If the law expects Jimmy to rehabilitate with a five dollar bill and a cheap cigar, they are wrong. A five dollar bill and a cheap cigar is barely enough to last a anyone a day, and without additional funding or education, anyone would be forced to revert back to the life they are trying to escape from. Even if Jimmy was planning on changing, he wouldn’t have been able to without a steady income and a different occupation. When Jimmy does go to back to his criminal ways, the law still blames it on Jimmy when they should be blaming it on …show more content…
Throughout the story, Jimmy suffers internal conflict between his two personas, Jimmy Valentine and Ralph D. Spencer. During the beginning of the story, Jimmy Valentine is the main character until Jimmy goes to a small town named Elmore where he meets a women and “[he] [looks] into her eyes, [forgets] who he [is], and [becomes] another man”. Love overtakes Jimmy as he shifts to his persona of Ralph D. Spencer who is an honest and successful shoe salesman that is in love with Annabel Adams, and has never committed a crime in his life. Later on two weeks away from Ralph and Annabel’s wedding, Mr. Adams buys a new safe and Ralphs future niece, Agatha gets locked within it. Annabel pleads for someone to save her and “with that act Ralph D. Spencer [passes] away and Jimmy Valentine [takes] his place”. After Jimmy saves Agatha he knows that the identity of Ralph was gone, and the internal conflict