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take. As he began to demonstrate with both hands at the mouth of the outlet pipe, in order
to make his account as clear as possible, the Traveler raised his head and, feeling behind
him with his hand, wanted to return to his chair. Then he saw to his horror that the
Condemned Man had also, like him, accepted the Officer’s invitation to inspect the
arrangement of the harrow up close. He had pulled the sleeping Soldier holding the chain
a little forward and was also bending over the glass. One could see how with a confused
gaze he also was looking for what the two gentlemen had just observed, but how he didn’t
succeed because he lacked the explanation. He leaned forward this way and that. He kept
running his eyes over the glass again and again. The Traveler wanted to push him back,
for what he was doing was probably punishable. But the Officer held the Traveler firmly
with one hand, and with the other he took a lump of earth from the wall and threw it at the
Soldier. The latter opened his eyes with a start, saw what the Condemned Man had dared
to do, let his weapon fall, braced his heels in the earth, and pulled the Condemned Man
back, so that he immediately collapsed. The Soldier looked down at him, as he writhed
around, making his chain clink. “Stand him up,” cried the Officer. Then he noticed that the
Condemned Man was distracting the Traveler too much. The latter was even leaning out
away from the harrow, without paying any attention to it, wanting to find out what was
happening to the Condemned Man. “Handle him carefully,” the Officer yelled again. He
ran around the apparatus, personally grabbed the Condemned Man under the armpits and,
with the help of the Soldier, stood the man, whose feet kept slipping, upright.
“Now I know all about it,” said the Traveler, as the Officer turned back to him again.
“Except the most important thing,” said the latter, grabbing the Traveler by the arm and
pointing up high. “There in the inscriber is the mechanism which determines the
movement of the harrow, and this mechanism is arranged according to the diagram on
which the sentence is set down. I still use the diagrams of the previous Commandant. Here
they are.” He pulled some pages out of the leather folder. “Unfortunately I can’t hand
them to you. They are the most cherished thing I possess. Sit down, and I’ll show you
them from this distance. Then you’ll be able to see it all well.” He showed the first sheet.
The Traveler would have been happy to say something appreciative, but all he saw was a
labyrinthine series of lines, criss-crossing each other in all sort of ways. These covered the
paper so thickly that only with difficulty could one make out the white spaces in between.
“Read it,” said the Officer. “I can’t,” said the Traveler. “But it’s clear,” said the Officer.”
“It’s very elaborate,” said the Traveler evasively, “but I can’t decipher it.”
“Yes,” said the Officer, smiling and putting the folder back again, “it’s not calligraphy
for school children. One has to read it a long time. You too will finally understand it
clearly. Of course, it has to be a script that isn’t simple. You see, it’s not supposed to kill
right away, but on average over a period of twelve hours. The turning point is set for the
sixth hour. There must also be many, many embellishments surrounding the basic script.
The essential script moves around the body only in a narrow belt. The rest of the body is
reserved for decoration. Can you now appreciate the work of the harrow and the whole
apparatus? Just look at it!” He jumped up the ladder, turned a wheel, and called down,
“Watch out—move to the side!” Everything started moving. If the wheel had not
squeaked, it would have been marvelous. The officer threatened the wheel with his fist, as
if he was surprised by the disturbance it created. Then he spread his arms, apologizing to
the traveler, and quickly clambered down, in order to observe the operation of the
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book In the Penal Colony"
In the Penal Colony
Translated from the German by Ian Johnston
- Title
- In the Penal Colony
- Author
- Franz Kafka
- Date
- 1919
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 19
- Category
- International