<h2><SPAN name="Pinchedquot" id="Pinchedquot" /><i>"Pinched"</i></h2>
<p>I rode into Niagara Falls in a "side-door Pullman," or, in common
parlance, a box-car. A flat-car, by the way, is known amongst the
fraternity as a "gondola," with the second syllable emphasized and
pronounced long. But to return. I arrived in the afternoon and headed
straight from the freight train to the falls. Once my eyes were filled
with that wonder-vision of down-rushing water, I was lost. I could not
tear myself away long enough to "batter" the "privates" (domiciles) for my
supper. Even a "set-down" could not have lured me away. Night came on, a
beautiful night of moonlight, and I lingered by the falls until after
eleven. Then it was up to me to hunt for a place to "kip."</p>
<p>"Kip," "doss," "flop," "pound your ear," all mean the same thing; namely,
to sleep. Somehow, I had a "hunch" that Niagara Falls was a "bad" town for
hoboes, and I headed out into the country. I climbed a fence and "flopped"
in a field. John Law would never find me there, I flattered myself. I lay
on my back in the grass and slept like a babe. It was so balmy warm that I
woke up not once all night. But with the first gray daylight my eyes
opened, and I remembered the wonderful falls. I climbed the fence and
started down the road to have another look at them. It was early—not more
than five o'clock—and not until eight o'clock could I begin to batter for
my breakfast. I could spend at least three hours by the river. Alas! I was
fated never to see the river nor the falls again.</p>
<p>The town was asleep when I entered it. As I came along the quiet street, I
saw three men coming toward me along the sidewalk. They were walking
abreast. Hoboes, I decided, like myself, who had got up early. In this
surmise I was not quite correct. I was only sixty-six and two-thirds per
cent correct. The men on each side were hoboes all right, but the man in
the middle wasn't. I directed my steps to the edge of the sidewalk in
order to let the trio go by. But it didn't go by. At some word from the
man in the centre, all three halted, and he of the centre addressed me.</p>
<p>I piped the lay on the instant. He was a "fly-cop" and the two hoboes
were his prisoners. John Law was up and out after the early worm. I was a
worm. Had I been richer by the experiences that were to befall me in the
next several months, I should have turned and run like the very devil. He
might have shot at me, but he'd have had to hit me to get me. He'd have
never run after me, for two hoboes in the hand are worth more than one on
the get-away. But like a dummy I stood still when he halted me. Our
conversation was brief.</p>
<p>"What hotel are you stopping at?" he queried.</p>
<p>He had me. I wasn't stopping at any hotel, and, since I did not know the
name of a hotel in the place, I could not claim residence in any of them.
Also, I was up too early in the morning. Everything was against me.</p>
<p>"I just arrived," I said.</p>
<p>"Well, you turn around and walk in front of me, and not too far in front.
There's somebody wants to see you."</p>
<p>I was "pinched." I knew who wanted to see me. With that "fly-cop" and the
two hoboes at my heels, and under the direction of the former, I led the
way to the city jail. There we were searched and our names registered. I
have forgotten, now, under which name I was registered. I gave the name of
Jack Drake, but when they searched me, they found letters addressed to
Jack London. This caused trouble and required explanation, all of which
has passed from my mind, and to this day I do not know whether I was
pinched as Jack Drake or Jack London. But one or the other, it should be
there to-day in the prison register of Niagara Falls. Reference can bring
it to light. The time was somewhere in the latter part of June, 1894. It
was only a few days after my arrest that the great railroad strike began.</p>
<p>From the office we were led to the "Hobo" and locked in. The "Hobo" is
that part of a prison where the minor offenders are confined together in a
large iron cage. Since hoboes constitute the principal division of the
minor offenders, the aforesaid iron cage is called the Hobo. Here we met
several hoboes who had already been pinched that morning, and every little
while the door was unlocked and two or three more were thrust in on us. At
last, when we totalled sixteen, we were led upstairs into the court-room.
And now I shall faithfully describe what took place in that court-room,
for know that my patriotic American citizenship there received a shock
from which it has never fully recovered.</p>
<p>In the court-room were the sixteen prisoners, the judge, and two bailiffs.
The judge seemed to act as his own clerk. There were no witnesses. There
were no citizens of Niagara Falls present to look on and see how justice
was administered in their community. The judge glanced at the list of
cases before him and called out a name. A hobo stood up. The judge glanced
at a bailiff. "Vagrancy, your Honor," said the bailiff. "Thirty days,"
said his Honor. The hobo sat down, and the judge was calling another name
and another hobo was rising to his feet.</p>
<p>The trial of that hobo had taken just about fifteen seconds. The trial of
the next hobo came off with equal celerity. The bailiff said, "Vagrancy,
your Honor," and his Honor said, "Thirty days." Thus it went like
clockwork, fifteen seconds to a hobo—and thirty days.</p>
<p>They are poor dumb cattle, I thought to myself. But wait till my turn
comes; I'll give his Honor a "spiel." Part way along in the performance,
his Honor, moved by some whim, gave one of us an opportunity to speak. As
chance would have it, this man was not a genuine hobo. He bore none of the
ear-marks of the professional "stiff." Had he approached the rest of us,
while waiting at a water-tank for a freight, we should have unhesitatingly
classified him as a "gay-cat." Gay-cat is the synonym for tenderfoot in
Hobo Land. This gay-cat was well along in years—somewhere around
forty-five, I should judge. His shoulders were humped a trifle, and his
face was seamed by weather-beat.</p>
<p>For many years, according to his story, he had driven team for some firm
in (if I remember rightly) Lockport, New York. The firm had ceased to
prosper, and finally, in the hard times of 1893, had gone out of business.
He had been kept on to the last, though toward the last his work had been
very irregular. He went on and explained at length his difficulties in
getting work (when so many were out of work) during the succeeding months.
In the end, deciding that he would find better opportunities for work on
the Lakes, he had started for Buffalo. Of course he was "broke," and
there he was. That was all.</p>
<p>"Thirty days," said his Honor, and called another hobo's name.</p>
<p>Said hobo got up. "Vagrancy, your Honor," said the bailiff, and his Honor
said, "Thirty days."</p>
<p>And so it went, fifteen seconds and thirty days to each hobo. The machine
of justice was grinding smoothly. Most likely, considering how early it
was in the morning, his Honor had not yet had his breakfast and was in a
hurry.</p>
<p>But my American blood was up. Behind me were the many generations of my
American ancestry. One of the kinds of liberty those ancestors of mine had
fought and died for was the right of trial by jury. This was my heritage,
stained sacred by their blood, and it devolved upon me to stand up for it.
All right, I threatened to myself; just wait till he gets to me.</p>
<p>He got to me. My name, whatever it was, was called, and I stood up. The
bailiff said, "Vagrancy, your Honor," and I began to talk. But the judge
began talking at the same time, and he said, "Thirty days." I started to
protest, but at that moment his Honor was calling the name of the next
hobo on the list. His Honor paused long enough to say to me, "Shut up!"
The bailiff forced me to sit down. And the next moment that next hobo had
received thirty days and the succeeding hobo was just in process of
getting his.</p>
<p>When we had all been disposed of, thirty days to each stiff, his Honor,
just as he was about to dismiss us, suddenly turned to the teamster from
Lockport—the one man he had allowed to talk.</p>
<p>"Why did you quit your job?" his Honor asked.</p>
<p>Now the teamster had already explained how his job had quit him, and the
question took him aback.</p>
<p>"Your Honor," he began confusedly, "isn't that a funny question to ask?"</p>
<p>"Thirty days more for quitting your job," said his Honor, and the court
was closed. That was the outcome. The teamster got sixty days all
together, while the rest of us got thirty days.</p>
<p>We were taken down below, locked up, and given breakfast. It was a pretty
good breakfast, as prison breakfasts go, and it was the best I was to get
for a month to come.</p>
<p>As for me, I was dazed. Here was I, under sentence, after a farce of a
trial wherein I was denied not only my right of trial by jury, but my
right to plead guilty or not guilty. Another thing my fathers had fought
for flashed through my brain—habeas corpus. I'd show them. But when I
asked for a lawyer, I was laughed at. Habeas corpus was all right, but of
what good was it to me when I could communicate with no one outside the
jail? But I'd show them. They couldn't keep me in jail forever. Just wait
till I got out, that was all. I'd make them sit up. I knew something about
the law and my own rights, and I'd expose their maladministration of
justice. Visions of damage suits and sensational newspaper headlines were
dancing before my eyes when the jailers came in and began hustling us out
into the main office.</p>
<p>A policeman snapped a handcuff on my right wrist. (Ah, ha, thought I, a
new indignity. Just wait till I get out.) On the left wrist of a negro he
snapped the other handcuff of that pair. He was a very tall negro, well
past six feet—so tall was he that when we stood side by side his hand
lifted mine up a trifle in the manacles. Also, he was the happiest and the
raggedest negro I have ever seen.</p>
<p>We were all handcuffed similarly, in pairs. This accomplished, a bright
nickel-steel chain was brought forth, run down through the links of all
the handcuffs, and locked at front and rear of the double-line. We were
now a chain-gang. The command to march was given, and out we went upon the
street, guarded by two officers. The tall negro and I had the place of
honor. We led the procession.</p>
<p>After the tomb-like gloom of the jail, the outside sunshine was dazzling.
I had never known it to be so sweet as now, a prisoner with clanking
chains, I knew that I was soon to see the last of it for thirty days. Down
through the streets of Niagara Falls we marched to the railroad station,
stared at by curious passers-by, and especially by a group of tourists on
the veranda of a hotel that we marched past.</p>
<p>There was plenty of slack in the chain, and with much rattling and
clanking we sat down, two and two, in the seats of the smoking-car. Afire
with indignation as I was at the outrage that had been perpetrated on me
and my forefathers, I was nevertheless too prosaically practical to lose
my head over it. This was all new to me. Thirty days of mystery were
before me, and I looked about me to find somebody who knew the ropes. For
I had already learned that I was not bound for a petty jail with a hundred
or so prisoners in it, but for a full-grown penitentiary with a couple of
thousand prisoners in it, doing anywhere from ten days to ten years.</p>
<p>In the seat behind me, attached to the chain by his wrist, was a squat,
heavily-built, powerfully-muscled man. He was somewhere between
thirty-five and forty years of age. I sized him up. In the corners of his
eyes I saw humor and laughter and kindliness. As for the rest of him, he
was a brute-beast, wholly unmoral, and with all the passion and turgid
violence of the brute-beast. What saved him, what made him possible for
me, were those corners of his eyes—the humor and laughter and kindliness
of the beast when unaroused.</p>
<p>He was my "meat." I "cottoned" to him. While my cuff-mate, the tall negro,
mourned with chucklings and laughter over some laundry he was sure to lose
through his arrest, and while the train rolled on toward Buffalo, I talked
with the man in the seat behind me. He had an empty pipe. I filled it for
him with my precious tobacco—enough in a single filling to make a dozen
cigarettes. Nay, the more we talked the surer I was that he was my meat,
and I divided all my tobacco with him.</p>
<p>Now it happens that I am a fluid sort of an organism, with sufficient
kinship with life to fit myself in 'most anywhere. I laid myself out to
fit in with that man, though little did I dream to what extraordinary good
purpose I was succeeding. He had never been in the particular penitentiary
to which we were going, but he had done "one-," "two-," and "five-spots"
in various other penitentiaries (a "spot" is a year), and he was filled
with wisdom. We became pretty chummy, and my heart bounded when he
cautioned me to follow his lead. He called me "Jack," and I called him
"Jack."</p>
<p>The train stopped at a station about five miles from Buffalo, and we, the
chain-gang, got off. I do not remember the name of this station, but I am
confident that it is some one of the following: Rocklyn, Rockwood, Black
Rock, Rockcastle, or Newcastle. But whatever the name of the place, we
were walked a short distance and then put on a street-car. It was an
old-fashioned car, with a seat, running the full length, on each side. All
the passengers who sat on one side were asked to move over to the other
side, and we, with a great clanking of chain, took their places. We sat
facing them, I remember, and I remember, too, the awed expression on the
faces of the women, who took us, undoubtedly, for convicted murderers and
bank-robbers. I tried to look my fiercest, but that cuff-mate of mine, the
too happy negro, insisted on rolling his eyes, laughing, and reiterating,
"O Lawdy! Lawdy!"</p>
<p>We left the car, walked some more, and were led into the office of the
Erie County Penitentiary. Here we were to register, and on that register
one or the other of my names will be found. Also, we were informed that we
must leave in the office all our valuables: money, tobacco, matches,
pocketknives, and so forth.</p>
<p>My new pal shook his head at me.</p>
<p>"If you do not leave your things here, they will be confiscated inside,"
warned the official.</p>
<p>Still my pal shook his head. He was busy with his hands, hiding his
movements behind the other fellows. (Our handcuffs had been removed.) I
watched him, and followed suit, wrapping up in a bundle in my handkerchief
all the things I wanted to take in. These bundles the two of us thrust
into our shirts. I noticed that our fellow-prisoners, with the exception
of one or two who had watches, did not turn over their belongings to the
man in the office. They were determined to smuggle them in somehow,
trusting to luck; but they were not so wise as my pal, for they did not
wrap their things in bundles.</p>
<p>Our erstwhile guardians gathered up the handcuffs and chain and departed
for Niagara Falls, while we, under new guardians, were led away into the
prison. While we were in the office, our number had been added to by other
squads of newly arrived prisoners, so that we were now a procession forty
or fifty strong.</p>
<p>Know, ye unimprisoned, that traffic is as restricted inside a large prison
as commerce was in the Middle Ages. Once inside a penitentiary, one cannot
move about at will. Every few steps are encountered great steel doors or
gates which are always kept locked. We were bound for the barber-shop, but
we encountered delays in the unlocking of doors for us. We were thus
delayed in the first "hall" we entered. A "hall" is not a corridor.
Imagine an oblong cube, built out of bricks and rising six stories high,
each story a row of cells, say fifty cells in a row—in short, imagine a
cube of colossal honeycomb. Place this cube on the ground and enclose it
in a building with a roof overhead and walls all around. Such a cube and
encompassing building constitute a "hall" in the Erie County Penitentiary.
Also, to complete the picture, see a narrow gallery, with steel railing,
running the full length of each tier of cells and at the ends of the
oblong cube see all these galleries, from both sides, connected by a
fire-escape system of narrow steel stairways.</p>
<p>We were halted in the first hall, waiting for some guard to unlock a door.
Here and there, moving about, were convicts, with close-cropped heads and
shaven faces, and garbed in prison stripes. One such convict I noticed
above us on the gallery of the third tier of cells. He was standing on the
gallery and leaning forward, his arms resting on the railing, himself
apparently oblivious of our presence. He seemed staring into vacancy. My
pal made a slight hissing noise. The convict glanced down. Motioned
signals passed between them. Then through the air soared the handkerchief
bundle of my pal. The convict caught it, and like a flash it was out of
sight in his shirt and he was staring into vacancy. My pal had told me to
follow his lead. I watched my chance when the guard's back was turned, and
my bundle followed the other one into the shirt of the convict.</p>
<p>A minute later the door was unlocked, and we filed into the barber-shop.
Here were more men in convict stripes. They were the prison barbers. Also,
there were bath-tubs, hot water, soap, and scrubbing-brushes. We were
ordered to strip and bathe, each man to scrub his neighbor's back—a
needless precaution, this compulsory bath, for the prison swarmed with
vermin. After the bath, we were each given a canvas clothes-bag.</p>
<p>"Put all your clothes in the bags," said the guard. "It's no good trying
to smuggle anything in. You've got to line up naked for inspection. Men
for thirty days or less keep their shoes and suspenders. Men for more than
thirty days keep nothing."</p>
<p>This announcement was received with consternation. How could naked men
smuggle anything past an inspection? Only my pal and I were safe. But it
was right here that the convict barbers got in their work. They passed
among the poor newcomers, kindly volunteering to take charge of their
precious little belongings, and promising to return them later in the day.
Those barbers were philanthropists—to hear them talk. As in the case of
Fra Lippo Lippi, never was there such prompt disemburdening. Matches,
tobacco, rice-paper, pipes, knives, money, everything, flowed into the
capacious shirts of the barbers. They fairly bulged with the spoil, and
the guards made believe not to see. To cut the story short, nothing was
ever returned. The barbers never had any intention of returning what they
had taken. They considered it legitimately theirs. It was the barber-shop
graft. There were many grafts in that prison, as I was to learn; and I,
too, was destined to become a grafter—thanks to my new pal.</p>
<p>There were several chairs, and the barbers worked rapidly. The quickest
shaves and hair-cuts I have ever seen were given in that shop. The men
lathered themselves, and the barbers shaved them at the rate of a minute
to a man. A hair-cut took a trifle longer. In three minutes the down of
eighteen was scraped from my face, and my head was as smooth as a
billiard-ball just sprouting a crop of bristles. Beards, mustaches, like
our clothes and everything, came off. Take my word for it, we were a
villainous-looking gang when they got through with us. I had not realized
before how really altogether bad we were.</p>
<p>Then came the line-up, forty or fifty of us, naked as Kipling's heroes who
stormed Lungtungpen. To search us was easy. There were only our shoes and
ourselves. Two or three rash spirits, who had doubted the barbers, had the
goods found on them—which goods, namely, tobacco, pipes, matches, and
small change, were quickly confiscated. This over, our new clothes were
brought to us—stout prison shirts, and coats and trousers conspicuously
striped. I had always lingered under the impression that the convict
stripes were put on a man only after he had been convicted of a felony. I
lingered no longer, but put on the insignia of shame and got my first
taste of marching the lock-step.</p>
<p>In single file, close together, each man's hands on the shoulders of the
man in front, we marched on into another large hall. Here we were ranged
up against the wall in a long line and ordered to strip our left arms. A
youth, a medical student who was getting in his practice on cattle such as
we, came down the line. He vaccinated just about four times as rapidly as
the barbers shaved. With a final caution to avoid rubbing our arms against
anything, and to let the blood dry so as to form the scab, we were led
away to our cells. Here my pal and I parted, but not before he had time to
whisper to me, "Suck it out."</p>
<p>As soon as I was locked in, I sucked my arm clean. And afterward I saw men
who had not sucked and who had horrible holes in their arms into which I
could have thrust my fist. It was their own fault. They could have sucked.</p>
<p>In my cell was another man. We were to be cell-mates. He was a young,
manly fellow, not talkative, but very capable, indeed as splendid a fellow
as one could meet with in a day's ride, and this in spite of the fact that
he had just recently finished a two-year term in some Ohio penitentiary.</p>
<p>Hardly had we been in our cell half an hour, when a convict sauntered down
the gallery and looked in. It was my pal. He had the freedom of the hall,
he explained. He was unlocked at six in the morning and not locked up
again till nine at night. He was in with the "push" in that hall, and had
been promptly appointed a trusty of the kind technically known as
"hall-man." The man who had appointed him was also a prisoner and a
trusty, and was known as "First Hall-man." There were thirteen hall-men in
that hall. Ten of them had charge each of a gallery of cells, and over
them were the First, Second, and Third Hall-men.</p>
<p>We newcomers were to stay in our cells for the rest of the day, my pal
informed me, so that the vaccine would have a chance to take. Then next
morning we would be put to hard labor in the prison-yard.</p>
<p>"But I'll get you out of the work as soon as I can," he promised. "I'll
get one of the hall-men fired and have you put in his place."</p>
<p>He put his hand into his shirt, drew out the handkerchief containing my
precious belongings, passed it in to me through the bars, and went on down
the gallery.</p>
<p>I opened the bundle. Everything was there. Not even a match was missing. I
shared the makings of a cigarette with my cell-mate. When I started to
strike a match for a light, he stopped me. A flimsy, dirty comforter lay
in each of our bunks for bedding. He tore off a narrow strip of the thin
cloth and rolled it tightly and telescopically into a long and slender
cylinder. This he lighted with a precious match. The cylinder of
tight-rolled cotton cloth did not flame. On the end a coal of fire slowly
smouldered. It would last for hours, and my cell-mate called it a "punk."
And when it burned short, all that was necessary was to make a new punk,
put the end of it against the old, blow on them, and so transfer the
glowing coal. Why, we could have given Prometheus pointers on the
conserving of fire.</p>
<p>At twelve o'clock dinner was served. At the bottom of our cage door was a
small opening like the entrance of a runway in a chicken-yard. Through
this were thrust two hunks of dry bread and two pannikins of "soup." A
portion of soup consisted of about a quart of hot water with floating on
its surface a lonely drop of grease. Also, there was some salt in that
water.</p>
<p>We drank the soup, but we did not eat the bread. Not that we were not
hungry, and not that the bread was uneatable. It was fairly good bread.
But we had reasons. My cell-mate had discovered that our cell was alive
with bed-bugs. In all the cracks and interstices between the bricks where
the mortar had fallen out flourished great colonies. The natives even
ventured out in the broad daylight and swarmed over the walls and ceiling
by hundreds. My cell-mate was wise in the ways of the beasts. Like Childe
Roland, dauntless the slug-horn to his lips he bore. Never was there such
a battle. It lasted for hours. It was shambles. And when the last
survivors fled to their brick-and-mortar fastnesses, our work was only
half done. We chewed mouthfuls of our bread until it was reduced to the
consistency of putty. When a fleeing belligerent escaped into a crevice
between the bricks, we promptly walled him in with a daub of the chewed
bread. We toiled on until the light grew dim and until every hole, nook,
and cranny was closed. I shudder to think of the tragedies of starvation
and cannibalism that must have ensued behind those bread-plastered
ramparts.</p>
<p>We threw ourselves on our bunks, tired out and hungry, to wait for supper.
It was a good day's work well done. In the weeks to come we at least
should not suffer from the hosts of vermin. We had foregone our dinner,
saved our hides at the expense of our stomachs; but we were content. Alas
for the futility of human effort! Scarcely was our long task completed
when a guard unlocked our door. A redistribution of prisoners was being
made, and we were taken to another cell and locked in two galleries higher
up.</p>
<p>Early next morning our cells were unlocked, and down in the hall the
several hundred prisoners of us formed the lock-step and marched out into
the prison-yard to go to work. The Erie Canal runs right by the back yard
of the Erie County Penitentiary. Our task was to unload canal-boats,
carrying huge stay-bolts on our shoulders, like railroad ties, into the
prison. As I worked I sized up the situation and studied the chances for a
get-away. There wasn't the ghost of a show. Along the tops of the walls
marched guards armed with repeating rifles, and I was told, furthermore,
that there were machine-guns in the sentry-towers.</p>
<p>I did not worry. Thirty days were not so long. I'd stay those thirty days,
and add to the store of material I intended to use, when I got out,
against the harpies of justice. I'd show what an American boy could do
when his rights and privileges had been trampled on the way mine had. I
had been denied my right of trial by jury; I had been denied my right to
plead guilty or not guilty; I had been denied a trial even (for I couldn't
consider that what I had received at Niagara Falls was a trial); I had not
been allowed to communicate with a lawyer nor any one, and hence had been
denied my right of suing for a writ of habeas corpus; my face had been
shaved, my hair cropped close, convict stripes had been put upon my body;
I was forced to toil hard on a diet of bread and water and to march the
shameful lock-step with armed guards over me—and all for what? What had
I done? What crime had I committed against the good citizens of Niagara
Falls that all this vengeance should be wreaked upon me? I had not even
violated their "sleeping-out" ordinance. I had slept outside their
jurisdiction, in the country, that night. I had not even begged for a
meal, or battered for a "light piece" on their streets. All that I had
done was to walk along their sidewalk and gaze at their picayune
waterfall. And what crime was there in that? Technically I was guilty of
no misdemeanor. All right, I'd show them when I got out.</p>
<p>The next day I talked with a guard. I wanted to send for a lawyer. The
guard laughed at me. So did the other guards. I really was <i>incommunicado</i>
so far as the outside world was concerned. I tried to write a letter out,
but I learned that all letters were read, and censured or confiscated, by
the prison authorities, and that "short-timers" were not allowed to write
letters anyway. A little later I tried smuggling letters out by men who
were released, but I learned that they were searched and the letters found
and destroyed. Never mind. It all helped to make it a blacker case when I
did get out.</p>
<p>But as the prison days went by (which I shall describe in the next
chapter), I "learned a few." I heard tales of the police, and
police-courts, and lawyers, that were unbelievable and monstrous. Men,
prisoners, told me of personal experiences with the police of great cities
that were awful. And more awful were the hearsay tales they told me
concerning men who had died at the hands of the police and who therefore
could not testify for themselves. Years afterward, in the report of the
Lexow Committee, I was to read tales true and more awful than those told
to me. But in the meantime, during the first days of my imprisonment, I
scoffed at what I heard.</p>
<p>As the days went by, however, I began to grow convinced. I saw with my own
eyes, there in that prison, things unbelievable and monstrous. And the
more convinced I became, the profounder grew the respect in me for the
sleuth-hounds of the law and for the whole institution of criminal
justice.</p>
<p>My indignation ebbed away, and into my being rushed the tides of fear. I
saw at last, clear-eyed, what I was up against. I grew meek and lowly.
Each day I resolved more emphatically to make no rumpus when I got out.
All I asked, when I got out, was a chance to fade away from the landscape.
And that was just what I did do when I was released. I kept my tongue
between my teeth, walked softly, and sneaked for Pennsylvania, a wiser and
a humbler man.</p>
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