once."
"This time he agrees with the majority of the authorities,"
announced the
missionary with huge
satisfaction. "The hill is
Golgotha, the Place of Skulls, or, as you please, so named because
it resembles a skull. Notice the
resemblance. That is where they
crucified--" He broke off and turned to me. "Whom did they crucify
there, young
scholar? Tell us what else you see."
Oh, I saw--my father reported that my eyes were bulging; but I shook
my head
stubbornly and said:
"I ain't a-goin' to tell you because you're laughin' at me. I seen
lots an' lots of men killed there. They nailed 'em up, an' it took
a long time. I seen--but I ain't a-goin' to tell. I don't tell
lies. You ask dad an' ma if I tell lies. He'd whale the stuffin'
out of me if I did. Ask 'm."
And thereat not another word could the
missionary get from me, even
though he baited me with more photographs that sent my head whirling
with a rush of memory-pictures and that urged and tickled my tongue
with spates of speech which I
sullenly resisted and overcame.
"He will certainly make a good Bible
scholar," the
missionary told
father and mother after I had kissed them good-night and departed
for bed. "Or else, with that
imagination, he'll become a successful
fiction-writer."
Which shows how
prophecy can go agley. I sit here in Murderers'
Row,
writing these lines in my last days, or, rather, in Darrell
Standing's last days ere they take him out and try to
thrust him
into the dark at the end of a rope, and I smile to myself. I became
neither Bible
scholar nor
novelist. On the
contrary, until they
buried me in the cells of silence for half a
decade, I was
everything that the
missionary forecasted not--an agricultural
expert, a professor of agronomy, a
specialist in the science of the
elimination of waste
motion, a master of farm
efficiency, a precise
laboratory
scientist where
precision and adherence to microscopic
fact are
absolute requirements.
And I sit here in the warm afternoon, in Murderers' Row, and cease
from the
writing of my memoirs to listen to the soothing buzz of
flies in the
drowsy air, and catch phrases of a low-voiced
conversation between Josephus Jackson, the negro
murderer on my
right, and Bambeccio, the Italian
murderer on my left, who are
discussing, through grated door to grated door, back and forth past
my grated door, the antiseptic virtues and excellences of chewing
tobacco for flesh wounds.
And in my suspended hand I hold my
fountain pen, and as I remember
that other hands of me, in long gone ages, wielded ink-brush, and
quill, and stylus, I also find thought-space in time to wonder if
that
missionary, when he was a little lad, ever trailed clouds of
glory and glimpsed the
brightness of old star-roving days.
Well, back to
solitary, after I had
learned the code of knuckle-talk
and still found the hours of
consciousness" target="_blank" title="n.意识;觉悟;知觉">
consciousness too long to
endure. By
self-hypnosis, which I began
successfully to
practise, I became able
to put my
conscious mind to sleep and to
awaken and loose my
sub
conscious mind. But the latter was an undisciplined and lawless
thing. It
wandered through all nightmarish
madness, without
coherence, without continuity of scene, event, or person.
My method of
mechanical hypnosis was the soul of simplicity.
Sitting with folded legs on my straw-mattress, I gazed fixedly at a
fragment of bright straw which I had attached to the wall of my cell
near the door where the most light was. I gazed at the bright
point, with my eyes close to it, and tilted
upward till they
strained to see. At the same time I relaxed all the will of me and
gave myself to the swaying dizziness that always
eventually came to
me. And when I felt myself sway out of balance
backward, I closed
my eyes and permitted myself to fall supine and un
conscious on the
mattress.
And then, for half-an-hour, ten minutes, or as long as an hour or
so, I would
wander erratically and
foolishly through the stored
memories of my
eternal recurrence on earth. But times and places
shifted too
swiftly. I knew afterward, when I awoke, that I,
Darrell Standing, was the linking
personality that connected all
bizarreness and grotesqueness. But that was all. I could never
live out completely one full experience, one point of
consciousness" target="_blank" title="n.意识;觉悟;知觉">
consciousnessin time and space. My dreams, if dreams they may be called, were
rhymeless and reasonless.
Thus, as a
sample of my rovings: in a single
interval of fifteen
minutes of sub
consciousness" target="_blank" title="n.意识;觉悟;知觉">
consciousness I have crawled and bellowed in the slime
of the primeval world and sat beside Haas--further and cleaved the
twentieth century air in a gas-driven monoplane. Awake, I
remembered that I, Darrell Standing, in the flesh, during the year
preceding my incarceration in San Quentin, had flown with Haas
further over the Pacific at Santa Monica. Awake, I did not remember
the crawling and the bellowing in the ancient slime. Nevertheless,
awake, I reasoned that somehow I had remembered that early adventure
in the slime, and that it was a verity of long-
previous experience,
when I was not yet Darrell Standing but somebody else, or something
else that crawled and bellowed. One experience was merely more
remote than the other. Both experiences were
equally real--or else
how did I remember them?
Oh, what a fluttering of
luminous images and actions! In a few
short minutes of loosed sub
consciousness" target="_blank" title="n.意识;觉悟;知觉">
consciousness I have sat in the halls of
kings, above the salt and below the salt, been fool and
jester, man-
at-arms, clerk and monk; and I have been ruler above all at the head
of the table--temporal power in my own sword arm, in the thickness
of my castle walls, and the numbers of my fighting men; spiritual
power
likewise mine by token of the fact that cowled priests and fat
abbots sat beneath me and swigged my wine and swined my meat.
I have worn the iron
collar of the serf about my neck in cold
climes; and I have loved princesses of royal houses in the tropic-
warmed and sun-scented night, where black slaves fanned the sultry
air with fans of
peacock plumes, while from afar, across the palm
and
fountains, drifted the roaring of lions and the cries of
jackals. I have crouched in chill desert places
warming my hands at
fires builded of camel's dung; and I have lain in the meagre shade
of sun-parched sagebrush by dry water-holes and yearned dry-tongued
for water, while about me, dismembered and scattered in the alkali,
were the bones of men and beasts who had yearned and died.
I have been sea-cuny and bravo,
scholar and recluse. I have pored
over hand-written pages of huge and musty tomes in the scholastic
quietude and
twilight of cliff-perched monasteries, while beneath on
the
lesser slopes, peasants still toiled beyond the end of day among
the vines and olives and drove in from pastures the blatting goats
and lowing kine; yes, and I have led shouting rabbles down the
wheel-worn, chariot-rutted paves of ancient and forgotten cities;
and, solemn-voiced and grave as death, I have enunciated the law,
stated the
gravity of the infraction, and imposed the due death on
men, who, like Darrell Standing in Folsom Prison, had broken the
law.
Aloft, at giddy mastheads oscillating above the decks of ships, I
have gazed on sun-flashed water where coral-growths iridesced from
profounds of turquoise deeps, and conned the ships into the safety
of mirrored lagoons where the anchors rumbled down close to palm-
fronded beaches of sea-pounded coral rock; and I have striven on
forgotten battlefields of the elder days, when the sun went down on
slaughter that did not cease and that continued through the night-
hours with the stars shining down and with a cool night wind blowing
from distant peaks of snow that failed to chill the sweat of battle;
and again, I have been little Darrell Standing, bare-footed in the
dew-lush grass of spring on the Minnesota farm, chilblained when of
frosty mornings I fed the cattle in their breath-steaming stalls,
sobered to fear and awe of the splendour and
terror of God when I
sat on Sundays under the rant and preachment of the New Jerusalem