Saturday, August 07, 2021

The Judgement

The Judgement is a short story by Franz Kafka. It involves the relationship between a man and his father. You can read it online here or listen to it read to you at the bottom of this post. The two translations differ. It begins,
It was a Sunday morning at the most beautiful time in spring. George Benderman, a young merchant, was sitting in his private room on the first floor of one of the low, poorly constructed houses extending in a long row along the river, almost indistinguishable from each other except for their height and colour. He had just finished a letter to a friend from his youth who was now abroad, had sealed in a playful and desultory manner, and then was looking, elbows propped on the writing table, out of the window at the river, the bridge, and the hills on the other shore with their delicate greenery.

He was thinking about how this friend, dissatisfied with his progress at home, had actually run off to Russia some years before. Now he ran a business in St. Petersburg, which had gotten off to a very good start but which for a long time now had appeared to be faltering, as his friend complained on his increasingly rare visits. So he was wearing himself out working to no purpose in a foreign land. The exotic full beard only poorly concealed the face George had known so well since his childhood years, and the yellowish colour of his skin seemed to indicate a developing sickness. As he explained it, he had no real connection to the colony of his countrymen in the place and also hardly any social interaction with local families and so was resigning himself to being a permanent bachelor.

What should one write to such a man, who had obviously gone off course, a man one could feel sorry for but could not help.

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10 comments:

  1. ...some people will be judged and perhaps not how they are expecting.

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    1. The people who most want to judge others seem to want love, mercy, and grace when their time comes.

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  2. I haven't read Kafka in ages and I don't think I've read this one. The list grows!

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    1. Too many to read them all, definitely!

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  3. This sounds like a good one. I will listen to this tomorrow while I paint.

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  4. 'Judge not that ye be not judged!' I like Kafka! Valerie

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