Jimmie and the old woman
listen until the noise from the fight fades. The old woman is a beggar who has
practiced her trade on Fifth Avenue for many years. She earns a few pennies
every day. Once she retrieved a dropped purse but even this seeming good luck
had turned foul when the police caught her with the supposedly stolen goods.
As such, she has nothing good to say about the police. She gives Jimmie seven
pennies and a bucket to fetch beer. She tells Jimmie that if his mother
continues on her rampage he can stay with her that night. Jimmie goes to a
nearby saloon, gets the bucket filled with beer and is on his way back to the
old woman's apartment when he encounters his drunken father. Despite Jimmie's
protests the father grabs the bucket and drinks it off in one long draught.
Jimmie curses his father but the man laughs, throws the empty bucket at him and
promises to beat him soon. The father staggers toward home and Jimmie
cautiously returns to the tenement building. He creeps past the old woman's
dooer and then listens at his family's door. He hears his parents arguing and
his father yells "Go teh hell". Something crashes loudly against the door and
Jimmie runs downstairs where he cowers and listens to the sounds of struggle
coming from the apartment. He sees other residents of the building poke their
heads out of their doors and more than one of them remarks "Ol' Johnson's
raising hell agin." Jimmie waits until long after the noise has died down and
then he creeps back to the apartment. In the red glare of the stove he sees
the broken furniture strewn about the apartment. His mother is asleep in the
middle of the floor and his father's sleeping body hangs limply across a
chair. He cautiously approaches his mother, terrified she will awake, and
observes her face swollen from drinking, her painful breathing and her harsh
expression. Fascinated, he looks directly into her face and to his horror
Mary's eyes open. Jimmie falls back howling with fear but the woman flounders
and then renews her snoring. Jimmie hears his sister meekly calling to him
from the other room and he sees that she shivers with fear. Maggie's eyes are
red with weeping. As the two children crouch together on the floor and stare
wordlessly at their sleeping mother until dawn, afraid that she will awake.
Analysis of Chapter 3
The roles of father and son
have been subverted and corrupted by a tradition of violence in which the
strong rule the home and need not justify their actions to those who cannot
physically best them. Jimmies' father forcibly takes the bucket of beer
despite his son's protests and there is nothing Jimmie can do to stop him.
Without the bucket of beer Jimmie cannot return to the old woman and he must,
therefore, return to his family and the violence. The neighbors are both
audience and judges and their commentary places the dysfunctional family in the
context of their peers. The Johnson's violence very much part of the social
fabric of the tenement. From this scene of public scrutiny, Crane turns the
narrative inward upon the tender yet disturbing image of Jimmie and Maggie
watching their sleeping mother in the red light of the glowing stove. They
watch not because they cherish her but because they fear her like a monster.
Maggie and Jimmie are living in hell - a point that Crane emphasizes with his
description of the glowing red stove that permeates the apartment and, more
blatantly, with the father's ironic explanation to the men at the bar that he
drinks because his home is a "reg'lar livin' hell!"
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