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When I came to myself I was bewildered and exhausted. The white light of the corridor shone in the polished floor. I was not among the immortals, not yet. I was still, as ever, on this side of the riddle of suffering, of wolf-men and t plexities. I had found no happy spot, no endurable resting place. There must be an end of it.In the great mirror, Harry stood opposite me. He did not appear to be very flourishing. His appearance was much the same as on that night when he visited the professor and sat through the da the Black Eagle. But that was far behind, years, turies behind. He had grown older. He had learo dance. He had visited the magic theater. He had heard Mozart laugh. Dang and women and knives had no more terrors for him. Even those who have average gifts, given a few hundred years, e to maturity. I looked for a long time at Harry in the looking glass. I still knew him well enough, aill bore a faint resemblao the boy of fifteen who one Sunday in March had met Rosa on the cliffs and taken off his school cap to her. A he had grown a few turies older sihen. He had pursued philosophy and musid had his fill of war and his Elsasser at the Steel Helmet and discussed Krishna with men of ho learning. He had loved Erid Maria, and had been Hermines friend, and shot down motorcars, and slept with the sleek ese, and entered Mozart and Goethe, and made sundry holes in the web of time as iys disguise, though it held him a prisoill. And suppose he had lost his pretty chessman again, still he had a fine blade in his pocket. On then, old Harry, old weary loon.
Bah, the devil—how bitter the taste of life! I spat at Harry in the looking glass. I gave him a kid kicked him to splinters. I walked slowly along the eg corridor, carefully sing the doors that had held out so many glowing promises. Not one now showed a single annou. Slowly I passed by all the hundred doors of the Magic Theater. Was not this the day I had been to a masked ball? Hundreds of years had passed sihen. Soon years would cease altogether. Something, though, was still to be done. Hermine awaited me. A strange marriage it was to be, and a sorrowful wave it was that bore me on, drearily bore me on, a slave, a wolf-man. Bah, the devil!
I stopped at the last door. So far had the sorrowful wave borne me. O Rosa! O departed youth! O Goethe! O Mozart!
I ope. What I saw was a simple aiful picture. On a rug on the floor lay two naked figures, the beautiful Hermine and the beautiful Pablo, side by side in a sleep of deep exhaustion after loves play. Beautiful, beautiful figures, lovely pictures, wonderful bodies. Beh Hermines left breast was a fresh round mark, darkly bruised—a love bite of Pablos beautiful, gleamih. There, where the mark was, I plunged in my ko the hilt. The blood welled out over her white and delicate skin. I would have kissed away the blood if everything had happened a little differently. As it was, I did not. I only watched how the blood flowed and watched her eyes open for a little moment in pain and deep wonder. What makes her wonder? I thought. Then it occurred to me. that I had to shut her eyes. But they shut again of themselves. So all was done. She only turned a little to one side, and from her armpit to her breast I saw the play of a delicate shadow. It seemed that it wished to recall something, but what I could not remember. Then she lay still.
For long I looked at her and at last I waked with a shudder and turo go. Then I saw Pablo stretch himself. I saw him open his eyes and stretch his limbs and then bend over the dead girl and smile. Never, I thought, will this fellow take anything seriously. Everything makes him smile. Pablo, meanwhile, carefully turned over a er of the rug and covered Hermine up as far as her breast so that the wound was hidden, and then he went silently out of the box. Where was he going? Was everybody leaving me alone? I stayed there, aloh the half-shrouded body of her whom I loved—and ehe boyish hair hung low over the white forehead. Her lips shone red against the dead pallor of her blanched fad they were a little parted. Her hair diffused its delicate perfume and through it glimmered the little shell-like ear.
Her wish was fulfilled. Before she had ever been mine, I had killed my love. I had dohe unthinkable, and now I kneeled and stared and did not know at all what this deed meant, whether it was good and right or the opposite. What would the clever chess player, what would Pablo have to say to it? I knew nothing and I could not think. The painted mouth glowed more red on the growing pallor of the face. So had my who藏书网le life been. My little happiness and love were like this staring mouth, a little red upon a mask of death.
And from the dead face, from the dead white shoulders and the dead white arms, there exhaled and slowly crept a shudder, a desert wintriness and desolation, a slowly, slowly increasing chill in which my hands and lips grew numb. Had I quehe sun? Had I stopped the heart of all life? Was it the ess of death and space breaking in?
With a shudder I stared at the stony brow and the stark hair and the cool pale shimmer of the ear. The cold that streamed from them was deathly a was beautiful, it rang, it vibrated. It was music!
Hadnt I once felt this shudder before and found it at the same time a joy? Hadnt I once caught this music before? Yes, with Mozart and the immortals.
Verses came into my head that I had one upon somewhere:
We above you ever more residing
Ihers star translumined ice
Know nor day nht nor times dividing,
Wear ne nor sex as our device.
Cool and unging is our eternal being,
Cool and star bright is our eternal laughter.
Then the door of the box opened and in came Mozart. I did nnize him at the first glance, for he was without pigtail, knee breeches and buckled shoes, in modern dress. He took a seat close beside me, and I was on the point of holding him back because of the blood that had flowed over the floor from Hermines breast. He sat there and began busying himself with an apparatus and some instruments that stood beside him. He took it very seriously, tightening this and screwing that, and I looked with wo his adroit and nimble fingers and wished that I might see them playing a piano for once. I watched him thoughtfully, or in a reverie rather, lost in admiration of his beautiful and skillful hands, warmed too, by the sense of his presend a little apprehensive as well. Of what he was actually doing and of what it was that he screwed and manipulated, I took no heed whatever.
I soon found, however, that he had fixed up a radio and put it in going order, and now he ied the loudspeaker and said: "Munich is on the air. certo Grosso in F Major by Handel."
And in fact, to my indescribable astonishment and horror, the devilish tin trumpet spat out, without more ado, a mixture of bronchial slime and chewed rubber; that hat owners of gramophones and radios have agreed to call musid behind the slime and the croaking there was, sure enough, like an old master beh a layer of dirt, the line of that divine music. I could distinguish the majestic structure and the deep wide breath and the full broad bowing of the strings.
"My God," I cried in horror, "what are you doing, Mozart? Do you really mean to inflict this mess on me and yourself, this triumph of our day, the last victorious on in the war of extermination against art? Must this be, Mozart?"
How the weird man laughed! And what a cold and eerie laugh! It was noiseless a everything was shattered by it. He marked my torment with deep satisfa while he bent over the cursed screws and atteo the tin trumpet. Laughing still, he let the distorted, the murdered and murderous music ooze out and on; and laughing still, he replied:
"Please, no pathos, my friend! Anyway, did you observe the ritardando? An inspiration, eh? Yes, and now you tolerant mahe sense of this ritardando touch you. Do you hear the basses? They stride like gods. Ahis inspiration of old Handel pee your restless heart and give it peace. Just listen, you poor creature, listen without either pathos or mockery, while far away behind the veil of this hopelessly idiotid ridiculous apparatus the form of this divine music passes by. Pay attention and you will learn something. Observe how this crazy funnel apparently does the most stupid, the most useless and the most damhing in the world. It takes hold of some music played where you please, without distin, stupid and coarse, lamentably distorted, to boot, and chucks it into space to land where it has no busio be; a after all this it ot destroy the inal spirit of the music; it only demonstrate its own senseless meism, its inane meddling and marring. Listen, then, you poor thing. Listen well. You have need of it. And now you hear not only a Handel who, disfigured by radio, is, all the same, in this most ghastly of disguises still divine; you hear as well and you observe, most worthy sir, a most admirable symbol of all life. When you listen to radio you are a witness of the everlasting war between idea and appearance, between time aernity, between the human and the divily, my dear sir, as the radio for ten miogether projects the most lovely music withard into the most impossible places, into respectable drawing rooms and attid into the midst of chattering, guzzling, yawning and sleeping listeners, aly as it strips this music of its sensuous beauty, spoils and scratches and beslimes it a ot altogether destroy its spirit, just so does life, the so-called reality, deal with the sublime picture-play of the world and make a hurley-burley of it. It makes its uizing tone—slime of the most magic orchestral music. Everywhere it obtrudes its meism, its activity, its dreary exigencies and vanity between the ideal and the real, between orchestra and ear. All life is so, my child, and we must let it be so; and, if we are not asses, laugh at it. It little bees people like you to be critics of radio or of life either. Better learn to listen first! Learn what is to be taken seriously and laugh at the rest. Or is it that you have doer yourself, more nobly and fitly and with better taste? Oh, no, Mr. Harry, you have not. You have made a frightful history of disease out of your life, and a misfortune of yifts. And you have, as I see, found er use <var></var>for so pretty, so enting a young lady than to stick a ko her body aroy her. Was that right, do you think?"
&quht?" I cried in despair. "No! My God, everything is so false, so hellishly stupid and wrong! I am a beast, Mozart, a stupid, angry beast, sid rotten. There youre right a thousand times. But as for this girl—it was her own desire. I have only fulfilled her own wish."
Mozart laughed his noiseless laughter. But he had the great kio turn off the radio.
My self-extenuation sounded uedly and thhly foolish even to me who had believed in it with all my heart. When Hermine had once, so it suddenly occurred to me, spoken about time aernity, I had been ready forthwith to take her thoughts as a refle of my own. That the thought, however, of dying by my hand had been her own inspiration and wish and not in the least influenced by me I had taken as a matter of course. But why on that occasion had I not only accepted that horrible and unnatural thought, but even guessed it in advance. Perhaps because it had been my own. And why had I murdered Hermine just at the very moment when I saw her lying naked in anothers arms? All-knowing and all-mog rang Mozarts soundless laughter.
"Harry," said he, "youre a great joker. Had this beautiful girl really nothing to desire of you but the stab of a knife? Keep that for someone else! Well, at least you have stabbed her properly. The poor child is stone dead. And now perhaps would be an opportune moment to realize the sequences of yallantry towards this lady. Or do you think of evading the sequences?"
"No," I cried. "Dont you uand at all? I evade the sequences? I have no other desire than to pay and pay and pay for them, to lay my head beh the axe and pay the penalty of annihilation."
Mozart looked at me with intolerable mockery.
"How pathetic you always are. But you will learn humor yet, Harry. Humor is always gallows-humor, and it is on the gallows you are now straio learn it. You are ready? Good. Then off with you to the public prosecutor ahe law take its course with you till your head is coolly hacked off at break of dawn in the prison yard. You are ready for it?"
Instantly a notice flashed before my eyes:
HARRYS EXECUTION
and I sented with a nod. I stood in a bare yard enclosed by four walls with barred windows, and shivered in the air of a gray dawn. There were a dozelemen there in m coats and gowns, and a newly erected guillotine. My heart was tracted with misery and dread, but I was ready and acquiest. At the word of and I stepped forward and at the word of and I k down. The public prosecutor removed his cap and cleared his throat and all the entlemen cleared their throats. He unfolded an official dot and held it before him and read out:
"Gentlemen, there stands before you Harry Haller, accused and found guilty of the willful misuse of ic Theater. Haller has not alone insulted the majesty of art in that he founded our beautiful picture gallery with so-called reality and stabbed to death the refle of a girl with the refle of a knife; he has in addition displayed the iion of using our theater as a meism of suicide and shown himself devoid of humor. Wherefore we n Haller to eternal life and we suspend for twelve hours his permit to enter our theater. The penalty also of being laughed out of court may not be remitted. Gentlemen, all together, owo-three!"
On the word "three" all who were present broke into one simultaneous peal of laughter, bbr>.</abbr>a laughter in full chorus, a frightful laughter of the other world that is scarcely to be borne by the ears of men.
When I came to myself again, Mozart was sitting beside me as before. He clapped me on the shoulder and said: "You have heard your sentence. So, you see, you will have to learn to listen to more of the radio music of life. Itll do you good. You are unonly poor in gifts, a poor blockhead, but by degrees you will e to grasp what is required of you. You have got to learn to laugh. That will be required of you. You must apprehend the humor of life, its gallows-humor. But of course you are ready for everything in the world except what will be required of you. You are ready to stab girls to death. You are ready to be executed with all solemnity. You would be ready, no doubt, to mortify and sce yourself for turies together. Wouldnt you?"
"Oh, yes, ready with all my heart," I cried in my misery.
"Of course! When its a question of anything stupid and pathetid devoid of humor or wit, youre the man, yedian. Well, I am not. I dont care a fig for all your romantics of ato. You wao be executed and to have your head chopped off, you lunatic! For this imbecile ideal you would suffer death ten times over. You are willing to die, you coward, but not to live. The devil, but you shall live! It would serve yht if you were o the severest of penalties."
"Oh, and what would that be?"
"We might, for example, restore this girl to life again and marry you to her."
"No, I should not be ready for that. It would bring unhappiness."
"As if there were not enough unhappiness in all you have designed already! However, enough of pathos ah-dealing. It is time to e to your senses. You are to live and to learn to laugh. You are to learn to listen to the cursed radio music of life and to reverehe spirit behind it and to laugh at its distortions. So there you are. More will not be asked of you."
Gently from behind ched teeth I asked: "And if I do not submit? And if I deny yht, Mozart, to interfere with the S<tt>..t>teppenwolf, and to meddle in his destiny?"
"Then," said Mozart calmly, "I should invite you to smoke another of my charming cigarettes." And as he spoke and jured up a cigarette from his waistcoat pocket and offered it me, he was suddenly Mozart no longer. It was my friend Pablo looking warmly at me out of his dark exotic eyes and as like the man who had taught me to play chess with the little figures as a twin.
"Pablo!" I cried with a vulsive start. "Pablo, where are we?"
"We are in my Magic Theater," he said with a smile, "and if you wish at any time to learango or to be a general or to have a talk with Alexahe Great, it is always at your service. But Im bound to say, Harry, you have disappointed me a little. You fot yourself badly. You broke through the humor of my little theater and tried to make a mess of it, stabbing with knives and spattering our pretty picture-world with the mud of reality. That was not pretty of you. I hope, at least, you did it from jealousy when you saw Hermine and me lying there. Unfortunately, you did not know what to do with this figure. I thought you had learhe game better. Well, you will do better ime."
He took Hermine who at once shrank in his fio the dimensions of a toy figure and put her in the very same waistcoat pocket from which he had taken the cigarette.
Its sweet and heavy smoke diffused a pleasant aroma. I felt hollow, exhausted, and ready to sleep for a whole year.
I uood it all. I uood Pablo. I uood Mozart, and somewhere behind me I heard his ghastly laughter. I khat all the huhousand pieces of lifes game were in my pocket. A glimpse of its meaning had stirred my reason and I was determio begin the game afresh. I would sample its tortures once more and shudder again at its senselessness. I would traverse not once more, but often, the hell of my inner being.
One day I would be a better hand at the game. One day I would learn how to laugh. Pablo was waiting for me, and Mozart too.
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