How does Tom's return journey differ in the story "Contents of the Dead Man's Pockets"?
TERROR enters into the equation. In Finney's "Contents of the Dead Man's Pocket," Tom Benecke is an aspiring ad man, working on a project for a new grocery-store display method. His project has absorbed all his time; he neglects his wife and sends her to the movies alone, promising to meet her later.
When his yellow sheet with all his time-consuming data is blown out the open window by the draft of the closing front door as his wife leaves, Tom is incredulous:
It was hard for him to understand that he actually had to abandon it--it was ridiculous--and he began to curse. Of all the papers on his desk, why did it have to be this one in particular!
Because this sheet contains "four long Saturday afternoons" of work, Tom cannot just let the paper go. His single thought is to retrieve it. "By a kind of instinct," he...
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plans this retrieval, thinking that it will take less than two minutes. So, "on a sudden impulse," he acts. And, although the fear begins to stir in his stomach, he does not allow himself time to think. As he must contort himself to grasp the paper, he looks between his legs and "a violent instantaneous explosion of absolute terror roared through him." Tom is paralyzed by his horror of what can happen to him; he trembles and has a "violent shuddering beyond his control," making his return impossible. "Out of utter necessity," Tom is finally able to shut out the thoughts of his plummeting to his death. But, he must keep this pent-up horror on the
other side of the flimsy barrier he had erected in his mind; and he knew that if it broke through he would lose this thin artificial control of his body.
At one point, this barrier breaks. Still, his will to live and not waste his life --if he falls, people will view symbolically the empty contents of his pockets --act as the impetus for him to overcome his terror and knock his arm through the window, and reach into the room safely.
Describe Tom's initial journey in "Contents of a Dead Man's Pocket."
Tom Benecke makes an impulse decision to retrieve his yellow paper from the ledge in Jack Finney’s short story “The Contents of the Dead Man’s Pockets.” He takes a few minutes to examine the circumstances, noting the ledge is as wide as the length of his shoe, before his grabs his coat and climbs out the window.
The ledge is perched eleven stories above busy Lexington Avenue in New York City, but Tom is undaunted as he leaves his apartment. Without analyzing the situation for too long, he begins to move along the ledge sliding one foot after the other with his face up against the building. Although he miscalculated the width of the ledge a bit, he moved along confidently, turning off his thoughts and acting on instinct. As he moved, he balanced on the balls of his feet in a similar fashion to a tightrope walker. It was not until he reached the paper and knew he had to bend over to retrieve it, that self-doubt arose.
Without pause he continued--right foot, left foot, right foot, left--his shoe soles shuffling and scraping along the rough stone, never lifting from it, fingers sliding along the exposed edging of brick.