Thursday, December 26, 2013
stop talking to me in a short while. But I didn’t know this, and the
plans were for me to take a nap in his house that afternoon at least.
The word was that Ed White had an apartment waiting for me up Colfax
avenue, that Allan Temko was already living in it and was waiting for me
to join him. I sensed some kind of conspiracy in the air and this
conspiracy lined up two groups in the gang: it was Hal Chase and Ed
White and Allan Temko, together with the Burfords, generally agreeing to
ignore Neal Cassady and Allen Ginsberg. I was smack in the middle of
this interesting war. There were social overtones too that I’ll explain.
First I must set the stage about Neal: he was the son of a wino, one of
the most tottering bums of Larimer Street and thereabouts. Neal used to
plead in court at the age of six to have his father let free. He used
to beg in front of Larimer alleys and sneak the money back to his father
who waited among the broken bottles with an old bum buddy. Then when
Neal grew up he began hanging around the Welton poolhalls and set a
Denver record for stealing cars and went to the reformatory. From the
age of eleven to seventeen he was usually in reform school. His
specialty was stealing cars, gunning for girls coming out of high school
in the afternoon, driving them out to the mountains, screwing them, and
coming back to sleep in any available hotel bath tub in town. Meanwhile
his father, once a very respectable and hardworking barber, had become a
complete wino---a wine alcoholic which is worse than whisky
alcoholic---and was reduced to riding freights to the South in the
winter, to Texas, and back to Denver in the summer. Neal had brothers on
his dead mother’s side---she died when he was small---but they also
disliked him. Neal’s only buddies were the poolhall boys- - a bunch I
came to meet a few days later. Then Justin W. Brierly, a tremendous
local character who all his life had specialized in developing the
potentialities of young people, had in fact been tutor to Shirley Temple
for MGM in the thirties, and was now a lawyer, a realtor, director of
the Central City Opera Festival and also an English teacher in a Denver
high school, discovered Neal. Brierly came to knock on a client’s door;
this
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