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A Clockwork Orange - Burgess, Anthony [37]

By Root 2723 0
do not approve. An eye for an eye, I say. If someone hits you you hit back, do you not? Why then should not the State, very severely hit by you brutal hooligans, not hit back also? But the new view is to say no. The new view is that we turn the bad into the good. All of which seems to me grossly unjust. Hm?” So I said, trying to be like respectful and accomodating: “Sir.” And then the Chief Chasso, who was standing all red and burly behind the Governor’s chair, creeched: “Shut your filthy hole, you scum.”

“All right, all right,” said the like tired and fagged-out Governor. “You, 6655321, are to be reformed. Tomorrow you go to this man Brodsky. It is believed that you will be able to leave State Custody in a little over a fortnight. In a little over a fortnight you will be out again in the big free world, no longer a number. I suppose,” and he snorted a bit here, “that prospect pleases you?” I said nothing so the Chief Chasso creeched:

“Answer, you filthy young swine, when the Governor asks you a question.” So I said:

“Oh, yes, sir. Thank you very much, sir. I’ve done my best here, really I have. I’m very grateful to all concerned.”

“Don’t be,” like sighed the Governor. “This is not a reward. This is far from being a reward. Now, there is a form here to be signed. It says that you are wiling to have the residue of your sentence commuted to submission to what is called here, ridiculous expression, Reclamation Treatment. Will you sign?”

“Most certainly I will sign,” I said, “sir. And very many thanks.” So I was given an ink-pencil and I signed my name nice and flowy. The Governor said:

“Right. That’s the lot, I think.” The Chief Chasso said: “The Prison Chaplain would like a word with him, sir.” So I was marched out and off down the corridor towards the Wing Chapel, tolchocked on the back and the gulliver all the way by one of the chassos, but in a very like yawny and bored manner. And I was marched across the Wing Chapel to the little cantora of the charles and then made to go in. The charles was sitting at his desk, smelling loud and clear of a fine manny von of expensive cancers and Scotch. He said: “Ah, little 6655321, be seated.” And to the chassos: “Wait outside, eh?” Which they did. Then he spoke in a very like earnest way to me, saying: “One thing I want you to understand, boy, is that this is nothing to do with me. Were it expedient, I would protest about it, but it is not expedient. There is the question of my own career, there is the question of the weakness of my own voice when set against the shout of certain more powerful elements in the polity. Do I make myself clear?” He didn’t, brothers, but I nodded that he did. “Very hard ethical questions are involved,” he went on. “You are to be made into a good boy, 6655321. Never again will you have the desire to commit acts of violence or to offend in any way whatsoever against the State’s Peace. I hope you take all that in. I hope you are absolutely clear in your own mind about that.” I said:

“Oh, it will be nice to be good, sir.” But I had a real hor-rorshow smeck at that inside, brothers. He said: “It may not be nice to be good, little 6655321. It may be horrible to be good. And when I say that to you I realize how self-contradictory that sounds. I know I shall have many sleepless nights about this. What does God want? Does God want woodness or the choice of goodness? Is a man who chooses the bad perhaps in some ways better than a man who has the good imposed upon him? Deep and hard questions, little 6655321. But all I want to say to you now is this: if at any time in the future you look back to these times and remember me, the lowest and humblest of all God’s servitors, do not, I pray, think evil of me in your heart, thinking me in any way involved in what is now about to happen to you. And now, talking of praying, I realize sadly that there will be little point in praying for you. You are passing now to a region where you will be beyond the reach of the power of prayer. A terrible terrible thing to consider. And yet, in a sense, in choosing to be deprive

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