The Stoker
Encyclopedia
"The Stoker" is a short story
Short story
A short story is a work of fiction that is usually written in prose, often in narrative format. This format tends to be more pointed than longer works of fiction, such as novellas and novels. Short story definitions based on length differ somewhat, even among professional writers, in part because...

 by Franz Kafka
Franz Kafka
Franz Kafka was a culturally influential German-language author of short stories and novels. Contemporary critics and academics, including Vladimir Nabokov, regard Kafka as one of the best writers of the 20th century...

. Kafka intended to include the story as the first chapter in a novel he did not complete; the novel was posthumously published under the title Amerika
Amerika (Kafka novel)
Amerika, also known as Der Verschollene or The Man Who Disappeared, is the incomplete first novel of author Franz Kafka, published posthumously in 1927...

.

Plot

The story begins as a sixteen-year-old boy named Karl Rossmann arrives at the New York harbor on a slow-moving ship. We are told that Karl has been sent to America "because a servant girl had seduced him and got herself with child by him."
As he is about to come ashore, he remembers that he has left his umbrella below deck. He asks a young man with whom he had been briefly acquainted during his voyage to watch over his trunk as he runs to get his umbrella.

The boy soon gets lost in the corridors and begins pounding on a door nearby. A gentleman lets him in and the two soon start having a conversation. The gentleman explains that he is a stoker and he works on the ship, but he is about to be fired because his boss (a Romanian
Romanians
The Romanians are an ethnic group native to Romania, who speak Romanian; they are the majority inhabitants of Romania....

named Schubal) has a preference toward Romanians (the ship and the stoker are both German). He goes on to explain that he has worked on a countless number of ships and has always been praised for his hard work.

Karl soon sympathizes with the stoker's story and pledges to help him. Together they go to see the captain of the ship, who is in an informal meeting with a few gentlemen. The stoker is at first allowed to enter the room, but is then asked to leave after the chief purser indicates that he is too busy to hear the stoker's case. As they are being shooed out of the room, Karl immediately runs across the room and grabs everyone's attention. He then explains that he believes the stoker has been done an injustice and that he needs to be listened to.

The captain steps forward and asks the stoker to make his case. The stoker, in return, begins describing the details of his case, but in a random and disorganized way. Karl intervenes and asks the stoker to be more organized and avoid unnecessary details. Right at this time Mr. Schubal comes in and dismisses any dishonesty on his part. He's accompanied by a number of witnesses waiting outside.

In the middle of all this a gentleman identifying himself as Mr. Jakob (a respectable Senator) asks Karl for his name. After recognizing Karl's name, he explains that he is actually Karl's uncle—that he had been informed of Karl's arrival through a letter by the maid who had earlier seduced Karl. Consequenly the focus of everyone's attention changes from the stoker to Karl and everyone begins congratulating the Senator for finding his nephew.

Karl tries to use his newly-found influence to gather some symphathy for the stoker's cause, but his uncle explains that it is really up to the captain what happens next. The captain, for his part, orders a boat lowered for the Senator and his nephew. In an emotional play (which leads to him weeping), Karl asks the stoker to stand up for himself and tell the truth before he leaves. His uncle then leads him away outside the room.

As Karl looks at the ship from his uncle's boat, he can see the windows of the office. Schubal's witnesses have filled the room and are waving the boat goodbye. There's no sign of the stoker. Karl wonders if his uncle will ever become as important to him as the stoker is.

External links

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