THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE - 1946
Price Presentation by Anders Österling, Permanent
Secretary of the
Swedish
Academy
This year's Nobel Prize in literature has been awarded to a writer of
German origin who has had wide critical acclaim and who has created
his work regardless of public favour. The sixty-nine-year-old Hermann
Hesse can look back on a considerable achievement consisting of
novels, short stories, and poems, partly available in Swedish
translation.
He escaped from political pressure earlier than other German writers
and, before the First World War, settled in Switzerland where he
acquired citizenship in 1924. It should not be overlooked, however,
that his extraction as well as his personal connections had always
justified Hesse in considering himself as much Swiss as German. His
asylum in a country that was neutral during the war allowed him to
continue his important literary work in relative quiet, and at present
Hesse, together with
Mann,
is the best representative of the German cultural heritage in
contemporary literature.
With Hesse, more than with most writers, one has to know his personal
background to understand the rather surprising components that make up
his personality. He comes from a strictly pietist Swabian family. His
father was a well-known church historian, his mother the daughter of a
missionary. She was of Swabian-French descent and was educated in
India. It was taken for granted that Hermann would become a minister,
and he was sent to the seminary at the
cloister of Maulbronn.
He ran away, became an apprentice to a watchmaker, and later worked in
bookshops in Tübingen and Basle.
The youthful rebellion against the inherited piety that nonetheless
always remained in the depth of his being, was repeated in a painful
inner crisis, when in 1914 as a mature man and an acknowledged master
of regional literature he went new ways which were far removed from
his previous idyllic paths. There are, briefly, two factors that
caused this profound change in Hesse's writings.
The first was, of course, the World War. When at its beginning he
wanted to speak some words of peace and contemplation to his agitated
colleagues and in his pamphlet used Beethoven's motto, «O Freunde,
nicht diese Töne», he aroused a storm of protest. He was savagely
attacked by the German press and was apparently deeply shocked by this
experience. He took it as evidence that the entire civilization of
Europe in which he had so long believed was sick and decaying.
Redemption had to come from beyond the accepted norms, perhaps from
the light of the East, perhaps from the core hidden in anarchic
theories of the resolution of good and evil in a higher unity. Sick
and doubt-ridden, he sought a cure in the psychoanalysis of Freud,
eagerly preached and practised at that time, which left lasting traces
in Hesse's increasingly bold books of this period.
This personal crisis found its magnificent expression in the
fantastical novel Der Steppenwolf (1927) [Steppenwolf],
an inspired account of the split in human nature, the tension between
desire and reason in an individual who is outside the social and moral
notions of everyday life. In this bizarre fable of a man without a
home, hunted like a wolf, plagued by neuroses, Hesse created an
incomparable and explosive book, dangerous and fateful perhaps, but at
the same time liberating by its mixture of sardonic humour and poetry
in the treatment of the theme. Despite the prominence of modern
problems Hesse even here preserves a continuity with the best German
traditions; the writer whom this extremely suggestive story recalls
most is E. T. A. Hoffmann, the master of the Elixiere des Teufels.
Hesse's maternal grandfather was the famous Indologist Gundert. Thus
even in his childhood the writer felt drawn to Indian wisdom. When as
a mature man he travelled to the country of his desire he did not,
indeed, solve the riddle of life; but the influence of Buddhism soon
entered his thought, an influence by no means restricted to
Siddhartha (1922 ) the beautiful story of a young Brahman's search
for the meaning of life on earth.
Hesse's work combines so many influences from Buddha and St. Francis
to Nietzsche and Dostoevsky that one might suspect that he is
primarily an eclectic experimenter with different philosophies. But
this opinion would be quite wrong. His sincerity and his seriousness
are the foundations of his work and remain in control even in his
treatment of the most extravagant subjects.
In his most accomplished novellas we are confronted both directly and
indirectly with his personality. His style, always admirable, is as
perfect in rebellion and demonic ecstasy as in calm philosophical
speculation. The story of the desperate embezzler Klein, who flees to
Italy to seek there his last chance, and the marvellously calm
description of his late brother Hans in the Gedenkblätter
(1937) [Reminiscences] are masterly examples from different fields of
creativity.
In Hesse's more recent work the vast novel Das Glasperlenspiel
(1943) [Magister Ludi] occupies a special position. It is a
fantasy about a mysterious intellectual order, on the same heroic and
ascetic level as that of the Jesuits, based on the exercise of
meditation as a kind of therapy. The novel has an imperious structure
in which the concept of the game and its role in civilization has
surprising parallels with the ingenious study Homo ludens by
the Dutch scholar Huizinga. Hesse's attitude is ambiguous. In a period
of collapse it is a precious task to preserve the cultural tradition.
But civilization cannot be permanently kept alive by turning it into a
cult for the few. If it is possible to reduce the variety of knowledge
to an abstract system of formulas, we have on the one hand proof that
civilization rests on an organic system; on the other, this high
knowledge cannot be considered permanent. It is as fragile and
destructible as the glass pearls themselves, and the child that finds
the glittering pearls in the rubble no longer knows their meaning. A
philosophical novel of this kind easily runs the risk of being called
recondite, but Hesse defended his with a few gentle lines in the motto
of the book, «...then in certain cases and for irresponsible men it
may be that non-existent things can be described more easily and with
less responsibility in words than the existent, and therefore the
reverse applies for pious and scholarly historians; for nothing
destroys description so much as words, and yet there is nothing more
necessary than to place before the eyes of men certain things the
existence of which is neither provable nor probable, but which, for
this very reason, pious and scholarly men treat to a certain extent as
existent in order that they may be led a step further toward their
being and their becoming.»
If Hesse's reputation as a prose writer varies, there has never been
any doubt about his stature as a poet. Since the death of Rilke and
George he has been the foremost German poet of our time. He combines
exquisite purity of style with moving emotional warmth, and his
musical form is unsurpassed in our time. He continues the tradition of
Goethe, Eichendorff, and Mörike and renews its poetic magic by a
colour peculiar to himself. His collection of poems, Trost der
Nacht (1929) [The Solace of Night], mirrors with unusual clarity
not only his inner drama, his healthy and sick hours, and his intense
self-examination, but also his devotion to life, his pleasure in
painting, and his worship of nature. A later collection, Neue
Gedichte (1937) [New Poems], is full of autumnal wisdom and
melancholy experience, and it shows a heightened sensibility in image,
mood, and melody.
In a summary introduction it is impossible to do justice to the many
changing qualities which make this writer particularly attractive to
us and which have justly given him a faithful following. He is a
problematic and a confessional poet with the wealth of the South
German mind, which he expresses in a very individual mixture of
freedom and piety. If one overlooked the passionate tendency to
protest, the ever-burning fire that makes the dreamer a fighter as
soon as the matters at stake are sacred to him, one might call him a
romantic poet. In one passage Hesse says that one must never be
content with reality, that one should neither adore nor worship it,
for this low, always disappointing, and desolate reality cannot be
changed except by denying it through proving our superior strength.
Hesse's award is more than the confirmation of his fame. It honours a
poetic achievement which presents throughout the image of a good man
in his struggle, following his calling with rare faithfulness, who in
a tragic epoch succeeded in bearing the arms of true humanism.
Unfortunately, reasons of health have prevented the poet from making
the journey to Stockholm. In his stead the envoy of the Swiss Federal
Republic will accept the Prize.
Your Excellency, I ask you now to receive from the hands of His
Majesty the King the Prize awarded by the Swedish Academy to your
countryman, Hermann Hesse.
From
Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1901-1967. (In Daten redigierte Fassung) |