PART I: CHILDHOOD
BOOK
II, Part 2 of 2
| BOOK I |
| I. pt.1 |
"If, in a state of prenatal existence..." (p.15) |
| I. pt.2 |
"I must have been about twelve years old..." (p.35) |
| I. pt.3 |
"I was given my instructions..." (p.54) |
| BOOK II |
| II. pt.1 |
"My earliest distinct and undoubted memory..." (p.74) |
| II. pt.2 |
"Whenever she talked to me of my father..." (p.93) |
CHILDHOOD -- Page 93
Whenever she talked
to me of my father, and the occasions became more and more frequent, she
did so in a conciliatory spirit, as if she wished to win me back to him.
His very serious short-comings she began to put down to temper rather than
to innate defects. He was self-willed, headstrong, subject to sudden bursts
of uncontrollable anger, true; he had never been checked in life; he lacked
the imagination to place himself in the position of others; but at bottom,
she said, he meant well. The worst about him was that he was "impractical".
This sounded all the stranger to me since it was
at about this time that, my mother's reserves breaking down under the pressure
of illness, I had the first hints of an early conflict in her own life. She became
less reticent and, on occasion, spoke bitterly of her own father. I pieced the
fragments together. It seemed that, in her girlhood, there had been three men:
an Austrian who held a high rank in the army; my father; and a third man whom,
incredibly, I seemed to recognize as my "Uncle Jacobsen". So that, - I said to
myself, was the relaltion between "us" and "Uncle Jacobsen". She never named
him, though. To all three my grandfather had objected violently: to the Austrian
because he was Austrian and, therefore, unstable and weak in character; to my
father because he considered him a spendthrift; to the third man because, at
the time, he had been penniless, a mere employee in a great commercial firm at
Hamburg; to all three because they had not been of his picking for her, besides
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94
being foreigners. My father, being
of English descent himself, had been the least foreign;
and so, after a violent struggle, he had carried the
day. All of which was completely bewildering to me;
I could not see the importance of it: what did the
choice of a husband matter? But my worship of my mother
was still sufficiently recent to me to make me vow,
when, in a tearful exchange of confidences, she urged
me, that I, for one, would never marry. Thus I replied
to her warnings; for, strange to say, she kept warning
me against women. In women she saw the great danger
to men; in men, to women. And I, being still at the
stage when boys have little but contempt for girls,
readily fell in with her plans as she painted for me
her ideal of a happy old age for herself: she would
be living with me, directing my household, ceasing
to do so only with death. I should be a middle-aged
man, then, like Uncle Jacobsen, beyond the temptations
of early manhood. Women, she said one day, make a man
weak.
In discussing my father, she remained dispassionate
and impartial; in some things she went so far as to blame herself. It was true,
according to her, my father had no sense of property. Where the use of money
was concerned, he had no inhibitions. Money, to him, had only one use: to secure,
out of life, as much pleasure as he could, as much pleasure as a human life could
hold. But even in that, she pronounced the, to me, shocking judgment that it
was more the fault of the women who would not leave him alone than his own fault.
Above all, she repeated over and over again, he was impractical. He could never
hold what he had; much less could he make his money work for him. He was a spender.
His father, she told me, had been a man who acquired; a man who built up; a man
who made money. It was a new idea
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 95
to me that money might have to be
made, even by such as we. So far, the possession of
acquired wealth, in contradistinction to wealth that
had been inherited, had been something rather which,
in the balance of character, had stood on the debit
side. This new view, of the necessity of earning or
making money, seemed to imply a complete reversal even
in my mother's attitude. It was only later that I came
to see the reason for this reversal: she, having, at
the time of her first operation for cancer, made a
new deal with her father, was now nearing the end of
the resources secured by that deal: she, too, was impractical;
she, too, had been living grotesquely beyond her means;
for years, to keep up her mode of life, she had been
living on capital, first taking a little, then, as
interest and dividends dwindled, more; and then still
more. Seeing the end of her financial independence
coming, feeling herself unable to stave off ruin, hoping
against hope, perhaps, that she was not going to live
to see the end of her resources, and yet hanging on
to life as the supreme and perhaps only good, she looked
about among her intimates and saw only one who, having
had nothing, now had much, Uncle Jacobsen, who, so
I inferred, had remained single on her account. Of
the approaching ruin I knew nothing at the time, of
course; though even then I overheard little snatches
of conversation between her and Uncle Jacobsen from
which I inferred that she was entrusting him with certain
financial transactions; that she was, at last, handing
over to him the management of her affairs; and I also
inferred, without as yet fully grasping the significance
of the fact, that these financial transactions consisted,
on the whole, of the sale of securities.
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OF MYSELF -- Page 96
At
last she openly broached the question of a future career
for me; and to my amazement and consternation she told
me of her wish that, the moment I reached the full
age of sixteen, I was to enter Uncle Jacobsen's business
as a sort of apprentice. At the age of sixteen! Within
a few months! That meant that I was to break off my
education before I could even feel that I had really
started upon it. So I was not to be a student, a scholar.
All my dreams, my ambitions, my efforts were to go
for nothing. I faced an abyss.
Much rather be a nurseryman, as my father's father
had been; much rather be a farmer - a farmer with an education which enabled
him to devote his leisure to the enjoyment of great literature, music, and art.
I knew that my father, during the intervals between our visits at Thurow, had
spent a considerable fraction of his time abroad, like ourselves. At least once
he had been at Paris when we were there: at the time of my fourteenth birthday.
I also knew that he did not go to Paris for the purpose of study; he went there
to have sumptuous dinners at Paillard's, Voisin's, and at the Tour d'Argent.
I at least suspected that he did not take these dinners alone but in gay company;
he was well-known in Paris and London, and even in Berlin which he disliked;
he was known as a fast liver and a furious spender. If he could do such things,
why should not I be able to do the other thing? For already the desire had sprung
up in me to be one day counted among the great poets or writers.
At last I spoke to my mother about this plan. Why
not let me follow my father as the squire of Thurow?
She did not answer at once; she took several days
to think it over; she had begun to see that there lay a strug-
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 97
gle ahead. I was no longer her little
boy; I was a young man with a will of my own; she would
have to reason with me.
It was not an easy task; she had never been one
to reason. She had been used to say, "Do this", and to see it done. It had not
only been the power of money, though that had no doubt entered into it. Above
all, she had, in the past, only had to appear to find everybody bowing. It had
been her bearing, her beauty. I remember an occasion when, at Paris, a gown had
been submitted to her in some great dress-making establishment of world-wide
reputation. That gown had been made for her: her dimensions had always made it
impossible for her to wear "models". It was laid out, on a sort of counter or
large table, for her inspection. But it had not met with her approval. She frowned
angrily, the bulge in her forehead, due to the horse's kick, burning red; and
then she had pushed the gown contemptuously from her, so that it slipped to the
floor. The "madame" behind the counter, herself of formidable proportions, bowed
with a green smile, looking at one of her assistants. "Enlevez-le," she
muttered and then proceeded, unruffled, to display other things. No doubt the
price of what my mother ultimately bought had included the cost of the rejected
gown.
On another occasion which I remember, we, five
of us, were standing in the station at Milan, with piles of baggage at our feet,
momentarily deserted by our porters, when the departure of the train which we
were to take was announced. Only Herr Niemoeller, my tutor, was there to carry
a small fraction of those hand-bags. In spite of the fact that two whole compartments
were reserved for us, there was danger of our missing that
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OF MYSELF -- Page 98
train. My mother turned to two passers-by,
tradesmen very likely, or possibly even professional
men - they had the proud bearing of the Italian bourgeois
- and said briefly, "Signori, I have to catch that
train. Will you oblige me?" And she pointed to the
pile of bags. The men gave her a peculiar look; I still
see it; but they did as they were bidden; for my mother's
tone had not been that of a mere request. Between them
they, Herr Niemoeller and I picked it all up and carried
it over to our compartments. My mother thanked them,
of course, but by no means effusively. The last moment
the porters came running, protesting loudly and insolently,
claiming their fees. "There is plenty of time, signora,
plenty of time," they said; but the train was moving
already; and my mother gave them nothing but a withering
look.
No, my mother had never reasoned; but with me,
her darling boy, she could not assume the attitude of command.
Again and again she pursued an indirect course,
telling me about my father. She told me that he had run through two fortunes,
confidently expecting that he would be able to run through a third. How, at present,
he was keeping things going, she did not know.
At last it was I who objected that these fortunes
had had to be made; or he could not have run through them.
That, she had already admitted; but she repeated
that it was not he who had made them; and for the first time she told me that,
on the father's side, I came of peasant stock. My great-grandfather had laid
the foundations, in Kent, by dealing in hops, in addition to farming, and by
beginning to grow nursery stock. My grandfather had been an exceedingly shrewd
man; he had seen the
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 99
opening for this nursery trade in
the Baltic. Even he had already been inclined to spend
lavishly; or he would never have acquired Thurow which
had cost hundreds of thousands. But chance had favoured
him; he had secured the great government contracts
from Sweden, Germany, and Russia. But at last the flow
of money from that source was drying up; the demand
had been supplied. No, to be a successful farmer, the
first thing needed was money; more money; money all
the time. Farming was well enough when one were either
rich to begin with or went into it after one had made
his pile at something else. She bade me look at Uncle
Jacobsen who owned a business with ramifications at
London, Le Havre, New York, Rio, Valparaiso. He would
help me; would send me into the new world for a few
years; that was the reason why she had insisted on
my learning Spanish. If I entered his business, I could
feel sure that I should be promoted as fast as possible,
for her sake. Within ten years, he had said, I might
be a junior partner in the firm; when the time came
for him to retire, which would be in some twenty or
twenty-five years, he would turn the whole concern
over to me. When I exclaimed at the figure of twenty-five
years, she smiled wanly: when I came to be her age,
I should understand that twenty-five years were nothing
to speak of: I should be only forty or forty-one, a
young man still. Meanwhile I should see German trade
expanding over the world; Germany was the country of
the future; the opportunities for a young man with
my knowledge of languages were unlimited; there was
no telling how far I might not go. Uncle Jacobsen was
the only true friend she had; the only one on whom
she could really [sic]; one day he would adopt me.
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OF MYSELF -- Page 100
She
had no idea how deeply she shocked me. Being adopted
by someone else was tantamount to giving up my identity;
and, so far, I was proud of being myself. But, like
her, I did not answer at once.
We were in Berlin at the time; and I was attending
a so-called Realgymnasiurn, which meant a secondary school in which Latin was
taught only to the extent to which it was useful in the teaching of modems. The
chief stress was laid on mathematics, science, English and French. Mr. Niemoeller
had at last been dismissed; I did not need to be supervised any longer. During
the lessons in English and French I was free; my teachers did not speak either
language with the fluency and idiomatic correctness which I commanded. Annette
was resuming her function as my mother's maid, the only servant that was retained,
though, once a week, there was still a gathering in the drawing-room - a gathering
which, with some stretch of the term, could still be called brilliant though
it had taken on a tinge of Bohemia. We occupied a furnished apartment of six
or eight rooms, with a fine view on the Tiergarten, the chief park of the city
- an expensive apartment. Yet even I could see that our social life was much
reduced. On occasion, when I saw my mother nervous over some trifling expenditure
to which formerly she would not have given a thought, I began to feel the chill
air of a coming disaster.
Nor could I shut my eyes to the fact that my mother
was getting heavy, almost unwieldy; and that at a rate which could not be explained
by the normal process of her ageing; her face was often lined and hollow; she
was losing her beauty; she still had her moments of magnificence in which men
went wild over her; but they were becoming rare. One day I came home and found
her
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 101
convulsed with laughter: a very
young man, attaché at one of the legations,
had proposed marriage to her; and it did sound funny;
but there was a trace of hysteria in her mirth. I,
of course, could not read the signs; I knew nothing
of illness and death; but her physician did. I am afraid
I found her passionate pleading with me simply importunate.
When, after several days, I did speak, I became
at once aware of her profound disappointment at my not falling readily in with
her arguments. She had assumed that her reasoning was irrefutable and final.
I told her that my ultimate desire was to be a writer; the road to that, in my
opinion, lay through a career as a scholar.
She bit her lips. "My dear, boy," she said at last, "I
wish I could agree. But are you aware of what that implies?"
"Perhaps not altogether," I replied. "At least
I don't know what you refer to, Mother."
"If I am to put you through a university career," she
said with shattering emphasis, "I must either return to your father and live
on him, using what little I have left for you; or I must get a divorce and marry
again; that is, marry money, not a man. Your grandfather advised that course
when I saw him last before his death."
I was appalled. The word divorce still had a sinister
sound at the time; and a new marriage would be as bad, for me, as an adoption
by Uncle Jacobsen. "Marry again!" I exclaimed with something like terror and
something like scorn in my voice.
This piqued her. She remained silent for a while.
Then she smiled at me, with a ghastly attempt at coquetry which was more revealing
than any amount of words could have been. "You don't know, of course," she
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OF MYSELF -- Page 102
said, "that, since I left your father,
amicably, fifteen, sixteen years ago, I have had at
least a score of offers?"
I was still more appalled.
"Mother," I said, trying to lead away from that
topic, "I know you want to do the best you can for me . . ."
"Of course," she interrupted. "But you don't realize.
Let me tell you, then; I am ruined."
This "of course" put an end to all my pleas, at
least for the moment.
And now I came to another conclusion: somehow my
mother seemed to assume that I could avert her ruin by adopting a commercial
career; as if the pittance I might earn as a beginner were sufficient to support,
not only me but her as well. I had some idea of what such beginners were paid;
it was less than I had been used to spend as my pocket money. Frankly, I did
not know what to do. In this dilemma I thought more and more of my uncle Jacobsen,
but in a sense different from that suggested by my mother.
Within a comparatively short time there followed
the first of the three great nightmares of my life.
One day I made the suggestion. If things were as
bad as my mother tried to make out, why not ask Uncle Jacobsen, who was wealthy,
to step into the breach?
"Oh!" she cried in an agony so intense that it
pierced even my egotism. "Don't you see, child? I've sent him a wire this morning
to come and to help me in doing what has to be done. But as for money... Don't
you understand that I can ask him to do almost anything for you; but that I can't
ask him to do a thing for me? That I couldn't accept if he offered."
I did not understand; I was obtuse, I grant; but
I was only sixteen.
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 103
"How
about Father?" I asked at last.
"Do you want me to go back to Thurow? It was on
your account that I left it."
I am afraid I was impatient; I was preoccupied
with my own problems, "What do you intend to do, then, Mother?" I asked. My own
problems would have to wait, I supposed; and anyway, this was not the moment
to bother my mother.
"It isn't a question of intention or wish any longer," she
cried. "It's a question of necessity." For the first time in her life she gave
way completely. She burst into tears and exclaimed at the injustice which life
had dealt her. "If only my father were alive!" she groaned at last.
I looked at her in consternation.
Her hysteria subsided; she was drying her tears. "I'll
tell you exactly," she said. "Perhaps you'll understand then. I am going to rent
the apartment next to this and conduct a boarding-house."
The bottom fell out of my world.
However, the struggle between me and my mother
went on unabated, none the less bitter because it now became silent.
I was leading my classes at school. Since I had
for years not had to take moderns, mathematics had always been my strong point;
I was intensely interested in the sort of science which was taught, physics and
chemistry. In my type of school, therefore, progress was a walkover. I did my
written assignments, of course; and that took a modicum of my time - time, not
exertion. I never really worked at my school tasks; my memory was phenomenal.
So I had much leisure outside of school hours; but I concealed the fact: I worked
at my Greek
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OF MYSELF -- Page 104
instead. By this time I had firmly
made up my mind, if we remained in Germany, to transfer,
for my final year at school, to a gymnasium where the
classics stood in the centre of the curriculum. If
I did that, I should be five or six years behind in
Greek: not in reading but in grammar and so-called
composition which was really translation into Greek.
Now, I was not in the least interested in these aspects
of the language; I wanted to be able to read Greek;
and I was able to do so; I had taught myself, by reading.
But there were teachers in my Realschule who knew better;
and one or two of them gave me a little time, when
a spare period of mine coincided with one of theirs,
to drill me in declensions and conjugations. Just how
much my mother knew or divined of this, I cannot tell
at this distance of time.
At last Uncle Jacobsen came. When my mother had
sent her wire, he had been at New York.
There were no excursions this time, no athletics.
He remained closeted with my mother for many hours. When he took me aside, he
did so only to impart to me final decisions arrived at.
Instead of renting the apartment adjoining the
one which we occupied, my mother surrendered her lease, being lucky in having
the chance to do so. She rented the whole, large ground floor of a nearby house
and furnished it. A huge black and gold sign was fastened up along the balconies
which jutted from its front. "Internationale Pension", it read. A not inconsiderable
staff of servants was hired; and within two weeks the establishment was opened.
Uncle Jacobsen was the first to rent a suite, if
only for a few days; and while he remained at Berlin, he was indefatigably busy
in bringing in others. For the moment
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 105
my mother seemed to have completely
recovered her buoyancy; she was continually in and
out, with the bearing of one who had been a landlady
all her life. She insisted that the rent must be paid
a year in advance; and the moment that was done, she,
felt secure; much more so than even in my judgment
was warranted.
But the boarders came: Russian, French, Italian,
Spanish. Nearly all of them were connected with one or other of the legations.
The thing seemed to rejuvenate my mother; she was used to marshalling about considerable
numbers of servants and felt in her element. What was the difference between
twenty boarders and twenty volunteers at home?
Uncle Jacobsen departed. Even he did not read the
signs.
For, as far as my mother was concerned, it was
a last flicker. The final breakdown came within a few weeks. A doctor was called
in, insisted on a consultation, advised an immediate operation, and carried her
off to the hospital.
Nobody, suddenly, bothered about me. Here I was
with a boarding-house and some twenty boarders on my hands. For the moment, it
is true, the place seemed to run itself; it ran by its own momentum. At least,
until pay-day came around for the servants' staff. It was the cook who spoke
to me, though one of the parlour-maids who also acted as a waitress assumed command.
I went to see my mother; and she told me that,
in a secret drawer of the secretary in her office I should find all that was
needed. I must, of course, pay all wages due as well as the tradesmen's bills.
As a matter of fact, I found five banknotes of
a hundred marks each; and that kept the ship from foundering
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for
the time being; but within two weeks, I no longer knew
where to turn. My mother refused to believe that there
was no more money. She became very thoughtful and finally
told me to bill the boarders. She seemed quite lucid
and gave me minute directions which I followed to the
letter. In that way I secured some funds; but the amount
was only just sufficient to help me weather things
for another week or so.
And then the appalling thing happened. My mother,
who had a private room at the hospital, paid for in advance, tried to leave at
night. She was seen before she got out of the building and taken back to her
room; but she behaved like one insane and had to be forcibly restrained. I was
notified and, when I saw her, tried to talk matters over with her in a quiet
way. But she vetoed every suggestion of mine. It was with great reluctance that
she at last consented to my sending Uncle Jacobsen a wire. I should have preferred
to send it to my father; but she would not hear of it.
Uncle Jacobsen came and consulted with the physicians.
He was told that, unless an operation was performed immediately - a thing which
my mother would not agree to - she was doomed. Then he came to talk matters over
with me. He told me that he had from the beginning been opposed to the venture
of the boardinghouse but had given in on that point because my mother seemed
to dread nothing so much as going back to my father. If, he said, there were
any chance of her recovering to the point where she could once more look after
the business in person, there might be hope; for she was a very capable woman;
but he added that, at best, the probability was one in ten.
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 107
What,
he asked at last, in case he got her consent to sell
the business, were my ideas about myself? I said I
did not know; but already I had an idea in the back
of my head the possibilities of which I wanted to explore.
Could he give me a day to think matters over? Very
well, he said; but was he to take this as meaning that
I did not wish to come in with him? I had to tell him,
at that, what my own desires and ambitions were. In
case of need, I said, I should like to try to put myself
through school and university by my own efforts. He
agreed that that would be a worthy attempt.
I went to see the teachers who had been helping
with my Greek; and I told them what there was to tell. Both agreed that I could
readily make my living as a "coach", by getting pupils who needed help to keep
their standing in their classes. They added, however, that it was a dog's life,
and that there would be no time left for study of my own.
When I saw my Uncle Jacobsen again, he had been
talking to the parlour-maid who had so readily assumed all managerial functions.
She was willing to take over the boarding-house as a going concern, agreeing
to pay, in half-yearly instalments, half the new value of the furniture, provided
that the current year's rent was thrown
in. That rent amounted to about three thousand
marks a vast amount for me to lose. Uncle Jacobsen, however, seemed to think
that her offer could be accepted as a basis for negotiation. I told him what
I had found out; and he nodded.
He went to see my mother who, of course, did not
know how hopeless her case was considered to be. He came away with a power-of-attorney.
At the best, he told me,
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the physicians whom he had also
seen again, gave her six months.
What could be done? I was obstinate in refusing
Uncle Jacobsen's direct financial aid. Otherwise I agreed to whatever he might
think best. He at once opened negotiations with the energetic parlour-maid.
She was willing to compromise. Above all, she agreed
to let me have, for the remainder of the year, room and board, in lieu of the
rent which had been paid in advance. It appeared that she had about a thousand
marks in savings. For the moment, that would be sufficient to carry my mother
at the hospital. The balance, some seven thousand marks or so, she agreed to
pay in five annual instalments. On this basis the papers were signed next day.
I must add that, at that time of my life, I looked
considerably older than I was. Nobody would have doubted my veracity had I given
my age at twice the correct figure; few people would have guessed that I was
not over twenty. I was tall and thin; but my bearing was that of a man, not a
boy. My wandering life had done one thing for me: it had enabled me to approach
anyone except my mother with assurance and self-confidence.
Uncle Jacobsen left. I saw the "Director" of my
school; and he gave me a number of introductions. Within a few weeks I began
to have pupils, mostly young boys attending the gymnasia of the city; and it
was my task to see to it that their home-work was done in a satisfactory manner.
In addition, I had a few night pupils in English, French, and Spanish, employees
in commercial houses these, who wished to qualify for positions as correspondents.
CHILDHOOD
-- Page 109
At
the end of the first month I was able to write to Uncle
Jacobsen that, in addition to keeping myself at school,
I was able to pay for my mother's stay at the hospital,
keep myself in pocket money, and lay by a little towards
the time when I should have to pay for my board. I
did not add that I spent a goodly fraction of my income
on books; of that he would have disapproved.
And then came the dreaded day of the operation
to which my mother had at last agreed.
It was over in half an hour. I met the surgeon
in the corridor as he came from the operating room - he was a European celebrity.
Seeing me, he raised his hands and motioned me to follow him into the room at
the end of the passage.
"You are the son of the patient, are you not?" he
asked.
I answered in the affirmative.
"There was nothing I could do," he went on. "I
explored and closed the incision; that is all. Her vital organs are so grown
through with the tumour that the knife is powerless to help. You must be prepared
for the worst."
I nodded; I could not speak.
But the incision healed; and now the physicians
began to realize that it would be a long struggle: the tumour was pitched in
battle against a tremendous constitution.
I was told I might take her home if I wished to.
Home? Where? Uncle Jacobsen had dismissed even Annette.
However, I arranged at the boarding-house for a
room; and one day she was brought there and put to bed. A nurse came with her.
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Once
more Uncle Jacobsen arrived to make the arrangements.
Fortunately the business as such was flourishing, though
with a clientele very different from that on which
my mother had counted. The new management catered to
pleasure-seekers from the provinces who came for the
sake of the night-life of Berlin, that lurid night-life
for which the city was just beginning to be famous.
So the new owner of the place was quite willing to
let room and board for my mother stand against her
indebtedness; and I had to pay only for the nurse,
a Roman sister, and for such incidentals as were needed.
Actually, the patient's coming "home" eased matters
for me, at least financially. Since it was still winter,
I began to do a little skating at night, mostly very
late, after eleven o'clock. And then I went home to
work; it was rare that I went to bed before two or
three in the morning. Yet I realized even then that
the whole thing was made bearable only by the expectation
That it could not last.
Meanwhile my mother lay in more or less complete
apathy, broken by occasional spells of lucidity in which she argued fiercely
with me, in a broken voice, imploring me not to be blind to my own best interests
by refusing to join Uncle Jacobsen; and at last I began to think that ultimately
I should have to give in to her urgency. I felt very unhappy about it all, for
to yield would have meant a surrender of all my desires.
It must have been at this stage that I first met
another relative of mine, a great-uncle by the name of Rutherford. More precisely,
he was a first cousin of my grandfather on the maternal side. He was well known
as a traveller and explorer in the wilder districts of central Asia, Tibet and
Sin-Kiang; and he had written several books, especially on the north-east border
of India where
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he had spent a good many years in
the Indian Civil Service. He was nearing his sixties;
but physically he was more alert than many a man half
his age. He had called on Uncle Jacobsen at Hamburg
and thus secured our address. The circumstances in
which he found us appalled him; but he did not stay;
he was engaged in negotiations with the Russian government
at St. Petersburg; for he was planning a winter trip
through Northern Siberia. Two years later he was to
play a sudden and decisive part in my life.
It so happened that my mother, during the whole
of his visit, remained in a state of semi-coma; and so he left with me certain
funds which he said he owed my mother who had financed his first trip into Tibet;
I never found out whether that was a pretext or not. He went out with me, taking
me to famous restaurants and to a show or two; so that, when he left for St.
Petersburg, his departure left a sudden void in my life, but not before he had,
in a long talk, more or less convinced me that it was my duty to notify, not
Uncle Jacobsen, but my father of how matters stood; my mother, he said, could
not be considered in this move since she was not of sound mind.
I did not do so immediately, for by this time I
was convinced that, at least financially, I could handle the situation myself.
My work as a tutor was highly successful and not unremunerative; throughout,
I had the offer of more pupils than I could accept; and nearly all of them came
from the wealthy homes of the capital. I raised my charges, and the fact seemed
to result, not only in an increased income, but also in a greater demand for
my services. "Of course," people said, "he isn't cheap." And that seemed to be
a recommendation to purse-proud bankers and manufacturers and their wives.
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And
then the final disaster came. One morning my mother
was gone. A thorough search of the house was made,
without result; and before the day was over, I had
to notify the police. Remaining away from school, I
at last wrote to my father, not because I wanted help,
but because my great-uncle's argument that my father
had a right to be told bore fruit; After all, that
uncle had said, my mother was still his lawful wife;
and the situation seemed now to have gone beyond my
capacity of handling.
By the time my father arrived, however, my mother
was back at the house. She came in a carriage, early one morning, driven by a
livened coachman from an estate in the neighbourhood of the city, and accompanied
by an elderly woman who could give me no other information than that, around
midnight, my mother had been found in the park of the estate, by some guests
departing from the "Schloss". By order of Herr von -, a man whom my mother had
known in the past, she had been taken in but had at once given her address and
asked to be sent home. She was out of her mind; but her address had been correct
enough.
She was put to bed and remained semi-conscious.
Perhaps I should say that, since her return from the hospital, she had been kept
under the influence of morphia, administered by the "sister". The doctor seemed
to think that her complete breakdown was due to the sudden withdrawal of the
drug. It was only later that I found out a few details of her wanderings. She
had gone to a village of that estate before going to the park; and there she
had entered several cottages, labourers' dwellings, which were under quarantine
for measles - a disease which she had never had.
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My
father arrived that night; and his appearance appalled
me almost as much as that of my mother would have done
had I not seen her for a few years. He no longer towered
above me. He gave the impression that, in the lumbar
region, his spine was shortened and bent at an angle;
when he stood beside a table, it always looked as if
he were bending over it, sideways. His enormously long
legs, straight as ever, made it appear as if his body
had been split from below, up to the region of the
chest in a normal body. As I have said, he reminded
me grotesquely of Niels, the "inspector". His head,
however, long and narrow, remained very handsome, set
off, now, by a long beard of ash-blond, wavy hair;
it had aged amazingly little. He must have been seventy-four
or five; but he looked fifty; there was not a grey
hair on his head. In fact, his hair seemed rather to
have darkened, so that at first I suspected, that he
dyed it; but the colour was natural. His clothes and
his long, narrow hands seemed as well groomed as ever;
but when he looked straight at me, which he rarely
did now, I became aware of a droop in the left eye-lid;
and there was something the matter with the eye, too.
I found later that an opacity was invading the pupil.
It so happened that there was a suite vacant in
the house; and he took it for the night. During the following day he sat for
a few hours with my mother who remained apathetic. Then, at noon, he told me
to go to school and to see the Director, with a view to securing some sort of
testimonial with regard to my progress and standing; and when he heard how I
had earned my living and at least part of my mother's as well, he nodded approvingly,
adding that I had better devote my afternoon to winding up my obligations. I
had, for some time, not been used
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to
taking anyone's orders; and it felt queer to have this
man step in and tell me what to do. But I obeyed.
The principal or Director of the school was most
kind. He called a meeting of my teachers at his office; and it was unanimously
resolved, in my presence, to give me a statement testifying that I had satisfactorily
covered the year's work. It was not, of course, expressly stated that I had remained
to the end of the term; but I remember distinctly that it was more or less implied.
In this, account was taken of the fact that I was to leave the country. One more
year, then, would give me university-entrance.
Next, I did, with regard to my pupils, as my father
had directed; and when I met him again at night, I could answer his question
whether I was ready to leave in the affirmative. We were in his sitting-room;
and apparently he wished to talk matters over. He spoke in a strangely gentle
voice, as if he feared to touch on the past. Of my mother he said no more than
that it would be best, taking things all around, if she died at home, adding
that he had made all arrangements for the transfer.
Then he broached the subject of my future.
It was not without diffidence that I told him of
my wish to finish my schooling and then to attend the university.
He merely nodded.
Encouraged, I told him of my mother's plans for
me and of my disinclination for a commercial career.
"No," he said, "that would hardly do for you." And
after an interval of thought he added, "Law. International Law. How would that
suit you? It would pave the way for a career. I can pull some strings; there
might be something in the diplomatic service.
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I
hesitated. Was there another conflict ahead? With my
father this time? But with a certain amount of cunning,
I said to myself that, once I got to the university,
no matter how, no matter where, I could do pretty well
as I pleased; he would not be there to supervise me.
If he financed a university course for me, I could
matriculate in law and attend as many lectures in classical
philology or archeology as I cared to. It was not standing
I was after; it was knowledge. So I agreed.
"What university?" he asked next. "I'd say Paris
to start with. In the diplomatic service you'd be dependent on Stockholm, of
course. Paris, Berlin, Rome. That would give you the necessary prestige."
The addition of Rome settled the matter in my mind. "Very
well," he said in the tone of dismissal, without rising.
I was to find out that he did not like to be seen
standing: it showed up the disproportion of his body too strikingly; and slowly,
during the next few months, I was to come to a partial realization of the magnitude
of the tragedy which had befallen him. He had taken to living the life of a hermit,
showing himself to his neighbours on horseback only; he felt ashamed of his disfigurement;
he never dismounted when he went from Thurow to an adjacent estate; and whenever
ladies appeared he took his departure promptly.
I do not remember what it was that delayed us;
but about two more weeks had gone by before my mother was one morning transferred
from her bed to a stretcher, with two newly-engaged nurses in attendance; for
my father dismissed the "sister" with a handsome present for her convent; she
herself was not permitted to accept any remuneration.
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The
stretcher was lifted into an ambulance and, half an
hour later, into the train in which my father, according
to his custom, had reserved a carriage. Thus, once
more, and for a last time, my mother made the trip
to Thurow. We arrived two days later.
I, being now fully sixteen years old, went over
all the familiar places, no longer on the pony which had been mine in the past;
I used one of the Danes. My mother's saddle-horses, I found, had all been disposed
of. For a week or two, it was like a melancholy and yet strangely burdenless
holiday; the woods, the fields, the beach -all seemed unreal.
As for my mother, from the moment of our arrival
at Thurow, we were all simply waiting for the end. A doctor from the city was,
of course, in daily attendance; the nurses looked after her; my father often
sat at her bedside for hours. I myself dropped in, of course; but she was a distressing
sight, and there was absolutely nothing I could do for her. She was beyond human
help except inasmuch as human care could spare her pain.
Yet she had still one surprise for us. She must
have picked up the infection in the workmen's village where, during her last
escapade, she had entered the quarantined cottages. The fact was that, when she
died, she did not die of cancer but of a children's disease which had been incubating
in her for some time. When it declared itself, it carried her off within a few
days. Only towards the very last did she become conscious once more; and when
she did, she called for me. When I came to her bedside, she burst into tears
and then, a last time, admonished me to enter Uncle Jacobsen's business, urging
me to give her my promise. Somehow I evaded; I did not pledge my- word. And,
seeing that I refused, she muttered a
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few words which mean more to me
now than they did at the time; I cannot bear to repeat
them.
As for myself, I only remember that my prevailing
feeling was of the awfulness of the change which had come over her - not nearly
so much of a loss to myself. I was very young. The conflict between us had brought
an element of estrangement. That conflict had already been decided in my favour.
It is appalling to me today that the fact should have spared me sorrow; but so
it was. I was no longer living with her; I was living in my own future. The mother
I had adored as a child had been dying too long to leave any poignancy to the
final event.
When, a few days later, I stood by her coffin,
I shed tears, it is true; a lump rose in my throat; and when that coffin was
carried out of the house, I sobbed. But, as we followed the hearse, I verily
believe, my father, who had his early memories of her, was more profoundly shaken
than I.
More than a hundred carriages followed her to the
grave: all she had known in the neighbourhood, and many, like my Uncle Jacobsen,
who had come from a distance. Among the latter there were two women, one from
Vienna, the other I do not remember whence in the Danubian basin; her sisters.
I see, today, only one of them with my mind's eye. Though older than my mother,
she resembled her strikingly, in the carriage of her body as well as in her imperious
ways. Both, on leaving, after a few days, carried away a few trifles that had
belonged to the woman who had died.
With that ended my childhood, and my youth began-
a youth which, four years later, or a little more, was to end no less catastrophically.
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