An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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He had seen his first man die.
XXXIIn the meantime, however, Asaâs condition had remained serious, and it was four entire months before it was possible for him to sit up again or for Mrs. Griffiths to dream of resuming her lecturing scheme. But by that time, public interest in her and her sonâs fate was considerably reduced. No Denver paper was interested to finance her return for anything she could do for them. And as for the public in the vicinity of the crime, it remembered Mrs. Griffiths and her son most clearly, and in so far as she was concerned, sympatheticallyâ âbut only, on the other hand, to think of him as one who probably was guilty and in that case, being properly punished for his crimeâ âthat it would be as well if an appeal were not takenâ âorâ âif it wereâ âthat it be refused. These guilty criminals with their interminable appeals!
And with Clyde where he was, more and more executionsâ âalthough as he foundâ âand to his invariable horror, no one ever became used to such things there; farmhand Mowrer for the slaying of his former employer; officer Riordan for the slaying of his wifeâ âand a fine upstanding officer too but a minute before his death; and afterwards, within the month, the going of the Chinaman, who seemed, for some reason, to endure a long time (and without a word in parting to anyoneâ âalthough it was well known that he spoke a few words of English). And after him Larry Donahue, the overseas soldierâ âwith a grand callâ âjust before the door closed behind: âGoodbye boys. Good luck.â
And after him againâ âbut, ohâ âthat was so hard; so much closer to Clydeâ âso depleting to his strength to think of bearing this deadly life here withoutâ âMiller Nicholsonâ âno less. For after five months in which they had been able to walk and talk and call to each other from time to time from their cells and Nicholson had begun to advise him as to books to readâ âas well as one important point in connection with his own caseâ âon appealâ âor in the event of any second trial, i.e.â âthat the admission of Robertaâs letters as evidence, as they stood, at least, be desperately fought on the ground that the emotional force of them was detrimental in the case of any jury anywhere, to a calm unbiased consideration of the material facts presented by themâ âand that instead of the letters being admitted as they stood they should be digested for the facts alone and that digestâ âand that only offered to the jury. âIf your lawyers can get the Court of Appeals to agree to the soundness of that you will win your case sure.â
And Clyde at once, after inducing a personal visit on the part of Jephson, laying this suggestion before him and hearing him say that it was sound and that he and Belknap would assuredly incorporate it in their appeal.
Yet not so long after that the guard, after locking his door on returning from the courtyard whispered, with a nod in the direction of Nicholsonâs cell, âHis next. Did he tell you? Within three days.â
And at once Clyde shrivelingâ âthe news playing upon him as an icy and congealing breath. For he had just come from the courtyard with him where they had walked and talked of another man who had just been brought inâ âa Hungarian of Utica who was convicted of burning his paramourâ âin a furnaceâ âthen confessing itâ âa huge, rough, dark, ignorant man with a face like a gargoyle. And Nicholson saying he was more animal than man, he was sure. Yet no word about himself. And in three days! And he could walk and talk as though there was nothing to happen, although, according to the guard, he had been notified the night before.
And the next day the sameâ âwalking and talking as though nothing had happenedâ âlooking up at the sky and breathing the air. Yet Clyde, his companion, too sick and feverishâ âtoo awed and terrified from merely thinking on it all night to be able to say much of anything as he walked but thinking: âAnd he can walk here. And be so calm. What sort of a man is this?â and feeling enormously overawed and weakened.
The following morning Nicholson did not appearâ âbut remained in his cell destroying many letters he had received from many places. And near noon, calling to Clyde who was two cells removed from him on the other side: âIâm sending you something to remember me by.â But not a word as to his going.
And then the guard bringing two booksâ âRobinson Crusoe and the Arabian Nights. That night Nicholsonâs removal from his cellâ âand the next morning before dawn the curtains; the same procession passing through, which was by now an old story to Clyde. But somehow this was so differentâ âso intimateâ âso cruel. And as he passed, calling: âGod bless you all. I hope you have good luck and get out.â And then that terrible stillness that followed the passing of each man.
And Clyde thereafterâ âlonelyâ âterribly so. Now there was no one hereâ âno oneâ âin whom he was interested. He could only sit and readâ âand thinkâ âor pretend to be interested in what these others said, for he could not really be interested in what they said. His was a mind that, freed from the miseries that had now befallen him, was naturally more drawn to romance than to reality. Where he read at all he preferred the light, romantic novel that pictured some such world as he would have liked to share, to anything that even approximated the hard reality of the world without, let alone this. Now what was going to become of him eventually? So alone was he! Only letters from his mother, brother and sisters. And Asa getting no better, and his mother not able to return as yetâ âthings were so difficult there in Denver. She was
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