登陆注册
19898800000060

第60章

After all, is not this contract system a regular jobbing business? If these men can employ the prisoners and pay forty-five cents a day for them, and make money and grow rich, why cannot the State work the convicts and save all these profits? Competent men can be secured assuperintendents to carry on this work. Some will say, that it will open up too many avenues to jobbery; that the superintendents will get to stealing from the State, and in the end the State will not get as much benefit as under the present system. This seems like begging the question. If these superintendents, after a time, become thieves, treat them as thieves, and give them a term in the penitentiary. This kind of medicine will soon cure all cases of jobbery. Again, prisoners should be assigned tasks according to their ability. All men are not alike equally skilled in the same kind of labor. All these things should be taken into account. No prisoner should be forced to carry a burden that is oppressive, in order to fill the coffers of avaricious contractors. Again, I ask that there be some humane person, whose duty it is to see that these helpless men, whose lips are sealed, are not oppressed by this damnable contract system. Let us treat these unfortunate men humanely, and never forget that, if stern justice was meted out to those who had the control of convicts, as officers, guards, or contractors, many of them would be doing service for the State, clad in a suit of stripes. The penitentiary of Missouri is self-supporting, with the exception of the officer's pay-roll. At each session of the Legislature, an appropriation of $140,000 is made for this purpose. There are over one hundred officers on the pay-roll. The records show that it requires nearly a quarter of a million dollars annually to pay the expenses of this institution.

Crime is an expensive luxury!

During the past two years $347,000 have been paid into the treasury as the earnings of the prison. The goods manufactured are sold chiefly in the State of Missouri. This brings convict labor, which is very cheap, into competition with the labor of the poor, but honest man on the outside. The average labor value of the convict is forty-five cents a day. How is it possible for laboring men on the outside, who have families depending upon them, to support themselves and families on an amount, that will enable business men, for whom they work, to engage in business and compete with this cheap convict labor? This is the great argument against convict labor. The convict must be given work or he will become insane. To bring this cheap labor into conflict with the toil of honest but poor men on the outside, is unjust and cruel. What to do with convict labor is one ofthe unsolved problems. It is a subject that will furnish ample scope for the thinking mind.

The prisoner is worked on an average of nine hours each day. He goes about his labor in silence. It is against the regulations for him to exchange a word or a knowing glance with a fellow-workman. When visitors pass through the workshops he is not permitted to lift his eyes from his work to look at them. An officer, perched upon a raised seat, who commands a view of the entire work-room, is constantly on the watch to see that no rule or regulation is violated. The convict cannot take a drink of water, or go from one part of the room to another in the discharge of his duties without permission from the officer. The prisoner is always conscious of being watched. This feeling is no small factor in making the life of a prisoner almost unbearable. Nearly all of the inmates work in shops, and all the exercise they receive in the open air is what they get in going to and from their meals and cells. It is this sameness of work, this daily and hourly going over the same routine, this monotonous labor, this being surrounded by hundreds of busy fellow-workmen, and not permitted to exchange a word with any of them, that makes the life of a prisoner to be so much dreaded. Young man, as you read these lines, it is impossible for you to conceive the misery that accompanies this kind of a monotonous life.

In order to know all that it means, you must pass through it, as I have done. Things are entirely different with you. While you are at work on the outside of prisons, you can carry on conversation with those about you and thus pass the time in a pleasant manner. After the day's work is over, if you so desire, you can spend an hour or so with friends. Not so with the criminal. After his day's work, done in silence, is past, he is locked up in his solitary cell to spend the evening as best he can.

There is no one to watch you constantly while at your daily toil, to see that you do not violate some insignificant rule or regulation. When you desire a holiday, and wish to take a stroll out into the woods, to look upon the beautiful flowers or admire nature in all her loveliness, to inhale the pure, fresh air--which is a stranger to packed workshops--to revel in the genial sunlight, there is no one to forbid you. You are a free man.

Oh, what a wonderful difference between the laboring man who is free, and him who is forced to work, clad in the habiliments of disgrace! He who penned these lines has had to toil as a convict in the coal mines of the Kansas penitentiary, eight hundred feet below the surface, lying stretched out on his side, and he knows what he is talking about when he says, he would rather die and be laid away in his grave than to spend five years as a convict.

Young man, think of these things when you are tempted to do those things that will send you to a felon's cell. Of course, it is no intention of yours ever to become an inmate of a prison. Permit one who has had experience, to tell you that it is one of the easiest things in the world to get into a prison, and that when once in, it is difficult to secure your liberty, until Time turns the bolt and lets you out, or in other words, until you serve out your term. May you never yield to a temptation that will make you a prisoner.

同类推荐
  • 图经衍义本草

    图经衍义本草

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 古城集

    古城集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 寻汪道士不遇

    寻汪道士不遇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 画禅室随笔

    画禅室随笔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金丹直指

    金丹直指

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 高唐梦

    高唐梦

    李饮家贫,从小习毛体,喜诗词,上高中不久,便开始了大唐开元之旅。本书风格写实,文笔先下重墨,之后会浓淡相宜。——这是芹菜的第一本书,肯定会有许多不尽如人意的地方,真心希望得到大家的宽容、理解与支持。——以下附庸风雅——香草美人,当从那馨香之物始。至于仗剑去国,游历天涯的情志,大唐除了这白之侠气和饮之儒雅,竟是难寻其右。饮穿大唐,唯有缚鸡之力,未得莫测神功。此人生存之道太差,只运气极佳,又因儿时于那诗词歌赋的些许嗜好,竟在大唐成了正果。至于正果究竟为何物,以愚拙见,当是免不了正头娘子以齐家,偏枕美妾以风流。再如治国、平天下者,当是凭栏浊酒咏醉之词,不足为据,只做流年笑谈罢了。
  • 我的腹黑俏丫头

    我的腹黑俏丫头

    一个是一脸笑意却极度腹黑的小美女,一个是看似恶魔实则超爱心软的酷王子,在圣凌学院这个贵族学院里,究竟会掀起怎样的风浪呢?敬请期待吧!
  • 独殇花

    独殇花

    一纸婚约缚束我的所有仇,一张休书我弃我于不顾。可笑披靡天下的你早已三宫六院佳丽三千,而我青丝成雪两鬓白发,只怕无人与你三千繁华水月镜花。
  • 狼狈人生

    狼狈人生

    不想要再复制的人生!却又有好多的不舍~人活着,就是为了活着吗?人年轻的时候犯错,是不成熟,是没长脑子。长大了再犯错呢?是自暴自弃吧~~~
  • 神秘之旅新世界

    神秘之旅新世界

    刘凡一个经历人生大起大落的现代人,心灰意冷的他放弃了家里富饶的生活。一个人在都市打拼,一场洪水让他意外的来到了异世界。结识了万能导游老狼,遇到了碰瓷的人生娃娃。在森林里开启了寻找的道路,走出原始踏进了文明。他看到了机会,他要建立一座自己的国度,自己的家族,自己的门派,他就是未来的炼狱大帝刘凡。
  • 前夫,温柔点

    前夫,温柔点

    她知道,他的心里不会有她,他爱的人永远是姐姐,他们两人,一个错嫁,一个恨娶。“滚,不准进我房间!”看着被他丢出窗外的衣物,她默默退出新房,在漆黑寒冷的庭园蜷缩一夜。“贱人,你不配拥有和她相似的脸!”所以,她满脸鲜血的抬起头,却疼得流不出泪来。她小心翼翼生活,只为寻找母亲所说的“幸福”。当她终于在他眼里看到自己时,却发现原来不过一场温柔假象。离婚书上她写下自己的名字,一弧一线全是心死。亲爱的,如果你走进我心里,你会哭,因为那里全是你。如果我走进你心里,我会哭,因为那里没有我。
  • 登天九步

    登天九步

    登天九步,九步登天。外炼皮肉以作舟,内悟法则度神魂,一重一变一涅槃,定用只手撑破天。这是一个武力为尊的世界,武力就代表了一个人的一切。
  • 我们都在等待着幸福

    我们都在等待着幸福

    城市,住满了形形色色的人,有人,在爱里沉沦;有人,在爱里哭泣;有人,在爱里欢笑;有人,在爱里寻找;有人,在爱里守候;还有人,在爱里等待。每个人的,都会有属于自己的爱情,会谱写出属于自己的情歌。
  • 我的咒印师女友

    我的咒印师女友

    主角因为一次偶然的意外,结识了一名冷淡的美女咒印师,更是机缘巧合下被卷入了一场场异能界的风波,结识了形形色色的人......他们或是生而恶(wu),或是活而悲,但是,无一例外,他们都是为了各自信仰而存活的人.....(本书节奏慢,甚至到了难以看懂的发指程度,非老书虫者慎入!小白勿近!!!)
  • 农门娇娘种田忙

    农门娇娘种田忙

    何瑾珺重生了,嫁给了一个莽汉,心不甘情愿却又无可奈何,更甚是家穷啊……且看她如何用现代的智慧在古时发家致富!--情节虚构,请勿模仿