Shame
by
Dick Gregory
[from his autobiography]
I never learned hate at home, or shame. I had
to go to school for that. I was about seven years old when I got my first
big lesson. I was in love with a little girl named Helene Tucker, a light-complexioned
little girl with pigtails and nice manners. She was always clean and she
was smart in school. I think I went to school then mostly to look at her.
I brushed my hair and even got me a little old handkerchief. It was a
lady's handkerchief, but I didn't want Helene to see me wipe my nose on
my hand.
The pipes were frozen again, there was no water
in the house, but I washed my socks and shirt every night. I'd get a pot,
and go over to Mister Ben's grocery store, and stick my pot down into
his soda machine and scoop out some chopped ice. By evening the ice melted
to water for washing. I got sick a lot that winter because the fire would
go out at night before the clothes were dry. In the morning I'd put them
on, wet or dry, because they were the only clothes I had.
Everybody's got a Helene Tucker, a symbol of
everything you want. I loved her for her goodness, her cleanness, her
popularity. She'd walk down my street and my brothers and sisters would
yell, "Here comes Helene," and I'd rub my tennis sneakers on the back
of my pants and wish my hair wasn't so nappy and the white folks' shirt
fit me better. I'd run out on the street. If I knew my place and didn't
come too close, she'd wink at me and say hello. That was a good feeling.
Sometimes I'd follow her all the way home, and shovel the snow off her
walk and try to make friends with her momma and her aunts. I'd drop money
on her stoop late at night on my way back from shining shoes in the taverns.
And she had a daddy, and he had a good job. He was a paperhanger.
I guess I would have gotten over Helene by
summertime, but something happened in that classroom that made her face
hang in front of me for the next twenty-two years. When I played the drums
in high school, it was for Helene, and when I broke track records in college,
it was for Helene, and when I started standing behind microphones and
heard applause, I wished Helene could hear it too. It wasn't until I was
twenty-nine years old and married and making money that I finally got
her out of my system. Helene was sitting in that classroom when I learned
to be ashamed of myself.
It was on a Thursday. I was sitting in the
back of the room, in a seat with a chalk circle drawn around it. The idiot's
seat, the troublemaker's seat.
The teacher thought I was stupid. Couldn't
spell, couldn't read, couldn't do arithmetic. Just stupid. Teachers were
never interested in finding out that you couldn't concentrate because
you were so hungry, because you hadn't had any breakfast. All you could
think about was noontime; would it ever come? Maybe you could sneak into
the cloakroom and steal a bite of some kid's lunch out of a coat pocket.
A bite of something. Paste. You can't really make a meal of paste, or
put it on bread for a sandwich, but sometimes I'd scoop a few spoonfuls
out of the big paste jar in the back of the room. Pregnant people get
strange tastes. I was pregnant with poverty. Pregnant with dirt and pregnant
with smells that made people turn away. Pregnant with cold and pregnant
with shoes that were never bought for me. Pregnant with five other people
in my bed and no daddy in the next room, and pregnant with hunger. Paste
doesn't taste too bad when you're hungry.
The teacher thought I was a troublemaker. All
she saw from the front of the room was a little black boy who squirmed
in his idiot's seat and made noises and poked the kids around him. I guess
she couldn't see a kid who made noises because he wanted someone to know
he was there.
It was on a Thursday, the day before the Negro
payday. The eagle always flew on Friday. The teacher was asking each student
how much his father would give to the Community Chest. On Friday night,
each kid would get the money from his father, and on Monday he would bring
it to the school. I decided I was going to buy a daddy right then. I had
money in my pocket from shining shoes and selling papers, and whatever
Helene Tucker pledged for her daddy I was going to top it. And I'd hand
the money right in. I wasn't going to wait until Monday to buy me a daddy.
I was shaking, scared to death. The teacher
opened her book and started calling out names alphabetically: "Helene
Tucker?" "My Daddy said he'd give two dollars and fifty cents." "That's
very nice, Helene. Very, very nice indeed."
That made me feel pretty good. It wouldn't
take too much to top that. I had almost three dollars in dimes and quarters
in my pocket. I stuck my hand in my pocket and held on to the money, waiting
for her to call my name. But the teacher closed her book after she called
everybody else in the class.
I stood up and raised my hand. "What is it
now?" "You forgot me?" She turned toward the blackboard. "I don't have
time to be playing with you, Richard."
"My daddy said he'd..." "Sit down, Richard,
you're disturbing the class." "My daddy said he'd give...fifteen dollars."
She turned around and looked mad. "We are collecting this money for you
and your kind, Richard Gregory. If your daddy can give fifteen dollars
you have no business being on relief."
"I got it right now, I got it right now, my
Daddy gave it to me to turn in today, my daddy said. .."
"And furthermore," she said, looking right
at me, her nostrils getting big 2 and her lips getting thin and her eyes
opening wide, "We know you don't have a daddy."
Helene Tucker turned around, her eyes full of tears. She felt sorry for
me. Then I couldn't see her too well because I was crying, too.
"Sit down, Richard." And I always thought the teacher kind of liked me.
She always picked me to wash the blackboard on Friday, after school. That
was a big thrill; it made me feel important. If I didn't wash it, come
Monday the school might not function right.
"Where are you going, Richard! "
I walked out of school that day, and for a
long time I didn't go back very often.
There was shame there. Now there was shame
everywhere. It seemed like the whole world had been inside that classroom,
everyone had heard what the teacher had said, everyone had turned around
and felt sorry for me. There was shame in going to the Worthy Boys Annual
Christmas Dinner for you and your kind, because everybody knew what a
worthy boy was. Why couldn't they just call it the Boys Annual Dinner-why'd
they have to give it a name? There was shame in wearing the brown and
orange and white plaid mackinaw' the welfare gave to three thousand boys.
Why'd it have to be the same for everybody so when you walked down the
street the people could see you were on relief? It was a nice warm mackinaw
and it had a hood, and my momma beat me and called me a little rat when
she found out I stuffed it in the bottom of a pail full of garbage way
over on Cottage Street. There was shame in running over to Mister Ben's
at the end of the day and asking for his rotten peaches, there was shame
in asking Mrs. Simmons for a spoonful of sugar, there was shame in running
out to meet the relief truck. I hated that truck, full of food for you
and your kind. I ran into the house and hid when it came. And then I started
to sneak through alleys, to take the long way home so the people going
into White's Eat Shop wouldn't see me. Yeah, the whole world heard the
teacher that day-we all know you don't have a Daddy.
It lasted for a while, this kind of numbness.
I spent a lot of time feeling sorry for myself. And then one day I met
this wino in a restaurant. I'd been out hustling all day, shining shoes,
selling newspapers, and I had googobs of money in my pocket. Bought me
a bowl of chili for fifteen cents, and a cheese- burger for fifteen cents,
and a Pepsi for five cents, and a piece of chocolate cake for ten cents.
That was a good meal. I was eating when this old wino came in. I love
winos because they never hurt anyone but themselves.
The old wino sat down at the counter and ordered
twenty-six cents worth of food. He ate it like he really enjoyed it. When
the owner, Mister Williams, asked him to pay the check, the old wino didn't
lie or go through his pocket like he suddenly found a hole.
He just said: "Don't have no money." The owner
yelled: "Why in hell did you come in here and eat my food if you don't
have no money? That food cost me money."
Mister Williams jumped over the counter and
knocked the wino off his stool and beat him over the head with a pop bottle.
Then he stepped back and watched the wino bleed. Then he kicked him. And
he kicked him again.
I looked at the wino with blood all over his
face and I went over.
"Leave him alone, Mister Williams. I'll pay the twenty-six cents."
The wino got up, slowly, pulling himself up
to the stool, then up to the counter, holding on for a minute until his
legs stopped shaking so bad. He looked at me with pure hate. "Keep your
twenty-six cents. You don't have to pay, not now. I just finished paying
for it."
He started to walk out, and as he passed me,
he reached down and touched my shoulder. "Thanks, sonny, but it's too
late now. Why didn't you pay it before?" I was pretty sick about that.
I waited too long to help another man. []
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