The Prison-Cells.
BY separation from other men, by solitary
confinement, in continual silence, the criminal
is to be punished and amended; therefore
were prison-cells contrived. In Sweden there
were several, and new ones have been built. I
visited one for the first time in Mariestad. This
building lies close outside the town, by a
running water, and in a beautiful landscape.
It resembles a large white-washed summer
residence, window above window.
But we soon discover that the stillness of
the grave rests over it. It is as if no one
dwelt here, or like a deserted mansion in the
time of the plague. The gates in the walls
are locked: one of them is opened for us: the
gaoler stands with his bunch of keys: the
yard is empty, but clean -- even the grass
weeded away between the stone paving. We
enter the waiting-room, where the prisoner is
received: we are shown the bathing-room,
into which he is first led. We now ascend a
flight of stairs, and are in a large hall, extending
the whole length and breadth of the building.
Galleries run along the floors, and between
these the priest has his pulpit, where he
preaches on Sundays to an invisible
congregation. All the doors facing the gallery are
half opened: the prisoners hear the priest, but
cannot see him, nor he them. The whole is a
well-built machine -- a nightmare for the spirit.
In the door of every cell there is fixed a glass,
about the size of the eye: a slide covers it, and
the gaoler can, unobserved by the prisoner,
see everything he does; but he must come
gently, noiselessly, for the prisoner’s ear is
wonderfully quickened by solitude. I turned
the slide quite softly, and looked into the closed
space, when the prisoner’s eye immediately met
mine. It is airy, clean, and light within the
cell, but the window is placed so high that it is
impossible to look out of it. A high stool,
made fast to a sort of table, and a hammock,
which can be hung upon hooks under the
ceiling, and covered with a quilt, compose the
whole furniture.
Several cells were opened for us. In one of
these was a young, and extremely pretty girl.
She had lain down in her hammock, but sprang
out directly the door was opened, and her first
employment was to lift her hammock down,
and roll it together. On the little table stood
a pitcher with water, and by it lay the remains
of some oatmeal cakes, besides the Bible and
some psalms.
In the cell close by sat a child’s murderess.
I saw her only through the little glass in the
door. She had had heard our footsteps; heard
us speak; but she sat still, squeezed up into
the corner by the door, as if she would hide
herself as much as possible: her back was
bent, her head almost on a level with her lap,
and her hands folded over it. They said this
unfortunate creature was very young. Two
brothers sat here in two different cells; they
were punished for horse stealing; the one was
still quite a boy.
In one cell was a poor servant girl. They
said: "She has no place of resort, and without
a situation, and therefore she is placed here."
I thought I had not heard rightly, and repeated
my question, "why she was here," but got the
same answer. Still I would rather believe that
I had misunderstood what was said -- it would
otherwise be abominable.
Outside, in the free sunshine, it is the busy
day; in here it is always midnight’s stillness.
The spider that weaves its web down the wall,
the swallow which perhaps flies a single time
close under the panes there high up in the wall --
even the stranger’s footstep in the gallery, as he
passes the cell-doors, is an event in that mute,
solitary life, where the prisoners’ thoughts are
wrapped up in themselves. One must read of
the martyr-filled prisons of the Inquisition, of
the crowds chained together in the Bagnes,
of the hot, lead chambers of Venice, and
the black, wet gulf of the wells -- be thoroughly
shaken by these pictures of misery, that we
may with a quieter pulsation of the heart
wander through the gallery of the prison-cells.
Here is light, here is air; -- here it is more
humane. Where the sunbeam shines mildly in
on the prisoner, there also will the radiance
of God shine into the heart.
The above contents can be inspected in scanned images:
53, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59
Project Runeberg, Sat Dec 15 19:52:25 2012
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