LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI BY MARK TWAIN

She and her two young children used to drop in every morning and talk

German to me–by request. One day, during a ramble about the city,

I visited one of the two establishments where the Government keeps and

watches corpses until the doctors decide that they are permanently dead,

and not in a trance state. It was a grisly place, that spacious room.

There were thirty-six corpses of adults in sight, stretched on their

backs on slightly slanted boards, in three long rows–all of them

with wax-white, rigid faces, and all of them wrapped in white shrouds.

Along the sides of the room were deep alcoves, like bay windows;

and in each of these lay several marble-visaged babes, utterly hidden and

buried under banks of fresh flowers, all but their faces and crossed hands.

Around a finger of each of these fifty still forms, both great

and small, was a ring; and from the ring a wire led to the ceiling,

and thence to a bell in a watch-room yonder, where, day and night,

a watchman sits always alert and ready to spring to the aid of any

of that pallid company who, waking out of death, shall make a movement–

for any, even the slightest, movement will twitch the wire and ring

that fearful bell. I imagined myself a death-sentinel drowsing

there alone, far in the dragging watches of some wailing, gusty night,

and having in a twinkling all my body stricken to quivering jelly by

the sudden clamor of that awful summons! So I inquired about this thing;

asked what resulted usually? if the watchman died, and the restored

corpse came and did what it could to make his last moments easy.

But I was rebuked for trying to feed an idle and frivolous curiosity

in so solemn and so mournful a place; and went my way with

a humbled crest.

Next morning I was telling the widow my adventure, when she exclaimed–

‘Come with me! I have a lodger who shall tell you all you want to know.

He has been a night-watchman there.’

He was a living man, but he did not look it. He was abed, and had

his head propped high on pillows; his face was wasted and colorless,

his deep-sunken eyes were shut; his hand, lying on his breast,

was talon-like, it was so bony and long-fingered. The widow

began her introduction of me. The man’s eyes opened slowly,

and glittered wickedly out from the twilight of their caverns;

he frowned a black frown; he lifted his lean hand and waved us

peremptorily away. But the widow kept straight on, till she

had got out the fact that I was a stranger and an American.

The man’s face changed at once; brightened, became even eager–

and the next moment he and I were alone together.

I opened up in cast-iron German; he responded in quite flexible English;

thereafter we gave the German language a permanent rest.

This consumptive and I became good friends. I visited him every day, and we

talked about everything. At least, about everything but wives and children.

Let anybody’s wife or anybody’s child be mentioned, and three things

always followed: the most gracious and loving and tender light glimmered

in the man’s eyes for a moment; faded out the next, and in its place came

that deadly look which had flamed there the first time I ever saw his

lids unclose; thirdly, he ceased from speech, there and then for that day;

lay silent, abstracted, and absorbed; apparently heard nothing that I said;

took no notice of my good-byes, and plainly did not know, by either sight

or hearing, when I left the room.

When I had been this Karl Ritter’s daily and sole intimate during two months,

he one day said, abruptly–

‘I will tell you my story.’

A DYING MAN S CONFESSION

Then he went on as follows:–

I have never given up, until now. But now I have given up.

I am going to die. I made up my mind last night that it

must be, and very soon, too. You say you are going to

revisit your river, by-and-bye, when you find opportunity.

Very well; that, together with a certain strange experience

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