said Neal, “I’ve been studying you know.” “And who is this
young gentleman here in glasses?” inquired Brierly. Allen Ginsberg
stepped up and announced himself. “Ah,” said Brierly, “this is most
interesting. I understand that you are an excellent poet.” “Why, have
you read any of my things?” “Oh,” said Brierly, “probably,
probably”---and Ed White, whose love of subtlety later drove him mad
over Boswell’s Old Sam Johnson, twinkle eyed all over. He gripped me in
the arm and whispered “You think he doesn’t know?” I guessed he did.
That was Neal’s and Brierly’s last stand together. Now Neal was back in
Denver with his demon poet. Brierly raised an ironical eyebrow and
avoided them. Hal Chase avoided them on secret principles of his own. Ed
White believed they were out for no good. They were the underground
monsters of that season in Denver, together with the poolhall gang, and
symbolizing this most beautifully Allen had a basement apartment on
Grant street and we all met there many a night that went to
dawn---Allen, Neal, myself, Jim Holmes, Al Hinkle and Bill Tomson. More
of these others later. My first afternoon in Denver I slept in Hal
Chase’s room while his mother went on with her housework downstairs and
Hal worked at the museum. It was a hot high-plains afternoon in July. I
would not have slept if it hadn’t been for Hal Chase’s father’s
invention. Hal Chase’s father was a mad self-styled inventor. He was
old, in his seventies, and seemingly feeble, thin and drawn-out and
telling stories with a slow, slow relish; good stories too, about his
boyhood
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