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might be, if he could he wanted to be truly free, and he began to shake back and forth, as
much as the harrow permitted.
âYouâre tearing my straps,â cried the Officer. âBe still! Weâll undo them right away.â
And, giving a signal to the Soldier, he set to work with him. The Condemned Man said
nothing and smiled slightly to himself. He turned his face to the Officer and then to the
Soldier and then back again, without ignoring the Traveler.
âPull him out,â the Officer ordered the Soldier. This process required a certain amount
of care because of the harrow. The Condemned Man already had a few small wounds on
his back, thanks to his own impatience.
From this point on, however, the Officer paid him hardly any attention. He went up to
the Traveler, pulled out the small leather folder once more, leafed through it, finally found
the sheet he was looking for, and showed it to the Traveler. âRead that,â he said. âI canât,â
said the Traveler. âIâve already told you I canât read these pages.â âBut take a close look at
the page,â said the Officer, and moved up right next to the Traveler in order to read with
him. When that didnât help, he raised his little finger high up over the paper, as if the page
must not be touched under any circumstances, so that using this he might make the task of
reading easier for the Traveler. The Traveler also made an effort so that at least he could
satisfy the Officer, but it was impossible for him. Then the Officer began to spell out the
inscription and then read out once again the joined up letters. ââBe just!â it states,â he said.
âNow you can read it.â The Traveler bent so low over the paper that the Officer, afraid that
he might touch it, moved it further away. The Traveler didnât say anything more, but it
was clear that he was still unable to read anything. â âBe just!â it says,â the Officer
remarked once again.
âThat could be,â said the Traveler. âI do believe thatâs written there.â âGood,â said the
Officer, at least partially satisfied. He climbed up the ladder, holding the paper. With great
care he set the page in the inscriber and appeared to rotate the gear mechanism completely
around. This was very tiring work. It must have required him to deal with extremely small
wheels. He had to inspect the gears so closely that sometimes his head disappeared
completely into the inscriber.
The Traveler followed this work from below without looking away. His neck grew stiff,
and his eyes found the sunlight pouring down from the sky painful. The Soldier and the
Condemned Man were keeping each other busy. With the tip of his bayonet the Soldier
pulled out the Condemned Manâs shirt and trousers which were lying in the hole. The shirt
was horribly dirty, and the Condemned Man washed it in the bucket of water. When he
was putting on his shirt and trousers, the Soldier and the Condemned Man had to laugh out
loud, for the pieces of clothing were cut in two up the back. Perhaps the Condemned Man
thought that it was his duty to amuse the Soldier. In his ripped-up clothes he circled
around the Soldier, who crouched down on the ground, laughed, and slapped his knees.
But they restrained themselves out of consideration for the two gentlemen present.
When the Officer was finally finished up on the machine, with a smile he looked over
the whole thing and all its parts one more time, and this time closed the cover of the
inscriber, which had been open up to this point. He climbed down, looked into the hole
and then at the Condemned Man, observed with satisfaction that he had pulled out his
15
zurĂŒck zum
Buch In the Penal Colony"
In the Penal Colony
Translated from the German by Ian Johnston
- Titel
- In the Penal Colony
- Autor
- Franz Kafka
- Datum
- 1919
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 19
- Kategorie
- International