An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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And Clyde seeing this, and despite his previous determination to bear up and say some comforting and heartening word to his mother, now began:
âBut you mustnât, Ma. Gee, you mustnât cry. I know itâs hard on you. But Iâll be all right. Sure I will. It isnât as bad as I thought.â Yet inwardly saying: âOh, God how bad!â
And Mrs. Griffiths adding aloud: âMy poor boy! My beloved son! But we mustnât give way. No. No. âBehold I will deliver thee out of the snares of the wicked.â God has not deserted either of us. And He will notâ âthat I know. âHe leadeth me by the still waters.â âHe restoreth my soul.â We must put our trust in Him. Besides,â she added, briskly and practically, as much to strengthen herself as Clyde, âhavenât I already arranged for an appeal? It is to be made yet this week. Theyâre going to file a notice. And that means that your case canât even be considered under a year. But it is just the shock of seeing you so. You see, I wasnât quite prepared for it.â She straightened her shoulders and now looked up and achieved a brave if strained smile. âThe warden here seems very kind, but still, somehow, when I saw you just nowâ ââ
She dabbed at her eyes which were damp from this sudden and terrific storm, and to divert herself as well as him she talked of the so very necessary work before her. Messrs. Belknap and Jephson had been so encouraging to her just before she left. She had gone to their office and they had urged her and him to be of good cheer. And now she was going to lecture, and at once, and would soon have means to do with that way. Oh, yes. And Mr. Jephson would be down to see him one of these days soon. He was by no means to feel that the legal end of all this had been reached. Far from it. The recent verdict and sentence was sure to be reversed and a new trial ordered. The recent one was a farce, as he knew.
And as for herselfâ âas soon as she found a room near the prisonâ âshe was going to the principal ministers of Auburn and see if she could not secure a church, or two, or three, in which to speak and plead his cause. Mr. Jephson was mailing her some information she could use within a day or two. And after that, other churches in Syracuse, Rochester, Albany, Schenectadyâ âin fact many cities in the eastâ âuntil she had raised the necessary sum. But she would not neglect him. She would see him at least once a week and would write him a letter every other day, or maybe even daily if she could. She would talk to the warden. So he must not despair. She had much hard work ahead of her, of course, but the Lord would guide her in all that she undertook. She knew that. Had He not already shown his gracious and miraculous mercy?
Clyde must pray for her and for himself. Read Isaiah. Read the Psalmsâ âthe 23rd and the 51st and 91st daily. Also Habbakuk. âAre there walls against the Hand of the Lord?â And then after more tears, an utterly moving and macerating scene, at last achieving her departure while Clyde, shaken to his soul by so much misery, returned to his cell. His mother. And at her ageâ âand with so little moneyâ âshe was going out to try to raise the money necessary to save him. And in the past he had treated her so badlyâ âas he now saw.
He sat down on the side of his cot and held his head in his hands the while outside the prisonâ âthe iron door of the same closed and only a lonely room and the ordeal of her proposed lecture tour ahead of herâ âMrs. Griffiths pausedâ âby no means so assured or convinced of all she had said to Clyde. To be sure God would aid her. He must. Had He ever failed her yetâ âcompletely? And nowâ âherein her darkest hour, her sonâs! Would He?
She paused for a moment a little later in a small parking-place, beyond the prison, to stare at the tall, gray walls, the watch towers with armed guards in uniform, the barred windows and doors. A penitentiary. And her son was now withinâ âworse yet, in that confined and narrow death house. And doomed to die in an electric chair. Unlessâ âunlessâ âBut, no, noâ âthat should not be. It could not be. That appeal. The money for it. She must busy herself as to that at onceâ ânot think or brood or despair. Oh, no. âMy shield and my buckler.â âMy Light and my Strength.â âOh, Lord, Thou art my strength and my deliverance. In Thee will I trust.â And then dabbing at her eyes once more and adding: âOh, Lord, I believe. Help Thou mine unbelief.â
So Mrs. Griffiths, alternately praying and crying as she walked.
XXXBut after this the long days in prison for Clyde. Except for a weekly visit from his mother, who, once she was entered upon her work, found it difficult to see him more often than thatâ âtraveling as she did in the next two months between Albany and Buffalo and even New York Cityâ âbut without the success she had at first hoped
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