ALL that day I lay in the dungeon cudgeling my brains for the reason of this new and inexplicable punishment. All I could conclude was that some stool had lied an infraction of the rules on
me in order to curry favor with the guards.
Meanwhile Captain Jamie fretted his head off and prepared
for the night, while Winwood passed the word along to the forty
lifers to be ready for the break. And two hours after midnight
every guard in the prison was under orders. This included the
dayshift, which should have been asleep. When two o'clock came,
they rushed the cells occupied by the forty. The rush was
simultaneous. The cells were opened at the same moment and
without exception the men named by Winwood were found out of
their bunks, fully dressed, and crouching just inside their doors. Of
course, this was verification absolute of all the fabric of lies that
the poet-forger had spun for Captain Jamie. The forty lifers were
caught in red-handed readiness for the break. What if they did
unite afterward, in averring that the break had been planned by
Winwood? The Prison Board of Directors believed, to a man, that
the forty lied in an effort to save themselves. The Board of
Pardons likewise believed, for, ere three months were up, Cecil
Winwood, forger and poet, most despicable of men, was pardoned
out.
Oh well, the stir, or the pen, as they call it in convict
argot, is a training school for philosophy. No inmate can survive
years of it without having had burst for him his fondest illusions
and fairest metaphysical bubbles. Truth lives, we are taught;
murder will out. Well, this is a demonstration that murder does
not always come out. The Captain of the Yard, the late Warden
Atherton, the Prison Board of Directors to a man—all believe,
right now, in the existence of that dynamite that never existed
save in the slippery-geared and all too accelerated brain of the
degenerate forger and poet, Cecil Winwood. And Cecil Winwood
still lives, while I, of all men concerned the utterest, absolutist,
innocentest, go to the scaffold in a few short weeks.
And now I must tell how entered the forty lifers upon my
dungeon stillness. I was asleep when the outer door to the
corridor of dungeons clanged open and aroused me. "Some poor
devil," was my thought; and my next thought was that he was
surely getting his, as I listened to the scuffling of feet, the dull
impact of blows on flesh, the sudden cries of pain, the filth of
curses, and the sounds of dragging bodies. For, you see, every
man was manhandled all the length of the way.
Dungeon door after dungeon door clanged open, and body
after body was thrust in, flung in, or dragged in. And continually
more groups of guards arrived with more beaten convicts who
still were being beaten, and more dungeon doors were opened to
receive the bleeding frames of men who were guilty of yearning
after freedom.
Yes, as I look back upon it, a man must be greatly a
philosopher to survive the continual impact of such brutish
experiences through the years and years. I am such a
philosopher. I have endured eight years of their torment, and
now, in the end, failing to get rid of me in all other ways, they
have invoked the machinery of state to put a rope around my
neck and shut off my breath by the weight of my body. Oh, I
know how the experts give expert judgment that the fall through the trap breaks the victim's neck. And the victims, like Shakespeare's traveler, never
return to testify to the contrary. But we who have lived in the stir
know of the cases that are hushed in the prison crypts, where the
victims' necks are not broken.
It is a funny thing, this hanging of a man. I have never seen a
hanging, but I have been told by eyewitnesses the details of a
dozen hangings so that I know what will happen to me. Standing
on the trap, leg-manacled and arm-manacled, the knot against the
neck, the black cap drawn, they will drop me down until the
momentum of my descending weight is fetched up abruptly short
by the tautening of the rope. Then the doctors will group around
me, and one will relieve another in successive turns in standing on
a stool, his arms passed around me to keep me from swinging like
a pendulum, his ear pressed close to my chest while he counts my
fading heartbeats. Sometimes twenty minutes elapses after the
trap is sprung ere the heart stops beating. Oh, trust me, they
make most scientifically sure that a man is dead once they get
him on a rope.
I will wander aside from my narrative to ask a question or
two of society. I have a right so to wander and so to question, for
in a little while they are going to take me out and do this thing to
me. If the neck of the victim be broken by the alleged shrewd
arrangement of knot and noose, and by the alleged shrewd
calculation of the weight of the victim and the length of slack,
then why do they manacle the arms of the victim? Society, as a
whole, is unable to answer this question. But I know why; so does
any amateur who ever engaged in a Iynching bee and saw the
victim throw up his hands, clutch the rope, and ease the throttle of
the noose about his neck so that he might breathe.
Another question I will ask of the smug, cotton-woofed
member of society, whose soul has never strayed to the red hells.
Why do they put the black cap over the head and face of the
victim ere they drop him through the trap? Please remember
that in a short while they will put that black cap over my head. So
I have a right to ask. Do they, your hangdogs, O smug citizen, do
these your hangdogs fear to gaze upon the facial horror of the
horror they perpetrate for you at your behest?
Please remember that I am not asking this question in the
twelve-hundredth year after Christ, nor in the time of Christ, nor
in the twelve-hundredth year before Christ. I, who am to be
hanged this year, the nineteen-hundred-and-thirteenth after Christ'
ask these questions of you who are assumably Christ's followers,
of you whose hangdogs are going to take me out and hide my face
under a black cloth because they dare not look upon the horror
they do to me while I yet live.
And now back to the situation in the dungeons. When the last
guard departed and the outer door clanged shut, all the forty
beaten disappointed men began to talk and ask questions. But
almost immediately, roaring like a bull in order to be heard, Skysail
Jack, a giant sailor of a lifer, ordered silence while a census could
be taken. The dungeons were full, and dungeon by dungeon, in
order of dungeons, shouted out its quota to the roll call. Thus,
every dungeon was accounted for as occupied by trusted convicts,
so that there was no opportunity for a stool to be hidden away and
listening.
Of me, only, were the convicts dubious, for I was the one
man who had not been in the plot. They put me through a
searching examination. I could but tell them how I had just
emerged from dungeon and jacket in the morning, and without
rhyme or reason, so far as I could discover, had been put back in
the dungeon after being out only several hours. My record as an
incorrigible was in my favor, and soon they began to talk.
As I lay there and listened, for the first time I learned of the
break that had been a-hatching. "Who had squealed?" was their
one quest, and throughout the night the quest was pursued. The
quest for Cecil Winwood was vain, and the suspicion against him
was general.
"There's only one thing, lads," Skysail Jack finally said. "It'll
soon be morning, and then they'll take us out and give us bloody
hell. We were caught dead to rights with our clothes on.
Winwood crossed us and squealed. They're going to get us out
one by one and mess us up. There's forty of us. Any lyin's bound
to be found out. So each lad, when they sweat him, just tells the
truth, the whole truth, so help him God."
And there, in that dark hole of man's inhumanity, from
dungeon cell to dungeon cell, their mouths against the gratings, the
twoscore lifers solemnly pledged themselves before God to tell
the truth.
Little good did their truth-telling do them. At nine o'clock the
guards, paid bravos of the smug citizens who constitute the state,
full of meat and sleep, were upon us. Not only had we had no
breakfast, but we had had no water. And beaten men are prone to
feverishness. I wonder, my reader, if you can glimpse or guess
the faintest connotation of a man beaten—"beat up," we prisoners
call it. But no, I shall not tell you. Let it suffice to know that these
beaten feverish men lay seven hours without water.
At nine the guards arrived. There were not many of them.
There was no need for many, because they unlocked only one
dungeon at a time. They were equipped with pickhandles—a
handy tool for the "disciplining" of a helpless man. One dungeon at
a time, and dungeon by dungeon, they messed and pulped the
lifers. They were impartial. I received the same pulping as the
rest. And this was merely the beginning, the preliminary to the
examination each man was to undergo alone in the presence of
the paid brutes of the state. It was the forecast to each man of
what each man might expect in inquisition hall.
I have been through most of the red hells of prison life, but
worst of all, far worse than what they intend to do with me in a
short while, was the particular hell of the dungeons in the days
that followed.
Long Bill Hodge, the hard-bitten mountaineer, was the
first man interrogated. He came back two hours later—or,
rather, they conveyed him back, and threw him on the stone of
his dungeon floor. Then they took away Luigi Polazzo, a San
Francisco hoodlum, the first native generation of Italian
parentage, who jeered and sneered at them and challenged them
to wreak their worst upon him.
It was some time before Long Bill Hodge mastered his pain
sufficiently to be coherent.
"What about this dynamite?" he demanded. "Who knows
anything about dynamite?"
And of course nobody knew, although it had been the burden
of the interrogation put to him.
Luigi Polazzo came back in a little less than two hours, and
he came back a wreck that babbled in delirium and could give no
answer to the questions showered upon him along the echoing
corridor of dungeons by the men who were yet to get what he
had got and who desired greatly to know what things had been
done to him and what interrogations had been put to him.
Twice again in the next forty-eight hours Luigi was taken out
and interrogated. After that, a gibbering imbecile, he went to live
in Bughouse Alley. He has a strong constitution. His shoulders
are broad, his nostrils wide, his chest is deep, his blood is pure; he
will continue to gibber in Bughouse Alley long after I have swung
off and escaped the torment of the penitentiaries of California.
Man after man was taken away, one at a time, and the
wrecks of men were brought back, one by one, to rave and howl
in the darkness. And as I lay there and listened to the moaning
and the groaning and all the idle chattering of pain-addled wits,
somehow, vaguely reminiscent, it seemed to me that somewhere,
sometime, I had sat in a high place, callous and proud, and
listened to a similar chorus of moaning and groaning. Afterward
as you shall learn, I identified this reminiscence and knew that the
moaning and the groaning was of the sweep-slaves manacled to
their benches, which I heard from above, on the poop, a soldier-passenger
on a galley of old Rome. That was when I sailed for Alexandria
a captain of men, on my way to Jerusalem . . . but that
is a story I shall tell you later. In the meanwhile . . .
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