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The Room with the Little Door

Chapter 36: ONCE IN A HUNDRED YEARS.
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About This Book

A former prisoner recounts life inside the Death-Chamber at Sing Sing, portraying a corridor of barred cells, constant surveillance, and a small door through which condemned men pass to execution. Through episodic sketches he conveys the monotony of waiting, restricted visits, a library of books, and the strange intimacy produced by shared confinement under bright lights. Vignettes range from tragicomic incidents—a man who befriends and ultimately preserves a dead mouse—to evenings of communal singing, friendships, and private reflections. Later pieces examine psychological experiments, interrogation practices, and contemplations about how individuals maintain dignity, hope, or indifference when facing imminent death.

CHAPTER XVII
 
Prologue to a little Comedy
written in the Death-Chamber, and called

ONCE IN A HUNDRED YEARS.

I come to tell you how the author sat
And looked upon the picture of his love.
He spoke to her—you know he could do that—
And she replied. But this you must believe.
Although no ears received her charming words,
Nor keenest eyes saw her sweet lips pronounce—
It was her heart which spoke to his and said
What none but they may know. ’Twas thus she brought him
Of love and faith and joy and merriment.
The last alone he has set down because
No tongue or pen can tell the other three.
But they, God bless them, knew it in their souls,
And so do I—for, would you think it,
I’m that happy man. Is there another
Half so blessed—“Once in a Hundred Years?”