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In the Penal Colony
(In der
Strafkolonie)
This short
story by Franz Kafka is set in an unnamed penal colony. In
the Penal
Colony is a story about the last use of an elaborate torture and
execution
device, that carves the sentence of the man on his skin in a flouring
script before letting him die, all over the course of twelve hours.
The
story has
only four characters, who are named only according to their role in the
story. The Officer is the machine's operator, the Condemned is a man
scheduled for execution, the Soldier is responsible for guarding the
Condemned, and the Traveler is a European dignitary and visitor.
The
story is told from the point of view of the Traveler, who--like the
reader--is
encountering this brutal machine for the first time. Everything about
the machine and its purpose is told to him by the Officer while the Soldier
and the Condemned placidly watch nearby. The Officer especially tells
of the
religious epiphany the executed experience in their last six hours in
the machine. Eventually it becomes clear that the use of the machine,
and its
associated process of justice where the accused is always instantly
found
guilty, has fallen out of favor with the current Commandant. The
Officer is
the last exhort of the machine, and strongly believes in the machine's
form of justice.
The Officer makes a plea to the man for him to speak
to the
current Commandent on behalf of the machine's continued use. When the
Traveler refuses to do so, and instead says that he will speak against
it, the Officer realizes that this will be the machine's last use. He
frees
the
Condemned and sets up the machine for himself, with the words "Be
Just"
to
be written on him. However the machine, in heavy disrepair,
malfunctions,
and instead of its usual elegant operation it simply stabs and kills
the
Officer quickly
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_the_Penal_Colony
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