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As I sit here and muse on it all; the footfalls of the death…watch
going up and down outside my cage; the man's suspicious eyes ever
peering in on me; almost I weary of eternal recurrence。 I have
lived so many lives。 I weary of the endless struggle and pain and
catastrophe that come to those who sit in the high places; tread the
shining ways; and wander among the stars。
Almost I hope; when next I reinhabit form; that it shall be that of
a peaceful farmer。 There is my dream…farm。 I should like to engage
just for one whole life in that。 Oh; my dream…farm! My alfalfa
meadows; my efficient Jersey cattle; my upland pastures; my brush…
covered slopes melting into tilled fields; while ever higher up the
slopes my angora goats eat away brush to tillage!
There is a basin there; a natural basin high up the slopes; with a
generous watershed on three sides。 I should like to throw a dam
across the fourth side; which is surprisingly narrow。 At a paltry
price of labour I could impound twenty million gallons of water。
For; see: one great drawback to farming in California is our long
dry summer。 This prevents the growing of cover crops; and the
sensitive soil; naked; a mere surface dust…mulch; has its humus
burned out of it by the sun。 Now with that dam I could grow three
crops a year; observing due rotation; and be able to turn under a
wealth of green manure。 。 。 。
I have just endured a visit from the Warden。 I say 〃endured〃
advisedly。 He is quite different from the Warden of San Quentin。
He was very nervous; and perforce I had to entertain him。 This is
his first hanging。 He told me so。 And I; with a clumsy attempt at
wit; did not reassure him when I explained that it was also my first
hanging。 He was unable to laugh。 He has a girl in high school; and
his boy is a freshman at Stanford。 He has no income outside his
salary; his wife is an invalid; and he is worried in that he has
been rejected by the life insurance doctors as an undesirable risk。
Really; the man told me almost all his troubles。 Had I not
diplomatically terminated the interview he would still be here
telling me the remainder of them。
My last two years in San Quentin were very gloomy and depressing。
Ed Morrell; by one of the wildest freaks of chance; was taken out of
solitary and made head trusty of the whole prison。 This was Al
Hutchins' old job; and it carried a graft of three thousand dollars
a year。 To my misfortune; Jake Oppenheimer; who had rotted in
solitary for so many years; turned sour on the world; on everything。
For eight months he refused to talk even to me。
In prison; news will travel。 Give it time and it will reach dungeon
and solitary cell。 It reached me; at last; that Cecil Winwood; the
poet…forger; the snitcher; the coward; and the stool; was returned
for a fresh forgery。 It will be remembered that it was this Cecil
Winwood who concocted the fairy story that I had changed the plant
of the non…existent dynamite and who was responsible for the five
years I had then spent in solitary。
I decided to kill Cecil Winwood。 You see; Morrell was gone; and
Oppenheimer; until the outbreak that finished him; had remained in
the silence。 Solitary had grown monotonous for me。 I had to do
something。 So I remembered back to the time when I was Adam Strang
and patiently nursed revenge for forty years。 What he had done I
could do if once I locked my hands on Cecil Winwood's throat。
It cannot be expected of me to divulge how I came into possession of
the four needles。 They were small cambric needles。 Emaciated as my
body was; I had to saw four bars; each in two places; in order to
make an aperture through which I could squirm。 I did it。 I used up
one needle to each bar。 This meant two cuts to a bar; and it took a
month to a cut。 Thus I should have been eight months in cutting my
way out。 Unfortunately; I broke my last needle on the last bar; and
I had to wait three months before I could get another needle。 But I
got it; and I got out。
I regret greatly that I did not get Cecil Winwood。 I had calculated
well on everything save one thing。 The certain chance to find
Winwood would be in the dining…room at dinner hour。 So I waited
until Pie…Face Jones; the sleepy guard; should be on shift at the
noon hour。 At that time I was the only inmate of solitary; so that
Pie…Face Jones was quickly snoring。 I removed my bars; squeezed
out; stole past him along the ward; opened the door and was free 。 。
。 to a portion of the inside of the prison。
And here was the one thing I had not calculated onmyself。 I had
been five years in solitary。 I was hideously weak。 I weighed
eighty…seven pounds。 I was half blind。 And I was immediately
stricken with agoraphobia。 I was affrighted by spaciousness。 Five
years in narrow walls had unfitted me for the enormous declivity of
the stairway; for the vastitude of the prison yard。
The descent of that stairway I consider the most heroic exploit I
ever accomplished。 The yard was deserted。 The blinding sun blazed
down on it。 Thrice I essayed to cross it。 But my senses reeled and
I shrank back to the wall for protection。 Again; summoning all my
courage; I attempted it。 But my poor blear eyes; like a bat's;
startled me at my shadow on the flagstones。 I attempted to avoid my
own shadow; tripped; fell over it; and like a drowning man
struggling for shore crawled back on hands and knees to the wall。
I leaned against the wall and cried。 It was the first time in many
years that I had cried。 I remember noting; even in my extremity;
the warmth of the tears on my cheeks and the salt taste when they
reached my lips。 Then I had a chill; and for a time shook as with
an ague。 Abandoning the openness of the yard as too impossible a
feat for one in my condition; still shaking with the chill;
crouching close to the protecting wall; my hands touching it; I
started to skirt the yard。
Then it was; somewhere along; that the guard Thurston espied me。 I
saw him; distorted by my bleared eyes; a huge; well…fed monster;
rushing upon me with incredible speed out of the remote distance。
Possibly; at that moment; he was twenty feet away。 He weighed one
hundred and seventy pounds。 The struggle between us can be easily
imagined; but somewhere in that brief struggle it was claimed that I
struck him on the nose with my fist to such purpose as to make that
organ bleed。
At any rate; being a lifer; and the penalty in California for
battery by a lifer being death; I was so found guilty by a jury
which could not ignore the asseverations of the guard Thurston and
the rest of the prison hangdogs that testified; and I was so
sentenced by a judge who could not ignore the law as spread plainly
on the statute book。
I was well pummelled by Thurston; and all the way back up that
prodigious stairway I was roundly kicked; punched; and cuffed by the
horde of trusties and guard