Portrait of the artist

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Monday 24 January 2022

I read of Turkey and marvel.

Europe’s busiest airport shut down in Istanbul while schools and vaccination centres closed in Athens as a rare snowstorm blanketed swathes of the eastern Mediterranean region, causing blackouts and traffic havoc.

The work to clean the runway and taxiways continues at Istanbul Airport, where all flights were stopped until 18.00 due to heavy snowfall in Istanbul, Turkey

The closure of Istanbul Airport, where the roof of one of the cargo terminals collapsed under the heavy snow, causing no injuries, grounded flights stretching from the Middle East and Africa to Europe and Asia on Monday.

The work to clean the runway and taxiways continues, at Istanbul Airport, where all flights were stopped until 18.00 due to heavy snowfall in Istanbul, Turkiye

Travel officials told AFP news agency it marked the gleaming glass-and-steel structure’s first shutdown since it replaced Istanbul’s old Atatürk Airport as the new hub for Turkish Airlines in 2019.

Agence France-Presse Logo.svg
Above: Agence France Presse logo

Due to adverse conditions, all flights at Istanbul Airport have been temporarily stopped for flight safety,” the airport said in a statement on Twitter.

Twitter-logo.svg
Above: Twitter logo

The shutdown dealt a major headache to the 16 million residents of Turkey’s largest city, where cars ploughed into each other skidding down steep, sleet-covered streets and highways turned into parking lots.

The Istanbul governor’s office warned drivers they would not be able to enter the city from Thrace, a region stretching across the European part of Turkey to its western border with Bulgaria and Greece.

Shopping malls closed early, food delivery services shut down and the city’s iconic “simit” bagel stalls stood empty because suppliers could not make their way through the snow.

Snowstorm brings much of Turkey and Greece to a halt | News | DW |  24.01.2022

Traffic officials also closed major roads across large parts of central and southeastern Turkey, a mountainous region first hit by a snowstorm last week.

Snowfall, blizzards bear down on Turkey, shut down roads | Daily Sabah

Istanbul Airport serviced more than 37 million passengers last year, becoming one of the word’s most important air hubs.

But critics of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had long questioned his decision to place the airport on a remote patch along the Black Sea coast that is often covered with fog in the winter.

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan 2021.jpg
Above: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

Turkish Airlines said it was suspending all Istanbul Airport flights until at least 4am (01:00 GMT) on Tuesday.

Turkey: Airport warehouse roof collapses in snowstorm - BBC News

A few light taps upon the pane made him turn to the window.

It had begun to snow again.

He watched sleepily the flakes, silver and dark, falling obliquely against the lamplight.

The time had come for him to set out on his journey westward.

Yes, the newspapers were right:

Snow was general all over Ireland.

It was falling on every part of the dark central plain, on the treeless hills, falling softly upon the Bog of Allen and, farther westward, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves.

It was falling, too, upon every part of the lonely churchyard on the hill where Michael Furey lay buried.

It lay thickly drifted on the crooked crosses and headstones, on the spears of the little gate, on the barren thorns.

His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and faintly falling, like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead.

James Joyce, Dubliners

Joyce - Dubliners, 1914 - 3690390 F.jpg

Five times since my return to Switzerland have I travelled to St. Gallen and once more I anticipate visiting this city before I leave, God willing, on 15 February.

I have seen colleagues from my Starbucks days and it was good, but there is within me a sense of apartness, of alienation.

A view of St. Gallen
Above: St. Gallen, Switzerland

Stephen watched the three glasses being raised from the counter as his father and his two cronies drank to the memory of their past.

An abyss of fortune or of temperament sundered him from them. 

His mind seemed older than theirs:

It shone coldly on their strifes and happiness and regrets like a moon upon a younger Earth.

No life or youth stirred in him as it had stirred in them.

He had known neither the pleasure of companionship with others nor the vigour of rude male health nor filial piety.

Nothing stirred within his soul but a cold and cruel and loveless lust.

His childhood was dead or lost and with it his soul capable of simple joys.

He was drifting amid life like the barren shell of the Moon.

Art thou pale for weariness
Of climbing Heaven and gazing on the Earth,
Wandering companionless…?

He repeated to himself the lines of Shelley’s fragment.

Its alternation of sad human ineffectiveness with vast inhuman cycles of activity chilled him, and he forgot his own human and ineffectual grieving…..

To merge his life in the common tide of other lives was harder for him than any fasting or prayer, and it was his constant failure to do this to his own satisfaction which caused in his soul at last a sensation of spiritual dryness together with a growth of doubts and scruples….

It wounded him to think that he would never be but a shy guest at the feast of the world’s culture and that the monkish learning, in terms of which he was striving to forge out an esthetic philosophy, was held no higher by the age he lived in than the subtle and curious jargons of heraldry and falconry…..

I will tell you what I will do and what I will not do.

I will not serve that in which I no longer believe, whether it call itself my home, my fatherland, or my church:

And I will try to express myself in some mode of life or art as freely as I can and as wholly as I can, using for my defence the only arms I allow myself to use — silence, exile and cunning.

James Joyce, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

A book cover. It is entirely blue, and has "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man ~ James Joyce" embossed on it.

Joyce eloped from Ireland in borrowed boots in 1904.

He fled both world wars to the safety of Zürich.

Zürich.jpg
Above: Zürich, Switzerland

Think you are escaping and run into yourself.

Longest way round is the shortest way home.

James Joyce

TakeTheLongWayHome.jpg

We did not elope, my wife and I.

We met one another in Stratford-upon-Avon, England, when she was a 19-year-old medical student serving as an apprentice at a Liverpool hospital while I was a 30-year-old traveller working in Leicester.

Stratford-upon-Avon - panoramio (4).jpg
Above: Stratford-upon-Avon, England

I followed her to Freiburg im Breisgau, settling there in 2001, marrying there in 2005, leaving there that same year for Brombach (Lörrach) near the German-Swiss border at Basel, then moving again in 2008 to Osnabrück, and finally here to Landschlacht since 2010.

View over Freiburg
Above: Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

Above: Brombach, Germany

City centre of Osnabrück
Above: Osnabrück, Germany

Above: Landschlacht, Switzerland

I have officially been living in both Eskişehir, Turkey, and Landschlacht, since 1 March 2021.

Above: Eskişehir, Turkey

Has escaping from Switzerland to Turkey made me feel like Switzerland is “home“?

Flag of Switzerland
Above: Flag of Switzerland

When the short days of winter came, dusk fell before we had well eaten our dinners.

When we met in the street the houses had grown sombre.

The space of sky above us was the colour of ever-changing violet and towards it the lamps of the street lifted their feeble lanterns.

The cold air stung us and we played till our bodies glowed.

Our shouts echoed in the silent street.

James Joyce, Dubliners

Portrait of James Joyce
Above: James Joyce (1882 – 1941)

Eloping from Ireland, via Paris, James Joyce and Nora Barnacle took a room in the Gasthaus Hoffnung (Hope) at 16 Reitergasse in Zürich.

This was where they consummated their union.

Hope often proved elusive during the decades ahead, but they were to stick by each other through poverty, two world wars, family crisis and literary fame.

They were to find themselves back in Zürich again and again, always by the skin of their teeth.

11 – 19 Oct 1904 & June/July 1915 | ZURICH JAMES JOYCE FOUNDATION
Above: Gasthaus Hoffnung, Zürich

My wife is a doctor and I am, at best, a freelance teacher of English-as-a-second-language.

She has had great success at the hospital near to our apartment.

Projekte Detailansicht
Above: Spital Thurgau, Münsterlingen

But for me Switzerland proved to be a reversal of fortunes.

Prior to the pandemic I who had once taught as many as 60 hours a week in Germany was reduced to teaching 3 hours a month.

The shortage of teaching hours compelled me to work at Starbucks in St. Gallen for five years.

Stadt St.Gallen | Starbucks Coffee Marktgasse

The resulting dissatisfaction compelled me to seek work away from Switzerland.

Through the help of a Starbucks colleague’s father I got the position at Wall Street Eskişehir, to which I shall soon return to.

We did not run from poverty, though we ran to the promise of profit.

Above: Wall Street English, Eskişehir

Switzerland has been neutral since the days of Napoleon.

Coat of arms of Switzerland
Above: Coat of arms of Switzerland

Fortunately neither my bride nor I have ever witnessed war directly, though I have a friend who once served in both Afghanistan and Iraq in a civilian capacity and my wife has a friend who for a time was a missionary in Afghanistan.

Flag of Afghanistan
Above: Flag of Afghanistan

Flag of Iraq
Above: Flag of Iraq

As for familial problems, well, who can say anyone has a choice in the families from whence they sprung?

Above: Clan tartan

As for literary fame, a writer needs literary product.

I am reminded of Stephen Leacock:

Mallory Tompkins had read all sorts of things and had half a mind to write a novel himself – either that or a play.

All he needed, he said, was to have a chance to get away somewhere by himself and think.

Every time he went away to the city Pipken expected that Mallory might return with the novel all finished, but though he often came back with his eyes red from thinking, the novel as yet remained incomplete.

The proprietor of the guesthouse behind the station was called Döblin.

Under the impression a job was waiting for him at the Berlitz School, Joyce next morning discovered to his dismay there was no such thing.

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Above: Zürich

That situation I know only too well.

No photo description available.
Above: Photo of the blogger as a young man

Oxford, England, Thursday 21 October 1996

A day of betrayal and hope.

The Thames Valley Police (TVP) suggested that my poverty would be alleviated easier by charitable organizations if I received a police report about the Ramsgate robbery from the Kent County Constabulary.

The Margate crime desk quickly faxed a copy to the TVP.

The Salvation Army Majors Green provided payment for last night’s stay at the Oxford Backpackers Hostel, a bag of groceries, and a cap.

Met the sister of J, 24-year-old R.

She informed me that their mother is terminally ill with leukemia, that J got terminated from Argos, and that J doesn’t give a damn about how I am.

I start work tomorrow distributing handbills for a men’s fashion store.

From top left to bottom right: Oxford skyline panorama from St Mary's Church; Radcliffe Camera; High Street from above looking east; University College, main quadrangle; High Street by night; Natural History Museum and Pitt Rivers Museum
Above: Images of Oxford, England

The Director did his best to find the penniless Irish graduate a teaching position in Switzerland, but without success.

Writing to his brother Stanislaus, Joyce emphasized shortage of funds and the secrecy surrounding his elopement:

Go about the highways of the city but not to any of my touched friends and make up one pound before Saturday which send me on that day without fail.”

New Directions Publishing | Stanislaus Joyce
Above: Stanislaus Joyce (1884 – 1955)

In England I tried getting money from Canada but my request was refused.

I never asked again.

I would later find work in Oxford, Leicester, Nottingham, Cardiff, and Luxembourg-Ville, before returning back to Canada on 1 November 1997, have met my wife-to-be on 27 July 1997 as aforementioned.

Leicester landmarks: (clockwise from top-left) Jewry Wall, National Space Centre, Arch of Remembrance, Central Leicester, Curve theatre, Leicester Cathedral and Guildhall, Welford Road Stadium, Leicester Market
Above: Images of Leicester, England

Nottingham skyline (top), then beneath from top left: Robin Hood statue, Council House, NET tram, Trent Bridge, Castle Gate House, Wollaton Hall, Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem, Nottingham Forest's City Ground
Above: Images of Nottingham, England

Clockwise from top left: The Senedd building, Principality Stadium, Cardiff Castle,[1] Cardiff Bay, Cardiff City Centre, City Hall clock tower, Welsh National War Memorial
Above: Images of Cardiff (Caerdydd), Wales (Cymru)

Skyline of Luxembourg City viewed over Grund and the Alzette
Above: Luxembourg-Ville, Luxembourg

A vertical triband design (red, white, red) with a red maple leaf in the center.
Above: Flag of Canada

The 22-year-old could not resist a laddish boast:

Finalement, elle n’est pas encore vièrge.

Elle est touchée.”

(Finally, she is no longer a virgin, she has been touched.)

The lovers spent a week in Zürich, kicking their heels.

Above: Zürich

I am not Joyce.

I do not believe in either bragging (or complaining) about my intimate (or inanimate) private life, real (or imagined).

Harry Styles Quote: “A gentleman doesn't kiss and tell.”

My baby makes me proud
Lord, don’t she make me proud
She never makes a scene
By hangin’ all over me in a crowd

‘Cause people like to talk
Lord, don’t they love to talk
But when they turn out the lights
I know she’ll be leavin’ with me

And when we get behind closed doors
Then she lets her hair hang down
And she makes me glad that I’m a man
Oh, no one knows what goes on behind closed doors

My baby makes me smile
Lord, don’t she make me smile
She’s never far away
Or too tired to say “I want you”

She’s always a lady
Just like a lady should be
But when they turn out the lights
She’s still a baby to me

‘Cause when we get behind closed doors
Then she lets her hair hang down
And she makes me glad I’m a man
Oh, no one knows what goes on behind closed doors
Behind closed doors.

Cover of the Behind Closed Doors album with the singer Charlie Rich in a cowboy hat.

Eventually a vacancy turned up in Trieste on the Adriatic.

They were off again.

That vacancy too proved as elusive as the Swiss one and they continued down the coast to Pola.

It was to be a vagabond life.

Above: Trieste, Italy

It has been suggested to me that a position might be waiting for me in Trieste after Eskişehir.

I am tempted.

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A decade later, in July 1914, Austria declared war on Serbia.

In August, Great Britain entered the war.

As holders of British passports, the Joyces in Austro-Hungarian Trieste grew worried.

Joyce’s brother was interned as an enemy alien in January 1915.

In May of that year, Italy mobilized its army, prompting anti-Italian demonstrations in Trieste.

Medium coat of arms (1867–1915) (see also Flags of Austria-Hungary) of Austria–Hungary
Above: Coat of arms of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (1867 – 1915)

Could war come again to Europe?

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Above: Europe (in green)

The world wars ended the pre-eminent position of Britain, France and Germany in Europe and the world.

At the Yalta Conference, Europe was divided into spheres of influence between the victors of World War II, and soon became the principal zone of contention in the Cold War between the two power blocs, the Western countries and the Communist bloc.

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Above: Yalta Conference: Winston Churchill, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin, February 1945

The United States and the majority of European liberal democracies at the time (United Kingdom, France, Italy, Netherlands, West Germany, etc.) established the NATO military alliance.

NATO OTAN landscape logo.svg
Above: Flag of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)

Later, the Soviet Union and its satellites (Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania) in 1955 established the Warsaw Pact as a counterpoint to NATO.

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Above: Logo of the Warsaw Pact

The Warsaw Pact had a much larger ground force, but the American-French-British nuclear umbrellas protected NATO.

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Above: NATO members

Communist states were imposed by the Red Army in the East, while parliamentary democracy became the dominant form of government in the West.

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Above: Warsaw Pact nations, 1990

Most historians point to its success as the product of exhaustion with war and dictatorship, and the promise of continued economic prosperity.

They also add that an important impetus came from the anti-Nazi wartime political coalitions.

The end of the Cold War came in a series of events from 1979 to 1991, mainly in Eastern Europe.

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Above: NATO (blue) versus the Warsaw Pact (red)

In the end, these brought the fall of the Iron Curtain, German reunification and the end of Soviet control over their Eastern European satellites and their worldwide network of Communist parties in a friendly chain reaction from the Pan-European Picnic in 1989.

The finals brought the division of the Soviet Union into 15 non-Communist states in 1991.

White stone memorial, with steps and people escaping
Above: Pan-European Picnic Monument, Berlin, Germany

Observers at the time emphasized that:

The systemic and ideological confrontation between capitalism and communism had faded away.

The geopolitical partition of Europe was no more.

Nuclear deterrence was morphing into a less armed, almost hypothetical version of its previous self.

Superpower rivalry was rapidly wound up with cascading effects in various areas of the world.

Capitalism vs. Communism: Pros and Cons - Soapboxie
Above: Capitalism vs Communism

Following the end of the Cold War, the European Economic Community (EEC) pushed for closer integration, co-operation in foreign and home affairs, and started to increase its membership into the neutral and former Communist countries.

Flag of EEC/ECM
Above: Flag of the European Union

In 1993, the Maastricht Treaty established the European Union (EU), succeeding the EEC and furthering political co-operation.

The neutral countries of Austria, Finland and Sweden acceded to the EU, and those that didn’t join were tied into the EU’s economic market via the European Economic Area.

These countries also entered the Schengen Agreement which lifted border controls between member states.

The Maastricht Treaty created a single currency for most EU members.

The Euro was created in 1999 and replaced all previous currencies in participating states in 2002.

The most notable exception to the currency union, or Eurozone, was the United Kingdom, which also did not sign the Schengen Agreement.

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Above: The European Union

The EU did not participate in the Yugoslav Wars (1991 – 2001) and was divided on supporting the United States in the Iraq War (2003 – 2011).

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Above: Images of the Yugoslav Wars

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Above: Images of the Iraq War

NATO has been part of the war in Afghanistan (2001 – 2021), but at a much lower level of involvement than the United States.

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Above: Images of the War in Afghanistan

In 2004, the EU gained ten new members:

(Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania (which had been part of the Soviet Union), the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia (five former Communist countries), Malta, and the divided island of Cyprus.)

Flag of Estonia
Above: Flag of Estonia

Flag of Latvia
Above: Flag of Latvia

Flag of Lithuania
Above: Flag of Lithuania

Flag of the Czech Republic
Above: Flag of the Czech Republic

Flag of Hungary
Above: Flag of Hungary

Flag of Poland
Above: Flag of Poland

Flag of Slovakia
Above: Flag of Slovakia

Flag of Slovenia
Above: Flag of Slovenia

Flag of Malta
Above: Flag of Malta

Flag of Cyprus
Above: Flag of Cyprus

These were followed by Bulgaria and Romania in 2007.

Flag of Bulgaria
Above: Flag of Bulgaria

Flag of Romania
Above: Flag of Romania

Russia’s regime had interpreted these expansions as violations against NATO’s promise to not expand “one inch to the east” in 1990. 

File:Flag of Russia.svg
Above: Flag of Russia

Russia engaged in a number of bilateral disputes about gas supplies with Belarus and Ukraine which endangered gas supplies to Europe.

Flag of Belarus
Above: Flag of Belarus

File:Flag of Ukraine.svg
Above: Flag of Ukraine

Russia also engaged in a minor war with Georgia in 2008.

Flag of Georgia
Above: Flag of Georgia

Supported by the United States and some European countries, Kosovo’s government unilaterally declared independence from Serbia on 17 February 2008.

Flag of Kosovo
Above: Flag of Kosovo

Public opinion in the EU turned against enlargement, partially due to what was seen as over-eager expansion including Turkey gaining candidate status.

Flag of Turkey
Above: Flag of Turkey

The European Constitution was rejected in France and the Netherlands, and then (as the Treaty of Lisbon) in Ireland, although a second vote passed in Ireland in 2009.

Flag of Ireland
Above: Flag of Ireland

The financial crisis of 2007 – 2008 affected Europe, and government responded with austerity measures.

Limited ability of the smaller EU nations (most notably Greece) to handle their debts led to social unrest, government liquidation, and financial insolvency.

Flag of Greece
Above: Flag of Greece

In May 2010, the German parliament agreed to loan €22.4 billion to Greece over three years, with the stipulation that Greece follow strict austerity measures.

Flag of Germany
Above: Flag of Germany

Beginning in 2014, Ukraine has been in a state of revolution and unrest with two breakaway regions (Donetsk and Lugansk) attempting to join Russia as full federal subjects.

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Above: Ukraine (in green) / disputed territories (light green)

On 16 March, a referendum was held in Crimea leading to the de facto secession of Crimea and its largely internationally unrecognized annexation to the Russian Federation as the Republic of Crimea.

Above: Flag of Crimea

In June 2016, in a referendum in the United Kingdom on the country’s membership in the EU, 52% of voters voted to leave the EU, leading to the complex Brexit separation process and negotiations, which led to political and economic changes for both the UK and the remaining EU countries.

A flag composed of a red cross edged in white and superimposed on a red saltire, also edged in white, superimposed on a white saltire on a blue background
Above: Flag of the United Kingdom

The UK left the EU on 31 January 2020.

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Above: Brexit flag

Later that year, Europe was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Scientifically accurate atomic model of the external structure of SARS-CoV-2. Each "ball" is an atom.

According to the Wall Street Journal in 2021 as Angela Merkel stepped down as the highly popular Chancellort of Germany after 16 years:

Ms. Merkel leaves in her wake a weakened Europe, a region whose aspirations to act as a third superpower have come to seem ever more unrealistic.

When she became chancellor in 2005, the EU was at a high point:

It had adopted the euro, which was meant to rival the dollar as a global currency, and had just expanded by absorbing former members of the Soviet bloc.

Today’s EU, by contrast, is geographically and economically diminished.

Having lost the UK because of Brexit, it faces deep political and cultural divisions, lags behind in the global race for innovation and technology and is increasingly squeezed by the mounting US – China strategic rivalry.

Europe has endured thanks in part to Ms. Merkel’s pragmatic stewardship, but it has been battered by crises during her entire time in office.

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Above: Angela Merkel

Are Russian forces getting ready for war in Ukraine?

Russian TV shows tank exercises close to the border with Ukraine on 14 Jan 2022

US President Joe Biden is certainly expecting some kind of military move.

Russia wants the West to promise that Ukraine will not join its NATO defensive alliance, and although the two sides are negotiating, that is not going to happen.

What happens next could jeopardise Europe’s entire security structure.

Joe Biden presidential portrait.jpg
Above: US President Joe Biden

Russia denies it is planning any invasion, but it has seized Ukrainian territory before and it has an estimated 100,000 troops deployed near its borders.

Russia has long resisted Ukraine’s move towards European institutions, and NATO in particular.

Graphic showing positioning of Russian troops..

Ukraine shares borders with both the EU and Russia, but as a former Soviet republic it has deep social and cultural ties with Russia, and Russian is widely spoken there.

When Ukrainians deposed their pro-Russian president in early 2014, Russia annexed Ukraine’s southern Crimean peninsula and backed separatists who captured large swathes of eastern Ukraine.

The rebels have fought the Ukrainian military ever since in a conflict that has claimed more than 14,000 lives.

Coat of arms of Ukraine
Above: Coat of arms of Ukraine

Russia says it has no plans to attack Ukraine:

Armed forces chief Valery Gerasimov even denounced reports of an impending invasion as a lie.

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Above: Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, First Deputy Minister of Defence of the Russian Federation, General of the Army Valery Gerasimov

But tensions are high and President Vladimir Putin has threatened “appropriate retaliatory military-technical measures” if what he calls the West’s aggressive approach continues.

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Above: Russian President Vladimir Putin

NATO’s secretary general warns the risk of conflict is real and President Biden says his guess is that Russia will move in.

The US says it knows of Russian plans to boost its forces near Ukraine “on very short notice“.

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Above: NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg

The US says Russia has offered no explanation for the troops posted close to Ukraine – and Russian troops and tanks have headed to Belarus for exercises.

Russia on the globe, with unrecognised territory shown in light green.[a]
Above: Russia (green) / disputed territory (light green)

Russia’s deputy foreign minister compared the current situation to the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, when the US and Soviet Union came close to nuclear conflict.

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Above: Soviet R12 nuclear ballistic missile

Western intelligence suggests a Russian incursion or invasion could happen some time in early 2022.

Spy vs. Spy Logotipe.png

Russia has spoken of a “moment of truth” in recasting its relationship with NATO:

For us it’s absolutely mandatory to ensure Ukraine never, ever becomes a member of NATO,” said Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov.

Moscow accuses NATO countries of “pumping” Ukraine with weapons and the US of stoking tensions.

President Putin has complained Russia has “nowhere further to retreat todo they think we’ll just sit idly by?

Sergei Ryabkov.jpg
Above: Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov

In reality, Russia wants NATO to return to its pre-1997 borders.

It demands no more eastward expansion and an end to NATO military activity in Eastern Europe.

That would mean combat units being pulled out of Poland and the Baltic republics of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and no missiles deployed in countries such as Poland and Romania.

A graphic showing Nato's expansion since 1997

Map indicating locations of NATO and Russia
Above: NATO (green) / Russia (orange)

Russia has also proposed a treaty with the US barring nuclear weapons from being deployed beyond their national territories.

World War 3: Russia and UK's relationship eerily similar to historic NATO  war game | World | News | Express.co.uk

Russia seized Crimea in 2014 arguing it had a historic claim to it.

Ukraine was part of the Soviet Union, which collapsed in December 1991.

Putin said it was the “disintegration of historical Russia“.

A clue to President Putin’s thinking on Ukraine came in a lengthy piece last year when he called Russians and Ukrainians “one nation“.

He labelled Ukraine’s current leaders as running an “anti-Russian project“.

Flag of the Soviet Union
Above: Flag of the former Soviet Union (1922 – 1981)

Russia has also become frustrated that a 2015 Minsk peace deal for eastern Ukraine is far from being fulfilled.

There are still no arrangements for independently monitored elections in the separatist regions.

Russia denies accusations that it is part of the lingering conflict.

Minsk Protocol.svg
Above: A map of the buffer zone established by the Minsk Protocol

President Vladimir Putin has spoken several times to Biden and high level talks continue, but Russian officials have warned that Western rejection of their key demands are leading to a “dead end“.

The question is how far Russia will go.

Analysis: Joe Biden cranks up pressure as Vladimir Putin mulls Ukraine  invastion - CNNPolitics
Above: Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin

President Biden has warned that a full-scale invasion would be a disaster for Russia.

But if it was a minor incursion, he said controversially that the West would “end up having to fight about what to do“.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visiting positions on the frontline with pro-Russian militants in the Donetsk region, Ukraine, 06 December 2021
Above: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on the front line on 6 December 2021

The White House has stressed any move across the border constitutes a renewed invasion – but points out Russia has other weapons, including cyber-attacks and paramilitary tactics.

The Pentagon has accused Russia of preparing a so-called false-flag operation, with operatives ready to carry out acts of sabotage against Russian-backed rebels, to provide a pretext for invasion. Russia has denied it.

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Above: The Pentagon, HQ of the US Department of Defense, Arlington, Virginia

Russia has also handed out 500,000 passports in rebel-run areas, so if it does not get what it wants then it could justify any action as protecting its own citizens.

Map of eastern Ukraine

However, if Russia’s only aim is to force NATO away from its backyard, there is no sign of it succeeding.

NATO’s 30 members have turned down flat any attempt to tie their hands for the future.

We will not allow anyone to slam closed Nato’s open-door policy,” said US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman.

Ukraine is looking for a clear timeline to join and NATO says Russia has “no veto, no right to interfere in that process”.

Deputy Secretary Sherman's Official Photo (51142275093).jpg
Above: US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman

Non-NATO members Sweden and Finland have also rejected Russia’s attempt to stop them beefing up their ties with the alliance.

Flag of Sweden
Above: Flag of Sweden

Flag of Finland
Above: Flag of Finland

We will not let go of our room for manoeuvre,” said Finland’s prime minister.

Marin lapsen oikeuksien juhla
Above: Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin

The US has made clear it has no plans to send combat troops, while being committed to helping Ukraine defend its “sovereign territory“.

The main tools in the West’s armoury appears to be sanctions and military aid in the form of advisers and weapons.

Military strengths graphic

President Biden has threatened Russia’s leader with measures “like none he’s ever seen” if Ukraine is attacked.

So what would they involve?

The ultimate economic hit would be to disconnect Russia’s banking system from the international Swift payment system.

That has always been seen very much as a last resort, but Latvia has said it would send a strong message to Moscow.

SWIFT Logo
Above: Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications logo

Another key threat is to prevent the opening of Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in Germany, and approval for that is currently being decided by Germany’s energy regulator.

Location of Nord Stream 1

There could also be measures targeting Russia’s RDIF sovereign wealth fund or restrictions on banks converting roubles into foreign currency.

RDIF.svg

Washington has said it is committed to “working in lockstep” with its allies, but there are divisions between the US and Europe.

European leaders are adamant that Russia cannot just decide on the future with the US.

France has even proposed that Europeans work together with NATO and then conduct their own dialogue with Russia.

File:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg
Above: Flag of France

Ukraine’s president wants an international summit to resolve the conflict, involving France and Germany along with Russia.

Volodymyr Zelensky Official portrait.jpg
Above: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky

Another World War?

Unlikely.

A war over Ukraine similar to past conflicts over the Korean Peninsula and Indochina?

Maybe.

Korean War Montage 2.png
Above: Images of the Korean War (1950 – 1953)

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Above: Images of the Vietnam War (1955 – 1975)

Switzerland again a sanctuary from war?

Above: Map of Switzerland (German language)

There has been significant immigration to Switzerland since the 1960s.

By contrast, during the 19th century, emigration from Switzerland was more common, as Switzerland was economically a poor country where a large fraction of the population survived on subsistence farming.

The largest immigrant groups in Switzerland are those from Italy, Germany, the former Yugoslavia, Albania, Portugal and Turkey (Turks and Kurds).

Between them, these six groups account for about 1.5 million people, 60% of the Swiss population with immigrant background, or close to 20% of total Swiss population.

How many migrants settle in Switzerland? | nccr – on the move

The current federal law of 16 December 2005, on foreigners (the Foreign Nationals Act) came into force on 1 January 2008, replacing the Federal Act on the Residence and Establishment of Foreigners of 1931.

Swizerland and Australia, with about a quarter of their population born outside the country, are the two countries with the highest proportion of immigrants in the western world, although who counts as an immigrant varies from country to country, and even between agencies within countries.

A blue field with the Union Flag in the upper hoist quarter, a large white seven-pointed star in the lower hoist quarter, and constellation of five white stars in the fly – one small five-pointed star and four, larger, seven-pointed stars.
Above: Flag of Australia

Some countries naturalise immigrants easily, while others make it much more difficult, which means that such comparisons ought to be treated with caution.

Switzerland also has the highest Potential Net Migration Index of any European country by a large margin, at +150% (followed by Sweden at +78%) according to a 2010 Gallup study:

This means that out of an estimated 700 million potential migrants worldwide, about 12 million (150% of Swiss resident population) would name Switzerland as their most desired country of residence. 

Residents with migration background are twice as likely to be unemployed.

Logo Gallup.svg

Switzerland doesn’t have much in common with Mars, but that doesn’t stop a foreigner from feeling like they have landed on another planet upon arrival.

They call people living in a country without holding its citizenship “resident aliens” and it is not without reason.

For even though Swiss trains are efficient (at least according to the lore), Swiss bureaucracy is not.

It is a new place.

You cannot just stand there and stare at it.

You have got to listen to what it is trying to tell you.

But there is much difficulty doing even the simple things.

It is not supposed to be a land of hardship.

It is supposed to be a land of cheese, chocolate and tax evaders.

Things are supposed to be both delicious and easy.

Delicious?

Yes.

Easy?

Absolutely not.

What can an immigrant do?

Give up?

It is tempting.

It is said that people who live abroad are more creative than people who do not.

Perhaps this has more to do with desperation than with inspiration.

Panozzo Chantal-999 Ways To Travel Switzerland BOOK NEW 9780990315537 | eBay

Though I had not given up my career, my career seemed to have given up on me after I moved to Switzerland so my wife could advance hers.

I came to realize that outside of institutions like school and work or outside of my mother tongue of English, I had come to rely on these to make friends.

I never considered how lonely life can be in Switzerland, wife notwithstanding.

As hard as it is to find permanent full-time employment as an ESL teacher in Switzerland, I found myself not at peace with my place as the trailing spouse and being asked to accept my fate accordingly.

I tried – for a decade – but a temp job at Starbucks that lasted five years but offered neither job security nor any incentive to seek promotion….

I seized an opportunity.

Out.

Turkish Airlines logo 2019 compact.svg

Despite the encroaching debacle, Joyce was gestating the novel that would make his name and send his own salvoes across the literary landscape.

In a letter to Ezra Pound, Joyce informed the poet that he had already completed the first two episodes of Ulysses:

And so, on 28 June 1915, leaving behind all their furniture and belongings, the Joyce family were able to leave for Zürich from the Southern Railway Station.

Weighed down with suitcases, which fortunately were not checked by the Austrian police at the border, they took a train bound for Innsbruck through the Brenner Pass.

They were to come back for less than nine months at the end of the war after Trieste had become Italian, but only to depart once more, in 1920, for Paris.

Never to return.

James Joyce Ulysses 1st Edition 1922 GB.jpg

I confess I hate the words “never to return” or “burning bridges behind“, but as much as I valued my time at Starbucks, I hope I never return to work there again.

Starbucks Corporation Logo 2011.svg
Above: Starbucks logo

Their train was detained at Innsbruck to allow the Emperor’s train to pass.

Logo ÖBB.svg
Above: Austrian Federal Railways (Österreichische Bundesbahnen) logo

Innsbruck, Austria, 19 October 1997

Sprawling beneath the mountain ridge of the Nordkette, Innsbruck is the only major urban centre in Austria with an array of high Alps on its own doorstep.

The visitor can visit museums in the morning, walk up mountains in the afternoon and bar-hop well into the early hours.

With the Tyrol’s largest concentration of mountain resorts in such close proximity, skiing is obviously big news here.

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Above: Innsbruck, Austria

Hosting the Winter Olympics in 1964 and 1976 provided the city with a wealth of sporting and tourist facilities to call its own.

1964 Winter Olympics logo.svg

1976 Winter Olympics logo.svg

For those who just want a taste of history, Innsbruck’s compact centre – a classic Austrian hybrid of the Gothic and Baroque – invites aimless strolling.

It is also a thriving commercial centre that depends on more than just tourism for its living.

Innsbruck - Altes Landhaus (Tiroler Landtag)1 (cropped).jpg
Above: Altes Landhaus, Innsbruck

Innsbruck has a down-to-earth unpretentious air quite different to that of western Austria’s other main urban centre, self-possessed Salzburg.

Salzburg (48489551981).jpg
Above: Salzburg, Austria

Innsbruck is the nation’s 3rd biggest university city after Vienna and Graz, its sizable student population helping to support a range of cultural and nightlife options wide enough to suit most tastes.

Above: Wien (Vienna), Österreich (Austria)

19-06-14-Graz-Murinsel-Schloßberg-RalfR.jpg
Above: Graz, Austria

It is an easy city to explore, with many of its tourist attractions only a few paces apart.

A great deal of sightseeing can be achieved in the space of a day.

And I did my best to see everything in a day:

  • the Golden Roof of the Maximilianeum Museum

Above: Goldenes Dach (Golden Roof), Innsbruck

  • the Helblinghaus

Above: Helblinghaus (Sebastian Helbling House), Innsbruck

  • the Stadtturm

Stadtturm (Innsbruck) – Wikipedia
Above: Stadtturm (City Tower), Innsbruck

  • the Domkirche St. Jakob

Cathedral of St. James Facade 1.jpg
Above: Innsbruck Cathedral

  • the Hofburg

Above: Hofburg (Court Castle / Imperial Palace), Innsbruck

  • the Hofkirche

Innsbruck, die Hofkirche Dm64204 poging2 foto7 2017-07-30 13.39.jpg
Above: Hofkirche (Court Church), Innsbruck

  • the Cenotaph of Emperor Maximilian I (1459 – 1519)

Above: Cenotaph of Emperor Maximilian I, Hofkirche, Innsbruck

  • the Tiroler Volkskunstmuseum

Above: Tiroler Volkskunstmuseum (Tyrolean Folk Art Museum), Innsbruck

  • Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum

Above: Ferdinandeum (Tyrolean State Museum), Innsbruck

  • the Zeughaus

Above: Zeughaus (Armoury), Innsbruck

  • the Annasäule

Innsbruck Annasäule from c.N.jpg
Above: Annasäule (St. Anne’s Column), Innsbruck

  • the Alpenverein Museum

Above: Hofburg, which houses the Alpenverein Museum (Alpine Club Museum), Innsbruck

  • the Galerie Taxispalais

Portal Taxispalais.jpg
Above: Taxispalais (Taxis Palace)

  • the Triumphpforte….

Above: Triumphpforte (Arch of Triumph), Innsbruck

But I was, for once, not in Innsbruck to play tourist.

Coat of arms of Innsbruck
Above: Coat of arms of Innsbruck

I was there for a woman.

I had met O at the sunset of a relationship and prior to the sunrise of the relationship in which I have since remained for a quarter of a century.

Histoire d o.jpg

W was Welsh and was most determined to show me Wales.

And show me Wales, she did.

Flag of Wales
Above: Flag of Wales

  • Borth
  • Cardigan Bay

Borth - 2008-03-01.jpg
Above: Borth and Cardigan Bay, Wales

  • Machynlleth

Central Machynlleth, June 2016.jpg
Above: Machynlleth, Wales

  • Porthmadog

Porthmadog - Harbour.JPG
Above: Porthmadog, Wales

  • the Ffestiniog Railway

Above: Ffestiniog Railway train leaves Porthmadog and heads towards Blaenau Ffestiniog along the Cob, Wales

  • Harlech

Harlech Castle - Cadw photograph.jpg
Above: Harlech Castle, Harlech, Wales

  • Barmouth

Barmouth.jpg
Above: Barmouth, Wales

  • Bala

Welcome to Visit Bala | Visit Bala | Visit Bala
Above: High Street, Bala, Wales

  • Llanuwchllyn

Llanuwchllyn.jpg
Above. High Street, Llanuwchllyn, Wales

  • the Bala Lake Railway

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Above: The Alice, Llanuwchllyn, Bala Lake Railway, Wales

  • Llangollen

Llangollen Church.jpg
Above: Llangollen, Wales

  • Dolgellau

Above: Dolgellau, Wales

  • Betws-Y-Coed

Betws-y-Coed - geograph.org.uk - 1917328.jpg
Above: Betws-y-Coed, Wales

  • Conwy

Conwy Castle and Bridges.jpg
Above: Conwy, Wales

  • Beaumaris

Beaumaris Castle (8074243202).jpg
Above: Beaumaris Castle, Beaumaris, Wales

  • Bangor

Above: Bangor, Wales

  • and back in England (but feeling Welsh), Shrewsbury

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Above: Shrewsbury, England

In Bangor, W and I stayed at the Tan-y-Bryn Youth Hostel.

Tan-y-bryn | Coflein

After a long day wherein we saw the Bangor Theatre, the Menai Straits and Pier, Bangor Cathedral and Bangor University and Penrhyn Castle, ate Chinese food, and drank Dogbolters at the Ffesant and Firkin Brewery Pub, we found ourselves chatting in the common room of the Hostel – W and I, O of Innsbruck and S of Ljubjana.

Theatr Gwynedd in Bangor, GB - Cinema Treasures
Above: Theatr Gwynedd, Bangor, Wales

Menai Straights.jpg
Above: Aerial view of the Menai Straits

Bangor Pier - geograph.org.uk - 1287040.jpg
Above: Garth Pier, Bangor, Wales

Bangor Cathedral from Bangor Mountain.jpg
Above: Bangor Cathedral

Bangor University.svg

Penrhyn Castle Wales 015.jpg
Above. Penrhyn Castle, Wales

Coc Y Gath! Too Much Burton Snatch For Me.
Above: Former location of the FFesant and Firkin pub, Bangor, Wales

YHA logo (green triangle with initials YHA)
Above: Youth Hostels Association (England and Wales) logo

S excused himself as did W excuse herself, surrendering to fatigue.

O and I spoke for hours more.

O and I kept up intimate correspondence before Innsbruck and for a short time afterwards.

I read the situation wrong and thought there was a connection between us.

I was wrong.

Innsbruck remains tainted.

View of Innsbruck by Albrecht Dürer, 1495 

Joyce had declared earlier in Trieste:

Kings are mountebanks.

(A mountebank is a person who deceives others, especially in order to trick them out of their money, a charlatan.)

(Yes, I had to look this up.)

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Above: Emperor Charles I of Austria (1887 – 1922)(r. 1916 – 1918)

Republics are slippers for everyone’s feet.”

May be an image of footwear and text that says 'Do these look like they're Laughing or Have i gone crazy?'

I am certain that his friend Ezra Pound would have approved.

photograph of Ezra H. Pound
Above: Ezra Pound, 1913

Ezra Pound (1885 – 1972) was an expatriate American poet and critic, a major figure in the early modernist poetry movement, and a fascist collaborator in Italy during World War II.

His works include Ripostes (1912), Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (1920), and his 800-page epic poem, The Cantos (1917 – 1962).

EzraPound Ripostes.png

Pound’s contribution to poetry began in the early 20th century with his role in developing imagism, a movement stressing precision and economy of language.

Working in London as foreign editor of several American literary magazines, he helped discover and shape the work of contemporaries such as T.S. Eliot, Ernest Hemingway, and James Joyce.

Eliot in 1934 by Lady Ottoline Morrell
Above: Thomas Stearns Eliot (1888 – 1965)

He was responsible for the 1914 serialization of Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, the 1915 publication of Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock“, and the serialization from 1918 of Joyce’s Ulysses.

Hemingway wrote in 1932 that, for poets born in the late 19th or early 20th century, not to be influenced by Pound would be “like passing through a great blizzard and not feeling its cold.”

Dark-haired man in light colored short-sleeved shirt working on a typewriter at a table on which sits an open book
Above: Ernest Hemingway (1899 – 1961)

Angered by the carnage of World War I, Pound blamed the war on finance capitalism, which he called “usury” (the practice of making unethical or immoral monetary loans that unfairly enrich the lender).

WWImontage.jpg
Above: Images of World War I (1914 – 1918)

Pound moved to Italy in 1924 and through the 1930s and 1940s promoted an economic theory known as social credit, wrote for publications owned by the British fascist Sir Oswald Mosley, embraced Benito Mussolini’s fascism, and expressed support for Adolf Hitler.

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Above: Oswald Mosley (1896 – 1980)

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Above: Benito Mussolini (1883 – 1945)

Portrait of Adolf Hitler, 1938
Above: Adolf Hitler (1889 – 1945)

During World War II and the Holocaust in Italy, Pound made hundreds of paid radio broadcasts for the Italian government, including in German-occupied Italy, attacking the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Great Britain, international finance, munitions makers and mongers, and Jews, among others, as causes, abettors and prolongers of the world war.

Above: Ezra Pound, 1920

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Above: Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882 – 1945)

As a result of which Pound was arrested in 1945 by American forces in Italy on charges of treason.

Photograph of a man

He spent months in a US military camp in Pisa, including three weeks in an outdoor steel cage.

Photograph of steel cages
Above: Pound spent three weeks in the reinforced cage on the far left.

Deemed unfit to stand trial, he was incarcerated in St. Elizabeths Psychiatric Hospital in Washington DC, for over 12 years.

photograph
Above: St. Elizabeth’s Psychiatric Hospital, Washington DC

While in custody in Italy, Pound began work on sections of The Cantos that were published as The Pisan Cantos (1948), for which he was awarded the Bollingen Prize for Poetry in 1949 by the Library of Congress, causing enormous controversy.

After a campaign by his fellow writers, he was released from St. Elizabeths in 1958 and lived in Italy until his death in 1972.

His economic and political views have ensured that his life and work remain controversial.

The Cantos by Ezra Pound - Paperback - 3rd - 1996 - from Philosophia &  Litterae (SKU: 022)

Sometimes I wonder if, in the eyes of some still, whether an American reading Pound is akin to a German buying art from Hitler’s Viennese period.

Above: Der Alte Hof in München, Adolf Hitler, 1914

Nonetheless, Joyce’s 11 years in Trieste under Austro-Hungarian rule -“Each archduke proud, the whole jimbang crowd” – had been benign.

When 23 year-old Joyce first moved to Trieste in March 1905, he immediately started teaching English at the Berlitz school.

By June, Joyce felt financially secure enough to have his satirical poem “Holy Office” printed and asked for copies to be distributed to his former associates in Dublin.

Photograph of Trieste filled with ships around 1907 viewing the city from out in the harbor
Above: Trieste, 1907

Trieste (Triest in German, Trst in Slovenian and Croatian) is a city in Northeast Italy that was once a very influential and powerful centre of politics, literature, music, art and culture under Austrian-Hungarian dominion.

Today, Trieste is often forgotten as tourists head off to bigger Italian cities like Roma (Rome), Milano (Milan), and Trieste’s ancient archrival Venezia (Venice).

But those tourists miss out on a very charming and underestimated city, with a quiet and lovely almost Eastern European atmosphere, several pubs and cafes, some stunning architecture and a beautiful sea view.

It was also, for a while, the residence of the famous Irish writer, James Joyce.

Above: Trieste, Italy

Joyce kept writing despite all these changes.

He completed 24 chapters of Stephen Hero and all but the final story of Dubliners.

But he was unable to get Dubliners in press.

Though the London publisher Grant Richards had contracted with Joyce to publish it, the printers were unwilling to print passages they found controversial because English law could hold them liable if they were brought to court for indecent language.

Richards and Joyce went back and forth trying to find a solution where the book could avoid legal liability while preserving Joyce’s sense of artistic integrity.

As they continued to negotiate, Richards began to scrutinise the stories more carefully.

He became concerned that the book might damage his publishing house’s reputation and eventually backed down from his agreement.

Grant Richards, British publisher and writer, in 1909.png
Above: Grant Richards (1872 – 1948)

Getting a book published should be easy:

  1. Edit and proofread.
  2. Identify a target audience for your book.
  3. Identify potential agents.
  4. Submit your book proposal directly to a publisher.

How to Write Your First Novel: The Stress-Free Guide to Writing Fiction for  Beginners by M.L. Ronn

Trieste was Joyce’s main residence until 1920.

Although he would temporarily leave the city — briefly staying in Rome, travelling to Dublin and emigrating to Zürich during World War I — it became a second Dublin for him and played an important role in his development as a writer.

Dubliners eBook by James Joyce - 1230003633175 | Rakuten Kobo Greece

He completed Dubliners, reworked Stephen Hero into Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, wrote his only published play Exiles, and decided to make Ulysses a full-length novel as he created his notes and jottings for the work.

Exiles | James JOYCE

He worked out the characters of Leopold and Molly Bloom in Trieste.

Ulysses eBook by James Joyce - 1230002430188 | Rakuten Kobo Greece

Many of the novel’s details were taken from Joyce’s observation of the city and its people, and some of its stylistic innovations appear to have been influenced by Futurism – (an artistic and social movement that originated in Italy in the early 20th century and also developed in Russia, it emphasized dynamism, speed, technology, youth, violence, and objects such as the car, the airplane, and the industrial city).

Above: Dynamic Hieroglyphic of the Bal Tabarin, Gino Severini, 1912

There are even words of the Triestine dialect in Finnegans Wake.

Simple book cover, unadorned

Trieste is at the crossroads of several commercial and cultural flows: German-speaking Central Europe to the north, Slavic masses and the Balkans to the east, Italy and Latin countries to the west and the Mediterranean Sea to the south.

Its artistic and cultural heritage is linked to its singular “border town” location.

You can find some old Roman architecture (a small theatre near the sea, a nice arch into old city and an interesting Roman museum), Austrian Empire architecture across the city centre (similar to stuff you can find in Vienna) and a nice atmosphere of metissage of Mediterranean styles, as Trieste was a very important port during the 18th century.

Above: Trieste

In late May 1906, the head of the Berlitz school ran away after embezzling its funds.

Artifoni took over the school but let Joyce know that he could only afford to keep one brother on. 

The Berlitz School | Lo chiamavano Zois…

Berlitz Corporation is a Japanese-owned language education and leadership training company based in Princeton, New Jersey.

The company was founded in 1878 by Maximilian Berlitz in Providence, Rhode Island in the United States.

Berlitz Corporation is now a member of the Benesse Group, a Japanese company, with more than 547 company-owned and franchised locations in more than 70 countries.

Berlitz Sprachschulen logo.svg

Berlitz started in 1878, when Maximilian Berlitz was in need of an assistant French instructor.

He employed a Frenchman by the name of Nicholas Joly, only soon to discover that Joly barely spoke English, and was hired to teach French to English speakers in their native language.

The first Berlitz language school opened in Providence, Rhode Island, in July 1878.

A decade later, Berlitz moved to Boston, Massachusetts, and opened additional schools.

Soon after, he opened schools in New York and New Jersey.

In 1886, he moved the headquarters and his personal residence to New York City.

In 1895, a children’s language learning book was published by Maximilian Berlitz. 

By 1914, there were about 200 Berlitz schools, including 63 Berlitz schools in Germany and 27 in Britain.

By the time of the start of World War I in 1914, there were over 200 Berlitz Schools worldwide.

Maximilian Berlitz died in 1921.

Portrait of Maximilian Berlitz
Above: Maximilian Berlitz (1852 – 1921)

His son-in-law and associate, Victor Harrison-Berlitz, assumed leadership of the business.

Harrison died in 1932, and control passed briefly to his son, Victor Harrison-Berlitz Jr.

The control of the company was thereafter passed to Jacques Strumpen-Darrie.

Jacques’ son Robert succeeded his father as president in 1953.

Above: The first Berlitz Language School in Providence, Rhode Island (1878)

In the 1950s, Berlitz opened its first Latin American language center in Mexico, followed by locations in Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, and Peru.

Flag of Mexico
Above: Flag of Mexico

In 1966, Berlitz reached Asia, starting with a language center in Tokyo.

Today, there are more than 90 Berlitz centres in Asia.

Berlitz has 547 locations in more than 70 countries.

Locations | Berlitz Language Training Canada
Above: Berlitz Language Training Centres Worldwide

The Berlitz Method” uses the direct method and focuses on using language as a tool for communication.

The direct method, as opposed to the traditional grammar translation method, advocates teaching through the target language only, the rationale being that students will be able to work out grammatical rules from the input language provided, without necessarily being able to explain the rules overtly.

Today, there are a variety of derivative methods and theories that find their beginnings in the natural and communicative elements that were pioneered by Berlitz.

The tried-and-tested Berlitz Method®

While the situation at Berlitz is different from country to country, in Japan there has been substantial industrial action, including the 2007 – 2008 Berlitz Japan strike, which grew into the longest and largest sustained strike among language teachers in Japan.

Berlitz filed suit against the teachers’ union for damages it says it suffered during the strike, but the claim was rejected by the Tokyo District Court on 27 February 2012. 

Within a week Berlitz appealed the ruling to the High Court, with the first court date on 28 May 2012.

The final hearing was held on 27 December 2012, when an agreement was struck between Berlitz and the union.

Berlitz withdrew their High Court lawsuit and new rules for collective bargaining were also established.

They will again be conducted in English, after the language was changed to Japanese previously.

Berlitz also promised to disclose more financial information to the union.

The company also agreed to pay a base-up raise to current union members plus a lump sum bonus to the union.

Berlitz court ruling unequivocal on basic right to strike | The Japan Times
Above: Berlitz Japan strike

In 2010, employees of Berlitz language centers in Germany experienced a major labor conflict, as management planned to lay off nearly 70 contract teachers in order to economize with a staff of freelancers.

Berlitz Deutschland GmbH - 3 Bewertungen - München Altstadt - Weinstr. |  golocal
Above: Berlitz Sprachschule (Language School), München (Munich), Deutschland (Germany)

My own personal experience with Berlitz was in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany.

I applied for work there to discover that not only was that school the least lucrative of schools in the city at that time, that I would not be paid during the training period that was not held there but in a different city, but as well I would be forbidden to work for other schools while working for Berlitz.

Sprachtraining und BAMF-Kurse in Freiburg | Berlitz
Above: Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

Wall Street English (formerly Wall Street Institute) is among the largest providers of English language education for adults around the world.

Wall Street English was established in 1972 in Italy by Italian Luigi Tiziano Peccenini. 

Pecce, Luigi Tiziano Peccenini.jpg
Above: Luigi Tiziano Peccenini

The first Wall Street Institute centres opened in Italy in 1972, and within two years 24 new centres opened across Italy.

In 1983, Wall Street Institute expanded outside of Italy, and by the late 1980s Wall Street Institute was well established across Europe.

Expansion continued through the early 1990s, when centres were opened in Mexico, Chile and Venezuela.

Beginning in the late 1990s, Wall Street Institute expanded into the Middle East and then to Asia, which has grown to be a significant part of its business.

The company has over three million alumni with a current enrolment of 180,000 students.

Using a franchise model, they currently operate over 450 centers in 28 countries in North Africa, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East. 

Its international offices are in Hong Kong and in Barcelona, Spain.

In 2013, Wall Street Institute launched a company-wide rebranding, changing its name and identity.

The company now operates as Wall Street English.

We are Wall Street English

The Wall Street English program is designed for all levels of learners.

They have 20 different levels of English language courses ranging from beginner to advanced.

Their program includes an English-only environment in their centers, native English-speaking teachers, social activities that allow students to practice English in a social, non-threatening environment, and a global online student community.

The Wall Street English Blended Learning Method, created by Luigi Tiziano Peccenini and Luciano Biondo, combines different education methods of acquiring a language into one study cycle.

The Blended Learning Method includes self-study, small teacher-led classes, and practice time.

Students listen, read, write, speak, and practice English to gain a deep understanding of the language.

Wall Street English has been teaching English since 1972.

Our Method - Wall Street English

Their curriculum is aligned to the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), according to a study undertaken with the support of the University of Cambridge English for Speakers of Other Languages Examination group (ESOL).

In plain English ...: THE COMMON EUROPEAN FRAMEWORK OF REFERENCE FOR  LANGUAGES

Wall Street English was acquired by Pearson plc from an affiliate of the Carlyle Group and Citic Private Equity for $92 million in cash in 2010. 

Pearson logo.svg

In 2017, Pearson sold it to Baring Private Equity Asia and CITIC Capital for around $300 million.

Baring Private Equity Asia Logo.png

There are eight Wall Street English centers in Switzerland: Biel/Bienne, Fribourg/Freiburg, Geneva, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Lausanne, Lugano, Montreux and Neuchâtel.

Eskişehir is not my first experience with Wall Street.

Once upon a time, back in 2012 – 2013, I worked at a Wall Street branch in St. Gallen.

I enjoyed teaching there, but I found management difficult to work with.

With the closing of that branch in 2014, there are no longer branches in the German-speaking regions of Switzerland.

Above: Languages of Switzerland – German (orange) / French (purple) / Italian (green) / Romansh (yellow)

There are 16 centres in Turkey: six in Istanbul (at Bakirköy, Caddebostan, Sisli, Erenköy, Taksim and Beylikdüzü), three centres in Ankara (Kizilay, Cayyolu and Ostim), Izmit, Bursa, Eskişehir, Izmir, Antalya, Gaziantep and Konya.

Franciza Wall Street English | Franciza.ro

Tired of Trieste and discouraged that he could not get a publisher for Dubliners, Joyce found an advertisement for a correspondence clerk in a Roman bank that paid twice his current salary. 

He was hired for the position, and went to Rome at the end of July.

James Joyce and His Time in Rome - Walks in Rome (Est. 2001)

Above: James Joyce Plaque, Rome

Their first address was a rooming house at Via Frattina 52, off the Corso.

A memorial tablet now graces the building:

Where he lived from August to December 1906 / James Joyce / A voluntary exile evoked the story of Ulysses / Making of his Dublin our Universe.”

Their lodgings were two blocks from the bank where Joyce worked at Via S. Claudio 87.

Rome was rather tense in 1906.

Pope Pius X, still smarting from his loss of the Papal States some 30 years earlier, refused to move beyond the sanctuary of St Peter’s while the Savoy family, his rivals and Italy’s new monarchs, built rather grand monuments, empty gestures of grandeur.

Pius X, by Ernest Walter Histed (retouched).jpg
Above: Pope Pius X ( Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto) (1835 – 1914)

Into this tension walked 24-year-old James Joyce:

A man desperately trying to escape tensions of his own.

Since leaving Dublin, Joyce had been living in the Adriatic coastal town of Trieste, in northeast Italy.

He had made quite an impact on the expatriate community and their hangers-on.

Many people befriended Joyce and seemed endlessly willing to help him and his wife as they struggled to come to terms with the realities of raising a young family.

Datei:James Joyce Statue Triest 08-2016 300dpi.jpg – Wikipedia
Above: James Joyce Statue, Trieste

But Joyce was a restless and flamboyant character whose fondness for alcohol worried his wife and riled his English school employers.

Joyce even lured his brother Stanislaus to Trieste, knowing full well the extra income would help maintain his indulgent lifestyle.

To make matters worse, the school director absconded, leaving the school in disarray and Joyce without a regular income.

There was always trouble in Trieste.

New Directions Publishing | Stanislaus Joyce
Above: Stanislaus Joyce (1884 – 1955)

Perhaps Rome, with all its mysterious splendour and history, could inspire him to greatness.

Destiny and fame surely awaited him.

This was the city of the Caesars.

Rome Montage 2017.png
Above: Images of Roma (Rome), Italia (Italy)

It was where Keats (1795 – 1821) died, where Goethe (1749 – 1832) had roamed the Forum, and Joyce’s great hero Henrik Ibsen (1828 – 1906) spent many happy months.

Above: John Keats Tombstone, Rome

 - Goethe in the Roman Campagna - Google Art Project.jpg
Above: Goethe in the Roman Campagna, Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein, 1786

Above: Henrik Ibsen (far left) with friends in Rome, 1867

Joyce fixed his mind on the Eternal City and went about securing a job for himself with little difficulty.

Aided by a letter of recommendation from a former lord mayor of Dublin, Timothy Harrington, Joyce was offered a temporary post in the bank of Nast, Kolb and Schumacher, which stood at the corner of Via del Corso and Via S. Claudio, today the site of a large department store.

Above: Timothy Harrington (1851 – 1910)

Arriving in Rome on 31 July 1906, the Joyce family took lodgings on the third floor of a house at 52 Via Frattina, where today a plaque commemorates his stay.

The accommodation was small but close to his work and the bars and cafés around the Spanish Steps.

From the very beginning, however, his letters to Stanislaus speak negatively of the city and its people.

According to Joyce, the area around the Colosseum was simply “like an old cemetery with broken columns of temples and slabs.”

In a letter to his brother, he wrote:

Rome reminds me of a man who lives by exhibiting to travellers his grandmother’s corpse.

It’s clear that the city’s former glories did nothing for such a modern man.

But he clearly admits his own shortcomings and demonstrates his indignation in another letter to Stanislaus, lamenting:

I wish I knew something of Latin or Roman history.

But it’s not worthwhile beginning now.

So let the ruins rot.”

Colosseo 2020.jpg
Above: The Colosseum, Rome

His work in the bank was soul-destroying.

He often had to work 12 hours a day, copying up to 200 letters in an office where he had no interaction with the public.

He had nothing but contempt for his colleagues who spoke endlessly of their ailments.

His brother received constant updates on how difficult life in Rome was.

And although Joyce was earning more money in the bank, he frequently begged his brother to send more cash.

We want somebody completely dedicated to our firm, so you must not ask for a timetable that allows for extra jobs.

Thus the private bank of Nast-Kolb and Schumacher in Rome sought to put the screws on its prospective employee, the 25-year-old Irish writer James Joyce.

Outwardly, Joyce was completely dedicated to the firm.

His hours were long:

08.30-12.00, 14.00-19.30.

After that there were the little English language teaching jobs, guaranteed to shrink the mind and to round out the ends of the months.

Like many before and after, Joyce quickly found his salary (L.250 a month) inadequate and Rome expensive:

Rome certainly is not cheap, a lira goes a very short way here.”

With his linguistic skills, he was employed initially in the correspondence office of the bank.

While in Rome he took Danish lessons from a man named Petersen.

He was already fluent in French and Italian, and had taught himself Norwegian in order to read Ibsen in the original.

This multilingual clerk had a jaundiced view of his colleagues:

This morning in the bank that German clerk informed us what his wife should be:

She should be able to cook well, to sew, to housekeep, and to play at least one musical instrument.

I suppose they’re all like that in Deutschland.

I am dead tired of their bello and bellezza.

A clerk here is named (he is round, bald, fat, voiceless) Bartoluzzi.

You pronounce it by inflating both cheeks and prolonging the u.

Every time I pass him I repeat the name to myself and translate ‘Good day, little bits of Barto.’

Another is named Simonetti:

They are all little bits of something or other, I think.

This is my first experience of clerks:

Do they all talk for five minutes about the position of a pen wiper?”

r3rhm02sx
Above: James Joyce

Joyce had other ideas: “I hope to find time to finish my novel in Rome within the year.”

But he had packed and gone before the year was out, having written nothing of consequence bar letters to his brother Stanislaus in Trieste.

Together with Nora Barnacle, his companion of two years, and their son Giorgio, he had spent a total of seven months and seven days in Rome, and hated the place.

James Joyce
Above: James Joyce

By November, Joyce’s landlady was tiring of his excessive alcohol abuse and requested that he leave the accommodation on Via Frattina.

Joyce expected to charm his way out of the tight spot but the Signora stuck firmly to her guns and Joyce found himself homeless with his young family.

After four days spent searching, the young writer moved into Via Monte Brianzo 51, near Piazza Navona.

By Christmas, Joyce was forced to take another job as a teacher, but it wasn’t enough and the family dined on pasta on a thoroughly depressing Christmas Day.

While he struggled to make ends meet in Rome nothing came from his pen.

He found no time to write and no immediate inspiration.

The Roman ruins compounded his misery.

He complained of nightmares involving “death, corpses, assassinations, in which I take an unpleasantly prominent part.”

Above: The Death of Caesar, Jean-Léon Gérôme, 1867

The intrigues and gore of ancient Rome infiltrated his psyche and it seems he began to develop a strange appreciation of his native Dublin, something not so keenly felt since his departure.

Irritations can create pearls.

The pearls in this case are Joyce’s two masterpieces, the short story “The Dead” and the novel Ulysses.

The seeds for both were sown in Rome.

Joyce’s letters from this period are filled with parallels between Rome and Dublin.

Samuel Beckett Bridge At Sunset Dublin Ireland (97037639) (cropped).jpeg
Above: Samuel Beckett Bridge, Dublin, Ireland

Photo of the Ponte Sant'Angelo bridge
Above: Ponte Sant’Angelo, Rome

The figure of the Jew, Leopold Bloom, in Ulysses, wandering the streets of a provincial capital, echoes Joyce’s position as a friendless expatriate bank clerk.

Poldy.png
Above: Drawing of Leopold Bloom by Joyce

Bloom’s facile, wide-ranging, restless mentality is that of the Roman flâneur.

Above: Le Flâneur, Paul Gavarni, 1842

(Flâneur is a French noun referring to a person, literally meaning “stroller“, “lounger“, “saunterer“, or “loafer“, but with some nuanced additional meanings. 

Flânerie is the act of strolling, with all of its accompanying associations.

A near-synonym of the noun is boulevardier.

Traditionally depicted as male, a flâneur is an ambivalent figure of urban affluence and modernity, representing the ability to wander detached from society with no other purpose than to be an acute observer of industrialized, contemporary life.

The flâneur was, first of all, a literary type from 19th century France, essential to any picture of the streets of Paris.

The word carried a set of rich associations: the man of leisure, the idler, the urban explorer, the connoisseur of the street.)

Something too of the tessellated sense of history, which Rome epitomises, has gone into Ulysses.

It was at this time that the ideas for his wonderful short story, The Dead, began their gestation.

Perhaps the simple Christmas lunch and Signora Dufour’s apparently barbarous treatment of his family led to dreams of more lavish feasts and what the story’s hero Gabriel Conroy refers to as unique Irish hospitality.

In the same breath Joyce, through Gabriel, a character all the while fixated on the attractions and trappings of continental Europe, acknowledges those things that Ireland has to offer the world by way of this tradition.

Rome’s somewhat crude irreverence for the dead who are constantly on display, whether through imperial Rome’s whimsical Caesars or greedy popes, is in sharp contrast to the quiet, melancholy image of Dublin covered in snow.

The romance and bombast of Michelangelo, Bernini and Borromini contrasts with the humble but no less passionate Michael Furey in The Dead who, we find out, courted Gabriel’s wife Gretta and died of consumption but may, as Gretta reveals, have “died for me”.

Eventually, Joyce had had enough and he decided to leave Rome.

The Dead by James Joyce | 9780979660795 | Paperback | Barnes & Noble®

The day before leaving he was given his last pay cheque from his bank job, and splashed out on a few farewell drinks.

As he drank, two men managed to get a look inside his wallet and when Joyce left the café they attacked and robbed him.

Luckily, he had left some of his pay at his lodgings and with it he packed his son and his wife onto a train for Trieste and left Rome.

He never returned.

Arrivederci Professore: Amazon.de: DVD & Blu-ray

Joyce felt he accomplished very little during his brief stay in Rome, but it had a large impact on his writing.

Though his new job took up most of his time, he revised Dubliners and worked on Stephen Hero.

Rome was the birthplace of the idea for “The Dead“, which would become the final story of Dubliners, and for Ulysses, which was originally conceived as a short story. 

His stay in the city was one of his inspirations for Exiles.

Exiles by James Joyce, New Directions, 1947 | Alvin lustig, Amazing book  covers, History design

Exiles is James Joyce’s only extant play and draws on the story of “The Dead“, the final short story in Joyce’s story collection Dubliners.

The play was rejected by W.B. Yeats for production by the Abbey Theatre.

Above: William Butler Yeats (1865 – 1939)

Its first major London performance was in 1970, when Harold Pinter directed it at the Mermaid Theatre.

Above: Harold Pinter (1930 – 2008)

In terms of both its critical and popular reception, Exiles has proven the least successful of all of Joyce’s published works.

In making his case for the defence of the play, Padraic Colum conceded:

Critics have recorded their feeling that Exiles has not the enchantment of Portrait of the Artist nor the richness of Ulysses.

They have noted that Exiles has the shape of an Ibsen play and have discounted it as being the derivative work of a young admirer of the great Scandinavian dramatist.”

Photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1959.
Above: Padraic Colum (1881 – 1972)

The play follows four players and two couples, Richard Rowan, a writer and his “common-law wifeBertha, and Robert Hand with his cousin and previous lover Beatrice, both old friends of the previous couple.

The plot is deceptively simple:

Richard, a writer, returns to Ireland from Rome with Bertha, the mother of his illegitimate son, Archie.

While there, he meets his former lover and correspondent Beatrice Justice and former drinking partner and now successful journalist Robert Hand.

Robert was also Beatrice’s lover, and here the complications begin.

As jealousy develops throughout the relationships the action meditates mostly in a budding relationship between Hand and Bertha and thus in Hand‘s attempts at seduction with the lover of his friend.

Exiles eBook by James Joyce - 1230000190742 | Rakuten Kobo Greece

The first act takes place at Rowan‘s house where Hand makes his first advance at Bertha.

After kissing her “with passion” several times Hand requests she join him in his home for a second meeting later that evening.

Bertha in turn confides in Rowan and questions whether or not to accept his invitation.

To this, Rowan retorts she must do whatever she pleases.

Joyce, J: Exiles: A Critical Edition (Florida James Joyce) : Fargnoli, A.  Nicholas, Gillespie, Michael Patrick, Joyce, James: Amazon.de: Books

In the second act, Hand waits, expecting Bertha at the appointed hour but instead is surprised when Rowan appears.

Calmly, Rowan explains his knowledge of Hand‘s attempts at wooing Bertha but is interrupted when Bertha herself knocks at the door.

Rowan returns home, leaving his wife alone with Hand who continues his advances toward Bertha.

The act ends inconclusively, with Hand asking if Bertha loves him, and Bertha explaining:

I like you, Robert.

I think you are good.

Are you satisfied?”

Exiles - Hörbuch Download | James Joyce | Audible.de: Gelesen von Lance  Rasmussen, Jo Palfi, Elizabeth Klett, Graham Scott, Linda Barrans, Leanne  Yau

The third act returns to Rowan‘s home at seven o’clock the following morning.

Bertha‘s maid informs her of Rowan‘s departure from the home an hour earlier, as he left for a walk on the strand.

Printed in the morning newspapers is a favourable article written about Rowan, written the previous evening by Hand himself.

The events of the previous night between Bertha and Hand are unclear, as both parties agree it was a “dream“.

But appearances demonstrate Hand and Bertha shared “a sacred night of love“.

Hand reports to Rowan, assuring him Bertha in fact did not stay the night but instead Hand spent the night alone.

Claiming to have visited the Vice-Chancellor’s lodge, returned home to write the newspaper article, then gone to a nightclub where he picked up a divorcée and had sex with her (“what the subtle Duns Scotus calls ‘a death of the spirit’ took place“) in the cab on the way home.

JohnDunsScotus - full.jpg
Above: John Duns Scotus (1265 – 1308)

Following this conversation, Hand leaves for his cousin’s house in Surrey while Rowan and Bertha are reconciled.

Bertha admits that she longs to meet her lover, but asserts that the lover is Rowan himself.

The resolution of the play lies precisely in the sense of doubt about what occurred between Hand and Bertha between Acts Two and Three.

Rowan is wounded by the sense of doubt that he admits he longed for.

Indeed, he sees this sense of doubt as what enables him “to be united with Bertha in body and soul in utter nakedness”.

Exiles : James Joyce : 9780198800064

There are obvious parallels to be drawn with Joyce’s own life – Joyce and Nora Barnacle lived, unmarried, in Trieste, during the years the fictional Rowans were living in Rome.

During this time, Joyce and his lover considered themselves to be living in exile, directly mirroring the setting of Exiles.

Robert Hand too, draws a connection to Joyce’s personal life as he resembles two friends of Joyce’s, Oliver St. John Gogarty and Vincent Cosgrave, and even shares a few defining characteristics with them both.

Similarly, the character of Beatrice Justice has been said to reflect a cousin of Joyce’s, Elizabeth Justice, who died in 1912.

However, Exiles is by no means straightforwardly autobiographical.

The great question which Joyce sought to use as the basis for a drama was that of human freedom and human dignity.

It is exposed and focused in terms of love and sexual relationships.”

Exiles : James Joyce : 9798686447462

While in Rome, Joyce read the socialist historian Guglielmo Ferrero in depth.

Ferraro’s anti-heroic interpretations of history, arguments against militarism, and conflicted attitudes toward Jews would find their way into Ulysses, particularly in the character of Leopold Bloom

Guglielmo Ferrero.jpg
Above: Guglielmo Ferrero

Guglielmo Ferrero (1871 — 1942) was an Italian historian, journalist and novelist, author of the five-volume Greatness and Decline of Rome (published in English in 1909).

Ferrero devoted his writings to classical liberalism.

He opposed any kind of dictatorship and unlimited government.

He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature twenty times in six years.

Guglielmo Ferrero - Grandeur et décadence de Rome - - Catawiki

Born in Portici, near Napoli (Naples), Ferrero studied law in Pisa, Bologna and Torino (Turin).

Soon afterward he married Gina Lombroso, a daughter of Cesare Lombroso, the criminologist and psychiatrist with whom he wrote The Female OffenderThe Prostitute and The Normal Woman.

Above: Gina Lombroso (1872 – 1944)

From 1891 to 1894 Ferrero traveled extensively in Europe and in 1897 wrote The Young Europe, a book which had a strong influence over James Joyce.

Above: Monument to Giordano Bruno, Campo de’ Fiori, Rome

Joyce admired Bruno and attended the procession in his honour while in Rome.

(In The Young Europe, Ferrero, according to a radical-democratic political perspective and sociology, noted that in Latin countries, such as Italy, society was “governed by classes that do not represent productive work” and expressed a government that is ” thief and patron at the same time, stripper and almsgiver “, dominating an authoritarian and Caesarist state, which presented itself to the agricultural plebs essentially in the form of “gendarme and tax collector“, while in the societies of Northern Europe, where modern industrial capitalism, the enemy of aristocracies, was in full development, “all men, even the humblest, are collaborators of the universe of common work and therefore necessary elements of the whole“, because of a “fruitful and living justice in relations between men“. )

Above: Europa, Palazzio Ferreria, Valetta, Malta

After studying the history of Rome, Ferrero turned to political essays and novels (Between Two Worlds in 1913, Speeches to the Deaf in 1925 and The Two Truths in 1939).

When the fascist reign of the Black Shirts forced liberal intellectuals to leave Italy in 1925, Ferrero refused and was placed under house arrest.

Above: Blackshirts, Piazza di Siena, Rome, 1936

In 1929 Ferrero accepted a professorship at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva.

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His last works (AdventureBonaparte in ItalyThe Reconstruction of EuropeThe Principles of Power and The Two French Revolutions) were dedicated to the French Revolution (1789 – 1799) and Napoleon Bonaparte (1769 – 1821).

Portrait of Napoleon in his late thirties, in high-ranking white and dark blue military dress uniform. In the original image he stands amid rich 18th-century furniture laden with papers, and gazes at the viewer. His hair is Brutus style, cropped close but with a short fringe in front, and his right hand is tucked in his waistcoat.
Above: The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries, Jacques-Louis David, 1812

Ferrero was invited to the White House in 1908 by Theodore Roosevelt, who had read The Greatness and Decline of Rome.

Ferrero gave lectures in the northeast of the USA which were collected and published in 1909 as Characters and Events of Roman History.

President Roosevelt - Pach Bros (cropped).jpg
Above: Theodore Roosevelt (1858 – 1919)

Ferrero died in 1942 at Mont Pèlerin, Switzerland.

MontPelerinFromMontreux.JPG
Above: Mont Pèlerin, France

In London, Elkin Mathews published Joyce’s Chamber Music on the recommendation of the British poet Arthur Symons.

Above: Arthur Symons (1865 – 1945)

Chamber Music is a collection of poems by James Joyce, published in May 1907.

The collection originally comprised 34 love poems, but two further poems were added before publication (“All day I hear the noise of waters” and “I hear an army charging upon the land“).

Although it is widely reported that the title refers to the sound of urine tinkling in a chamber pot, this is a later Joycean embellishment, lending an earthiness to a title first suggested by his brother Stanislaus and which Joyce (by the time of publication) had come to dislike:

The reason I dislike Chamber Music as a title is that it is too complacent“, he admitted to Arthur Symons in 1906.

I should prefer a title which repudiated the book without altogether disparaging it.”

ChamberMusicJoyce.jpg

Richard Ellmann reports (from a 1949 conversation with Eva Joyce) that the chamberpot connotation has its origin in a visit he made, accompanied by Oliver Gogarty, to a young widow named Jenny in May 1904.

Richard Ellmann.jpg
Above: Richard Ellmann (1918 – 1987)

The three of them drank porter while Joyce read manuscript versions of the poems aloud – and, at one point, Jenny retreated behind a screen to make use of a chamber pot.

Gogarty commented:

There’s a critic for you!“.

When Joyce later told this story to Stanislaus, his brother agreed that it was a “favourable omen“.

In Ulysses, Leopold Bloom reflects:

Chamber music.

Could make a pun on that.

In fact, the poetry of Chamber Music is not in the least bawdy, nor reminiscent of the sound of tinkling urine.

Although the poems did not sell well (fewer than half of the original print run of 500 had been sold in the first year), they received some critical acclaim. 

Ezra Pound admired the “delicate temperament” of these early poems, while Yeats described “I hear an army charging upon the land” as “a technical and emotional masterpiece“.

In 1909, Joyce wrote to his wife:

When I wrote Chamber Music, I was a lonely boy, walking about by myself at night and thinking that one day a girl would love me.”

James Joyce at six in 1888 in sailor suit with hands in pocket, facing the camera
Above: James Joyce, age 6, 1888

Nonetheless, Joyce was dissatisfied with his job, had exhausted his finances, and realised he’d need additional support when he learned Nora was pregnant again.

He left Rome after only seven months.

Arrivederci, Baby! (1966) - IMDb

Roma (Rome), the ‘Eternal City‘, is the capital and largest city of Italy and of the Lazio (Latium) region.

It is the famed city of the Roman Empire, the Seven Hills, La Dolce Vita (the sweet life), Vatican City and Three Coins in the Fountain.

Flag of Vatican City
Above: Flag of Vatican City

Rome, as a millennium-long centre of power, culture and religion, having been the centre of one of the globe’s greatest civilizations ever, has exerted a huge influence over the world in its 2,500 years of existence.

The historic centre of the city is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

UNESCO logo English.svg

With wonderful palaces, millennium-old churches and basilicas, grand romantic ruins, opulent monuments, ornate statues and graceful fountains, Rome has an immensely rich historical heritage and cosmopolitan atmosphere, making it one of Europe’s and the world’s most visited, famous, influential and beautiful capitals.

The Roman Empire in AD 117 at its greatest extent, at the time of Trajan's death (with its vassals in pink)[3]
Above: The Roman Empire at its greatest extent

Today, Rome has a growing nightlife scene and is also seen as a shopping heaven, being regarded as one of the fashion capitals of the world (some of Italy’s oldest jewellery and clothing establishments were founded in the city).

Three coins.jpg

With so many sights and things to do, Rome can truly be classified a “global city“.

La Dolce Vita (1960 film) coverart.jpg

Ute (the wife) and I visited Rome for three days in April 2004.

I enjoyed playing tourist in Rome, but like Istanbul or Paris or New York, it is a metropolis too crowded and too expensive for me to ever consider my wanting to live there.

I have few memories of Rome.

Above: Trajan’s Market, Rome

I read your book
And I find it strange
That I know that girl

And I know her world
A little too well

I didn’t know
By giving my hand
That I would be written down, sliced around, passed down
Among strangers’ hands

Three days in Rome
Where do we go?
I’ll always remember
Three days in Rome

Never again
Would I see your face
You carry a pen and a paper,

And no time and no words you waste


Oh, you’re a voyeur

The worst kind of thief
To take what happened to us
To write down everything that went on between you and me

Three days in Rome
And I stand alone
I’ll always remember
Three days in Rome

And what do I get?
Do I get revenge?
While you lay it all out
Without any doubt

Of how this would end


Sometimes it goes
Sometimes we come
To learn by mistake that the love you once made
Can’t be undone

Three days in Rome
I laid my heart out
I laid my soul down
I’ll always remember

Three days in Rome.

45cat - Sheryl Crow - Tomorrow Never Dies (Full Length Version) / The Book  - A&M - UK - 582 456-7

I remember the Torre Argentina Cat Sanctuary….

1929 was the year the sacred area of Torre Argentina was excavated.

This was also the year the history of the cats’ residency began.

Stray and abandoned felines took refuge in the protected area below stree​t level.

From 19​​29 until 1993, the cats were more or less regulary fed by a succession of cat ladies or “gattare“.

One of the most famous of these cat lovers was the great Italian filmstar Anna Magnani.

While working at Teatro Argentina which borders the ruins, Ms. Magnani would spend her breaks feeding her four legged friends.

This film legend, famous for her heart-tugging performances, died in the 1960s.

Above: Anna Magnani (1908 – 1973)

Lia and Silvia started working with the cats in 1993 when they began helping a woman who was running the show alone: feeding, spaying and neutering all the cats.

Her generous efforts put her on the verge of an economic and emotional collapse.

Soon Lia and Silvia realised there was a lot more work than the three women could manage.

In that year the cat population was 90 and growing due to the irresponsibility of people abandoning their cats and kittens, perhaps to go on vacation.

And so, Torre Argentina Cat Sanctuary was born.

Above: Lia and Silvia

Working conditions were primitive to say the least.

A cave like area under the street had been unwittingly created by the construction of the street and the pillars that sustain it long before the cat shelter began.

It had a floor space of about 100 square meters and it began as a night shelter for the cats and as a storage place for cat food.

It was a difficult and frustrating job.

Caring for more than 90 cats in a damp underground space, in many places so low that one cannot stand up and no electricity or running water.

For almost a year and a half Silvia and Lia worked under these conditions, hoping for a breakthrough or a guide through this dark period.

Their prayers were answered in 1995 when a savior arrived:

An English woman named Molga Salvalaggio.

She told Silvia and Lia about the wonderful achievements of certain English organizations who worked in animal protection and she put them in contact with the A.I.S.P.A. (Anglo-Italian Society for the Protection of Animals).

The A.I.S.P.A. was the first organisation to give material as well as moral support.

In addition, they introduced Silvia and Lia to English resources concerning stray cats and solutions to frequent problems who studied this invaluable information and began the slow process of imitating English role models.

The first job was to raise desperately needed funds.

The primitive location had one great advantage:

It was a tourist attraction because of the historical and archaeological significance of the ruins.

Painfully swallowing pride and embarrassment Silvia and Lia started approaching tourists who seemed more interested in the cats than the ruins and asked for donations.

Unbelievably, it worked!

Not only did they collect needed cash, they also managed to attract a certain number of volunteers:

Mostly women of many different nationalities, Italian, French, German, American, English, Brazilian and Dutch.

Torre Argentina became a sort of United Nations for cats.

To raise more money they started organizing fundraising dinners, raffles and flea market sales.​

In September 1998, US Navy Captain John Henriksen and his wife Cheryl generously opened their home to 120 people for a dinner, auction and raffle, the first Gala.

Later, Alexandra Richardson, wife to the British Ambassador allowed volunteers to hold a fundraiser/gala at her residence.

Several more galas followed the following years and provided badly needed funds.

With the newly found income, TA could afford cat food of better quality and the new burst of enthusiasm also motivated Silvia, Lia and their team of volunteers to become more professional and organized in daily operations.

When feeding, spaying, and veterinary care for the TA cats had become an affordable routine, TA started sharing funds also with the poorer sanctuaries around Rome, but with the emphasis on spaying and neutering.

They were, and still are, priorities.

Nelson, a one-eyed Torre Argentina cat was the main character in an award winning book by volunteer, Deborah D’Alessandro.

It was published in 1999 and soon became a bestseller at the shelter drawing attention to the plight of abandoned cats.

9788886061667: Nelson. The one-eyed king - Il re senza un occhio - AbeBooks  - Deborah D'Alessandro: 8886061668

At around the same time, Barbara Palmer published  “Cat Tales”:

Both books contributed to the growing reputation of the shelter.

Cat tales: Roma, Torre argentina - Praha - Sbazar.cz

In 2000, the Sanctuary entered a new era when we were given international exposure with the gift of a website, http://www.romancats.com from Dutch animal rescuers and professional web designers, Micha Postma and Christiaan Schipper.

On the home front, in 2001, the cats of Rome became a “bio-cultural heritage” by special proclamation of the city council.

Things were moving in the right direction:

As the Sanctuary grew, there was also a growing awareness  suffering of the stray animals and their need for protection.

The time was ripe for a public statement:

In 2003, Torre Argentina Sanctuary (TA) was instrumental in the organization of a demonstration march, Cat Pride, that had several thousand participants demanding protection and funding for Rome’s strays.

In 2004, the production of the DVD Cats of Rome  by Michael Hunt, contributed to a further diffusion of TA’s work and goals.

Amazon.com: Cats Of Rome : Narrated by Keith Burberry, Michael W. Hunt:  Movies & TV

I remember also, with as much great fondness as Torre Argentina, the Anglo-American Bookshop.

The Anglo American Bookshop - Wanted in Rome

The bookshop was founded in 1953 under the name of Interbook by an Englishman named Patrick Searle.

Later it was divided into two: Interbook and the Anglo-American Book Company.

The owner of the latter was General Edward Rush Duer Jr.

This choice was very courageous as the English language was not yet considered a language recognized worldwide for any type of exchange (economic, cultural, tourist, etc.).

The initial location was in the centre of Rome, on Via Firenze at the corner of Via Nazionale and later in Via del Boschetto where Arminio Lucchesi (45 years old) and Dino Donati (24 years old) worked, two young booksellers full of desire to do well and resourcefulness who came from previous book experiences.

The first had been in charge of the international department of the historic Bocca bookshop (in Piazza di Spagna, which unfortunately closed in the 90s to make way for a tour operator) and the second had been a willing salesman at the Modernissima bookshop (in via della Mercede, also closed in the 90s to make way for a pizzeria).

A few years later Donati found a shop in Via della Vite 57 (excellent for access to the public) and in company with Lucchesi and Mrs. Nadia Likatcheff Deur moved the business to these new premises where it has remained for over 40 years.

Anglo American Bookshop | Rome, Italy Shopping - Lonely Planet

The street was in the center of the capital but was in a location with little passage, the “neighbours” of the shop were a deposit of mineral water, a charcoal burner, a “sandwich shop” (which over time became the renowned Tuscan restaurant Mario).

At first, times were very difficult, the Second World War had just ended and illiteracy was still a problem felt in Italy.


At the beginning the sales situation was not at all rosy, but the situation improved day by day, Lucchesi was in charge of the internal management of the bookshop and Donati for the promotion and dissemination throughout Italy.

Soon the place became too small to manage the volume of books that arrived for the bookstore and those that were commissioned by customers, institutions or companies, and so they decided to rent an apartment in Via della Vite 68, in order to better manage the part of the commission that was getting bigger.

Anglo American Bookshop - Colonna - 3 tips from 98 visitors


In 1960 Mrs. Deur left for the US and, after a few months, her share was taken over by Donati and Lucchesi.

The bookshop and commission was now underway and the first profits and satisfactions had already arrived.

Luck was on their side, English had become the language of the future and interest grew more and more.

In 1972, part of the commission was transferred from Via della Vite 68 to Via della Vite 27 where the Technical and Scientific Department was located and established for reasons of space.

Otherwise Bookshop in Rome - An American in Rome


The next important step was the creation of the subscription service, one of the first in Italy and Europe.

The aim was to act as an intermediary between a multiplicity of publishers and large customers who needed to receive subscription journals to keep the current value of their studies or ongoing research very high.

The largest customers were, and are, universities, research institutions and medium-large companies engaged in long-term technological research.

At the end of the 70s there was the real explosion of activity and traffic.

The employees were more and more, the space was less and less, and the books and magazines published grew exponentially.


In 1978, Dino Donati took over his share from Arminio Lucchesi and distributed the company shares with his wife Carla and their children, Daniele and Cristina.

At the beginning of the 80s to meet further requests, two more apartments were rented in the same building in Via della Vite 27 outlining the following arrangement that still exists:

  • First and second floors: technical, scientific and commission department
  • Third floor: administration and management
  • Fourth floor: subscription service and data processing centre

To make the best use of the spaces of the small library, two architects were commissioned to renovate the library making it more welcoming and at the same time obtain useful spaces even in the smallest slot.

In 1981, the purchase of their first computer gave the start to the computerization of the entire society.

In 1986, the first XENIX multi-user system connected all the library departments.

The world’s first CD-ROM databases peeped out the door and the A-AB were among the first to consider and massively use them.

This was the beginning of the information and organizational revolution that has followed to this day.

English language bookshops in Rome - Wanted in Rome

At the end of the 80s the books in the library constantly present in stock had become over 80,000 and the small bookstore was bursting, so the sales staff were forced to invent unlikely positions to make sure that the books found a place.

In 1993, with considerable economic commitment, the library was moved from number 57 (about 40 square meters) to number 102 (about 180 square meters) always in Via della Vite where it is currently located.


Books finally breathe, customers too.

You don’t have to crowd to browse and evaluate a book before buying.

The books always on the shelves have reached over 150,000.


The 90s also brought the subscription service to the point of its maximum expansion with the Total service: a reception and delivery service designed for large companies and the most demanding libraries.

This led to the establishment of a company in New York the AABOOK Corp. where all US subscriptions are centralized and subsequently sent by express courier to Rome.

1997 was the year of the launch of the website and the beginning of e-commerce.

English language bookshops in Rome - Wanted in Rome

It was here I bought an English translation of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s Italian Journey, which in turn would inspire us to visit Casa di Goethe and the Keats-Shelley Memorial House.

It was here also I discovered the magazine Wanted in Rome:

Wanted in Rome | LinkedIn

Wanted in Rome is a monthly magazine in English for expatriates in Rome established in 1982.

The magazine covers Roman news stories that may be of interest to English and Italian speaking residents, and tourists as well.

The publication also offers classifieds, photos, information on events, museums, churches, galleries, exhibits, fashion, food, and local travel.

Wanted in Rome was founded in 1982 by two expats who identified the need of an aggregation magazine for the English-speaking community.

In 1997 it launched its website.

Wanted in Rome - June 2020 - Wanted in Rome

The Casa di Goethe is a museum in Rome, at Via del Corso 18, dedicated to Goethe, his Italian journey and his life at Rome in the years from 1786 through 1788.

During his journey Goethe wrote a journal and also many letters which would be published in 1817 as the Italian Journey.

House of goethe fassade.JPG

The Museum is located in the house and in the same rooms in which Goethe lived with his friend the German painter Johann Wilhelm Tischbein during his stay in Rome.

Above: Self Portrait, Johann Wilhelm Tischbein (1751 – 1829)

The permanent exhibition covers his life in Italy, his work and writing, and also about his private life and shows original documents concerning his life.

The second exhibition, which is always a temporary exhibition, often refers to arguments and themes which connect somehow the Italian and German cultures or talks about artists like:

  • Max Beckmann

Max Beckmann, photograph by Hans Möller,1922.jpg
Above: Max Beckmann (1884 – 1950)

  • Heinrich Mann

Heinrich Mann, 1906
Above: Heinrich Mann (1871 – 1950)

  • Thomas Mann

Thomas Mann in 1929
Above: Thomas Mann (1875 – 1955)

  • Andreu Alfaro

Andreu #Alfaro #artist | Escultura abstrata, Arte em cerâmica, Esculturas
Above: Andreu Alfaro (1929 – 2012)

  • Günter Grass

Grass in 2006
Above: Günter Grass (1927 – 2015)

  • Johann Gottfried Schadow (just to name a few) 

Above: Johann Gottfried Schadow (1764 – 1850)

  • Their experiences in Italy as well as their examinations of Goethe

Flag of Italy
Above: Flag of Italy

The Museum owns a library, which includes also the collection of Richard W. Dorn.

The Casa di Goethe, opened in 1997 and is administrated by the Association of Independent Cultural Institutes (AsKI) and directed by Ursula Bongaerts.

Casa di Goethe (@CasadiGoethe) / Twitter

The Keats–Shelley Memorial House is a writer’s house museum in Rome, commemorating the Romantic poets John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley.

The museum houses one of the world’s most extensive collections of memorabilia, letters, manuscripts, and paintings relating to Keats and Shelley, as well as Byron, Wordsworth, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Oscar Wilde, and others.

It is located on the second floor of the building situated just to the south of the base of the Spanish Steps and east of the Piazza do Spagna.

Keats-Shelley House.jpg
Above: Keats – Shelly House, beside the Spanish Steps, Rome

In November 1820, the English poet John Keats, who was dying of tuberculosis, came to Rome at the urging of friends and doctors who hoped that the warmer climate might improve his health.

Posthumous portrait of Keats by William Hilton, National Portrait Gallery, London (c. 1822)
Above: John Keats (1795 – 1821)

He was accompanied by an acquaintance, the artist Joseph Severn, who nursed and looked after Keats until his death, at age 25, on 23 February 1821, in this house. 

Visitors today can enter the second-floor bedroom in which the poet died in terrible agony, his devoted friend Joseph Severn at his side.

Above: Self Portrait, Joseph Severn (1793 – 1879)

Keats is buried in the city’s Non-Catholic Cemetery where his tomb – dedicated simply to a “young English poet” – continues to draw pilgrims almost two centuries after his death. 

Cimitero Acattolico Roma.jpg
Above: Cimitero Acattolico (Non-Catholic Cemetery), Rome

The walls were initially scraped and all things remaining in the room immediately burned (in accordance with the health laws of 19th century Rome) following the poet’s death.

The effort to purchase and restore the two-room apartment in which Keats spent his final days began in 1903 at the instigation of the American poet Robert Underwood Johnson. 

Robert Underwood Johnson in 1920.jpg
Above: Robert Underwood Johnson (1853 – 1937)

Assisted by interested parties representing America, England, and Italy, the house was purchased late in 1906 and dedicated in April 1909 for use by the Keats–Shelley Memorial Association.

The rooms then became known as the Keats–Shelley House.

During World War II, the Keats–Shelley House went “underground“, especially after 1943, in order to preserve its invaluable contents from falling into the hands of, and most likely being deliberately destroyed by, Nazi Germany.

External markings relating to the museum were removed from the building.

The Keats - Shelley House in Rome - Memorial House

Although the library’s 10,000 volumes were not removed, two boxes of artifacts were sent to the Abbey of Monte Cassino in December 1942 for safekeeping.

In October 1943, the Abbey’s archivist placed the two unlabelled boxes of Keats–Shelley memorabilia with his personal possessions so that they could be removed during the Abbey’s evacuation and not fall into German hands.

The items were reclaimed by the museum’s curator and returned to the Keats–Shelley House, where the boxes were reopened in June 1944 upon the arrival of the Allied forces in Rome.

Monte Cassino Opactwo 1.JPG
Above: Abbey of Monte Cassino, Italy

Rome’s Keats-Shelley House hosts a mysterious watercolour map on its steep, narrow stairwell where it is believed to have rested since the museum’s opening in 1909.

Painted by an unknown artist, the map depicts the area surrounding Piazza di Spagna, using blue motifs with calligraphy to indicate where visiting British and American writers and artists stayed during the 19th century.

By this time the network of streets around the Spanish Steps was already known as the “English ghetto” due to its popularity among wealthy British travellers who would conclude their grand tours of Europe in Rome.

The map contains around two dozen names – many of whose paths crossed – with several buildings hosting plaques boasting of their illustrious former residents.

Based on the information recorded in the map, which can also be viewed on the Keats-Shelley House website, it is possible to trace a roughly clockwise trail around the Tridente, a trident-shaped area of the centro storico fanning out from Porta del Popolo, once the main gateway to the city.

The walking tour spans nine decades, from 1817 to 1895, and takes a couple of hours at a leisurely pace. 

Tracing the footsteps of Rome's foreign writers and artists

1819 saw the arrival of English Romantic painter J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851).

It is not known where he stayed – perhaps at Palazzo Poli near the Trevi Fountain from which his one surviving letter was written.

However we know that on his return trip in August 1828 he took lodgings at Piazza Mignanelli 12, a stone’s throw from what is now the Keats-Shelley House.

Turner’s exhibition in December 1828 at Palazzo Trulli (demolished half a century later to make way for Corso Vittorio Emanuele II) was attended by over a thousand visitors.

However, the works received a predominantly unfavourable response, according to Turner expert David Blayney Brown.

On 3 January 1829 Turner departed Rome for the last time, although the city’s ruins were to feature prominently in his future work.

Joseph Mallord William Turner Self Portrait 1799.jpg
Above: Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775 – 1851)

Oh, Rome!

My country!

City of the soul!

The Romantic poet Lord Byron (1788 – 1824) is undoubtedly a most colourful character.

Fleeing debts and a desperate personal situation, Byron left England in 1816, never to return, living mainly in Italy until his death in modern-day Greece aged 36.

Byron befriended the Shelleys at Lake Geneva before travelling to Italy, where he was to spend seven years, predominantly in Venice, Pisa and Ravenna.

According to popular myth, he lodged at Piazza di Spagna 66, opposite the Keats-Shelley House, in 1817.

On his return to Ravenna he wrote the 4th canto of his epic narrative poem Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, about half of which relates to Rome. 

Portrait of Byron
Above: Lord George Gordon Byron (1788 – 1824)

The map features a couple of names who fit into neither painter nor writer category.

One of these figures is James Clark (1788 – 1870), a Scottish doctor who operated a thriving medical practice in Piazza di Spagna from 1819 until 1826, during which time poor Keats was one of his patients.

Despite rising to become physician to Queen Victoria, recent research suggests that Clark misdiagnosed Keats’ illness, compounding the poet’s final months of agony by enforcing starvation and blood lettings.

The doctor’s exact address is unknown but, according to the American author John Evangelist Walsh in his book In Darkling I Listen: The Last Days and Death of John Keats, Clark lived “across the steps” from the Keats – Shelley House. 

Sir-James-Clark-1788-1870.jpg
Above> Sir James Clark (1788 – 1870)

Ascending the steps to Trinità dei Monti, the map lists the American landscape painter Thomas Cole (1801 – 1848) as living on Via Sistina, without a street number, but with the vital clue that he was based at a studio once used by Claude Lorrain, from 1831 – 1832 and again in 1841.

According to a drawing in the collection of the British Museum, the location of Lorrain’s former studio corresponds to Via Sistina 66, the building wedged between the start of Via Sistina and Via Gregoriana, opposite today’s Hotel Hassler. 

Thomas Cole.jpg
Above: Thomas Cole (1801 – 1848)

Next door at Via Sistina 64 lived the Irish portrait painter Amelia Curran (1775 – 1847), who moved to Rome in or around 1818, eking out a living painting portraits and copying old Masters.

She is best known for her portrait of her friend Percy Bysshe Shelley, quill in hand, which was presumably painted at this address and is now in the National Portrait Gallery in London.

Above: Portrait of Percy Bysshe Shelley, Amelia Curran

Curran died in 1847, her funeral celebrated at the Franciscan church of St Isidore’s on Via degli Artisti 41.

Here she is commemorated with a memorial featuring palette and brushes, carved by prominent Rome-based Irish sculptor John Hogan (1800 – 1858).

Rome – St Isidore's College – Irish Franciscans
Above: St. Isidore’s, Rome

On 7 May 1819, Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792 – 1822) and his wife Mary Shelley (1797 – 1851), fresh from penning her Gothic masterpiece Frankenstein, left their lodgings at Palazzo Verospi on Via del Corso 374 to move next door to Curran on Via Sistina 65, against the wishes of the family doctor, who advised Shelley to escape the city’s “mal’aria”.

Half-length portrait of a woman wearing a black dress sitting on a red sofa. Her dress is off the shoulder. The brush strokes are broad.
Above: Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797 – 1851)

Although the elevated Via Sistina had the “best air in Rome” according to Shelley, one month after their move the Shelley’s three-year-old son William “Willmouse” died of a fever, most likely malaria.

The heartbroken couple left Rome for the last time on 10 June 1819, after burying the boy, their third child to die, at the Non-Catholic Cemetery.

Three and a half years later Shelley’s ashes would be interred in the same cemetery after his tragic death, aged 29, during a storm off the Tuscan coast near Lerici.

Above: Posthumous Portrait of Shelley Writing “Prometheus Unbound” in Italy, Joseph Severn, 1845

Veering slightly off-course now, turn left half-way down Via Sistina onto Via di Porta Pinciana.

At the top of the street Palazzo Laranzani, number 37, hosted Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804 – 1864) in 1858.

Hawthorne in the 1860s
Above: Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804 – 1864)

Hawthorne overcame his initial misgivings of Rome’s “wicked filth” to become enraptured with the city:

His 1858 Gothic romance The Marble Faun was inspired after seeing a woodland scene of mythological sculpture in Villa Borghese.

Hawthorne was affected profoundly by the tragic tale of Roman noblewoman Beatrice Cenci – who also inspired Shelley’s five-act drama The Cenci – and her portrait attributed to Guido Reni, which can be seen today at Palazzo Barberini. 

The Marble Faun.jpg

Turning back downhill towards Via Sistina, take the last left onto Via degli Artisti.

From 1821 until 1824, when the street was still called Via di S. Isidoro, it hosted the English painter Joseph Severn (1793-1879) who lived in a large apartment at number 18, today the Hotel degli Artisti.

Severn is linked eternally with Keats with whom he travelled to Rome in 1820 and whom he nursed devotedly in his dying days.

Severn would outlive Keats by almost six decades, becoming an accomplished painter and a highly respected figure among Rome’s English-speaking community.

In 1841 Severn moved back to England.

However, 20 years later he returned to Rome as British Consul, a post he held for 11 years.

When he died, aged 81, there was outrage that his resting place at the Non-Catholic Cemetery was not next to Keats.

Several years later, Severn was reinterred beside his old friend.

At the bottom of Via Sistina, cross over Piazza Barberini and up Via delle Quattro Fontane to Palazzo Barberini, home to Italy’s national gallery of ancient art.

The American neoclassical sculptor and art critic William Wetmore Story (1819 – 1895) lived here with his family from 1856, taking studios on nearby Via di S. Niccolò da Tolentino 4.

For the next four decades his apartment on the palace’s piano nobile was a bustling meeting place for distinguished expatriates, from Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning to Henry James.

Above: William Wetmore Story

When his wife Emelyn died in 1894, Story carved the poignant Angel of Grief in the Non-Catholic Cemetery.

The much-replicated memorial was Story’s last major work and became the artist’s resting place a year later on his death, aged 78. 

Above: Angel of Grief, Rome

Returning to Piazza Barberini, turn left down Via del Tritone and at Largo del Tritone turn right and then first left onto Via della Mercede.

When the Scottish poet and novelist Sir Walter Scott (1771 – 1832) undertook his Grand Tour of Italy in 1832, he had achieved international acclaim for historical novels including Ivanhoe and Rob Roy and poems such as The Lady of the Lake (some of which inspired well-known Italian operas).

However despite being greeted with much fanfare, Scott was in failing health by the time he reached Rome.

He stayed at Via della Mercede 11 from 16 April until 11 May 1832 in the same palazzo in which Bernini had lived and died two centuries earlier.

The building’s exterior hosts a plaque dedicated to Scott, who died on his return to Scotland several months later.

Portrait of Sir Walter Scott and his deerhound, "Bran" in 1830 by John Watson Gordon
Above: Sir Walter Scott

Continue along Via della Mercede, cross Via del Corso, into Piazza del Parlamento to the rear of today’s chamber of deputies and along Via dei Prefetti to number 17, home to Samuel Morse (1791-1872) from February 1830 to January 1831, as commemorated by a plaque over the door.

This American painter of portraits and historical scenes is best remembered as the inventor of the Morse Code.

An outspoken opponent of “popery”, it is said that while in Rome the staunchly Calvinist Morse caused a stir by refusing to take off his hat in the presence of the pontiff.

Samuel Morse 1840.jpg
Above: Samuel Morse

The next side-street to the right, Vicolo del Divino Amore, meanders to Palazzo Borghese where Lady Gwendoline Talbot (1817 – 1840) moved from her Alton Towers family estate in Staffordshire following her 1835 marriage to Prince Marcantonio Borghese.

Described by King William IV as the “greatest beauty in the realm“, Gwendoline was known in Rome for her tireless charity work and ministry to the sick.

Princess Gwendoline came into her own in the aftermath of the cholera epidemic that ravaged the Eternal City in 1837.

That year 9,752 victims were struck by the disease in Rome with 5,479 deaths, in a city with little more that 150,000 inhabitants.

The epidemic lasted from the end of July until 15 October, when crowds flocked to St. Maria Maggiore to celebrate the end of the pestilence.

It was with great reluctance that the princess withdrew with her family to their home in Frascati, Villa Mondragone, during those summer months to avoid the danger of contagion.

On her return, however, she threw herself immediately into relief work among the survivors, her prime concern being the infants orphaned by the plague.

She engaged the well-off families of Rome to help her and visited the homes of the poor and destitute, bringing food, clothes and medicine to the needy.

She had no qualms about washing, cleaning and feeding them, sometimes slipping out of the Palazzo Borghese in disguise to conceal her movements.

This led to some embarrassing moments.

On one occasion she was followed by a member of the papal bodyguard, intrigued by her gracious but mysterious aura.

Though somewhat abashed by his proposals, the princess nonetheless stood her ground and invited the gallant into the humble dwelling she was visiting.

Taken aback at the sight of the haggard mother and children who warmly greeted the princess as their benefactor, the young dandy was shamed into leaving a generous offering for their upkeep before he hastily withdrew.

She died of scarlet fever aged just 22, and her tomb in the Borghese Chapel at the Basilica of St. Maria di Maggiore carries the inscription “madre dei poverelli”.

Above: Lady Gwendoline is buried in the crypt under the Borghese Chapel in the Basilica di St. Maria Maggiore.

Shortly after her death the couple’s three sons died of measles however their daugher Agnese survived.

Incidentally, three years before her own marriage in Rome, Gwendoline’s elder sister Mary had married Prince Filippo Doria. 

The whole city was plunged into grief at the news of Princess Gwendoline’s death.

On the night of 30 October, the funeral cortege left the Borghese Palace and, followed by massive crowds, made its way along the Corso, Piazza Venezia and the Baths of Trajan before turning left up the slopes of the Quirinal Hill.

The procession halted at the Palazzo Quirinale, where Pope Gregory XVI came to his balcony and blessed the remains.

Declaring that her death was a public calamity, he gave orders that the great portal of St. Maria Maggiore be opened, a privilege reserved for the noblest Roman families.

Gregory XVI.jpg
Above: Pope Gregory XVI (né Bartolomeo Alberto Cappellari) (1765 – 1846)

Bearing the inscription: Qui riposano le ceneri della madre dei poverelli, la Principessa Guendolina Borghese, Nata a Londra, dal conte de Shrewsbury, morta a 22 anni, il 27 ottobre 1840, the Princess’s coffin was interred in the family vault below the altar in the Borghese Chapel in St. Maria Maggiore.

The funeral oration at the solemn obsequies for the princess in the church of St. Carlo al Corso was delivered by the Rev. Charles Michael Baggs, rector of the Venerable English College in Rome.

In the course of his discourse he remarked that the curate of the parish of St. Rocco, near the Mausoleum of Augustus, had claimed that the Princess knew his parishioners better than he did himself, and counselled him thus:

Fear not, lest you should praise her too highly.

Be sure that whatever you may say of her will fall short of her deserts.”

The orator claimed that Gwendoline’s only fault was to have been liberal beyond her ample means and continued as follows:

Her private fortune was entirely devoted to the poor.

And for their sake she sometimes contracted debts, which were generously paid by the Prince her husband, who admired and encouraged her benevolence.

When you next enter the Basilica of St. Maria Maggiore take note of the icon above the high altar, the Salus Populi Romani, an image of the Virgin Mary that was carried through the streets of Rome for the first time in over 200 years during the cholera epidemics of 1835 and 1837.

Roma - 2016-05-23 - Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore - 2957.jpg
Above: St. Maria Maggiore, Rome

Spare a thought too for the young princess who lies buried in the Borghese crypt below the altar, a lady whose devotion to the survivors of the epidemic was such that she earned the title:

Mother of the poor.

Princess Gwendoline: Rome's Mother of the Poor
Above: Gwendoline Talbot

Follow Via Borghese onto Via di Ripetta which the map lists as the 1859 address of Irish-born art historian Anna Brownell Jameson (1794 – 1860).

According to her biography by niece Gerardine Bate, Jameson occupied a “pleasant apartment close by the Tiber façade of the Palazzo Borghese, looking out over the river at the point known as the Porto di Ripetta.”

Jameson also stayed at an unknown address in Piazza di Spagna in 1847, after  making part of the journey from Paris to Rome with the Brownings – to undertake research for the best-selling work on which her reputation rests: Sacred and Legendary Art.

Jameson died before finishing the final segment of her celebrated series which was completed by Lady Eastlake, wife of English painter Charles Eastlake, as The History of Our Lord in Art

Anna Brownell Jameson 1844.jpg
Above: Anna Brownell Jameson

Follow Via di Ripetta into Piazza del Popolo, turning right past the twin churches onto Via del Babuino.

The first left is Via della Fontanella, where #4 hosted the studios of Welsh sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866) from 1818 until his death four decades later.

Gibson was originally the star pupil of Venetian master Antonio Canova and later Denmark’s Bertel Thorvaldsen before going on to make his fortune from monumental commissions, mainly from patrons in England.

He is buried in the Non-Catholic Cemetery.

John Gibson by Margaret Sarah Carpenter (née Geddes).jpg
Above: John Gibson

Although not listed on the map it is worth mentioning Gibson’s only protégée Harriet Hosmer (1830-1908), who became the most distinguished female sculptor in America in the 19th century.

Hosmer studied under Gibson from 1853 to 1860, during which time she became good friends with the Brownings and the Storys.

In addition to her artistic prowess and ferocious work ethic, the emancipated Hosmer raised eyebrows by riding her horse alone around the city at all times of night, and even rode from Rome to Florence “for a lark”.

Harriet hosmer.jpg
Above: Harriet Hosmer

Contuining down Via del Babuino, past All Saints’ Anglican Church, a bastion of British life in Rome since it opened in 1887, the map lists English author George Eliot (1819 – 1880) as residing at Hotel Amerique in 1860.

The hotel no longer exists but the building can be found at Via del Babuino 79.

While touring Italy Eliot conceived the idea for her historical novel Romola as well as gathering background material for her future masterpiece Middlemarch, completed in 1871.

The story’s central characters Dorothea and Casaubon honeymooned at a “boudoir of a handsome apartment in the Via Sistina.” 

Portrait of George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans) by Francois D'Albert Durade, 1850
Above: Mary Ann Evans (aka George Eliot)

Turn left into Vicolo dell’Orto di Napoli and straight ahead lies Via Margutta, a greenery-draped street long associated with painters and art studios.

According to the map – perhaps incorrectly – Sir Thomas Lawrence (1769 – 1830) stayed at number 53 in 1822.

This leading English portraitist travelled Europe painting foreign sovereigns and diplomats, including Pope Pius VII, and was hosted at the Palazzo del Quirinale from May 1819 until January 1820.

Subsequently, as president of the Royal Academy, Lawrence granted his cautious approval and funding to Rome’s fledgling British Academy of Arts, established in 1821 by a group of artists led by Severn.

This life drawing academy was based initially at Severn’s apartments on Via degli Artisti and then moved to Via Margutta 53b from 1895 until its closure in January 1936.

Self portrait of Sir Thomas Lawrence.jpg
Above: Unfinished self portrait, Sir Thomas Lawrence

Back on Via del Babuino continue towards Piazza di Spagna, taking the second right onto Via Vittoria until the street meets Via Mario de’ Fiori.

The map lists this corner building, Palazzo Rondanini, as hosting the Romantic poet and former banker Samuel Rogers (1763-1855) while he put the final touches to Italy, a sumptuous edition of verse tales illustrated with vignettes by Turner, in 1829.

Less known today, Rogers was highly prominent in his time, penning hugely popular poems such as The Pleasures of Memory.

In 1850, on the death of Wordsworth, he declined the offer of Poet Laureate due to his age.

Rogers first visited Rome in 1815 and again in 1822, when he met Byron and Shelley in Pisa.

Samuel Rogers
Above: Samuel Rogers

Take the next left onto Via Bocca di Leone where, at number 43, the poets Robert Browning (1812 – 1889) and Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806 – 1861) spent two winters, in 1853 and 1858, commemorated by a plaque in their honour.

They returned to Rome for the winter of 1859, staying at Via del Tritone 28, and spent the following winter at Via Sistina 126.

Less than a month after leaving Rome on 1 June 1861 Elizabeth died in Florence in her husband’s arms, “smilingly, happily, and with a face like a girl’s”.

She is buried in the city’s English Cemetery.

Robert died in Venice in 1889 and is buried in Poets’ Corner at Westminster Abbey.

The Brownings are also remembered with a writers’ museum at their former Casa Guidi residence in Florence.

Above: Portraits of Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Robert Browning

Continuing along Via Bocca di Leone we reach Hotel d’Inghilterra at number 14, where the American novelist Henry James (1843-1916) stayed in 1869, when it was called Hotel d’Angleterre.

From here the author immediately reeled through Rome’s streets “in a fever of enjoyment”.

His arrival coincided with the dying days of papal Rome, an era he was to mourn in subsequent years.

Considered among the greatest novelists in the English language, James was inspired by the social and cultural interplay between Americans, English people and continental Europeans.

His experience of life in Rome is referenced in his novel Portrait of a Lady, whose central character Isabel Archer lived unhappily at the Palazzo Roccanero on an unnamed street off Piazza Farnese.

James in 1913
Above: Henry James

Turning back a few paces, take the first right onto Via dei Condotti which hosted the former Hotel d’Allemagne, owned by the German family of watercolourist Ettore Roesler Franz, whose romantic paintings of Rome and its surroundings are still popular today.

Ettore Roesler Franz.jpg
Above: Ettore Roesler Franz (1845 – 1907)

It was here that the English writer William Makepeace Thackeray (1811 – 1863) stayed on his first visit to Rome during 1844 – 1845.

Thackeray returned to the hotel in 1853 with his daughters Anne Isabella and Jane but soon moved to a large apartment at Palazzo Poniatowski, at nearby Via della Croce 81, on the advice of the Brownings.

Anne Isabella wrote of “feasting on cakes and petits fours” from the Spillmann pastry shop below.

During this period Thackeray wrote and produced illustrations of The Rose and the Ring, a story conceived in the Christmas period of 1853 to entertain the daughters and children of friends, including Pen Browning and Edith Story.

Describing a “gay and pleasant English colony in Rome”, Thackeray wrote in his memoir The Newcomes:

The ancient city of the Cæsars, the august fanes of the popes, with their splendour and ceremony, are all mapped out and arranged for English diversion.”

1855 daguerreotype of William Makepeace Thackeray by Jesse Harrison Whitehurst
Above: William Makepeace Thackeray

On returning full-circle to the foot of the Spanish Steps, how better to conclude the map-inspired tour than taking a coffee or aperitif at the Caffè Greco.

Established in 1760, this venerable institution was frequented by most of the people on this list (although Hawthorne was not a fan), their memories enshrined today with portraits and literary memorabilia throughout the bar.

The Antico Caffè Greco, sometimes simply referred to as Caffè Greco) is a historic landmark café which opened on Via dei Condotti.

It is the oldest bar in Rome and the 2nd oldest in Italy, after Caffè Florian in Venice.

The café was named after its Greek (Greco in Italian) owner, who opened it in 1760. 

Above: Caffè Greco, Ludwig Passini, 1856

Historic figures who have had coffee there include: 

  • Stendhal

Stendhal, by Olof Johan Södermark, 1840
Above: French writer Marie-Henri Beyle (aka Stendhal) (1783 – 1842)

  • Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Goethe in 1828, by Joseph Karl Stieler
Above: German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 – 1832)

  • Arthur Schopenhauer

Arthur Schopenhauer by J Schäfer, 1859b.jpg
Above: German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer (1788 – 1860)

  • Bertel Thorvaldsen

Karl Begas 001.jpg
Above: Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770 – 1844)

  • Mariano Fortuny

Marià Fortuny - Self-portrait - Google Art Project.jpg
Above: Spanish painter Mariano Fortuny (1838 – 1874)

  • Byron

Above: English poet Lord Byron (1788 – 1824)

  • Georges Bizet

Above: French composer Georges Bizet (1838 – 1875)

  • Hector Berlioz

portrait of white man in early middle age, seen in left profile; he has bushy hair and a neckbeard but no moustache.
Above: French composer Louis-Hector Berlioz (1803 – 1869)

  • Johannes Brahms

Above: German composer Johannes Brahms (1833 – 1897)

  • Franz Liszt

Franz Liszt 1858.jpg
Above: Hungarian composer Franz Liszt (1811 – 1886)

  • John Keats

Above: Statue of English poet John Keats (1795 – 1821) , Chichester, England

  • Henrik Ibsen

Above: Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen (1828 – 1906)

  • Hans Christian Andersen

Andersen in 1869
Above: Danish author Hans Christian Andersen (1805 – 1875)

  • Felix Mendelssohn

Above: German composer Felix Mendelssohn (1809 – 1847)

  • James Joyce

Picture of James Joyce from 1922 in three-quarters view looking downward
Above: Irish writer James Joyce (1882 – 1941)

  • Gabriele D’Annunzio

Gabriele D'Anunnzio.png
Above: Italian writer Gabriele D’Annunzio (1863 – 1938)

  • François-René de Chateaubriand

Anne-Louis Girodet-Trioson 006.jpg
Above: French writer / diplomat François-René de Chateaubriand (1768 – 1848)

  • Orson Welles

Above: American actor Orson Welles (1915 – 1985) as the octogenarian Captain Shotover, Mercury Theatre production of Heartbreak House, Time, 9 May 1938

  • Mark Twain

Twain in 1907
Above: American writer Samuel Langhorne Clemens (aka Mark Twain) (1835 – 1910)

  • Friedrich Nietzsche

Nietzsche187a.jpg
Above: German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (1844 – 1900)

  • Thomas Mann

Above: German writer Thomas Mann (1875 – 1955)

  • Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres.jpg
Above: French painter Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780 – 1867)

  • Nikolai Gogol

Daguerreotype of Gogol taken in 1845 by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky (1819–1898)
Above: Russian writer Nikolai Gogol (1809 – 1852)

  • Edvard Grieg

Edvard Grieg (1888) by Elliot and Fry - 02.jpg
Above: Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg (1843 – 1907)

  • Antonio Canova

Antonio Canova Selfportrait 1792.jpg
Above: Italian sculptor Antonio Canova (1757 – 1822)

  • Giorgio de Chirico

Giorgio de Chirico (portrait).jpg
Above: Italian Giorgio de Chirico (1888 – 1978)

  • Guillaume Apollinaire

Photograph of Guillaume Apollinaire in spring 1916 after a shrapnel wound to his temple
Above: French writer Guillaume Apollinaire (1880 – 1918)

  • Charles Baudelaire

Charles Baudelaire by Étienne Carjat, 1863
Above: French poet Charles Baudelaire (1821 – 1867)

  • Richard Wagner

Above: German composer Richard Wagner (1813 – 1883)

  • Carlo Levi

Carlolevi.jpg
Above: Italian painter / writer Carlo Levi (1902 – 1985)

  • María Zambrano  

María Zambrano ca. 1918.JPG
Above: Spanish writer / philosopher María Zambrano (1904 – 1991)

  • Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Lawrence Ferlinghetti in 1965
Above: American poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1919 – 2021)

  • Giacomo Casanova

Casanova ritratto.jpg
Above: Italian adventurer Giacomo Casanova (1725 – 1798)

For more than two centuries and a half, the Caffè Greco has remained a haven for writers, politicians, artists and notable people in Rome.

However, in 2017, the owner of the building asked for a raise of its monthly rent from the current €18,000 to €120,000.

As of 23 October 2019, despite being protected by the Department of Beni Culturali, the café is under the risk of closing due to the expiration of its rental contract.

Above: Caffè Greco, Rome

The map also includes a few rather obscure names at the expense of towering literary figures, such as Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870) who stayed in Rome in early 1845 while gathering material for his book Pictures from Italy, or Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) whose 1887 visit inspired the poem Rome at the Pyramid of Cestius Near the Graves of Shelley and Keats.

Charles Dickens
Above: Charles Dickens

Hardy between about 1910 and 1915
Above: Thomas Hardy

Another glaring omission is Edith Wharton (1862 – 1937), whose regular travels around Italy in the late 19th century resulted in several erudite guides and travel tales, once describing Rome as exciting “a passion of devotion such as no other city can inspire.”

Wharton, c. 1895
Above: Edith Wharton (née Edith Newbold Jones)

Also omitted is the far less than impressed Mark Twain (1835 – 1910), who in 1867 felt that he had been cheated of discovering anything in Rome as it had all been experienced before.

Mark Twain - The Innocents Abroad.jpg

Finally, perhaps due to its timeline or maybe the attendant scandal, the map fails to record the three-month stay at Hotel d’Inghilterra of Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900), six months before his death in Paris. 

Wilde in 1882
Above: Oscar Wilde

But this is not Keats’ or Severn’s, Turner’s or Clark’s, Byron’s or Shelley’s, Hawthorne’s or Goethe’s, Story’s or Scott’s, Morse’s or Talbot’s, Jameson’s or Gibson’s, Hosmer’s or Eliot’s, Lawrence’s or Rogers’, Thackeray’s or James’, the Brownings’ or Dickens’, Hardy’s or Wharton’s, Wilde’s or Twain’s story.

Nor will we linger in Rome…..

Above: Aerial view of Rome

Joyce returned to Trieste in March 1907, but was unable to find full-time work.

He went back to being an English instructor, working part time for Berlitz and giving private lessons. 

Flag of Trieste
Above: Flag of Trieste

The author Aron Hector (Ettore) Schmitz, better known by pen name Italo Svevo, was one of his students.

Svevo was a Catholic of Jewish origin who became one of the models for Leopold Bloom

Joyce learned much of what knew about Judaism from him.

The two become lasting friends and mutual critics.

Svevo supported Joyce’s identity as an author, helping him work through his writer’s block with Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.

Svevo.jpg
Above: Aron Hector (Ettore) Schmitz (aka Italo Svevo)





Aron Hector (Ettore) Schmitz (1861 – 1928), better known by the pseudonym Italo Svevo, was an Italian writer, businessman, novelist, playwright and short story writer.

A close friend of Irish novelist and poet James Joyce, Svevo was considered a pioneer of the psychological novel in Italy and is best known for his classic modernist novel Zeno’s Conscience (La coscienza di Zeno) (1923), a work that had a profound effect on the movement.

Above: Italo Svevo

Born in Trieste as Aron Ettore Schmitz to a Jewish German father and an Italian mother, Svevo was one of seven children and grew up enjoying a passion for literature from a young age, reading Goethe, Schiller, Shakespeare, and the classics of French and Russian literature.

Svevo was a citizen of the Austro-Hungarian Empire until the end of the First World War.

He spoke Italian as a second language (as he usually spoke the Triestine dialect).

Due to his Germanophone ancestry through his father, he and his brothers were sent to a boarding school near Würzburg, Germany, where he learnt fluent German.

Marienberg wuerzburg.jpg
Above: Würzburg, Germany

After returning to Trieste in 1880, Svevo continued his studies for a further two years at Istituto Revoltella before being forced to take financial responsibility when his father filed for bankruptcy after his once successful glassware business failed.

This 20-year period as a bank clerk at Unionbank of Vienna served as inspiration for his first novel One Life (Una vita) (1892).

During his time at the bank, Svevo contributed to Italian-language socialist publication L’Indipendente, and began writing plays (which he rarely finished) before beginning work on Una vita in 1887.

Una vita eBook von Italo Svevo – 9788833464756 | Rakuten Kobo Österreich

(The plot of Una vita:

Alfonso Nitti, a shy young intellectual with literary aspirations, leaves his home in the country where his mother lives to go to Trieste – though the city is not named – and work in a white collar job, as a copy clerk in Maller’s bank.

One day, he is invited to the house of his boss and of his daughter Annetta who knows Macario, a young man with whom Alfonso is friends.

Annetta, like Alfonso, is interested in literature, and holds a weekly soiree to which several suitors are invited.

Alfonso joins this, and he and Annetta begin to co-author a novel.

Alfonso accepts this project out of self-interest, having no respect for Annetta‘s literary abilities, but ingratiatingly allows her to control the project so that they can be together in the hope of winning her hand.

He soon convinces himself that he loves her, but realises that at the same time he despises her.

Eventually he seduces Annetta but then, on the verge of marrying her, he flees on the advice of Francesca, her father’s mistress, who warns him that the marriage would be a failure.

She predicts that while he is away Annetta will forget him and marry a rival.

By chance, while he is away, he is delayed by the prolonged illness of his dying mother, and Francesca‘s prediction proves correct.

Meanwhile Annetta has confessed to her father that Alfonso compromised her and, although Alfonso is relieved at not having to keep his promise to Annetta, on his return to the bank he is treated with hostility by his employer.

He decides to live a life of contemplation, away from passions.

But after discovering that Annetta is engaged to his acquaintance Macario, whom he dislikes, he nevertheless feels jealous.

He makes a last-ditch bid to speak to Annetta but is rejected.

He attempts to assuage his conscience by giving a dowry to his landlady’s daughter so that she can marry respectably but, following a demotion at the bank, he accidentally insults Frederico, Annetta’s brother, and is obliged to accept a duel.

Before this can take place, he decides to kill himself, with feelings of calm and relief at ending his maladjusted existence.)

Italo Svevo.jpg
Above: Italo Svevo

Svevo adhered to a humanistic and democratic socialism which predisposed him to pacifism and to advocate a European economic union after the war.

Following the death of his parents, Svevo married his cousin Livia Veneziani in a civil ceremony in 1896.

Soon after, Livia convinced him to convert to Catholicism and take part in a religious wedding (probably after a troublesome pregnancy).

Personally, however, Svevo was an atheist.

He became a partner in his wealthy father-in-law’s paint business that specialized in manufacturing industrial paint that was used on naval warships.

He became successful in growing the business and after trips to France and Germany, set up a branch of the company in England.

Svevo lived for part of his life in Charlton, southeast London, while working for a family firm.

He documented this period in his letters to his wife which highlighted the cultural differences he encountered in Edwardian England.

His old home at 67 Charlton Church Lane now carries a blue plaque.

In 1923, Italo Svevo published the psychological novel La coscienza di Zeno.

The work, showing the author’s interest in the theories of Sigmund Freud, is written in the form of the memoirs of Zeno Cosini, who writes them at the insistence of his psychoanalyst.

Sigmund Freud, by Max Halberstadt (cropped).jpg
Above: Sigmund Freud (1856 – 1939)

Svevo’s novel received almost no attention from Italian readers and critics at the time.

The work might have disappeared altogether if it were not for the efforts of James Joyce.

Joyce had met Svevo in 1907, when Joyce tutored him in English while working for Berlitz in Trieste.

Joyce read Svevo’s earlier novels Una vita and Senilità.

Senilità : Svevo, Italo: Amazon.de: Bücher

(The plot of Senilità:

Emilio, a clerk from an insurance company who is a failed writer, lives a modest life in a shared apartment with his sister Amalia, a spinster who has few relationships with the outside world, whose life consists mainly of taking care of her bachelor brother.

At the start of the novel Emilio meets Angiolina, a vulgar, poor but beautiful woman, and falls in love with her, causing him to neglect his sister and his sculptor friend Stefano Balli.

Balli has managed to balance his moderate artistic recognition with his successes with women, unlike Emilio, who is now eager for a brief amorous relationship himself.

Emilio tries to explain to Angiolina that their relationship will be subordinate to his other duties, such as those with his own family.

In short, he wants to keep the relationship unofficial, and for both parties not to be too committed.

Balli, who does not believe in love, tries to convince Emilio to simply have fun with Angiolina, known throughout Trieste as a loose woman.

Emilio ends up, instead, opening his heart to this woman, and falls deep under her spell, despite knowing that she is at heart promiscuous.

He imagines transforming Angiolina through his education.

Balli is interested in Angiolina as his model for a sculpture, but Emilio keeps imagining the two being unfaithful to him.

Balli tries to warn Emilio from being too committed:

Angiolina, he says, is seen consorting with an umbrella maker and is soon harboring amorous interest for Balli himself.

The revelation pains Emilio.

Ironically since, as indicated at the beginning of the novel, their initial agreement was for Emilio and Angiolina to have a non-committed relationship.

He breaks off with Angiolina briefly, but soon finds himself searching her out for another tryst.

Balli, meanwhile, starts to frequent Emilio‘s house with great regularity.

In another ironic twist, Emilio‘s sister Amalia falls for Balli.

His masculine charm thus draws in both female protagonists.

Emilio, jealous of Balli, becomes progressively estranged from his sculptor friend, and Amalia, knowing that her secret love is hopeless, numbs herself with ether.

She ultimately becomes ill with pneumonia.

The illness leads to her death, but not after triggering the grave remorse of her negligent brother.)

La coscienza di Zeno (eNewton Classici) (Italian Edition) eBook : Svevo,  Italo, M. Lunetta: Amazon.de: Kindle-Shop

Joyce championed Zeno’s Conscience, helping to have it translated into French and then published in Paris, where critics praised it extravagantly.

That led Italian critics to discover it.

Zeno Cosini, the book’s hero and unreliable narrator, mirrored Svevo himself, being a businessman fascinated by Freudian theory.

Svevo was also a model for Leopold Bloom, the protagonist of Joyce’s seminal novel Ulysses.

Ulysses by James Joyce eBook von James Joyce – 9788180320996 | Rakuten Kobo  Deutschland

Zeno’s Conscience never looks outside the narrow confines of Trieste, much like Joyce’s work, which rarely left Dublin in the last years of Ireland’s time as part of the United Kingdom.

Svevo employed often sardonic wit in his observations of Trieste and, in particular, of his hero, an indifferent man who cheats on his wife, lies to his psychoanalyst, and is trying to explain himself to his psychoanalyst by revisiting his memories.

There is a final connection between Svevo and the character Cosini.

Cosini sought psychoanalysis, he said, in order to discover why he was addicted to nicotine.

As he reveals in his memoirs, each time he had given up smoking, with the iron resolve that this would be the “ultima sigaretta!!“, he experienced the exhilarating feeling that he was now beginning life over without the burden of his old habits and mistakes.

That feeling was, however, so strong that he found smoking irresistible, if only so that he could stop smoking again in order to experience that thrill once more.

La coscienza di Zeno: e «continuazioni» (Einaudi tascabili. Classici Vol.  31) (Italian Edition) - Kindle edition by Svevo, Italo, Lavagetto, M..  Literature & Fiction Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.

After being involved in a serious car accident, he was brought into hospital at Motta di Livenza, where his health rapidly failed.

As death approached he asked one of his visitors for a cigarette.

It was refused.

Svevo replied:

That would have been my last.”

He died that afternoon.

Piazza luzzatti.jpg
Above: Piazza Luzzati, Motta di Livenza, Italy

Roberto Prezioso, editor of the Italian newspaper Piccolo della Sera, was another of Joyce’s students.

He helped Joyce financially by commissioning him to write for the newspaper.

Joyce quickly produced three articles aimed toward the Italian irredentists in Trieste.

(Irredentism is a political and popular movement whose members claim – usually on behalf of their nation – and seek to occupy territory which they consider “lost” (or “unredeemed“), based on history or legend.)

He indirectly paralleled their desire for independence from Austria-Hungary with the struggle of the Irish from British rule.

Joyce earned additional money by giving a series of lectures on Ireland and the arts at Trieste’s Università Popolare.

University of Trieste logo.jpg

In May, Joyce was struck by an attack of rheumatic fever, which left him incapacitated for weeks.

The illness exacerbated eye problems that plagued him for the rest of his life. 

While Joyce was still recovering from the attack, Lucia was born on 26 July 1907. 

During his convalescence, he was able to finish “The Dead“, the last story of Dubliners.

Although a heavy drinker, Joyce gave up alcohol for a period in 1908.

He reworked Stephen Hero as the more concise and interior A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.

He completed the third chapter by April and translated John Millington Synge’s Riders to the Sea into Italian with the help of Nicolò Vidacovich.

John Millington Synge.jpg
Above: John Millington Synge (1871 – 1909)

He even took singing lessons. 

Joyce had been looking for an English publisher for Dubliners but was unable to find one, so he submitted it to a Dublin publisher, Maunsel and Company, owned by George Roberts.

In July 1909, Joyce received a year’s advance payment from one of his students and returned to Ireland to introduce Georgio to both sides of the family (his own in Dublin and Nora’s in Galway). 

He unsuccessfully applied for the position of Chair of Italian at his alma mater, which had become University College Dublin.

He met with Roberts, who seemed positive about publishing Dubliners

Dublin in 1909, with trams, horsecarts, and pedestrians
Above: Dublin, 1909

He returned to Trieste in September with his sister Eva, who helped Nora run the home. 

Joyce only stayed in Trieste for a month, as he almost immediately came upon the idea of starting a cinema in Dublin, which unlike Trieste had none.

He quickly got the backing of some Triestine business men and returned to Dublin in October, launching Ireland’s first cinema, the Volta Cinematograph. 

It was initially well-received, but fell apart after Joyce left.

David Cleary в Twitter: "The Volta Electric Theatre, Ireland's first cinema,  founded in December 1909 on Mary Street by James Joyce. Joyce brought cinema  to Ireland. https://t.co/0jgxIhnZpK" / Twitter

He returned to Trieste in January 1910 with another sister, Eileen.

From 1910 to 1912, Joyce still lacked a reliable income.

In 1912, Joyce once more lectured at the Università Popolare on various topics in English literature and applied for a teaching diploma in English at the University of Padua.

He performed very well on the qualification tests, but was denied because Italy did not recognise his Irish degree.

University of Padua seal.svg
Above: Logo of the University of Padua

In 1912, Joyce and his family returned to Dublin briefly in the summer. 

While there, his three year-long struggle with Roberts over the publication of Dubliners came to an end as Roberts refused to publish the book due to concerns of libel.

Roberts had the printed sheets destroyed, though Joyce was able to obtain a copy of the proof sheets.

When Joyce returned to Trieste, he wrote an invective against Roberts, “Gas from a Burner“.

He never went to Dublin again.

The Salvage Press

Joyce’s fortunes changed for the better 1913 when Richards agreed to publish Dubliners.

It was issued on 15 June 1914, eight and a half years since Joyce had first submitted it to him. 

Around the same time, he found an unexpected advocate in Ezra Pound, who was living in London. 

On the advice of Yeats, Pound wrote to Joyce asking if he could include a poem from Chamber Music, “I Hear an Army Charging upon the Land” in the journal Des Imagistes.

Des Imagistes - Trainwreckpress

They struck up a correspondence that lasted until the late 1930s.

Pound became Joyce’s promoter, helping ensure that Joyce’s works were both published and publicized.

After Pound persuaded Dora Marsden to serially publish A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man in the London literary magazine The Egoist, Joyce’s pace of writing increased.

He completed A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by 1914, resumed Exiles, completing it in 1915, started the novelette Giacomo Joyce, which he eventually abandoned, and began drafting Ulysses.

GiacomoJoyce.jpg

In August 1914, World War I broke out.

Although Joyce was a subject of the United Kingdom, which was now at war with Austria-Hungary, he remained in Trieste.

Even when his brother Stanislaus, who had publicly expressed his sympathy for the Triestine irredentists, was interned at the beginning of January 1915, Joyce chose to stay.

In May 1915, Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary, and less than a month later Joyce took his family to Zürich in neutral Switzerland.

Above: Zürich, Switzerland

Joyce arrived in Zürich as a double exile:

He was an Irishman with a British passport and a Triestine on parole from Austria-Hungary. 

To get to Switzerland, he had to promise the Austro-Hungarian officials that he would not help the Allies during the war, and he and his family had to leave almost all of their possessions in Trieste. 

During the war, he was kept under surveillance by both the English and Austro-Hungarian secret service.

Man in suit secret service agent icon Royalty Free Vector

The Joyces returned for a nostalgic stay at Gasthaus Hoffnung before settling into Zürich for the duration of the war.

In the interim two children had been born, Joyce had matured as a writer, and the realities of poverty, drink and prostitutes had strained his and Nora’s relationship.

James Joyce in Zurich | SpringerLink

Love between man and woman is impossible because there must not be sexual intercourse, and friendship between man and woman is impossible because there must be sexual intercourse.

James Joyce, Dubliners

Dubliners (Unabridged) von James Joyce. Hörbuch-Downloads | Orell Füssli

It had been a scramble to get out of Trieste, then the principal port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Sales of Dubliners (1914) stood at 499 copies.

Above: Port of Trieste

I wanted real adventures to happen to myself.

But real adventures, I reflected, do not happen to people who remain at home:

They must be sought abroad.

James Joyce, Dubliners

Dubliners, James Joyce

The manuscript of “Stephen Hero” tinkered with in 1904, had become A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916).

Published serially in The Egoist, it was a succèss d’estime.

Five publishers turned it down and seven printers to set up the type.

Joyce had to wait until the last days of 1916 for book publication.

His novel of growing up in Dublin in the last decades of the 19th century sank virtually unnoticed during the First World War.

The top half of a yellowed page of a periodical entitled "The Egoist" with "An Individualist Review" as the subtitle and "Formerly the New Freewoman" underneath the subtitle.

Shortly after arriving in Zürich, Joyce was awarded 75 pounds from the Royal Literary Fund.

He buttoned his lip as regards mountebanks.

He was granted a Civil List fund in 1916 as well as other monies privately donated to an author who was beginning to attract notice.

In 1904, and on this occasion in 1915, he had arrived in Zürich skint.

By the time he left for Paris in 1920, he had moved from poverty into a qualified bourgeoisie, at home with some but not all of the bürgerlich habits of the banking city.

Ljmmat/Sjhl | Museum für Gestaltung eGuide
Above: James Joyce

Zürich during the First World War was awash with refugees and war profiteers – a vibrant hodgepodge of pacifists, revolutionaries, anarchists and artists who kept the Swiss police in shoe leather.

Lenin arrived in 1916, taking a room 100 yards away from the Cabaret Voltaire where the Dada movement held noisy court.

Cabaret Voltaire
Above: Cabaret Voltaire, Zürich

Switzerland had long been a crucible of Russian revolutionary thought, including such firebrands as Alexander Herzen, Mikhail Bakunin, Piotr Kropotkin, Rosa Luxembourg and Lenin.

Many of them were shielded from Siberian exile by Switzerland’s tolerance and judicial system.

Flag of the Soviet Union
Above: Flag of the Soviet Union (1922 – 1991)

Lenin was a habitué of the Café Odéon and most likely rubbed shoulders with Joyce there.

Musical "Odeon" - Das legendäre Grand Café Odeon erobert die Bühne – und  ein 81-jähriger Geroldswiler spielt mit
Above: Café Odeon, Zürich

The political revolutionary was more outspoken about his hosts than the Irish writer:

Switzerland is the most revolutionary country in the world….

There is only one slogan that you should spread quickly in Switzerland and around all other countries:

Armed insurrection!”

No wonder the Swiss were keen to see him safely across the border.

After the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II in 1917, Lenin boarded a sealed train in Zürich that took him across Germany to the Finland Station.

The rest, as they say, is history.

Vladimir Lenin.jpg
Above: Vladimir Lenin (1870 – 1924)

From a provincial town, Zürich had grown to become the centre of European modernism.

Partly this had to do with the influx of German and other refugees – Joyce, Frank Wedekind, Tristan Tzara, Stefan Zweig, and the painters Wassily Kandinsky and Jean Arp.

Frank Wedekind
Above: German playwright Frank Wedekind (1864 – 1918)

Robert Delaunay's portrait of Tzara, 1923
Above: Romanian artist Tristan Tzara (1896 – 1963)

Stefan Zweig2.png
Above: Austrian writer Stefan Zweig (1881 – 1942)

Vassily-Kandinsky.jpeg
Above: Russian painter Vassily Kandinsky (1866 – 1944)

Hans Arp.JPG
Above: Alsatian painter Jean Arp (1886 – 1966)

Partly too it was because theatres were closed or restricted elsewhere.

Little of this ferment was homegrown.

Hugo Ball and Emmy Hennings, the wild spirits behind Dada, were German pacifists.

Hugoball.jpg
Above: German writer Hugo Ball (1886 – 1927)

Emmy Hennings, Dadaist pioneer | House of Switzerland
Above: German artist Emmy Hennins (1885 – 1948)

Carl Jung’s theories developed from the theories of Viennese Sigmund Freud.

ETH-BIB-Jung, Carl Gustav (1875-1961)-Portrait-Portr 14163 (cropped).tif
Above: Swiss psychologist Carl Jung (1875 – 1961)

The Swiss themselves were suspicious of the backwash of foreigners and showed scant interest in their avant-garde activities.

Police files during these years followed émigré movements, as they did during the Second World War.

Zürich was where Joyce got down to writing Ulysses.

The germ of the idea had come to him during an aborted stay in Rome – and its last line – “Trieste, Zürich, Paris” – is, as Alain de Botton says, “a symbol of the cosmopolitan spirit behind its composition“.

Alain de Botton.jpg
Above: Swiss philosopher Alain de Botton

Leopold Bloom, its urban Jewish protagonist, borrows characteristics from Joyce’s friends and acquaintances in the rump of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

But Bloom has a bit of Zürich in him too – modernist multi-culti Zürich, the Zürich of the flâneur as well as the banker.

Joyce’s friends in the Swiss city were mostly Jews, Greeks and displaced Austro-Hungarians, as they had benn in Trieste.

Bibliophilia on Twitter | James joyce, Joyce, James joyce poems
Above: James Joyce

Behind him Zürich, suddenly confronted by this and other manifestations of a revolutionary spirit, sat like some austere grandmother long since inured and indifferent to the babbling of unfamiliar progeny.”

Detail

Joyce’s Zürich drinking haunts signal his relative affluence.

Whereas in Trieste he had frequented sailors’s dens in the port, in Zürich a better class of establishment came to the fore, the restaurant Zum Roten Kreuz, the Café Terrasse and the Café Odéon.

Ansichtskarte / Postkarte Fluntern Zürich Stadt Schweiz, | akpool.de
Above: Zum Roten Kreuz, Zürich

In The End of the World News (1982), Anthony Burgess imagines Joyce and Lenin at nearby tables in the Zum Roten Kreuz, both plotting revolutions in two different dimensions.

The End of the World News: An Entertainment - Wikipedia

Together with Joyce’s regular haunt, the Pfauen Café, these locales hosted a medley of polyglot drinking, singing and repartee.

Other Joyce Sites | ZURICH JAMES JOYCE FOUNDATION
Above: Pfauen Café, Zürich

As the Swiss writer Dürrenmatt reminds us, the Hapsburgs originated just outside of town.

Zürich can strike the visitor as the most Western of the Mitteleuropa cities.

Dürrenmatt in 1989
Above: Swiss writer Friedrich Dürrenmatt (1921 – 1990)

Many of Joyce’s hosteleries still flourish a century later.

The Café Odéon reduced to a third its original size, is usually crowded with shoppers and capuccino drinkers – bags and dogs at their feet – rather than the radical loudmouths of the early 20th century.

In the winter there is the smell of wet cashmere.

Gilt mirrors and brassy bar have seen generations come and go through the stained glass doors.

Café Bar Odeon - Zürich - Guidle
Above: Café Odeon, Zürich

Across the road, the Café Terrasse is also crowded.

The pastries are good, the décor a bit doily.

Gone are the newspapers on batons, that quintessential feature of the central European coffeehouse, but laptops are in evidence.

Oompa music on public squares has been replaced by ringtones at tables.

Joyce’s bars have weathered revolutions and wars and come up in the world in the meantime.

TERRASSE, Zürich - Old Town - Menü, Preise & Restaurant Bewertungen -  Tripadvisor
Above: Café Terrasse, Zürich

The Joyce family viewed Zürich as an interlude that stretched to four years, intending to return to furniture and pictures in Trieste as soon as the First World War had ended.

But nobody knew when that would be.

They occupied a number of furnished apartments in the course of their stay, the longest at Universitätsstrasse 29.

Joyce in Zurich | ZURICH JAMES JOYCE FOUNDATION
Above: Universitätsstrasse 29, Zürich

The language at home was a Triestine dialect of Italian, with Slavic undertones.

Giorgio was turning ten when they arrived in Zürich, and Lucia eight.

They were put back two years in school, as they knew no German.

Joyce himself had quite good German – enough to write lovelorn letters to his fancy women – but for Nora the language was a trial.

Above: “A complete word“, Illustration in the essay “The Awful German Language“, A Tramp Abroad, Mark Twain

Market day in Locarno reminded her of Trieste:

It was quite lively to hear the men calling out the prices and making as much noise as they could just like in Trieste.

The markets in Ticino | ticino.ch
Above: Market, Locarno, Ticino, Switzerland

Contact with other languages in the smithy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire made Joyce instantly aware of his own, its registers, dialects, history and slang.

He code shifted from Triestine Italian to Zürich German to Modern Greek.

Ulysses has the cosmopolitan soundscape of the war years, its language a mixing board, its constituent parts broken down, like notes, like an opera.

On any given day in Zürich you never know what languages you might encounter.

Joyce became an auditor of the world’s sounds, at sea in the flotsam of language, adrift from meaning, aware of multiple levels and the interpenetration of words.

A tram bell.

Above: Zürich

A cry in the street.

The murmur along a bar.

Rutting in the next room.

Vision reduced, his ears took up the slack.

Above: Zürich

It was in Zürich that Joyce’s eye troubles turned serious.

His glaucoma required an iridectomy, the first of eleven operations over the next fifteen years.

In 1917 he wrote to Pound:

On Saturday when walking in the street I got suddenly a violent Hexenschuss which incapicated me from moving for about twenty minutes.

I managed to crawl into a tram and get home.

It got better in the evening but the next day I had symptoms of glaucoma again – slightly better today.

Tomorrow morning I am going to the Augenklinik.

This climate is impossible for me so that, operated or not, I want to go away next month.

I am advised to go to Italian Switzerland.

Acute angle closure glaucoma.JPG

Neither Joyce nor Nora adapted to Zürich’s muggy climate after balmy seaside Trieste.

In August 1917, Nora and the children went ahead to Locarno while Joyce remained behind.

On Bahnhofstrasse he suffered the episode of glaucoma described to Pound.

The eye clinic operated successfully and Nora returned to comfort her husband.

In the days following, Joyce wrote one of his more touching poems about the loss of youthful vision and vim,

Bahnhofstrasse is named for Zürich’s main thoroughfare, the most expensive shopping street in the world.

He was only 37.

Bahnhofstrasse Zurich | Shopping in Zurich
Above: Bahnhofstrasse, Zürich

Ah, star of evil! Star of pain!

Highhearted youth comes not again.

Nor old heart’s wisdom yet to know

The signs that mock me as I go.

Should James Joyce's remains leave Switzerland?
Above: James Joyce statue, Zürich

They wintered in Locarno, staying at the Pension Villa Rossa and laster at the Pension Daheim.

Above: Postcard, Pension Villa Rosa, Locarno

The nearby fishing village of Ascona was already an artists’ colony.

Ascona IMG 1646.jpg
Above: Ascona

But Joyce grew bored in Locarno.

He was a city boy at heart.

Despite snow and an earthquake, he was able to complete there the three opening episodes of Ulysses – the manuscript title page bears the inscription “Pension Daheim, Locarno, Switzerland“.

Above: Pension Daheim, Locarno

Nora and the children relaxed into the Italian atmosphere, with its accents of home.

Pizza was on the menu.

Eq it-na pizza-margherita sep2005 sml.jpg

Because of his glaucoma Joyce decided to forgo absinthe, his tipple at the time, for Swiss white wines.

Absinthe-glass.jpg
Above: Absinthe

He settled on Fendant de Sion, comparing its golden hue to an Archduchess’ piss:

For now the wine was known as ‘the Archduchess’ and is so celebrated in ‘Finnegan’s Wake‘.”

Varone Fendant de Sion Soleil du Valais | Vivino

Glaucoma didn’t prevent his other eye from wandering.

Two women took hold of Joyce’s imagination, apart from Nora, during his stay in Switzerland.

Both made their way into Ulysses, forming the composite figure of Gerty McDowell showing her drawers to an admiring Bloom.

Ulysses (English Edition) eBook : James Joyce: Amazon.de: Kindle-Shop

Dr. Gertrude Kaempffer was a 26-year-old recovering from tuberculosis in Orselina above Locarno, where the Madonna del Sasso Basilica commands the valley.

Above: Orselina

When she rebuffed his initial advances, Joyce conducted an erotic correspondence with her from Zürich, using a poste restante address, as Bloom does in Ulysses.

Joyce revealed to her his first sexual experience when he was 14 while walking with the family nanny through fields on the edge of a wood.

The nanny was taken short and asked him to look the other way.

She went off to pee.

He heard the sound of liquid splashing on the ground…..

The sound aroused him:

I jiggled furiously.‘”

exclamation mark - Simple English Wiktionary

This information proved less stimulating to Dr. Kaempffer than to the author of Ulysses and so their correspondence fizzled out.

White Balloon And Deflated Balloon On A White Background High-Res Stock  Photo - Getty Images

The second of Joyce’s dalliances, Marthe Fleischmann, was closer to home.

She lived around the corner from the Joyce flat at 29 Universitätsstrasse, Kitty Corner.

Their windows were in sight of each other and he first spotted her as she was pulling the toilet chain.

Joyce gives to the hero of Finnegans Wake an erotic interest in watching girls pee and the author’s correspondence with his wife Nora confirms this peccadillo.

Marthe was attractive, had notions about herself and walked with a slight limp (as does Gerty in Ulysses).

Joyce cast Marthe as the reincarnation of his youthful muse first spotted on Dublin’s North Strand: girlish, birdlike, ethereal, her skirts hiked up.

He began a correspondence in French with Marthe, deploying his usual Irish blether about Dante, Shakespeare and the Dark Lady of the Sonnets – and, by the way, could we meet?

He shaved two years off his age, continued ogling her through the window and sent her a copy of his wee book of poems, Chamber Music, named in jest for another piddling floozy.

Martha Fleischmann (Aufrichtig) (1901 - c.1942) - Genealogy
Above: Martha Fleischmann (1901 – 1942)

They arranged to meet on his birthday – 2 February, Candlemas Day.

Joyce borrowed his friend Frank Budgen’s flat for the assignation.

Smells and bells, a Hanukkah candelabra (Joyce thought she was of Jewish ancestry), the whole caboodle:

By nightfall everything was ready.

He had lit the candles both because they were romantic and because he wished to see his visitor in a flattering light.

His Pagan Marthe both yielded and withheld.

He confided to Budgen when they met later on that he had ‘explored the coldest and the hottest parts of a woman’s body’.

Hanukkah חג חנוכה.jpg

Marthe was already a kept woman.

She liked her airs and graces, and secreted rosewater hankies in her cleavage.

But she wasn’t adverse to Joyce’s dirty talk about undergarments.

Her paramour (‘Vormund‘) was an engineer named Rudolph Hiltpond, himself putting it about a bit with sundry mistresses, who soon got wind of the peeping Paddy next door.

As Joyce expressed it militarily in a letter to Frank Budgen:

Result, status: Waffenstillstand.” (Armistice)

Women's Fashion During WWI: 1914–1920 - Bellatory

It was with Budgen with whom Joyce made a second trip to Locarno in May 1919.

He was an ex-sailor, a painter and had modelled for the Swiss artist August Suter.

He had an associative, imaginative mind, much like Joyce’s.

The allegorical figure representing Labour, was modelled on Budgen, as was the sailor on a pack of Player’s Navy Cut cigarettes.

Joyce was continuously looking for material to feed his mythopoeic imagination, even manipulating conversations to get it, as August Suter noted:

He imperceptively brought on conversation that he happened to need for his work.”

Above: English artist Frank Budgen (1882 – 1971)

On this second visit to Locarno, Joyce and Budgen encountered the Baroness St. Leger, who lived on the tiny Isola di Brissago on Lago Maggiore.

Joyce was working on the Circe episode of Ulysses.

Circe in Homer is a kind of temptress emasculator, with Odysseus as her captive boy-toy and her island as a dolce far niente.

Joyce thought the Baroness might fit the bill:

She had been thrice married.

He dubbed her “the Siren of Lago Maggiore“.

Isoledibrissago.jpg
Above: Aerial view of the Brissago Isles

A Siren in winter, perhaps.

The Baroness is one of those fascinating figures on the margins of writers’ lives.

She was born in St. Petersburg in 1856 and was rumoured to be the illegitimate daughter of Tsar Alexander II.

Zar Alexander II.jpg (cropped).jpg
Above: Russian Tsar Alexander II (1818 – 1881)

Her birth certificate gives her parents’ names as Nicholas Alexandre and Maryam Meyer.

Antoinetta was pretty and vivacious.

Ein Vorschlag aus dem Tessin: Isole del Brissago - FORUM elle
Above: Baroness St. Leger (1886 – 1948)

Her piano teacher had been Franz Liszt.

Two husbands quickly palled.

Her third husband was the Anglo-Irish Lord Richard Fleming Saint Leger, from Kingstown (Dun Laoghaire), apparently descended from Richard the Lionheart.

They bought the two Brissago islands for CHF 10,000 and the Baroness proceeded to import thousands of plants and turn the hideaway into a botanical paradise befitting the Mediterranean microclimate.

Her other passion, like Circe‘s, was for young men.

Husband #3 soon abandoned her in 1897.

Above: Villa Brissago

By the time Joyce pitched up in 1919, she was 63 and as flighty as ever, coming over the water to greet him standing up in her boat.

The poet Rilke, fond of people’s castles as he was, had visited the Baroness the same year, so she had no shortage of scribbling admirers.

Rilke in 1900
Above: German poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875 – 1926)

She liked to make puppets and had hundreds of them on the island, which may indicate her psychological makeup.

Penniless in 1927, she was forced to sell her islands to the department store magnate Max Emden.

Above: Villa Emden, Brissago Islands

He was German-Jewish and fed up with the retail business.

(He was the founder of the KaDeVe chain, still ringing the tills in Germany.)

On a good day he dressed in a kimono and did his yoga and meditation on the Roman baths he had built on the island.

Curvaceous lovelies kept him company.

There was nude water-skiing and slap and tickle among the guests.

He was a department store Gatsby.

MaxEmden.JPG
Above: Max Emden

Monte Verità art collector Baron Eduard von der Heydt (more of a toga man) was an occasional poolside visitor.

Eduard von der Heydt im Tresor der Von der Heydt‘s Bank AG, Berlin.jpg
Above: Eduard von der Heydt (1882 – 1964)

Emden died in 1940, after fifteen good years in a kimono.

The Baroness outlived him, saw out two world wars as well as the Crimean War and the downfall of the Russian Empire, and died age 92 in 1948 – still penniless, in an old people’s home in Intragna.

ThinkShop: The Baroness on Brissago Islands
Above: Baroness St. Leger

Like many Swiss stories, this one has a sting in the tale.

In 2012, the grandson of Max Emden, a Chilean, claimed ownership of Claude Monet’s “Poppy Fields at Vétheuil“, valued at over €20 million.

The Bührle Foundation in Zürich has the famous painting and is clear about the provenance.

Max Enden’s only son fled Switzerland for Chile at the beginning of the war and the painting was apparently sold to finance his excape from the Nazis.

The German government has not ruled in favour of restitution.

Poppy field near Vétheuil · Claude Monet · Stiftung Sammlung E.G. Bührle
Above: Claude Monet’s Poppy Fiedls at Vétheuil

Other details of Joyce’s Swiss stay make their way into Ulysses.

A visit to the Rhine Falls near Schaffhausen found a faint echo in ‘Circe‘.

SBB RABe 514 DTZ Rheinfall.jpg
Above: Rhine Falls, Schaffhausen, Switzerland

Joyce co-founded an acting company, the English Players, and became its business manager.

The company was pitched to the British government as a contribution to the war effort, and mainly staged works by Irish playwrights, such as Oscar Wilde, George Bernard Shaw and John Millington Synge.

Wilde in 1882
Above: Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900)

Middle-aged man with greying hair and full beard
Above: George Bernard Shaw (1856 – 1950)

For Synge’s Riders to the Sea, Nora played a principal role and Joyce sang offstage, which he did again when Robert Browning’s In a Balcony was staged.

He hoped the company would eventually stage his play, Exiles, but his participation in the English Players declined in the wake of the Great Influenza Epidemic of 1918, though the company continued until 1920.

The Pfauen complex, a large stone building. Theatre is in the center. Cafe used to be right of theatre
Above: The Pfauen in Zürich. Joyce’s preferred hangout was the cafe, which used to be on the right corner. The theatre staged the English Players.

Joyce’s work with the English Players involved him in a lawsuit. 

Henry Wilfred Carr (1894 – 1962), a wounded war veteran and British consul, accused Joyce of underpaying him for his role in The Importance of Being Earnest.

Carr sued for compensation.

Joyce countersued for libel.

When the cases were settled in 1919, Joyce won the compensation case but lost the one for libel.

The incident ended up creating acrimony between the British consulate and Joyce for the rest of his time in Zürich.

Clean-shaven young white man in Scottish military dress uniform, with kilt and bearskin
Above: Henry Carr in Canadian Black Watch uniform, 1917

Up to rheumy Zürich town came an Irish man one day,

And as the place was rather dull he thought he’d give a play,

So that the German propagandists might be rightly riled,

But the bully British Philistine once more drove Oscar Wilde.”

Joyce, James Augustine Aloysius (1882–1941), writer | Oxford Dictionary of  National Biography
Above: James Joyce

Fritz Senn, the keeper of the flame at the James Joyce Foundation in Zürich, has uncovered numerous references to his city in Ulysses and Finnegans Wake.

Zürich served as a refuge from the war and provided Joyce with an atmosphere, an urban vibe and a cacophony of friends who fuelled his masterpiece.

UZH - The Swiss Centre of Irish Studies @ the Zurich James Joyce Foundation  - About Us

When the Joyce family returned to Trieste in 1919, it was not for long.

It had become a backwater.

By 1919, Joyce was in financial straits again.

Zürich had become expensive to live in after the war.

Furthermore, he was becoming isolated as the city’s emigres returned home.

In October 1919, Joyce’s family moved back to Trieste, but it had changed.

The Austro-Hungarian empire had ceased to exist.

Trieste was now an Italian city in post-war recovery.

Eight months after his return, Joyce went to Sirmione, Italy, to meet Pound, who made arrangements for him to move to Paris.

The castle at the entrance of the old town
Above: Sirmione, Italy

Joyce and his family packed their belongings and headed for Paris in June 1920.

Paris was the happening place and Zürich had whetted Joyce’s appetite for it.

File:La Tour Eiffel vue de la Tour Saint-Jacques, Paris août 2014 (2).jpg
Above: Paris, France

Joyce was almost blind in the last months of 1940.

He and his family were on the run from yet another war.

The Swiss Federal Aliens’ Police rejected Joyce’s initial application for visas on the supposition that he and his family were Jews.

The Swiss writer Jacques Mercanton put the authorities right on this point.

Joyce himself privately declared that he “was not a Jew from Judea but an Aryan from Erin“.

The mayor of Zürich, the rector of its university, the Swiss Society of Authors, and other notables vouched for him.

Mercanton, Jacques | Lenos Verlag
Above: Jacques Mercanton (1909 – 1997)

(Up in the University Library, Joyce researched Ulysses.)

University of Zurich seal.svg
Above: Logo of the University of Zürich

Cantonal authorities wanted a guarantee of CHF 50,000, later reduced to CHF 20,000.

The Joyce family eventually succeeded in getting entry permits.

In December 1940 they came into Switzerland by way of Geneva, where Stephen Joyce, the writer’s eight-year-old grandson, had his bicycle impounded at the border because of inability to pay import duties.

A view over Geneva and the lake
Above: Genève (Geneva), Switzerland

They spent the night of 14 December 1940 at the Richemonde Hotel, before moving on to Lausanne.

Hotel Richemond Geneva - Jep Cary
Above: Hotel Richemond, Geneva

Seán Lester, acting general secretary of the League of Nations and a Belfast man, had tea with the Joyce family on the Sunday afternoon, in the marble and ormolu salon of their hotel:

SeanLester.jpg
Above: Seán Lester (1888 – 1959)

Flag of League of Nations
Above: Flag of the League of Nations

The famous Joyce is tall, slight, in the fifties, blue eyes and a good thatch of hair.

No one would hesitate in looking at him to recognize his nationality and accent as Dublin as when he left it over thirty years ago.

seated portrait of James Joyce in a suit. He is in three-quarters view looking left, wearing a suit. Table with books is in background on the right.
Above: James Joyce

His eyesight is very bad and he told me it had been some years ago by the famous Vogt of Zürich, who had also operated on de Valera (President of Ireland and statesman).

Alfred Vogt.jpg
Above: Swiss ophthalmologist Alfred Vogt (1879 – 1943)

Éamon de Valera.jpg
Above: Éamon de Valera (1882 – 1975)

His son, seemingly in his late twenties, came in first.

A fine, well-built fellow, with a peculiar hybrid accent in English.

He told me he is a singer and has sung in Paris and New York.

James Joyce and his wife Nora with their son Giorgio, daughter-in-law Helen and two-year-old grandson Stephen James Joyce in Paris in 1934. Photo: Bettmann Archive
Above: James Joyce and his wife Nora with their son Giorgio, daughter-in-law Helen and two-year-old grandson Stephen James Joyce in Paris in 1934.

The Richemonde sits one block back from the more illustrious Hotel Beau Rivage on Geneva’s lakeshore.

The Beau Rivage is where royalty stayed, where Empress Sisi of Austria-Hungary died from a madman’s stiletto, where Somerset Maugham and other international spies kept their ears open.

Hotel Beau Rivage Geneva | Geneva.info
Above: Hotel Beau Rivage, Geneva

Isabel da Áustria 1867.jpg
Above: Austrian Empress Elisabeth (“Sisi“) (1837 – 1898)

Above: An artist’s rendition of the stabbing of Elisabeth by the Italian anarchist Luigi Lucheni in Geneva, 10 September 1898

Maugham photographed by Carl Van Vechten in 1934
Above: William Somerset Maugham (1874 – 1965)

The Richemonde is equally glitzy:

Charlie Chaplin, Sophia Loren and Michael Jackson found rooms with a view there.

Above: Poster of Charlie Chaplin (1889 – 1977)

Sophia Loren - 1959.jpg
Above: Sophie Loren (née Sofia Costanza Brigida Villani Scicolone)

A photograph of Michael Jackson singing into a microphone
Above: Michael Jackson (1958 – 2009)

It is a historic corner overlooking Brunswick Monument – a history not lost on James Joyce.

Brunswick Monument - Wikipedia
Above: Brunswick Monument, Geneva

As a boy he had lived on Dublin’s North Richmond Street.

Pillar to Post: SUNDAY REVIEW /ARABY /SHORT STORY BY JAMES JOYCE
Above: North Richmond Street, Dublin, Ireland

Great Brunswick Street was where he sang in the Antient Concert Rooms at the beginning of the century.

A Night at the Ancient Concert Rooms
Above: Antient Concert Rooms, Dublin, Ireland

The Joyce family might have felt that they were once again at history’s mercy.

Above: History, Frederick Dielman (1896)

Finnegans Wake (1939), 17 years in the writing, had received a puzzled reception the previous year.

Needing two magnifying glasses to read and write, Joyce was addicted to Radio Éireann.

Since 1920, he, Nora and their two children had been living in Paris, where the writer had achieved fame and squandered some fortune.

Now Paris was occupied and they were on the move once more.

In the late 1930s, Joyce became increasingly concerned about the rise of fascism and antisemitism. 

As early as 1938, Joyce was involved in helping a number Jews escape Nazi persecution.

After the defeat of France in World War II, Joyce and his family fled from Nazi occupation, returning to Zürich a final time.

They were going to settle in Zürich, where they had some good friends.

I said I thought it was an unusual place for him to choose and asked, ‘What about Suisse Romande?’.

His wife then intervened and said that Zürich had always been associated with certain crises in their lives.

They had rushed from Austria at the beginning of the last war and had lived in Zürich very comfortably.

They had spent their honeymoon there.

It was there that Joyce’s eyesight had been saved and now they were going back in another crisis.

They liked the solid virtues of the people.

James Joyce: Irish writer died in Switzerland on Jan 13 1941
Above: James Joyce

It was these solid Swiss virtues that supported them as the world turned once more to war.

When they returned to Zürich in December 1940, it musr have seemed like déjà vu.

Not more bloody Swiss German, Nora must have thought – it was her 4th language.

Friends met them at the Hauptbahnhof.

Above: Hauptbahnhof (Grand Central Station), Zürich

Staying at the Hotel Pension Delphin on Muhlebachstrasse, Joyce wrote to the Mayor of Zürich to thank him:

The connection between me and your hospitable city extends over a period of nearly forty years and in these painful times I feel honoured that I should owe my presence here in large part to the personal guaranty of Zürich’s first citizen.

Quartierverein - Zürich Fluntern

The Joyce family celebrated Christmas with friends.

He walked out in the snow in the afternoons with his grandson Stephen, to the confluence of the Sihl and Limmat Rivers, where today the spot has an inscription from Finnegans Wake:

Yssel that the Limmat?” and “legging a jig or so on the Sihl“.

File:Limmat & Sihl - James-Joyce-Kanzel 2011-08-20 15-47-00.JPG - Wikimedia  Commons
Above: Where the Limmat and Sihl Rivers meet, Zürich

At the Kronenhalle, Joyce ate his last dinner.

The bistro has priceless art on the walls and has been feeding artists from Joyce to Picasso to Dürrenmatt and Frisch for over a century.

Restaurant Kronenhalle Zürich | Schönste Zeit Magazin
Above: Restaurant Kronenhalle, Zürich

On 11 January 1941, Joyce underwent surgery in Zürich for a perforated duodenal ulcer.

He fell into a coma the following day.

He awoke at 2 am on 13 January 1941, and asked a nurse to call his wife and son.

They were en route when he died 15 minutes later, less than a month before his 59th birthday.

His body was buried in the Fluntern Cemetery in Zürich.

Swiss tenor Max Meili sang “Addio terra, addio cielo” from Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo at the burial service.

FORGOTTEN OPERA SINGERS : Max Meili (Tenor) (Winterthur, Switzerland 11  December 1899 - Zürich, Switzerland 17 March 1970)
Above: Max Meili (1899 – 1970)

Joyce had been a subject of the United Kingdom all his life and only the British consul attended the funeral.

Although two senior Irish diplomats were in Switzerland at the time, neither attended Joyce’s funeral.

When Joseph Walshe, secretary at the Department of External Affairs in Dublin, was informed of Joyce’s death by Frank Cremins, chargé d’affaires at Bern, Walshe responded:

Please wire details of Joyce’s death.

If possible find out did he die a Catholic?

Express sympathy with Mrs Joyce and explain inability to attend funeral.”

Ireland and the Nazis: a troubled history

Above: Joseph Walshe (1886 – 1956)

Buried originally in an ordinary grave, Joyce was moved in 1966 to a more prominent “honour grave“, with a seated portrait statue by American artist Milton Hebald nearby.

Nora, whom he had married in 1931, survived him by 10 years.

She is buried by his side, as is their son Giorgio, who died in 1976.

Horizontal gravestone saying "JAMES JOYCE", "NORA BARNACLE JOYCE", GEORGE JOYCE", and "...ASTA OSTERWALDER JO...", all with dates. Behind the stone is a green hedge and a seated statue of Joyce holding a book and pondering.
Above: James Joyce Grave, Flautern Cemetery, Zürich

After Joyce’s death, the Irish government declined Nora’s request to permit the repatriation of Joyce’s remains, despite being persistently lobbied by the American diplomat John J. Slocum.

In October 2019, a motion was put to Dublin City Council to plan and budget for the costs of the exhumations and reburials of Joyce and his family somewhere in Dublin, subject to his family’s wishes.

Logo

The proposal immediately became controversial, with the Irish Times commenting:

“It is hard not to suspect that there is a calculating, even mercantile, aspect to contemporary Ireland’s relationship to its great writers, whom we are often more keen to ‘celebrate’, and if possible monetise, than read.”

The Irish Times logo.svg

The Pfauen has shut, but the Schauspielhaus right next door, where Brecht’s Mother Courage got its premiere, is still packing them in.

Brecht in 1954
Above: Bertolt Brecht (1898 – 1956)

One of Joyce’s old apartments is gone, bulldozed by the developers.

Under the Uraniabrücke, gaze up at Frank Budgen, Joyce’s model friend, in the stony buff.

Imagine having to go past yourself like that every day.

Other Joyce Sites | ZURICH JAMES JOYCE FOUNDATION
Above: Statue of Frank Budgen

Together with Thomas Mann and Vladimir Nabokov, Joyce is one of the 20th century’s literary greats.

All three were marked by history.

As Joyce fled Vichy France for Zürich, Nabokov boarded the boat for America and Mann took refuge in California.

They all eventually found peace and quiet to write in Switzerland, sometimes engaging but more often disengaging from the conflicts that surrounded them.

Nabokov’s final resting place is at Clarens above Lac Léman (Lake Geneva).

Above: Vladimir and Vera Nabokov gravesite, Cimetière de Clarens, near Montreux, Switzerland

Mann is buried at Kilchberg across the Lake (Zürichsee) from Joyce, who died on 13 January 1941, age 59.

Above: The grave of Thomas, Katia, Erika, Monika, Michael and Elisabeth Mann, Kilchberg, Switzerland

The great modernist is buried next to Nora in Zürich’s Flauntern Cemetery, within a lion’s roar of the Zoo.

trumb
Above: Friedhof Flauntern, Zürich

He watched the scene and thought of life; and (as always happened when he thought of life) he became sad.

A gentle melancholy took possession of him.

He felt how useless it was to struggle against fortune, this being the burden of wisdom which the ages had bequeathed him.

James Joyce, Dubliners

Dubliners by James Joyce: 9780812983012 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books

I have often told my wife – and anyone who has cared to listen – that I was willing to live in Switzerland, but that, given a choice, I would not choose to die in Switzerland.

Joyce chose Zürich as his final choice of exile.

Though I resided in Landschlacht, I “lived” in St. Gallen, for it was in the latter where most of the work I did and most of the friends I had were.

Above: Old houses, St. Gallen, Switzerland

On Wednesday, I will visit St. Gallen again.

There are tales to be told.

Some of them may sting…..

Above: Abbey Library, St. Gallen

(To be continued…..)

Sources: Wikipedia / Wikivoyage / Google / Personal journals / “Heavy snowfall in Turkey forces Istanbul Airport to close“, Al Jazeera, 24 January 2022 / Sheryl Crow, “The Book” / James Joyce: Chamber Music/Dubliners/Exiles/Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man / Paul Kirby, “Is Russia preparing to invade Ukraine?“, BBC News, 26 January 2022 / Stephen Leacock, Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town / Mícheál MacCraith, “Princess Gwendoline: Rome’s Mother of the Poor“, Wanted in Rome, January 2020 / Chantal Panozzo, Swiss Life: 30 Things I Wish I’d Known / Charlie Rich, “Behind Closed Doors” / Padraig Rooney, The Gilded Chalet: Off-piste in Literary Switzerland / Wanted in Rome, “James Joyce in Rome“, 16 June 2021 / Wanted in Rome, “Tracing the footsteps of Rome’s foreign writers and artists“, 2 November 2018 / http://www.aab.it (Anglo-American Bookshop) / http://www.gattidiroma.net (Cats of Rome)

The still centre

Goodbye, Farewell and Amen, Part Three

Eskişehir, Turkey, Wednesday 23 December 2021

Above: Porsuk River bridge, Eskişehir, Turkey

I have friends and family who occasionally ask me:

Where is the novel we know you can write?

I stutter and stammer my response, for the answer is never as easy to express as the question, so let me begin to explain myself by first referring to other glorious writers who have come before me as I emerge blinking and blind into the light of day.

Get Started in Creative Writing by Stephen May | Goodreads

There are three rules for writing the novel.

Unfortunately, no one knows what they are.

(W. Somerset Maugham)

Maugham photographed by Carl Van Vechten in 1934
Above: William Somerset Maugham (1874 – 1965)

This is true.

For it is not so much as the way a writer writes, for I think I can on occasion string words together as crudely as a garland of popcorn on a Yuletide tree.

How to Make a Popcorn Garland - DIY Old-Fashioned Christmas Garland

What’s writing really about?

It’s about trying to take fuller possession of your life.

(Ted Hughes)

Ted Hughes.jpeg
Above: Ted Hughes (1930 – 1998)

How I write is significant, certainly, but the why I write matters more.

You are miming the real thing until one day the chain draws unexpectedly tight and you have dipped into the waters that will continue to entice you back.

You have broken the skin on the pool of yourself.

(Seamus Heaney)

Heaney in 1982
Above: Seamus Heaney (1939 – 2013)

Writing, for me, is an intimate act, privately created for public perusal.

It is closely intertwined with notions of perception, personality, morality and possibility.

Writing is akin to serendipity.

I never know what wonderful and/or terrible thing I will accidentally discover about myself and the humanity that binds me to others.

The Three Princes of Serendip: New Tellings of Old Tales for Everyone: Al  Galidi, Rodaan, Aalders, Geertje: 9781536214505: Amazon.com: Books

Writing is a choice to examine the choices I have made in my life.

And this revelation leaves me as exposed as a stripper inside a congregation of the righteous.

Upside Down Quasi-Rastafarian Stripper Pole Crucifix at St… | Flickr

But this is an exposure far more intimate than that of an overweight scarred aging man’s body, but rather it is the cross-sectional microscopic examination of the contents of my heart, my mind, my soul.

Compound Microscope (cropped).JPG

There are strange tales told beneath the Arctic sun by the men who moil for gold,

The Arctic trails have their secret tales that would make your blood run cold,

The Northern Lights have seen queer sights but the strangest they ever did see….

(Robert W. Service)

Service c. 1905
Above: Robert William Service (1874 – 1958)

….was the night in the room of shadows of gloom when I revealed the real me.

Dark Room Work In Progress by damenFaltor on DeviantArt

The winds of opinion can be as cold as a “three dog night” in Tuktoyaktuk.

Three Dog Night - Three Dog Night.jpg
Above: Three Dog Night is an American rock band formed in 1967, with founding members consisting of vocalists Danny Hutton, Cory Wells (1941 – 2015), and Chuck Negron. This lineup was soon augmented by Jimmy Greenspoon (1948 – 2015)(keyboards), Joe Schermie (1946 – 2002)(bass), Michael Allsup (guitar), and Floyd Sneed (drums). The band had 21 Billboard Top 40 hits between 1969 and 1975, with three hitting number one. Three Dog Night recorded many songs written by outside songwriters, and they helped to introduce mainstream audiences to writers such as Paul Williams (“An Old Fashioned Love Song“) and Hoyt Axton (1938 – 1999)(“Joy to the World“). The official commentary included in the CD set Celebrate: The Three Dog Night Story, 1965 – 1975 states that vocalist Danny Hutton’s girlfriend, actress June Fairchild (1946 – 2015)(best known as the “Ajax Lady” from the Cheech and Chong movie Up In Smoke) suggested the name after reading a magazine article about Aboriginal Australians, in which it was explained that on cold nights they would customarily sleep in a hole in the ground while embracing a dingo, a native species of wild dog. On colder nights they would sleep with two dogs and, if the night were freezing, it was a “three dog night“.

Above: Trans Canada Trail sign in Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, Canada

And so an exposed psyche feels hesitant at times.

Sentences sentence me as the testimony of the sum and signature of my person, the deepest reflection of an identity undefined and undefinable crawling haltingly from the cocoon of my consciousness, is read against me.

Each word is made of Roman characters chiselled from the frozen fortress that protects me from myself.

Fortress Around Your Heart Sting UK 12-inch.jpg

My mind is relentless with endless discussion, examination, testing, moulding and learning.

Layers of tone and texture make a man and could, should make a solid story.

What’s going to happen?

To whom?

When?

Where?

Why?

How?

What’s the story?

My novel is much like my life.

Much, God willing, left to be written.

Writing a Novel : Richard Skinner : 9780571340460

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Sunday 28 February 2021

Above: Landschlacht, Switzerland

Reading and writing are two sides of the same coin, but it is not only what you read that is important, it is how you read as well.

As to what I read, this is a combination of serendipity for new literature (at least new for me) and a nostalgic return to old previously read works.

Serendipity poster.jpg

It has been suggested that when starting to read a novel for the first time or re-reading an old favourite that the reading writer should try to view it as an editor would, looking “through” the text in X-ray fashion.

Reading books in this way allows you to examine a narrative closely, locating and identifying dee p structure and embedded themes.

Buy The Original X-ray Spex - Amazing X-ray Vision! [Toy] Online in Turkey.  B001DBEARY

How does the writer bring their themes to life?

What most appealed to you about the story?

How was that dramatized in the narrative?

It has been suggested that we should try to begin reading not just for pleasure, but also for ideas.

Reading in this way can be a great source of inspiration.

You should not hesitate to use all the stimulation and motivation to kickstart your own work.

Reading Like a Writer: A Guide for People Who Love Books and for Those Who  Want to Write Them: Prose, Francine: 9780060777050: Books - Amazon.ca

A work is eternal, not because it imposes a single meaning on different men, but because it suggests different meanings to a single man.”

(Roland Barthes)

Roland Barthes Vertical.jpg
Above: Roland Barthes (1915 – 1980)

It is good to read as widely as possible – especially outside your race, class and gender.

The reading of other writers and noting how they write is one of the least expensive and gentlest schools of learning of all.

Required reading: The books that students read in 28 countries around the  world |

That exploration of extensive reading is done through the search of each calendar date and the subsequent revelation of authors who have lived, published or died on that date.

World Writers Day Literature Holiday Isolated Icon Books Stock Vector -  Illustration of antique, learning: 140479181

Which, on this day of days, has led me to Stephen Spender…..

Spender in 1933
Above: Stephen Spender (1909 – 1995)

History is the ship carrying living memories to the future.

(Stephen Spender)

Above: Bluenose postage stamp of 1929

Stephen Spender was a member of the generation of British poets who came to prominence in the 1930s, a group—sometimes referred to as the Oxford Poets — that included W.H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood, C. Day Lewis, and Louis MacNeice.

From top left to bottom right: Oxford skyline panorama from St Mary's Church; Radcliffe Camera; High Street from above looking east; University College, main quadrangle; High Street by night; Natural History Museum and Pitt Rivers Museum
Above: Images of Oxford, England

In an essay on Spender’s work in Chicago Tribune Book World, Gerald Nicosia wrote:

While preserving a reverence for traditional values and a high standard of craftsmanship, these poets turned away from the esotericism of T.S. Eliot, insisting that the writer stay in touch with the urgent political issues of the day and that he speak in a voice whose clarity can be understood by all.

Logo of the Chicago Tribune

Spender’s numerous books of poetry include: 

  • Dolphins (1994)

Dolphins by Stephen Spender

  • Collected Poems, 1928 – 1985

Collected Poems 1928-1953 | Stephen SPENDER

  • The Generous Days (1971)

The Generous Days | Stephen Spender | Books Tell You Why, Inc

  • Poems of Dedication (1946)

Poems of Dedication by Stephen Spender: Near Fine Hardcover (1947) 1st  Edition, Signed by Author(s) | Sellers & Newel Second-Hand Books

  • The Still Centre (1939)

The Still Centre | Stephen SPENDER

Stephen Spender was born on 28 February 1909 in Kensington, London, to journalist Harold Spender and Violet Hilda Schuster, a painter and poet, of German Jewish heritage.

St Mary Abbots, Kensington High Street, London W8 - geograph.org.uk - 1590248.jpg
Above: St. Mary Abbots, Kensington High Street, London, England

Violet Hilda Schuster Spender (1877-1921) - Find A Grave Memorial

When a child, my dreams rode on your wishes,
I was your son, high on your horse,
My mind a top whipped by the lashes
Of your rhetoric, windy of course.

On his father in “The Public Son of a Public Man“, as quoted in Time magazine, 20 January 1986

Above: Harold Spender (1864 – 1926)

My Parents

My parents kept me from children who were rough
Who threw words like stones and wore torn clothes
Their thighs showed through rags they ran in the street
And climbed cliffs and stripped by the country streams.

I feared more than tigers their muscles like iron
Their jerking hands and their knees tight on my arms
I feared the salt coarse pointing of those boys
Who copied my lisp behind me on the road.

They were lithe they sprang out behind hedges
Like dogs to bark at my world. They threw mud
While I looked the other way, pretending to smile.
I longed to forgive them but they never smiled.

English Literature Summaries: Summary of My Parents by Stephen Spender

He went first to Hall School in Hampstead and then at 13 to Gresham’s School, Holt, and later Charlecote School in Worthing, but he was unhappy there.

Contact Us | The Hall School
Above: Hall School, Hampstead, North London, England

The Old Greshamian Club | Gresham's School – The Old Greshamian Club
Above: Gresham’s School, Holt, Norfolk, England

Readers share memories of former junior school in Worthing | Shoreham Herald
Above: Charlecote Junior School, Worthing, West Sussex, England

An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum

Far far from gusty waves these children’s faces.
Like rootless weeds, the hair torn round their pallor:
The tall girl with her weighed-down head. The paper-
seeming boy, with rat’s eyes. The stunted, unlucky heir
Of twisted bones, reciting a father’s gnarled disease,
His lesson, from his desk. At back of the dim class
One unnoted, sweet and young. His eyes live in a dream
Of squirrel’s game, in tree room, other than this.

On sour cream walls, donations. Shakespeare’s head,
Cloudless at dawn, civilized dome riding all cities.
Belled, flowery, Tyrolese valley. Open-handed map
Awarding the world its world. And yet, for these
Children, these windows, not this map, their world,
Where all their future’s painted with a fog,
A narrow street sealed in with a lead sky
Far far from rivers, capes, and stars of words.

Surely, Shakespeare is wicked, the map a bad example.
With ships and sun and love tempting them to steal —
For lives that slyly turn in their cramped holes
From fog to endless night? On their slag heap, these children
Wear skins peeped through by bones and spectacles of steel
With mended glass, like bottle bits on stones.
All of their time and space are foggy slum.
So blot their maps with slums as big as doom.

Unless, governor, inspector, visitor,
This map becomes their window and these windows
That shut upon their lives like catacombs,
Break O break open till they break the town
And show the children to green fields, and make their world
Run azure on gold sands, and let their tongues
Run naked into books the white and green leaves open
History theirs whose language is the sun.

Primary school classroom | Primary school classroom, Elementary school  classroom, English projects

On the face of it, Stephen’s childhood in Hampstead and Norfolk couldn’t have been more privileged.

His mother, Violet, came from a wealthy Anglo-German Jewish family called Schuster.

Star of David.svg
Above: Star of David, symbol of Judaism

His father, Harold, was a tireless campaigning journalist whose friends numbered Henry James and Lloyd George.

James in 1913
Above: American-British writer Henry James (1843 – 1916)

David Lloyd George.jpg
Above: British Prime Minister David Lloyd George (1863 – 1945)

(Visiting the latter in Downing Street, Harold took so long about it that young Stephen, waiting in a taxi outside, was forced to relieve himself out of the back window).

10 Downing Street. MOD 45155532.jpg
Above: The Prime Minister’s Residence, 10 Downing Street, London, England

Denied contact with poorer children, in case they were carrying diseases, the Spender children were brought up largely by servants – though once a day, tidied up, they would be brought to Violet and allowed to play with her jewel-box.

Italian Leather Wave Jewel Box | Jewelry Case | Leather Accessories | Home  Decor | ScullyandScully.com

The three younger children – Stephen, Humphrey and Christine – lived in the shadow of the oldest, Michael, whose infant beauty prompted a cringe-making poem from Violet (“rosy cheeks, eyes blue and tender! / Neighbours, have you such a one? / All the neighbours answer, ‘None!’“).

Stephen’s allotted family role was that of namby-pamby.

Word For The Weekend: NAMBY-PAMBY - WARM 101.3

Things got worse when he went to boarding school.

As well as being flogged for stupidity and persecuted for his Hunnish origins, he was flung down the kipper hole at the back of the school dining-room, along with meal scraps intended for pigs.

His piano teacher consolingly prophesied that he’d be happy once an adult.

In the shorter term he was rescued by his mother, who died when he was 12, after which he was allowed home again as a day boy.

The death left him guiltily unmoved and “longing to be stricken again in order to prove that next time I would be really tragic“.

On the death of his mother, he was transferred to University College School (Hampstead), which he later described as “that gentlest of schools“.

Above: University College School, Frognal, Hampshire, England

Teen age brought further embarrassments.

The widowed Harold was possessive of his charges and studiously monitored their bowel movements to ensure they “did their little duty“.

The children were also enlisted as canvassers when Harold stood (and lost) as a Liberal MP, which meant being dispatched round the streets of Bath in a cart pulled by a donkey with “VOTE FOR DADDY” round its neck.

Bath, England (38162201235).jpg
Above: Pulteney Bridge, Bath, England

For the hyper-sensitive Stephen, who felt “skewered on the gaze of everyone” even when unobtrusively walking down the street, nothing could have been more humiliating.

I had the most tormented adolescence anyone has ever had in the whole of history,” he later wrote.

Luckily, Harold outlived Violet by less than five years, suffering a heart attack after an operation on his spleen, after which Stephen had “a very happy last year” at school.

Harold Spender - Person - National Portrait Gallery
Above: Harold Spender

Spender left for Nantes and Lausanne and then went up to University College, Oxford. 

(Much later, in 1973, he was made an Honorary Fellow).

Panorama depuis Butte Sainte-Anne.jpg
Above: Nantes, France

View of the city centre of Lausanne
Above: Lausanne, Switzerland

Quad, University College, Oxford University
Above: University College, Oxford University, Oxford, England

Academically, he was still a laggard.

In fact he failed every exam he took apart from his driving test.

(And terrified passengers doubted the wisdom of that result).

Withdrawn] Driving lessons, theory tests and driving tests to restart in  England - GOV.UK

But poetically and politically he had found his niche, and won a place at Oxford, where, after much angling for an introduction, he met Auden, already a legend at 21.

In the many different accounts Spender gave of that meeting, the word “clinical” is unvarying, pinpointing what the master has and what his acolyte lacks.

Auden wields a surgeon’s knife.

Spender is woozier.

Perhaps his closest friend and the man who had the biggest influence on him was W. H. Auden, who introduced him to Christopher Isherwood.

Spender handprinted the earliest version of Auden’s Poems.

AudenVanVechten1939.jpg
Above: Wystan Hugh Auden (1907 – 1973)

But do you really think I’m any good?” a nervous Stephen Spender asked WH Auden, some six weeks after they’d met.

Of course,” Auden said. “Because you are so infinitely capable of being humiliated.

Humiliation was Spender’s lifetime companion.

Few poets have been more savagely reviewed.

And none has nurtured a greater sense of inadequacy.

This is the man who, having dismissed John Lehmann as a potential lover because he was a “failed version of myself“, adds: “but I also regarded myself as a failed version of myself.”

With Spender, self-deprecation reaches comic extremes of self-abasement.

NPG x184157; W.H. Auden; Stephen Spender - Portrait - National Portrait  Gallery
Above: W.H. Auden and Stephen Spender, 22 June 1972

He left Oxford without taking a degree and in 1929 moved to Hamburg.

Alster Hd pano a.jpg
Above: Hamburg, Germany

Isherwood invited him to Berlin.

Siegessaeule Aussicht 10-13 img4 Tiergarten.jpg
Above: Berlin, Germany

Every six months, Spender went back to England.

Christopher Isherwood in 1938
Above: Christopher Isherwood (1904 – 1986)

By now Spender was a strikingly handsome young man.

In the German gay-arcadia of 1930, every Hans, Helmut and Harry was a willing bedfellow.

But it was Tony Hyndman, a sandy-haired Welsh ex-soldier, who consumed Spender’s emotional life for several years.

Tony Hyndman | stuartshieldgardendesign
Above: Tony Hyndman

Few friends saw the point of Tony.

Feckless, drunk and pilfering, he could also be wildly possessive, and in his later career as a stage manager took revenge on his former lover Michael Redgrave by sprinkling tacks on a couch on to which the actor was obliged to throw himself.

Sir Michael Redgrave portrait.jpg
Above: British actor Michael Redgrave (1908 – 1985)

If Spender escaped more lightly, that’s because he remained oddly loyal to Tony.

The embarrassing struggle to extricate him from Spain, where he was fighting for the Republicans, was the extent of Spender’s Spanish Civil War – and the beginning of his disillusion with Communism.

Flag of Spain
Above: Flag of Spain

Spender was acquainted with fellow Auden Group members: 

  • Louis MacNeice

New Catalogue: Papers of Louis MacNeice | Archives and Manuscripts at the  Bodleian Library
Above: Irish poet Louis MacNeice (1907 – 1963)

  • Edward Upward

Upward c. 1938
Above: British writer Edward Upward (1903 – 2009)

  • Cecil Day-Lewis

Cecil Day-Lewis.jpg
Above: Irish-English poet Cecil Day-Lewis (1904 – 1972)

He was friendly with David Jones.

David Jones
Above: English poet David Jones (1895 – 1974)

He later came to know: 

  • William Butler Yeats

Above: Irish writer W.B. Yeats (1865 – 1939)

  • Allen Ginsberg

Ginsberg in 1979
Above: American writer Allen Ginsberg (1926 – 1997)

  • Ted Hughes

Above: English poet Ted Hughes

  • Joseph Brodsky

Brodsky in 1988
Above: Russian-American poet Joseph Brodsky (1940 – 1996)

  • Isaiah Berlin

IsaiahBerlin1983.jpg
Above: Latvian-British philosopher Isaiah Berlin (1909 – 1997)

  • Mary McCarthy

McCarthy in 1963
Above: American writer Mary McCarthy (1912 – 1989)

  • Roy Campbell

The Poet, Roy Campbell | CMOA Collection
Above: South African writer Roy Campbell (1901 – 1957)

  • Raymond Chandler

Man with slicked-back black hair facing left, smoking a pipe
Above: American-British novelist Raymond Chandler (1888 – 1959)

  • Dylan Thomas

A black and white photograph of Thomas wearing a suit with a white spotted bow tie in a book shop in New York.
Above: Welsh writer Dylan Thomas (1914 – 1953)

  • Jean-Paul Sartre

Sartre 1967 crop.jpg
Above: French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre (1905 – 1980)

  • Colin Wilson

Wilson in Cornwall, 1984
Above: English writer Colin Wilson (1931 – 2013)

  • Aleister Crowley

1912 photograph of Aleister Crowley
Above: English occultist Aleister Crowley (1875 – 1947)

  • F. T. Prince

Manuscript Collections: Papers of Frank Templeton Prince | University of  Southampton Special Collections
Above: British poet Frank Templeton Prince (1912 – 2003)

  • T. S. Eliot

Eliot in 1934 by Lady Ottoline Morrell
Above: Thomas Stearns Eliot (1888 – 1965)

  • Virginia Woolf

Photograph of Virginia Woolf in 1902; photograph by George Charles Beresford
Above: English writer Virginia Woolf (1882 – 1941)

Paris Review interview, May 1978:

The Paris Review cover issue 1.jpg

I knew Dylan from very early on.

In fact, I was the first literary person he met in London.

Statue of Thomas in the Maritime Quarter, Swansea
Above: Dylan Thomas statue, Swansea, Wales

Edith Sitwell made the absurd claim that she’d discovered Dylan Thomas, which is rubbish.

All she did was write a favorable review of his first book.

Portrait of Sitwell by Roger Fry, 1915
Above: British poet Edith Sitwell (1887 – 1964)

There was a Sunday newspaper called Reynolds News at that time, and it had a poetry column which was edited by a man called Victor Neuberg.

He would publish poems sent in by readers.

I always read this column, being very sympathetic with the idea of ordinary people writing poetry.

And then in one issue I saw a poem which I thought was absolutely marvelous —

It was about a train going through a valley.

I was very moved by this poem, so I wrote to the writer in care of the column, and the writer wrote back.

WW2 WARTIME NEWSPAPER - REYNOLDS NEWS - MAY 17th 1942 | eBay
Above: Reynolds News, 17 May 1942

It was Dylan Thomas, and in his letter he said first of all that he admired my work, something that he never said again.

Then he said he wanted to come up to London and that he wanted to make money —

He was always rather obsessed by money.

So I invited him to London, and may have sent him his fare.

I felt nervous about meeting him alone, which is what I should have done, so I invited my good friend William Plomer to have lunch with us.

Above: South African-British writer William Plomer (1903 – 1973)

We took him to a restaurant in Soho.

He was very pale and intense and nervous, and Plomer and I talked a lot of London gossip to prevent the meal from going in complete silence.

I think he probably stayed in London —

Soho
Above: A bar in Soho, London, England

He was a friend of Pamela Hansford Johnson, who became Lady Snow.

Pamela Hansford Johnson at her typewriter in the 1930s or 1940s
Above: Pamela Hansford Johnson (1912 – 1981)

Then, right at the end of his life, Dylan wrote me a letter saying he’d never forgotten that I was the first poet of my generation who met him.

He was thanking me for some review I’d written —

This was the most appreciative review he’d had in his life, I think he said, something like that.

Mind you, he probably wrote a dozen letters like that to people every day.

And he certainly said extremely mean things behind my back, of that I’m quite sure.

I don’t hold that against him at all —

It was just his style.

We all enjoy doing things like that.

After those very early days I didn’t see Dylan often.

One reason is that I never get on well with alcoholics.

Also he liked to surround himself with a kind of court that moved from pub to pub.

And Dylan was expected to pay for everyone, which he always did, and he was expected to be “Dylan”.

On the corner of a block is a building with large glass fronts on both sides; a sign displaying the tavern's name shines brightly above in red neon.
Above: White Horse Tavern, New York City, where Dylan Thomas was drinking shortly before his death

Of course when I was at Horizon with Cyril Connolly, Dylan was always coming in, usually to borrow money.

NPG x15334; Cyril Connolly - Portrait - National Portrait Gallery
Above: English writer Cyril Connolly (1903 – 1974)

Richard Burton was funny telling me about Dylan.

He was a young actor and absolutely without money.

He would be playing somewhere and Dylan would turn up to borrow a pound.

When he left, Burton would always hear a taxi carrying the pauper away.

Photo of Richard Burton in The Robe, 1953
Above: English actor Richard Burton (1925 – 1984)

Spender began work on a novel in 1929, which was not published until 1988, under the title The Temple.

The novel is about a young man who travels to Germany and finds a culture at once more open than England’s, particularly about relationships between men, and shows frightening harbingers of Nazism that are confusingly related to the very openness the man admires.

Spender wrote in his 1988 introduction:

In the late Twenties young English writers were more concerned with censorship than with politics…. 1929 was the last year of that strange Indian Summer—the Weimar Republic.

For many of my friends and for myself, Germany seemed a paradise where there was no censorship and young Germans enjoyed extraordinary freedom in their lives.

The Temple is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Stephen Spender, sometimes labelled a Bildungsroman because of its explorations of youth and first love.

It was written after Spender spent his summer vacation in Germany in 1929 and recounts his experiences there.

During the holiday in 1929 on which The Temple is based, Spender formed friendships with Herbert List (photographer) and Ernst Robert Curtius (German critic), the latter of which introduced him to and cultivated his passion for Rilke, Hölderlin, Schiller and Goethe.

Spender had a particularly significant relationship with German culture which he found heavily conflicted with his Jewish roots.

His taste for German society sets him apart from some of his contemporaries.

However, even after contemplating suicide if the Nazis were to invade England due to his abhorrence of their regime, he still maintained a love of Germany, returning to it after the war and writing a book about its ruins.

It was not completed until the early 1930s (after Spender had failed his finals at Oxford University in 1930 and moved to Hamburg).

Because of its frank depictions of homosexuality, it was not published in the UK until 1988.

Flag of Germany
Above: Flag of Germany

(Does a person’s sexual orientation have anyone to do with creativity?

I don’t believe so.

Frankly, what an author’s private life is (or isn’t) should not affect my ability to enjoy their public creations.)

question mark | 3d human with a red question mark | Damián Navas | Flickr

The Temple begins in Oxford, where Paul Schoner meets Simon Wilmot and William Bradshaw, caricatures of the young W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood respectively.

Above: Aerial view of Oxford, England

They encourage him to visit Germany, hinting that Paul might prefer Germany to Britain because of Germany’s liberal attitudes towards sex and the body.

During this section, Paul is introduced to Ernst Stockmann, a fan of his poetry who later invites him to visit his family home in Hamburg.

Paul visits Ernst Stockmann, meeting his wealthy mother and friends, Joachim Lenz and Willy Lassel.

During his time at the Stockmann household, Paul experiences the liberality of German youth culture first-hand, attending a party at which he drinks too much and meets Irmi, his later love affair.

Projekt Heißluftballon - Highflyer -IMG-1407.jpg
Above: Hamburg, Germany

Paul, Ernst, Joachim and Willy also visit Hamburg’s notorious quarter Sankt Pauli.

In Sankt Pauli, at a bar named The Three Stars, Paul meets some young male prostitutes who claim to be destitute.

It is on this evening, while he is drunk, that Paul agrees to go on holiday to the Baltic with Ernst despite being uncomfortable in Ernst’s company.

St. Pauli Piers and the port of Hamburg
Above: St. Pauli Pier and the port of Hamburg, Germany

When Paul and Ernst arrive at the hotel by the Baltic where they will be staying, Paul is distressed to find that Ernst has booked them into a shared room.

Paul feels suffocated by Ernst’s clear affection for him and tries to deter Ernst by telling him that he is not interested.

Afterward, Paul ponders Stephen Wilmot’s quasi-Freudian premise that it is kindest to offer love in return to those who love you, especially if you do not find them attractive.

As a result, when Ernst comes on to Paul in the hotel room, Paul accepts his attention and they have an uncomfortable sexual encounter.

In the morning, Paul is keen to escape the hotel room, and runs down to a beach, where he meets Irmi again.

They have a more satisfying sexual experience on the beach.

Map

In the next chapter, Paul goes on a trip with Joachim Lenz to the Rhine.

On this trip, Joachim makes it clear that he intends to fall in love, but there is little indication that he and Paul could be lovers.

Nevertheless, Paul is distressed when Joachim books him an adjacent hotel room so that he can stay with a young man named Heinrich who he had met on the beach.

Flusssystemkarte Rhein 04.jpg

In Part Two, “Towards the Dark“, Paul returns to Germany in the winter of 1932.

Spender admits in his introduction to the 1988 edition that both parts had taken place in 1929 in reality, but that he moved this part forward to winter 1932 to increase the sense of foreboding (as Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany later that winter).

In this section, Paul visits several of his friends again, most notably Willy Lassel, who is now engaged to a Nazi woman, and Joachim Lenz, whose relationship with Heinrich is struggling.

Heinrich has made friends with Erich, a fascist man.

Paul meets him and is disgusted and disturbed by his ideology.

Soon after, Paul visits Joachim again and finds him with a cut on his face, staying in a trashed flat.

Joachim tells Paul how one of Heinrich’s Nazi friends had threatened him and destroyed his possessions after Joachim defiled a Nazi party uniform belonging to Heinrich.

This discussion about their former acquaintances is the end of the novel.

Flag of Nazi Germany
Above: Flag of Nazi Germany (1935 – 1945)

Spender was discovered by T. S. Eliot, an editor at Faber & Faber, in 1933.

His early poetry, notably Poems (1933), was often inspired by social protest.

Poems by Stephen Spender by Stephen Spender

Living in Vienna, he further expressed his convictions in Forward from Liberalism, in Vienna (1934), a long poem in praise of the 1934 uprising of Austrian socialists, and in Trial of a Judge (1938), an antifascist drama in verse.

Forward from Liberalism: Spender, Stephen: 9781125852484: Amazon.com: Books

The 1930s were marked by turbulent events that would shape the course of history: the worldwide economic depression, the Spanish Civil War, and the beginnings of World War II.

Above: Dorothea Lange’s (1895 – 1965) Migrant Mother depicts destitute pea pickers in California, centering on Florence Owens Thompson (1903 – 1983), age 32, a mother of seven children, in Nipomo, California, March 1936

Collage guerra civile spagnola.png
Above: Images of the Spanish Civil War (1936 – 1939)

World War II: Summary, Combatants & Facts - HISTORY
Above: Soldier, World War II (1939 – 1945)

Seeing the established world crumbling around them, the writers of the period sought to create a new reality to replace the old, which, in their minds, had become obsolete.

For a time, Spender, like many young intellectuals of the era, was a member of the Communist Party.

CPGB2.png

Spender believed that Communism offered the only workable analysis and solution of complex world problems, that it was sure eventually to win, and that for significance and relevance the artist must somehow link his art to the Communist diagnosis.

Spender’s poem, “The Funeral” (included in Collected Poems: 1928 – 1953, published in 1955, but omitted from the 1985 revision of the same work), has been described as “a Communist elegy”.

37,263 Communism Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty-Free Images - iStock
Above: Communist flag

Auden’s Funeral

One among friends who stood above your grave
I cast a clod of earth from those heaped there
Down on the great brass-handled coffin lid.
It rattled on the oak like a door knocker
And at that sound I saw your face beneath
Wedged in an oblong shadow under ground.
Flesh creased, eyes shut, jaw jutting
And on the mouth a grin: triumph of one
Who has escaped from life-long colleagues roaring
For him to join their throng. He’s still half with us
Conniving slyly, yet he knows he’s gone
Into that cellar where they’ll never find him,
Happy to be alone, his last work done,
Word freed from world, into a different wood.

But we, with feet on grass, feeling the wind
Whip blood up in our cheeks, walk back along
The hillside road we earlier climbed today
Following the hearse and tinkling village band.
The white October sun circles Kirchstetten
With colours of chrysanthemums in gardens,
And bronze and golden under wiry boughs,
A few last apples gleam like jewels.
Back in the village inn, we sit on benches
For the last toast to you, the honoured ghost
Whose absence now becomes incarnate in us.
Tasting the meats, we imitate your voice
Speaking in flat benign objective tones
The night before you died. In the packed hall
You are your words. Your listeners see
Written on your face the poems they hear
Like letters carved in a tree’s bark
The sight and sound of solitudes endured.
And looking down on them, you see
Your image echoed in their eyes
Enchanted by your language to be theirs.
And then, your last word said, halloing hands
Hold up above their heads your farewell bow.
Then many stomp the platform, entreating
Each for his horde, your still warm signing hand.
But you have hidden away in your hotel
And locked the door and lain down on the bed
And fallen from their praise, dead on the floor.

(Ghost of a ghost, of you when young, you waken
In me my ghost when young, us both at Oxford.
You, the tow-haired undergraduate
With jaunty liftings of the head.
Angular forward stride, cross-questioning glance,
A Buster Keaton-faced pale gravitas.
Saying aloud your poems whose letters bit
Ink-deep into my fingers when I set
Them up upon my five-pound printing press:

‘An evening like a coloured photograph

A music stultified across the water

The heel upon the finishing blade of grass.’)

Back to your room still growing memories –
Handwriting, bottles half-drunk, and us – drunk –
Chester, in prayers, still prayed for your ‘dear C.’,
Hunched as Rigoletto, spluttering
Ecstatic sobs, already slanted
Down towards you, his ten-months-hence
Grave in Athens – remembers
Opera, your camped-on heaven, odourless
Resurrection of your bodies singing
Passionate duets whose chords resolve
Your rows in harmonies. Remembers
Some tragi-jesting wish of yours and puts
‘Siegfried’s Funeral March’ on the machine.
Wagner who drives out every thought but tears –
Down-crashing drums and cymbals cataclysmic
End-of-world brass exalt on drunken waves
The poet’s corpse borne on a bier beyond
The foundering finalities, his world,
To that Valhalla where the imaginings
Of the dead makers are their lives.
The dreamer sleeps forever with the dreamed.

Above: W.H. Auden’s grave, Kirchstetten, Austria

It has been observed that much of Spender’s other works from the same early period—including his play, Trial of a Judge: A Tragedy in Five Acts (1938), his poems in Vienna (1934), and his essays in The Destructive Element: A Study of Modern Writers and Beliefs (1935) and Forward from Liberalism (1935)—address Communism.

Trial of a Judge: A Tragic Statement in Five Acts | Stephen Spender | First  Edition, First Printing

Vienna by Stephen Spender

The Destructive Element. A Study of Modern Writers and Beliefs | Stephen  SPENDER

In Poets of the Thirties, D.E.S. Maxwell commented:

The imaginative writing of the thirties created an unusual milieu of urban squalor and political intrigue.

This kind of statement — a suggestion of decay producing violence and leading to change — as much as any absolute and unanimous political partisanship gave this poetry its Marxist reputation.

Communism and ‘the Communist’ (a poster-type stock figure) were frequently invoked.

Poets of the thirties,: Maxwell, D. E. S: 9780389010616: Amazon.com: Books

The attitudes Spender developed in the 1930s continued to influence him throughout his life.

As Peter Stansky pointed out in the New Republic

The 1930s were a shaping time for Spender, casting a long shadow over all that came after.

It would seem that the rest of his life, even more than he may realize, has been a matter of coming to terms with the 1930s, and the conflicting claims of literature and politics as he knew them in that decade of achievement, fame and disillusion.

Amazon.co.uk: Peter Stansky: Books, Biography, Blogs, Audiobooks, Kindle
Above: American historian Peter Stansky

From Stephen Spender’s The Destructive Element (1935):

I have taken Henry James as a great writer who developed an inner world of his own through his art.

I have also tried to show that his attitude to our civilization forced him to that development.

The process had two stages:

The first was his conviction that European society – and particularly English society – was decadent, combined with his own despair of fulfilling any creative or critical function in civilization as a whole.

Secondly, he discovered, in the strength of his own individuality, immense resources of respect for the past and for civilization.

He fulfilled his capacity to live and watch and judge by his own standards, to the utmost.

The Portrait of a lady cover.jpg

His characters have the virtues of people who are living into the past: an extreme sensibility, consideration for and curiosity about each other’s conduct, an aestheticism of behaviour.

In some ways their lives are a pastiche, but this pastiche is an elaboration of traditional moral values.

The life that James is, on the surface, describing, may be false.

The life that he is all the time inventing is true.

The Wings of the Dove (Henry James Novel) 1st edition cover.jpg

James, Joyce, Yeats, Ezra Pound and Eliot have all fortified their works by creating some legend or by consciously going back into a tradition that seemed and seems to be dying.

They are all conscious of the present as chaotic (though they are not all without their remedies) and of the past as an altogether more solid ground.

Portrait of James Joyce
Above: Irish writer James Joyce (1882 – 1941)

photograph of Ezra H. Pound
Above: American poet Ezra Pound (1885 – 1972)

In the destructive element immerse.

That is the way.

(Joseph Conrad)

Head shot with moustache and beard
Above: Polish-British writer Joseph Conrad (né Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski) (1857 – 1924)

Things fall apart. The centre cannot hold.

Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.

The blood dammed tide is loosed and everywhere.

The ceremony of innocence is drowned.

(Yeats)

Above: William Butler Yeats

Paris Review interview, May 1978:

I met Yeats, I think probably in 1935 or 1936, at Lady Ottoline Morrell’s.

Ottoline asked me to tea alone with Yeats.

Lady Ottoline Morrell, 1902
Above: Ottoline Morrell (1873 – 1938)

He was very blind and I don’t know whether he was deaf, but he was very sort of remote, he seemed tremendously old.

He was only about the age I am now, but he seemed tremendously old and remote.

Above: William Butler Yeats

He looked at me and then he said:

Young man, what do you think of the Sayers?

I hadn’t the faintest idea what he was talking about — I thought perhaps he meant Dorothy Sayers’s crime stories or something — I became flustered.

Dorothy L Sayers 1928.jpg
Above: English writer Dorothy Sayers (1893 – 1957)

What he meant was a group of young ladies who chanted poems in chorus.

Ten Poems Students Love to Read Out Loud by… | Poetry Foundation

Ottoline got very alarmed and rushed out of the room and telephoned to Virginia Woolf, who was just around the corner, and asked her to come save the situation.

Virginia arrived in about ten minutes’ time, tremendously amused, and Yeats was very pleased to meet her because he’d just been reading The Waves.

TheWaves.jpg

He also read quite a lot of science — I think he read Eddington and Rutherford and all those kinds of things — and so he told her that The Waves was a marvelous novel, that it was entirely up to date in scientific theory because light moved in waves, and time, and so on.

Arthur Stanley Eddington.jpg
Above: English astrophysicist Arthur Stanley Eddington (1882 – 1944)

Sir Ernest Rutherford LCCN2014716719 - restoration1.jpg
Above: New Zealander-British Physicist Ernest Rutherford (1871 – 1937)

Of course Virginia, who hadn’t thought of all this, was terribly pleased and flattered.

And then I remember he started telling her a story in which he said:

And as I went down the stairs there was a marble statue of a baby and it started talking in Greek to me.”—

That sort of thing.

Virginia adored it all, of course.

Portrait of Virginia Woolf 1927
Above: Virginia Woolf

Ottoline had what she called her Thursday parties, at which you met a lot of writers.

Yeats was often there.

He loosened up a great deal if he could tell malicious stories, and so he talked about George Moore.

Portrait, 1879
Above: Irish writer George Moore (1852 – 1933)

Yeats particularly disliked George Moore because of what he wrote in his book Hail and Farewell, which is in three volumes, and which describes Yeats in a rather absurd way.

Moore thought Yeats looked very much like a black crow or a rook as he walked by the lake on Lady Gregory’s estate at Coole.

Head and shoulders profile of a dignified older woman with hair swept back and a slightly prominent nose. Underneath is the signature "Augusta Gregory".
Above: Irish writer Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory (1852 – 1932)

Lady Gregory's Lodge - Unique Irish Homes
Above: Lady Gregory Lodge, Coole Park, County Galway, Ireland

He also told how Yeats would spend the whole morning writing five lines of poetry and then he’d be sent up strawberries and cream by Lady Gregory, and so Yeats would have to get his own back on George Moore.

Hail and Farewell! by George Moore

Another thing that amused Yeats very much for some reason was Robert Graves and the whole saga of his life with Laura Riding.

Graves in 1929
Above: British poet Robert Graves (1895 – 1985)

He told how Laura Riding threw herself out of a window without breaking her spine, or breaking it but being cured very rapidly.

All that pleased Yeats tremendously.

Woman with shoulder length brown hair wearing a white coat
Above: American writer Laura Riding Jackson (née Laura Reichenthal) (1901 – 1991)

I remember his telling the story of his trip to Rapallo to show the manuscript of The Tower to Ezra Pound.

The sea front and harbour of Rapallo.
Above: Rapallo, Italy

He stayed at the hotel and then went around and left the manuscript in a packet for Pound, accompanied by a letter saying:

I am an old man, this may be the last poetry I’ll ever write, it is very different from my other work?

All that kind of thing — and:

What do you think of it?

Next day he received a postcard from Ezra Pound with one word on it putrid.

Yeats was rather amused by that.

Apparently Pound had a tremendous collection of cats, and Yeats used to say that Pound couldn’t possibly be a nasty man because he fed all the cats of Rapallo.

Pound: poet and political prisoner - spiked
Above: Ezra Pound, Rapallo, Italy

I once asked him how he came to be a modern poet, and he told me that it took him 30 years to modernize his style.

He said he didn’t really like the modern poetry of Eliot and Pound.

He thought it was static, that it didn’t have any movement, and for him poetry had always to have the romantic movement.

He said:

For me poetry always means:

‘Yet we’ll go no more a-roving / By the light of the moon.’

Portrait of Byron
Above: English poet George Gordon Byron (1788 – 1824)

So the problem was how to keep the movement of the Byron lines but at the same time enlarge it so that it could include the kind of material that he was interested in, which was to do with everyday life —politics, quarrels between people, sexual love, and not just the frustrated love he had with Maud Gonne.

Maude Gonne McBride nd.jpg
Above: English-Irish activist Maude Gonne McBride (1866 – 1953)

The idea for a book on James gradually resolved itself, then, in my mind, into that of a book about modern writers and beliefs or unbeliefs.

The difficulty of a book about contemporaries is that one is dealing in a literature of few accepted values.

At best, one can offer opinions or one can try to prove that one living writer is, for certain reasons, better than another.

At worst, such criticism degenerates into a kind of bookmaking or stockbroking.

A living writer does not diminish in accordance with rules laid down by donnish minds.

Impertinent criticism means that the critic is projecting on to writing some fantasy of his own as to how poems should be written.

TheAmbassadors.jpg

D.H. Lawrence is a kind of traveller to uncharted lands.

As a psychologist, in his poems, and in Fantasia of the Unknown, he is unique and has no follower.

D. H. Lawrence, 1929
Above: David Herbert Lawrence (1885 – 1930)

All these writers seem to me faced by the destructive element, the experience of an all-pervading present which is a world without belief.

On the one hand, there are the writers who search for some unifying belief in the past or in some personal legend.

On the other, those who look forward to a world of new beliefs in the future.

Both of these attitudes are explained by the consciousness of a void in the present.

The Destructive Element: A Study Of Modern Writers And Beliefs by Stephen  Spender

What interests me is what writers write about, the subjects of literature today.

I am not defending the young writers from the old writers.

I am defending what is, in the widest sense, the political or moral subject in writing.

The Trance | Poem Summary | Snappynotes
Above: Stephen Spender

Lawrence’s own books are descriptions of his experience.

His writing is so inextricably bound up with the value he set on living, that it seems a part of the experience.

It does not seem at all cut off from his life.

Sonslovers.jpg

The organ of life, the moral life of human beings, is the subject, the consistent pattern.

To write a poetry which represents the modern moral life, which is yet not isolated from tradition.

Dust jacket, Lawrence, The Rainbow, Methuen, 1915.jpg

In Yeats I see a fundamental division of the realist from the practical politician and mystic, the reporter attending séances.

Above: William Butler Yeats

I see Eliot as an extremely isolated artist of great sensibility, a deaf and neurotic sensibility that produced great quartets.

Above: Thomas Stearns Eliot

James believed that the only values which mattered at all were those cultivated by individuals who had escaped from the general decadence.

Above: Henry James

Before everything else, the individual must be agonizingly aware of his isolated situation.

Nor is he to be selfish.

He is still occupied in building up the little nucleus of a real civilization possible for himself and for others possessing the same awareness as himself.

More recently, however, the situation seems to have profoundly altered, because the moral life of the individual has become comparatively insignificant.

365 Ways to Change the World – The Speaking Tree

In times of revolution or war, there is a divorce between the kind of morality that affects individuals and the morality of the state, of politics.

In time of war, the immoral purpose invented by the state is to beat the enemy and the usual taboos affecting individuals are almost suspended.

Those taboos which serve to make an individual conform to a strict family code may become regarded as ludicrous.

In revolutionary times it is questions of social justice, of liberty, of war or peace, of election, that become really important.

Civilization series logo (2016).svg
Above: Civilizations video game series logo

Questions of private morality, of theft, of adultery, become almost insignificant.

In private life there remain few great saints and absolutely no great sinners.

Yin and yang.svg

The old question of free will, of whether the individual is free to choose between two courses of action, becomes superseded by another question:

Is a society able to determine the course of its history?

Society is, of course, made up of individuals, and the choice, if there is any, lies finally with individuals.

But there is a difference between public acts and private acts of individuals.

There is a difference between the man who considers that he is a great and exciting sinner because he leads a promiscuous sexual life, and the man who decides not to live too promiscuously because to do so embarrasses and complicates his revolutionary activities.

Casanova film.jpg

To the second man the question of a morality in his private life becomes a matter of convenience, whereas his political conscience governs his actions.

In times of rest, of slow evolution and peace, society is an image of the individual quietly living his life and obeying the laws.

A painting of a man and woman with stern expessions standing side-by-side in front of a white house. The man holds a pitch fork.
Above: American Gothic, Grant Wood

In violent times the moral acts of the individual seem quite unrelated to the immense social changes going on all around him.

He looks at civilization and does not see his own quiet image reflected there at all, but the face of something fierce and threatening that may destroy him.

It may seem foreign and yet resemble his own face.

He knows that if he is not to be destroyed, he must somehow connect his life again with this political life and influence it.

Stop Reading the News by Rolf Dobelli, Caroline Waight | Waterstones

The extraordinary public events of the last few years, the war, revolutions, the economic crisis, are bound eventually into the tradition of literature, the organ of life.

It is not true to say that poetry is about nothing.

Poetry is about history, but not history in the sense of school books.

Poetry is a history which is the moral life, which is always contemporary.

The pattern, the technique, is the organ of life.

Dead poets society.jpg

I find myself opposed to the distinguished critic who says that art is, or should be, non-moral and non-political, but external and satiric, as much as I am bound also to oppose those who say that literature should become an instrument of propaganda.

Why I Write (Great Ideas #020) by George Orwell

The greatest art is moral, even when the artist has no particular moral or political axe to grind.

Conversely, that having a particular moral or political axe to grind does destroy art if the writer:

  • suspends his own judgments and substitutes the system of judging established by a political creed
  • assumes knowledge of men and the future course of history, which he may passionately believe, but which, as an artist, he simply hasn’t got

Utopia by Thomas More

The poet is not dealing in purely esthetic values, but he is communicating an experience of life which is outside his own personal experience.

He may communicate his own experience yet he is not bound by this, but by his own understanding.

Pure poetry does communicate a kind of experience and this is the experience of a void.

For the sense of a void is a very important kind of experience.

All theories of art for art’s sake and of pure art are the attempt to state the theory of a kind of art based on no political, religious or moral creed.

Gallery of Light, Space, and Movement Become Art During the Mesmerizing  Sensory Experience of "VOID" - 3

The old gang to be forgotten in the spring

The hard bitch and the riding master

Stiff underground; deep in clear lake

The lolling bridegroom, beautiful, there

(W.H. Auden)

Above: W.H. Auden

I am not stating how writers should write or even what they should write about.

That is their business, not mine.

Writer at Work - Writers Write

At some time in his life an artist has got to come to grips with the objective, factual life around him.

He cannot spin indefinitely from himself unless he learned how to establish contact with his audience by the use of symbols which represent reality to his contemporaries.

If he does not learn this lesson, he ceases to be.

He needs to be islanded with imagery, which is derived from realistic observation.

Just as dreams express the desires censored by our waking thoughts figure those desires in pictures which are actual to us.

Thus we find a museum full of the symbols which were at first observed as conditions in real life are used as symbols for different states of mind.

The Museum of Innocence.jpg
Above: The Museum of Innocence, Istanbul, Turkey

I have not the least hesitation in saying that I aspire to write in such a way that it would be impossible for an outsider to say whether I am at a given moment an American writing about England or an Englishman writing about America, and far from being ashamed of such an ambiguity I should be exceedingly proud of it, for it would be highly civilized.

(Henry James)

Above: Henry James

The most limited theme is capable of the greatest development and variation.

From humble beginnings come great things | Inspirational Quotes |  Typography inspiration, Words, Lettering

James is the spectator at the edge of life always refusing to enter into it.

His characters all listen and talk and comment and do not act.

The Beast in the Jungle is the study of a man in whose life nothing happens, it is all spent in waiting for the beast to spring.

The Beast in the Jungle eBook by Henry James - 9788822868657 | Rakuten Kobo  United States

A life of leisured and comfortable journeys to frequented and beautiful cities or parts of the country is, in the majority of cases, the most uneventful life our society has to offer.

If it provides excitement, it provides excitement with the least possible amount of friction.

The personal conflict is a conflict between the desire to plunge too deeply into experience and the prudent resolution to remain a spectator, to absorb the tradition without losing own individuality, to choose between two kinds of isolation:

  • the isolation of a person so deeply involved in experiencing the sensations of a world foreign to him that he fails to affirm himself as a part of its unity
  • to be isolated in the manner of absolutely refusing to be an actor in the play which so impressed him

I Am A Rock 45.jpg

What, then, have you dreamed of?

A man whom I can have the luxury of respecting!

A man whom I can admire enough to make me know I am doing it, whom I fondly believe to be cast in a bigger mould than most of the vulgar breed – large in character, great in talent, strong in will.

In such a man as that, one’s weary imagination at last may rest or may wander if it will, but with the sense of coming home again a greater adventure than any other.

(Henry James)

James Washington Square cover.JPG

The tragic muse is a book in which all the conflicting aspects of life are represented:

The life of political action, the aesthetic life, and the drama.

Intelligently responsive critical interest in an artist’s work is an almost necessary stimulus to creation.

Bookmark: Authors, readings, launches move to online | Star Tribune

It was as if he had said to me on seeing me:

Lay hands on the weak little relics of our common youth:

Oh, but you are not going to give me away, to hand me over in my raggedness and my poor accidents, quite helpless, friendless.

You are going to do the best for me you can, aren’t you?

And since you are going to let me seem to justify them as I possibly can?

(Henry James)

The Bostonians by Henry James

At the Shakespeare and Company bookstore in Paris, which published the first edition of James Joyce’s Ulysses, historic figures made rare appearances to read their work: 

Shakespeare and Company bookstore, Paris 13 August 2013.jpg
Above: Shakespeare and Company bookstore, Paris, France

JoyceUlysses2.jpg

Paul Valéry, André Gide and Eliot.

Paul Valéry photographed by Henri Manuel, 1920s.
Above: French writer Paul Valéry (1871 – 1945)

André Gide.jpg
Above: French writer André Gide (1869 – 1951)

T. S. Eliot | Poetry Foundation
Above: T.S. Eliot

Hemingway even broke his rule of not reading in public if Spender would read with him.

Since Spender agreed, Hemingway appeared for a rare reading in public with him.

Dark-haired man in light colored short-sleeved shirt working on a typewriter at a table on which sits an open book
Above: American writer Ernest Hemingway (1899 – 1961)

Paris Review interview, May 1978:

Hemingway I knew during the Spanish Civil War.

He often turned up in Valencia and Madrid and other places where I happened to be.

We would go for walks together and then he would talk about literature.

ErnestHemmingway ForWhomTheBellTolls.jpg

He was marvelous as long as he didn’t realize that he was talking about literature —

I mean he’d say how the opening chapter of Stendhal’s La Chartreuse de Parme was the best description of war in literature, when Fabrizio gets lost, doesn’t know where he is at all in the Battle of Waterloo.

Stendhal, by Olof Johan Södermark, 1840
Above: French writer Marie-Henri Beyle (aka Stendhal) (1783 – 1842)

StendhalCharterhouseParma01.jpg
Above: The Charterhouse of Parma, first edition

Battle of Waterloo 1815.PNG
Above: The Battle of Waterloo, Waterloo, Belgium, 18 June 1815

Then I’d say:

Well, what do you think about Henry IV?

Portrait of Henry IV
Above: English King Henry IV (1367 – 1413)

Do you think Shakespeare writes well about war?

Oh, I’ve never read Shakespeare,” he would say.

Shakespeare.jpg
Above: William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

What are you talking about?

You seem to imagine I’m a professor or something.

I don’t read literature.

I’m not a literary man.”—

That kind of thing.

Above: The Hemingway family (Hadley, Bumby and Ernest), Schruns, Austria, 1926

In Chicago, Hemingway worked as an associate editor of the monthly journal Cooperative Commonwealth, where he met novelist Sherwood Anderson.

It is believed that Anderson suggested Paris to Hemingway because “the monetary exchange rate” made it an inexpensive place to live, more importantly it was where “the most interesting people in the world” lived.

Anderson in 1933
Above: American novelist Sherwood Anderson (1876 – 1941)

In Paris, Hemingway met American writer and art collector Gertrude Stein, Irish novelist James Joyce, American poet Ezra Pound (who “could help a young writer up the rungs of a career“) and other writers.

Above: American writer Gertrude Stein (1874 – 1946)

Picture of James Joyce from 1922 in three-quarters view looking downward
Above: James Joyce

Above: Ezra Pound

The Hemingway of the early Paris years was a “tall, handsome, muscular, broad-shouldered, brown-eyed, rosy-cheeked, square-jawed, soft-voiced young man.”

He and Hadley lived in a small walk-up at 74 rue du Cardinal Lemoine in the Latin Quarter, and he worked in a rented room in a nearby building.

74 rue du Cardinal Lemoine | Hemingway's Paris-37 | This was… | Flickr
Above: 74 rue du Cardinal Lemoine, Paris

File:Rue Cardinal Lemoine-Plaque Hemingway.JPG - Wikimedia Commons

Stein, who was the bastion of modernism in Paris, became Hemingway’s mentor and godmother to his son Jack. 

She introduced him to the expatriate artists and writers of the Montparnasse Quarter, whom she referred to as the “Lost Generation“—a term Hemingway popularized with the publication of The Sun Also Rises.

Generation timeline.svg

A regular at Stein’s salon, Hemingway met influential painters such as Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró and Juan Gris.

Portrait de Picasso, 1908.jpg
Above: Spanish painter Pablo Picasso (1881 – 1973)

Portrait of Joan Miro, Barcelona 1935 June 13.jpg
Above: Spanish painter Joan Miro (1893 – 1983)

Juan Gris, 1922, photograph by Man Ray, Paris. Gelatin silver print.jpg
Above: Spanish painter Juan Gris (1887 – 1927)

He eventually withdrew from Stein’s influence, and their relationship deteriorated into a literary quarrel that spanned decades.

Ezra Pound met Hemingway by chance at Sylvia Beach’s bookshop Shakespeare and Company in 1922.

Sylvia Beach at Shakespeare & Co Paris 1920.jpg
Above: American bookseller/publisher Sylvia Beach (1887 – 1962)

The two toured Italy in 1923 and lived on the same street in 1924.

They forged a strong friendship, and in Hemingway, Pound recognized and fostered a young talent. 

Pound introduced Hemingway to James Joyce, with whom Hemingway frequently embarked on “alcoholic sprees“.

During his first 20 months in Paris, Hemingway filed 88 stories for the Toronto Star newspaper.

Passport photograph
Above: Hemingway’s 1923 passport photo. At this time, he lived in Paris with his wife Hadley, and worked as a foreign correspondent for the Toronto Star.

Toronto-Star-Logo.svg

By-Line Ernest Hemingway 1967.jpg

In September 1923, the Hemingways returned to Toronto, where their son John was born on 10 October.

He missed Paris, considered Toronto boring, and wanted to return to the life of a writer, rather than live the life of a journalist.

Hemingway, Hadley and their son (nicknamed Bumby) returned to Paris in January 1924 and moved into a new apartment at 113 rue Notre-Dame des Champs.

Ernest Hemingway, 113 rue notre-dame des champs, Montparnasse, Paris,1926.  (from Kiki's Paris by Billy Kluver… | Great short stories, Dorothy parker,  The new yorker
Above: Ernest Hemingway, 1926

Hemingway helped Ford Madox Ford edit The Transatlantic Review, which published works by Pound, John Dos Passos, Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, and Stein, as well as some of Hemingway’s own early stories, such as “Indian Camp“.

When In Our Time was published in 1925, the dust jacket bore comments from Ford.

Indian Camp” received considerable praise.

Ford saw it as an important early story by a young writer.

Critics in the United States praised Hemingway for reinvigorating the short story genre with his crisp style and use of declarative sentences.

c. 1905 photo
Above: English writer Ford Madox Ford (1873 – 1939)

Six months earlier, Hemingway had met F. Scott Fitzgerald.

The pair formed a friendship of “admiration and hostility“. 

A photograph of F. Scott Fitzgerald by Nickolas Muray. Fitzgerald is bent over a desk and is examining a sheaf of papers. He is wearing a light suit and a polka-dot tie. A white handkerchief is in his breast pocket.
Above: American writer Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (1896 – 1940)

Fitzgerald had published The Great Gatsby the same year:

Hemingway read it, liked it, and decided his next work had to be a novel.

The book cover with title against a dark sky. Beneath the title are lips and two eyes, looming over a city.

He was very nice when one was alone with him, but the public Hemingway could be troublesome.

On one occasion, I remember we went into a bar where there were girls.

Hemingway immediately took up a guitar and started strumming, being “Hemingway”.

One of the girls standing with him pointed at me and said, “Tu amigo es muy guapo.”—

Your friend is very handsome.

Hemingway became absolutely furious, bashed down the guitar and left in a rage.

He was very like that.

Another time, my first wife and I met him and Marty Gellhorn in Paris.

Yours, for Probably Always: Martha Gellhorn's Letters of Love and War  1930-1949 – review | History books | The Guardian
Above: Marty Gellhorn

They invited us to lunch, someplace where there were steaks and chips, things like that, but my wife ordered sweetbread.

Also she wouldn’t drink.

Inez Spender', Sir William Coldstream, 1937–8 | Tate
Above: Inez Pearn Spender (née Marie Agnes Pearn) (1913 – 1976)

So Hemingway said:

Your wife is yellow, that’s what she is, she’s yellow.

Marty was like that, and do you know what I did?

I used to take her to the morgue in Madrid every morning before breakfast.

Well, the morgue in Madrid before breakfast really must have been something.

photograph of three men and two women sitting at a sidewalk table

Above: Ernest Hemingway with Lady Duff Twysden, his wife Hadley, and friends, July 1925 trip to Spain

Hemingway always said of me:

You’re okay.

All that’s wrong with you is you’re too squeamish.

MoveableFeast.jpg

So he would describe modern war.

He’d say:

If you think of modern war from the point of view of a pilot, the city that he’s bombing isn’t all these people whom you like to worry about, people who are going to suffer —

It’s just a mathematical problem.

It’s like shading in a circle with dark areas where you drop your bombs.

You mustn’t think of it in a sentimental way at all.

Hemingway farewell.png

At that same meeting in Paris, he told me again I was squeamish, and then he said:

This is something you ought to look at, it will do you good.

He produced a packet of about 30 photographs of the most horrible murders, which he carried around in his pockets.

This toughened one up in some way.

The Murders in the Rue Morgue eBook by Edgar Allan Poe - 9783967993257 |  Rakuten Kobo Greece

He told me that what motivated him really, while he was in Spain, wasn’t so much enthusiasm about the Republic, but to test his own courage.

He said:

Only if you actually go into battle and bullets are screeching all around you, can you know whether you’re a coward or not.

He had to prove to himself that he wasn’t a coward.

And he said:

Mind, you shit in your pants with fear.

Everyone does that, but that isn’t what counts.

I don’t remember quite what it is that counts —

But he always wanted to test his own courage.

Physical courage to him was a kind of absolute value.

photograph of three men
Above: Hemingway (center) with Dutch filmmaker Joris Ivens (1898 – 1989) and German writer Ludwig Renn (1889 – 1979) (serving as an International Brigades officer) during the Spanish Civil War, 1937

In 1936, Spender became a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain. 

Communist Party of Great Britain (Provisional Central Committee) - Wikipedia

(The Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) was the largest Communist party in Great Britain between 1920 and 1991.

Founded in 1920 through a merger of several smaller Marxist parties, the CPGB gained the support of many socialist organisations and trade unions following the political fallout of the First World War and the Russian October Revolution.

Ideologically the CPGB was a socialist party organised upon Marxism-Leninist ideology, strongly opposed to British colonialism, sexual discrimination and racial segregation.

These beliefs led many leading anti-colonial revolutionaries, feminists, and anti-fascist figures, to become closely associated with the Party.

Many prominent CPGB members became leaders of Britain’s trade union movements.)

Join the party or become a supporter | The Communists

Harry Pollitt, its head, invited him to write for the Daily Worker on the Moscow Trials.

Above: Henry Pollitt (1890 – 1960) giving a speech to workers in front of Whitehall, London, 1941

(The Moscow Trials were a series of show trials held in the Soviet Union between 1936 and 1938 at the instigation of Joseph Stalin.

Stalin Full Image.jpg
Above: Joseph Stalin (1878 – 1953)

They were nominally directed against “Trotskyists” and members of the “Right Opposition” of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

Above: Leon Trotsky (1879 – 1940)

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
Above: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, German authors of The Communist Manifesto

At the time the three Moscow Trials were given extravagant titles:

  • the “Case of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite Terrorist Center” (or the Zinoviev-Kamenev Trial, also known as the ‘Trial of the Sixteen‘, August 1936)

Grigory Zinoviev
Above: Russian revolutionary Grigory Zinovieff (né Hirsch Apfelbaum) (1883 – 1936)

Lev Kamenev 1920s (cropped).jpg
Above: Russian revolutionary Lev Kamenev (né Rozenfeld) (1883 – 1936)

  • the “Case of the Anti-Soviet Trotskyist Center” (or the Pyatakov-Radek Trial, January 1937)

Pyatakov GL.jpg
Above: Russian revolutionary Georgy Pyatakov (1890 – 1937)

Karl Radek 1.jpg
Above: Ukrainian revolutionary Karl Radek (1885 – 1939)

  • the “Case of the Anti-Soviet ‘Bloc of Rights and Trotskyites’” (or the Bukharin-Rykov Trial, also known as the ‘Trial of the Twenty-One‘, March 1938)

Bucharin.bra.jpg
Above: Russian revolutionary Nikolai Bukharin (1888 – 1938)

Alexei Rykov.jpg
Above: Alexei Rykov (1881 – 1938)

The defendants were Old Bolshevik Party (“old party guard“) leaders and top officials of the Soviet Secret Police (KGB).

Emblema KGB.svg
Above: Emblem of the KGB

Most were charged under Article 58 of the RSFSR Penal Code with conspiring with the Western powers to assassinate Stalin and other Soviet leaders, dismember the Soviet Union, and restore capitalism.

Several prominent figures were sentenced to death during this period outside these trials.

The Moscow Trials led to the execution of many of the defendants.

The trials are generally seen as part of Stalin’s Great Purge, a campaign to rid the party of current or prior opposition, including Trotskyists and leading Bolshevik cadre members from the time of the Russian Revolution or earlier, who might even potentially become a figurehead for the growing discontent in the Soviet populace resulting from Stalin’s mismanagement of the economy.

Stalin’s rapid industrialization during the period of the First Five Year Plan and the brutality of the forced agricultural collectivization had led to an acute economic and political crisis (1928 – 1933), made worse by the global Great Depression, which led to enormous suffering on the part of the Soviet workers and peasants.

Stalin was acutely conscious of this fact and took steps to prevent it taking the form of an opposition inside the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to his increasingly totalitarian rule.)

КПСС.svg
Above: Flag of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union with face of Vladimir Lenin (1870 – 1924)

In late 1936, Spender married Inez Pearn, whom he had recently met at an Aid to Spain meeting.

She is described as ‘small and rather ironic‘ and ‘strikingly good-looking‘.

Spender was married to his first wife, Inez, having been part-converted to heterosexuality through an affair with an American, Muriel Gardiner.

Sleeping with a woman, he told Isherwood, was “more satisfactory, more terrible, more disgusting, and, in fact, more everything“.

One of his poems speaks of having “a third mouth of the dark to kiss“.

The marriage to Inez ended as the Second World War began.

The poet who was Britain's pottiest parent: His son describes the love  affairs, the holidays alone and breastfeeding kittens | Daily Mail Online
Above: Inez and Stephen Spender

In 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, the Daily Worker sent him to Spain on a mission to observe and report on the Soviet ship Komsomol, which had sunk while carrying Soviet weapons to the Second Spanish Republic.

Leninsky Komsomol-class cargo ship - Wikipedia
Above: The Leninsky-Komsomol class cargo ship Ravenstvo

Spender travelled to Tangier and tried to enter Spain via Cadiz, but was sent back.

He then travelled to Valencia, where he met Ernest Hemingway and Manuel Altolaguirre. 

5 poemas de Manuel Altolaguirre - Zenda
Above: Spanish poet Manuel Altolaguirre (1905 – 1959)

You stared out of the window on the emptiness
Of a world exploding:
Stones and rubble thrown upwards in a fountain
Blasted sideways by the wind.
Every sensation except loneliness
Was drained out of your mind
By the lack of any motionless object the eye could
find.
You were a child again
Who sees for the first time things happen.

When you smiled,
Everything in the room was shattered;
Only you remained whole
In frozen wonder, as though you stared
At your image in the broken mirror
Where it had always been silverly carried.

To A Spanish Poet” (for Manuel Altolaguirre), The Still Centre, 1939

Manuel Altolaguirre - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia
Above: Manuel Altolaguirre

(Tony Hyndman, alias Jimmy Younger, had joined the International Brigades, which were fighting against Francisco Franco’s forces in the Battle of Guadalajara.)

Emblem of the International Brigades.svg
Above: Emblem of the International Brigades (1936 – 1938), Spanish Civil War

RETRATO DEL GRAL. FRANCISCO FRANCO BAHAMONDE (adjusted levels).jpg
Above: Spanish dictator Francisco Franco (1892 – 1975)

Bundesarchiv Bild 183-2006-1204-500, Spanien, Schlacht um Guadalajara.jpg
Above: Nationalist forces, Battle of Guadalajara, Spain, 8-23 March 1937

The guns spell money’s ultimate reason
In letters of lead on the spring hillside.
But the boy lying dead under the olive trees
Was too young and too silly
To have been notable to their important eye.
He was a better target for a kiss.

His name never appeared in the papers.
The world maintained its traditional wall
Round the dead with their gold sunk deep as a well,
Whilst his life, intangible as a Stock Exchange
rumour, drifted outside.

Consider his life which was valueless
In terms of employment, hotel ledgers, news files.
Consider. One bullet in ten thousand kills a man.
Ask. Was so much expenditure justified
On the death of one so young and so silly
Lying under the olive tree, O world, O death?

Ultima Ratio Regum“, The Still Centre, 1939

In July 1937, Spender attended the Second International Writers’ Congress, the purpose of which was to discuss the attitude of intellectuals to the war, held in Valencia, Barcelona and Madrid, and attended by many writers, including Ernest Hemingway, André Malraux and Pablo Neruda. 

Malraux in 1974
Above: French writer André Malraux (1901 – 1976)

Pablo Neruda 1963.jpg
Above: Chilean poet Pablo Neruda (1904 – 1973)

Pollitt told Spender “to go and get killed.

We need a Byron in the movement.”

Above: Lord Byron on his Death-bed, Joseph-Denis Odevaere – Byron planned to attack the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto, at the mouth of the Gulf of Corinth. Byron employed a fire-master to prepare artillery, and he took part of the rebel army under his own command, despite his lack of military experience. Before the expedition could sail, on 15 February 1824, he fell ill, and bloodletting weakened him further. He made a partial recovery, but in early April he caught a violent cold, which therapeutic bleeding, insisted on by his doctors, aggravated. This treatment, carried out with unsterilized medical instruments, may have caused him to develop sepsis. He contracted a violent fever and died in Missolonghi on 19 April 1824.

Deep in the winter plain, two armies
Dig their machinery, to destroy each other.
Men freeze and hunger. No one is given leave
On either side, except the dead, and wounded.

All have become so nervous and so cold
That each man hates the cause and distant words
Which brought him here, more terribly than bullets.

Two Armies“, The Still Centre, 1939

Above: Italian tankettes advancing with a flame thrower tank in the lead at Guadalajara

Spender was imprisoned for a while in Albacete.

Above: Members of the International Brigades in the British cookhouse at Albacete raising their fists

In Madrid, he met André Malraux.

They discussed André Gide’s Retour de l’U.R.S.S..

André Gide's Return From the USSR: Retour de l' U.R.S.S. a book by André  Gide and David Grunwald

Because of medical problems, Spender went back to England and bought a house in Lavenham.

In 1939, he divorced.

Lavenham High Street.jpg
Above: High Street, Lavenham, England

His 1938 translations of works by Bertolt Brecht and Miguel Hernández appeared in John Lehmann’s New Writing.

Brecht in 1954
Above: German writer Bertolt Brecht (1898 – 1956)

Miguel Hernandez
Above: Spanish poet Miguel Hernandez (1910 – 1942)

John Lehmann biography
Above: English poet John Lehmann (1907 – 1987)

Spender felt close to the Jewish people.

His mother, Violet Hilda Schuster, was half-Jewish.

(Her father’s family were German Jews who converted to Christianity, and her mother came from an upper-class family of Catholic German, Lutheran Danish and distant Italian descent).

Judaica.jpg
Above: Judaica – Shabbat (Sabbath) candlesticks, the handwashing cup egg-shaped etrog box, the ram’s horn shofar, Torah pointer, the Torah in book-form Tanach

Spender’s second wife, Natasha, whom he married in 1941, was also Jewish.

 In 1941, he married Natasha Litvin, 10 years his junior.

The end of the War coincided with the birth of their first child.

Photos, Biography, Literary Movement - LIFE OF STEPHEN SPENDER
Above: Stephen and Natasha Spender

Spender continued to write poetry throughout his life, but it came to consume less of his literary output in later years than it did in the 1930s and 1940s.

Critics praised his work as an autobiographer and critic.

In a Times Literary Supplement review, Julian Symons noted “the candor of the ceaseless critical self-examination Spender has conducted for more than half a century in autobiography, journals, criticism, poems.

Julian Symons (1912 – 1994) – A Crime is Afoot
Above: British writer Julian Symons (1912 – 1994)

Spender was at his best when he was writing autobiography.

The poet himself pointed echoed this assertion in the postscript to The Thirties and After: Poetry, Politics, People, 1933 – 1970 (1978):

“I myself am, it is only too clear, an autobiographer.

Autobiography provides the line of continuity in my work. I am not someone who can shed or disclaim his past.”

The Thirties and After | SpringerLink

In 1942, he joined the fire brigade of Cricklewood and Maresfield Gardens as a volunteer.

Spender met several times with the poet Edwin Muir.

Edwin Muir.jpg
Above: Scottish poet Edwin Muir (1887 – 1959)

After he was no longer left-wing, he was one of those who wrote of their disillusionment with Communism in the essay collection The God that Failed (1949), along with Arthur Koestler and others.

(The God that Failed is a 1949 collection of six essays by Louis Fischer, André Gide, Arthur Koestler, Ignazio Silone, Stephen Spender and Richard Wright.

The common theme of the essays is the authors’ disillusionment with and abandonment of Communism.)

The God that Failed - Wikipedia

It is thought that one of the big areas of disappointment was the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact between Germany and the Soviet Union, which many leftists saw as a betrayal.

Vyacheslav Molotov Anefo2.jpg
Above: Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov (1890 – 1986)

Portrait of a middle-aged man with short grey hair and a stern expression. He wears a dark military uniform, with a swastika on one arm. He is seated with his hands on a table with several papers on it, holding a pen.
Above: Nazi Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop (1893 – 1946)

Like Auden, Isherwood and several other outspoken opponents of fascism in the 1930s, Spender did not see active military service in World War II.

He was initially graded “C” upon examination because of his earlier colitis, poor eyesight, varicose veins and the long-term effects of a tapeworm in 1934.

But he pulled strings to be re-examined and was upgraded to “B“, which meant that he could serve in the London Auxiliary Fire Service.

Spender spent the winter of 1940 teaching at Blundell’s School.

Above: Blundell’s, Tiverton, Devon, England

After the War, Spender was a member of the Allied Control Commission, restoring civil authority in Germany.

Allied Control Commission In Berlin Photograph by Mary Evans Picture Library
Above: Allied Control Commission in Berlin

All the posters on the walls
All the leaflets in the streets
Are mutilated, destroyed or run in rain,
Their words blotted out with tears,
Skins peeling from their bodies
In the victorious hurricane.

All the lessons learned, unlearned;
The young, who learned to read, now blind
Their eyes with an archaic film;
The peasant relapses to a stumbling tune
Following the donkey`s bray;
These only remember to forget.

But somewhere some word presses
On the high door of a skull and in some corner
Of an irrefrangible eye
Some old man memory jumps to a child
— Spark from the days of energy.
And the child hoards it like a bitter toy.

Fall of a City“, Selected Poems, 1941

Battle of Berlin - Wikipedia
Above: Berlin at the end of World War II

With Cyril Connolly and Peter Watson, Spender co-founded Horizon magazine and served as its editor from 1939 to 1941.

Above: Cyril Connolly

Queer saint' Peter Watson left his mark on British culture by bankrolling  artworld giants | The Independent | The Independent
Above: English arts benefactor Peter Watson (1908 – 1956)

Horizon: April 1940 by edited by Cyril - First edition - 1940 - from  Between the Covers- Rare Books, Inc. ABAA (SKU: 75362)

A poet can only write about what is true to his own experience, not about what he would like to be true to his experience.


Poetry does not state truth.

It states the conditions within which something felt is true.

Even while he is writing about the little portion of reality which is part of his experience, the poet may be conscious of a different reality outside.

His problem is to relate the small truth to the sense of a wider, perhaps theoretically known, truth outside his experience.

Foreword“, The Still Centre (1939)

Stephen Spender Quotes | Profound quotes, Writing poetry, Wise quotes

From 1947 to 1949, he went to the US several times and saw Auden and Isherwood.

Flag of the United States
Above: Flag of the United States of America

Since we are what we are, what shall we be
But what we are?
 We are, we have
Six feet and seventy years, to see
The light, and then resign it for the grave.

Spiritual Explorations” from Poems of Dedication (1947)

POEMS OF DEDICATION | Stephen Spender | First Edition

He was the editor of Encounter magazine from 1953 to 1966, but resigned after it emerged that the Congress for Cultural Freedom, which published it, was covertly funded by the CIA. 

Spender insisted that he was unaware of the ultimate source of the magazine’s funds.

Encounter - Powerbase

Annual program 2017 - Announcements - e-flux

Seal of the Central Intelligence Agency.svg

He taught at various American institutions and accepted the Elliston Chair of Poetry at the University of Cincinnati in 1954.

University of Cincinnati seal.svg

In 1961, he became professor of rhetoric at Gresham College, London.

Gresham College logo.svg

Spender helped found the magazine Index on Censorship, was involved in the founding of the Poetry Book Society and did work for UNESCO.

UNESCO logo English.svg

(Index on Censorship is an organization campaigning for freedom of expression, which produces a quarterly magazine of the same name from London.

Index raster-rgb.png

It is directed by the non-profit-making Writers and Scholars International, Ltd. (WSI) in association with the UK-registered charity Index on Censorship (founded as the Writers and Scholars Educational Trust), which are both chaired by the British television broadcaster, writer and former politician Trevor Phillips.

Flickr - boellstiftung - Trevor Phillips.jpg
Above: Trevor Phillips

 

Index is based at 1 Rivington Place in central London.

WSI was created by poet Stephen Spender, Oxford philosopher Stuart Hampshire, the publisher and editor of The Observer David Astor, and the writer and expert on the Soviet Union Edward Crankshaw.

Above: Stuart Hampshire (1914 – 2004)

David Astor: a king in the golden age of print | David Astor | The Guardian
Above: David Astor (1912 – 2001)

Edward Crankshaw - Peters Fraser and Dunlop (PFD) Literary Agents
Above: Edward Crankshaw (1909 – 1984)

The founding editor of Index on Censorship was the critic and translator Michael Scammell, who still serves as a patron of the organization.

Mike Scammell
Above: Michael Scammell

The original impetus for the creation of Index on Censorship came from an open letter addressed “To World Public Opinion” by two Soviet dissenters, Pavel Litvinov and Larisa Bogoraz.

Russian Dissident Litvinov Condemns Zeman - Supports Drahos - Prague  Business Journal
Above: Soviet dissident Pavel Litvinov

BogorazL.jpg
Above: Soviet dissident Larisa Bogoraz

In the words of the samizdat periodical A Chronicle of Current Events, they described “the atmosphere of illegality” surrounding the January 1968 trial of Ginzburg and Galanskov and called for “public condemnation of this disgraceful trial, for the punishment of those responsible, the release of the accused from detention and a retrial which would fully conform with the legal regulations and be held in the presence of international observers.

A Chronicle of Current Events Nr 58: 9780862100360: Amazon.com: Books

(Alexander Ginzburg resumed his dissident activities on release from the camps, until expelled from the USSR in 1979.

Alexander Ginzburg 1980.jpg
Above: Alexander Ginzburg (1936 – 2002)

The writer Yuri Galanskov died in a camp in November 1972.)

Yury Galanskov, 1939-1972 (28.2) – A Chronicle of Current Events
Above: Yuri Galanskov (1939 – 1972)

The Times (London) published a translation of the open letter and in reply the English poet Stephen Spender composed a brief telegram:

We, a group of friends representing no organisation, support your statement, admire your courage, think of you and will help in any way possible.

The Times logo.svg

Among the other 15 British and US signatories were:

  • the poet W. H. Auden

WH Auden: the poet for our times | Saturday Review | The Times
Above: W.H. Auden

  • English philosopher A. J. Ayer

Alfred Jules Ayer.jpg
Above: Alfred Jules Ayer (1910 – 1989)

  • American-British musician Yehudi Menuhin

Above: Yehudi Menuhin (1916 – 1999)

  • English man of letters J. B. Priestley

J. B. Priestley at work in the study at his home in Highgate, London
Above: John Boynton Priestley (1894 – 1984)

  • English actor Paul Scofield

Paul Scofield Allan Warren.jpg
Above: Paul Scofield (1922 – 2008)

  • English sculptor Henry Moore

Henry Moore in workshop Allan Warren.jpg
Above: Henry Moore (1898 – 1986)

  • British philosopher Bertrand Russell

Bertrand Russell 1957.jpg
Above: Bertrand Russell (1872 – 1970)

  • American writer Mary McCarthy

The Formidable Friendship of Mary McCarthy and Hannah Arendt | The New  Yorker
Above: Mary McCarthy

  • Russian-French-American composer Igor Stravinsky

Above: Igor Stravinsky (1882 – 1971)

Later that year, on 25 August, Bogoraz, Litvinov and five others demonstrated on Red Square against the invasion of Czechoslovakia.

Above: “For your freedom and ours“, one of the banners of the Red Square demonstrators

Lobnoe place Moscow.jpg
Above: Lobnoye Mesto (Place of Proclamation), Red Square, Moscow, Russia

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Above: Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia, 20-21 August 1968

A few weeks before, Litvinov sent Spender a letter (translated and published several years later in the first May 1972 issue of Index).

He suggested that a regular publication might be set up in the West “to provide information to world public opinion about the real state of affairs in the USSR“.

Flag of the Soviet Union
Above: Flag of the Soviet Union (1922 – 1991)

Spender and his colleagues, Stuart Hampshire, David Astor, Edward Crankshaw and founding editor Michael Scammell decided, like Amnesty International, to cast their net wider.

They wished to document patterns of censorship in right-wing dictatorships — the military regimes of Latin America and the dictatorships in Greece, Spain and Portugal — as well as the Soviet Union and its satellites.

Latin America (orthographic projection).svg
Above: Latin America (in green)

Flag of Greece
Above: Flag of Greece

Flag of Portugal
Above: Flag of Portugal

Meanwhile, in 1971, Amnesty International began to publish English translations of each new issue of A Chronicle of Current Events, which documented human rights abuses in the USSR and included a regular “Samizdat Update“.

Amnesty International logo.svg

In a recent interview, Michael Scammell explains the informal division of labour between the two London-based organizations:

When we received human rights material we forwarded it to Amnesty and when Amnesty received a report of censorship they passed it on to us.”

View of Tower Bridge from Shad Thames
Above: Tower Bridge, London

Originally, as suggested by Scammell, the magazine was to be called Index, a reference to the lists or indices of banned works that are central to the history of censorship: the Roman Catholic Church’s Index Librorum Prohibitorum (Index of Forbidden Books), the Soviet Union’s Censor’s Index, and apartheid South Africa’s Jacobsens Index of Objectionable Literature.

Above: Title page of Index Librorum Prohibitorum (Venice 1564)

USSR: Censoring history, literature, science and religion - August 1980  Index on Censorship

Guide – The Literature Police

Scammell later admitted that the words “on censorship” were added as an afterthought when it was realised that the reference would not be clear to many readers.

Panicking, we hastily added the words ‘on Censorship’ as a subtitle“, wrote Scammell in the December 1981 issue of the magazine, “and this it has remained ever since, nagging me with its ungrammaticality (Index of Censorship, surely) and a standing apology for the opacity of its title.”

Describing the organization’s objectives at its inception, Stuart Hampshire said:

The tyrant’s concealments of oppression and of absolute cruelty should always be challenged.

There should be noise of publicity outside every detention centre and concentration camp and a published record of every tyrannical denial of free expression.”

Autumn magazine 2015: Spies, secrets and lies - Index on Censorship Index  on Censorship

Index on Censorship magazine was founded by Michael Scammell in 1972.

It supports free expression, publishing distinguished writers from around the world, exposing suppressed stories, initiating debate, and providing an international record of censorship.

The quarterly editions of the magazine usually focus on a country or region or a recurring theme in the global free expression debate. 

Index on Censorship also publishes short works of fiction and poetry by notable new writers. 

Challenging the censors - April 1987 Index on Censorship

Index Index, a round-up of abuses of freedom of expression worldwide, was published in the magazine until December 2008.

While the original inspiration to create Index came from Soviet dissidents, from its outset the magazine covered censorship in right-wing dictatorships then ruling Greece and Portugal, the military regimes of Latin America, and the Soviet Union and its satellites.

The magazine has covered other challenges facing free expression, including religious extremism, the rise of nationalism, and Internet censorship.

In the first issue of May 1972, Stephen Spender wrote:

Obviously there is the risk of a magazine of this kind becoming a bulletin of frustration.

However, the material by writers which is censored in Eastern Europe, Greece, South Africa and other countries is among the most exciting that is being written today.

Moreover, the question of censorship has become a matter of impassioned debate and it is one which does not only concern totalitarian societies.

Index on Censorship: Complicity: Why and when we choose to censor ourselves  and give away our privacy (Index on Censorship) by Rachael Jolley | WHSmith

Issues are usually organised by theme and contain a country-by-country list of recent cases involving censorship, restrictions on freedom of the press and other free speech violations.

Occasionally, Index on Censorship publishes short works of fiction and poetry by notable new writers as well as censored ones.

Over the half century it has been in existence, Index on Censorship has presented works by some of the world’s most distinguished writers and thinkers, including: 

  • Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 

Solzhenitsyn in February 1974
Above: Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1918 – 2008)

  • Milan Kundera

Milan Kundera in 1980
Above: Czech writer Milan Kundera

  • Václav Havel

Vaclav Havel.jpg
Above: Czech writer/President Vaclav Havel (1936 – 2011)

  • Nadine Gordimer

Gordimer at the Göteborg Book Fair, 2010
Above: South African writer/activist Nadine Gordimer (1923 – 2014)

  • Salman Rushdie

Rushdie at the 2016 Hay Festival
Above: Indian-British-American writer Salman Rushdie

  • Doris Lessing

Lessing at the Lit. Cologne literary festival in 2006
Above: British-Zimbabwean writer Doris Lessing (1919 – 2013)

  • Arthur Miller

Miller in 1997
Above: American playwright Arthur Miller (1915 – 2005)

  • Noam Chomsky

A photograph of Noam Chomsky
Above: American linguist/philosopher/activist Noam Chomsky

  • Umberto Eco

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Above: Italian writer Umberto Eco (1932 – 2016)

Issues under the editorship of Rachael Jolley have covered taboos, the legacy of the Magna Carta and William Shakespeare’s enduring legacy in protest.

Magna Carta (British Library Cotton MS Augustus II.106).jpg
Above: The Magna Carta (Great Charter) of 1215

Index on Censorship: Staging Shakespearian Dissent : Plays That Provoke,  Protest and Slip by the Censors (Paperback) - Walmart.com - Walmart.com

There have been special issues on China, reporting from the Middle East, and on Internet censorship.

China: Unofficial texts for the first time in English- September 1979 Index  on Censorship

Middle East: Algeria erupts, Taboo in Tunisia - January 1989 - Index on  Censorship

Global Freedom of Expression | Internet Censorship 2020: A Global Map of  Internet Restrictions - Global Freedom of Expression
Above: Global Freedom of Expression – Internet Censorship 2020: A Global Map of Internet Restrictions

The Russia issue (January 2008) won an Amnesty International Media Award 2008 for features by Russian journalists Fatima Tlisova and Sergei Bachinin, and veteran Russian free speech campaigner Alexei Simonov, founder of the Glasnost Defence Foundation.

List of issues Index on Censorship

Other landmark publications include Ken Saro-Wiwa’s writings from prison (Issue 3/1997) and a translation of the Czechoslovak Charter 77 manifesto drafted by Václav Havel and others in Issue 3/1977.

Ken Saro-Wiwa.jpg
Above: Nigerian writer/environmental activist Ken Saro-Wiwa (1941 – 1995)

Above: Charter 77 Memorial, Prague, Czech Republic

Index published the first English translation of Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s Nobel Prize acceptance speech. 

A golden medallion with an embossed image of Alfred Nobel facing left in profile. To the left of the man is the text "ALFR•" then "NOBEL", and on the right, the text (smaller) "NAT•" then "MDCCCXXXIII" above, followed by (smaller) "OB•" then "MDCCCXCVI" below.

Index on Censorship published the stories of the “disappeared” in Argentina and the work of banned poets in Cuba, the work of Chinese poets who escaped the massacres that ended the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. 

Nunca Mas: Argentina's 9,000 "disappeared" persons - March 1986 Index on  Censorship

Flag of Cuba
Above: Flag of Cuba

Tank Man (Tiananmen Square protester).jpg
Above: “Tank Man” blocks a column of Type 59 tanks heading east on Beijing’s Chang’an Boulevard (Avenue of Eternal Peace) near Tiananmen Square during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. This photo was taken from the 6th floor of the Beijing Hotel, about half a mile away, through a 800 mm lens at 1/30th of a second on 5 June 1989. The name and fate of the man is unknown.

(The Tiananmen Square protests were student-led demonstrations held in Tiananmen Square, Beijing during 1989.

In what is known as the Tiananmen Square Massacre, troops armed with assault rifles and accompanied by tanks fired at the demonstrators and those trying to block the military’s advance into Tiananmen Square.

The protests started on 15 April and were forcibly suppressed on 4 June when the government declared martial law and sent the People’s Liberation Army to occupy parts of central Beijing.

Estimates of the death toll vary from several hundred to several thousand, with thousands more wounded.

The popular national movement inspired by the Beijing protests is sometimes called the ’89 Democracy Movement or the Tiananmen Square Incident.

Tiananmen Square: What happened in the protests of 1989? - BBC News

The protests were precipitated by the death of pro-reform Chinese Communist Party (CCP) General Secretary Hu Yaobang in April 1989 amid the backdrop of rapid economic development and social change in post-Mao China, reflecting anxieties among the people and political elite about the country’s future.

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Above: Chinese reformer Hu Yaobang (1915 – 1989)

The reforms of the 1980s had led to a nascent market economy that benefited some people but seriously disadvantaged others.

The one-party political system also faced a challenge to its legitimacy.

Common grievances at the time included inflation, corruption, limited preparedness of graduates for the new economy, and restrictions on political participation.

Although they were highly disorganized and their goals varied, the students called for greater accountability, constitutional due process, democracy, freedom of the press, and freedom of speech.

At the height of the protests, about one million people assembled in the Square.

Rare Photos Of China's 1989 Tiananmen Square Protests : The Picture Show :  NPR

As the protests developed, the authorities responded with both conciliatory and hardline tactics, exposing deep divisions within the party leadership.

By May, a student-led hunger strike galvanized support around the country for the demonstrators.

The protests spread to some 400 cities.

Among the CCP top leadership, Premier Li Peng and Party Elders Li Xiannian and Wang Zhen called for decisive action through violent suppression of the protesters, and ultimately managed to win over Paramount Leader Deng Xiaoping and President Yang Shangkun to their side.

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Above: Li Peng (1928 – 2019)

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Above: Li Xiannian (1909 – 1992)

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Above: Wang Zhen (1908 – 1993)

Deng Xiaoping and Jimmy Carter at the arrival ceremony for the Vice Premier of China. - NARA - 183157-restored(cropped).jpg
Above: Deng Xiaoping (1904 – 1997)

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Above: Yang Shangkun

On 20 May, the State Council declared martial law.

They mobilized as many as 300,000 troops to Beijing.

The troops advanced into central parts of Beijing on the city’s major thoroughfares in the early morning hours of 4 June, killing both demonstrators and bystanders in the process.

The military operations were under the overall command of General Baibing, half-brother of President Yang Shangkun.

Yang Baibing.jpg
Above: Yang Baibing

As it happened June 4-5, 1989: Tanks rumble out of Tiananmen Square | The  Times of Israel

The international community, human rights organizations, and political analysts condemned the Chinese government for the massacre.

Western countries imposed arms embargoes on China.

The Chinese government made widespread arrests of protesters and their supporters, suppressed other protests around China, expelled foreign journalists, strictly controlled coverage of the events in the domestic press, strengthened the police and internal security forces, and demoted or purged officials it deemed sympathetic to the protests.

More broadly, the suppression ended the political reforms begun in 1986 and halted the policies of liberalization of the 1980s, which were only partly resumed after Deng Xiaoping’s Southern Tour in 1992.

Considered a watershed event, reaction to the protests set limits on political expression in China, limits that have lasted up to the present day.

Remembering the protests is widely associated with questioning the legitimacy of CCP rule and remains one of the most sensitive and most widely censored topics in China.)

No, 10,000 were not killed in China's 1989 Tiananmen crackdown – SupChina

Index on Censorship has a long history of publishing writers in translation, including Bernard Henri Lévy, Ivan Klima, Ma Jian and Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi, and news reports including Anna Politkovskaia’s coverage of the war in Chechnya (Issue 2/2002).

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Above: French philosopher Bernard Henri Lévy

Ivan Klíma (May 2009)
Above: Czech writer Ivan Klima

Ma Jian in November 2018
Above: Chinese-British writer Ma Jian

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Above: Iranian political activist Shirin Ebadi

Politkovskaya during a March 2005 interview in Leipzig, Germany
Above: Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya (1958 – 2006)

Tom Stoppard’s play Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (1977) is set in a Soviet mental institution and was inspired by the personal account of former detainee Victor Fainberg and Clayton Yeo’s expose of the use of psychiatric abuse in the USSR, were published in Index on Censorship (Issue 2, 1975).

The play was first performed with the London Symphony Orchestra.

Stoppard became a member of the advisory board of Index on Censorship in 1978 and remains connected to the publication as a patron of Index.

Man smiling wearing open necked shirt indoors
Above: Czech-British playwright Tom Stoppard

Index on Censorship published the World Statement by the International Committee for the Defence of Salman Rushdie in support of “the right of all people to express their ideas and beliefs and to discuss them with their critics on the basis of mutual tolerance, free from censorship, intimidation and violence“.

The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie 1st/1st Viking 1988: Amazon.co.uk: Salman  Rushdie: Books

(The Satanic Verses is British writer Salman Rushdie’s 4th novel, first published 26 September 1988 and inspired in part by the life of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.

As with his previous books, Rushdie used magical realism and relied on contemporary events and people to create his characters.
The title refers to the Satanic Verses, a group of Quranic verses that refer to three pagan Meccan goddesses: Allat, Uzza, and Manat.

The part of the story that deals with the “satanic verses” was based on accounts from the historians al-Waqidi and al-Tabari.

In the United Kingdom, The Satanic Verses received positive reviews, was a 1988 Booker Prize finalist, and won the 1988 Whitbread Award for novel of the year.

However, major controversy ensued as Muslims accused it of blasphemy and mocking their faith.

The outrage among Muslims resulted in Supreme Leader of Iran Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, calling for Rushdie’s death on 14 February 1989.




Ruhollah Khomeini portrait 1.jpg

Above: Ayatollah Khomeini (1900 – 1989)




The result was several failed assassination attempts on Rushdie, who was placed under police protection by the UK government, and attacks on several connected individuals, including the murder of translator Hitoshi Igarashi.




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Above: Hitoshi Igarashi (1947 – 1991)




The book was banned in India as hate speech directed toward Muslims.)

Horizontal tricolour flag bearing, from top to bottom, deep saffron, white, and green horizontal bands. In the centre of the white band is a navy-blue wheel with 24 spokes.
Above: Flag of India

(As much as I advocate freedom of expression, I feel that this power to express one’s opinions needs to be balanced by a sense of responsibility.

Those who were surprised by the trouble caused by Rushdie’s book failed to understand that in questioning the singularity of God the Satanic Verses ignored or subverted the supreme importance that all Muslims bestow on God’s unity – in addition to being disrespectful to the Prophet.

Rushdie’s sin was to give credence to a pre-Islamic belief that Allah had three daughters, each of whom held divine power.

The Prophet Muhammad’s teaching holds that God had neither wife nor children, and this would have been incompatible with His role as the Creator and the Almighty.

To believe that God is not omnipotent (all and solely powerful) is to commit shirk.

In strict Muslim societies, shirk is so serious that the only appropriate punishment is death.

The West regarded the outcry over the Verses as an affront to freedom of speech.

However, the important lesson to be learned from the Rushdie incident is that, to strict Muslims, the central tenets of Islam are so powerful that they can transcend all other considerations.

Personally, I think that God, should He exist, can defend Himself and does not need Man to defend His honour for Him.

That being said, Rushdie is a fool who should have known better, considering he came from an Islamist background and is a highly-educated man.)

Above: Salman Rushdie

Six months later, Index published the Hunger Strike Declaration from four student leaders of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, Liu Xiaobo, Zhou Duo, Hou Dejian and Gao Xin.

Liu Xiaobo.jpg
Above: Liu Xiaobo (1955 – 2017)

He Stayed at Tiananmen to the End. Now He Wonders What It Meant. - The New  York Times
Above: Zhou Duo

Hou Dejian ((Chinese: 侯德健; pinyin: Hóu Déjiàn; Wade–Giles: Hou Te-Chien,  Cantonese: Hau Dak-gin) şarkı sözleri - TR

324 Gao Xin Photos and Premium High Res Pictures - Getty Images
Above: Gao Xin

Index Index, a round-up of abuses of freedom of expression worldwide, continued to be published in each edition of the magazine until December 2008, when this function was transferred to the website.

The offences against free expression documented in that first issue’s Index Index listing included censorship in Greece and Spain, then dictatorships, and Brazil, which had just banned the film Zabriskie Point on the grounds that it “insulted a friendly power” – the United States, where it had been made and freely shown.

1ZabriskiePoint.jpg

(Zabriskie Point is a 1970 American drama film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni (1912 – 2007) and starring Mark Frechette (1947 – 1975), Daria Halprin and Rod Taylor (1930 – 2015).

It was widely noted at the time for its setting in the counterculture of the United States.

Some of the film’s scenes were shot on location at Zabriskie Point in Death Valley.

The film was an overwhelming commercial failure and was panned by most critics upon release. 

Its critical standing has increased, however, in the decades since. 

It has to some extent achieved cult status and is noted for its cinematography, use of music, and direction.)

Index on Censorship paid special attention to the situation in then Czechoslovakia between the Soviet invasion of 1968 and the Velvet Revolution of 1989, devoting an entire issue to the country eight years after the Prague Spring (Issue 3/1976).

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Above: Prague during the Velvet Revolution, 25 November 1989

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Above: During the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, Czechoslovaks carry their national flag past a burning tank in Prague, 1 January 1968.

It included several pieces by Václav Havel, including a first translation of his one act play Conversation, and a letter to Czech officials on police censorship of his December 1975 production of The Beggar’s Opera by John Gay.

Czechoslovakia eight years after: 4 cases - Autumn 1976 Index on Censorship

The magazine also carried articles on the state of the Czech theatre and a list of the so-called Padlock Publications, 50 banned books that circulated only in typescript.

Cuba today:identity, soul, Fidel, and worldview - March 1989 - Index on  Censorship

Index also published an English version of Havel’s play Mistake, dedicated to Samuel Beckett in gratitude for Beckett’s own dedication of his play Catastrophe to Havel.

Both short plays were performed at the Free Word Centre to mark the launch of Index‘s special issue looking back at the changes of 1989 (Issue 4, 2009).

Beckett in 1977
Above: Irish playwright Samuel Beckett (1906 – 1989)

Free Speech is not For Sale, a joint campaign report by Index on Censorship and English PEN highlighted the problem of so-called libel tourism (actively searching for reasons to sue) and the English law of defamation’s chilling effect on free speech.

Free Speech Is Not For Sale | PDF | Defamation | Freedom Of Speech

After much debate surrounding the report’s ten key recommendations, the UK Justice Secretary Jack Straw pledged to make English defamation laws fairer.

A free press can’t operate or be effective unless it can offer readers comment as well as news.

What concerns me is that the current arrangements are being used by big corporations to restrict fair comment, not always by journalists but also by academics.

He added:

The very high levels of remuneration for defamation lawyers in Britain seem to be incentivising libel tourism.”

Jack Straw 2.jpg
Above: MP Jack Straw

These campaigns and others were illustrative of then CEO John Kampfner’s strategy, supported by then chair Jonathan Dimbleby, to boost Index‘s public advocacy profile in the UK and abroad beginning in 2008.

John Kampfner, Creative Industries Federation in London.jpg
Above: Singaporean-British writer John Kampfner

Until then the organization did not regard itself as “a campaigning organisation in the mould of Article 19 or Amnesty International“, as former news editor Sarah Smith noted in 2001, preferring to use its “understanding of what is newsworthy and politically significant” to maintain pressure on oppressive regimes (such as China, from 1989) through extensive coverage.

LOGO ARTICLE 19.jpg

Index on Censorship also runs a programme of UK based and international projects that put the organization’s philosophy into practice.

In 2009 and 2010, Index on Censorship worked in Afghanistan, Burma, Iraq, Tunisia and many other countries, in support of journalists, broadcasters, artists and writers who work against a backdrop of intimidation, repression, and censorship.

The organization’s arts programmes investigate the impact of current and recent social and political change on arts practitioners, assessing the degree and depth of self-censorship.

It uses the arts to engage young people directly into the freedom of expression debate.

It works with marginalised communities in UK, creating new platforms, on line and actual for creative expression.

Editor's letter: All hail those who speak out - Index on Censorship Index  on Censorship

Index on Censorship works internationally to commission new work, not only articles for print and online, but also new photography, film & video, visual arts and performance.

Examples have included an exhibition of photo stories produced by women in Iraq, Open Shutters, and programme involving artists from refugee and migrant communities in UK, linking with artists from their country of origin, imagine art after, exhibited at Tate Britain in 2007.

Standard8 | Open Shutters Iraq
Above: Open Shutters Iraq exhibition, Tate Gallery, London

Index has also worked with Burmese exiled artists and publishers on creating a programme in support of the collective efforts of Myanmar’s creative community.

Index also commissioned a new play by Actors for Human Rights, Seven Years With Hard Labour, weaving together four accounts from former Burmese political prisoners now living in the UK. 

Flag of Myanmar
Above: Flag of Myanmar

Index also co-published a book of poetry by homeless people in London and St. Petersburg.

Index on Censorship: The Global Magazine for Free Expression Index on  Censorship

In December 2002, Index on Censorship faced calls to cancel a charity performance of the John Malkovich film The Dancer Upstairs at London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA).

The Dancer Upstairs Poster.jpg

Speaking to students the previous May, Malkovich had been asked whom – as the star of Dangerous Liaisons – he would like to fight a duel with.

John Malkovich at a screening of "Casanova Variations" in January 2015.jpg
Above: John Malkovich

He picked Robert Fisk, The Independent newspaper’s Middle East correspondent, and George Galloway, at the time a Glasgow Labour MP, adding that rather than duel them, he would “rather just shoot them“.

George Galloway 2007-02-24, 02.jpg
Above: George Galloway

Fisk wrote an article saying that Malkovich’s comment was one of many threats he now received and that “almost anyone who criticizes US or Israeli policy in the Middle East is now in this free-fire zone“.

Robert Fisk at Al Jazeera Forum 2010 (cropped).jpg
Above: Robert Fisk (1946 – 2020)

The media rights group Reporters sans Frontieres (RSF) (Reporters without Borders) condemned Malkovich, but in an online article Index‘s then Associate Editor (now deputy CEO) Rohan Jayasekera, dismissed the actor’s comments as “flippant” in an article on the organization’s site.

File:RSF 2020 logo min.svg

In November 2004, Index on Censorship attracted further controversy over another indexonline.org blog post by Jayasekera that, to many readers, seemed to condone or justify the murder of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh.

The blog described Van Gogh was a “free speech fundamentalist” on a “martyrdom operation, roaring his Muslim critics into silence with obscenities” in an “abuse of his right to free speech“.

Theo van Gogh
Above: Theo van Gogh (1957 – 2004)

Describing Van Gogh’s film Submission as “furiously provocative“, Jayasekera concluded by describing his death as:

A sensational climax to a lifetime’s public performance, stabbed and shot by a bearded fundamentalist, a message from the killer pinned by a dagger to his chest, Theo Van Gogh became a martyr to free expression.

His passing was marked by a magnificent barrage of noise as Amsterdam hit the streets to celebrate him in the way the man himself would have truly appreciated.

And what timing!

Just as his long-awaited biographical film of Pim Fortuyn’s life is ready to screen.

Bravo, Theo!

Bravo!”

Submission Part I.png

Submission is a 2004 English-language Dutch short drama film produced and directed by Theo van Gogh, and written by Ayaan Hirsi Ali (a former member of the Dutch House of Representatives for the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy).

It was shown on the Dutch public broadcasting network (VPRO) on 29 August 2004.

The film’s title is one of the possible translations of the Arabic word “Islam“.

The film tells the story of four fictional characters played by a single actress wearing a veil, but clad in a see-through Hijab, her naked body painted with verses from the Quran.

The characters are Muslim women who have been abused in various ways.

The film contains monologues of these women and dramatically highlights three verses of the Koran, by showing them painted on women’s bodies.

Writer Hirsi Ali has said:

It is written in the Koran a woman may be slapped if she is disobedient.

This is one of the evils I wish to point out in the film“. 

In an answer to a question about whether the film would offend Muslims, Hirsi Ali said that:

If you’re a Muslim woman and you read the Koran, and you read in there that you should be raped if you say ‘no’ to your husband, that is offensive.

And that is insulting.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali by Gage Skidmore.jpg
Above: Somali-Dutch-American social activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Director of the film, Theo Van Gogh, who was known as a controversial and provocative personality, called the film a “political pamphlet“.

Van Gogh'un Kardeşinin, Hollanda'nın Ortasında Öldürülen Torunu: Theo Van  Gogh - Ekşi Şeyler
Above: Theo van Gogh

The film drew praise for portraying the ways in which women are abused in accordance with fundamentalist Islamic law, as well as anger for criticizing Islamic canon itself. 

It drew the following comment from movie critic Phil Hall:

Submission was bold in openly questioning misogyny and a culture of violence against women because of Koranic interpretations.

The questions raised in the film deserve to be asked:

Is it divine will to assault or kill women?

Is there holiness in holding women at substandard levels, denying them the right to free will and independent thought?

And ultimately, how can such a mind frame exist in the 21st century?

From defending Fred Goodwin to Qatar: Former News of the World editor Phil  Hall on ten years in PR - Press Gazette
Above: Phil Hall

 

Film critic Dennis Lim, on the other hand, stated that:

It’s depressing to think that this morsel of glib effrontery could pass as a serious critique of conservative Islam.

Another critic referred to the stories told in the film as “simplistic, even caricatures“.

Dennis Lim, director of programming at the Film Society of Lincoln Center -  UniFrance
Above: Dennis Lim

After the film’s broadcast on Dutch television, newspaper De Volkskrant reported claims of plagiarism against Hirsi Ali and Van Gogh, made by Internet journalist Francisco van Jole.

File:Volkskrant.svg - Wikimedia Commons

Van Jole said the duo had “aped” the ideas of Iranian American video artist Shirin Neshat.

Francisco van Jole - The Next Speaker
Above: Francisco van Jole

Neshat’s work, which made abundant use of Persian calligraphy projected onto bodies, had been shown in the Netherlands in 1997 and 2000.

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Above: Shirin Neshat

On 2 November 2004, Van Gogh was assassinated in public by Mohammed Bouyeri, a Dutch-Moroccan Muslim with a Dutch passport.

A letter, stabbed through and affixed to the body by a dagger, linked the murder to Van Gogh’s film and his views regarding Islam.

It was addressed to Ayaan Hirsi Ali and called for a jihad (holy war) against kafir (unbelievers or infidels), against America, Europe, the Netherlands, and Hirsi Ali herself.

Bouyeri was jailed for life, for which in the Netherlands there is no possibility of parole, and pardons are rarely granted.

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Above: Mohammed Bouyeri

Following the murder of Van Gogh, tens of thousands gathered in the center of Amsterdam to mourn Van Gogh’s death.

The murder widened and polarized the debate in the Netherlands about the social position of its more than one million Muslim residents.

Flag of Netherlands
Above: Flag of the Netherlands

It also put the country’s liberal tradition further into question, coming only two years after Pim Fortuyn’s murder. 

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Above: Pim Fortuyn (1948 – 2002)

(Pim Fortuyn was a Dutch politician, author, civil servant, businessman, sociologist and academic who founded the party Pim Fortuyn List (Lijst Pim Fortuyn or LPF) in 2002.

Fortuyn criticized multiculturism, immigration and Islam in the Netherlands.

He called Islam “a backward culture“, and was quoted as saying that if it were legally possible, he would close the borders for Muslim immigrants.

Fortuyn was assassinated during the 2002 Dutch national election campaign by Volkert van der Graaf, a left-wing environmentalist and animal rights activist. 

In court at his trial, van der Graaf said he murdered Fortuyn to stop him from exploiting Muslims as “scapegoats” and targeting “the weak members of society” in seeking political power.

The assassination shocked many residents of the Netherlands and highlighted the cultural clashes within the country. )

Familie Pim Fortuyn woedend: niets wijst op emigratie moordenaar Volkert  van der Graaf | Politiek | AD.nl
Above: Volkert van der Graaf

In an apparent reaction against controversial statements about the Islamic, Christian and Jewish religions— such as those Van Gogh had made — the Dutch Minister of Justice, Christian Democrat Piet Hein Donner, suggested Dutch blasphemy laws should either be applied more stringently or made more strict.

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Above: Piet Hein Donner

The liberal D66 party suggested scrapping the blasphemy laws altogether.)

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There were many protests from both left- and right-wing commentators regarding Rohan Jayasekera’s comments.

Rohan Jayasekera of Index on Censorship, for IREX Iraqi eMedia - YouTube
Above: Rohan Jayasekera

Nick Cohen of The Observer newspaper wrote in December 2004, that:

When I asked Jayasekera if he had any regrets, he said he had none.

He told me that, like many other readers, I shouldn’t have made the mistake of believing that Index on Censorship was against censorship, even murderous censorship, on principle – in the same way as Amnesty International is opposed to torture, including murderous torture, on principle.

It may have been so its radical youth, but was now as concerned with fighting ‘hate speech’ as protecting free speech.

Nick Cohen
Above: Nick Cohen

Ursula Owen, the chief executive of Index on Censorship, while agreeing that the blog post’s “tone was not right” contradicted Cohen’s account of his conversation with Jayasekera in a letter to The Observer.

NPG x31000; Ursula Margaret Owen - Portrait - National Portrait Gallery
Above: Ursula Owen

In December 2009, the magazine published an interview with Jytte Klausen about a refusal of Yale University Press to include the Mohammed cartoons in Klausen’s book The Cartoons that Shook the World.

The magazine declined to include the cartoons alongside the interview.)

The Cartoons that Shook the World cover.jpg

Across this dazzling
Mediterranean
August morning
The dolphins write such
Ideograms:
With power to wake
Me prisoned in
My human speech
They sign: ‘I AM!’

Dolphins“, Stephen Spender

Bottlenose dolphin

Spender was appointed the 17th Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress in 1965.

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During the late 1960s, Spender frequently visited the University of Connecticut, which he declared had the “most congenial teaching faculty” he had encountered in the United States.

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Great poetry is always written by somebody straining to go beyond what he can do.

As quoted in The New York Times (26 March 1961)

Stephen Spender : The Authorized Biography: Sutherland, John:  9780670883035: Amazon.com: Books

Spender was Professor of English at University College London (UCL) from 1970 to 1977 and then became Professor Emeritus.

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He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) at the 1962 Queen’s Birthday Honours, and knighted in the 1983 Queen’s Birthday Honours.

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At a ceremony commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Normandy Invasion on 6 June 1984, US President Ronald Reagan (1911 – 2004) quoted from Spender’s poem “The Truly Great” in his remarks:

Gentlemen, I look at you and I think of the words of Stephen Spender’s poem.

You are men who in your “lives fought for life and left the vivid air signed with your honour”.

File:President Ronald Reagan giving speech on the 40th Anniversary of D-Day  (cropped).jpg - Wikimedia Commons

The Truly Great

I think continually of those who were truly great.
Who, from the womb, remembered the soul’s history
Through corridors of light, where the hours are suns,
Endless and singing. Whose lovely ambition
Was that their lips, still touched with fire,
Should tell of the Spirit, clothed from head to foot in song.
And who hoarded from the Spring branches
The desires falling across their bodies like blossoms.


What is precious, is never to forget
The essential delight of the blood drawn from ageless springs
Breaking through rocks in worlds before our earth.
Never to deny its pleasure in the morning simple light
Nor its grave evening demand for love.
Never to allow gradually the traffic to smother
With noise and fog, the flowering of the spirit.


Near the snow, near the sun, in the highest fields,
See how these names are fêted by the waving grass
And by the streamers of white cloud
And whispers of wind in the listening sky.
The names of those who in their lives fought for life,
Who wore at their hearts the fire’s centre.
Born of the sun, they travelled a short while toward the sun
And left the vivid air signed with their honour.

Stephen Spender – The Truly Great | Genius

Spender also had profound intellectual workings with the world of art, including Pablo Picasso.

The Worlds of Stephen Spender – Hauser & Wirth

The artist Henry Moore did etchings and lithographs conceived to accompany the work of writers, including Charles Baudelaire and Spender.

Moore’s work in that regard also included illustrations of the literature of Dante Alighieri, André Gide and William Shakespeare.

The exhibition was held at The Henry Moore Foundation.

Portrait of Stephen Spender – Works – Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue

Spender collected and befriended artists such as: 

  • Jean Arp

Hans Arp.JPG
Above: French artist (1886 – 1966)

  • Frank Auerbach

Above: German-British artist Frank Auerbach

  • Francis Bacon

Above: Irish-British artist Francis Bacon (1909 – 1992)

  • Lucian Freud

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Above: British artist Lucian Freud (1922 – 2011)

  • Alberto Giacometti

Above: Swiss artist Alberto Giacometti

  • Arshile Gorky

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Above: Armenian-American Arshile Gorky (1904 – 1948)

  • Philip Guston

Profile of the artist
Above: Canadian-American artist Philip Guston (né Goldstein) (1913 – 1980)

  • David Hockney

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Above: English artist David Hockney

  • Giorgio Morandi

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Above: Italian artist Giorgio Morandi (1890 – 1964)

  • and others.

In The Worlds of Stephen Spender, the artist Frank Auerbach selected art work by those masters to accompany Spender’s poems.

The Worlds of Stephen Spender ARTBOOK | D.A.P. 2018 Catalog Books  Exhibition Catalogues 9783906915197

Spender wrote China Diary with David Hockney in 1982, published by Thames and Hudson art publishers in London.

China Diary. DAVID HOCKNEY | Stephen Spender

The Soviet artist Wassily Kandinsky created an etching for Spender, Fraternity, in 1939.

Wassily Kandinsky | Radierung für Stephen Spender, from Fraternity (1939) |  Artsy
Above: Fraternity – Etching for Stephen Spender, Wassily Kandinsky

Personal Life

In 1933, Spender fell in love with Tony Hyndman, and they lived together from 1935 to 1936.

In 1934, Spender had an affair with Muriel Gardiner.

In December 1936, shortly after the end of his relationship with Hyndman, Spender fell in love with and married Inez Pearn after an engagement of only three weeks.

The marriage broke down in 1939.

In 1941, Spender married Natasha Litvin, a concert pianist.

The marriage lasted until his death.

Stephen Spender - Index on Censorship Index on Censorship
Above: Stephen Spender

Spender’s sexuality has been the subject of debate.

Spender’s seemingly changing attitudes have caused him to be labelled bisexual, repressed, latently homophobic or simply something complex that resists easy labelling. 

Many of his friends in his earlier years were gay.

NPG x2952; W.H. Auden; Christopher Isherwood; Stephen Spender - Portrait -  National Portrait Gallery
Above: W.H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood and Stephen Spender

Spender had many affairs with men in his earlier years, most notably with Hyndman, who was called “Jimmy Younger” in his memoir World Within World.

WORLD WITHIN WORLD. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF STEPHEN SPENDER by Stephen SPENDER  - First Edition - (1951) - from Charles Agvent (SKU: 015132)

After his affair with Muriel Gardiner, he shifted his focus to heterosexuality, but his relationship with Hyndman complicated both that relationship and his short-lived marriage to Inez Pearn.

His marriage to Natasha Litvin in 1941 seemed to have marked the end of his romantic relationships with men but not the end of all homosexual activity, as his unexpurgated diaries have revealed.

Subsequently, he toned down homosexual allusions in later editions of his poetry.

Nevertheless, he was a founding member of the Homosexual Law Reform Society, which lobbied for the repeal of British sodomy laws.

Sir Stephen Spender : London Remembers, Aiming to capture all memorials in  London
Above: Stephen Spender

Spender sued author David Leavitt for allegedly using his relationship with “Jimmy Younger” in Leavitt’s While England Sleeps in 1994.

The case was settled out of court with Leavitt removing certain portions from his text.

While England Sleeps: A Novel: Leavitt, David: 9781620407080: Amazon.com:  Books

I am not really sure what I should say in regards to Spender’s proclivities.

Frankly, what happens in the bedroom in my opinion should remain in the bedroom.

Do I really need to know about Spender’s extracurricular affairs to enjoy (or not) his poetry?

Cover of the Behind Closed Doors album with the singer Charlie Rich in a cowboy hat.

In the 1980s, Spender’s writing — The Journals of Stephen Spender, 1939-1983, Collected Poems, 1928-1985, and Letters to Christopher: Stephen Spender’s Letters to Christopher Isherwood, 1929-1939, in particular—placed a special emphasis on autobiographical material.

Stephen Spender_ Journals 1939-1983 | Stephen Spender, John Goldsmith |  Cloth/dust jacket Octavo

Letters to Christopher: Stephen Spender's Letters to Christopher Isherwood,  1929-1939: With "The Line of the Branch"--Two Thirties Journals by Stephen  Spender

I’m struggling at the end to get out of the valley of hectoring youth, journalistic middle age, imposture, moneymaking, public relations, bad writing, mental confusion.

On turning 70 in Journals 1939 – 1983 (1986), as quoted in Time magazine (20 January 1986)

Time Magazine logo.svg

What I had not foreseen
Was the gradual day
Weakening the will

Leaking the brightness away

For I had expected always
Some brightness to hold in trust,
Some final innocence

To save from dust

What I Expected Was“, Stephen Spender

Journals, 1939-1983: Spender, Stephen: 9780571139224: Amazon.com: Books

One, a poet, went babbling like a fountain
Through parks. All were jokes to children.
All had the pale unshaven stare of shuttered plants
Exposed to a too violent sun.

Exiles From Their Land, History Their Domicile“, The Still Centre, 1939

The Still Centre (Audio, Faber): Spender, Stephen, Spender, Stephen:  9780140863963: Amazon.com: Books

In the New York Times Book Review, critic Samuel Hynes commented that:

The person who emerges from Spender’s letters is neither a madman nor a fool, but an honest, intelligent, troubled young man, groping toward maturity in a troubled time.

And the author of the journals is something more.

He is a writer of sensitivity and power.

Samuel Hynes, 'highly respected scholar-critic' of British literature and  World War II veteran, dies at 95
Above: Samuel Hynes (1924 – 2019)

On 16 July 1995, Spender died of a heart attack in Westminster, London, aged 86.

He was buried in the graveyard of St Mary on Paddington Green Church in London.

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Above: St Mary on Paddington Green Church, Paddington Green, London

Death is another milestone on their way.
With laughter on their lips and with winds blowing round them
They record simply
How this one excelled all others in making driving belts.

The Funeral

Spender’s name was most frequently associated with that of W.H. Auden, perhaps the most famous poet of the 1930s.

However, some critics found the two poets dissimilar in many ways.

57 Stephen Spender Photos and Premium High Res Pictures - Getty Images

In the New Yorker, for example, Vendler observed that:

At first Spender imitated Auden’s self-possessed ironies, his determined use of technological objects. … But no two poets can have been more different.

Auden’s rigid, brilliant, peremptory, categorizing, allegorical mind demanded forms altogether different from Spender’s dreamy, liquid, guilty, hovering sensibility.

Auden is a poet of firmly historical time, Spender of timeless nostalgic space.

The New Yorker Logo.svg

In the New York Times Book Review, Kazin similarly concluded that Spender “was mistakenly identified with Auden.

Although they were virtual opposites in personality and in the direction of their talents, they became famous at the same time as ‘pylon poets’— among the first to put England’s gritty industrial landscape of the 1930s into poetry.

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The term “pylon poets” refers to “The Pylons” a poem by Spender that many critics described as typical of the Auden generation.

A Short Analysis of Stephen Spender's 'The Pylons' – Interesting Literature

The much-anthologized work, included in one of Spender’s earliest collections, Poems (1933), as well as in his Collected Poems, 1928 – 1985, includes imagery characteristic of the group’s style and reflects the political and social concerns of its members.

A Literary Blog of Twentieth-Century and Beyond Poetry in English
Above: The Auden group of poets: W.H. Auden, Louis MacNiece, Cecil Day-Lewis, Stephen Spender and Christopher Isherwood

In The Angry Young Men of the Thirties (1976), Elton Edward Smith recognized that in such a poem:

The poet, instead of closing his eyes to the hideous steel towers of a rural electrification system and concentrating on the soft green fields, glorifies the pylons and grants to them the future.

And the nonhuman structure proves to be of the very highest social value, for rural electrification programs help create a new world of human equality.”

The Angry Young Men of the Thirties. by Elton Edward Smith - 1 - from  ATGBooks (SKU: 38505)

The Pylons

The secret of these hills was stone, and cottages
Of that stone made,
And crumbling roads
That turned on sudden hidden villages

Now over these small hills, they have built the concrete
That trails black wire
Pylons, those pillars
Bare like nude giant girls that have no secret.

The valley with its gilt and evening look
And the green chestnut
Of customary root,
Are mocked dry like the parched bed of a brook.

But far above and far as sight endures
Like whips of anger
With lightning’s danger
There runs the quick perspective of the future.

This dwarfs our emerald country by its trek
So tall with prophecy
Dreaming of cities
Where often clouds shall lean their swan-white neck.

Anchor tower of overhead power line.jpg

Over a 65-year career, Stephen Spender wrote scores of poems, hundreds of reviews and essays, and arguably one of the finer memoirs of the 20th century.

And yet he may end up better remembered for a cab ride.

In 1980, Spender battled a lost wallet, an octogenarian driver, and 287 miles of dismal weather to taxi from a lecture in Oneonta, NY, to a dinner date with Jacqueline Onassis in Manhattan.

(“I simply had to get there” is the breathless quote detractors are happy to supply.)

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Above: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis (née Bouvier) (1929 – 1994)

Fairly or unfairly, Spender’s reputation as a toady has steadily consolidated, while his reputation as a poet has steadily declined.

His most recent defender, John Sutherland, over 600 pages of an otherwise reverent biography, makes only the meekest case for Spender the literary artist.

They never stopped trying”, Sutherland writes on Page 1 of Stephen Spender: A Literary Life, alluding cryptically to unidentified enemies.

But somehow his quality (and I would argue, his literary greatness) weathered the assault.”

It’s nice to know Sutherland would argue it.

Maybe one day he will.

In his current book, though, the case for Spender’s greatness stays parenthetical, optative, and firmly stuck on Page 1.

John Sutherland (author) - Alchetron, the free social encyclopedia
Above: John Sutherland

So we’re faced with an interesting question.

Why has every decade since the ‘30s bothered to rough up an “indifferent poet”, as Spender’s good friend Cyril Connolly once described him?

Why has posterity consigned Stephen Spender to oblivion?

NPG P536; Stephen Spender - Portrait - National Portrait Gallery
Above: Stephen Spender

As aforementioned, Spender first emerged in the 30s as part of a coterie of Oxford prodigies that included Louis MacNeice, W.H. Auden, Cecil Day-Lewis, and Christopher Isherwood.

In a round robin of mutual admiration, the poets dedicated their early books to one another and soon came to be known, somewhat derisively, as “Macspaunday”.

If a coterie is incidental to a genius, as it certainly became to Auden, it can get rung around the neck of a lesser talent.

And Spender has never quite lived down the suspicion that he was little more than a well-placed satellite.

Above: Sputnik I, the first artificial satellite in space

He produced indifferent poems —

Hope and despair and the vivid small longings/ Like minnows gnaw the body” is a fair sampling —

But he was deft at courting the great, to whom he appeared pleasantly unchallenging.

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A loose jointed mind,” Virginia Woolf wrote in her diary after one encounter, “misty, clouded, suffusive.

Nothing has outline.

We plunged and skipped and hopped — from sodomy and women and writing and anonymity and — I forget.”

A Writer's Diary by Virginia Woolf: Very Good Hardcover (1954) 1st American  Edition | onourshelves

Not surprisingly, this was not a personality that organized itself around abiding convictions.

To piece together his literary life, Spender went high and went low.

He spent weekends with the Rothschilds at Mouton, and he trundled as a stipendiary from American college to American college.

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Above: Rothschild family coat of arms

When Auden told him to stick to poetry, he dutifully complied, just as he complied when Auden later told him to write nothing but autobiographical prose.

Wyndham Lewis – Stephen Spender, 1939
Above: Stephen Spender, Wyndham Lewis

He fell into the reigning Oxford cult of homosexuality, and just as easily fell out of it.

Above: Aerial view of Oxford

Communism was a brief, intense fascination — he even announced his party membership in the Daily Worker — but the depth of the Party’s hatred of the bourgeoisie finally only baffled him.

The Daily Worker

Before the war, Spender was gay, Communist, and a poet of reportedly blazing promise.

Soon after the war, Spender was a husband, a liberal demi-Cold Warrior, and a thoroughly bland cultural statesman.

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Both he and Auden posed an answer to a question that has, always and everywhere, overwhelmed poets, but had lately taken on new powers of vexation.

That question was:

What does a poet still have to offer a modern world?

Question mark and man concept illustration Stock Photo by ©mstanley  122688212

Auden answered it with great, painstaking care, and correctly, or at least importantly.

Spender answered it facilely, and incorrectly, or unimportantly.

To understand their answers, one has to have some appreciation of the atmosphere of the 1930s.

Above: Dust storm, Texas, 1935

As self-pleased as Auden and his circle were, they were also deeply serious poets-in-the-making, who to a man wanted to address themselves to — and change — the world.

Change the World Primary Cover.jpg

The modern poet is “acutely conscious of the present isolation of the individual and the necessity for a social organism which may restore communion,” wrote Cecil Day-Lewis in 1933.

Why my father Cecil Day-Lewis's poem Walking Away stands the test of time |  Poetry | The Guardian
Above: Cecil Day-Lewis

The majority of artists today are forced to remain individualists in the sense of the individualist who expresses nothing except his feeling for his own individuality, his isolation,” Spender wrote in the same year.

Stephen Spender (Print #620735). Photographic Prints, Framed Photos
Above: Stephen Spender

How to restore public communion, when public speech is increasingly being given over to sloganeering — or, worse, aggression and persecution?

History, they felt, had handed them a choice, to be aesthetes or to be propagandists, and with their collective heart they hated the choice.

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Consequently, two seemingly contrary complaints have been lodged against the Auden generation.

The first was that they naively overcommitted themselves to political causes.

The literary history of the thirties,” Orwell wrote, in the essay “Inside the Whale”, “seems to justify the opinion that a writer does well to keep out of politics.”

The second was that, enamored of their own feline ambivalence, they lacked any conviction whatsoever.

The confusion is not baseless.

Photograph of the head and shoulders of a middle-aged man, with black hair and a slim mustache
Above: Eric Blair (aka George Orwell) (1903 – 1950)

Even in his mature poetry, Auden can appear as both a dealer in hopelessly obscure private parables and the over-explicit schoolmaster.

But this confusion was also the source of Auden’s triumph, which was to rescue from a debased public life the possibility of genuine, eccentric human intimacy, and to rescue from intimacy, in turn, something like a quasi-public idiom.

We need to love all since we are/ Each a unique particular/ That is no giant, god or dwarf,/ But one odd human isomorph.” 

Above: W.H. Auden

This was the task of the poet, then.

To remind people they were fully human, which is to say, not reducible to convenient ends by dictators, or for that matter, by corporate managers or mass marketers.

And to remind them in a language that bore no trace of manipulation or officialdom.

You'reOnlyHuman.jpg

How did Spender answer the question?

Poorly.

He chose … poorly.” – Keet's Cocktails
Above: Julian Glover (Walter Donovan), Alison Doody (Elsa Schneider), Robert Eddison (The Grail Knight) and Harrison Ford (Indiana Jones), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

To begin with, unlike Auden, Spender seemed to possess no guile whatsoever.

When the muse first came to Mr. Spender,” Randall Jarrell once wrote, “he looked so sincere that her heart failed her, and she said:

‘Ask anything, and I will give it to you.’

And he said: ‘Make me sincere.’

Sincerity is a nice enough virtue in acquaintances, but it keeps a literary voice from carrying.

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Above: American poet Randall Jarrell (1914 – 1965)

His poem about meeting the French phenomenologist Merleau-Ponty begins:

I walked with Merleau-Ponty by the lake.

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Above: French philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908 – 1961)

Part of the problem, apparently, was that Spender was averse to loneliness.

And so he crammed his life with luncheons and international symposia.

The loneliness pandemic | Harvard Magazine

Visiting D.H. Lawrence’s widow, Frieda, in New Mexico, Spender treated himself to six weeks’ isolation on the ranch where Lawrence’s ashes were laid.

Later in life, Sutherland tells us, Spender recalled this as the “only time in his life that he had truly experienced loneliness(a condition he normally abhorred).

During these lonely weeks he produced a first draft of what would become World Within World.”

Is it any accident this remains his one eminently readable book?

D. H. Lawrence Ranch, San Cristobal, NM – Brick and Stone: Architecture and  Preservation
Above: D.H. Lawrence Ranch, San Cristobal, New Mexico

The larger defect, though, was that Spender, as perfect counterpoint to his facile idea of the revealed self (the original title for World Within World was “Autobiography and Truth”), maintained an equally facile belief in the poet’s duty to projects of large public renovation.

Spender Stephen - World Within World

In the postwar years, Spender jetted from conference to conference, as if something as delicate and strange as poetry might be featured as part of the Marshall Plan.

Trans World Airlines Globe Map Logo 1.png

(The Marshall Plan (officially the European Recovery ProgramERP) was an American initiative enacted in 1948 to provide foreign aid to Western Europe.

The US transferred over $13 billion (equivalent of about $114 billion in 2020) in economic recovery programs to Western European economies after the end of World War II.

It operated for four years beginning on 3 April 1948. 

The goals of the United States were to rebuild war-torn regions, remove trade barriers, modernize industry, improve European prosperity, and prevent the spread of communism.

The Marshall Plan required a reduction of interstate barriers and the dissolution of many regulations while also encouraging an increase in productivity as well as the adoption of modern business procedures.)

Portrait of a man in military uniform.
Above: George Catlett Marshall (1880 – 1959)

For his part, Spender was indefatigable, lecturing at one point on how the modern writer “is a kind of super egotist, a hero, and a martyr, carrying the whole burden of civilization in his work.”

For their part, modern writers were happy to take Spender’s handouts, then disparage to others his missionary naiveté.

Sir Stephen Harold Spender (1909-1995) was an Engl - 1887 | LeeMiller
Above: Stephen Spender

I met Spender a few weeks ago,” Dylan Thomas wrote to a friend.

It was very sad.

He is on a lecture tour.

It is very sad.

He is bringing the European intellectuals together.

It is impossible.

He said, in a lecture I saw reported:

‘All poets speak the same language.’

It is a bloody lie:

Who talks Spender?

Dylan Thomas Marathon am 27.10.2021 (Serie 'Literatur', Teichwiesen #  1714), 27.10.2021 : : my.race|result
Above: Dylan Thomas

Exactly.

Who talks Spender?

Though cruelly arrived at, this is the rub.

No one talks Spender, just as no one talks Esperanto.

Flag of Esperanto.svg
Above: Flag of Esperanto

Until we are firmly rooted in our strange selves, we cannot begin to speak to others meaningfully.

Conversely, if you start from that lovely ideal, of culture as a universal idiom, you quickly find yourself softened into a nonentity.

(This is why Auden, I suspect, was willing to court the disgust of the high-minded when he wrote, in his elegy for Yeats, that:

Poetry makes nothing happen”.)

Above: Yeats’s final resting place in the shadow of the Dartry Mountains, Drumcliffe, County Sligo, Ireland

The aim of serious writing isn’t statesmanship, proximity to the rich, or the production of culture, whatever that is.

People lock themselves in rooms, and tolerate the sound of their own inane voices on the page, to rescue from “the most recent cacophonies … the delicate reduced and human scale of language in which individuals are able to communicate in a civilized and affectionate way with one another.”

The strength of Spender’s literary reputation, which was international in scope, made him something of a nomad as scholar and poet.

His homes were in St. John’s Wood, London, and Maussanne-les-Alpilles, France, where he spent his summers.

A House in St John's Wood: In Search of My Parents: Spender, Matthew:  9780374269869: Amazon.com: Books

Becoming French in Ninety Days: November 2005
Above: View from Maussane les Alpilles

But he was often on the road, giving readings and lectures and serving as writer in residence at various American universities.

Spender’s domicile in Houston was a penthouse apartment atop a high-rise dormitory on the university campus.

The walls of the apartment are glass and afforded the poet a 270° view of America’s self-proclaimed 20th century city.

His fellow residents in the dorm were mostly athletes, a fact that especially delighted Spender at breakfast, for with them he was served steaks, sausage, ham, eggs, biscuits and grits.

Above: Houston, Texas

At the time, Spender was busy with several projects:

Besides preparing for his imminent departure and saying goodbye to his many friends, he was completing the text for Henry Moore: Sculptures in Landscape, which was published in 1978.

Henry Moore Sculptures in Landscape (Hardcover) for sale online | eBay

He had also been invited by the University to deliver its commencement address, an event that took place on the afternoon of 13 May.

I’ve never even been to a commencement before.

What does one say?” he asked.

I suppose I will tell them to read books all their lives and to make a lot of money and give it to the university.

University of Houston seal.svg

In 1960, Spender was renowned as a figure from the past – a poet of the 1930s – and his work was deeply out of fashion.

Indeed, the 1930s were out of fashion.

He was seen as a tragicomic literary epoch in which poets had absurdly tried, or pretended, to engage with current politics – one in which pimply young toffs had linked arms with muscular proletarians in order to “repel the Fascist threat” when they weren’t at Sissington or Garsinghurst for the weekend, sucking up to Bloomsbury grandees.

Bloomsbury-publishing-logo.PNG
Above: Logo of Bloomsbury publishing group

Cyril Connolly called them:

Psychological revolutionaries, people who adopt left-wing political formulas because they hate their fathers or were unhappy at their public schools or insulted at the Customs, or lectured about sex.”

Connolly | Lapham's Quarterly
Above: Cyril Connolly

Someone else had dubbed Spender “the Rupert Brooke of the Depression.”

Rupert Brooke Q 71073.jpg
Above: English poet Rupert Brooke (1887 – 1915)

Most of us had been told in school that of all the 30s poets Spender was the one whose reputation had been most inflated.

He lacked the complexity of Auden, the erudition of Louis MacNeice, the cunning of Cecil Day-Lewis.

He was the one who had believed the slogans. –

Oh, young men.

Oh, young comrades.“-

And, after the War, the one who had recanted most shamefacedly.

He was the fairest of fair game.

I remember my school’s English teacher reading aloud from Spender’s “I think continually of those who were truly great” and substituting for “great” words like “posh” and “rich” and “queer“.

The same piece involving Spender’s “Pylons, those pillars / Bare like nude, giant girls that have no secret.

Even you lot,” he would say, “might draw the line at girls who looked like that.”

My teacher was in line with current critical opinion.

He usually was.

The late 50s was a period of skeptical naysaying.

It was modish to be cagey, unillusioned.

The only brave cause left was the cause of common sense, the only decent political standpoint the refusal to be taken in.

Look what happened in the 30s!” was the common cry.

And it was not just political wind-baggery that was distrusted.

There was suspicion, too, of anything religious, arty, or intense.

Above: Cary Grant (Roger O. Thornhill), North by Northwest (1959)

A neutral tone is nowadays preferred,” Donald Davie wrote in a mid-50s poem called “Remembering the Thirties“.

Above: English poet Donald Davie (1922 – 1995)

Thom Gunn – the young poet 1960s students most admired – was preaching a doctrine of butch self-reliance:

        I think of all the toughs through
	   history
	And thank heaven they lived,
	   continually.
	I praise the over dogs from Alexander
	To those who would not play with 
	    Stephen Spender

It was better, Gunn said:

To be insensitive, to steel the will, / Than sit irresolute all day at stool / Inside the heart.

Such tough talk was music to our ears.

Paris Review - The Art of Poetry No. 72
Above: English poet Thom Gunn (1929 – 2004)

After the war, Spender joined UNESCO as Counsellor to the Section of Letters, and this marked an new phase of his celebrity:

A 20-year-long stint as a kind of globe-trotting cultural emissary.

Above: Flag of UNESCO

The postwar years were good years in which to be an intellectual.

The civilized world had to be rebuilt, but thoughtfully:

This time, we had to get it right.

Huge congresses were organized at which famous thinkers debated the big questions: “Freedom and the Artist“, “The Role of the Artist“, “Art and the Totalitarian Threat“.

Spender was in regular attendance at such gatherings in Europe, and was soon in demand for trips to India, Japan, even Australia.

These “junkets“, as he described them, were usually paid for by the Congress for Cultural Freedom, based in Washington, as part of America’s hearts-and-minds offensive against Communism.

In 1953, he was approached by the Congress to edit the literary side of a new monthly, Encounter, which would be “anti-Communist in policy but not McCarthyite.”

(He was told that the money for it came from the Fairfield Foundation, a supposedly independent body.)

Indiana University Press on Twitter: "POEMS WRITTEN ABROAD by Stephen  Spender and edited by @chrisirmscher is hot off the press! Start reading  here: https://t.co/1jZWeQKQmV #stephenspender #poetry #poem…  https://t.co/E0nTwKYWeS"

Spender, it had been noted, contributed to the much discussed 1949 anthology “The God That Failed“, a collection of contrite essays by six of Europe’s most prominent ex-Communists.

His 1936 flirtation with the Party was no longer to be laughed at:

He had experienced that of which he spoke and could thus be seen as a Cold Warrior of high potential.

As Spender saw it, there was nothing at all warlike in the politics he had settled for – a politics that transcended immediate East-West disputes, that dealt not in power plays but in moral absolutes.

I am for neither West nor East,” he wrote in 1951, “but for myself considered as a self–one of the millions who inhabit the Earth.”

Freedom of speech, the preeminence of the individual conscience – in short, the mainstream liberal verities – would from now on be the components of his faith.

The God That Failed Six Studies in Communism: Koestler, Wright, Gide,  Fischer, Spender, Richard Crossman: Amazon.com: Books

I am for neither West nor East, but for myself considered as a self — one of the millions who inhabit the Earth.

If it seems absurd that an individual should set up as a judge between these vast powers, armed with their superhuman instruments of destruction I can reply that the very immensity of the means to destroy proves that judging and being judged does not lie in these forces.

For supposing that they achieved their utmost and destroyed our civilization, whoever survived would judge them by a few statements. a few poems, a few testimonies surviving from all the ruins, a few words of those men who saw outside and beyond the means which were used and all the arguments which were marshaled in the service of those means.

Thus I could not escape from myself into some social situation of which my existence was a mere product, and my witnessing a willfully distorting instrument.

I had to be myself, choose and not be chosen.

But to believe that my individual freedom could gain strength from my seeking to identify myself with the “progressive” forces was different from believing that my life must be an instrument of means decided on by political leaders. 

I came to see that within the struggle for a more just world, there is a further struggle between the individual who cares for long-term values and those who are willing to use any and every means to gain immediate political ends — even good ends.

Within even a good social cause, there is a duty to fight for the pre-eminence of individual conscience.

The public is necessary, but the private must not be abolished by it.

And the individual must not be swallowed up by the concept of the social man.

World Within World, 1951

He had by this time become the Spender who disconcerted us in Oxford.

No longer the holy fool of 30s legend, he was transmuting into an itinerant representative of liberal unease.

During the late 50s and throughout the 60s, Spender was perpetually on the move, sometimes as troubled ambassador for Western values, for the Congress, for International PEN, or for the British Council, as agency for promoting British culture abroad, and sometimes as hard-up literary journeyman, lecturing on modern poetry at Berkeley or Wesleyan or the University of Florida – wherever the fees were sufficiently enticing – or dreaming up viable book projects, such as “Love-Hate Relations“, a study of Anglo-American literary relationships, and “The Year of the Young Rebels” and account of the 1968 upheavals in Paris, Prague, New York, and West Berlin.

The ultimate aim of politics is not politics, but the activities which can be practised within the political framework of the State. 

Therefore an effective statement of these activities — e.g. science, art, religion — is in itself a declaration of ultimate aims around which the political means will crystallise.

A society with no values outside of politics is a machine carrying its human cargo, with no purpose in its institutions reflecting their care, eternal aspirations, loneliness, need for love.

Life and the Poet (1942)

Pin by D Norwich on Steve Maraboli Quotes | Life is an adventure, Words  quotes, Poems

Would I have liked Spender had we lived at the same time and had met one another?

Hard to say.

Do I think Spender is overrated as a poet?

I guess this depends on whom is rating him.

1114 3d Man With Multiple Question Mark Stock Photo | PowerPoint Slide  Presentation Sample | Slide PPT | Template Presentation

I am very honoured by your wanting to write a life of me.

But the fact is I regard my life as rather a failure in the only thing in which I wanted it to succeed.

I have not written the books I ought to have written and I have written a lot of books I should not have written. 

My life as lived by me has been interesting to me but to write truthfully about it would probably cause much pain to people close to me — and I always feel that the feelings of the living are more important than the monuments of the dead.

Response to a would be biographer in 1980, “When Stephen met Sylvia“, The Guardian, 24 April 2004

The Guardian 2018.svg

There is a certain justice in criticism.

The critic is like a midwife — a tyrannical midwife.

Lecture at Brooklyn College, as quoted in The New York Times (20 November 1984)

Brooklyn College Seal.svg

In my humble opinion I find Spender overrated as a poet no more than Andy Warhol (1928 – 1987) was overrated as an artist.

There is much about Spender’s craving for the spotlight and surrounded himself with celebrated society that is reminiscent of Warhol.

What does come through is Spender’s talent for friendship – and how his seemingly artless curiosity opened him to people, places and experiences he would otherwise have missed.

There was a kind of bravery in that.

A shrewdness, too.

He’d have liked to write more poems.

But in the end it mattered more to him to have an interesting life.

Nice Quotes about Life by Chines curse – May you always live in interesting  times - Quotespictures.com

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Ian Hamilton, “Spender’s Lives“, The New Yorker, 28 February 1994 / Magsie Hamilton Little, The Thing About Islam: Exposing the Myths, Facts and Controversies / Stephan Metcalf, “Stephen Spender: Toady?“, Slate.com, 7 February 2005 / Blake Morrison, “A talent for friendship“, The Guardian, 23 January 2005 / Richard Skinner, Writing a Novel / Stephen Spender: The Destructive Element / The God that Failed / Life and the Poet / Poems of Dedication / Poems / Ruins and Visions / Selected Poems / The Still Centre / The Temple / World Within World / John Sutherland, Stephen Spender: The Authorised Biography

Canada Slim and the Love of Landscape

Landschlacht, Switzerland, Monday 20 July 2020

Think of this blog as a prologue.

It is named “Building Everest“, for it is here where I practice building something impressive (hopefully), my writing career.

Everest kalapatthar.jpg

Above: Mount Everest

On Monday (13 July) I phoned an old friend in Gatineau, Québec, Canada and we got to talking about our literary passions and ambitions.

Both of us in our 50s we have come to the realization that there are probably more years behind us than ahead of us, and there is no guarantee that the years that remain will necessarily be healthy years.

Happily, our creative projects do not conflict.

Gatineau downtown area

Above: Gatineau, Québec, Canada

He would like to write science fiction and fantasy similar to C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.

Monochrome head-and-left-shoulder photo portrait of 50-year-old Lewis

Above: C(live) S(taples) Lewis (1898 – 1963)

Tolkien as a second lieutenant in the Lancashire Fusiliers (in 1916, aged 24)

Above: J(ohn) R(onald) R(euel) Tolkien (1892 – 1973)

I want to write novels and travel books similar to Charles Dickens and Paul Theroux.

Charles Dickens

Above: Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870)

Theroux in 2008

Above: Paul Theroux (b. 1941)

I miss my friend and Ottawa where our sporadic reunions usually take place and I wish we lived closer to one another and we could be like his literary heroes.

Centre Block on Parliament Hill, the Government House, Downtown Ottawa, the Château Laurier, the National Gallery of Canada and the Rideau Canal

Above: Images of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (across the river from Gatineau)

Lewis, Tolkien and their friends were a regular feature of the Oxford scenery in the years during and after the Second World War.

From top left to bottom right: Oxford skyline panorama from St Mary's Church; Radcliffe Camera; High Street from above looking east; University College, main quadrangle; High Street by night; Natural History Museum and Pitt Rivers Museum

Above: Images of Oxford, England

They drank beer on Tuesday at “the Bird and Baby” (The Eagle and Child Pub) and on Thursday nights they met in Lewis’s Magdalen College rooms to read aloud from the books they were writing, jokingly calling themselves “the Inklings“.

The Eagle and Child.jpg

Above: The Eagle and Child, Oxford

Magdalen-may-morning-2007-panorama.jpg

Above: Magdalen (pronounced Maud-lin) College, Oxford

Above: The corner of the Eagle and Child where the Inklings regularly met

Lewis and Tolkien first introduced the former’s The Screwtape Letters and the latter’s The Lord of the Rings to an audience in this company.

Thescrewtapeletters.jpg

First Single Volume Edition of The Lord of the Rings.gif

As a English Canadian living in Deutschschweiz, I long for some sort of local creative writing club where I could share my writing worries and hopes in a way much like Lewis, in a letter to his friend A(lfred) K(enneth) Hamilton Jenkin (1900 – 1980), described the idyllic setting of his college rooms:

Above: Linguistic map (German, French, Italian, Rumansh) of Switzerland

The Story of Cornwall: A.K. Hamilton Jenkin: Amazon.com: Books

I wish there was anyone here childish enough (or permanent enough, not the slave of his particular and outward age) to share it with me.

Is it that no man makes real friends after he has passed the undergraduate age?

Because I have got no forr’arder, since the old days.

I go to Barfield (Owen Barfield) for sheer wisdom and a sort of richness of spirit.

Owen Barfield – AnthroWiki

Above: Arthur Owen Barfield (1898 – 1997)

I go to you for some smaller and yet more intimate connexion with the feel of things.

But the question I am asking is why I meet no such men now.

Is it that I am blind?

Some of the older men are delightful:

The younger fellows are none of them men of understanding.

Oh, for the people who speak one’s own language!

I guess this blog must serve this capacity.

So many ideas float through my mind and are captured in my chapbook.

(Normally, a chapbook refers to a small publication of about 40 pages, but I use this word in the context of a portable notebook where ideas are recorded as they spontaneously occur.)

Above: Chapbook frontispiece of Voltaire’s The Extraordinary Tragical Fate of Calas, showing a man being tortured on a breaking wheel, late 18th century

Just a sample:

  • Scaling the Fish: Travels around Lake Constance

Bodensee satellit.jpg

  • Mellow Yellow: Switzerland Discovered in Slow Motion

  • The Coffeehouse Chronicles (an older man in love with a much younger woman)

Above: Café de Flore in Paris is one of the oldest coffeehouses in the city.

It is celebrated for its famous clientele, which in the past included high-profile writers and philosophers

  • America 47 (think 47 Ronin meets Trumpian times)

Flag of the United States

  • 20th Century Man (think time travel)

The Time Machine (H. G. Wells, William Heinemann, 1895) title page.jpg

  • Lover’s Cross (a Beta male escapes his Alpha wife)

Jim Croce - Lover's Cross (1985, Vinyl) | Discogs

  • Alicia in Switzerland (Alice in Wonderland meets Gulliver’s Travels in Switzerland)

Alice in Wonderland (1951 film) poster.jpg

  • Love in the Time of Corona (though the title is reminiscent of Love in the Time of Cholera, the story is more about the virtues of faith, family and hope in periods of plague)

LoveInTheTimeOfCholera.jpg

  • Gone Mad (what is sanity and how is the world seen by those judged ill in this regard)

Above: Engraving of the eighth print of A Rake’s Progress, depicting inmates at Bedlam Asylum, by William Hogarth.

  • The Forest of Shadows (sci-fi that asks the question what if the past never dies?)

Above: Conifer forest, Swiss National Park

I have the ideas.

I believe I have the talent.

What is lacking is the ability to market myself and the discipline to be a prolific writer.

Still I believe that each day I am getting closer to the realization of my ambitions.

Doug And The Slugs - Day By Day (1985, Vinyl) | Discogs

One thing that inspires my creativity is my travels and sometimes even a drive through the country can be the spark that ignites my imagination.

Landschlacht to Flims (Part One), Thursday 28 May 2020

Transport of the mails, transport of the human voice, transport of flickering pictures – in this century, as in others, our highest accomplishments still have the single aim of bringing men together.” (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)

Saint-Exupéry in Toulouse, 1933

Above: Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (1900 – 1944)

He and She

In a sense, it is travelling together that can make (or break) a relationship.

My wife and I don’t always live together harmoniously, but, generally, we travel well together.

Like any relationship with two (or more) people, harmony is possible once an understanding of who the other person is and what they like becomes clearer.

He said she said.jpg

My wife is an efficient German doctor who sets a goal and will not stop until it is realized, and for this she does have my respect.

I am the “life is a journey, not a destination dreamer in the relationship.

Life Is a Highway Tom Cochrane.jpg

I recall a bitter battle of poorly chosen words between us when on a journey between Freiburg im Breisgau (Black Forest of southwestern Germany) and Bretagne (on the Atlantic coast of France) we argued over efficiency over effectiveness.

I wanted to explore the regions between the Black Forest and Bretagne instead of simply rushing through them.

She, the driver, found driving through towns far more exhausting than sticking to motorways.

I, the passenger, wanted to see more than concrete rest stops where we wouldn’t stop and far-off fields we would never walk.

Main eventposter.jpg

Over the years we have come to an unspoken compromise.

We travel slowly to our travel destination and zoom home after our time there was complete.

Above: The Tortoise and the Hare“, from an edition of Caleb’s Fables illustrated by Arthur Rackham, 1912

On this day our journey in Switzerland (as of this day the borders around Switzerland were not yet open) wasn’t far by Canadian driving standards: a little over an hour and an half if we followed Highway 13 and Expressway 62 from Landschlacht in Canton Thurgau to Flims in Canton Graubünden.

Instead we opted to take the scenic route, avoiding as much as humanly possible heavily trafficked Autobahns, extending the journey at least another hour if we did not stop on the way.

Flag of Switzerland

I’ve no use for statements in which something is kept back, ” he added.  “And that is why I shall not furnish information in supprt of yours.

The journalist smiled.

You talk the language of St. Just.

Without raising his voice Rieux said he knew nothing about that.

The language he used was that of a man who was sick and tired of the world he lived in – though he had much liking for his fellow men – and had resolved, for his part, to have no truck with injustice and compromises with the truth.

His shoulders hunched, Rambert gazed at the doctor for some Moments without speaking.

Then, “I think I understand you,” he said, getting up from his chair.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

La Peste book cover.jpg

The Private Secret Language of Altnau

What I do know for certain is that what is regarded as success in a rational materialistic society only impresses superficial minds. 

It amounts to nothing and will not help us rout the destructive forces threatening us today. 

What may be our salvation is the discovery of the identity hidden deep in any one of us, and which may be found in even the most desperate individual, if he cares to search the spiritual womb which contains the embryo of what can be one’s personal contribution to truth and life.

(Patrick White)

White in Sydney, 1973

Above: Patrick White (1912 – 1990)

Heading east along Highway 13 from Landschlacht, the Traveller comes to Altnau (population: 2,244).

During the Lockdown (16 March to 10 May 2020) I often followed the walking path that hugs the shore of Lake Constance, north of both the Lake Road (Highway #13) and the Thurbo rail line, from Landschlacht to Altnau.

Visitors that zoom past Landschlacht often zoom past Altnau as well, as both Highway #13 and the railroad lie north of the town centre, so neither connection to Altnau is a boon to tourism or the economy as a whole.

Altnau remains for most people only a deliberate distant choice, which is a shame as the town entire has been designated as part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites, with a special focus on the town’s Reformed and Catholic churches and the Apfelweg (apple path).

Oberdorf Altnau

Above: Upper town, Altnau, Canton Thurgau, Switzerland

The Apfelweg, the first fruit educational path in Switzerland, is a nine-kilometre long circular route which explains with 16 signs everything you didn’t know you wanted to know about apples and apple production.

Understandably the Apfelweg is best done in the spring when the blossoms are on the orchards or late summer when the apples are ready to be harvested.

Apfelweg Altnau - Thurgau Tourismus

What can be seen by the lakeside visitor, even viewed from the highway or the train, is the Altnau Pier (Schiffsanlegesteg Altnau).

Completed in 2010, at a length of 270 metres, because of the wide shallow water zone, the Pier is the longest jetty on Lake Constance.

Altnauers call this jetty the Eiffel Tower of Lake Constance because the length of the jetty is the same as the height of the Tower.

Above: Altnau Pier

Notable people have formed the fabric of Altnau.

Hans Baumgartner (1911 – 1996), a famous (by Swiss standards) photographer was born here.

He studied in Kreuzlingen and Zürich and would later teach in Steckborn and Frauenfeld.

He would later sell his photographs to magazines and newspapers.

In 1937, Baumgartner met the Berlingen artist Adolf Dietrich who would feature in many of Baumgartner’s future photographs.

Adolf Dietrich.jpg

Above: Adolf Dietrich (1877 – 1957)

Baumgartner travelled and photographed Paris, Italy, the Balkans, southern France, North Africa and the Sahara, Croatia and the Dalmatian Coast, Burgundy, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Finland, the US, Mexico, Belgium and Germany.

He also visited Bombay, Colombo, Saigon, Hong Kong and Yokohama.

He even photographed his spa visits in Davos.

Der Chronist mit der Kamera | Journal21

Above: Hans Baumgartner (1911 – 1996)

Altnau attracted the likes of composer-poetess Olga Diener (1890 – 1963).

Born in St. Gallen, Olga lived in Altnau from 1933 to 1943.

Diener, Olga Nachlass Olga Diener

Above: Olga Diener

In a letter to Hans Reinhart in June 1934, Hermann Hesse wrote about Olga’s work:

“I like Olga’s dreams very much.

I also love many of her pictures and their rhythms, but I see them enclosed in a glasshouse that separates her and her poems from the world.

That miracle must come about in poetry, that one speaks his own language and his pictures, be it only associative, that others can understand – that distinguishes the dream from poetry.

Olga’s verses are, for me at least, far too much dream and far too little poetry.

She has her personal secret language not being able to approximate the general language in such a way that the sender and recipient correspond to each other.

So I am privately a genuine friend of Olga’s and her books, but as a writer I am not able to classify them.

Hermann Hesse 2.jpg

Above: Hermann Hesse (1877 – 1962)

Besides Hesse, of the visitors Olga Diener had in her Altnau home, of interest is fellow poet Hans Reinhart (1880 – 1963).

Reinhart came from a Winterthur trading family, which allowed him the opportunity to lead a financially independent poet’s life.

During a spa stay in Karlovy Vary in the late summer of 1889, Reinhart read Hans Christian Andersen‘s fairy tales for the first time.

Andersen in 1869

Above: Hans Christian Andersen (1805 – 1875)

They deeply impressed Reinhart and he later transformed them into stage plays.

After his secondary studies, “Müggli” studied philosophy, psychology, German, art, theatre and music history in Heidelberg, Berlin, Zürich, Paris, Leipzig and Munich.

After completing his studies, he met Rudolf Steiner for the first time in 1905, whom he recognized as a spiritual teacher.

Reinhart later helped Steiner build the first Goetheanum and made friends with other anthroposophists.

In 1941 Reinhart brought his friend Alfred Mombert and his sister from the French internment camp Gurs to Winterthur.

Reinhart Hans, 1880-1963, Dichter - Winterthur Glossar

Above: Hans Reinhart (1880 – 1963)

Another of Olga’s Altnau guests was writer / poet Emanuel von Bodman (1874 – 1946).

Bodman lived in Kreuzlingen as a child and attended high school in Konstanz.

After studying in Zürich, Munich and Berlin, he chose Switzerland’s Gottlieben as his adopted home.

His home, like Olga’s, was the meeting point for many artists, including the famous Rainer Maria Rilke and Hermann Hesse.

Bodman wrote several dramas, short stories and hundreds of poems.

He was seen as a poet, storyteller and playwright in the neo-romantic, neo-classical tradition.

Emanuel von Bodman - Liebesgedichte und Biographie

Above: Emanuel von Bodman

I write about these members of a long-departed Dead Poets Society, whose works we have not read and might never read, to inspire us.

If writers, poets, artists and musicians can come from Here and their works be loved (at least in their times) then perhaps we too can rise above our humblest of origins and find such luck to inspire others.

Dead poets society.jpg

All of these wordsmiths and miracle scribes seem, without exception, all thick and heavy with each other.

And herein lies my weakness.

By temperament, I am more like the Americans Charles Bukowski and Eric Hoffer than I am like those one might call the litterati.

Charles Bukowski smoking.jpg

Above: Charles Bukowski (1920 – 1994)

Eric Hoffer in 1967, in the Oval Office, visiting President Lyndon Baines Johnson

Above: Eric Hoffer (1898 – 1983)

But there is the Internet – a potential tool I have yet to master.

Visualization of Internet routing paths

Above: Visualization of Internet routing paths

Today, hardly anyone knows the poet Olga Diener.

It almost seems as if her existence was as unreal as the tone of her poems.

She was once a very real phenomenon on Lake Constance where she had her permanent residence during the 1930s.

She had an exchange of letters with Hermann Hesse.

The poets Hans Reinhart and Emanuel von Bodman were among the guests at her annual anniversary celebrations (4 January) by candlelight.

Pin by Rine Ling on bokeh art photography | Candles photography ...

Otherwise she avoided the company of people with their too many disappointments and losses.

Her house “Belrepeire“, which she had planned herself, was a little bit away from the village.

Belrepeire” is the name of a city in Wolfram von Eschenbach’s poem “Parzival“.

Above: Statue of Wolfram von Eschenbach (1160 – 1220), Abenburg Castle, Bavaria, Germany

The poet was under the spell of the Grail myth.

Above: The Holy Grail depicted on a stained glass window at Quimper Cathedral, France

Olga found in the silence of her seclusion, the voice of her poems, which bore fairytale titles like “The Golden Castle” or “The White Deer“.

In this mystery game, a character named Blaniseflur sings the verses:

All the gardens have woken up. 

Dew fell from the stars and

Venus Maria walked through them with her light feet. 

Now flowers breathe the sky

And the Earth fulfills the dream

Received from spring night.

How a blackbird sings! 

The longing carries the swans

Swinging across the lake. 

The sun rises red from the water.

Light is everything.

Sunrise on the Lake Constance | Bodensee, in German. Konstan… | Flickr

The images Olga saw on long walks on the shores of the Lake, as she would have said, condensed into dreamlike structures, the form of which was often difficult to understand.

Even Hans Rheinhart, who made the only attempt for decades to critically appreciate Olga in the Bodenseebuch (the Book of Lake Constance) in 1935, did not understand her “private secret language“.

jahrgaenge 1935 - ZVAB

Olga was actually a musician.

For her there was no creative difference between writing and composing.

How musical her language was can immediately be heard when her poetry is read out loud.

Her words are full of sound relationships far beyond the usual measure, which Hesse described:

In your newer verses there is often such a beautiful sound.”

Music notes set musical note treble clef Vector Image

Olga wrote notes like other people speak words.

In the guestbook of Julie and Jakobus Weidenmann, she immortalized herself with a song instead of verses.

She was often a guest at the Weidenmanns.

Julie shared Olga’s natural mystical worldview, which was coloured Christian, while Olga tended to esotericism.

Julie’s first volume of poems is entitled Tree Songs, while Olga wrote a cycle called Rose Songs in Altnau.

Jakobus Weidenmann – Personenlexikon BL

Above: Jakobus and Julie Weidenmann

The seventh poem of Olga’s cycle contains her lyrical confession:

Leave me in the innermost garden

Faithfully my roses wait:

Fertilize, cut, bind,

Cut hands from thorns.

The blooming light, awake moonlight

Enter the flower goblets.

The winds pull gently over it,

And rain roars in some nights.

I am earthbound like her

And once again disappeared.

Unlike Olga, Golo Mann (1909 – 1994) was anything but a mystic.

As the son of Thomas Mann, Golo belonged to one of the most famous literary families in the world.

Not only his father, but also his uncle Heinrich and his siblings Erika, Klaus, Monika, Elisabeth and Michael worked as writers.

Writing was in Golo’s blood.

Above: Golo Mann (1909 – 1994)

This does not mean that writing was always easy for him.

On the contrary, like all of Thomas Mann’s children, Golo was overshadowed by his father and did not feel privileged to be the son of a Nobel laureate in literature.

Golo saw himself primarily as a historian and thus distinguished himself from the novelist who was his father.

Above: Thomas Mann (1875 – 1955)

Nevertheless, Golo used a thoroughly literary approach to history.

Two of his books are titled History and Stories and Historiography as Literature.

The fact that Golo cultivated a narrative style that earned him condescending reviews and the derisive ridicule of fellow historians, but this did not stop the general public from enthusiastically reading his books.

Deutsche Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts - Golo Mann ...

Golo Mann’s first bestseller was largely created in Thurgau.

Again and again Golo retired to Altnau for several weeks in the Zur Krone Inn, for the first time in summer 1949.

His memories of Lake Constance were published in 1984 in the anthology Mein Bodensee: Liebeserklärung an eine Landschaft (My Lake Constance: Declaration of Love for a Landscape), under the title “Mit wehmütigen Vergnügen” (with wistful pleasure).

There he writes about the Krone:

There was an inn on the ground floor, the owner’s family had set up an apartment on the first floor, and on the second floor a few small rooms connected by a forecourt were available to friends of the Pfisters, the bookseller Emil Oprecht and his wife Emmi.

Thanks to my friend Emmi, they became my asylum, my work and retirement home.

Emmi and Emil Oprecht belonged to the circle of friends of Julie and Jakobus Weidenmann in Kesswil.

The Oprecht home in Zürich was a meeting point for all opponents of the Hitler regime during the war.

Ziviler Ungehorsam gegen Hitler: Wie Emil und Emmie Oprecht auch ...

Above: Emil and Emmi Oprecht

Europa Verlag (Europa Publishing) was committed to the same democratic and social spirit as that of the Weidenmann guests in the 1920s, including Golo’s siblings Erika and Klaus.

Above: Erika Mann (1905 – 1969) and Klaus Mann (1906 – 1949)

Golo’s father was good friends with Emil Oprecht and published the magazine Mass und Wert (Measure and Value) together with Konrad Falke (1880 – 1942).

It is ultimately thanks to these diverse relationships that Golo Mann put his Deutsche Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts (German History of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries) in paper in 1956 and 1957, primarily in Altnau.

The success of this book made it possible for Golo Mann, who had gone into American exile like his father, to finally return to Europe.

It looked like nothing stood in the way of his academic career.

When his appointment to the University of Frankfurt did not come about, Golo retired from teaching and lived from then on a freelance writer in his parents’ home in Kilchberg on Lake Zürich and in Berzona in Canton Ticino, where fellow writers Alfred Andersch (1914 – 1980) and Max Frisch were his neighbours.

Above: Max Frisch (1911 – 1981)

In Kilchberg, Berzona, and again in Altnau, Golo wrote his opus magnum, Wallenstein – Sein Leben erzählt von Golo Mann (Wallenstein: His Life Told by Golo Mann).

Telling history was completely frowned upon by academic historians in 1971, the year this monumental biography was published, but Golo didn’t care nor did the thousands of his readers.

Wallenstein“ (Golo Mann) – Buch gebraucht kaufen – A02lgtja01ZZ4

Despite hostility from university critics, Golo was awarded two honorary doctorates, in France and England, but not in the German-speaking world.

In addition, he was awarded a number of literary prizes for his books: the Schiller Prize, the Lessner Ring, the Georg Büchner Prize, the Goethe Prize and the Bodensee Literature Prize.

Große Kreisstadt Überlingen: Bodensee-Literaturpreis

The last will have particularly pleased him, because the Lake smiled at the beginning of his literary fame.

(For more on the entire Thomas Mann family, please see Canada Slim and the Family of Mann in my other blog, The Chronicles of Canada Slimhttps://canadaslim.wordpress.com)

The Lake seemed to be smiling at the beginning of our journey as we left Highway #13 in the direction of Sommeri.

Summery Sommeri Summary

The word ‘plague’ had just been uttered for the first time….

Everybody knows that pestilences have a way of recurring in the world.

Yet somehow we find it hard to believe in ones that crash down on our heads from a blue sky.

There have been as many plagues as wars in history.

Yet always plagues and wars take people equally by surprise.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Above: The plague, Marseille, France, 1720, Michel Serré

Sommeri (population: 591) is first mentioned in 905 as Sumbrinaro.

Between 1474 and 1798, the villages of Niedersommeri and Obersommeri formed a court of the PrinceAbbot of St. Gall.

In 1474 the Church of St. Mauritius was dedicated.

It was renovated to its current appearance in the first half of the 15th century.

After the Protestant Reformation reached Sommeri in 1528, the church became a shared church for both faiths in 1534.

Originally the major economic activities in Sommeri were predominantly grain production and forestry.

Wappen von Sommeri

Above: Coat-of-arms of Sommeri

It was nearly obliterated by the Black Death in 1629.

In the second half of the 19th century, fruit production, hay production, cattle and dairy farming were added.

A cheese factory was opened in 1852.

In the last third of the 20th century, some industrial plants moved into the villages, especially embroidery and furniture manufacturing.

At the beginning of the 21st century there were companies in the HVAC industry, precision engineering and manufacturing school furniture in Sommeri.

Sommeri

Above: Sommeri, Canton Thurgau, Switzerland

To be frank, there is no reason to linger in Sommeri, except to say that it was the birthplace of the writer Maria Dutli-Rutlishauser (1903 – 1995) of whom I have previously written.

Alt- Steckborn

Above: Maria Dutli-Rutlishauser

(For more on Maria, please see Canada Slim and the Immunity Wall of this blog.)

Onwards.

From Sommeri, Google Maps leads her hapless wanderers onwards to Langrickenbach.

Google Maps Logo.svg

Query:

How contrive not to waste time?

Answer:

By being fully aware of it all the while.

Ways in which this can be done:

By spending one’s days on an uneasy chair in a dentist’s waiting room, by remaining on one’s balcony all Sunday afternoon, by listening to lectures in a language one doesn’t know, by travelling by the longest and least convenient train routes, and, of course, standing all the way, by queuing at the box office of theatres and then not booking a seat. 

And so forth.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Longing for Langrickenbach

Langrickenbach (population: 1,291) was first mentioned in 889 as “Rihchinbahc“.

It is a place for crops and fruit, cattle breeding and dairy farming, general goods, timber and cattle trading.

Again, not much to see.

Hit the road.

Above: Langrickenbach, Canton Thurgau

Watching cows and calves playing, grooming one another or being assertive, takes on a whole new dimension if you know that those taking part are siblings, cousins, friends or sworn enemies.

If you know animals as individuals you notice how often older brothers are kind to younger ones, how sisters seek or avoid each other’s company, and which families always get together at night to sleep and which never do so.

Cows are as varied as people.

They can be highly intelligent or slow to understand, friendly, considerate, aggressive, docile, inventive, dull, proud or shy.

All these characteristics are present in a large enough herd.”

(Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows)

The Secret Life of Cows: Amazon.co.uk: Young, Rosamund ...

The Birwinken Bulletin

Makes me think of Bullwinkle, the cartoon moose and his squirrel friend Rocky.

No moose or squirrels spotted.

Above from left to right: Rocky, Bullwinkle, and Captain Peter “Wrongway” Peachfuzz

Birwinken (population: 1,319) was first mentioned in 822 as “Wirinchova“.

In the 19th century, the village economy added animal husbandry….

Cattle feedlot

(My wife is an animal?)

….to the traditional agriculture and fruit growing.

In 1878, a weaving firm and three embroidery factories provided 165 jobs.

However the decline of the textile industry in the 20th century and the village’s remoteness from Anywhere led to high levels of emigration.

As a result, the village never developed much industry and has remained a farmer’s hamlet.

In 1990, for example, 63% of the population worked in agriculture.

Birwinken

Above: Birwinken, Canton Thurgau

It was only a matter of lucidly recognizing what had to be recognized, of dispelling extraneous shadows and doing what needed to be done….

There lay certitude.

There, in the daily round.

All the rest hung on mere threads and trivial contingencies.

You couldn’t waste your time on it.

The thing was to do your job as it should be done.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

The Doctor Luke Fildes crop.jpg

Above: The Doctor, Luke Fildes, 1891

What is an extremely interesting product of the village is native son Stefan Keller (b. 1958), a writer, journalist and historian.

Rotpunktverlag

Above: Stefan Keller

Keller is best known for:

  • Die Rückkehr: Joseph Springs Geschichte (The Return: Joseph Spring’s Story)

The Berlin youth Joseph Sprung was chased through half of Europe by the Nazis.

He lived in Brussels, Montpellier and Bordeaux with false papers and worked as an interpreter without being recognized.

He survived invasions and rail disasters, but never kissed a girl when he fell into the hands of the Swiss border authorities in November 1943.

At the age of 16, the fugitive was handed over to the Gestapo by the Swiss border guards and denounced as a Jew.

He was transferred to the Auschwitz concentration camp via the Drancy collective warehouse near Paris.

Sixty years later, Joseph Sprung returned to Switzerland.

Today his name is Joseph Spring, he lives in Australia and demands the justice he deserves.

He accused the Swiss government of aiding and abetting genocide.

In a sensational trial, the Swiss federal court decided in 2000 that the extradition of a Jewish youth to the National Socialists can no longer be judged.

Joseph Spring had at least asked for symbolic reparation.

In November 2003, he returned to Switzerland to tell his story:

The story of a survivor who sued an entire country, went through a process to demand justice, lost it, and still has the last word.

Die Rückkehr: Joseph Springs Geschichte (Hörbuch-Download): Amazon ...

  • Die Zeit der Fabriken (The Age of Factories)

The worker Emil Baumann was already dead when his former superior Hippolyt Saurer died unexpectedly.

The whole of Arbon mourned the truck manufacturer Saurer.

At that time, almost all of Arbon mourned Baumann, for whom the workers in Saurer’s factory were responsible for his death.

Emil Baumann died shortly after an argument with his boss Saurer.

It is 1935 when everything starts with two deaths.

The young lathe operator Emil Baumann dies from suicide because his master harasses him and because he cannot cope with the new working conditions.

The college immediately went on strike.

Then the entrepreneur and engineer Hippolyt Saurer dies.

He choked on his own blood after an tonsil operation.

Based on the death of these two men, Stefan Keller tells the story of a small town in eastern Switzerland, its conflicts, triumphs and defeats.

The city of Arbon on the Swiss shore of Lake Constance is ruled by the “Reds” (by the Social Democrats, the left).

The Adolph Saurer AG factory was and still is legendary for its (military) trucks.

Above: Memorial to Franz, Adolph und Hippolyt Saurer, Arbon

Arbon is an example of many places in Switzerland:

The time of the factories is also a history of the Swiss industry and workers’ movement.

Starting with the motor carriages of the Wilhelminian era to the Saurer gasification trucks of the National Socialists, from the big strikes after 1918 to the dismantling of almost all jobs in the 1990s and from the resistance of an editor against censors in the Second World War to the union’s «fight against» against foreign colleagues.

Die Zeit der Fabriken: Amazon.de: Stefan Keller: Bücher

  • Grüningers Fall (The Grüninger Case)

A historical report about the St. Gallen police captain Paul Grüninger, who in the 1930s, according to his conscience and not in accordance with the law, saved the lives of numerous Jews.

The facts:

In 1938/1939, Grüninger saved the lives of hundreds, if not thousands, of Austrian, Jewish refugees by providing them with the wrong papers and thus enabling them to enter Switzerland legally.

He was suspended from duty due to breach of official duties and falsification of documents.

He was severely fined for his conduct and sentenced to prison.

The book aims to make it clear that today it was not Grüninger who would have to sit on the dock, but the inhumane refugee policy of the Swiss government during the Nazi era.

The book was made into a film in 1997 based on a screenplay by Stefan Keller and directed by Richard Dindo with Keller’s expert advice.

Grüningers Fall

  • Maria Theresia Wilhelm: Spurlos verschwunden (Maria Theresia Wilhelm: Disappeared without a trace)

In the mid-1930s Maria Theresia Wilhelm met the Swiss mountain farmer and gamekeeper Ulrich Gantenbein, who subsequently left his first wife.

From the beginning Maria and Ulrich’s marriage suffered from official regulations.

Ulrich is admitted to a psychiatric clinic shortly after their marriage.

Maria is barely tolerated by the neighbourhood.

Eventually she too comes to a psychiatric clinic and there experiences inhumane therapy methods from today’s perspective.

Her seven children are torn away, placed in orphanages and put to work.

Maria is finally released in June 1960.

On the way to buy shoes, she disappears without a trace….

Maria Theresia Wilhelm - spurlos verschwunden - Stefan Keller ...

Rieux asked Grand if he was doing extra work for the Municipality.

Grand said No.

He was working on his own account.

“Really?”, Rieux said, to keep the conversation going.

“And are you getting on well with it?”

“Considering I’ve been at it for years, it would be surprising if I wasn’t.

Though, in one sense, there hasn’t been much progress.”

“May one know” – the doctor halted – “what it is that you’re engaged on?”

Grand put a hand up to his hat and tugged it down upon his big, protruding ears, then murmured some half-inaudible remark from which Rieux seemed to gather that Grand’s work was connected with “the growth of a personality”.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Bürglen Bound

Next town Google leads us to is Bürglen (population: 3,841), first mentioned in 1282 as “Burgelon“.

Even though the village was fortified around 1300, it was never considered a city, due to the decline of its owner, the Baron of Sax-Hohensax, and from other neighbouring villages.

After the disastrous fire of 1528, the villagers went into debt for the reconstruction of Bürglen.

To help pay off their debt, in 1540 they granted the nobility rights to St. Gallen.

Under St. Gallen, Bürglen lost most of its autonomy.

St. Gallen appointed the bailiff and the chairman of the Lower Court, promoted the settlement of its citizens to form a local elite and change the succession order of inheritances.

Despite this, the local farmers enjoyed a certain independence.

In the 17th century, they promoted the expansion of the Castle as well as the creation of new businesses.

This relative prosperity was followed in the 18th century by a government practice that hindered the formation of viable village government and led to general impoverishment.

Reformierte Kirche und Schloss Bürglen

Above: Bürglen, Canton Thurgau

Power mattered more than people.

A problem eternal and universal.

Worth seeing is the Bürgeln Castle, the old quarter and the Reformed Church.

Above: Bürglen Castle

Of notable personalities connected to Bürgeln, it was home to artists Gottlieb Bion (1804 – 1876), Fritz Gilsi (1878 – 1961) and Jacques Schedler (1927 – 1989) as well as the writer Elisabeth Binder (b. 1951).

I haven’t read Ms. Binder’s work as yet, but the titles sound appealing…..

  • Der Nachtblaue (The Night Blue)
  • Sommergeschicht (Summer Story)
  • Orfeo
  • Der Wintergast (The Winter Guest)
  • Ein kleiner und kleiner werdender Reiter: Spurren einer Kindheit (A rider getting smaller and smaller: Traces of a childhood)

Above: Elisabeth Binder

Ever south and east the long and winding road continues….

The long and winding road.png

Cottard was a silent, secretive man, with something about him that made Grand think of a wild boar.

His bedroom, meals at a cheap restaurant, some rather mysterious comings and goings . these were the sum of Cottard’s days.

He described himself as a traveller in wines and spirits.

Now and again he was visited by two or three men, presumably customers.

Sometimes in the evening he would go to a cinema across the way.

In this connection Grand mentioned a detail he had noticed – that Cottard seemed to have a preference for gangster films.

But the thing that had struck him most about the man was his aloofness, not to say his mistrust of everyone he met.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Nighthawks by Edward Hopper 1942.jpg

Above: Nighthawks, Edward Hopper, 1942

Few Words for Wuppenau

Wuppenau (population: 1,111) was first mentioned in 820 as “Wabbinauwa” and is primarily an agricultural community.

Wuppenau

Above: Wuppenau, Canton Thurgau

(It is funny how so many of the original names seem similar to those of the Original Peoples of the Americas.

Or akin to something Elmer Fudd might say about wascally wabbits.)

ElmerFudd.gif

….and that’s all I have to say about that.

Film poster with a white background and a park bench (facing away from the viewer) near the bottom. A man wearing a white suit is sitting on the right side of the bench and is looking to his left while resting his hands on both sides of him on the bench. A suitcase is sitting on the ground, and the man is wearing tennis shoes. At the top left of the image is the film's tagline and title and at the bottom is the release date and production credits.

We are now in Canton St. Gallen and the city of Wil (pronounced “ville”).

Wappen von Wil

Above: Coat of arms of Wil, Canton St. Gallen

The Word Pump and the Swan Song of Wil

“I have the same idea with all my books: an attempt to come close to the core of reality, the structure of reality, as opposed to the merely superficial. 

The realistic novel is remote from art. 

A novel should heighten life, should give one an illuminating experience. 

It shouldn’t set out what you know already. 

I just muddle away at it. 

One gets flashes here and there, which help. 

I am not a philosopher or an intellectual. 

Practically anything I have done of any worth I feel I have done through my intuition, not my mind.”  (Patrick White)

There are times in a man’s life when he simply must ask for assistance and my trying to convey to you an accurate mental image of Wil may require the services of an expert.

Above: Wil Castle

Ask Fred.

Fred Mast, excuse me, Professor Dr. Mast.

Born and raised in Wil, Fred is a full professor at the University of Bern, specialized in mental imagery, sensory motor processing and visual perception.

Perhaps he is one of the few folks who can truly answer the question:

Do you see what I see?

Über uns: Prof. Dr. Fred Mast - Kognitive Psychologie, Wahrnehmung ...

Above: Dr. Fred Mast

I mean, Fred should know, he has been educated and worked at universities esteemable, such as Zürich, the Federal Institute of Technology (ETHZ)(Switzerland’s equivalent to MIT), Harvard, MIT, Lausanne and Bern.

Some of his published papers suggest he does know what he is talking about:

  • Visual mental imagery interferes with allocentric orientation judgments
  • Visual mental images can be ambiguous
  • Mental images: always present, never there

Black Mamba oder die Macht der Imagination: Wie unser Gehirn die ...

Thanks, Dr. Fred, for demystifying the fuzzification.

Let me say for the record that as a place to visit I have always liked Wil….

But as a place to work….not as much.

Wil (population: 23,955), today the 3rd biggest city in Canton St. Gallen, was founded around 1200 and was handed over by the Counts of Toggenburg to the Abbey of St. Gallen in 1226.

(Look, Ma!  Look at what I founded!)

Disputes between the Abbey and Habsburg King Rudolf I (1218 – 1291) led to the destruction of Wil in 1292.

(If Rudolf couldn’t have Wil, then no one will?)

Above: Statue of Rudolf I, Speyer Cathederal, Germany

Wil was again besieged in the Old Zürich War in 1445 and yet again in the Toggenburg War in 1712.

On 1 January 2013, Susanne Hartmann became the first female mayor, not only of Wil-Bronschhofen, but in the entire canton of St. Gallen.

Hartmann announced her candidacy in April 2012.

Despite all forecasts the result of the elections was a landslide victory for Susanne Hartmann.

Despite (or perhaps because) the bus being driven by a woman, Will carries on.

Susanne Hartmann :: CVP Kanton St. Gallen

Above: Her Honour Wil Mayor Susanne Hartmann

In addition to many small and medium-sized enterprises, Wil is also home to a number of large, some international, industrial firms, including Stihl, Larag, Camion Transport, Brändle, Heimgartner Fahnen, Schmolz & Bickenbach, Kindlemann….

So it stands to reason that a city of industry may attract schools to teach those in these industries.

Such was the Wil school (now defunct) where I taught.

It was, what we in the business of freelance teaching refer to as a “cowboy school“, an institution more interested in the school’s acquisition of money than in the students’ acquisition of an education.

It was one of those schools where parents sent their children who lacked either the capacity or the desire to learn.

A paid education in all senses of the word.

It was a nightmare to teach there.

Blackboard Jungle (1955 poster).jpg

The students, best defined as juvenile deliquents or little criminal bastards, would not do their assignments, stay off their damn phones, bring their textbooks to class, listen in class or stop talking to one another.

The worst of them brought out the worst in me, so it was to everyone’s mutual relief when we parted company.

Above: Student – Teacher Monument, Rostock, Germany

As for the city of Wil itself, putting aside my feelings towards my ex-employer now extinct, there is much that is positive to relate.

Wil is considered to be the best preserved city in Eastern Switzerland and best seen from afar standing atop the Stadtweiher (a hill with a pond overlooking Wil) overlooking the silhouette of the old quarter.

The pedestrian promenade from Schwanenkreisel (Swan Circle) towards the old quarter is the place where most of the shops are, including a farmer’s market every Saturday.

On 8 July 2006, the 37-metre high Wiler Tower was inaugurated on the Hofberg (the mountain above Wil).

It is a wooden structure with a double spiral staircase and three X supports.

It is worth the climb for the view, if not for the exercise.

Around 180 kilometres of hiking trails are signposted around Wil.

The almost 33 kilometres long Wilerrundweg (Wil Circle Path)….

(Safer than a cycle path?)

….was established in 2013.

Kussbänkli: Kantonsrat Sennhauser hat es hergestellt – und ...

Above: The Kissing Bench

The 87-kilometre Toggenburger Höhenweg (high road) starts in Wil and leads to Wildhaus via Mühlrüti, Atzmännig and Arvenbüel.

Toggenburger Höhenweg - Ferienregion Toggenburg - Ostschweiz

The Thurweg passes near Wil at Schwarzenbach (black creek), following the Thur River from Wildhaus to Rüdlingen where it meets the Rhine River in Canton Schaffhausen.

Thurweg von Stein nach Ebnat- Kappel - MeinToggenburg.ch

Worth seeing in Wil are the Maria Hilf Wallfahrtskirche (Mary of Charity Pilgrim Church), the Abbey Castle, the St. Katarina Dominican and the Capuchin Cloisters, the Courthouse, Ruddenzburg (Ruddenz Castle), St. Niklaus and St. Peter Catholic Churches, the old Guardhouse, the City Archive, the Schnetztor gate, the City Museum (open on weekends from 2 to 5 pm), the psychiatric clinic (ask, in vain, for Dr. Fred) and the former Hurlimann tractor factory.

Wil has the Challer Theatre, the Kunsthalle (art hall), the Tonhalle (concert hall) and the Remise (for more modern music), but excepting these cultural remnants the young generally don’t party here if they can get away to Zürich.

The room was in almost complete darkness.

Outside, the street was growing noisier and a sort of murmur of relief greeted the moment when all the street lamps lit up, all together.

Rieux went out on to the balcony and Cottard followed him.

From the outlying districts – as happens every evening in our town – a gentle breeze wafted a murmur of voices, smells of roasting meat, a gay perfumed tide of freedom sounding on its ways, as the streets filled up with noisy young people released from shops and offices.

Nightfall with its deep remote baying of unseen ships, the rumour rising from the sea and the happy tumult of the crowd – that first hour of darkness which in the past had always had a special charm for Rieux – seemed today charged with menace, because of all he knew.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Mediterranean side – Oran

Above: Oran, Algeria

Of the many famous people native to Wil, noteworthy (by Swiss standards) are the filmmaker Max Peter Ammann (b. 1929) and the TV star Kurt Felix (1941 – 2012).

LESE-THEATER-STÜCK VON MAX PETER AMMANN IM HOF ZU WIL – wil24.ch

Above: Max Peter Ammann

Kurt Felix

Above: “When I must go, I will leave a happy man.

Daniel Imhof (b. 1977), the Swiss son of a Smithers (British Columbia) bush pilot, is a retired footballer from Canada’s national soccer team and now resides in Wil.

Canada Soccer

I think to myself:

I have finally gotten so impossible and unpleasant that they will really have to do something to make me better….

They have no idea what a bottomless pit of misery I am….

They do not know that this is not some practice fire drill meant to prepare them for the real inferno, because the real thing is happening right now.

All the bells say:

Too late.

It’s much too late and I’m so sure that they are still not listening.

(Elizabeth Wurtzel, Prozac Nation)

ProzacNationBook.jpg

Of human interest is the story of Wil native, the opera singer Anna Sutter (1871 – 1910).

Her brief affair with royal Württemberg court conductor Aloys Obrist proved to be fatal.

After she ended their two-year relationship in 1909, Obrist entered her Stuttgart apartment on 29 June 1910 and killed her with two pistol shots before taking his own life.

Sadly, Anna is best remembered for how she died than for how she lived.

Cows are individuals, as are sheep, pigs and hens, and, I dare say, all the creatures on the planet however unnoticed, unstudied or unsung.

Certainly, few would dispute that this is true of cats and dogs and horses.

When we have had occasion to treat a farm animal as a pet, because of illness, accident or bereavement, it has exhibited great intelligence, a huge capacity for affection and an ability to fit in with an unusual routine.

Perhaps everything boils down to the amount of time spent with any one animal – and perhaps that is true of humans too.

(Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows)

CH cow 2 cropped.jpg

Also worth mentioning is the writer René Oberholzer (b. 1963), who has been teaching in Wil (in a non-cowboy school it is hoped) since 1987.

He began writing poetry in 1986 and prose in 1991.

(I must confess my rural roots and prejudices appear when I find myself asking:

Do real men write (or even read) poetry?

I believe they do, but whether the fine folks in Argenteuil County in Canada feel that way is debatable.)

Shakespeare.jpg

Above: William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

Oberholzer founded the Höhenhöhe (higher heights) writers group in 1991.

As founding can be addictive, the following year he then founded the literary experimental group Die Wortpumpe (the Word Pump) together with his colleagues (co-conspirators?) Aglaja Veteranyi and Gabriele Leist.

He is a member of several author associations.

His work has been mainly published in anthologies, literary and online magazines.

He is best known for:

  • Wenn sein Herz nicht mehr geht, dann repariert man es und gibt es den Kühen weiter: 39 schwarze Geschichten (When his heart stops beating, repair it and give it to the cows: 39 dark tales)
  • Ich drehe den Hals um – Gedichte (I turn my stiff neck: Poems)
  • Die Liebe würde an einem Dienstag erfunden (Love was invented on a Tuesday)
  • Kein Grund zur Beunruhigung – Geschichten (No reason to panic: Stories)

Die Liebe wurde an einem Dienstag erfunden: 120 Geschichten | René ...

As my wife and I are married (no reason to panic) and it was a Thursday (as love only visits Wil on Tuesdays), we faithfully follow fatalistic Google Maps, and continue on to….

Why is it that one can look at a lion or a planet or an owl or at someone’s finger as long as one pleases, but looking into the eyes of another person is, if prolonged past a second, a perilous affair?

(Walker Percy)

Percy in 1987

Above: Walker Percy (1916 – 1990)

Restful Rickenbach

Rickenbach (population: 2,774), first mentioned in 754 as “Richinbach“.

After the end of the crop rotation system in the 19th century livestock and dairy farming became the major sources of income.

A mill, built in the 13th century, was expanded in 1919 to become Eberle Mills, which operated until 2000.

The Eschmann Bell Foundry existed until 1972.

After the construction of the A1 motorway and the growth of Wil, by 1990 the population of Rickenbach had doubled.

Langrickenbach

Above: Rickenbach

A bridged Lütisburg

When a war breaks out people say:

It’s too stupid.  It can’t last long.”

But though a war may well be ‘too stupid’, that doesn’t prevent its lasting.

Stupidity has a knack of getting its way.

As we should see if we were not always so much wrapped in ourselves.

In this respect our townsfolk were like everybody else, wrapped up in themselves.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

Duns cup helps with concentration

Lütisburg (population: 1,576), though smaller than Rickenbach, is far more interesting to the casual visitor.

It is first mentioned on 1214 as “Luitinsburch“.

Wappen von Lütisburg

Above: Lütisburg coat of arms

The Castle, built in 1078 by the Abbey of St. Gallen, was abandoned by the Abbey a short time later, but due to the Castle’s strategically important location, it became the headquarters of the Counts of Toggenburg from the 13th to the 15th centuries.

After the Abbey acquired the County of Toggenburg in 1468, the Castle served as a bailiwick.

In the 19th century, alongside agriculture, ironworks, copper hammering and manufacturing dominated.

The train station has existed since 1870.

Above: Lütisburg, 1700

Lütisburg’s townscape is characterized by bridges and footbridges, including the Letzi Bridge (1853), the Guggenloch Railway Viaduct (1870) and the “new” Thur Bridge (1997).

The covered wooden bridge (1790) over the Thur River, on the cantonal road to Flawil, was used for car traffic until 1997.

Upon the wooden Letzi Bridge, the hiking trail to Ganterschwil crosses the Neckar River.

The nearby hamlet of Winzenburg with its Winzenberger Höhe (heights) (836 m) is a popular destination with local lovers of landscape.

B&B Winzenberg (Schweiz Lütisburg) - Booking.com

Lütisburg’s claim to fame, beside its bridges, lies with the two brothers Germann….

War of any kind is abhorrent. 

Remember that since the end of World War II, over 40 million people have been killed by conventional weapons. 

So, if we should succeed in averting nuclear war, we must not let ourselves be sold the alternative of conventional weapons for killing our fellow man. 

We must cure ourselves of the habit of war.

(Patrick White)

Modern warfare: Into the Jaws of Death, 1944

Kilian Germann (1485 – 1530) was the son of Johannes Germann, the Chief bailiff of Lütisburg, and brother of the mercenary leader (and later bailiff) Hans Germann (also known as the Batzenhammer) and Gallus Germann (also chief bailiff of Lütisburg).

Kilian was governor in Roschach (1523 – 1528) and in Wil (1528 -1529).

In 1529, Kilian was elected to be the next Prince-Abbot of St. Gallen in Rapperswil.

After his confirmation by Pope Clement VII (1478 – 1534), Kilian was also proposed for this position to Emperor Charles V (1500 – 1558) who confirmed him in February 1530.

Above: Coat of arms of Kilian Germann

But life often thwarts the best-laid plans….

What I am interested in is the relationship between the blundering human being and God.

I belong to no church, but I have a religious faith.

It is an attempt to express that, among other things, that I try to do.

Whether he confesses to being religious or not, everyone has a religious faith of a kind.

I myself am a blundering human being with a belief in God who made us and we got out of hand, a kind of Frankenstein monster.

Everyone can make mistakes, including God.

I believe that God does intervene.

I think there is a Divine Power, a Creator, who has an influence on human beings if they are willing to be open to Him.

(Patrick White)

Michelangelo - Creation of Adam (cropped).jpg

Above: Creation of Adam, Michelangelo, Sistine Chapel, Vatican City

Prince-Abbot Kilian fled to Meersburg (on the German side of Lake Constance) in 1529 after the outbreak of the First Kappel War.

From February 1530, Kilian lived at Wolfurt Castle near Bregenz (on the Austrian part of Lake Constance).

Above: Wolfurt Castle

In exile, Kilian nonetheless cultivated his social network with the southern German nobility in order to secure political pressure on the reformed movement on the Prince-Abbot’s lands, which did not escape the attention of his enemy, the reformer Vadian.

Above: Vadian statue, St. Gallen

In 1530, Kilian represented the Abbey of St. Gallen at the Council of Basel.

In July, he visited the Augsburg Reichstag (government).

It looked like Kilian’s fading star was beginning to shine once more.

That same year of his visits to Basel and Augsburg, returning to Bregenz after a visit to the Earl of Montfort, Kilian drowned when his horse fell into the Bregenz Ach (stream).

He was buried in the Mehrerau Monastery near Bregenz.

Abtei Mehrerau – Blick vom Gebhardsberg

Discipline is the soul of an army.

It makes small numbers formidable, procures success to the weak and success to all.

(George Washington)

Gilbert Stuart Williamstown Portrait of George Washington.jpg

Above: George Washington (1730 – 1799)

Hans Germann (1500 – 1550), Kilian’s younger brother, was an officer in the service of the French Crown for many years.

After returning home, Hans supported his brother Kilian during the turmoil of the Reformation.

Contemporaries described Hans as “a firm, brave, but rough, frivolous journeyman, who had sold many of his fellow countrymen to France for boring gold.”

Above: Coat of arms of Captain Hans Germann, Kreuzenstein Castle, Austria

I guess we find both sinners and saints in every family and in every community.

The socially disadvantaged of Ganterschwil

In my books I have lifted bits from various religions in trying to come to a better understanding.

I have made use of religious themes and symbols.

Now, as the world becomes more pagan, one has to lead people in the same direction in a different way.

(Patrick White)

Down the road (so to speak) is the village of Ganterschwil (population: 1,186).

It is first mentioned in 779 as “Cantrichesuilare“.

(Try saying that five times fast….)

Pfarrkirche von Ganterschwil

Above:  Parish church, Ganterschwil, Canton St. Gallen

Grain and oats were grown and processed in three mills here.

From the 18th century, contract weaving became important.

Small textile factories developed from family businesses.

In the 19th century, the livestock and dairy indutries replaced grain cultivation.

After the crash in the textile industry in 1918, only smaller companies could be built.

In 2000, around half of the working population was employed in the service sector.

Wappen von Ganterschwil

Above: Coat of arms of Ganterschwil

The Home for Socially Disadvantaged Children, founded in 1913 by Reformer Pastor Alfred Lauchener, developed into the Centre for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Sonnenhof.

Klinik Sonnenhof Ganterschwil

Above: Centre for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Sonnenhof, Ganterschwil

In Ganterschwil, there are many small businesses that offer jobs.

The best-known is the Berlinger Company, which was active in tape production.

Today it plays a leading role in the production of doping control systems, in the form of counterfeit-proof sample glasses.

Temperature Monitoring / Doping Control Equipment- Berlinger & Co. AG

In the parish church there are frescoes from the Middle Ages discovered and restored in 1941 and now under the protection of the Swiss Confederation.

Ganterschwil is a place difficult to define.

Is it the past?

The future?

What is it now?

The Beautiful Minds of Lichtensteig

Lichtensteig (population: 1,870) is first mentioned in 1228 and was founded by the Counts of Toggenburg as “Liehtunsteige“.

A market is mentioned in 1374 and the right to hold markets was confirmed in 1400.

A letter of privileges issued by the Lords of Raron (1439) confirms the existence of 12 burghers and the appointment of judges by the burghers and the Lords.

After the acquisition of the Toggenburg by St. Gallen Abbey in 1468, Lichtensteig became the seat of the Abbot’s reeve.

The council declared Lichtensteig’s support for the Reformation in 1528.

The sole church at this time was shared by both Reformed and Catholic believers, while their schools were kept separate until 1868.

Lichtensteig’s importance as a market town increased in the 19th century with the development of the textile home working industry in the Toggenburg.

In the early 20th century, there were six yearly markets and a weekly livestock market.

Lichtensteig’s connection to the railroad dates to 1870.

Lichtensteig

Above: Lichtensteig, Canton St. Gallen

I don’t quite know how to say this politely, so I will say it directly.

It seems the further south one travels in Deutschschweiz, the smarter people seem to be.

Thurgau is blood, sweat, tears and toil.

Thurgau is always in the middle of things, between two places but belonging to neither.

Wars of religion and between nations have been fought here for centuries.

Tourists do not linger in Thurgau but traverse it en route to places deemed more interesting.

This is farm country, a land of labour and pragmatism, where poets party in private homes but never parade themselves in political protest processions.

Coat of arms of Kanton Thurgau

Above: Coat of arms of Canton Thurgau

St. Gallen, both city and canton especially the City itself, bears the scent of incense, the stains on a faithful shroud, the remnants of religious rule.

Coat of arms of Kanton St. Gallen

Above: Coat of arms of Canton St. Gallen

St. Gallen is reminiscent of (Giovanni Bocaccio’s Decameron) Ceppello of Prato, who after a lifetime of evil, hoodwinks a holy friar with a deathbed confession and comes to be venerated as St. Ciappelletto, except in reverse with the holy friar hoodwinking the world into venerating it as holier than it could have been.

Decameron, The (unabridged) – Naxos AudioBooks

Granted that the St. Gallen Abbey Library is truly worthy of its UNESCO designation as “an outstanding example of a large Carolingian monastery and was, since the 8th century until its secularisation in 1805, one of the most important cultural centres in Europe”.

The library collection is the oldest in Switzerland, and one of earliest and most important monastic libraries in the world.

The library holds almost 160,000 volumes, with most available for public use.

In addition to older printed books, the collection includes 1,650 incunabula (books printed before 1500), and 2,100 manuscripts dating back to the 8th through 15th centuries – among the most notable of the latter are items of Irish, Carolingian, and Ottonian production.

These codices are held inside glass cases, each of which is topped by a carved cherub offering a visual clue as to the contents of the shelves below – for instance, the case of astronomy-related materials bears a cherub observing the books through a telescope.

Books published before 1900 are to be read in a special reading room.

The manuscript B of the Nibelungenlied (The Song of the Nibelungs, an epic poem written around 1200, the first heroic epic put into writing in Germany, helping to found a larger genre of written heroic poetry) is kept here.

Above: St. Gallen Abbey Library

Granted that the University of St. Gallen (“from insight to impact“) is, according to international rankings,  considered among the world’s leading business schools.

University of St. Gallen logo english.svg

But, my view of the city of St. Gallen is coloured by my experience, which has meant a working man’s life split between teaching at private schools similar to the cowboy outfit of Wil and formerly working as a Starbucks barista.

Neither side seems reflective of St. Gallen’s intellectual potential.

Above: Old houses, St. Gallen

(To be fair, people don’t actually hate places.

They hate their experiences of places.)

The two half-cantons of Appenzell Innerrhoden and Appenzell Ausserrhoden have, over time, perhaps without justification, become the butt of many a joke from the rest of Switzerland when one seeks a place to label as backwards.

Coat of arms of Appenzell

Above: Coat of arms of the half-cantons of Appenzell

To be fair to the comedians, Appenzell still has elections where folks line up in the town square to cast their votes by raising their arms to show their assent and it was the last place in the nation to give women the right to vote.

Farmers still lead their cattle in great processions through towns to Alpine pastures in springtime and back again when winter threatens.

As one travels from Thurgau south towards Ticino one senses a change in spirit.

Swiss cantons

Already we have encountered a village that fostered the growth of a Pulitzer Prize-deserving journalist and we have traversed towns of castles and artists, of epic tales and bridges over troubled waters.

But it is here in Lichtensteig where the air becomes rarified, where farmers think and plowmen wax poetic.

The time has come when scientific truth must cease to be the property of the few, when it must be woven into the common life of the world.” (Louis Agassiz)

Louis Agassiz H6.jpg

Above: Louis Agassiz (1807 – 1873)

Jost Bürgi (1552 – 1632) is probably the kind of man Agassiz had in mind.

Lichtensteiger Bürgi was a Swiss clockmaker, a maker of astronomical instruments and a mathematician.

Although an autodidact (he taught himself), Bürgi was already during his lifetime considered one of the most excellent mechanical engineers of his generation (think of a Da Vinci or an Edison).

Bürgi’s employer, William IV (1532 – 1592), the Landgrave of Hesse-Kessel, in a letter to Tycho Brahe (1542 – 1601)(Denmark’s greatest astronomer) praised Bürgi as “a second Archimedes” (287 – 212 BC).

The lunar crater Byrgius (the Latin form of Bürgi) is named in this Lichtensteiger’s honour.

Above: Portrait of Jost Bürgi

Another thinking man from Lichtensteig was Augustine Reding (1625 – 1692), a Benedictine, the Prince-Abbot of Einsiedeln Abbey and a respected theological writer.

At Einsiedeln, Reding organized the construction of the Abbey’s choir, confessional and the Chapel of St. Magdalena.

In 1675, Einsiedeln took charge of the college at Bellinzona, which was conducted by the monks of the Abbey until their suppression in 1852.

Reding watched carefully over discipline of Abbey affairs and insisted on a thorough intellectual training of his monks.

Above: Einsiedeln Cloister, Canton Schwyz

Lichtenberger Johann Ulrich Giezendanner (1686 – 1738) learned the profession of goldsmithing in Toggenburg.

Through his parish priest Niklaus Scherrer and his friend August Hermann Francke in Halle, Giezendanner began to practice pietism.

Giezendanner was banished from Toggenburg on suspicion of pietism, because he threatened the authorities with the criminal judgment of God.

His threats led to an investigation by a pietist commission set up by the Council, in which the secular side had the majority.

As a result, Giezendanner was expelled without a trial in 1710.

And so he went to Zürich.

In 1714, Giezendanner began studying theology at the University of Marburg, heard lectures from Johann Heinrich Hottinger (1681 – 1750) and worked as a teacher in the Marburg orphanage.

Because Giezendanner preached on his own initiative in Marburg, he was expelled from the state of Hesse.

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After a short stay in Heidelberg, he returned to eastern Switzerland and began to hold secret meetings in Bottinghoffen near Scherzingen, less than 10 klicks (Canadian for kilometres) from my Landschlacht driveway.

Above: Bottighofen Harbour

As a representative of the radical pietism in German-speaking Switzerland, he returned to Zürich until he was expelled from there for his preaching.

On 29 June 1716, Giezendanner’s most memorable sermon of inspiration was given at the country estate of Johann Kaspar Schneeberger in Engstringen (just outside Zürich), in which Giezendanner said:

Hear now, my word, you stupid sticky clods of earth, where is your lie?

And so, hear, hear, heads of this place, you enter as gods and lords, but what kind of god you have for your rule, is it not with you all that you bring your belly to God?

With great arrogance to exclaim sins on the streets, when you walk on the streets, sin will take place and all of you will find it.

Unterengstringen, im Vordergrund das Kloster Fahr

Above: Engstringen, Canton Zürich

Unable to win friends and influence people in Switzerland, Giezendanner emigrated to America in 1734, working as a goldsmith in Charleston.

In 1736, he founded the first church of Toggenburger, Rhine Valley and Appenzell pietists in South Carolina’s Orangeburg County.

Above: Historic houses, Charleston, South Carolina, USA

It is a pity that those trained in the uncertainties of faith couldn’t be made responsible for the training of those who lead nations.

Perhaps a rigorous examination of our leaders’ intellectual and moral training might prevent the rise of demagogues and populists whose only qualification for power is their desire to dominate others.

Another man whose mind was a beautiful thing to behold was Max Rychner.

Max Rychner (1897 – 1965) was a writer, journalist, translator and literary critic.

Hannah Arendt (1906 – 1975), widely considered to be one of the most important political philosophers of the 20th century, called Rychner “one of the most educated and subtle figures in the intellectual life of the era“.

Rychner is considered, among other things, to be the discoverer of the poet Paul Celan (1920 – 1970), the publisher of the memoirs of Walter Benjamin (1892 – 1940), the editor-translator of philosopher-poet Paul Valéry (1871 – 1945), as well as being himself a poet, novelist and essayist.

Rychner is best known for:

  • Freundeswort (Word of a friend)
  • Die Ersten: Ein Epyllion (The first: an epyllion)(not sure what an epyllion is)
  • Unter anderem zur europäischen Literatur zwischen zwei Weltkriegen (On European literature between two world wars)
  • Arachne
  • Bedelte und testierte Welt (Affirmed and certified world)

Bei mir laufen Fäden zusammen - Max Rychner | Wallstein Verlag

According to Wikipedia, Rycher’s “method of literary admiration, based on hermeneutic models, raised formal aesthetic criteria far beyond questions of content and meaning.”

I have no idea of what that means, but it sure sounds impressive.

An incomplete sphere made of large, white, jigsaw puzzle pieces. Each puzzle piece contains one glyph from a different writing system, with each glyph written in black.

Wikivoyage (German version only) recommends Lichtensteig for:

  • the alleys and houses in the old quarter of the town

  • the Toggenburger Museum (Sundays 1 – 5 pm)

  • Fredy’s Mechanical Music Museum (last weekend of the months April to December at 3 pm / guided tours only / five-person minimum / CHF 14 per person)

Fredy's Mechanical Music Museum | Switzerland Tourism

  • Erlebniswelt Toggenburg (Adventure World Toggenburg)(Wednesdays and weekends: 1030 to 1630)

(It’s a small world, after all.)

Erlebniswelt Toggenburg - BESUCHER

  • Various sports facilities, including a climbing wall and an outdoor pool
  • the Thurweg which wends through the town

Datei:Thurweg..jpg

  • Jazz Days, with international jazz greats, annually

Jazztage Lichtensteig | Erlebnisregion Ostschweiz & Bodensee

Travel as a Political Act

Now you may be wondering why I bother telling you all of this, explaining in painful prose what lies beneath the surface of places.

Travel guide writer Rick Steves said it best:

Travel connects people with people.

It helps us fit more comfortably and compatibly into a shrinking world.

It inspires creative new solutions to persistent problems facing our nation.

We can’t understand our world without experiencing it.

There is more to travel than good-value hotels, great art and tasty cuisine.

Travel as a political act means the Traveller can have the time of his life and come home smarter – with a better understanding of the interconnectedness of today’s world and just how we fit in.”

Travel as a Political Act (Rick Steves): Steves, Rick ...

Steves sees the travel writer of the 21st century like a court jester of the Middle Ages.

Rick Steves cropped.jpg

Above: Rick Steves

While thought of as a comedian, the jester was in a unique position to tell truth to power without being punished.

Back then, kings were absolute rulers – detached from the lives of their subjects.

The court jester’s job was to mix it up with people that the King would never meet.

The jester would play in the gutter with the riffraff.

Then, having fingered the gritty pulse of society, the true lifeblood of the Kingdom, the jester would come back into the court and tell the King the truth.

Above: “Keying Up” – The Court Jester, by William Merritt Chase, 1875.

Your Highness, the people are angered by the cost of mead. 

They are offended by the Queen’s parties. 

The Pope has more influence than you. 

Everybody is reading the heretics’ pamphlets. 

Your stutter is the butt of many rude jokes.

Is there not a parallel here between America and this Kingdom?

Comedians like Seth Meyers, Stephen Colbert and Trevor Noah are listened to more by the average American than the actual news these comedians parody.

For these jesters of 21st century television know the pulse of the nation far more accurately than do the mandarins of power in Washington.

Seth Meyers by Gage Skidmore.jpg

Above: Seth Meyers

Stephen Colbert December 2019.jpg

Above: Stephen Colbert

Trevor Noah 2017.jpg

Above: Trevor Noah

Trump is the butt of many rude jokes, because he deserves to be.

Trump has leaders from around the world openly laughing at him at ...

Meyers, Colbert and Noah are graffiti writers on the walls of sacred institutions, watching rich riffraff ride roughshod over the rest of those whose sole hopes from the gutter is that their only direction from their perspective is up.

File:Who Watches the Watchmen.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

In the Kingdom, the King did not kill the jester.

In order to rule more wisely, the King needed the jester’s insights.

In America, the President would love to kill his critics.

He is not interested in ruling wisely, only perpetually.

Official Keep America Great 45th President Hat – Trump Make ...

Many of today’s elected leaders have no better connection with real people (especially beyond their borders) than those divinely ordained monarchs did centuries ago.

Any Traveller, including your humble blogger and you my patient readers, can play jester in your own communities.

Sometimes a jackass won’t move unless a gesturing mosquito is biting its behind.

Mosquito 2007-2.jpg

Consider countries like El Salvador (where people don’t dream of having two cars in every garage) or Denmark (where they pay high taxes with high expectations and are satisfied doing so) or Iran (where many compromise their freedom for their fidelity to their faith).

Travellers can bring back valuable insights and, just like those insights were needed in the Middle Ages, this understanding is desperately needed in our age of anxiety.

Ideally, travel broadens our perspectives personally, culturally and politically.

Suddenly, the palette with which we paint the parameters of our personalities has more colour, more vibrancy.

We realize that there are exciting alternatives to the social and community norms that our less-travelled neighbours may never consider.

It is like discovering there are other delicacies off the menu, that there is more than one genre of music available on the radio, that there is an upstairs alcove above the library yet to be discovered, that you haven’t yet tasted all 31 flavours.

1970s Baskin Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream logo

That there are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy.

I will never be against tourists who travel to escape their workaday lives and simply wish to relax in as uncomplicated a fashion as humanly possible.

Sometimes this is needed.

Kokomo song cover.jpg

No, I am referring to Travellers who travel with a purpose on purpose.

People who try to connect with other people.

People who take history seriously.

Yesterday’s history informs today’s news, which becomes all our tomorrows.

Those with a knowledge (or at least a curiosity) of history can understand current events in a broader context and respond to them more thoughtfully.

As you travel, opportunities to enjoy history are everywhere.

Work on cultivating a general grasp of the sweep of history and you will be able to infuse your travels with more meaning.

Even if, in this time of corona, our travels are local.

Above: History by Frederick Dielman (1896)

I digress.

The Warriors of Wattwil

The long and winding road leads us to Wattwil (population: 8,740), first documented in 897 as “Wattinurlare” (which sounds exotic but only means “Watto’s village“).

Wattwil Gesamtansicht Yburg.jpg

Above: Wattwil, Canton St. Gallen

Around 1230, Heinrich von Iberg had Iberg Castle built here.

It was destroyed during the Appenzell Wars (1401 – 1429) and rebuilt.

It served as the seat of the bailiffs until 1805.

Above: Iberg Castle, Wattwil

In 1468, the entire Toggenburg County (the last Toggenburg Count, Friedrich VII died without heirs) was bought by St. Gallen Abbey.

The Pfaffenweise (place of assembly) (today a cemetery) served as a community and war gathering point and as a place to demonstrate hommage to the Prince-Abbots of St. Gallen.

Above: Wattwil station

In 1529, Pastor Mauriz Miles from Lichtensteig introduced the Reformation to Wattwil.

The population, which supported the religious innovations by a large majority, was able to prevail against the Catholic abbots.

Catholic Services were only reintroduced in 1593.

The Wattwil church was used by both faiths until a new Catholic church was built in 1968.

Above: Wattwil Reformed Church

Above: Wattwil Catholic Church

In 1621, the Capuchin Convent of St. Mary the Angel was built on the slope called the Wenkenürti (I have no idea what this translates to.) after a devastating fire at their previous location on Pfanneregg (a hill where the Vitaparcours – think “outdoor gym path” – is practiced).

The Convent is an excellently preserved complex with a highly baroque church.

Sadly, the Sisters left the monastery in 2010.

Above: St. Mary the Angel Convent

In the 17th century, St. Gallen Abbey wanted to expand the road known as Karrenweg via Rickenpass, in order to ensure a better connection between St. Gallen and Catholic Central Switzerland.

The majority of the Reformed Wattwil populace refused to work on it or contribute to it, tirggering the Toggenburg Turmoil (1699 – 1712), which led to the Second Villmerger War of 1712.

The road was only realized in 1786.

Wattwil’s traditional linen weaving mill was replaced by a cotton factory in 1750.

In the 19th century, more than a dozen companies started operating in the town.

In 1881, the Toggenburg weaving school was founded, from which the Swiss Textile Technical School later emerged.

The spirit of intelligence, the thirst for knowledge, the expression of wisdom can also be found in Wattwil.

Ulrich Bräker (1735 – 1798) was an autodidact, writer and diarist, known for his autobiography, widely received at the time as the voice of an unspoiled “natural man” of the lower classes, based on the title which Bräker became known “der arme Mann im Toggenburg” (the poor man of Toggenburg).

Bräker was born the oldest of eight siblings.

Above: Bräker’s birth house in Näppis near Wattwil

Bräker was educated in literacy and basic arithmetic during ten weeks each winter, working as a goatherd for the rest of the year.

In 1754, the family moved to Wattwil, where Bräker worked various jobs.

In 1755, he entered the service of a Prussian recruiting officer.

Against Bräker’s wishes, he was pressed into military duty in the 13th infantry regiment of the Prussian army in 1756, but he managed to escape later that same year in the midst of the Battle of Lobositz.

War Ensign of Prussia (1816).svg

Above: War flag of Prussia

Returning to his native Toggenburg, Bräker married Salome Ambühl (1735 – 1822) of Wattwil in 1761 and had several children.

Bräker built a house “auf der Hochsteig” (on the high slope) outside of Wattwil and traded in cotton for the local home industry.

Above: Bräker’s house auf der Hochsteig, contemporary drawing (c. 1794; the house was destroyed in 1836)

He began writing a diary.

Der arme Mann im Tockenburg - Ulrich Bräker - Buch kaufen | Ex Libris

Bräker’s writing talent was discovered by local writer and intellectual Johann Ludwig Ambühl.

Bräker published some texts in Ambühl’s Brieftasche aus den Alpen (Letter Bag from the Alps).

Bräker’s writing is based on the pietistic outlook and reflects familiarity with the Bible as well as a keen observation of nature and an enthusiastic interest in the translated works of Shakespeare.

9781166984809: Die Brieftasche Aus Den Alpen (1780) (German ...

Bräker’s diary is a touching human document containing Lebensweisheit (pearls of pure pramatic wisdom).

Sämtliche Schriften, 5 Bde., Bd.1, Tagebücher 1768-1778: Amazon.de ...

Bräker lived to see, and was perturbed by, the French invasion of Switzerland in the spring of 1798.

He died in September that same year.

Johann Ludwig Ambühl (1750 – 1800) was a civil servant and a writer – much like my aforementioned Canadian friend at the beginning of this post.

Ambühl was the son of the schoolmaster of Wattwil, Hans Jacob Ambühl (1699 – 1773).

At the age of 23, Johann became his father’s successor in 1733, for he had helped Hans, increasingly blind, with seven hours of instruction every day since he was 12.

In his free time, Johann mainly devoted himself to studying geometry, music, reading, drawing and collecting natural objects.

In Wattwil, Ambühl was considered a Stölzling (nerd), because of his always strict and serious appearance in public.

9781120610225: Die Brieftasche Aus Den Alpen (1780) (German ...

In 1783, on the recommendation of Gregorius Grob, Ambühl was hired as a court master by the rich Rheineck merchant Jacob Laurenz Custer.

In this function, he accompanied one of his students to Strasbourg in 1786, to Geneva (1788 – 1789) and in 1790 on a study trip through Italy.

The majority of Ambühl’s literary work consists of plays of extremely patriotic content.

It was like sawdust, the unhappiness.

It infiltrated everything.

Everything was a problem, everything made her cry….but it was so hard to say exactly what the problem was in the first place.” 

(Melanie Thernstrom, The Dead Girl)

The Dead Girl by Melanie Thernstrom

Hans Adolf Pestalozzi (1929 – 2004) was a social critic of late 20th century capitalism, which eventually led to his becoming a bestselling author.

Hans A Pestalozzi - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

Born in Zürich, Pestalozzi, after his studies at the University of St. Gallen, started working for Migros.

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In the 1960s he built up the Gottlieb Duttweiler Institut, a think tank named ater the Migros founder, in Rüschlikon (on Lake Zürich).

The Institute was established to investigate the range of possible shortcomings and negative effects of capitalism, in particular within Western consumer society, so that they could be combated more effectively.

Pestalozzi fulfilled that task very thoroughly, too thoroughly, especially in his lectures, so much so that in 1977 he was fired by Migros.

Rather than looking for a new job, he became a freelance writer and self-proclaimed “autonomous agitator” who sided with the fledging European youth, peace and ecological movements.

He preached “positive subversion” and tried to convince people that using their own intelligence was the right thing to do.

HANS A. PESTALOZZI | Autor, Positiv

Above: Pestalozzi (centre), After us the future, from positive subversion (left) and Off the trees of the apes (right)

Moreover, Pestalozzi demanded a guaranteed minimum income for everybody.

Pestalozzi died a recluse by suicide in his home near Wattwil.

Einsamer Tod eines wirtschaftskritischen Managers

Wikivoyage recommends the Cloister, the Castle and the Kubli Church in Wattwil.

The current Wikivoyage logo

The Wattwil area is great for hiking and mountain biking.

And somewhere down the highway….

The Afterglow of Ebnat- Kappel

Perhaps the easiest way of making a town’s acquaintance is to ascertain how the people in it work, how they love and how they die. 

In our little town (is this, one wonders, an effect of the climate?) all three are done on much the same lines, with the same feverish yet casual air. 

The truth is that everyone is bored and devotes himself to cultivating habits.

(Albert Camus, The Plague)

The Plague (1992 film).jpg

Ebnat-Kappel (population: 5,031) was first mentioned in 1218 as “Capelle“.

On 26 July 1854, a fire almost completely destroyed the village.

In 1847, Johann Gerhard Oncken founded the first Swiss Baptist church here in E-K.

Ebnat-Kappel Vilagxo kun preghejo 611.jpg

People visit Ebnat-Kappel primarily to ski or to follow the 60-kilometre Thurweg.

Worth viewing are:

  • the Reformed Church in the centre of Ebnat along with the church hall with its front tower

  • the Steinfels House (a Gothic building with Baroque decor)

  • the Ackerhaus (built for Albert Edelmann who donated the house to serve as the local museum)

Museum Hauskultur Toggenburg Ackerhaus, Ebnat-Kappel

  • Typical wooden Toggenburg houses preserved in nearby Eich

Bäuerliches Toggenburger Haus in Ebnat-Kappel Foto & Bild ...

  • the Felsenstein House in Kappel with Gothic windows and cross-vaulted rooms
  • the willow wood figures near the station depicting a chapel and an unicorn

Wappen von Ebnat-Kappel

Above: Coat of arms of Ebnat – Kappel

  • the Sinnepark (a sensory park) just south of the village

Der Sinnepark - Verkehrsverein Ebnat-Kappel

Above: Ebnat-Kappel station

Notable people of Ebnat-Kappel are:

  • Albert Edelmann (1886 – 1963) was a teacher, painter and sponsor of local folk and cultural assets.

His Ackerhaus museum shows objects of Toggenburg culture from four centuries.

In addition to household items and equipment from the Toggenburg, the collection contains rural paintings, pictures by Babeli Giezendammer and other painters, seven house organs and neck zithers.

By the end of the 19th century, the neck zither game in Toggenburg was forgotten.

Thanks to Edelmann this tradition was revived.

There is a room dedicated to the Biedermeier period (1815 – 1848) in Toggenburg.

Edelmann’s former studio shows his CV and his work.

While the Museum offers encounters with the past, the culture of Now is everpresent.

Above: Albert Edelmann

I enjoy decoration. 

By accumulating this mass of detail you throw light on things in a longer sense. 

In the long run it all adds up. 

It creates a texture – how shall I put it – a background, a period, which makes everything you write that much more convincing. 

Of course, all artists are terrible egoists. 

Unconsciously you are largely writing about yourself. 

I could never write anything factual. 

I only have confidence in myself when I am another character. 

All the characters in my books are myself, but they are a kind of disguise.

(Patrick White)

  • Babeli Giezendanner (1831 – 1905) was a painter, representative of Appenzeller / Toggenburger peasant painting.

She was born the third of nine children.

In 1861, she married master shoemaker Ulrich Remisegger.

In 1873, he died in an accident.

As a widow with three children, Babeli supported her family through weaving, drawing and painting.

In 1904, she moved to the Hemberg poorhouse and lived there until she died in her 74th year.

Possibly all art flowers more readily in silence. 

Certainly the state of simplicity and humility is the only desirable one for artist or for man. 

While to reach it may be impossible, to attempt to do so is imperative.

(Patrick White)

Babeli Giezendanner learned to draw from her father, which meant that she had a good knowledge of perspective drawing that characterizes her work.

Furthermore, she worked temporarily in Lichtensteig for the lithographer Johan Georg Schmied.

Stylistic relationships to the work of the Swiss peasant painter Johannes Müller from Stein (AR) can be proven.

He may have been one of her role models.

The artist’s oeuvre is diverse and extensive, the inventory includes around 100 works.

They include the depiction of houses and villages, alpine lifts and cattle shows.

She created numerous livery paintings and memorial sheets for birth, baptism, wedding and death.

For commemorative albums, she painted pictures and wrote poems.

The painting of umbrellas and dials of clocks has been handed down in the vernacular, but cannot be proven.

Today, many of her paintings and drawings are exhibited in the Toggenburg Museum in Lichtensteig and in the Museum Ackerhus in Ebnat-Kappel.

Very early in my life it was too late.

(Marguerite Duras, The Lover)

OnFiction: Marguerite Duras The Lover

I start to get the feeling that something is really wrong.

Like all the drugs put together – the lithium, the Prozac, the desipramine and the Desyrel that I take to sleep at night – can no longer combat whatever it is that was wrong with me in the first place. 

I feel like a defective model, like I came off the assembly line flat-out f….d and my parents should have taken me back for repairs before the warranty ran out. 

But that was so long ago.

I start to think there really is no cure for depression, that happiness is an ongoing battle, and I wonder if it isn’t one I’ll have to fight for as long as I live. 

I wonder if it’s worth it.

I start to feel like I can’t maintain the facade any longer, that I may just start to show through. 

And I wish I knew what was wrong.

Maybe something about how stupid my whole life is.

I don’t know.

(Elizabeth Wurzel, Prozac Nation)

Prozac Nation film.jpg

  • Guido Looser (1892 – 1937) was a writer.

Looser attended high school in Zürich and then studied history, German and geography at universities in Zürich and Berlin.

He then worked as a teacher in Zürich.

From 1922, he suffered increasingly from depression which led to long hospital stays in Kreuzlingen and Oetiwil.

In 1937, Looser committed suicide, given the impossibility of continuing to fund adequate hospitalization.

Guido Looser

Looser wrote novels, essays and poems, strongly influenced by his psychological suffering and revolving around illness, melancholy and death.

Looser is known for:

  • Nachglanz (Afterglow)
  • Josuas Hingabe (Joshua’s dedication)
  • Die Würde (Dignity)
  • Nur nie jemandem sagen, wohin man reist (Just never tell anyone where you are going)

Nur nie jemandem sagen, wohin man reist. Prosa - Guido Looser ...

“You only live twice: once when you are born and once when you look death in the face.”

(Ian Fleming)

Above: Ian Fleming (1908 – 1964)

Bridges over troubled waters

Bridge Over Troubled Water single.jpg

When I think of all the things he did because he loved me – what people visit on each other out of something like love. 

It is enough for all the world’s woe. 

You don’t need hate to have a perfectly miserable time.

(Richard Bausch, Mr. Field’s Daughter)

Mr. Field's Daughter: Bausch, Richard: 9780671640514: Amazon.com ...

Stein (population: 1,429) has a few sites worth viewing:

In the village centre, the 18th century church and the Appenzeller Folklore Museum with, among other things, looms and embroidery machines from the 19th century.

Wappen von Stein

Above: Coat of arms, Stein, Canton Appenzell

Between the hamlet of Störgel and the St. Gallen suburb of Haggen lies the Haggen Bridge, the highest pedestrian footbridge in Europe, which spans the 355-metre wide gorge of the Sitter at a height of 99 metres.

The structure called “Ganggelibrugg” (wobbly bridge) was actually planned for traffic between Stein and St. Gallen, but due to serious structural defects it could never be handed over to its intended purpose.

For a long time it was the most used bridge for suicide in Switzerland.

Since 2010, the bridge has been secured with nets that help prevent such tragedies.

Nearby are the Kubelbrücke (the Talking Bridge, a covered wooden bridge over the Urnäsch River in the hamlet of Kubel), the Abtebrücke (the Abbey Bridge, a covered wooden bridge over the River Sitter in the hamlet of Kubel, built by the St. Gallen Monastery) and the Hüsli covered wooden bridges across the Sitter and the Wattbach beneath the Ganggelibrugg in the hamlets of Blatten and Zweibruggen.

Also worth visiting in Stein is the Appenzeller Show Dairy, where you can watch the production of Appenzeller cheese.

(Open: 0900 – 1800 / Guided tours: Wednesday and Sundays, 1400 and 1700)

Everybody is interested (or should be) in Switzerland.

No other country in Europe offers a richer return to the Traveller for his time and effort.

To revisit Switzerland is for the old to renew one’s youth, while for the young it is to gain a lifelong sense of the inspiring grandeurs of this wonderworld.

Above: The Matterhorn

The Traveller goes to Switzerland chiefly to look at mountains, the Swiss Alps are as effectively displayed as the treasures in a well-arranged museum, but the mountains are not the only things in Switzerland.

There are the towns and cities and the people, those admirable Swiss people, who have made their land in many respects the model country of the world.

Above: Lake Lucerne, view from Pilatus

(If you are not sure about this, just ask the Swiss.)

Coat of arms of Switzerland

The sad thing is that while Switzerland may be the playground of Europe, it is not the playground of the Swiss.

Switzerland is their workshop, where they toil at many industries and practice many useful arts of which the outside world knows little.

The world knows of music boxes, cheese and watches and that the Swiss are born hotel keepers with comfort and courtesy as their watchwords.

Non-Swiss tend to dismiss Switzerland as an irrelevance in the broader sweep of European history.

Because the country is peaceful today, the assumption is that it has always been somehow inherently tranquil, but this is an illusion.

Until the middle of the 19th century, Switzerland was the most unstable country in Europe.

The Alpine calm of today came at the price of a millennium of war.

The Swiss may no longer be an offensive force, but they are defensively armed to the teeth.

The Reformation, which began in Germany in the early 16th century, was sparked in Switzerland by a native of the next town down the road….

Above: Map of the Old Swiss Confederacy 1536 showing the religious division

Within a few days I will go to the Papal Legate [Pucci], and if he shall open a conversation on the subject as he did before, I will urge him to warn the Pope not to issue an excommunication [against Luther], for which I think would be greatly against him [the Pope].

For if it be issued I believe the Germans will equally despise the Pope and the excommunication.

But do you be of good cheer, for our day will not lack those who will teach Christ faithfully, and who will give up their lives for Him willingly, even though among men their names shall not be in good repute after this life…

So far as I am concerned I look for all evil from all of them: I mean both ecclesiastics and laymen.

I beseech Christ for this one thing only, that He will enable me to endure all things courageously, and that He break me as a potter’s vessel or make me strong, as it pleased Him.

If I be excommunicated I shall think of the learned and holy Hilary, who was exiled from France to Africa, and of Lucius, who though driven from his seat at Rome returned again with great honour.

Not that I compare myself with them: for as they were better than I so they suffered what was a greater ignominy.

And yet if it were good to flourish I would rejoice to suffer insult for the name of Christ.

But let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.

Lately I have read scarcely any thing of Luther’s, but what I have seen of his hitherto does not seem to me to stray from gospel teaching.

You know – if you remember – that what I have always spoken of in terms of the highest commendation in him is that he supports his position with authoritative witness.”

(Huldrych Zwingli)

Ulrich-Zwingli-1.jpg

Above: Portrait of Ulrich Zwingli (1484 – 1531)

Swiss city after city overthrew ecclesiastical overlords in favour of the new Protestantism, with city authorities gaining new power over the countryside in the process.

Zwingli’s attempts in 1531 to reorganize the Confederation under the urban leadership of Zürich and Bern led to armed conflict and the eventual loss of his life in battle.

The Reformation continued to spread, with Geneva – at the time not Swiss – emerging as a major centre for Protestantism, thanks to the zealotry of French priest and Reformer Jean Calvin.

Increasingly the Catholic cantons nurtured an inferiority complex towards the Protestant cities, which held a grip on political authority.

Above: Religious division of the Old Confederacy during the 17th and 18th century

Only shared economic interests keep the Swiss Confederation together.

I have mentioned the textile industry as crucial to the towns we passed through, for it was textiles, among other industries, where merchants in the cities (generally Protestant) supplied raw materials to peasants in the countryside (generally Catholic) who worked up finished products and returned them for trading on.

Wildhaus (population: 1,205) is first mentioned in 1344 as “Wildenhuss“.

In addition to tourism, agriculture and forestry from the economic focus.

The birthplace of the Reformer Huldrych Zwingli, built in 1449, is one of the oldest wooden houses in Switzerland.

(For more on Zwingli and travels following his life, please see:

Canada Slim… 

  • and the Road to Reformation
  • and the Wild Child of Toggenburg
  • and the Thundering Hollows
  • and the Battle for Switzerland’s Soul
  • and the Monks of the Dark Forest
  • and the Battlefield Brotherhood
  • and the Lakeside Pilgrimage

….of my other blog, The Chronicles of Canada Slim at https://canadaslim.wordpress.com.)

Wildhaus is both a summer and winter sports resort.

Two chair lifts and several ski lifts lead to the Gamsalp and the Gamserrugg.

The Obertoggenburg and the Churfirsten ski area, which Wildhaus operated together with Unterwasser and Alt St. Johann until separated by the Cablecar Conflict of 2019.

The 87-kilometre Toggenburger Höhenweg begins in Wildhaus and ends in Will, as does the 60-kilometre long Thurweg.

Wildhaus SG

Above: Wildhaus, Canton St. Gallen

Wildhaus is a place my wife and I have together and apart have repeatedly visited.

I have followed both the Höhenweg and the Thurweg from start to finish.

We have driven to and through Wildhaus.

On this trip we do not tarry but continue swiftly onwards.

Coat of arms of Wildhaus

Above: Coat of arms of Wildhaus

What follows is a place so seductive that an afternoon seems to stand still….

(To be continued….)

Wildhaus SG

Sources: Wikipedia / Google / Wikiquote / Wikivoyage / Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron / Albert Camus, The Plague / Humphrey Carpenter, The Inklings / Albert M. Debrunner, Literaturführer Thurgau / Rick Steves, Travel as a Political Act / Elizabeth Wurzel, Prozac Nation / Rosamund Young, The Secret Life of Cows