The Story (continued)
That
night, a drunken Uncle Birdie speaks to a framed picture of his deceased
wife Bess, confiding in her about what he witnessed at the bottom
of the river. The sight of Willa's submerged body in the water has
sped up his paranoid descent into a drunken stupor:
They'll think it was me. They'll think it was poor
old Uncle Birdie. Ah, if you could have seen it, Bess, down there
in the deep place, with her hair waving soft and lazy like meadow
grass under flood water, and that slit in her throat, like she
had an extra mouth. You're the only human mortal I can go to, Bess.
If I go to the law, they'll hang it on me. Sweet heavens, save
poor old Uncle Birdie.
During an enforced dinner with Pearl and John, Powell
continues his single-minded, possessed pursuit of the money. To intimidate
and harrass them, he displays his switchblade knife that he uses
on "meddlers." Curious, Pearl is attracted to it - a blatant
but dangerous sexual symbol - and reaches for it as he snaps:
No, no. No little lamb. Don't touch it. Now, don't
touch my knife. That makes me mad. That makes me very, very mad.
He asks her: "Now just tell me, where's the
money hid?" but John has convinced Pearl to keep silent,
and that infuriates Powell:
Powell (banging his hand on the table to accentuate
each raging word): John doesn't matter! Can't I get that through
your head, you poor silly, disgusting little wretch! (Tears well
up in Pearl's eyes and she starts crying.) There now, you made
me lose my temper. I'm sorry. I'm real sorry. Now just tell me, where's
it hid, honey?
Hoping to get a chance to escape, John agrees to tell,
and explains that the money is buried beneath a stone in the cellar
floor. Powell forces the children to lead him down the fruit cellar
stairs while he carries a candle to light their way. Powell discovers
the floor is concrete and that John is lying. Pearl concurs: "John
made a sin. John told a lie." To punish his lie, Powell throws
John over a barrel, preaching: "The liar is an abomination before
mine eyes." He takes out his switchblade knife, and prepares
to cut John's throat. Sobbing and terrified, little Pearl cannot
hold out with John in danger, and screams out the secret:
It's in my doll. It's in my doll!
Powell looks upward, sits back, laughs out loud and
smiles: "The doll. Why sure. The last place anyone would think
to look." Seizing the opportunity, John snuffs out the candle
with one hand, and with his other hand knocks loose a shelf board
that supports heavy preserve jars. The home-canned jars tumble onto
the preacher's head from the collapsing shelves. Desperate to evade
the Preacher, John grabs Pearl (who grabs her doll), and they run
up the stairs to escape - John knows that they will be murdered once
their homicidal step-father gets the money.
Furious with them, the Preacher chases after them,
first tripping on a jar, falling, recovering, and then lunging with
his hands outstretched and reaching toward them (like Frankenstein's
monster). At the top of the treacherous stairs, John slams the cellar
door on his fingers. Powell lets go a low gutteral noise, and then
is locked in. The children run down to the river for refuge at Uncle
Birdie's barge, but they find the incapacitated old man helplessly
rolling about on the floor in a drunken stupor. Unable to revive
him after screaming:
"Please wake up!", John announces one more way to escape: "There's
still the river." They dash to the river where they find their
father's old skiff. [It is significant that they find a means of escape
in their father's boat.] They wade toward the boat in the mud just
as Powell appears as a black silhouette coming after them and calling
out: "Chill-dren."
Like a figure in a nightmare, he comes crashing down
to the river bank through the underbrush, his knife held high and
slashing at the growth like a machete, as they shove off from the
shore in the rowboat. At the last moment, he wades out and lunges
toward them, but slips waist-deep in the mudhole as the skiff slides
into the current just out of his reach. With animalistic rage, he
moans in anger and frustration with a blood-curdling sound - screaming
like an inhuman, stranded monstrous beast as they float away from
him.
The film magically calms as the exhausted children
begin their arduous journey on the river - remote figures against
an enchanting, ethereal night backdrop. They fall asleep under a
fantastic sky filled by the light of twinkling stars. As if from
some dark enchanted, lyrical fairy tale, the benevolent creatures
of the night, dominating the foreground shoreline, look after the
strange figures as they drift by. Their progress is observed by natural
wildlife - an unseen spider with a beautifully-designed spider's
web and a croaking frog.
An evil stepfather, Powell doggedly pursues - in fact,
stalks - his step-children downriver on a stolen white farm horse.
One day, John docks the boat and they beg for food, given a raw potato
by an old woman. In the next few days, they pass by other creatures
of nature. Many are wildlife that symbolize their vulnerability:
an owl, a slow-moving turtle, two jackrabbits, and bleating sheep.
They spend the night on land, taking refuge in a barn, and sleeping
in the upper hayloft. As the moon rises, John wakes to the sound
of dogs barking and distant singing of a familiar refrain:
Leaning, leaning!
Safe and secure from all alarms!
Leaning, leaning!
Leaning on the everlasting arms!
Backlit and silhouetted against the horizon on a ridge
like a pop-up storybook image come to life - one of the film's most
terrifying and memorable images (shot with a deep-focus background),
John spots Powell approaching on horseback. The Preacher relentlessly
pursues them on the stolen horse. The boy mutters aloud, knowing
that the Preacher will never stop hunting them: "Don't he never
sleep?" He wakes Pearl and they race back to the boat and the
safety of the river. The sun rises and their boat drifts ashore.
The exhausted, dirty and hungry children are awakened
by the stern voice of a kindly, warmhearted, and benevolent old matriarchal
widow, Mrs. Rachel Cooper (Lillian Gish). Strong-willed, she towers
over them and briskly orders the two river orphans out of the boat
and up to her farmhouse: "You two youngsters get up here to
me this instant. Get on up to my house. Mind me now. I'll get me
a switch!" At her farm, she already takes care of three lost
and cast-off children (Clary, Lary, and Ruby) made homeless by the
Depression. Although John and Pearl are "two more mouths to
feed," she immediately takes them in and scrubs them clean in
an outdoor tub. John is as distrustful of her and can't talk of his
past (as he is of Powell), but Pearl immediately likes Rachel.
The Bible-fearing, verse-spouting, sturdy, gray-haired
old lady tells the town's grocer of his worries about unwanted children
put up for adoption, when she sees a young girl being romanced:
Goodness, fools. Look at that. She'll be losin' her
mind to a tricky mouth and a full moon, and like as not I'll be
saddled with the consequences.
She also tells him about her dedicated care and provision
of sanctuary for the houseful of orphans, likening herself to a 'strong
tree with branches for many birds':
I'm a strong tree with branches for many birds. I'm
good for somethin' in this old world, and I know it, too.
In the evenings, Rachel tells her big, makeshift family
Bible stories (including the Pharaoh story - of baby Moses in the
bulrushes being saved from those who kill children). This scriptural
story is something that intrigues and mesmerizes John, and he slowly
warms to her motherly charm and heals his unhappiness. Regularly
on Thursday evenings, the oldest child on the farm, the blossoming
and nubile Ruby (Gloria Castillo), (Rachel's "bothersome girl"),
is given permission to go to town - presumably for sewing lessons.
During one of her visits in the local drugstore, after being bribed
with ice cream, the purchase of a movie magazine, and being told
that she is pretty, Ruby reveals her generous and charming benefactor.
It is the Preacher/stranger, who is told that there are two new children
at the farm, named Pearl and John, who play with a doll.
When the Preacher leaves with the information he needs,
Ruby watches him go, sensing: "I've been bad." Later that
evening, guilt-ridden Ruby confesses to Rachel that she has been
lying about her whereabouts and sneaking around with the boys in
town. She also admits that she spoke to a Preacher about John and
Pearl. With Ruby in tears, Rachel comforts her and then absolves
her. Rachel expresses her tender concern that Ruby grow up properly
guided and protected from making regretful mistakes and succumbing
to flirtation, until she is more mature:
You were looking for love, Ruby, in the only
foolish way you knew how. We all need love, Ruby. I lost the love
of my son. I found it with you all. You're going to grow up to
be a strong, fine woman and I'm gonna see to it that you do.
The next day, Powell comes riding up to Mrs. Cooper's
front gate, claiming that he is looking for his lost children, Pearl
and John. He dramatically overplays his search for them:
Oh, them poor little lambs. To think I never hoped
to see them again in this world. No, dear Madam, if you was to
know what a crown of thorns I've borne in my search for them stray
chicks.
While Pearl and John are being summoned, he begins
his tale of "LOVE" and
"HATE," but she cuts him off. She is immediately suspicious
and instantly sees through him, when he tells her that the children
have run away from Cincinnati, down the river. She knows that
they floated downstream: "Right funny ain't it how they
rowed all the way up river in a ten-foot john boat?"
When the children appear, John turns cold toward his 'father.' When
she asks:
"What's wrong, John?" he tells her about the reality of his
psychotic step-father:
John: He ain't my Dad!
Rachel: No, and he ain't no Preacher, neither.
Powell tries to snatch Pearl's doll on the ground,
but John grabs it first and dives under the front porch. Powell brandishes
his deadly switchblade and crawls in after the boy. When he feels
something tapping him on the back, he looks up into the shiny barrel
of Rachel's shotgun, as she orders him off the property. As he retreats
to his horse and rides off, chased away by the muzzle of her shotgun,
he defiantly curses:
All right, but you haven't heard the last of Harry
Powell yet. The Lord God Jehovah will guide my hand in vengeance.
Devil! You whores of Babylon! I'll be back, when it's dark.
That night as promised, in a classic confrontational
scene between the phony, blaspheming 'false prophet' and a true,
pure and strong Christian, he lurks outside the farm house to lay
siege, singing his rendition of the hymn with the words: "Leaning,
leaning..." while waiting for her to fall asleep. In silhouette,
Rachel appears like the portrait of Whistler's Mother, sitting
in a rocking chair on the screened-in porch with the shotgun across
her lap to battle against him with her own vigil. Rachel counters
his song, defiantly and harmoniously singing the authentic version
of the Protestant religious hymn with a spiritual reference to Jesus: "Lean
on Jesus, lean on Jesus," filling in the words that he has chosen
to leave out in a simultaneous duet. [She wisely knows that the dual
forces of 'good' and 'evil' that are tattooed on his knuckles are
from the hands of one demonic power.] Suddenly, the preacher
vanishes.
Rachel summons the children to gather in the kitchen.
As the camera views an owl sweeping down and attacking a defenseless
rabbit (offscreen), Rachel observes, thinking of small creatures
and children as well, in a famous line:
It's a hard world for little things.
She lines the five children up as she marches back
and forth in front of them with her shotgun, telling them the Bible
story of the Massacre of the Innocents - King Herod's massacre of
babies to kill the promised Messiah. When she sees Powell's shadow
inside the house in the living room, and his voice quering: "Figured
I was gone, huh?" she sends the children to safety upstairs,
cocks her shotgun, aims, and asks: "What do you want?" Powell's
voice is heard in the darkness:
I want them kids!
When she warns that she will shoot after counting to
three, he pops up right in front of her. She blasts him with her
shotgun, after which he runs out of the house, yelping, shrieking
and howling like a madman and wounded wolf, while grabbing his behind.
Apparently, he is not badly hurt, but the brutal coward has actually
been wounded in the shoulder (an identical wound suffered by Ben
Harper). Then, she phones the State Troopers to come and arrest the
Preacher, telling an officer: "I've got something trapped in
my barn."
In the kitchen the next morning, she tells John that
children are mankind at its strongest:
You know, when you're little, you have more endurance
than God is ever to grant you again. Children are humanity's strongest.
They abide.
Sirens sound and the police arrive, dragging out wounded
Harry Powell and arresting him for the murder of Willa Harper - the
film's second arrest scene. As they throw him to the ground and start
to handcuff him, John remembers the traumatic last time he saw his
natural, 'good' father when he was arrested, and he reacts similarly
to the arrest of his 'evil' stepfather. He clutches his stomach in
pain, crying out: "Don't! Don't. Don't!" Then, he grabs
Pearl's doll from her hands, rushes over to the policeman, and pummels
and flogs the head of his captured and arrested father over and over
again with the limp female doll. John screams out as the hidden/stolen
money flies out of the ripped doll's body to fall at the feet of
his stepfather. He has discovered that money isn't important enough
anymore to justify their suffering:
Here! Here! Take it back. Take it back. I don't want
it. It's too much. Here! Here!
[The arrest of Powell coincides with the last female
body to be split open.] John collapses, and is gently carried inside
by Rachel.
A trial scene follows, attended by the Spoons and other
neighbors who have come to town for the event. They both shout: "Lynch
him. Lynch him. Bluebeard. Twenty-five wives, and he killed every
last one of 'em." The experience on the witness stand is too
much for John - he is unable (or refuses) to testify. But Powell
is still sentenced to be hanged for all the women he has killed.
Rachel takes the children to a nearby restaurant, where they witness
the formation of a lynch mob led by the Spoons, claiming that the
children - "the poor little lambs" - are the ones that
Powell sinned against and wronged.
To protect her wards from the temptations and violence
of the physical world, Rachel steers her brood/flock of children
clear of the axe-wielding mob. She marches through town like a mother
quail with her young scurrying behind. Rachel retrieves Ruby from
outside the jail, where the young girl has gone because she mistakenly
thinks the mob is going to free the Preacher - and she wants
to help. She protests against Rachel: "I love him. You think
he's like them others. You were so mad, you shot him." The children
follow after Rachel in single-file, Mother Goose-style, down the
street. Powell is led out the side door of the jail by the police,
to be taken away in a car to the penitentiary for his execution.
Now that it is Christmas time, in the safety and security
of Rachel's matriarchal care, the children present gifts of homemade
potholders to her. Having no money or gift, but wishing to give something
to Rachel, John sneaks into the living room, wraps an apple in a
lace doily serviette, and gives it to her. She admires it and thanks
him:
That's the richest gift a body could have.
Ruby is given a pretty brooch by Rachel - it is an
object that acknowledges her need to feel pretty and adult. Stirring
something on the stove, Rachel delivers one of the film's final lines:
Lord, save little children. You'd think the world
would be ashamed to name such a day as Christmas for one of them
and then go on in the same old way. My soul is humble when I see
the way little ones accept their lot. Lord, save little children.
The wind blows and the rain's a-cold. Yet they abide...
John admires his present from Rachel, a new watch,
delighted with something he had always wanted. "This watch is
the nicest watch I ever had," he beams, discovering what it
means to be happy and safe in a world he has experienced without
stable and protective fathers. The film closes on Rachel's triumphant,
reassuring final words as she marvels about the orphaned, brutalized
children who have reclaimed their innocence, after many nights of
being hunted by a demon:
They abide and they endure.
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