Reason must dictate that eventually at some
point, there must come a time when inmates of The Village have tried every way
there is to escape The Village. Of course that would not stop new arrivals from
making the same attempts. Because there can only be a certain number of ways to
try and escape. So then what, quiet acceptance of The Village? Anyone who is
thinking of escape could do no better than to ask Number 8 {the white Queen}
seeing as she’s helped others with their escape attempts. None of which ever
succeeded, but at least she knows what escape plans have been tried already.
Perhaps it might be amusing to see someone come up with a plan that’s been used
before and failed. Take Number 6’s plan in ‘Checkmate,’ he learned how to
distinguish between the warders and the prisoners from Number 14, who in all
probability tried that same plan himself. And was himself involved with Number
6’s plan. Number 14 may well have instigated the same plan, in having gathered
about him men he thought he could depend on. And yet the plan failed, perhaps
because he was betrayed, or let down in the same manner Number 6 was by the
Rook. And yet Number 14 went along with Number 6’s plan, because perhaps he
thought where he failed, Number 6
might well succeed. It must have been heart breaking for Number 14 to see the
plan fail a second time!
Be seeing you
"Reason must dictate that eventually at some point, there must come a time when inmates of The Village have tried every way there is to escape The Village"
ReplyDeleteReason must equally dictate that a lot of features of 'The Prisoner' are highly questionable, e.g. Rover, the clones, the shiftingly indefinite geographical location, the preprinted newspapers ...
'The Prisoner' is above being dictated to by reason.