That quote has stuck with me all week. It prompted me to revisit "The Bowery," a chronicle of life along this thoroughfare in the early 1970s by Michael D. Zettler. The book, now out of print, was published in 1975. When I read the book, I think "yellow," not gold.
The book ends with police discovering a man lying face up on the Bowery at Houston. (You'd have a good view of him from the outdoor seats at Pulino's.)
"Is he all right officer?"
"He's better off than the rest of 'em ... Sure is yellow, ain't he?"
"Yeah ... is he dead?"
"Stiff."
"Where does he go from here?"
"Why? You want him? The wagon'll be along in a moment they take 'em up to the morgue at Bellvue ... The kids who're going to be doctors get to cut 'em up ... there probably ain't much left to look at inside of him though."
He's eventually taken to Potter's Field on Hart Island, where he's buried in an unmarked grave with the rest of the John Does.
[Thanks to our friend Bryan at This Ain't the Summer of Love for bringing this book to our attention.]