47 pages • 1 hour read
Arthur KoestlerA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In Chapter 9, we learn through a series of flashbacks where exactly Rubashov saw the Pietà. He was at a secret meeting at a “picture gallery of a town in southern Germany on a Monday afternoon” in 1933 (31), a week before his first arrest. Rubashov is meeting with Richard, a nineteen-year-old Party member whose pregnant, seventeen-year-old wife has been arrested for their subversive activities. Despite this sacrifice and Richard’s desperation, Rubashov has come to tell him that he has been ousted from the Party for not distributing the approved Party materials. Throughout their conversation, Rubashov tries to see around Richard’s head to the Pietà on the wall behind him, but can only see “the Madonna’s thin hands, curved upwards, hollowed to the shape of a bowl” (34). He leaves the gallery without seeing the picture in full. When he leaves Richard, he gets into a taxi whose driver is sympathetic to the Party. The driver does not charge Rubashov for the ride and tells Rubashov that he is also willing to help Richard if he needs it. Instead of accepting the free ride and shaking the man’s hand, Rubashov pays him “without a word” (49) and heads into the train station.