8 Works of Literature Written From Prison
Prison life is usually filled with bleakness and drudgery, but the
solitude of a jail cell also provided some historical figures with the time and
inspiration to pen some of their most famous works. From Martin Luther King’s
immortal jailhouse letter to a classic of philosophy completed on death row,
get the facts on eight of the most influential and incendiary works written
from behind bars.
1. Martin Luther King’s
“Letter from Birmingham Jail”
King's
mugshot following his Birmingham arrest.
In April
1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was tossed in a Birmingham, Alabama, jail cell
on charges of leading a public demonstration without a permit. During a
nine-day sentence, King used the margins of newspapers and bits of jailhouse
toilet paper to draft a response to a group of Birmingham clergymen that had
denounced his fight against segregation and labeled him an “outside agitator.”
The eloquent, 7,000-word essay used quotes from St. Thomas Aquinas, Thomas
Jefferson and others to examine the nature of unjust laws and civic
responsibility, and included the immortal line, “Injustice anywhere is a threat
to justice everywhere.” King’s associates smuggled the scattered scraps of
paper out of the jail and typed them up a few days before his release. “Letter
from Birmingham Jail” soon appeared in publications across the nation, and went
on to become a touchstone of the American civil rights movement.
2. Marco Polo’s “Travels”
A few years after returning from his 24-year trek through Asia, Marco Polo was captured while leading a Venetian galley into battle against the rival Italian city-state of Genoa. Confined to prison, the 44-year-old merchant passed the time by regaling his fellow inmates with tales of his journeys in China and his years spent in the employ of the Mongol ruler Kublai Khan. Polo’s jailhouse yarns caught the attention of a writer and fellow prisoner named Rustichello of Pisa, and the duo eventually collaborated on the book “Description of the World,” more commonly known as the “Travels.” This epic, often embellished travelogue sealed Polo’s legacy as one of the world’s great explorers, and provided many Europeans with their first glimpse into the wonders of the Far East.
3. Nelson Mandela’s
Autobiography
Nelson
Mandela visits his former prison cell on Robben Island in February 1995.
(Credit: Guy Tillim/AFP/Getty Images)
Before he
was South Africa’s first black president, Nelson Mandela was inmate number
466/64 at Robben Island, one of three prisons in which he eventually did 27
years hard time. In 1974, while confined to an 8-by-7-foot cell, he began
secretly writing an autobiography documenting his years as an anti-apartheid
activist and revolutionary. Fellow inmates offered criticism and suggestions,
and a prisoner named Mac Maharaj painstakingly transcribed Mandela’s manuscript
into tiny text to save space. After completing the book, Mandela buried the
original copy in the prison garden. Guards eventually discovered it, but by
then, Maharaj and others had been freed and smuggled the transcript out with
them. The autobiography remained unreleased until 1994, when Mandela used it to
help shape his famous book “Long Walk to Freedom.”
4. John Bunyan’s “The
Pilgrim’s Progress”
Bunyan in
prison
Originally a tinker by trade, England’s John Bunyan first made his name in the late-1650s, when he found religion and became a popular separatist preacher. Along with drawing crowds and followers, Bunyan’s stirring sermons soon drew the ire of the monarchy, which considered it illegal for him to hold religious gatherings that did not conform to the Anglican Church. In 1660, he was arrested and confined to a jail in Bedford. Bunyan’s crime only carried a three-month sentence, but since he refused to quit preaching, he eventually spent more than 12 years behind bars. During this time, he used his experiences with state persecution to begin work on “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” a religious allegory that follows the adventures of a Christian crusader who endures trials and tests on his journey to a paradise called “Celestial City.” Bunyan published “The Pilgrim’s Progress” in 1678 after his release from jail, and the book went on to become a runaway success. It has been in constant circulation ever since, and is often cited as one of the landmark novels of the 17th century.
5. Adolf Hitler’s “Mein
Kampf”
Credit:
AFP/Getty Images
In 1923,
Adolf Hitler led members of the upstart Nazi Party in a failed coup known as
the “Munich Beer Hall Putsch.” Condemned to Bavaria’s Landsberg Prison on
charges of high treason, the young radical spent the next several months
writing “Mein Kamp” (“My Struggle”), a mammoth volume that was equal parts
memoir, political tract and racist screed. The book was effectively a schematic
for the “Third Reich” that Hitler would go on to create as Germany’s ruler. In
a rage-fueled and often bombastic style, he describes the need to preserve the
purity of Germany’s Aryan race and outlines a plan to strike a blow of revenge
against nearby France and Russia. Volume one of “Mein Kampf” was published in
1925, shortly after Hitler had completed his nine-month sentence. The book was
initially a flop, but it later sold millions of copies during the Nazi’s rise
to power in the 1920s and 30s.
6. Sir Thomas Malory’s “Le
Morte d’Arthur”
Illustration
of King Arthur and Excalibur (Credit: Getty Images)
Little is
known about the author of the most famous collection of tales about King Arthur’s
Camelot, but evidence indicates that Sir Thomas Malory was not a particularly
chivalrous fellow. If historians’ assumptions about his identity are correct,
Malory was a Warwickshire knight and all-around rogue who was repeatedly jailed
for crimes ranging from extortion and attempted murder to theft and even rape.
It was while under lock and key in 1470 that the self-described
“Knight-Prisoner” supposedly put the finishing touches on “Le Morte d’Arthur,”
the book that would later introduce the world to Excalibur and the Knights of
the Round Table.
7. Marquis de Sade’s “120
Days of Sodom”
A portion
of the long sheet of paper de Sade used to write the book (Credit: Getty
Images)
Along
with penning some of history’s most scandalous literature, the French writer
Marquis de Sade also spent more than a third of his life in prison for acts of
sexual cruelty and violence. During a 1785 stint in the Bastille, Sade secretly
wrote “The 120 Days of Sodom,” a stomach-turning story of torture, rape and
depravity that he proudly called “the most impure tale that has ever been told
since our world began.” Sade scribbled the entire novel on a single
39-foot-long roll of paper and stashed it in a crack in the wall of his cell to
prevent it from being confiscated. He lost track of the lone copy after he was
transferred to a new prison during the French Revolution, and the book wasn’t
rediscovered and published until decades after his death in 1814. The book has
since been repeatedly banned and denounced as obscene, but in 2014, a French
museum owner paid 7 million Euros to buy Sade’s original handwritten manuscript.
8. Boethius’ “Consolation of
Philosophy”
Page from
an illustrated “Consolations of Philosophy”
Anicius
Manlius Severinus Boethius spent most of his life as one of Italy’s most
influential philosophers and statesmen. He reached the peak of his career while
heading the government of the Ostrogoth ruler Theodoric in the 520s, but his
fortunes later took a severe turn when he was unjustly accused of treason and
sentenced to death. As he languished in prison and pondered his imminent
demise, Boethius put pen to paper on “Consolation of Philosophy,” an elegant
examination of the nature of evil, free will and divine providence. The book
consists of a Socratic dialogue between the condemned Boethius and Lady
Philosophy, who soothes the prisoner’s outrage and misery by reminding him that
a “higher good” controls the universe. Boethius’ death sentence was eventually
carried out sometime around 524 A.D., but his “Consolation of Philosophy” went
on to become one of the most widely studied texts of the Middle Ages.
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