Read Stanley Kubrick's A clockwork orange: based on the novel by Anthony Burgess Online
Authors: Stanley Kubrick; Anthony Burgess
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sign?"
"Most certainly I will sign," I said, "sir. And very many
thanks." So I was given an ink-pencil and I signed my name nice
and flowy. The Governor said:
"Right. That's the lot, I think." The Chief Chasso said:
"The Prison Chaplain would like a word with him, sir." So I
was marched out and off down the corridor towards the
Wing Chapel, tolchocked on the back and the gulliver all the
way by one of the chassos, but in a very like yawny and bored
manner. And I was marched across the Wing Chapel to the
little cantora of the charles and then made to go in. The
charles was sitting at his desk, smelling loud and clear of a fine
manny von of expensive cancers and Scotch. He said:
"Ah, little 6655321, be seated." And to the chassos: "Wait
outside, eh?" Which they did. Then he spoke in a very like
earnest way to me, saying: "One thing I want you to under-
stand, boy, is that this is nothing to do with me. Were it
expedient, I would protest about it, but it is not expedient.
There is the question of my own career, there is the question
of the weakness of my own voice when set against the shout
of certain more powerful elements in the polity. Do I make
myself clear?" He didn't, brothers, but I nodded that he did.
"Very hard ethical questions are involved," he went on. "You
are to be made into a good boy, 6655321. Never again will
you have the desire to commit acts of violence or to offend
in any way whatsoever against the State's Peace. I hope you
take all that in. I hope you are absolutely clear in your own
mind about that." I said:
"Oh, it will be nice to be good, sir." But I had a real hor-
rorshow smeck at that inside, brothers. He said:
"It may not be nice to be good, little 6655321. It may be
horrible to be good. And when I say that to you I realize how
self-contradictory that sounds. I know I shall have many
sleepless nights about this. What does God want? Does God
want woodness or the choice of goodness? Is a man who
chooses the bad perhaps in some ways better than a man who
has the good imposed upon him? Deep and hard questions,
little 6655321. But all I want to say to you now is this: if at
any time in the future you look back to these times and re-
member me, the lowest and humblest of all God's servitors,
do not, I pray, think evil of me in your heart, thinking me in
any way involved in what is now about to happen to you. And
now, talking of praying, I realize sadly that there will be little
point in praying for you. You are passing now to a region
where you will be beyond the reach of the power of prayer. A
terrible terrible thing to consider. And yet, in a sense, in
choosing to be deprive of the ability to make an ethical
choice, you have in a sense really chosen the good. So I shall
like to think. So, God help us all, 6655321, I shall like to
think." And then he began to cry. But I didn't really take much
notice of that, brothers only having a bit of a quiet smeck
inside, because you could viddy that he had been peeting away
at the old whisky, and now he took a bottle from a cupboard
in his desk and started to pour himself a real horrorshow
bolshy slog into a very greasy and grahzny glass. He downed
it and the said: "All may be well, who knows? God works in a
mysterious way." Then he began to sing away at a hymn in a
real loud rich goloss. Then the door opened and the chassos
came in to tolchock me back to my vonny cell, but the old
charles still went on singing this hymn.
Well, the next morning I had to say good-bye to the old
Staja, and I felt a malenky bit sad as you always will when you
have to leave a place you've like got used to. But I didn't go
very far, O my brothers. I was punched and kicked along to
the new white building just beyond the yard where we used to
do our bit of exercise. This was a very new building and it had
a new cold like sizy smell which gave you a bit of the shivers. I
stood there in the horrible bolshy bare hall and I got new
vons, sniffing away there with my like very sensitive morder or
sniffer. These were like hospital vons, and the chelloveck the
chassos handed me over to had a white coat on, as he might
be a hospital man. He signed for me, and one of the brutal
chassos who had brought nme said: "You watch this one, sir. A
right brutal bastard he has been and will be again, in spite of
all his sucking up to the Prison Chaplain and reading the
Bible." But this new chelloveck had real horrorshow blue glaz-
zies which like smiled when he govoreeted. He said:
"Oh, we don't anticipate any trouble. We're going to be
friends, aren't we?" And he smiled with his glazzies and his fine
big rot which was full of shining white zoobies and I sort of
took to this veck right away. Anyway, he passed me on to a
like lesser veck in a white coat, and this one was very nice
too, and I was led off to a very nice white clean bedroom with
curtains and a bedside lamp, and just the one bed in it, all for
Your Humble Narrator. So I had a real horrorshow inner
smeck at that, thinking I was really a very lucky young mal-
chickiwick. I was told to take off my horrible prison platties
and I was given a really beautiful set of pyjamas, O my
brothers, in plain green, the heighth of bedwear fashion. And I
was given a nice warm dressing-gown too and lovely toofles
to put my bare nogas in, and I thought: "Well, Alex boy, little
6655321 as was, you have copped it lucky and no mistake.
You are really going to enjoy it here."
After I had been given a nice chasha of real horrorshow
coffee and some old gazettas and mags to look at while peet-
ing it, this first veck in white came in, the one who had like
signed for me, and he said: "Aha, there you are," a silly sort of
a veshch to say but it didn't sound silly, this veck being so like
nice. "My name," he said, "is Dr. Branom. I'm Dr. Brodsky's
assistant. With your permission, I'll just give you the usual
brief overall examination." And he took the old stetho out of
his right carman. "We must make sure you're quite fit, mustn't
we? Yes indeed, we must." So while I lay there with my pyjama
top off and he did this, that and the other, I said:
"What exactly is it, sir, that you're going to do?"
"Oh," said Dr. Branom, his cold stetho going all down my
back, "it's quite simple, really. We just show you some films."
"Films?" I said. I could hardly believe my ookos, brothers,
as you may well understand. "You mean," I said, "it will be just
like going to the pictures?"
"They'll be special films," said Dr. Branom. "Very special
films. You'll be having the first session this afternoon. Yes," he
said, getting up from bending over me, "you seem to be quite a
fit young boy. A bit under-nourished perhaps. That will be the
fault of the prison food. Put your pyjama top back on. After
every meal," he said, sitting on the edge of the bed, "we shall be
giving you a shot in the arm. That should help." I felt really
grateful to this very nice Dr. Branom. I said:
"Vitamins, sir, will it be?"
"Something like that," he said, smiling real horrorshow and
friendly, "just a jab in the arm after every meal." Then he went
out. I lay on the bed thinking this was like real heaven, and I
read some of the mags they'd given me - 'Worldsport', 'Sinny'
(this being a film mag) and 'Goal'. Then I lay back on the bed
and shut my glazzies and thought how nice it was going to be
out there again, Alex with perhaps a nice easy job during the
day, me being now too old for the old skolliwoll, and then
perhaps getting a new like gang together for the nochy, and
the first rabbit would be to get old Dim and Pete, if they had
not been got already by the millicents. This time I would be
very careful not to get loveted. They were giving another like
chance, me having done murder and all, and it would not be
like fair to get loveted again, after going to all this trouble to
show me films that were going to make me a real good mal-
chick. I had a real horrorshow smeck at everybody's like
innocence, and I was smecking my gulliver off when they
brought in my lunch on a tray. The veck who brought it was
the one who'd led me to this malenky bedroom when I came
into the mesto, and he said:
"It's nice to know somebody's happy." It was really a very
nice appetizing bit of pishcha they'd laid out on the tray - two
or three lomticks of like hot roastbeef with mashed kartoffel
and vedge, then there was also ice-cream and a nice hot
chasha of chai. And there was even a cancer to smoke and a
matchbox with one match in. So this looked like it was the
life, O my brothers. Then, about half an hour after while I was
lying a bit sleepy on the bed, a woman nurse came in, a real
nice young devotchka with real horrorshow groodies (I had
not seen such for two years) and she had a tray and a hypo-
dermic. I said:
"Ah, the old vitamins, eh?" And I clickclicked at her but she
took no notice. All she did was to slam the needle into my
left arm, and then swishhhh in went the vitamin stuff. Then she
went out again, clack clack on her high-heeled nogas. Then
the white-coated veck who was like a male nurse came in with
a wheelchair. I was a malenky bit surprised to viddy that. I
said:
"What giveth then, brother? I can walk, surely, to wherever
we have to itty to." But he said:
"Best I push you there." And indeed, O my brothers, when I
got off the bed I found myself a malenky biy weak. It was the
under-nourishment like Dr. Branom had said, all that horrible
prison pishcha. But the vitamins in the after-meal injection
would put me right. No doubt at all about that, I thought.
4
Where I was wheeled to, brothers, was like no sinny I had ever
viddied before. True enough, one wall was all covered with
silver screen, and direct opposite was a wall with square holes
in for the projector to project through, and there were stereo
speakers stuck all over the mesto. But against the right-hand
one of the other walls was a bank of all like little meters, and
in the middle of the floor facing the screen was like a dentist's
chair with all lengths of wire running from it, and I had to like
crawl from the wheelchair to this, being given some help by
another like male nurse veck in a white coat. Then I noticed
that underneath the projection holes was like all frosted glass
and I thought I viddied shadows of like people moving behind
it and I thought I slooshied somebody cough kashl kashl
kashl. But then all I could like notice was how weak I seemed
to be, and I put that down to changing over from prison
pishcha to this new rich pishcha and the vitamins injected into