"Once I built a tower up to the sun
Brick and rivet and lime
Once I built a tower, now it’s done
Brother, can you spare a dime"
Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?
--E. Y. Harburg, Jay Gorney
Bonnie Parker stood 4’11" in her stocking feet, weighed 90
pounds, had Shirley Temple-colored strawberry-blond ringlets, was
freckle-faced and, according to those who knew her, was very pretty.
Born October 1, 1910, in Rowena, Texas, her parents were hard
working laborers plunked down in life among the lower caste. A good
student in high school, she excelled in creative writing and
displayed a dramatic flair for the arts. Her favorite color was red;
when she could afford it, she wore fashionable clothes dominating
that color. She loved hats of all kinds. As a child, her father died
young and her mother was forced to bring her and her two siblings to
Cement City, near Dallas, where they lived with Mrs. Parker’s
parents. Married too young, at age 16, her immature rattle-brained
husband wound up in the penitentiary a year later. For money, she
was forced to become a waitress. Bored and poor, she knew life had
something more to offer.
Clyde Chestnut Barrow stood 5’7," weighed 130 pounds,
slicked back his thick brown hair in the style of the day, and
parted it on the left. His eye color matched his hair. Women found
him attractive. He came into this world as one of many children born
to dirt-poor tenant farmer parents barely making a living on the
cotton fields of Teleco, Texas. Moving with his parents, brothers
and sisters to the Dallas outskirts, where his father ran a gas
station (in which the family members crowded as one into a tiny back
room), Clyde quickly learned to abhor poverty. Bored and poor, he
too knew life had something more to offer.
Bonnie and Clyde were meant for each other. And they clung to
each other while they fought back against the elements. These
elements were destitution and a government they took for its face
value. They were children of a nationwide economic depression that
not unlike France in the late 1700s had its upheavals -- and those
who tried to keep small the size and impact of the upheavals.
An anger dwelt within Clyde, having been born ragged and made
more ragged by the Depression. He sometimes killed in cold blood,
and always tried to justify the murders as if he had a right to pull
that trigger, thus releasing somehow the seething that built up like
a volcano deep inside him. Perhaps he actually believed in his own
special privilege. As the fame of Bonnie and Clyde grew, they shot
their way out of police loops, each time growing tighter and
tighter, and claimed that the "laws" they killed just
happened to get in the way between their fiery outcry and the rest
of the country. Their killings were not personal, they contended.
But, the government took them personal. And Bonnie and her man were
marked for death.
Depression had lowered a hideous shroud over the nation. The
American Dream collapsed along with Wall Street in 1929. Pride of
freedom became a joke. "The country’s money simply declined
by 38 percent," explains E.R. Milner, author of The Lives and
Times of Bonnie and Clyde. "Gaunt dazed men roamed the city
streets seeking jobs...Breadlines and soup kitchens became jammed.
(In rural areas) foreclosures forced more than 38 percent of farmers
from their lands (while simultaneously) a catastrophic drought
struck the Great Plains...By the time Bonnie and Clyde became well
known, many had felt the capitalistic system had been abused by big
business and government officials...Now here were Bonnie and Clyde
striking back."
While they terrorized banks and store owners in five states --
Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Louisiana, and New Mexico -- Americans
thrilled to their "Robin Hood" adventures. The presence of
a female, Bonnie, escalated the sincerity of their intentions to
make them something unique and individual -- even at times heroic --
and above similar activities of all-male motor bandits like John
Dillinger, "Baby Face" Nelson and "Pretty Boy"
Floyd.
Historian Jonathan Davis, in an excellent A&E Cable
Network-produced Biography on the two bandits, says of Bonnie and
Clyde’s crimes, "Anybody who robbed banks or fought the law
were really living out some secret fantasies on a large part of the
public."
Even more than their insurgence against their status in life was
Bonnie and Clyde’s devotion to their own. With police and
government detectives constantly on their trails, sometimes
literally by inches, they time and time again risked their own lives
to protect the other. Says Marie Barrow, Clyde’s sister, in
Biography, "They never worried about anything else but each
other."
When on the lam, they found time to visit their Dallas-area
families, risking capture more than once. Marie asserts that her
brother and father had concocted their own signal to let the
families know when the outlaws were in town: Clyde would pause the
latest of his stolen automobiles in front of the Barrow service
station and from the car toss a soda pop bottle containing
directions to a place of rendezvous. "My mother would fix them
something to eat," she adds.
In their getaway cars, Clyde and Bonnie habitually carried a
Kodak box camera; they loved to pose in dramatic tableaux wielding
shotguns and revolvers, self-parodying the gangster image they
realized they had earned. More than that, they loved to pose
together, embraced or kissing, having other gang members do the
snapping. When they died, the police found an undeveloped roll of
film under their car seat -- photos of them together, looking
adventurous and deeply in love.
They knew they were going to die, maybe next week, maybe next
month. Maybe in the morning. They never pretended they might be the
only exception to the standard, "Crime doesn’t pay".
But, because they knew their time was limited -- their crime spree
lasted less than two years -- they decided to let all hell break
loose in the meantime to whoop and holler it up till death do them
part. Bonnie’s last request to her mother was, "Don’t bring
me to a funeral parlor. Bring me home."
The last two years of their lives, once they met, were a
whirly-gig. Never-ending highways burning in the Southwest sun;
dusty backroads; the scorch of over-heated radiators; the burn of
rubber; the stifled crampedness of one car after another; their only
air the hot breeze they channeled through rolled-down car windows.
Fast life. A die-young life. And they wouldn’t have traded it for
the world.
They were Bonnie and Clyde.
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Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker (AP) |
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