Thursday, December 26, 2013
We rushed back to our miner’s shack. Everything was in preparation for
the big party. The girls Bev and Jean cooked up a snack of beans and
franks and then we danced to our own music, and started on the beer for
fair. The opera over, great crowds of young girls came piling into our
place. Burford and Ed and I licked our lips. We grabbed them and danced.
There was no music, just dancing. The place filled up. People began to
bring bottles. We rushed out to hit bars and rushed back. The night was
getting more and more frantic. I wished Neal and Allen were there- -then
I realized they’d be out of place and unhappy. They were like the man
with the dungeon stone and the gloom, rising from the underground, the
sordid hipsters of America, a new beat generation that I was slowly
joining. The boys from the chorus showed up. They began singing “Sweet
Adeline.” They also sang phrases such as “Pass me the beer” and “What
are you doing with your face hanging out” and great long baritone howls
of “Fi-de-lio!” “Ah me, what gloom!” I sang. The girls were terrific.
They went out in the backyard and necked. There were beds in the other
rooms, the uncleaned dusty ones, and I had a girl sitting on it and was
talking with her when suddenly there was a great inrush of young ushers
from the opera, half of them hired by Brierly, who just grabbed girls
and kissed them without proper come-ons. Teenagers, drunk, dishevelled,
excited…they ruined our party. Inside of five minutes every single girl
was gone and a great big fraternity type party got underway with banging
of beer bottles and roars. Bob and Ed and I decided to hit the bars.
Temko was gone, Bev and Jean were gone. We tottered into the night. The
opera crowd was out, jamming the bars from bar to wall. Temko was
shouting above heads. Justin W. Brierly was shaking hands with everybody
and saying “Good afternoon, how are you?” and when midnight came he was
saying “Good afternoon, how are you?” At one point I saw him rushing
the Mayor of Denver off somewhere. Then he came back with a middle-aged
woman; next minute he was talking to a couple of young ushers in the
street. The next minute he was shaking my hand without recognizing me
and saying “Happy New Year, m’boy.” He wasn’t drunk on liquor, just
drunk on
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