Thomas Mann: Disillusionment
THOMAS MANN
[1875-1955]
Thomas Mann was born in Litbeck, Germany, into a wealthy merchant fisnily. He wrote
his first novel, Buddenbrooks (1900), as a saga chronicling the rise of the family business
and exploring what was to become one of bis sunjor thematic preoceuparions—the conflict
between the artistic spirit and bourgeois values. Mann produced a series of important and
complex novels that included Doctor Faustus (1947), The Magic Mountain.(1924), and
the tebralagy Joseph and His Brothers, based on the biblical story of Joseph. After receiving
the Nobel Prise in Literature in 1929, Mann exiled himself from Germany with the rise
of the Nazis, moving initially to Switzerland and then later to the United States, where
he was granted citizenship in 1944.
Disillusionment
T confess that I was completely bewildered by the conversation which I had with this
extraordinary man. I am aftaid that I am even yet hardly in a state to report it in such
a way that i will affect others as it did me. Very likely the effect was largely due to the
candour and friendliness with which an entire stranger laid himself open to me.
It was some two months ago, on an autumnal afternoon, that I first noticed my
stranger on the Piazza di San Marco. Only a few people were abroad; but on the wide
square the standards flapped in the light sea-breeze in front of that sumptuots marvel
of colour and line which stood out with Iuminous enchantment against a tender
pale-blue sky. Directly before the centre portal a young girl stood strewing corti for a
host of pigeons at her feet, while more and more swooped down in clouds from all
sides. An incomparably blithe and festive sight.
[met him on the square and I have him in perfect clarity before my eye as T write.
He was rather under middle height and a little stooped, walking briskly and holding
his cane in his hands behind his back. He wore a stiff black hat, a light summer overcoat,
and dark striped trousers. For some reason I mistook him for an Englishman, He might
have been thirty years-old, he miight have been fifty, His face was smooth-shaven, with
a thickish nose and tired grey eyes; round his mouth played constantly an inexplicable
and somewhat simple smile. But from time to time he would look searchingly about
him, then stare upon the ground, mutter a few words to himself, give his head a shake
and fall to smiling again. In this fashion he marched perseveringly up and down the
square.
‘After that first time I noticed him daily; for he seemed to have no other business
than to pace up and down, thirty, forty, or fifty times, in good weather and bad, always
alone and always with that extraordinary bearing of his,
~ On the evening which I mean to describe there had been a concert by-a military
band. I was sitting at one of the little tables which spread out into the piazza from
737738 SHORT STORIES
Mlorian’s caf; and when after the concert the concourse of people had begun to
> disperse, my unknown, with his accustomed absent. smile, sat down in a seat left vacant
near me, .
“The evening drew on, the scene grew quicter and quieter, soon al the tables were
GaP” Hardly any strollers were left, the majestie square was wrapped in peace, the
hy above it thick with stars; a great hal moon hung above the splendid spectacular
fagade of San Marco.
Thad been reading my paper, with my back to my neighbour, and was about to
Surrender the field to him when I was obliged instead to turn in his direction Fey
‘whereas I had not beard a single sound, he now suddenly began to speak,
“You are in Venice for the first time, sir?” he asked, in bad French, When Tessayed
{2 answer in English he went on in good Getman, speaking in alow, husky voice sad
coughing often to clear it.
Tou ate secing allthis for the fist time? Does it come up to your expectations?
Surpasses them, eh? You did not picture it as finer than the reality? You mean ie Yen
would not say so in order to seem happy and enviable? Ah!” He leaned back and looked
at me, blinking rapidly with a quite inexplicable expression.
The ensuing pause lasted for some time. I did not know how to go on with ths
{Do you know, my dear sit, what disillusionment is?” he asked in low, urgent
‘ones, both hands leaning on his stick. “Not a miscarriage in small, important
imatiers bur the great and general disappointment which everything, al of life has in
store? No, of course, you do not know. But from my youth up I have carried it kone
‘with me; it has made me lonely, unhappy, and a bit queer, Ido not deny that,
“You could not, of course, understand what I mean, all at once. But you might;
1 beg of you to listen tome fora few minutes. For ifitcan be told at allt cmb la
without many words. :
rena begin by saying that I grew up in a clergyman’s family, in quite a small
town. ‘There reigned in our home a punctilious cleanliness and the pathevie optimism
of the scholarly atmosphere, We breathed a strange atmosphere, compact of pulpit
rhetoric, of large words for good and evil, beautiful and base, which T bitterly hate,
since pethaps they are to blame for all my sufferings.
“For me life consisted utterly of those large words; for knew no more of it than
the infinite, insubstantial emotions which they called up in me. From man I expected
divine virtue or hair-raising wickedness; from life cither ravishing loveliness or cke
consummate horror; and Iwas full of avidity forall that and of a profound, tormented
yearning for @ larger reality, for experience of no matter what kind, let it be glorious
and intoxicating bliss or unspeakable, undreamed-of anguish, :
He enemas, st, with painfal cleamess the fist disappointment of my lifes and 1
"oul beg You to observe that it had not at all to do with the miscarriage of some
cherished hope, but with an unfortunate occurrence. ‘There was « fire at night in my
Rarents\ house, when Iwas hardly more than a child. It had spread insidiously unt
Je whole small storey was in flames up to my chamber door, and the stairs would sncm
have been on fire as well. I discovered it frst, and I remember thet I were rushing
through the house shouting over and over: ‘Fite, fire!” Iknow exactly what Teed ang
SeThomas Mann: Disillusionment
what feeling underlay the words, though at the time it could scarcely have come to the
surface of my consciousness. ‘So this,’ I thought, ‘is a fire. This is what itis like to have
the house on fire. Is this all there is to it?”
“Goodness knows it was serious enough. The whole house burned down, the
family was only saved with difficulty, and I got some burns, And it would be wrong to
say that my fancy could have painted anything much worse than the actual burning of
my parents’ house. Yet some vague, formless idea ofan event even more frightful must
have existed somewhere within me, by comparison with which the reality seemed flat.
This fire was the first great event in my life. It left me defrauded of my hope of
fearfialness.
“Do not fear lest I go on to recount my disappointments to you irtdetail. Enough
10 tell you that I zealously fed my magnificent expectations of life with the matter of
a thousand books and the works of all the poets. Ah, how J have learned to hate them,
those poets who chalked up their large words on all the walls of life—because they had
no power to write them on the sky with pencils dipped in Vesuvius! I came to think of
every large word as a lie or a mockery.
“Bestatic poets have said that speech is:poor: ‘Ah, how poor are words,’ so they
sing. But no, sir. Speech, it seems to me, is rich, is extravagantly rich compared with
the poverty and limitations of life. Pain has its limits: physical pain in unconsciousness
and mental in torpor; it is not different with joy, Our human need for communication
has found itself'a way to create sounds which lic beyond these limits,
“Is the fault mine? Is it down rhy spine alone that certain words can run so as to
awaken in me intuitions of sensations which do not exist?
“J went out into that supposedly so wonderful life, craving just one, one single
experience which should correspond to my great expectations. God help me, I have
never had it. I have roved the globe over, seen all the best-praised sights, all the works
of art upon which have been lavished the most extravagant words. I have stood in front
of these and said to myself: ‘It is beautiful. And yét—is that all? Is it no more beautifi
than that?”
“T have no sense of actualities, Perhaps that is the trouble. Once, somewhere in
the world, I stood by a deep, narrow gorge in the mountains. Bare rock went up
perpendicular on either side, and far below the water roared past. I looked down and
thought to myself: ‘What if I were to fall?” But I knew myself well enough to answer:
“If that were to happen you would say to yourself as you fell: “Now you are falling, you
are actually falling. Well, and what of i”
“You may believe me that I do not speak without experience of life. Years ago I
fell in love with a girl, a charming, gentle creature, whom it would have been my joy
to protect and cherish. Butshe loved me not, which was not surprising, and she married
another. What other experience can be so painfuul as this? What tortures are greater
than the dry agonics of bafiled lust? Many a night I lay wide-eyed and wakeful; yet my
greatest torture resided in the thought: ‘So this is the greatest pain we can suffer. Well,
and what then—is this all?”
+ “Shall I go on to tell you of my happiness? For I have had my happiness as well
and it too has been a disappointment. No, I need not go on; for no heaping up of bald
examples can make clearer to you that it is life in general, life in its dull, uninteresting,
average course which has disappointed me—disappointed, disappointed!
739v—e
740 SHORT STORIES
. “What is man? asks young Werther—man, the glorious half-god? Do not his
powers fail him just where he needs them most? Whether he soars upwards in joy or
sinks down in anguish, is he not always brought back to bald, cold consciousness
precisely at the point where he seeks to lose himself in the fullness of the infinite?
“Often I have thought of the day when I gazed for the first time at the sea. The
sea is vast, the sea is wide, my eyes roved far and wide and longed to be free. But there
was the horizon. Why a horizon, when I wanted the infinite from life?
“Jt may be narrower, my horizon, than that of other men. I have said that I lack
a sense of actualities—perhaps it is that I have too much. Perhaps I am too soon full,
perhaps I am too soon done with things, Am I acquainted in too adulterated a.form
with both joy and pain? :
“T do not believe it; and least of all do I believe in those whose views of life are
based on the great words of the pocts—it is all lies and poltroonery. And you may have
observed, my dear sir, that there are human beings so vain and so greedy of the
admiration and envy of others that they pretend to have experienced the heights of
i happiness but never the depths of pain?
| “Tt is dark and you have almost ceased to listen to me; so I can the more easily
confess that I too have tried to be like these men and make myself appear happy in my
ow8 and others’ eyes, But it is some years since that the bubble of this vanity was
pricked. Now Iam alone, unhappy, and a little queer, I do not deny it.
“It is my favourite occupation to gaze at the starry heavens at night—that being
the best way to turn my eyes away from earth and from life. And perhaps it may be
pardoned in me that I still cling to my distant hopes? That I dream ofa freer life, where
the actuality of my fondest anticipations is revealed to be without any torturing residue
of disillusionment? Ofa life where there are no more horizons?
“So I dream and wait for death. Ah, how well I know it already, death, that ast
disappointment! At my last moment I shall be saying to myself: ‘So this is the great
experience—well, and what of it? What is it after al?”
“But it has grown cold here on the piazza, sir—that I can still feel—ha ha! I have
the honour to bid you a very good night.”
[1896]
KATHERINE MANSFIELD
| [1888-1923]
Katherine Mansfield was born in New Zealand and began writing at an early age.
During her London university years she edited the school literary magazine and returned
briefly to New Zealand, only to leave it permanently rwo years later, Living in London 05
a struggling writer, she drew on personal experiences for the materialin her first short-story
collection, In a German Pension (1911). Meeting the critic John Middleton Murry was
«a turning point in her career. She reviewed and edited for him on various magazines, In
1920 her collection, Bliss, and Other Stories, brought her critical acclaim; three more