On	the	29th	of	July,	in	1943,	my	father	died.	On	the	same	day,	a	few hours	later,	his	last	child	was	born.	Over	a	month	before	this,	while	all our	energies	were	concentrated	in	waiting	for	these	events,	there	had been,	in	Detroit,	one	of	the	bloodiest	race	riots	of	the	century.	A	few hours	after	my	father’s	funeral,	while	he	lay	in	state	in	the	undertaker’s chapel,	a	race	riot	broke	out	in	Harlem.	On	the	morning	of	the	3rd	of August,	we	drove	my	father	to	the	graveyard	through	a	wilderness	of smashed	plate	glass.
The	day	of	my	father’s	funeral	had	also	been	my	nineteenth	birthday. As	we	drove	him	to	the	graveyard,	the	spoils	of	injustice,	anarchy, discontent,	and	hatred	were	all	around	us.	It	seemed	to	me	that	God himself	had	devised,	to	mark	my	father’s	end,	the	most	sustained	and brutally	dissonant	of	codas.	And	it	seemed	to	me,	too,	that	the	violence which	rose	all	about	us	as	my	father	left	the	world	had	been	devised	as	a corrective	for	the	pride	of	his	eldest	son.	I	had	declined	to	believe	in	that apocalypse	which	had	been	central	to	my	father’s	vision;	very	well,	life seemed	to	be	saying,	here	is	something	that	will	certainly	pass	for	an apocalypse	until	the	real	thing	comes	along.	I	had	inclined	to	be contemptuous	of	my	father	for	the	conditions	of	his	life,	for	the conditions	of	our	lives.	When	his	life	had	ended	I	began	to	wonder	about that	life	and	also,	in	a	new	way,	to	be	apprehensive	about	my	own.
I	had	not	known	my	father	very	well.	We	had	got	on	badly,	partly because	we	shared,	in	our	different	fashions,	the	vice	of	stubborn	pride. When	he	was	dead	I	realized	that	I	had	hardly	ever	spoken	to	him.	When he	had	been	dead	a	long	time	I	began	to	wish	I	had.	It	seems	to	be typical	of	life	in	America,	where	opportunities,	real	and	fancied,	are thicker	than	anywhere	else	on	the	globe,	that	the	second	generation	has no	time	to	talk	to	the	first.	No	one,	including	my	father,	seems	to	have known	exactly	how	old	he	was,	but	his	mother	had	been	born	during slavery.	He	was	of	the	first	generation	of	free	men.	He,	along	with thousands	of	other	Negroes,	came	North	after	1919	and	I	was	part	of that	generation	which	had	never	seen	the	landscape	of	what	Negroes sometimes	call	the	Old	Country.
He	had	been	born	in	New	Orleans	and	had	been	a	quite	young	man there	during	the	time	that	Louis	Armstrong,	a	boy,	was	running	errands for	the	dives	and	honky-tonks	of	what	was	always	presented	to	me	as one	of	the	most	wicked	of	cities—to	this	day,	whenever	I	think	of	New Orleans,	I	also	helplessly	think	of	Sodom	and	Gomorrah.	My	father	never mentioned	Louis	Armstrong,	except	to	forbid	us	to	play	his	records;	but there	was	a	picture	of	him	on	our	wall	for	a	long	time.	One	of	my father’s	strong-willed	female	relatives	had	placed	it	there	and	forbade my	father	to	take	it	down.	He	never	did,	but	he	eventually	maneuvered her	out	of	the	house	and	when,	some	years	later,	she	was	in	trouble	and near	death,	he	refused	to	do	anything	to	help	her.
He	was,	I	think,	very	handsome.	I	gather	this	from	photographs	and from	my	own	memories	of	him,	dressed	in	his	Sunday	best	and	on	his way	to	preach	a	sermon	somewhere,	when	I	was	little.	Handsome, proud,	and	ingrown,	“like	a	toe-nail,”	somebody	said.	But	he	looked	to me,	as	I	grew	older,	like	pictures	I	had	seen	of	African	tribal	chieftains: he	really	should	have	been	naked,	with	war-paint	on	and	barbaric mementos,	standing	among	spears.	He	could	be	chilling	in	the	pulpit	and indescribably	cruel	in	his	personal	life	and	he	was	certainly	the	most bitter	man	I	have	ever	met;	yet	it	must	be	said	that	there	was	something else	in	him,	buried	in	him,	which	lent	him	his	tremendous	power	and, even,	a	rather	crushing	charm.	It	had	something	to	do	with	his blackness,	I	think—he	was	very	black—with	his	blackness	and	his beauty,	and	with	the	fact	that	he	knew	that	he	was	black	but	did	not know	that	he	was	beautiful.	He	claimed	to	be	proud	of	his	blackness	but it	had	also	been	the	cause	of	much	humiliation	and	it	had	fixed	bleak boundaries	to	his	life.	He	was	not	a	young	man	when	we	were	growing up	and	he	had	already	suffered	many	kinds	of	ruin;	in	his	outrageously demanding	and	protective	way	he	loved	his	children,	who	were	black like	him	and	menaced,	like	him;	and	all	these	things	sometimes	showed in	his	face	when	he	tried,	never	to	my	knowledge	with	any	success,	to establish	contact	with	any	of	us.	When	he	took	one	of	his	children	on	his knee	to	play,	the	child	always	became	fretful	and	began	to	cry;	when	he tried	to	help	one	of	us	with	our	homework	the	absolutely	unabating tension	which	emanated	from	him	caused	our	minds	and	our	tongues	to become	paralyzed,	so	that	he,	scarcely	knowing	why,	flew	into	a	rage and	the	child,	not	knowing	why,	was	punished.	If	it	ever	entered	his head	to	bring	a	surprise	home	for	his	children,	it	was,	almost	unfailingly, the	wrong	surprise	and	even	the	big	watermelons	he	often	brought	home on	his	back	in	the	summertime	led	to	the	most	appalling	scenes.	I	do	not remember,	in	all	those	years,	that	one	of	his	children	was	ever	glad	to see	him	come	home.	From	what	I	was	able	to	gather	of	his	early	life,	it seemed	that	this	inability	to	establish	contact	with	other	people	had always	marked	him	and	had	been	one	of	the	things	which	had	driven him	out	of	New	Orleans.	There	was	something	in	him,	therefore,	groping and	tentative,	which	was	never	expressed	and	which	was	buried	with him.	One	saw	it	most	clearly	when	he	was	facing	new	people	and	hoping to	impress	them.	But	he	never	did,	not	for	long.	We	went	from	church	to smaller	and	more	improbable	church,	he	found	himself	in	less	and	less demand	as	a	minister,	and	by	the	time	he	died	none	of	his	friends	had come	to	see	him	for	a	long	time.	He	had	lived	and	died	in	an	intolerable bitterness	of	spirit	and	it	frightened	me,	as	we	drove	him	to	the graveyard	through	those	unquiet,	ruined	streets,	to	see	how	powerful and	overflowing	this	bitterness	could	be	and	to	realize	that	this bitterness	now	was	mine.
When	he	died	I	had	been	away	from	home	for	a	little	over	a	year.	In that	year	I	had	had	time	to	become	aware	of	the	meaning	of	all	my father’s	bitter	warnings,	had	discovered	the	secret	of	his	proudly	pursed lips	and	rigid	carriage:	I	had	discovered	the	weight	of	white	people	in the	world.	I	saw	that	this	had	been	for	my	ancestors	and	now	would	be for	me	an	awful	thing	to	live	with	and	that	the	bitterness	which	had helped	to	kill	my	father	could	also	kill	me.
He	had	been	ill	a	long	time—in	the	mind,	as	we	now	realized,	reliving instances	of	his	fantastic	intransigence	in	the	new	light	of	his	affliction and	endeavoring	to	feel	a	sorrow	for	him	which	never,	quite,	came	true. We	had	not	known	that	he	was	being	eaten	up	by	paranoia,	and	the discovery	that	his	cruelty,	to	our	bodies	and	our	minds,	had	been	one	of the	symptoms	of	his	illness	was	not,	then,	enough	to	enable	us	to	forgive him.	The	younger	children	felt,	quite	simply,	relief	that	he	would	not	be coming	home	anymore.	My	mother’s	observation	that	it	was	he,	after	all, who	had	kept	them	alive	all	these	years	meant	nothing	because	the problems	of	keeping	children	alive	are	not	real	for	children.	The	older children	felt,	with	my	father	gone,	that	they	could	invite	their	friends	to the	house	without	fear	that	their	friends	would	be	insulted	or,	as	had sometimes	happened	with	me,	being	told	that	their	friends	were	in league	with	the	devil	and	intended	to	rob	our	family	of	everything	we owned.	(I	didn’t	fail	to	wonder,	and	it	made	me	hate	him,	what	on	earth we	owned	that	anybody	else	would	want.)
His	illness	was	beyond	all	hope	of	healing	before	anyone	realized	that he	was	ill.	He	had	always	been	so	strange	and	had	lived,	like	a	prophet, in	such	unimaginably	close	communion	with	the	Lord	that	his	long silences	which	were	punctuated	by	moans	and	hallelujahs	and	snatches of	old	songs	while	he	sat	at	the	living-room	window	never	seemed	odd to	us.	It	was	not	until	he	refused	to	eat	because,	he	said,	his	family	was trying	to	poison	him	that	my	mother	was	forced	to	accept	as	a	fact	what had,	until	then,	been	only	an	unwilling	suspicion.	When	he	was committed,	it	was	discovered	that	he	had	tuberculosis	and,	as	it	turned out,	the	disease	of	his	mind	allowed	the	disease	of	his	body	to	destroy him.	For	the	doctors	could	not	force	him	to	eat,	either,	and,	though	he was	fed	intravenously,	it	was	clear	from	the	beginning	that	there	was	no hope	for	him.
In	my	mind’s	eye	I	could	see	him,	sitting	at	the	window,	locked	up	in his	terrors;	hating	and	fearing	every	living	soul	including	his	children who	had	betrayed	him,	too,	by	reaching	towards	the	world	which	had despised	him.	There	were	nine	of	us.	I	began	to	wonder	what	it	could have	felt	like	for	such	a	man	to	have	had	nine	children	whom	he	could barely	feed.	He	used	to	make	little	jokes	about	our	poverty,	which	never, of	course,	seemed	very	funny	to	us;	they	could	not	have	seemed	very funny	to	him,	either,	or	else	our	all	too	feeble	response	to	them	would never	have	caused	such	rages.	He	spent	great	energy	and	achieved,	to our	chagrin,	no	small	amount	of	success	in	keeping	us	away	from	the people	who	surrounded	us,	people	who	had	all-night	rent	parties	to which	we	listened	when	we	should	have	been	sleeping,	people	who cursed	and	drank	and	flashed	razor	blades	on	Lenox	Avenue.	He	could not	understand	why,	if	they	had	so	much	energy	to	spare,	they	could	not use	it	to	make	their	lives	better.	He	treated	almost	everybody	on	our block	with	a	most	uncharitable	asperity	and	neither	they,	nor,	of	course, their	children	were	slow	to	reciprocate.
The	only	white	people	who	came	to	our	house	were	welfare	workers and	bill	collectors.	It	was	almost	always	my	mother	who	dealt	with them,	for	my	father’s	temper,	which	was	at	the	mercy	of	his	pride,	was never	to	be	trusted.	It	was	clear	that	he	felt	their	very	presence	in	his home	to	be	a	violation:	this	was	conveyed	by	his	carriage,	almost ludicrously	stiff,	and	by	his	voice,	harsh	and	vindictively	polite.	When	I was	around	nine	or	ten	I	wrote	a	play	which	was	directed	by	a	young, white	schoolteacher,	a	woman,	who	then	took	an	interest	in	me,	and gave	me	books	to	read	and,	in	order	to	corroborate	my	theatrical	bent, decided	to	take	me	to	see	what	she	somewhat	tactlessly	referred	to	as “real”	plays.	Theater-going	was	forbidden	in	our	house,	but,	with	the really	cruel	intuitiveness	of	a	child,	I	suspected	that	the	color	of	this woman’s	skin	would	carry	the	day	for	me.	When,	at	school,	she suggested	taking	me	to	the	theater,	I	did	not,	as	I	might	have	done	if	she had	been	a	Negro,	find	a	way	of	discouraging	her,	but	agreed	that	she should	pick	me	up	at	my	house	one	evening.	I	then,	very	cleverly,	left	all the	rest	to	my	mother,	who	suggested	to	my	father,	as	I	knew	she	would, that	it	would	not	be	very	nice	to	let	such	a	kind	woman	make	the	trip	for nothing.	Also,	since	it	was	a	schoolteacher,	I	imagine	that	my	mother countered	the	idea	of	sin	with	the	idea	of	“education,”	which	word,	even with	my	father,	carried	a	kind	of	bitter	weight.
Before	the	teacher	came	my	father	took	me	aside	to	ask	why	she	was coming,	what	interest	she	could	possibly	have	in	our	house,	in	a	boy	like me.	I	said	I	didn’t	know	but	I,	too,	suggested	that	it	had	something	to	do with	education.	And	I	understood	that	my	father	was	waiting	for	me	to say	something—I	didn’t	quite	know	what;	perhaps	that	I	wanted	his protection	against	this	teacher	and	her	“education.”	I	said	none	of	these things	and	the	teacher	came	and	we	went	out.	It	was	clear,	during	the brief	interview	in	our	living	room,	that	my	father	was	agreeing	very much	against	his	will	and	that	he	would	have	refused	permission	if	he had	dared.	The	fact	that	he	did	not	dare	caused	me	to	despise	him:	I	had no	way	of	knowing	that	he	was	facing	in	that	living	room	a	wholly unprecedented	and	frightening	situation.
Later,	when	my	father	had	been	laid	off	from	his	job,	this	woman became	very	important	to	us.	She	was	really	a	very	sweet	and	generous woman	and	went	to	a	great	deal	of	trouble	to	be	of	help	to	us, particularly	during	one	awful	winter.	My	mother	called	her	by	the highest	name	she	knew:	she	said	she	was	a	“christian.”	My	father	could scarcely	disagree	but	during	the	four	or	five	years	of	our	relatively	close association	he	never	trusted	her	and	was	always	trying	to	surprise	in	her open,	Midwestern	face	the	genuine,	cunningly	hidden,	and	hideous motivation.	In	later	years,	particularly	when	it	began	to	be	clear	that	this “education”	of	mine	was	going	to	lead	me	to	perdition,	he	became	more explicit	and	warned	me	that	my	white	friends	in	high	school	were	not really	my	friends	and	that	I	would	see,	when	I	was	older,	how	white people	would	do	anything	to	keep	a	Negro	down.	Some	of	them	could	be nice,	he	admitted,	but	none	of	them	were	to	be	trusted	and	most	of	them were	not	even	nice.	The	best	thing	was	to	have	as	little	to	do	with	them as	possible.	I	did	not	feel	this	way	and	I	was	certain,	in	my	innocence, that	I	never	would.
But	the	year	which	preceded	my	father’s	death	had	made	a	great change	in	my	life.	I	had	been	living	in	New	Jersey,	working	in	defense plants,	working	and	living	among	southerners,	white	and	black.	I	knew about	the	south,	of	course,	and	about	how	southerners	treated	Negroes and	how	they	expected	them	to	behave,	but	it	had	never	entered	my mind	that	anyone	would	look	at	me	and	expect	me	to	behave	that	way.	I learned	in	New	Jersey	that	to	be	a	Negro	meant,	precisely,	that	one	was never	looked	at	but	was	simply	at	the	mercy	of	the	reflexes	the	color	of one’s	skin	caused	in	other	people.	I	acted	in	New	Jersey	as	I	had	always acted,	that	is	as	though	I	thought	a	great	deal	of	myself—I	had	to	act that	way—with	results	that	were,	simply,	unbelievable.	I	had	scarcely arrived	before	I	had	earned	the	enmity,	which	was	extraordinarily ingenious,	of	all	my	superiors	and	nearly	all	my	co-workers.	In	the beginning,	to	make	matters	worse,	I	simply	did	not	know	what	was happening.	I	did	not	know	what	I	had	done,	and	I	shortly	began	to wonder	what	anyone	could	possibly	do,	to	bring	about	such	unanimous, active,	and	unbearably	vocal	hostility.	I	knew	about	jim-crow	but	I	had never	experienced	it.	I	went	to	the	same	self-service	restaurant	three times	and	stood	with	all	the	Princeton	boys	before	the	counter,	waiting for	a	hamburger	and	coffee;	it	was	always	an	extraordinarily	long	time before	anything	was	set	before	me;	but	it	was	not	until	the	fourth	visit that	I	learned	that,	in	fact,	nothing	had	ever	been	set	before	me:	I	had simply	picked	something	up.	Negroes	were	not	served	there,	I	was	told, and	they	had	been	waiting	for	me	to	realize	that	I	was	always	the	only Negro	present.	Once	I	was	told	this,	I	determined	to	go	there	all	the time.	But	now	they	were	ready	for	me	and,	though	some	dreadful	scenes were	subsequently	enacted	in	that	restaurant,	I	never	ate	there	again.
It	was	the	same	story	all	over	New	Jersey,	in	bars,	bowling	alleys, diners,	places	to	live.	I	was	always	being	forced	to	leave,	silently,	or	with mutual	imprecations.	I	very	shortly	became	notorious	and	children giggled	behind	me	when	I	passed	and	their	elders	whispered	or	shouted —they	really	believed	that	I	was	mad.	And	it	did	begin	to	work	on	my mind,	of	course;	I	began	to	be	afraid	to	go	anywhere	and	to	compensate for	this	I	went	places	to	which	I	really	should	not	have	gone	and	where, God	knows,	I	had	no	desire	to	be.	My	reputation	in	town	naturally enhanced	my	reputation	at	work	and	my	working	day	became	one	long series	of	acrobatics	designed	to	keep	me	out	of	trouble.	I	cannot	say	that these	acrobatics	succeeded.	It	began	to	seem	that	the	machinery	of	the organization	I	worked	for	was	turning	over,	day	and	night,	with	but	one aim:	to	eject	me.	I	was	fired	once,	and	contrived,	with	the	aid	of	a	friend from	New	York,	to	get	back	on	the	payroll;	was	fired	again,	and	bounced back	again.	It	took	a	while	to	fire	me	for	the	third	time,	but	the	third time	took.	There	were	no	loopholes	anywhere.	There	was	not	even	any way	of	getting	back	inside	the	gates.
That	year	in	New	Jersey	lives	in	my	mind	as	though	it	were	the	year during	which,	having	an	unsuspected	predilection	for	it,	I	first contracted	some	dread,	chronic	disease,	the	unfailing	symptom	of	which is	a	kind	of	blind	fever,	a	pounding	in	the	skull	and	fire	in	the	bowels. Once	this	disease	is	contracted,	one	can	never	be	really	carefree	again, for	the	fever,	without	an	instant’s	warning,	can	recur	at	any	moment.	It can	wreck	more	important	things	than	race	relations.	There	is	not	a Negro	alive	who	does	not	have	this	rage	in	his	blood—one	has	the choice,	merely,	of	living	with	it	consciously	or	surrendering	to	it.	As	for me,	this	fever	has	recurred	in	me,	and	does,	and	will	until	the	day	I	die.
My	last	night	in	New	Jersey,	a	white	friend	from	New	York	took	me	to the	nearest	big	town,	Trenton,	to	go	to	the	movies	and	have	a	few drinks.	As	it	turned	out,	he	also	saved	me	from,	at	the	very	least,	a violent	whipping.	Almost	every	detail	of	that	night	stands	out	very clearly	in	my	memory.	I	even	remember	the	name	of	the	movie	we	saw because	its	title	impressed	me	as	being	so	patly	ironical.	It	was	a	movie about	the	German	occupation	of	France,	starring	Maureen	O’Hara	and Charles	Laughton	and	called	This	Land	Is	Mine.	I	remember	the	name	of the	diner	we	walked	into	when	the	movie	ended:	it	was	the	“American Diner.”	When	we	walked	in	the	counterman	asked	what	we	wanted	and	I remember	answering	with	the	casual	sharpness	which	had	become	my habit:	“We	want	a	hamburger	and	a	cup	of	coffee,	what	do	you	think	we want?”	I	do	not	know	why,	after	a	year	of	such	rebuffs,	I	so	completely failed	to	anticipate	his	answer,	which	was,	of	course,	“We	don’t	serve Negroes	here.”	This	reply	failed	to	discompose	me,	at	least	for	the moment.	I	made	some	sardonic	comment	about	the	name	of	the	diner and	we	walked	out	into	the	streets.
This	was	the	time	of	what	was	called	the	“brown-out,”	when	the	lights in	all	American	cities	were	very	dim.	When	we	re-entered	the	streets something	happened	to	me	which	had	the	force	of	an	optical	illusion,	or a	nightmare.	The	streets	were	very	crowded	and	I	was	facing	north. People	were	moving	in	every	direction	but	it	seemed	to	me,	in	that instant,	that	all	of	the	people	I	could	see,	and	many	more	than	that,	were moving	toward	me,	against	me,	and	that	everyone	was	white.	I remember	how	their	faces	gleamed.	And	I	felt,	like	a	physical	sensation, a	click	at	the	nape	of	my	neck	as	though	some	interior	string	connecting my	head	to	my	body	had	been	cut.	I	began	to	walk.	I	heard	my	friend call	after	me,	but	I	ignored	him.	Heaven	only	knows	what	was	going	on in	his	mind,	but	he	had	the	good	sense	not	to	touch	me—I	don’t	know what	would	have	happened	if	he	had—and	to	keep	me	in	sight.	I	don’t know	what	was	going	on	in	my	mind,	either;	I	certainly	had	no conscious	plan.	I	wanted	to	do	something	to	crush	these	white	faces, which	were	crushing	me.	I	walked	for	perhaps	a	block	or	two	until	I came	to	an	enormous,	glittering,	and	fashionable	restaurant	in	which	I knew	not	even	the	intercession	of	the	Virgin	would	cause	me	to	be served.	I	pushed	through	the	doors	and	took	the	first	vacant	seat	I	saw, at	a	table	for	two,	and	waited.
I	do	not	know	how	long	I	waited	and	I	rather	wonder,	until	today, what	I	could	possibly	have	looked	like.	Whatever	I	looked	like,	I frightened	the	waitress	who	shortly	appeared,	and	the	moment	she appeared	all	of	my	fury	flowed	towards	her.	I	hated	her	for	her	white face,	and	for	her	great,	astounded,	frightened	eyes.	I	felt	that	if	she found	a	black	man	so	frightening	I	would	make	her	fright	worth-while.
She	did	not	ask	me	what	I	wanted,	but	repeated,	as	though	she	had learned	it	somewhere,	“We	don’t	serve	Negroes	here.”	She	did	not	say	it with	the	blunt,	derisive	hostility	to	which	I	had	grown	so	accustomed, but,	rather,	with	a	note	of	apology	in	her	voice,	and	fear.	This	made	me colder	and	more	murderous	than	ever.	I	felt	I	had	to	do	something	with my	hands.	I	wanted	her	to	come	close	enough	for	me	to	get	her	neck between	my	hands.
So	I	pretended	not	to	have	understood	her,	hoping	to	draw	her	closer. And	she	did	step	a	very	short	step	closer,	with	her	pencil	poised incongruously	over	her	pad,	and	repeated	the	formula:	“…	don’t	serve Negroes	here.”
Somehow,	with	the	repetition	of	that	phrase,	which	was	already ringing	in	my	head	like	a	thousand	bells	of	a	nightmare,	I	realized	that she	would	never	come	any	closer	and	that	I	would	have	to	strike	from	a distance.	There	was	nothing	on	the	table	but	an	ordinary	water-mug	half full	of	water,	and	I	picked	this	up	and	hurled	it	with	all	my	strength	at her.	She	ducked	and	it	missed	her	and	shattered	against	the	mirror behind	the	bar.	And,	with	that	sound,	my	frozen	blood	abruptly	thawed, I	returned	from	wherever	I	had	been,	I	saw,	for	the	first	time,	the restaurant,	the	people	with	their	mouths	open,	already,	as	it	seemed	to me,	rising	as	one	man,	and	I	realized	what	I	had	done,	and	where	I	was, and	I	was	frightened.	I	rose	and	began	running	for	the	door.	A	round, potbellied	man	grabbed	me	by	the	nape	of	the	neck	just	as	I	reached	the doors	and	began	to	beat	me	about	the	face.	I	kicked	him	and	got	loose and	ran	into	the	streets.	My	friend	whispered,	“Run!”	and	I	ran.
My	friend	stayed	outside	the	restaurant	long	enough	to	misdirect	my pursuers	and	the	police,	who	arrived,	he	told	me,	at	once.	I	do	not	know what	I	said	to	him	when	he	came	to	my	room	that	night.	I	could	not have	said	much.	I	felt,	in	the	oddest,	most	awful	way,	that	I	had somehow	betrayed	him.	I	lived	it	over	and	over	and	over	again,	the	way one	relives	an	automobile	accident	after	it	has	happened	and	one	findsoneself	alone	and	safe.	I	could	not	get	over	two	facts,	both	equally difficult	for	the	imagination	to	grasp,	and	one	was	that	I	could	have	been murdered.	But	the	other	was	that	I	had	been	ready	to	commit	murder.	I saw	nothing	very	clearly	but	I	did	see	this:	that	my	life,	my	real	life,	was in	danger,	and	not	from	anything	other	people	might	do	but	from	the hatred	I	carried	in	my	own	heart.