In the meanwhile obtained the horror
of the dungeons, after the discovery of the plot to
break prison. And never, during those eternal
hours of waiting, was it absent from my consciousness
that I should follow these other convicts out, endure
the hells of inquisition they endured, and be brought
back a wreck and flung on the stone floor of my stone-walled,
iron-doored dungeon.
They came for me. Ungraciously
and ungently, with blow and curse, they haled me forth,
and I faced Captain Jamie and Warden Atherton, themselves
arrayed with the strength of half a dozen state-bought,
tax-paid brutes of guards who lingered in the room
to do any bidding. But they were not needed.
“Sit down,” said Warden
Atherton, indicating a stout arm-chair.
I, beaten and sore, without water
for a night long and a day long, faint with hunger,
weak from a beating that had been added to five days
in the dungeon and eighty hours in the jacket, oppressed
by the calamity of human fate, apprehensive of what
was to happen to me from what I had seen happen to
the others I, a wavering waif of a human
man and an erstwhile professor of agronomy in a quiet
college town, I hesitated to accept the invitation
to sit down.
Warden Atherton was a large man and
a very powerful man. His hands flashed out to
a grip on my shoulders. I was a straw in his
strength. He lifted me clear of the floor and
crashed me down in the chair.
“Now,” he said, while
I gasped and swallowed my pain, “tell me all
about it, Standing. Spit it out all
of it, if you know what’s healthy for you.”
“I don’t know anything
about what has happened . . .”, I began.
That was as far as I got. With
a growl and a leap he was upon me. Again he
lifted me in the air and crashed me down into the chair.
“No nonsense, Standing,”
he warned. “Make a clean breast of it.
Where is the dynamite?”
“I don’t know anything of any dynamite,”
I protested.
Once again I was lifted and smashed back into the
chair.
I have endured tortures of various
sorts, but when I reflect upon them in the quietness
of these my last days, I am confident that no other
torture was quite the equal of that chair torture.
By my body that stout chair was battered out of any
semblance of a chair. Another chair was brought,
and in time that chair was demolished. But more
chairs were brought, and the eternal questioning about
the dynamite went on.
When Warden Atherton grew tired, Captain
Jamie relieved him; and then the guard Monohan took
Captain Jamie’s place in smashing me down into
the chair. And always it was dynamite, dynamite,
“Where is the dynamite?” and there was
no dynamite. Why, toward the last I would have
given a large portion of my immortal soul for a few
pounds of dynamite to which I could confess.
I do not know how many chairs were
broken by my body. I fainted times without number,
and toward the last the whole thing became nightmarish.
I was half-carried, half-shoved and dragged back
to the dark. There, when I became conscious,
I found a stool in my dungeon. He was a pallid-faced,
little dope-fiend of a short-timer who would do anything
to obtain the drug. As soon as I recognized
him I crawled to the grating and shouted out along
the corridor:
“There is a stool in with me,
fellows! He’s Ignatius Irvine! Watch
out what you say!”
The outburst of imprecations that
went up would have shaken the fortitude of a braver
man than Ignatius Irvine. He was pitiful in his
terror, while all about him, roaring like beasts,
the pain-racked lifers told him what awful things
they would do to him in the years that were to come.
Had there been secrets, the presence
of a stool in the dungeons would have kept the men
quiet, As it was, having all sworn to tell the truth,
they talked openly before Ignatius Irvine. The
one great puzzle was the dynamite, of which they were
as much in the dark as was I. They appealed to me.
If I knew anything about the dynamite they begged
me to confess it and save them all from further misery.
And I could tell them only the truth, that I knew
of no dynamite.
One thing the stool told me, before
the guards removed him, showed how serious was this
matter of the dynamite. Of course, I passed the
word along, which was that not a wheel had turned
in the prison all day. The thousands of convict-workers
had remained locked in their cells, and the outlook
was that not one of the various prison-factories would
be operated again until after the discovery of some
dynamite that somebody had hidden somewhere in the
prison.
And ever the examination went on.
Ever, one at a time, convicts were dragged away and
dragged or carried back again. They reported
that Warden Atherton and Captain Jamie, exhausted
by their efforts, relieved each other every two hours.
While one slept, the other examined. And they
slept in their clothes in the very room in which strong
man after strong man was being broken.
And hour by hour, in the dark dungeons,
our madness of torment grew. Oh, trust me as
one who knows, hanging is an easy thing compared with
the way live men may be hurt in all the life of them
and still live. I, too, suffered equally with
them from pain and thirst; but added to my suffering
was the fact that I remained conscious to the sufferings
of the others. I had been an incorrigible for
two years, and my nerves and brain were hardened to
suffering. It is a frightful thing to see a
strong man broken. About me, at the one time,
were forty strong men being broken. Ever the
cry for water went up, and the place became lunatic
with the crying, sobbing, babbling and raving of men
in delirium.
Don’t you see? Our truth,
the very truth we told, was our damnation. When
forty men told the same things with such unanimity,
Warden Atherton and Captain Jamie could only conclude
that the testimony was a memorized lie which each
of the forty rattled off parrot-like.
From the standpoint of the authorities,
their situation was as desperate as ours. As
I learned afterward, the Board of Prison Directors
had been summoned by telegraph, and two companies
of state militia were being rushed to the prison.
It was winter weather, and the frost
is sometimes shrewd even in a California winter.
We had no blankets in the dungeons. Please know
that it is very cold to stretch bruised human flesh
on frosty stone. In the end they did give us
water. Jeering and cursing us, the guards ran
in the fire-hoses and played the fierce streams on
us, dungeon by dungeon, hour after hour, until our
bruised flesh was battered all anew by the violence
with which the water smote us, until we stood knee-deep
in the water which we had raved for and for which
now we raved to cease.
I shall skip the rest of what happened
in the dungeons. In passing I shall merely state
that no one of those forty lifers was ever the same
again. Luigi Polazzo never recovered his reason.
Long Bill Hodge slowly lost his sanity, so that a
year later, he, too, went to live in Bughouse Alley.
Oh, and others followed Hodge and Polazzo; and others,
whose physical stamina had been impaired, fell victims
to prison-tuberculosis. Fully 25 per cent. of
the forty have died in the succeeding six years.
After my five years in solitary, when
they took me away from San Quentin for my trial, I
saw Skysail Jack. I could see little, for I was
blinking in the sunshine like a bat, after five years
of darkness; yet I saw enough of Skysail Jack to pain
my heart. It was in crossing the Prison Yard
that I saw him. His hair had turned white.
He was prematurely old. His chest had caved
in. His cheeks were sunken. His hands shook
as with palsy. He tottered as he walked.
And his eyes blurred with tears as he recognized
me, for I, too, was a sad wreck of what had once been
a man. I weighed eighty-seven pounds.
My hair, streaked with gray, was a five-years’
growth, as were my beard and moustache. And I,
too, tottered as I walked, so that the guards helped
to lead me across that sun-blinding patch of yard.
And Skysail Jack and I peered and knew each other
under the wreckage.
Men such as he are privileged, even
in a prison, so that he dared an infraction of the
rules by speaking to me in a cracked and quavering
voice.
“You’re a good one, Standing,”
he cackled. “You never squealed.”
“But I never knew, Jack,”
I whispered back I was compelled to whisper,
for five years of disuse had well-nigh lost me my voice.
“I don’t think there ever was any dynamite.”
“That’s right,”
he cackled, nodding his head childishly. “Stick
with it. Don’t ever let’m know.
You’re a good one. I take my hat off to
you, Standing. You never squealed.”
And the guards led me on, and that
was the last I saw of Skysail Jack. It was plain
that even he had become a believer in the dynamite
myth.
Twice they had me before the full
Board of Directors. I was alternately bullied
and cajoled. Their attitude resolved itself into
two propositions. If I delivered up the dynamite,
they would give me a nominal punishment of thirty
days in the dungeon and then make me a trusty in the
prison library. If I persisted in my stubbornness
and did not yield up the dynamite, then they would
put me in solitary for the rest of my sentence.
In my case, being a life prisoner, this was tantamount
to condemning me to solitary confinement for life.
Oh, no; California is civilized.
There is no such law on the statute books.
It is a cruel and unusual punishment, and no modern
state would be guilty of such a law. Nevertheless,
in the history of California I am the third man who
has been condemned for life to solitary confinement.
The other two were Jake Oppenheimer and Ed Morrell.
I shall tell you about them soon, for I rotted with
them for years in the cells of silence.
Oh, another thing. They are
going to take me out and hang me in a little while no,
not for killing Professor Haskell. I got life-imprisonment
for that. They are going to take me out and hang
me because I was found guilty of assault and battery.
And this is not prison discipline. It is law,
and as law it will be found in the criminal statutes.
I believe I made a man’s nose
bleed. I never saw it bleed, but that was the
evidence. Thurston, his name was. He was
a guard at San Quentin. He weighed one hundred
and seventy pounds and was in good health. I
weighed under ninety pounds, was blind as a bat from
the long darkness, and had been so long pent in narrow
walls that I was made dizzy by large open spaces.
Really, mime was a well-defined case of incipient
agoraphobia, as I quickly learned that day I escaped
from solitary and punched the guard Thurston on the
nose.
I struck him on the nose and made
it bleed when he got in my way and tried to catch
hold of me. And so they are going to hang me.
It is the written law of the State of California
that a lifetimer like me is guilty of a capital crime
when he strikes a prison guard like Thurston.
Surely, he could not have been inconvenienced more
than half an hour by that bleeding nose; and yet they
are going to hang me for it.
And, see! This law, in my case,
is ex post facto. It was not a law at
the time I killed Professor Haskell. It was not
passed until after I received my life-sentence.
And this is the very point: my life-sentence
gave me my status under this law which had not yet
been written on the books. And it is because
of my status of lifetimer that I am to be hanged for
battery committed on the guard Thurston. It is
clearly ex post facto, and, therefore, unconstitutional.
But what bearing has the Constitution
on constitutional lawyers when they want to put the
notorious Professor Darrell Standing out of the way?
Nor do I even establish the precedent with my execution.
A year ago, as everybody who reads the newspapers
knows, they hanged Jake Oppenheimer, right here in
Folsom, for a precisely similar offence . . . only,
in his case of battery, he was not guilty of making
a guard’s nose bleed. He cut a convict
unintentionally with a bread-knife.
It is strange life and
men’s ways and laws and tangled paths.
I am writing these lines in the very cell in Murderers’
Row that Jake Oppenheimer occupied ere they took him
out and did to him what they are going to do to me.
I warned you I had many things to
write about. I shall now return to my narrative.
The Board of Prison Directors gave me my choice:
a prison trustyship and surcease from the jute-looms
if I gave up the non-existent dynamite; life imprisonment
in solitary if I refused to give up the non-existent
dynamite.
They gave me twenty-four hours in
the jacket to think it over. Then I was brought
before the Board a second time. What could I
do? I could not lead them to the dynamite that
was not. I told them so, and they told me I
was a liar. They told me I was a hard case, a
dangerous man, a moral degenerate, the criminal of
the century. They told me many other things,
and then they carried me away to the solitary cells.
I was put into Number One cell. In Number Five
lay Ed Morrell. In Number Twelve lay Jake Oppenheimer.
And he had been there for ten years. Ed Morrell
had been in his cell only one year. He was serving
a fifty-years’ sentence. Jake Oppenheimer
was a lifer. And so was I a lifer. Wherefore
the outlook was that the three of us would remain there
for a long time. And yet, six years only are
past, and not one of us is in solitary. Jake
Oppenheimer was swung off. Ed Morrell was made
head trusty of San Quentin and then pardoned out only
the other day. And here I am in Folsom waiting
the day duly set by Judge Morgan, which will be my
last day.
The fools! As if they could
throttle my immortality with their clumsy device of
rope and scaffold! I shall walk, and walk again,
oh, countless times, this fair earth. And I
shall walk in the flesh, be prince and peasant, savant
and fool, sit in the high place and groan under the
wheel.