An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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âConvicted! Convicted!â And that meant that he must die! God! But how blessed to be able to conceal his face upon a pillow and not let anyone seeâ âhowever accurately they might guess!
XXVIIThe dreary aftermath of a great contest and a great failure, with the general public from coast to coastâ âin view of this stern local interpretation of the tragedyâ âfirmly convinced that Clyde was guilty and, as heralded by the newspapers everywhere, that he had been properly convicted. The pathos of that poor little murdered country girl! Her sad letters! How she must have suffered! That weak defense! Even the Griffiths of Denver were so shaken by the evidence as the trial had progressed that they scarcely dared read the papers openlyâ âone to the otherâ âbut, for the most part, read of it separately and alone, whispering together afterwards of the damning, awful deluge of circumstantial evidence. Yet, after reading Belknapâs speech and Clydeâs own testimony, this little family group that had struggled along together for so long coming to believe in their own son and brother in spite of all they had previously read against him. And because of thisâ âduring the trial as well as afterwardsâ âwriting him cheerful and hopeful letters, based frequently on letters from him in which he insisted over and over again that he was not guilty. Yet once convicted, and out of the depths of his despair wiring his mother as he didâ âand the papers confirming itâ âabsolute consternation in the Griffiths family. For was not this proof? Or, was it? All the papers seemed to think so. And they rushed reporters to Mrs. Griffiths, who, together with her little brood, had sought refuge from the unbearable publicity in a remote part of Denver entirely removed from the mission world. A venal moving-van company had revealed her address.
And now this American witness to the rule of God upon earth, sitting in a chair in her shabby, nondescript apartment, hard-pressed for the very means to sustain herselfâ âdegraded by the milling forces of life and the fell and brutal blows of chanceâ âyet serene in her trustâ âand declaring: âI cannot think this morning. I seem numb and things look strange to me. My boy found guilty of murder! But I am his mother and I am not convinced of his guilt by any means! He has written me that he is not guilty and I believe him. And to whom should he turn with the truth and for trust if not to me? But there is He who sees all things and who knows.â
At the same time there was so much in the long stream of evidence, as well as Clydeâs first folly in Kansas City, that had caused her to wonderâ âand fear. Why was he unable to explain that folder? Why couldnât he have gone to the girlâs aid when he could swim so well? And why did he proceed so swiftly to the mysterious Miss Xâ âwhoever she was? Oh, surely, surely, surely, she was not going to be compelled, in spite of all her faith, to believe that her eldestâ âthe most ambitious and hopeful, if restless, of all of her children, was guilty of such a crime! No! She could not doubt himâ âeven now. Under the merciful direction of a living God, was it not evil in a mother to believe evil of a child, however dread his erring ways might seem? In the silence of the different rooms of the mission, before she had been compelled to remove from there because of curious and troublesome visitors, had she not stood many times in the center of one of those miserable rooms while sweeping and dusting, free from the eye of any observerâ âher head thrown back, her eyes closed, her strong, brown face molded in homely and yet convinced and earnest linesâ âa figure out of the early Biblical days of her six-thousand-year-old worldâ âand earnestly directing her thoughts to that imaginary throne which she saw as occupied by the living, giant mind and body of the living Godâ âher Creator. And praying by the quarter and the half hour that she be given strength and understanding and guidance to know of her sonâs innocence or guiltâ âand if innocent that this searing burden of suffering be lifted from him and her and all those dear to him and herâ âor if guilty, she be shown how to doâ âhow to endure the while he be shown how to wash from his immortal soul forever the horror of the thing he had doneâ âmake himself once more, if possible, white before the Lord.
âThou art mighty, O God, and there is none beside Thee. Behold, to Thee all things are possible. In Thy favor is Life. Have mercy, O God. Though his sins be as scarlet, make him white as snow. Though they be red like crimson, make them as wool.â
Yet in her thenâ âand as she prayedâ âwas the wisdom of Eve in regard to the daughters of Eve. That girl whom Clyde was alleged to have slainâ âwhat about her? Had she not sinned too? And was she not older than Clyde? The papers said so. Examining the letters, line by line, she was moved by their pathos and was intensely and pathetically grieved for the misery that had befallen the Aldens. Nevertheless, as a mother and woman full of the wisdom of ancient Eve, she saw how Roberta herself must have consentedâ âhow the lure of her must have aided in the weakening and the betrayal of her son. A strong, good girl would not have consentedâ âcould not have. How many confessions about this same thing had she not heard in the mission and at street meetings? And might it not be said in Clydeâs favorâ âas in the very beginning of life in the Garden of Edenâ ââthe woman tempted meâ?
Trulyâ âand because of thatâ â
âHis mercy endureth forever,â she
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