Availability: Usually ships within 48 hours. Ships from and sold by Babblebooks.com.Running time: 4 hr 17 min
The unabridged classic on MP3 audio, narrated by Anais 9000. Three playback speeds on one disk; etext edition included. Running time: 4.7 hours (slow), 4.3 hours (medium), 3.9 hours (fast).
Chapter I
I know that in writing the following pages I
am divulging the great secret of my life, the
secret which for some years I have guarded far
more carefully than any of my earthly
possessions; and it is a curious study to me to analyze
the motives which prompt me to do it. I feel
that I am led by the same impulse which forces
the unfound-out criminal to take somebody into
his confidence, although he knows that the act is
liable, even almost certain, to lead to his undoing.
I know that I am playing with fire, and I feel the
thrill which accompanies that most fascinating
pastime; and, back of it all, I think I find a sort
of savage and diabolical desire to gather up all
the little tragedies of my life, and turn them into
a practical joke on society.
And, too, I suffer a vague feeling of
unsatisfaction, of regret, of almost remorse from
which I am seeking relief, and of which I
shall speak in the last paragraph of this
account.
I was born in a little town of Georgia a few
years after the close of the Civil War. I shall
not mention the name of the town, because there
are people still living there who could be
connected with this narrative. I have only a faint
recollection of the place of my birth. At times
I can close my eyes, and call up in a dream-like
way things that seem to have happened ages ago
in some other world. I can see in this half vision
a little house,--I am quite sure it was not a large
one;--I can remember that flowers grew in the
front yard, and that around each bed of flowers
was a hedge of vari-colored glass bottles stuck
in the ground neck down. I remember that once,
while playing around in the sand, I became
curious to know whether or not the bottles grew
as the flowers did, and I proceeded to dig them up
to find out; the investigation brought me a
terrific spanking which indelibly fixed the incident in
my mind. I can remember, too, that behind the
house was a shed under which stood two or three
wooden wash-tubs. These tubs were the earliest
aversion of my life, for regularly on certain
evenings I was plunged into one of them, and scrubbed
until my skin ached. I can remember to this day
the pain caused by the strong, rank soap getting
into my eyes.
Back from the house a vegetable garden ran,
perhaps, seventy-five or one hundred feet; but to
my childish fancy it was an endless territory. I
can still recall the thrill of joy, excitement and
wonder it gave me to go on an exploring
expedition through it, to find the blackberries, both
ripe and green, that grew along the edge of the
fence.
I remember with what pleasure I used to
arrive at, and stand before, a little enclosure in
which stood a patient cow chewing her cud, how
I would occasionally offer her through the
bars a piece of my bread and molasses, and
how I would jerk back my hand in half
fright if she made any motion to accept my
offer.
I have a dim recollection of several people who
moved in and about this little house, but I have
a distinct mental image of only two; one, my
mother, and the other, a tall man with a small,
dark mustache. I remember that his shoes or
boots were always shiny, and that he wore a gold
chain and a great gold watch with which he was
always willing to let me play. My admiration
was almost equally divided between the watch and
chain and the shoes. He used to come to the
house evenings, perhaps two or three times a
week; and it became my appointed duty whenever
he came to bring him a pair of slippers, and
to put the shiny shoes in a particular corner; he
often gave me in return for this service a bright
coin which my mother taught me to promptly
drop in a little tin bank. I remember distinctly
the last time this tall man came to the little house
in Georgia; that evening before I went to bed he
took me up in his arms, and squeezed me very
tightly; my mother stood behind his chair wiping
tears from her eyes. I remember how I sat upon
his knee, and watched him laboriously drill a hole
through a ten-dollar gold piece, and then tie the
coin around my neck with a string. I have worn
that gold piece around my neck the greater part
of my life, and still possess it, but more than once
I have wished that some other way had been found
of attaching it to me besides putting a hole
through it.
On the day after the coin was put around my
neck my mother and I started on what seemed to
me an endless journey. I knelt on the seat and
watched through the train window the corn and
cotton fields pass swiftly by until I fell asleep.
When I fully awoke [...]