The narrator, driven by a sense of duty and mild guilt, goes to the city morgue to claim the body so it can be buried properly by Petrus and the family. But he is met with an impenetrable bureaucracy. The officials refuse to release the body without a permit from the pass office. He travels from office to office, facing indifference, rudeness, and paperwork. The pass office officials, who are white, care only about the legal status of Lucas’s pass, not about his death or the family’s grief.
The climax is deeply ironic and tragic. The narrator, defeated, returns and tells Petrus. He offers to buy a headstone for the unmarked pauper’s grave, but Petrus declines. Instead, Petrus asks for something else: He wants a proper family grave on the land where Lucas lived and died. six feet of the country by nadine gordimer summary
: Authorities take the body for an autopsy. Petrus and his family scrape together their meager savings for a proper burial. The Climax The narrator, driven by a sense of duty
The story is a masterclass in showing how apartheid works not only through overt violence but through bureaucracy. Pass laws, native commissioners, medical officers, public health regulations—these impersonal forces reduce a man’s deeply felt cultural and familial need (to bury his brother at home) into a series of administrative obstacles. The state does not need to be cruel to the narrator or Petrus; it simply needs to be indifferent. The final letter from the Secretary for Native Affairs is the perfect symbol of this: a typed, official, polite, and absolute denial of human dignity. He travels from office to office, facing indifference,