And farm management!  I know the waste of superfluous motion without studying a moving picture record of it, whether it be farm or farm-hand, the layout of buildings or the layout of the farm-hands’ labour.  There is my handbook and tables on the subject.  Beyond the shadow of any doubt, at this present moment, a hundred thousand farmers are knotting their brows over its spread pages ere they tap out their final pipe and go to bed.  And yet, so far was I beyond my tables, that all I needed was a mere look at a man to know his predispositions, his co-ordinations, and the index fraction of his motion-wastage.

And here I must close this first chapter of my narrative.  It is nine o’clock, and in Murderers’ Row that means lights out.  Even now, I hear the soft tread of the gum-shoed guard as he comes to censure me for my coal-oil lamp still burning.  As if the mere living could censure the doomed to die!

CHAPTER II

I am Darrell Standing.  They are going to take me out and hang me pretty soon.  In the meantime I say my say, and write in these pages of the other times and places.

After my sentence, I came to spend the rest of my “natural life” in the prison of San Quentin.  I proved incorrigible.  An incorrigible is a terrible human being—at least such is the connotation of “incorrigible” in prison psychology.  I became an incorrigible because I abhorred waste motion.  The prison, like all prisons, was a scandal and an affront of waste motion.  They put me in the jute-mill.  The criminality of wastefulness irritated me.  Why should it not?  Elimination of waste motion was my speciality.  Before the invention of steam or steam-driven looms three thousand years before, I had rotted in prison in old Babylon; and, trust me, I speak the truth when I say that in that ancient day we prisoners wove more efficiently on hand-looms than did the prisoners in the steam-powered loom-rooms of San Quentin.



6 из 294