This final chapter opens with
a woman sitting at a table eating. An unkempt soiled man enters and says:
"Well, Mag's dead." The woman responds: "Deh hell she is," and finishes her
meal before she begins to cry. The man is Jimmie and the woman is Mary and the
neighbors come running at the sound of her lamentations. She repeats over and
over that she can remember when Maggie's feet were as big as a thumb and she
wore worsted boot, a detail that seems particularly important to her. The
other women of the tenement house share her grief and make an effort to tidy up
the apartment. One particularly sympathetic woman, identified as Miss Smith,
enters in a black gown and using the vocabulary of mission preachers she
embraces Mary and shares her grief. She comforts Mary with the knowledge that
Maggie was a fallen girl, unkind to her mother, and has gone to a place where
her sins will be judged. Mary rises to her feet, stumbles about the room and
grabs Maggie's baby shoes from the wall. The sight of them causes all the
women to break out anew in sobbing and wailing. Mary commands Jimmie to fetch
his sister's body so they can put the baby shoes on her and though Jimmie sees
no point to the task he wearily agrees. The women tell Mary that she must
forgive her wayward child and that she has gone to a place where her sins will
be judged. Mary relents and proclaims loudly "Oh, yes, I'll fergive her! I'll
fergive her!"
Analysis of Chapter 19
This chapter is staged like
the final act of a melodrama. Mary waits to finish her meal before beginning
the overwrought performance of mourning. The neighbors, Miss Smith in
particular, do their part to bring Mary to the conclusion that she must forgive
her wayward daughter because it is not the task of the living to judge the
dead. Knowing that Mary's cruel treatment of her daughter led to her downfall
the reader is left with the impression of a woman who is conforming to the
expectations of her role without the possibility of realizing the truth of her
daughter's life. Crane's use of irony is prevalent in this chapter. That Mary
should show tenderness toward her daughter's baby shoes but never to her
daughter and be vindicated by her neighbors for a display of affection after
the fact of her death are both excellent examples of the hard irony that
suffuses the entire story.
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