An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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And so accoutered, immediately transferred to the death house proper, where in a cell on the ground floor he was now lockedâ âa squarish light clean space, eight by ten feet in size and fitted with sanitary plumbing as well as a cot bed, a table, a chair and a small rack for books. And here then, while he barely sensed that there were other cells about himâ âranging up and down a wide hallâ âhe first stoodâ âand then seated himselfâ ânow no longer buoyed by the more intimate and sociable life of the jail at Bridgeburgâ âor those strange throngs and scenes that had punctuated his trip here.
The hectic tensity and misery of these hours! That sentence to die; that trip with all those people calling to him; that cutting of his hair downstairs in that prison barber shopâ âand by a convict; the suit and underwear that was now his and that he now had on. There was no mirror hereâ âor anywhereâ âbut no matterâ âhe could feel how he looked. This baggy coat and trousers and this striped cap. He threw it hopelessly to the floor. For but an hour before he had been clothed in a decent suit and shirt and tie and shoes, and his appearance had been neat and pleasing as he himself had thought as he left Bridgeburg. But nowâ âhow must he look? And tomorrow his mother would be comingâ âand later Jephson or Belknap, maybe. God!
But worseâ âthere, in that cell directly opposite him, a sallow and emaciated and sinister-looking Chinaman in a suit exactly like his own, who had come to the bars of his door and was looking at him out of inscrutable slant eyes, but as immediately turning and scratching himselfâ âvermin, maybe, as Clyde immediately feared. There had been bedbugs at Bridgeburg.
A Chinese murderer. For was not this the death house? But as good as himself here. And with a garb like his own. Thank God visitors were probably not many. He had heard from his mother that scarcely any were allowedâ âthat only she and Belknap and Jephson and any minister he chose might come once a week. But now these hard, white-painted walls brightly lighted by wide unobstructed skylights by day and as he could seeâ âby incandescent lamps in the hall without at nightâ âyet all so different from Bridgeburgâ âso much more bright or harsh illuminatively. For there, the jail being old, the walls were a gray-brown, and not very cleanâ âthe cells larger, the furnishings more numerousâ âa table with a cloth on it at times, books, papers, a chess- and checkerboardâ âwhereas hereâ âhere was nothing, these hard narrow wallsâ âthe iron bars rising to a heavy solid ceiling aboveâ âand that very, very heavy iron door which yetâ âlike the one at Bridgeburg, had a small hole through which food would be passed, of course.
But just then a voice from somewhere:
âHey! we got a new one wid us, fellers! Ground tier, second cell, east.â And then a second voice: âYou donât say. Wotâs he like?â And a third: âWotâs yer name, new man? Donât be scared. You ainât no worse off than the rest of us.â And then the first voice, answering number two: âKinda tall and skinny. A kid. Looks a little like mammaâs boy, but not bad at dat. Hey, you! Tell us your name!â
And Clyde, amazed and dumb and pondering. For how was one to take such an introduction as this? What to sayâ âwhat to do? Should he be friendly with these men? Yet, his instinct for tact prompting him even here to reply, most courteously and promptly: âClyde Griffiths.â And one of the first voices continuing: âOh, sure! We know who you are. Welcome, Griffiths. We ainât as bad as we sound. We been readinâ a lot about you, up dere in Bridgeburg. We thought youâd be along pretty soon now.â And another voice: âYou donât want to be too down. It ainât so worse here. At least de place is all rightâ âa roof over your head, as dey say.â And then a laugh from somewhere.
But Clyde, too horrified and sickened for words, was sadly gazing at the walls and door, then over at the Chinaman, who, silent at his door, was once more gazing at him. Horrible! Horrible! And they talked to each other like that, and to a stranger among them so familiarly. No thought for his wretchedness, his strangeness, his timidityâ âthe horror he must be suffering. But why should a murderer seem timid to anyone, perhaps, or miserable? Worst of all they had been speculating here as to how long it would be before he would be along which meant that everything concerning him was known here. Would they nagâ âor bullyâ âor make trouble for one unless one did just as they wished? If Sondra, or any one of all the people he had known, should see or even dream of him as he was here nowâ ââ ⊠God!â âAnd his own mother was coming tomorrow.
And then an hour later, now evening, a tall, cadaverous guard in a more pleasing uniform, putting an iron tray with food on it through that hole in the door. Food! And for him here. And that sallow, rickety Chinaman over the way taking his. Whom had he murdered? How? And then the savage scraping of iron trays in the various cells! Sounds that reminded him more of hungry animals being fed than men. And some of these men were actually talking as they ate and scraped. It sickened him.
âGee! Itâs a wonder them guys
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