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The Project Gutenberg EBook of Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka | |
Translated by David Wyllie. | |
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with | |
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or | |
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included | |
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net | |
** This is a COPYRIGHTED Project Gutenberg eBook, Details Below ** | |
** Please follow the copyright guidelines in this file. ** | |
Title: Metamorphosis | |
Author: Franz Kafka | |
Translator: David Wyllie | |
Release Date: August 16, 2005 [EBook #5200] | |
First posted: May 13, 2002 | |
Last updated: May 20, 2012 | |
Language: English | |
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK METAMORPHOSIS *** | |
Copyright (C) 2002 David Wyllie. | |
Metamorphosis | |
Franz Kafka | |
Translated by David Wyllie | |
I | |
One morning, when Gregor Samsa woke from troubled dreams, he found | |
himself transformed in his bed into a horrible vermin. He lay on | |
his armour-like back, and if he lifted his head a little he could | |
see his brown belly, slightly domed and divided by arches into stiff | |
sections. The bedding was hardly able to cover it and seemed ready | |
to slide off any moment. His many legs, pitifully thin compared | |
with the size of the rest of him, waved about helplessly as he | |
looked. | |
"What's happened to me?" he thought. It wasn't a dream. His room, | |
a proper human room although a little too small, lay peacefully | |
between its four familiar walls. A collection of textile samples | |
lay spread out on the table - Samsa was a travelling salesman - and | |
above it there hung a picture that he had recently cut out of an | |
illustrated magazine and housed in a nice, gilded frame. It showed | |
a lady fitted out with a fur hat and fur boa who sat upright, | |
raising a heavy fur muff that covered the whole of her lower arm | |
towards the viewer. | |
Gregor then turned to look out the window at the dull weather. | |
Drops of rain could be heard hitting the pane, which made him feel | |
quite sad. "How about if I sleep a little bit longer and forget all | |
this nonsense", he thought, but that was something he was unable to | |
do because he was used to sleeping on his right, and in his present | |
state couldn't get into that position. However hard he threw | |
himself onto his right, he always rolled back to where he was. He | |
must have tried it a hundred times, shut his eyes so that he | |
wouldn't have to look at the floundering legs, and only stopped when | |
he began to feel a mild, dull pain there that he had never felt | |
before. | |
"Oh, God", he thought, "what a strenuous career it is that I've | |
chosen! Travelling day in and day out. Doing business like this | |
takes much more effort than doing your own business at home, and on | |
top of that there's the curse of travelling, worries about making | |
train connections, bad and irregular food, contact with different | |
people all the time so that you can never get to know anyone or | |
become friendly with them. It can all go to Hell!" He felt a | |
slight itch up on his belly; pushed himself slowly up on his back | |
towards the headboard so that he could lift his head better; found | |
where the itch was, and saw that it was covered with lots of little | |
white spots which he didn't know what to make of; and when he tried | |
to feel the place with one of his legs he drew it quickly back | |
because as soon as he touched it he was overcome by a cold shudder. | |
He slid back into his former position. "Getting up early all the | |
time", he thought, "it makes you stupid. You've got to get enough | |
sleep. Other travelling salesmen live a life of luxury. For | |
instance, whenever I go back to the guest house during the morning | |
to copy out the contract, these gentlemen are always still sitting | |
there eating their breakfasts. I ought to just try that with my | |
boss; I'd get kicked out on the spot. But who knows, maybe that | |
would be the best thing for me. If I didn't have my parents to | |
think about I'd have given in my notice a long time ago, I'd have | |
gone up to the boss and told him just what I think, tell him | |
everything I would, let him know just what I feel. He'd fall right | |
off his desk! And it's a funny sort of business to be sitting up | |
there at your desk, talking down at your subordinates from up there, | |
especially when you have to go right up close because the boss is | |
hard of hearing. Well, there's still some hope; once I've got the | |
money together to pay off my parents' debt to him - another five or | |
six years I suppose - that's definitely what I'll do. That's when | |
I'll make the big change. First of all though, I've got to get up, | |
my train leaves at five." | |
And he looked over at the alarm clock, ticking on the chest of | |
drawers. "God in Heaven!" he thought. It was half past six and the | |
hands were quietly moving forwards, it was even later than half | |
past, more like quarter to seven. Had the alarm clock not rung? He | |
could see from the bed that it had been set for four o'clock as it | |
should have been; it certainly must have rung. Yes, but was it | |
possible to quietly sleep through that furniture-rattling noise? | |
True, he had not slept peacefully, but probably all the more deeply | |
because of that. What should he do now? The next train went at | |
seven; if he were to catch that he would have to rush like mad and | |
the collection of samples was still not packed, and he did not at | |
all feel particularly fresh and lively. And even if he did catch | |
the train he would not avoid his boss's anger as the office | |
assistant would have been there to see the five o'clock train go, he | |
would have put in his report about Gregor's not being there a long | |
time ago. The office assistant was the boss's man, spineless, and | |
with no understanding. What about if he reported sick? But that | |
would be extremely strained and suspicious as in fifteen years of | |
service Gregor had never once yet been ill. His boss would | |
certainly come round with the doctor from the medical insurance | |
company, accuse his parents of having a lazy son, and accept the | |
doctor's recommendation not to make any claim as the doctor believed | |
that no-one was ever ill but that many were workshy. And what's | |
more, would he have been entirely wrong in this case? Gregor did in | |
fact, apart from excessive sleepiness after sleeping for so long, | |
feel completely well and even felt much hungrier than usual. | |
He was still hurriedly thinking all this through, unable to decide | |
to get out of the bed, when the clock struck quarter to seven. | |
There was a cautious knock at the door near his head. "Gregor", | |
somebody called - it was his mother - "it's quarter to seven. | |
Didn't you want to go somewhere?" That gentle voice! Gregor was | |
shocked when he heard his own voice answering, it could hardly be | |
recognised as the voice he had had before. As if from deep inside | |
him, there was a painful and uncontrollable squeaking mixed in with | |
it, the words could be made out at first but then there was a sort | |
of echo which made them unclear, leaving the hearer unsure whether | |
he had heard properly or not. Gregor had wanted to give a full | |
answer and explain everything, but in the circumstances contented | |
himself with saying: "Yes, mother, yes, thank-you, I'm getting up | |
now." The change in Gregor's voice probably could not be noticed | |
outside through the wooden door, as his mother was satisfied with | |
this explanation and shuffled away. But this short conversation | |
made the other members of the family aware that Gregor, against | |
their expectations was still at home, and soon his father came | |
knocking at one of the side doors, gently, but with his fist. | |
"Gregor, Gregor", he called, "what's wrong?" And after a short | |
while he called again with a warning deepness in his voice: "Gregor! | |
Gregor!" At the other side door his sister came plaintively: | |
"Gregor? Aren't you well? Do you need anything?" Gregor answered to | |
both sides: "I'm ready, now", making an effort to remove all the | |
strangeness from his voice by enunciating very carefully and putting | |
long pauses between each, individual word. His father went back to | |
his breakfast, but his sister whispered: "Gregor, open the door, I | |
beg of you." Gregor, however, had no thought of opening the door, | |
and instead congratulated himself for his cautious habit, acquired | |
from his travelling, of locking all doors at night even when he was | |
at home. | |
The first thing he wanted to do was to get up in peace without being | |
disturbed, to get dressed, and most of all to have his breakfast. | |
Only then would he consider what to do next, as he was well aware | |
that he would not bring his thoughts to any sensible conclusions by | |
lying in bed. He remembered that he had often felt a slight pain in | |
bed, perhaps caused by lying awkwardly, but that had always turned | |
out to be pure imagination and he wondered how his imaginings would | |
slowly resolve themselves today. He did not have the slightest | |
doubt that the change in his voice was nothing more than the first | |
sign of a serious cold, which was an occupational hazard for | |
travelling salesmen. | |
It was a simple matter to throw off the covers; he only had to blow | |
himself up a little and they fell off by themselves. But it became | |
difficult after that, especially as he was so exceptionally broad. | |
He would have used his arms and his hands to push himself up; but | |
instead of them he only had all those little legs continuously | |
moving in different directions, and which he was moreover unable to | |
control. If he wanted to bend one of them, then that was the first | |
one that would stretch itself out; and if he finally managed to do | |
what he wanted with that leg, all the others seemed to be set free | |
and would move about painfully. "This is something that can't be | |
done in bed", Gregor said to himself, "so don't keep trying to do | |
it". | |
The first thing he wanted to do was get the lower part of his body | |
out of the bed, but he had never seen this lower part, and could not | |
imagine what it looked like; it turned out to be too hard to move; | |
it went so slowly; and finally, almost in a frenzy, when he | |
carelessly shoved himself forwards with all the force he could | |
gather, he chose the wrong direction, hit hard against the lower | |
bedpost, and learned from the burning pain he felt that the lower | |
part of his body might well, at present, be the most sensitive. | |
So then he tried to get the top part of his body out of the bed | |
first, carefully turning his head to the side. This he managed | |
quite easily, and despite its breadth and its weight, the bulk of | |
his body eventually followed slowly in the direction of the head. | |
But when he had at last got his head out of the bed and into the | |
fresh air it occurred to him that if he let himself fall it would be | |
a miracle if his head were not injured, so he became afraid to carry | |
on pushing himself forward the same way. And he could not knock | |
himself out now at any price; better to stay in bed than lose | |
consciousness. | |
It took just as much effort to get back to where he had been | |
earlier, but when he lay there sighing, and was once more watching | |
his legs as they struggled against each other even harder than | |
before, if that was possible, he could think of no way of bringing | |
peace and order to this chaos. He told himself once more that it | |
was not possible for him to stay in bed and that the most sensible | |
thing to do would be to get free of it in whatever way he could at | |
whatever sacrifice. At the same time, though, he did not forget to | |
remind himself that calm consideration was much better than rushing | |
to desperate conclusions. At times like this he would direct his | |
eyes to the window and look out as clearly as he could, but | |
unfortunately, even the other side of the narrow street was | |
enveloped in morning fog and the view had little confidence or cheer | |
to offer him. "Seven o'clock, already", he said to himself when the | |
clock struck again, "seven o'clock, and there's still a fog like | |
this." And he lay there quietly a while longer, breathing lightly | |
as if he perhaps expected the total stillness to bring things back | |
to their real and natural state. | |
But then he said to himself: "Before it strikes quarter past seven | |
I'll definitely have to have got properly out of bed. And by then | |
somebody will have come round from work to ask what's happened to me | |
as well, as they open up at work before seven o'clock." And so he | |
set himself to the task of swinging the entire length of his body | |
out of the bed all at the same time. If he succeeded in falling out | |
of bed in this way and kept his head raised as he did so he could | |
probably avoid injuring it. His back seemed to be quite hard, and | |
probably nothing would happen to it falling onto the carpet. His | |
main concern was for the loud noise he was bound to make, and which | |
even through all the doors would probably raise concern if not | |
alarm. But it was something that had to be risked. | |
When Gregor was already sticking half way out of the bed - the new | |
method was more of a game than an effort, all he had to do was rock | |
back and forth - it occurred to him how simple everything would be | |
if somebody came to help him. Two strong people - he had his father | |
and the maid in mind - would have been more than enough; they would | |
only have to push their arms under the dome of his back, peel him | |
away from the bed, bend down with the load and then be patient and | |
careful as he swang over onto the floor, where, hopefully, the | |
little legs would find a use. Should he really call for help | |
though, even apart from the fact that all the doors were locked? | |
Despite all the difficulty he was in, he could not suppress a smile | |
at this thought. | |
After a while he had already moved so far across that it would have | |
been hard for him to keep his balance if he rocked too hard. The | |
time was now ten past seven and he would have to make a final | |
decision very soon. Then there was a ring at the door of the flat. | |
"That'll be someone from work", he said to himself, and froze very | |
still, although his little legs only became all the more lively as | |
they danced around. For a moment everything remained quiet. | |
"They're not opening the door", Gregor said to himself, caught in | |
some nonsensical hope. But then of course, the maid's firm steps | |
went to the door as ever and opened it. Gregor only needed to hear | |
the visitor's first words of greeting and he knew who it was - the | |
chief clerk himself. Why did Gregor have to be the only one | |
condemned to work for a company where they immediately became highly | |
suspicious at the slightest shortcoming? Were all employees, every | |
one of them, louts, was there not one of them who was faithful and | |
devoted who would go so mad with pangs of conscience that he | |
couldn't get out of bed if he didn't spend at least a couple of | |
hours in the morning on company business? Was it really not enough | |
to let one of the trainees make enquiries - assuming enquiries were | |
even necessary - did the chief clerk have to come himself, and did | |
they have to show the whole, innocent family that this was so | |
suspicious that only the chief clerk could be trusted to have the | |
wisdom to investigate it? And more because these thoughts had made | |
him upset than through any proper decision, he swang himself with | |
all his force out of the bed. There was a loud thump, but it wasn't | |
really a loud noise. His fall was softened a little by the carpet, | |
and Gregor's back was also more elastic than he had thought, which | |
made the sound muffled and not too noticeable. He had not held his | |
head carefully enough, though, and hit it as he fell; annoyed and in | |
pain, he turned it and rubbed it against the carpet. | |
"Something's fallen down in there", said the chief clerk in the room | |
on the left. Gregor tried to imagine whether something of the sort | |
that had happened to him today could ever happen to the chief clerk | |
too; you had to concede that it was possible. But as if in gruff | |
reply to this question, the chief clerk's firm footsteps in his | |
highly polished boots could now be heard in the adjoining room. | |
From the room on his right, Gregor's sister whispered to him to let | |
him know: "Gregor, the chief clerk is here." "Yes, I know", said | |
Gregor to himself; but without daring to raise his voice loud enough | |
for his sister to hear him. | |
"Gregor", said his father now from the room to his left, "the chief | |
clerk has come round and wants to know why you didn't leave on the | |
early train. We don't know what to say to him. And anyway, he | |
wants to speak to you personally. So please open up this door. I'm | |
sure he'll be good enough to forgive the untidiness of your room." | |
Then the chief clerk called "Good morning, Mr. Samsa". "He isn't | |
well", said his mother to the chief clerk, while his father | |
continued to speak through the door. "He isn't well, please believe | |
me. Why else would Gregor have missed a train! The lad only ever | |
thinks about the business. It nearly makes me cross the way he | |
never goes out in the evenings; he's been in town for a week now but | |
stayed home every evening. He sits with us in the kitchen and just | |
reads the paper or studies train timetables. His idea of relaxation | |
is working with his fretsaw. He's made a little frame, for | |
instance, it only took him two or three evenings, you'll be amazed | |
how nice it is; it's hanging up in his room; you'll see it as soon | |
as Gregor opens the door. Anyway, I'm glad you're here; we wouldn't | |
have been able to get Gregor to open the door by ourselves; he's so | |
stubborn; and I'm sure he isn't well, he said this morning that he | |
is, but he isn't." "I'll be there in a moment", said Gregor slowly | |
and thoughtfully, but without moving so that he would not miss any | |
word of the conversation. "Well I can't think of any other way of | |
explaining it, Mrs. Samsa", said the chief clerk, "I hope it's | |
nothing serious. But on the other hand, I must say that if we | |
people in commerce ever become slightly unwell then, fortunately or | |
unfortunately as you like, we simply have to overcome it because of | |
business considerations." "Can the chief clerk come in to see you | |
now then?", asked his father impatiently, knocking at the door | |
again. "No", said Gregor. In the room on his right there followed | |
a painful silence; in the room on his left his sister began to cry. | |
So why did his sister not go and join the others? She had probably | |
only just got up and had not even begun to get dressed. And why was | |
she crying? Was it because he had not got up, and had not let the | |
chief clerk in, because he was in danger of losing his job and if | |
that happened his boss would once more pursue their parents with the | |
same demands as before? There was no need to worry about things like | |
that yet. Gregor was still there and had not the slightest | |
intention of abandoning his family. For the time being he just lay | |
there on the carpet, and no-one who knew the condition he was in | |
would seriously have expected him to let the chief clerk in. It was | |
only a minor discourtesy, and a suitable excuse could easily be | |
found for it later on, it was not something for which Gregor could | |
be sacked on the spot. And it seemed to Gregor much more sensible | |
to leave him now in peace instead of disturbing him with talking at | |
him and crying. But the others didn't know what was happening, they | |
were worried, that would excuse their behaviour. | |
The chief clerk now raised his voice, "Mr. Samsa", he called to him, | |
"what is wrong? You barricade yourself in your room, give us no more | |
than yes or no for an answer, you are causing serious and | |
unnecessary concern to your parents and you fail - and I mention | |
this just by the way - you fail to carry out your business duties in | |
a way that is quite unheard of. I'm speaking here on behalf of your | |
parents and of your employer, and really must request a clear and | |
immediate explanation. I am astonished, quite astonished. I | |
thought I knew you as a calm and sensible person, and now you | |
suddenly seem to be showing off with peculiar whims. This morning, | |
your employer did suggest a possible reason for your failure to | |
appear, it's true - it had to do with the money that was recently | |
entrusted to you - but I came near to giving him my word of honour | |
that that could not be the right explanation. But now that I see | |
your incomprehensible stubbornness I no longer feel any wish | |
whatsoever to intercede on your behalf. And nor is your position | |
all that secure. I had originally intended to say all this to you | |
in private, but since you cause me to waste my time here for no good | |
reason I don't see why your parents should not also learn of it. | |
Your turnover has been very unsatisfactory of late; I grant you that | |
it's not the time of year to do especially good business, we | |
recognise that; but there simply is no time of year to do no | |
business at all, Mr. Samsa, we cannot allow there to be." | |
"But Sir", called Gregor, beside himself and forgetting all else in | |
the excitement, "I'll open up immediately, just a moment. I'm | |
slightly unwell, an attack of dizziness, I haven't been able to get | |
up. I'm still in bed now. I'm quite fresh again now, though. I'm | |
just getting out of bed. Just a moment. Be patient! It's not quite | |
as easy as I'd thought. I'm quite alright now, though. It's | |
shocking, what can suddenly happen to a person! I was quite alright | |
last night, my parents know about it, perhaps better than me, I had | |
a small symptom of it last night already. They must have noticed | |
it. I don't know why I didn't let you know at work! But you always | |
think you can get over an illness without staying at home. Please, | |
don't make my parents suffer! There's no basis for any of the | |
accusations you're making; nobody's ever said a word to me about any | |
of these things. Maybe you haven't read the latest contracts I sent | |
in. I'll set off with the eight o'clock train, as well, these few | |
hours of rest have given me strength. You don't need to wait, sir; | |
I'll be in the office soon after you, and please be so good as to | |
tell that to the boss and recommend me to him!" | |
And while Gregor gushed out these words, hardly knowing what he was | |
saying, he made his way over to the chest of drawers - this was | |
easily done, probably because of the practise he had already had in | |
bed - where he now tried to get himself upright. He really did want | |
to open the door, really did want to let them see him and to speak | |
with the chief clerk; the others were being so insistent, and he was | |
curious to learn what they would say when they caught sight of him. | |
If they were shocked then it would no longer be Gregor's | |
responsibility and he could rest. If, however, they took everything | |
calmly he would still have no reason to be upset, and if he hurried | |
he really could be at the station for eight o'clock. The first few | |
times he tried to climb up on the smooth chest of drawers he just | |
slid down again, but he finally gave himself one last swing and | |
stood there upright; the lower part of his body was in serious pain | |
but he no longer gave any attention to it. Now he let himself fall | |
against the back of a nearby chair and held tightly to the edges of | |
it with his little legs. By now he had also calmed down, and kept | |
quiet so that he could listen to what the chief clerk was saying. | |
"Did you understand a word of all that?" the chief clerk asked his | |
parents, "surely he's not trying to make fools of us". "Oh, God!" | |
called his mother, who was already in tears, "he could be seriously | |
ill and we're making him suffer. Grete! Grete!" she then cried. | |
"Mother?" his sister called from the other side. They communicated | |
across Gregor's room. "You'll have to go for the doctor straight | |
away. Gregor is ill. Quick, get the doctor. Did you hear the way | |
Gregor spoke just now?" "That was the voice of an animal", said the | |
chief clerk, with a calmness that was in contrast with his mother's | |
screams. "Anna! Anna!" his father called into the kitchen through | |
the entrance hall, clapping his hands, "get a locksmith here, now!" | |
And the two girls, their skirts swishing, immediately ran out | |
through the hall, wrenching open the front door of the flat as they | |
went. How had his sister managed to get dressed so quickly? There | |
was no sound of the door banging shut again; they must have left it | |
open; people often do in homes where something awful has happened. | |
Gregor, in contrast, had become much calmer. So they couldn't | |
understand his words any more, although they seemed clear enough to | |
him, clearer than before - perhaps his ears had become used to the | |
sound. They had realised, though, that there was something wrong | |
with him, and were ready to help. The first response to his | |
situation had been confident and wise, and that made him feel | |
better. He felt that he had been drawn back in among people, and | |
from the doctor and the locksmith he expected great and surprising | |
achievements - although he did not really distinguish one from the | |
other. Whatever was said next would be crucial, so, in order to | |
make his voice as clear as possible, he coughed a little, but taking | |
care to do this not too loudly as even this might well sound | |
different from the way that a human coughs and he was no longer sure | |
he could judge this for himself. Meanwhile, it had become very | |
quiet in the next room. Perhaps his parents were sat at the table | |
whispering with the chief clerk, or perhaps they were all pressed | |
against the door and listening. | |
Gregor slowly pushed his way over to the door with the chair. Once | |
there he let go of it and threw himself onto the door, holding | |
himself upright against it using the adhesive on the tips of his | |
legs. He rested there a little while to recover from the effort | |
involved and then set himself to the task of turning the key in the | |
lock with his mouth. He seemed, unfortunately, to have no proper | |
teeth - how was he, then, to grasp the key? - but the lack of teeth | |
was, of course, made up for with a very strong jaw; using the jaw, | |
he really was able to start the key turning, ignoring the fact that | |
he must have been causing some kind of damage as a brown fluid came | |
from his mouth, flowed over the key and dripped onto the floor. | |
"Listen", said the chief clerk in the next room, "he's turning the | |
key." Gregor was greatly encouraged by this; but they all should | |
have been calling to him, his father and his mother too: "Well done, | |
Gregor", they should have cried, "keep at it, keep hold of the | |
lock!" And with the idea that they were all excitedly following his | |
efforts, he bit on the key with all his strength, paying no | |
attention to the pain he was causing himself. As the key turned | |
round he turned around the lock with it, only holding himself | |
upright with his mouth, and hung onto the key or pushed it down | |
again with the whole weight of his body as needed. The clear sound | |
of the lock as it snapped back was Gregor's sign that he could break | |
his concentration, and as he regained his breath he said to himself: | |
"So, I didn't need the locksmith after all". Then he lay his head on | |
the handle of the door to open it completely. | |
Because he had to open the door in this way, it was already wide | |
open before he could be seen. He had first to slowly turn himself | |
around one of the double doors, and he had to do it very carefully | |
if he did not want to fall flat on his back before entering the | |
room. He was still occupied with this difficult movement, unable to | |
pay attention to anything else, when he heard the chief clerk | |
exclaim a loud "Oh!", which sounded like the soughing of the wind. | |
Now he also saw him - he was the nearest to the door - his hand | |
pressed against his open mouth and slowly retreating as if driven by | |
a steady and invisible force. Gregor's mother, her hair still | |
dishevelled from bed despite the chief clerk's being there, looked | |
at his father. Then she unfolded her arms, took two steps forward | |
towards Gregor and sank down onto the floor into her skirts that | |
spread themselves out around her as her head disappeared down onto | |
her breast. His father looked hostile, and clenched his fists as if | |
wanting to knock Gregor back into his room. Then he looked | |
uncertainly round the living room, covered his eyes with his hands | |
and wept so that his powerful chest shook. | |
So Gregor did not go into the room, but leant against the inside of | |
the other door which was still held bolted in place. In this way | |
only half of his body could be seen, along with his head above it | |
which he leant over to one side as he peered out at the others. | |
Meanwhile the day had become much lighter; part of the endless, | |
grey-black building on the other side of the street - which was a | |
hospital - could be seen quite clearly with the austere and regular | |
line of windows piercing its facade; the rain was still | |
falling, now throwing down large, individual droplets which hit the | |
ground one at a time. The washing up from breakfast lay on the | |
table; there was so much of it because, for Gregor's father, | |
breakfast was the most important meal of the day and he would | |
stretch it out for several hours as he sat reading a number of | |
different newspapers. On the wall exactly opposite there was | |
photograph of Gregor when he was a lieutenant in the army, his sword | |
in his hand and a carefree smile on his face as he called forth | |
respect for his uniform and bearing. The door to the entrance hall | |
was open and as the front door of the flat was also open he could | |
see onto the landing and the stairs where they began their way down | |
below. | |
"Now, then", said Gregor, well aware that he was the only one to | |
have kept calm, "I'll get dressed straight away now, pack up my | |
samples and set off. Will you please just let me leave? You can | |
see", he said to the chief clerk, "that I'm not stubborn and I | |
like to do my job; being a commercial traveller is arduous but | |
without travelling I couldn't earn my living. So where are you | |
going, in to the office? Yes? Will you report everything accurately, | |
then? It's quite possible for someone to be temporarily unable to | |
work, but that's just the right time to remember what's been | |
achieved in the past and consider that later on, once the difficulty | |
has been removed, he will certainly work with all the more diligence | |
and concentration. You're well aware that I'm seriously in debt to | |
our employer as well as having to look after my parents and my | |
sister, so that I'm trapped in a difficult situation, but I will | |
work my way out of it again. Please don't make things any harder | |
for me than they are already, and don't take sides against me at the | |
office. I know that nobody likes the travellers. They think we | |
earn an enormous wage as well as having a soft time of it. That's | |
just prejudice but they have no particular reason to think better of | |
it. But you, sir, you have a better overview than the rest of the | |
staff, in fact, if I can say this in confidence, a better overview | |
than the boss himself - it's very easy for a businessman like him to | |
make mistakes about his employees and judge them more harshly than | |
he should. And you're also well aware that we travellers spend | |
almost the whole year away from the office, so that we can very | |
easily fall victim to gossip and chance and groundless complaints, | |
and it's almost impossible to defend yourself from that sort of | |
thing, we don't usually even hear about them, or if at all it's when | |
we arrive back home exhausted from a trip, and that's when we feel | |
the harmful effects of what's been going on without even knowing | |
what caused them. Please, don't go away, at least first say | |
something to show that you grant that I'm at least partly right!" | |
But the chief clerk had turned away as soon as Gregor had started to | |
speak, and, with protruding lips, only stared back at him over his | |
trembling shoulders as he left. He did not keep still for a moment | |
while Gregor was speaking, but moved steadily towards the door | |
without taking his eyes off him. He moved very gradually, as if | |
there had been some secret prohibition on leaving the room. It was | |
only when he had reached the entrance hall that he made a sudden | |
movement, drew his foot from the living room, and rushed forward in | |
a panic. In the hall, he stretched his right hand far out towards | |
the stairway as if out there, there were some supernatural force | |
waiting to save him. | |
Gregor realised that it was out of the question to let the chief | |
clerk go away in this mood if his position in the firm was not to be | |
put into extreme danger. That was something his parents did not | |
understand very well; over the years, they had become convinced that | |
this job would provide for Gregor for his entire life, and besides, | |
they had so much to worry about at present that they had lost sight | |
of any thought for the future. Gregor, though, did think about the | |
future. The chief clerk had to be held back, calmed down, convinced | |
and finally won over; the future of Gregor and his family depended | |
on it! If only his sister were here! She was clever; she was already | |
in tears while Gregor was still lying peacefully on his back. And | |
the chief clerk was a lover of women, surely she could persuade him; | |
she would close the front door in the entrance hall and talk him out | |
of his shocked state. But his sister was not there, Gregor would | |
have to do the job himself. And without considering that he still | |
was not familiar with how well he could move about in his present | |
state, or that his speech still might not - or probably would not - | |
be understood, he let go of the door; pushed himself through the | |
opening; tried to reach the chief clerk on the landing who, | |
ridiculously, was holding on to the banister with both hands; but | |
Gregor fell immediately over and, with a little scream as he sought | |
something to hold onto, landed on his numerous little legs. Hardly | |
had that happened than, for the first time that day, he began to | |
feel alright with his body; the little legs had the solid ground | |
under them; to his pleasure, they did exactly as he told them; they | |
were even making the effort to carry him where he wanted to go; and | |
he was soon believing that all his sorrows would soon be finally at | |
an end. He held back the urge to move but swayed from side to side | |
as he crouched there on the floor. His mother was not far away in | |
front of him and seemed, at first, quite engrossed in herself, but | |
then she suddenly jumped up with her arms outstretched and her | |
fingers spread shouting: "Help, for pity's sake, Help!" The way she | |
held her head suggested she wanted to see Gregor better, but the | |
unthinking way she was hurrying backwards showed that she did not; | |
she had forgotten that the table was behind her with all the | |
breakfast things on it; when she reached the table she sat quickly | |
down on it without knowing what she was doing; without even seeming | |
to notice that the coffee pot had been knocked over and a gush of | |
coffee was pouring down onto the carpet. | |
"Mother, mother", said Gregor gently, looking up at her. He had | |
completely forgotten the chief clerk for the moment, but could not | |
help himself snapping in the air with his jaws at the sight of the | |
flow of coffee. That set his mother screaming anew, she fled from | |
the table and into the arms of his father as he rushed towards her. | |
Gregor, though, had no time to spare for his parents now; the chief | |
clerk had already reached the stairs; with his chin on the banister, | |
he looked back for the last time. Gregor made a run for him; he | |
wanted to be sure of reaching him; the chief clerk must have | |
expected something, as he leapt down several steps at once and | |
disappeared; his shouts resounding all around the staircase. The | |
flight of the chief clerk seemed, unfortunately, to put Gregor's | |
father into a panic as well. Until then he had been relatively self | |
controlled, but now, instead of running after the chief clerk | |
himself, or at least not impeding Gregor as he ran after him, | |
Gregor's father seized the chief clerk's stick in his right hand | |
(the chief clerk had left it behind on a chair, along with his hat | |
and overcoat), picked up a large newspaper from the table with his | |
left, and used them to drive Gregor back into his room, stamping his | |
foot at him as he went. Gregor's appeals to his father were of no | |
help, his appeals were simply not understood, however much he humbly | |
turned his head his father merely stamped his foot all the harder. | |
Across the room, despite the chilly weather, Gregor's mother had | |
pulled open a window, leant far out of it and pressed her hands to | |
her face. A strong draught of air flew in from the street towards | |
the stairway, the curtains flew up, the newspapers on the table | |
fluttered and some of them were blown onto the floor. Nothing would | |
stop Gregor's father as he drove him back, making hissing noises at | |
him like a wild man. Gregor had never had any practice in moving | |
backwards and was only able to go very slowly. If Gregor had only | |
been allowed to turn round he would have been back in his room | |
straight away, but he was afraid that if he took the time to do that | |
his father would become impatient, and there was the threat of a | |
lethal blow to his back or head from the stick in his father's hand | |
any moment. Eventually, though, Gregor realised that he had no | |
choice as he saw, to his disgust, that he was quite incapable of | |
going backwards in a straight line; so he began, as quickly as | |
possible and with frequent anxious glances at his father, to turn | |
himself round. It went very slowly, but perhaps his father was able | |
to see his good intentions as he did nothing to hinder him, in fact | |
now and then he used the tip of his stick to give directions from a | |
distance as to which way to turn. If only his father would stop | |
that unbearable hissing! It was making Gregor quite confused. When | |
he had nearly finished turning round, still listening to that | |
hissing, he made a mistake and turned himself back a little the way | |
he had just come. He was pleased when he finally had his head in | |
front of the doorway, but then saw that it was too narrow, and his | |
body was too broad to get through it without further difficulty. In | |
his present mood, it obviously did not occur to his father to open | |
the other of the double doors so that Gregor would have enough space | |
to get through. He was merely fixed on the idea that Gregor should | |
be got back into his room as quickly as possible. Nor would he ever | |
have allowed Gregor the time to get himself upright as preparation | |
for getting through the doorway. What he did, making more noise | |
than ever, was to drive Gregor forwards all the harder as if there | |
had been nothing in the way; it sounded to Gregor as if there was | |
now more than one father behind him; it was not a pleasant | |
experience, and Gregor pushed himself into the doorway without | |
regard for what might happen. One side of his body lifted itself, | |
he lay at an angle in the doorway, one flank scraped on the white | |
door and was painfully injured, leaving vile brown flecks on it, | |
soon he was stuck fast and would not have been able to move at all | |
by himself, the little legs along one side hung quivering in the air | |
while those on the other side were pressed painfully against the | |
ground. Then his father gave him a hefty shove from behind which | |
released him from where he was held and sent him flying, and heavily | |
bleeding, deep into his room. The door was slammed shut with the | |
stick, then, finally, all was quiet. | |
II | |
It was not until it was getting dark that evening that Gregor awoke | |
from his deep and coma-like sleep. He would have woken soon | |
afterwards anyway even if he hadn't been disturbed, as he had had | |
enough sleep and felt fully rested. But he had the impression that | |
some hurried steps and the sound of the door leading into the front | |
room being carefully shut had woken him. The light from the | |
electric street lamps shone palely here and there onto the ceiling | |
and tops of the furniture, but down below, where Gregor was, it was | |
dark. He pushed himself over to the door, feeling his way clumsily | |
with his antennae - of which he was now beginning to learn the value | |
- in order to see what had been happening there. The whole of his | |
left side seemed like one, painfully stretched scar, and he limped | |
badly on his two rows of legs. One of the legs had been badly | |
injured in the events of that morning - it was nearly a miracle that | |
only one of them had been - and dragged along lifelessly. | |
It was only when he had reached the door that he realised what it | |
actually was that had drawn him over to it; it was the smell of | |
something to eat. By the door there was a dish filled with | |
sweetened milk with little pieces of white bread floating in it. He | |
was so pleased he almost laughed, as he was even hungrier than he | |
had been that morning, and immediately dipped his head into the | |
milk, nearly covering his eyes with it. But he soon drew his head | |
back again in disappointment; not only did the pain in his tender | |
left side make it difficult to eat the food - he was only able to | |
eat if his whole body worked together as a snuffling whole - but the | |
milk did not taste at all nice. Milk like this was normally his | |
favourite drink, and his sister had certainly left it there for him | |
because of that, but he turned, almost against his own will, away | |
from the dish and crawled back into the centre of the room. | |
Through the crack in the door, Gregor could see that the gas had | |
been lit in the living room. His father at this time would normally | |
be sat with his evening paper, reading it out in a loud voice to | |
Gregor's mother, and sometimes to his sister, but there was now not | |
a sound to be heard. Gregor's sister would often write and tell him | |
about this reading, but maybe his father had lost the habit in | |
recent times. It was so quiet all around too, even though there | |
must have been somebody in the flat. "What a quiet life it is the | |
family lead", said Gregor to himself, and, gazing into the darkness, | |
felt a great pride that he was able to provide a life like that in | |
such a nice home for his sister and parents. But what now, if all | |
this peace and wealth and comfort should come to a horrible and | |
frightening end? That was something that Gregor did not want to | |
think about too much, so he started to move about, crawling up and | |
down the room. | |
Once during that long evening, the door on one side of the room was | |
opened very slightly and hurriedly closed again; later on the door | |
on the other side did the same; it seemed that someone needed to | |
enter the room but thought better of it. Gregor went and waited | |
immediately by the door, resolved either to bring the timorous | |
visitor into the room in some way or at least to find out who it | |
was; but the door was opened no more that night and Gregor waited in | |
vain. The previous morning while the doors were locked everyone had | |
wanted to get in there to him, but now, now that he had opened up | |
one of the doors and the other had clearly been unlocked some time | |
during the day, no-one came, and the keys were in the other sides. | |
It was not until late at night that the gaslight in the living room | |
was put out, and now it was easy to see that his parents and sister had | |
stayed awake all that time, as they all could be distinctly heard as | |
they went away together on tip-toe. It was clear that no-one would | |
come into Gregor's room any more until morning; that gave him plenty | |
of time to think undisturbed about how he would have to re-arrange | |
his life. For some reason, the tall, empty room where he was forced | |
to remain made him feel uneasy as he lay there flat on the floor, | |
even though he had been living in it for five years. Hardly aware | |
of what he was doing other than a slight feeling of shame, he | |
hurried under the couch. It pressed down on his back a little, and | |
he was no longer able to lift his head, but he nonetheless felt | |
immediately at ease and his only regret was that his body was too | |
broad to get it all underneath. | |
He spent the whole night there. Some of the time he passed in a | |
light sleep, although he frequently woke from it in alarm because of | |
his hunger, and some of the time was spent in worries and vague | |
hopes which, however, always led to the same conclusion: for the | |
time being he must remain calm, he must show patience and the | |
greatest consideration so that his family could bear the | |
unpleasantness that he, in his present condition, was forced to | |
impose on them. | |
Gregor soon had the opportunity to test the strength of his | |
decisions, as early the next morning, almost before the night had | |
ended, his sister, nearly fully dressed, opened the door from the | |
front room and looked anxiously in. She did not see him straight | |
away, but when she did notice him under the couch - he had to be | |
somewhere, for God's sake, he couldn't have flown away - she was so | |
shocked that she lost control of herself and slammed the door shut | |
again from outside. But she seemed to regret her behaviour, as she | |
opened the door again straight away and came in on tip-toe as if | |
entering the room of someone seriously ill or even of a stranger. | |
Gregor had pushed his head forward, right to the edge of the couch, | |
and watched her. Would she notice that he had left the milk as it | |
was, realise that it was not from any lack of hunger and bring him | |
in some other food that was more suitable? If she didn't do it | |
herself he would rather go hungry than draw her attention to it, | |
although he did feel a terrible urge to rush forward from under the | |
couch, throw himself at his sister's feet and beg her for something | |
good to eat. However, his sister noticed the full dish immediately | |
and looked at it and the few drops of milk splashed around it with | |
some surprise. She immediately picked it up - using a rag, | |
not her bare hands - and carried it out. Gregor was extremely | |
curious as to what she would bring in its place, imagining the | |
wildest possibilities, but he never could have guessed what his | |
sister, in her goodness, actually did bring. In order to test his | |
taste, she brought him a whole selection of things, all spread out | |
on an old newspaper. There were old, half-rotten vegetables; bones | |
from the evening meal, covered in white sauce that had gone hard; a | |
few raisins and almonds; some cheese that Gregor had declared | |
inedible two days before; a dry roll and some bread spread with | |
butter and salt. As well as all that she had poured some water into | |
the dish, which had probably been permanently set aside for Gregor's | |
use, and placed it beside them. Then, out of consideration for | |
Gregor's feelings, as she knew that he would not eat in front of | |
her, she hurried out again and even turned the key in the lock so | |
that Gregor would know he could make things as comfortable for | |
himself as he liked. Gregor's little legs whirred, at last he could | |
eat. What's more, his injuries must already have completely healed | |
as he found no difficulty in moving. This amazed him, as more than | |
a month earlier he had cut his finger slightly with a knife, he | |
thought of how his finger had still hurt the day before yesterday. | |
"Am I less sensitive than I used to be, then?", he thought, and was | |
already sucking greedily at the cheese which had immediately, almost | |
compellingly, attracted him much more than the other foods on the | |
newspaper. Quickly one after another, his eyes watering with | |
pleasure, he consumed the cheese, the vegetables and the sauce; the | |
fresh foods, on the other hand, he didn't like at all, and even | |
dragged the things he did want to eat a little way away from them | |
because he couldn't stand the smell. Long after he had finished | |
eating and lay lethargic in the same place, his sister slowly turned | |
the key in the lock as a sign to him that he should withdraw. He | |
was immediately startled, although he had been half asleep, and he | |
hurried back under the couch. But he needed great self-control to | |
stay there even for the short time that his sister was in the room, | |
as eating so much food had rounded out his body a little and he | |
could hardly breathe in that narrow space. Half suffocating, he | |
watched with bulging eyes as his sister unselfconsciously took a | |
broom and swept up the left-overs, mixing them in with the food he | |
had not even touched at all as if it could not be used any more. | |
She quickly dropped it all into a bin, closed it with its wooden | |
lid, and carried everything out. She had hardly turned her back | |
before Gregor came out again from under the couch and stretched | |
himself. | |
This was how Gregor received his food each day now, once in the | |
morning while his parents and the maid were still asleep, and the | |
second time after everyone had eaten their meal at midday as his | |
parents would sleep for a little while then as well, and Gregor's | |
sister would send the maid away on some errand. Gregor's father and | |
mother certainly did not want him to starve either, but perhaps it | |
would have been more than they could stand to have any more | |
experience of his feeding than being told about it, and perhaps his | |
sister wanted to spare them what distress she could as they were | |
indeed suffering enough. | |
It was impossible for Gregor to find out what they had told the | |
doctor and the locksmith that first morning to get them out of the | |
flat. As nobody could understand him, nobody, not even his sister, | |
thought that he could understand them, so he had to be content to | |
hear his sister's sighs and appeals to the saints as she moved about | |
his room. It was only later, when she had become a little more used | |
to everything - there was, of course, no question of her ever | |
becoming fully used to the situation - that Gregor would sometimes | |
catch a friendly comment, or at least a comment that could be | |
construed as friendly. "He's enjoyed his dinner today", she might | |
say when he had diligently cleared away all the food left for him, | |
or if he left most of it, which slowly became more and more | |
frequent, she would often say, sadly, "now everything's just been | |
left there again". | |
Although Gregor wasn't able to hear any news directly he did listen | |
to much of what was said in the next rooms, and whenever he heard | |
anyone speaking he would scurry straight to the appropriate door and | |
press his whole body against it. There was seldom any conversation, | |
especially at first, that was not about him in some way, even if | |
only in secret. For two whole days, all the talk at every mealtime | |
was about what they should do now; but even between meals they spoke | |
about the same subject as there were always at least two members of | |
the family at home - nobody wanted to be at home by themselves and | |
it was out of the question to leave the flat entirely empty. And on | |
the very first day the maid had fallen to her knees and begged | |
Gregor's mother to let her go without delay. It was not very clear | |
how much she knew of what had happened but she left within a quarter | |
of an hour, tearfully thanking Gregor's mother for her dismissal as | |
if she had done her an enormous service. She even swore | |
emphatically not to tell anyone the slightest about what had | |
happened, even though no-one had asked that of her. | |
Now Gregor's sister also had to help his mother with the cooking; | |
although that was not so much bother as no-one ate very much. | |
Gregor often heard how one of them would unsuccessfully urge another | |
to eat, and receive no more answer than "no thanks, I've had enough" | |
or something similar. No-one drank very much either. His sister | |
would sometimes ask his father whether he would like a beer, hoping | |
for the chance to go and fetch it herself. When his father then | |
said nothing she would add, so that he would not feel selfish, that | |
she could send the housekeeper for it, but then his father would | |
close the matter with a big, loud "No", and no more would be said. | |
Even before the first day had come to an end, his father had | |
explained to Gregor's mother and sister what their finances and | |
prospects were. Now and then he stood up from the table and took | |
some receipt or document from the little cash box he had saved from | |
his business when it had collapsed five years earlier. Gregor heard | |
how he opened the complicated lock and then closed it again after he | |
had taken the item he wanted. What he heard his father say was some | |
of the first good news that Gregor heard since he had first been | |
incarcerated in his room. He had thought that nothing at all | |
remained from his father's business, at least he had never told him | |
anything different, and Gregor had never asked him about it anyway. | |
Their business misfortune had reduced the family to a state of total | |
despair, and Gregor's only concern at that time had been to arrange | |
things so that they could all forget about it as quickly as | |
possible. So then he started working especially hard, with a fiery | |
vigour that raised him from a junior salesman to a travelling | |
representative almost overnight, bringing with it the chance to earn | |
money in quite different ways. Gregor converted his success at work | |
straight into cash that he could lay on the table at home for the | |
benefit of his astonished and delighted family. They had been good | |
times and they had never come again, at least not with the same | |
splendour, even though Gregor had later earned so much that he was | |
in a position to bear the costs of the whole family, and did bear | |
them. They had even got used to it, both Gregor and the family, | |
they took the money with gratitude and he was glad to provide it, | |
although there was no longer much warm affection given in return. | |
Gregor only remained close to his sister now. Unlike him, she was | |
very fond of music and a gifted and expressive violinist, it was his | |
secret plan to send her to the conservatory next year even though it | |
would cause great expense that would have to be made up for in some | |
other way. During Gregor's short periods in town, conversation with | |
his sister would often turn to the conservatory but it was only ever | |
mentioned as a lovely dream that could never be realised. Their | |
parents did not like to hear this innocent talk, but Gregor thought | |
about it quite hard and decided he would let them know what he | |
planned with a grand announcement of it on Christmas day. | |
That was the sort of totally pointless thing that went through his | |
mind in his present state, pressed upright against the door and | |
listening. There were times when he simply became too tired to | |
continue listening, when his head would fall wearily against the | |
door and he would pull it up again with a start, as even the | |
slightest noise he caused would be heard next door and they would | |
all go silent. "What's that he's doing now", his father would say | |
after a while, clearly having gone over to the door, and only then | |
would the interrupted conversation slowly be taken up again. | |
When explaining things, his father repeated himself several times, | |
partly because it was a long time since he had been occupied with | |
these matters himself and partly because Gregor's mother did not | |
understand everything the first time. From these repeated explanations | |
Gregor learned, to his pleasure, that despite all their misfortunes | |
there was still some money available from the old days. It was not | |
a lot, but it had not been touched in the meantime and some interest | |
had accumulated. Besides that, they had not been using up all the | |
money that Gregor had been bringing home every month, keeping only a | |
little for himself, so that that, too, had been accumulating. | |
Behind the door, Gregor nodded with enthusiasm in his pleasure at | |
this unexpected thrift and caution. He could actually have used | |
this surplus money to reduce his father's debt to his boss, and the | |
day when he could have freed himself from that job would have come | |
much closer, but now it was certainly better the way his father had | |
done things. | |
This money, however, was certainly not enough to enable the family | |
to live off the interest; it was enough to maintain them for, | |
perhaps, one or two years, no more. That's to say, it was money | |
that should not really be touched but set aside for emergencies; | |
money to live on had to be earned. His father was healthy but old, | |
and lacking in self confidence. During the five years that he had | |
not been working - the first holiday in a life that had been full of | |
strain and no success - he had put on a lot of weight and become | |
very slow and clumsy. Would Gregor's elderly mother now have to go | |
and earn money? She suffered from asthma and it was a strain for her | |
just to move about the home, every other day would be spent | |
struggling for breath on the sofa by the open window. Would his | |
sister have to go and earn money? She was still a child of | |
seventeen, her life up till then had been very enviable, consisting | |
of wearing nice clothes, sleeping late, helping out in the business, | |
joining in with a few modest pleasures and most of all playing the | |
violin. Whenever they began to talk of the need to earn money, | |
Gregor would always first let go of the door and then throw himself | |
onto the cool, leather sofa next to it, as he became quite hot with | |
shame and regret. | |
He would often lie there the whole night through, not sleeping a | |
wink but scratching at the leather for hours on end. Or he might go | |
to all the effort of pushing a chair to the window, climbing up onto | |
the sill and, propped up in the chair, leaning on the window to | |
stare out of it. He had used to feel a great sense of freedom from | |
doing this, but doing it now was obviously something more remembered | |
than experienced, as what he actually saw in this way was becoming | |
less distinct every day, even things that were quite near; he had | |
used to curse the ever-present view of the hospital across the | |
street, but now he could not see it at all, and if he had not known | |
that he lived in Charlottenstrasse, which was a quiet street despite | |
being in the middle of the city, he could have thought that he was | |
looking out the window at a barren waste where the grey sky and the | |
grey earth mingled inseparably. His observant sister only needed to | |
notice the chair twice before she would always push it back to its | |
exact position by the window after she had tidied up the room, and | |
even left the inner pane of the window open from then on. | |
If Gregor had only been able to speak to his sister and thank her | |
for all that she had to do for him it would have been easier for him | |
to bear it; but as it was it caused him pain. His sister, | |
naturally, tried as far as possible to pretend there was nothing | |
burdensome about it, and the longer it went on, of course, the | |
better she was able to do so, but as time went by Gregor was also | |
able to see through it all so much better. It had even become very | |
unpleasant for him, now, whenever she entered the room. No sooner | |
had she come in than she would quickly close the door as a | |
precaution so that no-one would have to suffer the view into | |
Gregor's room, then she would go straight to the window and pull it | |
hurriedly open almost as if she were suffocating. Even if it was | |
cold, she would stay at the window breathing deeply for a little | |
while. She would alarm Gregor twice a day with this running about | |
and noise making; he would stay under the couch shivering the whole | |
while, knowing full well that she would certainly have liked to | |
spare him this ordeal, but it was impossible for her to be in the | |
same room with him with the windows closed. | |
One day, about a month after Gregor's transformation when his sister | |
no longer had any particular reason to be shocked at his appearance, | |
she came into the room a little earlier than usual and found him | |
still staring out the window, motionless, and just where he would be | |
most horrible. In itself, his sister's not coming into the room | |
would have been no surprise for Gregor as it would have been | |
difficult for her to immediately open the window while he was still | |
there, but not only did she not come in, she went straight back and | |
closed the door behind her, a stranger would have thought he had | |
threatened her and tried to bite her. Gregor went straight to hide | |
himself under the couch, of course, but he had to wait until midday | |
before his sister came back and she seemed much more uneasy than | |
usual. It made him realise that she still found his appearance | |
unbearable and would continue to do so, she probably even had to | |
overcome the urge to flee when she saw the little bit of him that | |
protruded from under the couch. One day, in order to spare her even | |
this sight, he spent four hours carrying the bedsheet over to the | |
couch on his back and arranged it so that he was completely covered | |
and his sister would not be able to see him even if she bent down. | |
If she did not think this sheet was necessary then all she had to do | |
was take it off again, as it was clear enough that it was no | |
pleasure for Gregor to cut himself off so completely. She left the | |
sheet where it was. Gregor even thought he glimpsed a look of | |
gratitude one time when he carefully looked out from under the sheet | |
to see how his sister liked the new arrangement. | |
For the first fourteen days, Gregor's parents could not bring | |
themselves to come into the room to see him. He would often hear | |
them say how they appreciated all the new work his sister was doing | |
even though, before, they had seen her as a girl who was somewhat | |
useless and frequently been annoyed with her. But now the two of | |
them, father and mother, would often both wait outside the door of | |
Gregor's room while his sister tidied up in there, and as soon as | |
she went out again she would have to tell them exactly how | |
everything looked, what Gregor had eaten, how he had behaved this | |
time and whether, perhaps, any slight improvement could be seen. | |
His mother also wanted to go in and visit Gregor relatively soon but | |
his father and sister at first persuaded her against it. Gregor | |
listened very closely to all this, and approved fully. Later, | |
though, she had to be held back by force, which made her call out: | |
"Let me go and see Gregor, he is my unfortunate son! Can't you | |
understand I have to see him?", and Gregor would think to himself | |
that maybe it would be better if his mother came in, not every day | |
of course, but one day a week, perhaps; she could understand | |
everything much better than his sister who, for all her courage, was | |
still just a child after all, and really might not have had an | |
adult's appreciation of the burdensome job she had taken on. | |
Gregor's wish to see his mother was soon realised. Out of | |
consideration for his parents, Gregor wanted to avoid being seen at | |
the window during the day, the few square meters of the floor did | |
not give him much room to crawl about, it was hard to just lie | |
quietly through the night, his food soon stopped giving him any | |
pleasure at all, and so, to entertain himself, he got into the habit | |
of crawling up and down the walls and ceiling. He was especially | |
fond of hanging from the ceiling; it was quite different from lying | |
on the floor; he could breathe more freely; his body had a light | |
swing to it; and up there, relaxed and almost happy, it might happen | |
that he would surprise even himself by letting go of the ceiling and | |
landing on the floor with a crash. But now, of course, he had far | |
better control of his body than before and, even with a fall as | |
great as that, caused himself no damage. Very soon his sister | |
noticed Gregor's new way of entertaining himself - he had, after | |
all, left traces of the adhesive from his feet as he crawled about - | |
and got it into her head to make it as easy as possible for him by | |
removing the furniture that got in his way, especially the chest of | |
drawers and the desk. Now, this was not something that she would be | |
able to do by herself; she did not dare to ask for help from her | |
father; the sixteen year old maid had carried on bravely since the | |
cook had left but she certainly would not have helped in this, she | |
had even asked to be allowed to keep the kitchen locked at all times | |
and never to have to open the door unless it was especially | |
important; so his sister had no choice but to choose some time when | |
Gregor's father was not there and fetch his mother to help her. As | |
she approached the room, Gregor could hear his mother express her | |
joy, but once at the door she went silent. First, of course, his | |
sister came in and looked round to see that everything in the room | |
was alright; and only then did she let her mother enter. Gregor had | |
hurriedly pulled the sheet down lower over the couch and put more | |
folds into it so that everything really looked as if it had just | |
been thrown down by chance. Gregor also refrained, this time, from | |
spying out from under the sheet; he gave up the chance to see his | |
mother until later and was simply glad that she had come. "You can | |
come in, he can't be seen", said his sister, obviously leading her | |
in by the hand. The old chest of drawers was too heavy for a pair | |
of feeble women to be heaving about, but Gregor listened as they | |
pushed it from its place, his sister always taking on the heaviest | |
part of the work for herself and ignoring her mother's warnings that | |
she would strain herself. This lasted a very long time. After | |
labouring at it for fifteen minutes or more his mother said it would | |
be better to leave the chest where it was, for one thing it was too | |
heavy for them to get the job finished before Gregor's father got | |
home and leaving it in the middle of the room it would be in his way | |
even more, and for another thing it wasn't even sure that taking the | |
furniture away would really be any help to him. She thought just | |
the opposite; the sight of the bare walls saddened her right to her | |
heart; and why wouldn't Gregor feel the same way about it, he'd been | |
used to this furniture in his room for a long time and it would make | |
him feel abandoned to be in an empty room like that. Then, quietly, | |
almost whispering as if wanting Gregor (whose whereabouts she did | |
not know) to hear not even the tone of her voice, as she was | |
convinced that he did not understand her words, she added "and by | |
taking the furniture away, won't it seem like we're showing that | |
we've given up all hope of improvement and we're abandoning him to | |
cope for himself? I think it'd be best to leave the room exactly the | |
way it was before so that when Gregor comes back to us again he'll | |
find everything unchanged and he'll be able to forget the time in | |
between all the easier". | |
Hearing these words from his mother made Gregor realise that the | |
lack of any direct human communication, along with the monotonous | |
life led by the family during these two months, must have made him | |
confused - he could think of no other way of explaining to himself | |
why he had seriously wanted his room emptied out. Had he really | |
wanted to transform his room into a cave, a warm room fitted out | |
with the nice furniture he had inherited? That would have let him | |
crawl around unimpeded in any direction, but it would also have let | |
him quickly forget his past when he had still been human. He had | |
come very close to forgetting, and it had only been the voice of his | |
mother, unheard for so long, that had shaken him out of it. Nothing | |
should be removed; everything had to stay; he could not do without | |
the good influence the furniture had on his condition; and if the | |
furniture made it difficult for him to crawl about mindlessly that | |
was not a loss but a great advantage. | |
His sister, unfortunately, did not agree; she had become used to the | |
idea, not without reason, that she was Gregor's spokesman to his | |
parents about the things that concerned him. This meant that his | |
mother's advice now was sufficient reason for her to insist on | |
removing not only the chest of drawers and the desk, as she had | |
thought at first, but all the furniture apart from the all-important | |
couch. It was more than childish perversity, of course, or the | |
unexpected confidence she had recently acquired, that made her | |
insist; she had indeed noticed that Gregor needed a lot of room to | |
crawl about in, whereas the furniture, as far as anyone could see, | |
was of no use to him at all. Girls of that age, though, do become | |
enthusiastic about things and feel they must get their way whenever | |
they can. Perhaps this was what tempted Grete to make Gregor's | |
situation seem even more shocking than it was so that she could do | |
even more for him. Grete would probably be the only one who would | |
dare enter a room dominated by Gregor crawling about the bare walls | |
by himself. | |
So she refused to let her mother dissuade her. Gregor's mother | |
already looked uneasy in his room, she soon stopped speaking and | |
helped Gregor's sister to get the chest of drawers out with what | |
strength she had. The chest of drawers was something that Gregor | |
could do without if he had to, but the writing desk had to stay. | |
Hardly had the two women pushed the chest of drawers, groaning, out | |
of the room than Gregor poked his head out from under the couch to | |
see what he could do about it. He meant to be as careful and | |
considerate as he could, but, unfortunately, it was his mother who | |
came back first while Grete in the next room had her arms round the | |
chest, pushing and pulling at it from side to side by herself | |
without, of course, moving it an inch. His mother was not used to | |
the sight of Gregor, he might have made her ill, so Gregor hurried | |
backwards to the far end of the couch. In his startlement, though, | |
he was not able to prevent the sheet at its front from moving a | |
little. It was enough to attract his mother's attention. She stood | |
very still, remained there a moment, and then went back out to | |
Grete. | |
Gregor kept trying to assure himself that nothing unusual was | |
happening, it was just a few pieces of furniture being moved after | |
all, but he soon had to admit that the women going to and fro, their | |
little calls to each other, the scraping of the furniture on the | |
floor, all these things made him feel as if he were being assailed | |
from all sides. With his head and legs pulled in against him and | |
his body pressed to the floor, he was forced to admit to himself | |
that he could not stand all of this much longer. They were emptying | |
his room out; taking away everything that was dear to him; they had | |
already taken out the chest containing his fretsaw and other tools; | |
now they threatened to remove the writing desk with its place | |
clearly worn into the floor, the desk where he had done his homework | |
as a business trainee, at high school, even while he had been at | |
infant school--he really could not wait any longer to see whether | |
the two women's intentions were good. He had nearly forgotten they | |
were there anyway, as they were now too tired to say anything while | |
they worked and he could only hear their feet as they stepped | |
heavily on the floor. | |
So, while the women were leant against the desk in the other room | |
catching their breath, he sallied out, changed direction four times | |
not knowing what he should save first before his attention was | |
suddenly caught by the picture on the wall - which was already | |
denuded of everything else that had been on it - of the lady dressed | |
in copious fur. He hurried up onto the picture and pressed himself | |
against its glass, it held him firmly and felt good on his hot | |
belly. This picture at least, now totally covered by Gregor, would | |
certainly be taken away by no-one. He turned his head to face the | |
door into the living room so that he could watch the women when they | |
came back. | |
They had not allowed themselves a long rest and came back quite | |
soon; Grete had put her arm around her mother and was nearly | |
carrying her. "What shall we take now, then?", said Grete and | |
looked around. Her eyes met those of Gregor on the wall. Perhaps | |
only because her mother was there, she remained calm, bent her face | |
to her so that she would not look round and said, albeit hurriedly | |
and with a tremor in her voice: "Come on, let's go back in the | |
living room for a while?" Gregor could see what Grete had in mind, | |
she wanted to take her mother somewhere safe and then chase him down | |
from the wall. Well, she could certainly try it! He sat unyielding | |
on his picture. He would rather jump at Grete's face. | |
But Grete's words had made her mother quite worried, she stepped to | |
one side, saw the enormous brown patch against the flowers of the | |
wallpaper, and before she even realised it was Gregor that she saw | |
screamed: "Oh God, oh God!" Arms outstretched, she fell onto the | |
couch as if she had given up everything and stayed there immobile. | |
"Gregor!" shouted his sister, glowering at him and shaking her fist. | |
That was the first word she had spoken to him directly since his | |
transformation. She ran into the other room to fetch some kind of | |
smelling salts to bring her mother out of her faint; Gregor wanted | |
to help too - he could save his picture later, although he stuck | |
fast to the glass and had to pull himself off by force; then he, | |
too, ran into the next room as if he could advise his sister like in | |
the old days; but he had to just stand behind her doing nothing; she | |
was looking into various bottles, he startled her when she turned | |
round; a bottle fell to the ground and broke; a splinter cut | |
Gregor's face, some kind of caustic medicine splashed all over him; | |
now, without delaying any longer, Grete took hold of all the bottles | |
she could and ran with them in to her mother; she slammed the door | |
shut with her foot. So now Gregor was shut out from his mother, | |
who, because of him, might be near to death; he could not open the | |
door if he did not want to chase his sister away, and she had to | |
stay with his mother; there was nothing for him to do but wait; and, | |
oppressed with anxiety and self-reproach, he began to crawl about, | |
he crawled over everything, walls, furniture, ceiling, and finally | |
in his confusion as the whole room began to spin around him he fell | |
down into the middle of the dinner table. | |
He lay there for a while, numb and immobile, all around him it was | |
quiet, maybe that was a good sign. Then there was someone at the | |
door. The maid, of course, had locked herself in her kitchen so | |
that Grete would have to go and answer it. His father had arrived | |
home. "What's happened?" were his first words; Grete's appearance | |
must have made everything clear to him. She answered him with | |
subdued voice, and openly pressed her face into his chest: "Mother's | |
fainted, but she's better now. Gregor got out." "Just as I | |
expected", said his father, "just as I always said, but you women | |
wouldn't listen, would you." It was clear to Gregor that Grete had | |
not said enough and that his father took it to mean that something | |
bad had happened, that he was responsible for some act of violence. | |
That meant Gregor would now have to try to calm his father, as he | |
did not have the time to explain things to him even if that had been | |
possible. So he fled to the door of his room and pressed himself | |
against it so that his father, when he came in from the hall, could | |
see straight away that Gregor had the best intentions and would go | |
back into his room without delay, that it would not be necessary to | |
drive him back but that they had only to open the door and he would | |
disappear. | |
His father, though, was not in the mood to notice subtleties like | |
that; "Ah!", he shouted as he came in, sounding as if he were both | |
angry and glad at the same time. Gregor drew his head back from the | |
door and lifted it towards his father. He really had not imagined | |
his father the way he stood there now; of late, with his new habit | |
of crawling about, he had neglected to pay attention to what was | |
going on the rest of the flat the way he had done before. He really | |
ought to have expected things to have changed, but still, still, was | |
that really his father? The same tired man as used to be laying | |
there entombed in his bed when Gregor came back from his business | |
trips, who would receive him sitting in the armchair in his | |
nightgown when he came back in the evenings; who was hardly even | |
able to stand up but, as a sign of his pleasure, would just raise | |
his arms and who, on the couple of times a year when they went for a | |
walk together on a Sunday or public holiday wrapped up tightly in | |
his overcoat between Gregor and his mother, would always labour his | |
way forward a little more slowly than them, who were already walking | |
slowly for his sake; who would place his stick down carefully and, | |
if he wanted to say something would invariably stop and gather his | |
companions around him. He was standing up straight enough now; | |
dressed in a smart blue uniform with gold buttons, the sort worn by | |
the employees at the banking institute; above the high, stiff collar | |
of the coat his strong double-chin emerged; under the bushy | |
eyebrows, his piercing, dark eyes looked out fresh and alert; his | |
normally unkempt white hair was combed down painfully close to his | |
scalp. He took his cap, with its gold monogram from, probably, some | |
bank, and threw it in an arc right across the room onto the sofa, | |
put his hands in his trouser pockets, pushing back the bottom of his | |
long uniform coat, and, with look of determination, walked towards | |
Gregor. He probably did not even know himself what he had in mind, | |
but nonetheless lifted his feet unusually high. Gregor was amazed | |
at the enormous size of the soles of his boots, but wasted no time | |
with that - he knew full well, right from the first day of his new | |
life, that his father thought it necessary to always be extremely | |
strict with him. And so he ran up to his father, stopped when his | |
father stopped, scurried forwards again when he moved, even | |
slightly. In this way they went round the room several times | |
without anything decisive happening, without even giving the | |
impression of a chase as everything went so slowly. Gregor remained | |
all this time on the floor, largely because he feared his father | |
might see it as especially provoking if he fled onto the wall or | |
ceiling. Whatever he did, Gregor had to admit that he certainly | |
would not be able to keep up this running about for long, as for | |
each step his father took he had to carry out countless movements. | |
He became noticeably short of breath, even in his earlier life his | |
lungs had not been very reliable. Now, as he lurched about in his | |
efforts to muster all the strength he could for running he could | |
hardly keep his eyes open; his thoughts became too slow for him to | |
think of any other way of saving himself than running; he almost | |
forgot that the walls were there for him to use although, here, they | |
were concealed behind carefully carved furniture full of notches and | |
protrusions - then, right beside him, lightly tossed, something flew | |
down and rolled in front of him. It was an apple; then another one | |
immediately flew at him; Gregor froze in shock; there was no longer | |
any point in running as his father had decided to bombard him. He | |
had filled his pockets with fruit from the bowl on the sideboard and | |
now, without even taking the time for careful aim, threw one apple | |
after another. These little, red apples rolled about on the floor, | |
knocking into each other as if they had electric motors. An apple | |
thrown without much force glanced against Gregor's back and slid off | |
without doing any harm. Another one however, immediately following | |
it, hit squarely and lodged in his back; Gregor wanted to drag | |
himself away, as if he could remove the surprising, the incredible | |
pain by changing his position; but he felt as if nailed to the spot | |
and spread himself out, all his senses in confusion. The last thing | |
he saw was the door of his room being pulled open, his sister was | |
screaming, his mother ran out in front of her in her blouse (as his | |
sister had taken off some of her clothes after she had fainted to | |
make it easier for her to breathe), she ran to his father, her | |
skirts unfastened and sliding one after another to the ground, | |
stumbling over the skirts she pushed herself to his father, her arms | |
around him, uniting herself with him totally - now Gregor lost his | |
ability to see anything - her hands behind his father's head begging | |
him to spare Gregor's life. | |
III | |
No-one dared to remove the apple lodged in Gregor's flesh, so it | |
remained there as a visible reminder of his injury. He had suffered | |
it there for more than a month, and his condition seemed serious | |
enough to remind even his father that Gregor, despite his current | |
sad and revolting form, was a family member who could not be treated | |
as an enemy. On the contrary, as a family there was a duty to | |
swallow any revulsion for him and to be patient, just to be patient. | |
Because of his injuries, Gregor had lost much of his mobility - | |
probably permanently. He had been reduced to the condition of an | |
ancient invalid and it took him long, long minutes to crawl across | |
his room - crawling over the ceiling was out of the question - but | |
this deterioration in his condition was fully (in his opinion) made | |
up for by the door to the living room being left open every evening. | |
He got into the habit of closely watching it for one or two hours | |
before it was opened and then, lying in the darkness of his room | |
where he could not be seen from the living room, he could watch the | |
family in the light of the dinner table and listen to their | |
conversation - with everyone's permission, in a way, and thus quite | |
differently from before. | |
They no longer held the lively conversations of earlier times, of | |
course, the ones that Gregor always thought about with longing when | |
he was tired and getting into the damp bed in some small hotel room. | |
All of them were usually very quiet nowadays. Soon after dinner, | |
his father would go to sleep in his chair; his mother and sister | |
would urge each other to be quiet; his mother, bent deeply under the | |
lamp, would sew fancy underwear for a fashion shop; his sister, who | |
had taken a sales job, learned shorthand and French in the evenings | |
so that she might be able to get a better position later on. | |
Sometimes his father would wake up and say to Gregor's mother | |
"you're doing so much sewing again today!", as if he did not know | |
that he had been dozing - and then he would go back to sleep again | |
while mother and sister would exchange a tired grin. | |
With a kind of stubbornness, Gregor's father refused to take his | |
uniform off even at home; while his nightgown hung unused on its peg | |
Gregor's father would slumber where he was, fully dressed, as if | |
always ready to serve and expecting to hear the voice of his | |
superior even here. The uniform had not been new to start with, but | |
as a result of this it slowly became even shabbier despite the | |
efforts of Gregor's mother and sister to look after it. Gregor | |
would often spend the whole evening looking at all the stains on | |
this coat, with its gold buttons always kept polished and shiny, | |
while the old man in it would sleep, highly uncomfortable but | |
peaceful. | |
As soon as it struck ten, Gregor's mother would speak gently to his | |
father to wake him and try to persuade him to go to bed, as he | |
couldn't sleep properly where he was and he really had to get his | |
sleep if he was to be up at six to get to work. But since he had | |
been in work he had become more obstinate and would always insist on | |
staying longer at the table, even though he regularly fell asleep | |
and it was then harder than ever to persuade him to exchange the | |
chair for his bed. Then, however much mother and sister would | |
importune him with little reproaches and warnings he would keep | |
slowly shaking his head for a quarter of an hour with his eyes | |
closed and refusing to get up. Gregor's mother would tug at his | |
sleeve, whisper endearments into his ear, Gregor's sister would | |
leave her work to help her mother, but nothing would have any effect | |
on him. He would just sink deeper into his chair. Only when the | |
two women took him under the arms he would abruptly open his eyes, | |
look at them one after the other and say: "What a life! This is what | |
peace I get in my old age!" And supported by the two women he would | |
lift himself up carefully as if he were carrying the greatest load | |
himself, let the women take him to the door, send them off and carry | |
on by himself while Gregor's mother would throw down her needle and | |
his sister her pen so that they could run after his father and | |
continue being of help to him. | |
Who, in this tired and overworked family, would have had time to | |
give more attention to Gregor than was absolutely necessary? The | |
household budget became even smaller; so now the maid was dismissed; | |
an enormous, thick-boned charwoman with white hair that flapped | |
around her head came every morning and evening to do the heaviest | |
work; everything else was looked after by Gregor's mother on top of | |
the large amount of sewing work she did. Gregor even learned, | |
listening to the evening conversation about what price they had | |
hoped for, that several items of jewellery belonging to the family | |
had been sold, even though both mother and sister had been very fond | |
of wearing them at functions and celebrations. But the loudest | |
complaint was that although the flat was much too big for their | |
present circumstances, they could not move out of it, there was no | |
imaginable way of transferring Gregor to the new address. He could | |
see quite well, though, that there were more reasons than | |
consideration for him that made it difficult for them to move, it | |
would have been quite easy to transport him in any suitable crate | |
with a few air holes in it; the main thing holding the family back | |
from their decision to move was much more to do with their total | |
despair, and the thought that they had been struck with a misfortune | |
unlike anything experienced by anyone else they knew or were related | |
to. They carried out absolutely everything that the world expects | |
from poor people, Gregor's father brought bank employees their | |
breakfast, his mother sacrificed herself by washing clothes for | |
strangers, his sister ran back and forth behind her desk at the | |
behest of the customers, but they just did not have the strength to | |
do any more. And the injury in Gregor's back began to hurt as much | |
as when it was new. After they had come back from taking his father | |
to bed Gregor's mother and sister would now leave their work where | |
it was and sit close together, cheek to cheek; his mother would | |
point to Gregor's room and say "Close that door, Grete", and then, | |
when he was in the dark again, they would sit in the next room and | |
their tears would mingle, or they would simply sit there staring | |
dry-eyed at the table. | |
Gregor hardly slept at all, either night or day. Sometimes he would | |
think of taking over the family's affairs, just like before, the | |
next time the door was opened; he had long forgotten about his boss | |
and the chief clerk, but they would appear again in his thoughts, | |
the salesmen and the apprentices, that stupid teaboy, two or three | |
friends from other businesses, one of the chambermaids from a | |
provincial hotel, a tender memory that appeared and disappeared | |
again, a cashier from a hat shop for whom his attention had been | |
serious but too slow, - all of them appeared to him, mixed together | |
with strangers and others he had forgotten, but instead of helping | |
him and his family they were all of them inaccessible, and he was | |
glad when they disappeared. Other times he was not at all in the | |
mood to look after his family, he was filled with simple rage about | |
the lack of attention he was shown, and although he could think of | |
nothing he would have wanted, he made plans of how he could get into | |
the pantry where he could take all the things he was entitled to, | |
even if he was not hungry. Gregor's sister no longer thought about | |
how she could please him but would hurriedly push some food or other | |
into his room with her foot before she rushed out to work in the | |
morning and at midday, and in the evening she would sweep it away | |
again with the broom, indifferent as to whether it had been eaten or | |
- more often than not - had been left totally untouched. She still | |
cleared up the room in the evening, but now she could not have been | |
any quicker about it. Smears of dirt were left on the walls, here | |
and there were little balls of dust and filth. At first, Gregor | |
went into one of the worst of these places when his sister arrived | |
as a reproach to her, but he could have stayed there for weeks | |
without his sister doing anything about it; she could see the dirt | |
as well as he could but she had simply decided to leave him to it. | |
At the same time she became touchy in a way that was quite new for | |
her and which everyone in the family understood - cleaning up | |
Gregor's room was for her and her alone. Gregor's mother did once | |
thoroughly clean his room, and needed to use several bucketfuls of | |
water to do it - although that much dampness also made Gregor ill | |
and he lay flat on the couch, bitter and immobile. But his mother | |
was to be punished still more for what she had done, as hardly had | |
his sister arrived home in the evening than she noticed the change | |
in Gregor's room and, highly aggrieved, ran back into the living | |
room where, despite her mothers raised and imploring hands, she | |
broke into convulsive tears. Her father, of course, was startled | |
out of his chair and the two parents looked on astonished and | |
helpless; then they, too, became agitated; Gregor's father, standing | |
to the right of his mother, accused her of not leaving the cleaning | |
of Gregor's room to his sister; from her left, Gregor's sister | |
screamed at her that she was never to clean Gregor's room again; | |
while his mother tried to draw his father, who was beside himself | |
with anger, into the bedroom; his sister, quaking with tears, | |
thumped on the table with her small fists; and Gregor hissed in | |
anger that no-one had even thought of closing the door to save him | |
the sight of this and all its noise. | |
Gregor's sister was exhausted from going out to work, and looking | |
after Gregor as she had done before was even more work for her, but | |
even so his mother ought certainly not to have taken her place. | |
Gregor, on the other hand, ought not to be neglected. Now, though, | |
the charwoman was here. This elderly widow, with a robust bone | |
structure that made her able to withstand the hardest of things in | |
her long life, wasn't really repelled by Gregor. Just by chance one | |
day, rather than any real curiosity, she opened the door to Gregor's | |
room and found herself face to face with him. He was taken totally | |
by surprise, no-one was chasing him but he began to rush to and fro | |
while she just stood there in amazement with her hands crossed in | |
front of her. From then on she never failed to open the door | |
slightly every evening and morning and look briefly in on him. At | |
first she would call to him as she did so with words that she | |
probably considered friendly, such as "come on then, you old | |
dung-beetle!", or "look at the old dung-beetle there!" Gregor never | |
responded to being spoken to in that way, but just remained where he | |
was without moving as if the door had never even been opened. If | |
only they had told this charwoman to clean up his room every day | |
instead of letting her disturb him for no reason whenever she felt | |
like it! One day, early in the morning while a heavy rain struck the | |
windowpanes, perhaps indicating that spring was coming, she began to | |
speak to him in that way once again. Gregor was so resentful of it | |
that he started to move toward her, he was slow and infirm, but it | |
was like a kind of attack. Instead of being afraid, the charwoman | |
just lifted up one of the chairs from near the door and stood there | |
with her mouth open, clearly intending not to close her mouth until | |
the chair in her hand had been slammed down into Gregor's back. | |
"Aren't you coming any closer, then?", she asked when Gregor turned | |
round again, and she calmly put the chair back in the corner. | |
Gregor had almost entirely stopped eating. Only if he happened to | |
find himself next to the food that had been prepared for him he | |
might take some of it into his mouth to play with it, leave it there | |
a few hours and then, more often than not, spit it out again. At | |
first he thought it was distress at the state of his room that | |
stopped him eating, but he had soon got used to the changes made | |
there. They had got into the habit of putting things into this room | |
that they had no room for anywhere else, and there were now many | |
such things as one of the rooms in the flat had been rented out to | |
three gentlemen. These earnest gentlemen - all three of them had | |
full beards, as Gregor learned peering through the crack in the door | |
one day - were painfully insistent on things' being tidy. This | |
meant not only in their own room but, since they had taken a room in | |
this establishment, in the entire flat and especially in the | |
kitchen. Unnecessary clutter was something they could not tolerate, | |
especially if it was dirty. They had moreover brought most of their | |
own furnishings and equipment with them. For this reason, many | |
things had become superfluous which, although they could not be | |
sold, the family did not wish to discard. All these things found | |
their way into Gregor's room. The dustbins from the kitchen found | |
their way in there too. The charwoman was always in a hurry, and | |
anything she couldn't use for the time being she would just chuck in | |
there. He, fortunately, would usually see no more than the object | |
and the hand that held it. The woman most likely meant to fetch the | |
things back out again when she had time and the opportunity, or to | |
throw everything out in one go, but what actually happened was that | |
they were left where they landed when they had first been thrown | |
unless Gregor made his way through the junk and moved it somewhere | |
else. At first he moved it because, with no other room free where | |
he could crawl about, he was forced to, but later on he came to | |
enjoy it although moving about in that way left him sad and tired to | |
death, and he would remain immobile for hours afterwards. | |
The gentlemen who rented the room would sometimes take their evening | |
meal at home in the living room that was used by everyone, and so | |
the door to this room was often kept closed in the evening. But | |
Gregor found it easy to give up having the door open, he had, after | |
all, often failed to make use of it when it was open and, without | |
the family having noticed it, lain in his room in its darkest | |
corner. One time, though, the charwoman left the door to the living | |
room slightly open, and it remained open when the gentlemen who | |
rented the room came in in the evening and the light was put on. | |
They sat up at the table where, formerly, Gregor had taken his meals | |
with his father and mother, they unfolded the serviettes and picked | |
up their knives and forks. Gregor's mother immediately appeared in | |
the doorway with a dish of meat and soon behind her came his sister | |
with a dish piled high with potatoes. The food was steaming, and | |
filled the room with its smell. The gentlemen bent over the dishes | |
set in front of them as if they wanted to test the food before | |
eating it, and the gentleman in the middle, who seemed to count as | |
an authority for the other two, did indeed cut off a piece of meat | |
while it was still in its dish, clearly wishing to establish whether | |
it was sufficiently cooked or whether it should be sent back to the | |
kitchen. It was to his satisfaction, and Gregor's mother and | |
sister, who had been looking on anxiously, began to breathe again | |
and smiled. | |
The family themselves ate in the kitchen. Nonetheless, Gregor's | |
father came into the living room before he went into the kitchen, | |
bowed once with his cap in his hand and did his round of the table. | |
The gentlemen stood as one, and mumbled something into their beards. | |
Then, once they were alone, they ate in near perfect silence. It | |
seemed remarkable to Gregor that above all the various noises of | |
eating their chewing teeth could still be heard, as if they had | |
wanted to show Gregor that you need teeth in order to eat and it was | |
not possible to perform anything with jaws that are toothless | |
however nice they might be. "I'd like to eat something", said | |
Gregor anxiously, "but not anything like they're eating. They do | |
feed themselves. And here I am, dying!" | |
Throughout all this time, Gregor could not remember having heard the | |
violin being played, but this evening it began to be heard from the | |
kitchen. The three gentlemen had already finished their meal, the | |
one in the middle had produced a newspaper, given a page to each of | |
the others, and now they leant back in their chairs reading them and | |
smoking. When the violin began playing they became attentive, stood | |
up and went on tip-toe over to the door of the hallway where they | |
stood pressed against each other. Someone must have heard them in | |
the kitchen, as Gregor's father called out: "Is the playing perhaps | |
unpleasant for the gentlemen? We can stop it straight away." "On | |
the contrary", said the middle gentleman, "would the young lady not | |
like to come in and play for us here in the room, where it is, after | |
all, much more cosy and comfortable?" "Oh yes, we'd love to", | |
called back Gregor's father as if he had been the violin player | |
himself. The gentlemen stepped back into the room and waited. | |
Gregor's father soon appeared with the music stand, his mother with | |
the music and his sister with the violin. She calmly prepared | |
everything for her to begin playing; his parents, who had never | |
rented a room out before and therefore showed an exaggerated | |
courtesy towards the three gentlemen, did not even dare to sit on | |
their own chairs; his father leant against the door with his right | |
hand pushed in between two buttons on his uniform coat; his mother, | |
though, was offered a seat by one of the gentlemen and sat - leaving | |
the chair where the gentleman happened to have placed it - out of | |
the way in a corner. | |
His sister began to play; father and mother paid close attention, | |
one on each side, to the movements of her hands. Drawn in by the | |
playing, Gregor had dared to come forward a little and already had | |
his head in the living room. Before, he had taken great pride in | |
how considerate he was but now it hardly occurred to him that he had | |
become so thoughtless about the others. What's more, there was now | |
all the more reason to keep himself hidden as he was covered in the | |
dust that lay everywhere in his room and flew up at the slightest | |
movement; he carried threads, hairs, and remains of food about on | |
his back and sides; he was much too indifferent to everything now to | |
lay on his back and wipe himself on the carpet like he had used to | |
do several times a day. And despite this condition, he was not too | |
shy to move forward a little onto the immaculate floor of the living | |
room. | |
No-one noticed him, though. The family was totally preoccupied with | |
the violin playing; at first, the three gentlemen had put their | |
hands in their pockets and come up far too close behind the music | |
stand to look at all the notes being played, and they must have | |
disturbed Gregor's sister, but soon, in contrast with the family, | |
they withdrew back to the window with their heads sunk and talking | |
to each other at half volume, and they stayed by the window while | |
Gregor's father observed them anxiously. It really now seemed very | |
obvious that they had expected to hear some beautiful or | |
entertaining violin playing but had been disappointed, that they had | |
had enough of the whole performance and it was only now out of | |
politeness that they allowed their peace to be disturbed. It was | |
especially unnerving, the way they all blew the smoke from their | |
cigarettes upwards from their mouth and noses. Yet Gregor's sister | |
was playing so beautifully. Her face was leant to one side, | |
following the lines of music with a careful and melancholy | |
expression. Gregor crawled a little further forward, keeping his | |
head close to the ground so that he could meet her eyes if the | |
chance came. Was he an animal if music could captivate him so? It | |
seemed to him that he was being shown the way to the unknown | |
nourishment he had been yearning for. He was determined to make his | |
way forward to his sister and tug at her skirt to show her she might | |
come into his room with her violin, as no-one appreciated her | |
playing here as much as he would. He never wanted to let her out of | |
his room, not while he lived, anyway; his shocking appearance | |
should, for once, be of some use to him; he wanted to be at every | |
door of his room at once to hiss and spit at the attackers; his | |
sister should not be forced to stay with him, though, but stay of | |
her own free will; she would sit beside him on the couch with her | |
ear bent down to him while he told her how he had always intended to | |
send her to the conservatory, how he would have told everyone about | |
it last Christmas - had Christmas really come and gone already? - if | |
this misfortune hadn't got in the way, and refuse to let anyone | |
dissuade him from it. On hearing all this, his sister would break | |
out in tears of emotion, and Gregor would climb up to her shoulder | |
and kiss her neck, which, since she had been going out to work, she | |
had kept free without any necklace or collar. | |
"Mr. Samsa!", shouted the middle gentleman to Gregor's father, | |
pointing, without wasting any more words, with his forefinger at | |
Gregor as he slowly moved forward. The violin went silent, the | |
middle of the three gentlemen first smiled at his two friends, | |
shaking his head, and then looked back at Gregor. His father seemed | |
to think it more important to calm the three gentlemen before | |
driving Gregor out, even though they were not at all upset and | |
seemed to think Gregor was more entertaining than the violin playing | |
had been. He rushed up to them with his arms spread out and | |
attempted to drive them back into their room at the same time as | |
trying to block their view of Gregor with his body. Now they did | |
become a little annoyed, and it was not clear whether it was his | |
father's behaviour that annoyed them or the dawning realisation that | |
they had had a neighbour like Gregor in the next room without | |
knowing it. They asked Gregor's father for explanations, raised | |
their arms like he had, tugged excitedly at their beards and moved | |
back towards their room only very slowly. Meanwhile Gregor's sister | |
had overcome the despair she had fallen into when her playing was | |
suddenly interrupted. She had let her hands drop and let violin and | |
bow hang limply for a while but continued to look at the music as if | |
still playing, but then she suddenly pulled herself together, lay | |
the instrument on her mother's lap who still sat laboriously | |
struggling for breath where she was, and ran into the next room | |
which, under pressure from her father, the three gentlemen were more | |
quickly moving toward. Under his sister's experienced hand, the | |
pillows and covers on the beds flew up and were put into order and | |
she had already finished making the beds and slipped out again | |
before the three gentlemen had reached the room. Gregor's father | |
seemed so obsessed with what he was doing that he forgot all the | |
respect he owed to his tenants. He urged them and pressed them | |
until, when he was already at the door of the room, the middle of | |
the three gentlemen shouted like thunder and stamped his foot and | |
thereby brought Gregor's father to a halt. "I declare here and | |
now", he said, raising his hand and glancing at Gregor's mother and | |
sister to gain their attention too, "that with regard to the | |
repugnant conditions that prevail in this flat and with this family" | |
- here he looked briefly but decisively at the floor - "I give | |
immediate notice on my room. For the days that I have been living | |
here I will, of course, pay nothing at all, on the contrary I will | |
consider whether to proceed with some kind of action for damages | |
from you, and believe me it would be very easy to set out the | |
grounds for such an action." He was silent and looked straight | |
ahead as if waiting for something. And indeed, his two friends | |
joined in with the words: "And we also give immediate notice." With | |
that, he took hold of the door handle and slammed the door. | |
Gregor's father staggered back to his seat, feeling his way with his | |
hands, and fell into it; it looked as if he was stretching himself | |
out for his usual evening nap but from the uncontrolled way his head | |
kept nodding it could be seen that he was not sleeping at all. | |
Throughout all this, Gregor had lain still where the three gentlemen | |
had first seen him. His disappointment at the failure of his plan, | |
and perhaps also because he was weak from hunger, made it impossible | |
for him to move. He was sure that everyone would turn on him any | |
moment, and he waited. He was not even startled out of this state | |
when the violin on his mother's lap fell from her trembling fingers | |
and landed loudly on the floor. | |
"Father, Mother", said his sister, hitting the table with her hand | |
as introduction, "we can't carry on like this. Maybe you can't see | |
it, but I can. I don't want to call this monster my brother, all I | |
can say is: we have to try and get rid of it. We've done all that's | |
humanly possible to look after it and be patient, I don't think | |
anyone could accuse us of doing anything wrong." | |
"She's absolutely right", said Gregor's father to himself. His | |
mother, who still had not had time to catch her breath, began to | |
cough dully, her hand held out in front of her and a deranged | |
expression in her eyes. | |
Gregor's sister rushed to his mother and put her hand on her | |
forehead. Her words seemed to give Gregor's father some more | |
definite ideas. He sat upright, played with his uniform cap between | |
the plates left by the three gentlemen after their meal, and | |
occasionally looked down at Gregor as he lay there immobile. | |
"We have to try and get rid of it", said Gregor's sister, now | |
speaking only to her father, as her mother was too occupied with | |
coughing to listen, "it'll be the death of both of you, I can see it | |
coming. We can't all work as hard as we have to and then come home | |
to be tortured like this, we can't endure it. I can't endure it any | |
more." And she broke out so heavily in tears that they flowed down | |
the face of her mother, and she wiped them away with mechanical hand | |
movements. | |
"My child", said her father with sympathy and obvious understanding, | |
"what are we to do?" | |
His sister just shrugged her shoulders as a sign of the helplessness | |
and tears that had taken hold of her, displacing her earlier | |
certainty. | |
"If he could just understand us", said his father almost as a | |
question; his sister shook her hand vigorously through her tears as | |
a sign that of that there was no question. | |
"If he could just understand us", repeated Gregor's father, closing | |
his eyes in acceptance of his sister's certainty that that was quite | |
impossible, "then perhaps we could come to some kind of arrangement | |
with him. But as it is ..." | |
"It's got to go", shouted his sister, "that's the only way, Father. | |
You've got to get rid of the idea that that's Gregor. We've only | |
harmed ourselves by believing it for so long. How can that be | |
Gregor? If it were Gregor he would have seen long ago that it's not | |
possible for human beings to live with an animal like that and he | |
would have gone of his own free will. We wouldn't have a brother | |
any more, then, but we could carry on with our lives and remember | |
him with respect. As it is this animal is persecuting us, it's | |
driven out our tenants, it obviously wants to take over the whole | |
flat and force us to sleep on the streets. Father, look, just | |
look", she suddenly screamed, "he's starting again!" In her alarm, | |
which was totally beyond Gregor's comprehension, his sister even | |
abandoned his mother as she pushed herself vigorously out of her | |
chair as if more willing to sacrifice her own mother than stay | |
anywhere near Gregor. She rushed over to behind her father, who had | |
become excited merely because she was and stood up half raising his | |
hands in front of Gregor's sister as if to protect her. | |
But Gregor had had no intention of frightening anyone, least of all | |
his sister. All he had done was begin to turn round so that he | |
could go back into his room, although that was in itself quite | |
startling as his pain-wracked condition meant that turning round | |
required a great deal of effort and he was using his head to help | |
himself do it, repeatedly raising it and striking it against the | |
floor. He stopped and looked round. They seemed to have realised | |
his good intention and had only been alarmed briefly. Now they all | |
looked at him in unhappy silence. His mother lay in her chair with | |
her legs stretched out and pressed against each other, her eyes | |
nearly closed with exhaustion; his sister sat next to his father | |
with her arms around his neck. | |
"Maybe now they'll let me turn round", thought Gregor and went back | |
to work. He could not help panting loudly with the effort and had | |
sometimes to stop and take a rest. No-one was making him rush any | |
more, everything was left up to him. As soon as he had finally | |
finished turning round he began to move straight ahead. He was | |
amazed at the great distance that separated him from his room, and | |
could not understand how he had covered that distance in his weak | |
state a little while before and almost without noticing it. He | |
concentrated on crawling as fast as he could and hardly noticed that | |
there was not a word, not any cry, from his family to distract him. | |
He did not turn his head until he had reached the doorway. He did | |
not turn it all the way round as he felt his neck becoming stiff, | |
but it was nonetheless enough to see that nothing behind him had | |
changed, only his sister had stood up. With his last glance he saw | |
that his mother had now fallen completely asleep. | |
He was hardly inside his room before the door was hurriedly shut, | |
bolted and locked. The sudden noise behind Gregor so startled him | |
that his little legs collapsed under him. It was his sister who had | |
been in so much of a rush. She had been standing there waiting and | |
sprung forward lightly, Gregor had not heard her coming at all, and | |
as she turned the key in the lock she said loudly to her parents "At | |
last!". | |
"What now, then?", Gregor asked himself as he looked round in the | |
darkness. He soon made the discovery that he could no longer move | |
at all. This was no surprise to him, it seemed rather that being | |
able to actually move around on those spindly little legs until then | |
was unnatural. He also felt relatively comfortable. It is true | |
that his entire body was aching, but the pain seemed to be slowly | |
getting weaker and weaker and would finally disappear altogether. | |
He could already hardly feel the decayed apple in his back or the | |
inflamed area around it, which was entirely covered in white dust. | |
He thought back of his family with emotion and love. If it was | |
possible, he felt that he must go away even more strongly than his | |
sister. He remained in this state of empty and peaceful rumination | |
until he heard the clock tower strike three in the morning. He | |
watched as it slowly began to get light everywhere outside the | |
window too. Then, without his willing it, his head sank down | |
completely, and his last breath flowed weakly from his nostrils. | |
When the cleaner came in early in the morning - they'd often asked | |
her not to keep slamming the doors but with her strength and in her | |
hurry she still did, so that everyone in the flat knew when she'd | |
arrived and from then on it was impossible to sleep in peace - she | |
made her usual brief look in on Gregor and at first found nothing | |
special. She thought he was laying there so still on purpose, | |
playing the martyr; she attributed all possible understanding to | |
him. She happened to be holding the long broom in her hand, so she | |
tried to tickle Gregor with it from the doorway. When she had no | |
success with that she tried to make a nuisance of herself and poked | |
at him a little, and only when she found she could shove him across | |
the floor with no resistance at all did she start to pay attention. | |
She soon realised what had really happened, opened her eyes wide, | |
whistled to herself, but did not waste time to yank open the bedroom | |
doors and shout loudly into the darkness of the bedrooms: "Come and | |
'ave a look at this, it's dead, just lying there, stone dead!" | |
Mr. and Mrs. Samsa sat upright there in their marriage bed and had | |
to make an effort to get over the shock caused by the cleaner before | |
they could grasp what she was saying. But then, each from his own | |
side, they hurried out of bed. Mr. Samsa threw the blanket over his | |
shoulders, Mrs. Samsa just came out in her nightdress; and that is | |
how they went into Gregor's room. On the way they opened the door | |
to the living room where Grete had been sleeping since the three | |
gentlemen had moved in; she was fully dressed as if she had never | |
been asleep, and the paleness of her face seemed to confirm this. | |
"Dead?", asked Mrs. Samsa, looking at the charwoman enquiringly, | |
even though she could have checked for herself and could have known | |
it even without checking. "That's what I said", replied the | |
cleaner, and to prove it she gave Gregor's body another shove with | |
the broom, sending it sideways across the floor. Mrs. Samsa made a | |
movement as if she wanted to hold back the broom, but did not | |
complete it. "Now then", said Mr. Samsa, "let's give thanks to God | |
for that". He crossed himself, and the three women followed his | |
example. Grete, who had not taken her eyes from the corpse, said: | |
"Just look how thin he was. He didn't eat anything for so long. | |
The food came out again just the same as when it went in". Gregor's | |
body was indeed completely dried up and flat, they had not seen it | |
until then, but now he was not lifted up on his little legs, nor did | |
he do anything to make them look away. | |
"Grete, come with us in here for a little while", said Mrs. Samsa | |
with a pained smile, and Grete followed her parents into the bedroom | |
but not without looking back at the body. The cleaner shut the door | |
and opened the window wide. Although it was still early in the | |
morning the fresh air had something of warmth mixed in with it. It | |
was already the end of March, after all. | |
The three gentlemen stepped out of their room and looked round in | |
amazement for their breakfasts; they had been forgotten about. | |
"Where is our breakfast?", the middle gentleman asked the cleaner | |
irritably. She just put her finger on her lips and made a quick and | |
silent sign to the men that they might like to come into Gregor's | |
room. They did so, and stood around Gregor's corpse with their | |
hands in the pockets of their well-worn coats. It was now quite | |
light in the room. | |
Then the door of the bedroom opened and Mr. Samsa appeared in his | |
uniform with his wife on one arm and his daughter on the other. All | |
of them had been crying a little; Grete now and then pressed her | |
face against her father's arm. | |
"Leave my home. Now!", said Mr. Samsa, indicating the door and | |
without letting the women from him. "What do you mean?", asked the | |
middle of the three gentlemen somewhat disconcerted, and he smiled | |
sweetly. The other two held their hands behind their backs and | |
continually rubbed them together in gleeful anticipation of a loud | |
quarrel which could only end in their favour. "I mean just what I | |
said", answered Mr. Samsa, and, with his two companions, went in a | |
straight line towards the man. At first, he stood there still, | |
looking at the ground as if the contents of his head were | |
rearranging themselves into new positions. "Alright, we'll go | |
then", he said, and looked up at Mr. Samsa as if he had been | |
suddenly overcome with humility and wanted permission again from | |
Mr. Samsa for his decision. Mr. Samsa merely opened his eyes wide | |
and briefly nodded to him several times. At that, and without | |
delay, the man actually did take long strides into the front | |
hallway; his two friends had stopped rubbing their hands some time | |
before and had been listening to what was being said. Now they | |
jumped off after their friend as if taken with a sudden fear that | |
Mr. Samsa might go into the hallway in front of them and break the | |
connection with their leader. Once there, all three took their hats | |
from the stand, took their sticks from the holder, bowed without a | |
word and left the premises. Mr. Samsa and the two women followed | |
them out onto the landing; but they had had no reason to mistrust | |
the men's intentions and as they leaned over the landing they saw how | |
the three gentlemen made slow but steady progress down the many | |
steps. As they turned the corner on each floor they disappeared and | |
would reappear a few moments later; the further down they went, the | |
more that the Samsa family lost interest in them; when a butcher's | |
boy, proud of posture with his tray on his head, passed them on his | |
way up and came nearer than they were, Mr. Samsa and the women came | |
away from the landing and went, as if relieved, back into the flat. | |
They decided the best way to make use of that day was for relaxation | |
and to go for a walk; not only had they earned a break from work but | |
they were in serious need of it. So they sat at the table and wrote | |
three letters of excusal, Mr. Samsa to his employers, Mrs. Samsa | |
to her contractor and Grete to her principal. The cleaner came in | |
while they were writing to tell them she was going, she'd finished | |
her work for that morning. The three of them at first just nodded | |
without looking up from what they were writing, and it was only when | |
the cleaner still did not seem to want to leave that they looked up | |
in irritation. "Well?", asked Mr. Samsa. The charwoman stood in | |
the doorway with a smile on her face as if she had some tremendous | |
good news to report, but would only do it if she was clearly asked | |
to. The almost vertical little ostrich feather on her hat, which | |
had been a source of irritation to Mr. Samsa all the time she had | |
been working for them, swayed gently in all directions. "What is it | |
you want then?", asked Mrs. Samsa, whom the cleaner had the most | |
respect for. "Yes", she answered, and broke into a friendly laugh | |
that made her unable to speak straight away, "well then, that thing | |
in there, you needn't worry about how you're going to get rid of it. | |
That's all been sorted out." Mrs. Samsa and Grete bent down over | |
their letters as if intent on continuing with what they were | |
writing; Mr. Samsa saw that the cleaner wanted to start describing | |
everything in detail but, with outstretched hand, he made it quite | |
clear that she was not to. So, as she was prevented from telling | |
them all about it, she suddenly remembered what a hurry she was in | |
and, clearly peeved, called out "Cheerio then, everyone", turned | |
round sharply and left, slamming the door terribly as she went. | |
"Tonight she gets sacked", said Mr. Samsa, but he received no reply | |
from either his wife or his daughter as the charwoman seemed to have | |
destroyed the peace they had only just gained. They got up and went | |
over to the window where they remained with their arms around each | |
other. Mr. Samsa twisted round in his chair to look at them and sat | |
there watching for a while. Then he called out: "Come here, then. | |
Let's forget about all that old stuff, shall we. Come and give me a | |
bit of attention". The two women immediately did as he said, | |
hurrying over to him where they kissed him and hugged him and then | |
they quickly finished their letters. | |
After that, the three of them left the flat together, which was | |
something they had not done for months, and took the tram out to the | |
open country outside the town. They had the tram, filled with warm | |
sunshine, all to themselves. Leant back comfortably on their seats, | |
they discussed their prospects and found that on closer examination | |
they were not at all bad - until then they had never asked each | |
other about their work but all three had jobs which were very good | |
and held particularly good promise for the future. The greatest | |
improvement for the time being, of course, would be achieved quite | |
easily by moving house; what they needed now was a flat that was | |
smaller and cheaper than the current one which had been chosen by | |
Gregor, one that was in a better location and, most of all, more | |
practical. All the time, Grete was becoming livelier. With all the | |
worry they had been having of late her cheeks had become pale, but, | |
while they were talking, Mr. and Mrs. Samsa were struck, almost | |
simultaneously, with the thought of how their daughter was | |
blossoming into a well built and beautiful young lady. They became | |
quieter. Just from each other's glance and almost without knowing | |
it they agreed that it would soon be time to find a good man for | |
her. And, as if in confirmation of their new dreams and good | |
intentions, as soon as they reached their destination Grete was the | |
first to get up and stretch out her young body. | |
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka | |
Translated by David Wyllie. | |
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