Friday, December 27, 2013
of Bill Tomson, Al Hinkle, his boyhood buddies, his street buddies…they
rushed down the street together digging everything in the early way they
had which has later now become so much sadder and perceptive... but then
they danced down the street like dingledodies and I shambled after as
usual as I’ve been doing all my life after people that interest me,
because the only people that interest me are the mad ones, the ones who
are mad to live, mad to talk, desirous of everything at the same time,
the ones that never yawn or say a commonplace thing.. but burn, burn,
burn like roman candles across the night. Allen was queer in those days,
experimenting with himself to the hilt, and Neal saw that, and a former
boyhood hustler himself in the Denver night, and wanting dearly to
learn how to write poetry like Allen, the first thing you know he was
attacking Allen with a great amorous soul such as only the common can
have. I was in the same room, I heard them across the darkness and I
mused and said to myself “Hmm, now something’s started, but I don’t want
anything to do with it.” So I didn’t see them for about two weeks
during which time they cemented their relationship to mad proportions.
Then came the great time of traveling, Spring, and everybody in the
scattered gang was getting ready to take one trip or another. I was
busily at work on my novel and when I came to the halfway mark, after a
trip down South with my mother to visit my sister, I got ready to travel
west for the very first time. Neal had already left. Allen and I saw
him off at the 34th Street Greyhound station. Upstairs they have a place
where you can make pictures for a quarter. Allen took off his glasses
and looked sinister. Neal made a profile shot and looked coyly around. I
took a straight picture that made me look, as Lucien said, like a 30
year old Italian who’d kill anybody who said anything against his
mother. This picture Allen and Neal neatly cut down the middle with a
razor and saved a half each in their wallets. I saw those halves later
on. Neal was wearing a real western business suit for his big trip back
to Denver; he’d finished his first fling in New York. I say fling but he
only worked like a dog in parkinglots, the most fantastic parkinglot
attendant in the world; he can back a car forty miles an hour into a
tight
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