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The Green Mile
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Paul's Long Life and the Price of Sin

Paul Edgecomb's extreme longevity of 108 years is interpreted not as a simple flow of time but as a 'divine punishment' — a visualization of the eternal psychological burden he carries for having witnessed and then killing John Coffey's miracle. This longevity symbolizes the permanent psychological weight of guilt and the burden of salvation that form the film's core themes.

The Curse of the Miracle Witness: Paul Edgecomb's Longevity

Paul Edgecomb's longevity of 108 years is one of the work's most powerful and most sorrowful symbols. Rather than the physical passage of time, it is a device that visualizes the eternal psychological burden — the 'price of sin' — he came to carry by killing John Coffey's miracle. Paul does not regard his longevity as a blessing. Rather he accepts it as evidence of the guilt of being a witness to the truth — the process by which an innocent life is unjustly extinguished amid systemic absurdity — a truth he can never forget his whole life.

1. The Weight of Memory and the Flow of Time

The film proceeds with Paul recalling the events of 1935 to his nursing home friend Elaine Connelly in his old age. This flashback structure itself is directly connected to Paul's longevity. Paul is not simply telling the past — he endures the pain that the very fact of his survival is continuously re-enacting the past. His longevity is like being imprisoned in a 'prison of memory' where he must engrave in body and soul every emotional shock he endured — the healing power of John Coffey's miracle, the tragic death of Delacroix, and the enormous event of John's execution.

2. Divine Judgment and the Confession of Sin

This guilt reaches its peak in the scene where Paul directly confesses to John Coffey. Paul tells John: "When I die and I stand before God and He asks me why I killed one of His true miracles, what am I gonna say? That it was my job?" This dialogue clearly establishes that Paul's longevity is not simple survival but the act of waiting for judgment — for an ethical failure that occurred between his professional role and human compassion. John's answer — "Tell God the Father it was a kindness done" — gives Paul the most gentle, yet simultaneously most heart-wrenching pain.

3. The Paradoxical Symbolism of Survival

Paul's longevity shows the paradox of survival. He watches everyone around him die — including his beloved wife Jan. The fact that he alone survives creates the irony that he is both the greatest victim of the system that killed innocent John Coffey's miracle, and simultaneously the witness who must carry that sin forever. This symbolizes the guilt of a human who was powerless before the enormous absurdity of history — like Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor who sent an innocent man to the execution chamber.

4. Contrast with Mr. Jingles

This symbolism is further emphasized through contrast with another living creature. Del's pet circus mouse Mr. Jingles lives for more than 64 years as a portion of John's ability transfers to him. Mr. Jingles is small, helpless, and insignificant. Paul, by contrast, possesses a vast human body — yet that body is not free, weighed down by the heavy burden of guilt. Mr. Jingles's survival symbolizes the continuity of the miracle, while Paul's longevity symbolizes the eternal suffering of the one who took that miracle away.

Why It Matters

Paul's longevity setting proves that this film poses deep philosophical questions — it is not a simple prison thriller. His survival is living proof that 1930s Louisiana's deep-rooted racial discrimination and systemic bias destroyed an individual's conscience and human dignity before the enormous absurdity. Paul is a sinner who survives 'through memory,' and his anguish makes audiences reflect on 'What is justice?' and 'What must a witness do?' — completing the work's thematic consciousness.

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The Green Mile

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