“All Rise!” In single file, we justices entered the court and took our places on the bench, before us sat the accused; these architects of death. My eyes were drawn to just one of these men. He looked faintly Chaplinesque. He sat there, pale and palsied, along with Goering and the rest. He had been captured in Bavaria. ****** had thought to flee to his friends in South America, forsaking Germany.
Perhaps he thought the World would forget, and thus absolve him of his crimes. Now he faced the specter of the rope; There was no thought of ****** serving time. That was the likely fate of some of these men, Men like Donitz, Speer and Hess. Such men could age behind grey walls And live out lifetimes of regret.
Not for ******, their Fuhrer, for him only death sufficed. Though we would follow the forms of Justice, Most would vote to **** him twice. Perhaps his neck would be snapped by a rope on some cold grey future date. Perhaps a simple firing squad would be Herr ******’s fate. Perhaps he’d get a bar of soap and a threadbare linen towel. then hear the hiss of Zyklon B in the chambers he had styled.
I wondered how it came to this. He’d had the means and time. To put a pistol in his mouth And atone for all his crimes. He’d been fleeing from the Russians when he fell into allied hands. Those soldiers had shown great restraint, their sergeant great command. Now the little corporal sits in the dock, attentive to every word. We each now have our part to play in the theatre of the absurd.
In this poem of alternate history, the Supreme Court Associate Justice Robert H. Jackson contemplates the fate of the leader of the Third *****.