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Thomas Hal Phillips - The Loved and the Unloved (Banner Books Series)

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Yes, I should have hated the Acrofts. That was one side of it. They had thick rugs and soft chairs and bright lights and good clothes and lots of food and big roaring fires. They walked across the earth in a different way, because they owned it--part of it--while not a handful belonged to me. And the other side: they still asked me to sit at their table; they furnished us month after month, though we owed five hundred and forty-four dollars two years from the day we moved there. Few writers have surpassed Thomas Hal Phillips in capturing the austere dignity of plain people in the rural South. Admiring readers and critics have acclaimed his rare ability to depict tenderness and love even when human life is reduced to utter poverty. In this compelling book, Phillipss last published novel, we are intrigued by a compassionate executioner whose macabre duty with a portable electric chair is thwarted by his overwhelming love for the unloved. First published in 1955 by Harper & Brothers, this hauntingly authentic novel explores the complex and mercurial nature of human emotions. Classically stark like Phillipss other novels, this is a tragic story told by Max Harper, the son of a Mississippi sharecropper. He lives with his parents and brother on land owned by a benevolent planter named Acroft. It seems a great wrong for a boy so warm and intelligent to be crushed in the pit of poverty. Despite the unbridled contempt Acrofts bullying son Vance inflicts on the Harper family, the young Max remains sensitive and restrained. However, Vances scorn for Max fuels an antagonism that leads to a tragic and violent death. After publishing The Loved and the Unloved, Phillips turned toward Hollywood and writing for the screen. As a rising southern star in the years following World War II, he was celebrated and watched. For his singular talent a reviewer for the New York Herald Tribune said Phillips was a keener, more compassionate observer of life than a whole cottonfield full of younger southern novelists. Thomas Hal Phillips is the author of five novels (The Loved and the Unloved, The Bitterweed Path, The Golden Lie, Search for a Hero, and Kangaroo Hollow). He received the O. Henry Award and two Guggenheims. He has been a screenwriter and script editor for such movies as Nashville, Thieves Like Us, The Brain Machine, Ode to Billy Joe, and Tarzans Fight for Life. He lives in Corinth, Mississippi.

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The Loved and the Unloved title The Loved and the Unloved - photo 1
The Loved and the Unloved

title:The Loved and the Unloved
author:Phillips, Thomas Hal.
publisher:University Press of Mississippi
isbn10 | asin:1578060567
print isbn13:9781578060566
ebook isbn13:9780585033013
language:English
subjectChildren of sharecroppers--Fiction, Southern States--Fiction, Murderers--Fiction.
publication date:1998
lcc:PS3566.H524L68 1998eb
ddc:813/.54
subject:Children of sharecroppers--Fiction, Southern States--Fiction, Murderers--Fiction.
Books by Thomas Hal Phillips
THE BITTERWEED PATH
THE GOLDEN LIE
SEARCH FOR A HERO
KANGAROO HOLLOW
THE LOVED AND THE UNLOVED
The Loved and the Unloved
by THOMAS HAL PHILLIPS
BANNER BOOKS UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
Jackson
First published in 1955 by Harper & Brothers
Copyright 1998 by Thomas Hal Phillips
All rights reserved
Manufactured in United States of America
01 00 99 98 4 3 2 1
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
Phillips, Thomas Hal, 1922
The loved and the unloved/by Thomas Hal Phillips.
p. cm.
ISBN 1-157806-056-7 (alk. paper)
I. Title.
PS3566.H524L68 1998Picture 2Picture 3Picture 4Picture 597-42205
813'.54DC21Picture 6Picture 7Picture 8Picture 9Picture 10CIP
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication data available
THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO
MR. AND MRS. HILLIE MILLS
Page 1
Prologue
Page 3
EARLY in March, in the year following World War II, the State's executioner was directed to appear in small agricultural town where a prisoner was condemned to die in the portable electric chair. According to the laws of the State regarding such cases, the chair would be installed, inspected, and pronounced ready at least forty-eight hours before the time set for execution.
William Morgan was the name of the executioner, and if, in that early March time, he had proceeded with his duties as prescribed by the law and custom, it is likely that few people in the State would remember him. As it happened, he became famous for not doing his job.
He brought the chair to the town of Cross City three days before the appointed day. It was installed, but was neither inspected nor pronounced ready that afternoon. The executioner left the town hurriedly and when he reached home he was in a bad humor. He told his wife the unseasonably bright sunshine had given him a violent headache. He took a bath and went to bed early, something he had not done for years. Usually he was up until eleven or later and did not
Page 4
arise in the mornings until eight or nine o'clock, excepting, of course, the days of execution.
He was actually a kind-hearted person, with many of the ministerial qualities, and for twenty-three years he had been somewhat horrified by the position he held. Yet, he liked his job very much. Once when repercussions from a Governor's race had endangered his position, he went to great lengths to smooth over the trouble: that is, he made several trips to the State capital, and secured affidavits from neighbors stating that he had openly supported the winning candidate.
William Morgan was born on a farm, and by the time he was nine years old he had quit school and taken his place as a grown worker alongside his older brothers. He was inclined to be fat and slowafter the Seaforths not the Morgansand in the summertime his feet would become scalded and peel to the raw. He vowed to himself that he would one day have a job which would require no walking at all, and such was the epitome of his ambitions.
At eighteen he left home and after a few years as plumber, electrician, carpenter, he finally settled as bookkeeper for a large cotton gin.
The owner of the gin was a politician, a former state senator, whose holdings were large and whose debts were larger. When one of his daughters decided to marry William Morgan, he neither approved nor disapproved, for he neither liked nor disliked William Morgan. Besides, his daughter Clyde was twenty-seven years old and, in his eyes, approaching
Page 5
the spinster age. So he gave her away in the local church on a day in June, and in August, in the Democratic primaries, his candidate won the office of Governor of the State. Fifteen days after the Governor took office, he appointed William Morgan, whom he had never heard of, as the State's executioner.
William was twenty-eight at the time and had not yet reached what he later called the "raw bone stage of living." He was so upset by the appointment that he went to bed for a week. The news had come like a thunderbolt. He had asked for nothing. He was perfectly satisfied to go on as bookkeeper, which was not only seasonal but also a sitting-down job. But after a few months he began to appreciate what his father-in-law had done. On the third day of every month, unless a Sunday or holiday interfered, he received a check for two hundred dollars. That happened seventeen times before he was called upon to act officially.
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