Hermann Hesse's
THE GLASS BEAD GAME
A tentative sketch of the life of
Magister Ludi Joseph Knecht
Translated from the German
by Richard and Clara Winston
______________________
THE GLASS BEAD GAME:
A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO ITS HISTORY
FOR THE LAYMAN
... Non entia enim licet quodammodo
levibusque hominimus facilius atque incuriosius verbis reddere quam entia,
veruntamen pio diligentique rerum scriptori plane aliter res se habet: nihil
tantum repugnant ne verbis illustretur, at nihil adeo necesse est ante hominum
oculos proponere ut certas quasdam res, quas esse neque demonstrari neque
probari potest, quae contra eo ipso, quod pii diligentesque viri illas quasi ut
entia tractant, enti nascendique facultati paululum appropinquant.
ALBERTUS
SECUNDUS
tract.
de cristall. spirit.
ed.
Clangor et Collof. lib. I, cap. 28
In Joseph Knecht's holograph
translation:
... For although in a certain sense
and for light-minded persons non-existent things can be more easily and
irresponsibly represented in words than existing things, for the serious and
conscientious historian it is just the reverse.
Nothing is harder, yet nothing is more necessary, than to speak of
certain things whose existence is neither demonstrable nor probable. The very fact that serious and conscientious
men treat them as existing things brings them a step closer to existence and to
the possibility of being born.
___________________
IT
IS
OUR intention to preserve in these pages what scant biographical material we
have been able to collect concerning Joseph Knecht, or Ludi Magister Josephus
III, as he is called in the Archives of the Glass Bead Game. We are not unaware that this endeavour runs,
or seems to run, somewhat counter to the prevailing laws and usages of our
intellectual life. For, after all,
obliteration of individuality, the maximum integration of the individual into
the hierarchy of the educators and scholars, has ever been one of our ruling
principles. And in the course of our
long tradition this principle has been observed with such thoroughness that
today it is exceedingly difficult, and in many cases completely impossible, to
obtain biographical and psychological information on various persons who have
served the hierarchy in exemplary fashion.
In very many cases it is no longer even possible to determine their
original names. The hierarchic
organization cherishes the ideal of anonymity, and comes very close to the
realization of that ideal. This fact remains
one of the abiding characteristics of intellectual life in our Province.
If we have nevertheless persisted in
our endeavour to determine some of the facts about the life of Ludi Magister
Josephus III, and at least to sketch the outlines of his character, we believe
we have done so not out of any cult of personality, nor out of disobedience to
the customs, but on the contrary solely in the service of truth and
scholarship. It is an old idea that the
more pointedly and logically we formulate a thesis, the more irresistibly it
cries out for its antithesis. We uphold
and venerate the idea that underlies the anonymity of our authorities and our
intellectual life. But a glance at the
early history of that life of the mind we now lead, namely a glance at the
development of the Glass Bead Game, shows us irrefutably that every phase of
its development, every extension, every change, every essential segment of its
history, whether it be seen as progressive or conservative, bears the plain
imprint of the person who introduced the change. He was not necessarily its sole or actual
author, but he was the instrument of transformation and perfection.
Certainly, what nowadays we understand
by personality is something quite different from what the biographers and
historians of earlier times meant by it.
For them, and especially for the writers of those days who had a
distinct taste for biography, the essence of a personality seems to have been
deviance, abnormality, uniqueness, in fact all too often the pathological. We moderns, on the other hand, do not even
speak of major personalities until we encounter men who have gone beyond all
original and idiosyncratic qualities to achieve the greater possible
integration into the generality, the greatest possible service to the
suprapersonal. If we look closely into
the matter we shall see that the ancients had already perceived this
ideal. The figure of the Sage or Perfect
One among the ancient Chinese, for example, or the ideal of Socratic ethics,
can scarcely be distinguished from our present ideal; and many a great
organization, such as the Roman Church in the eras of its greatest power, has
recognized similar principles. Indeed,
many of its greatest figures, such as St. Thomas Aquinas, appear to us - like
early Greek sculptures - more the classical representatives of types than
individuals.
Nevertheless, in the period before the
reformation of the intellectual life, a reformation which began in the
twentieth century and of which we are the heirs, that authentic ancient ideal
had patently come near to being entirely lost.
We are astonished when the biographies of those times rather garrulously
relate how many brothers and sisters the hero had, or what psychological scars
and blotches were left behind from his casting off the skins of childhood and
puberty, from the struggle for position and the search for love. We moderns are not interested in a hero's
pathology or family history, nor in his drives, his digestion, and how he
sleeps. Not even his intellectual
background - the influence upon his development of his favourite studies,
favourite reading, and so on - is particularly important to us. For us, a man is a hero and deserves special
interest only if his nature and his education have rendered him able to let his
individuality be almost perfectly absorbed in its hierarchic function without
at the same time forfeiting the vigorous, fresh, admirable impetus which make
for the savour and worth of the individual.
And if conflicts arise between the individual and the hierarchy, we
regard these very conflicts as a touchstone for the stature of a
personality. We do not approve of the
rebel who is driven by his desires and passions to infringements upon law and
order; we find all the more worthy of our reverence the memory of those who
tragically sacrificed themselves for the greater whole.
These latter are the heroes, and in
the case of these truly exemplary men, interest in the individual, in the name,
face, and gesture, seems to us permissible and natural. For we do not regard even the perfect
hierarchy, the most harmonious organization, as a machine put together out of
lifeless units that count for nothing in themselves, but as a living body,
formed of parts and animated by organs which possess their own nature and
freedom. Every one of them shares in the
miracle of life. In this sense, then, we
have endeavoured to obtain information on the life of Joseph Knecht, Master of
the Glass Bead Game, and especially to collect everything written by
himself. We have, moreover, obtained
several manuscripts we consider worth reading.
What we have to say about Knecht's
personality and life is surely familiar in whole or in part to a good many
members of the Order, especially the Glass Bead Game players, and for this
reason among others our book is not addressed to this circle alone, but is
intended to appeal more widely to sympathetic readers.
For the narrower circle, our book
would need neither introduction nor commentary.
But since we also wish our hero's life and writings to be studied
outside the Order, we are confronted with the somewhat difficult task of
prefacing our book with a brief popular introduction, for that less-prepared
reader, into the meaning and history of the Glass Bead Game. We stress that this introduction is intended
only for popular consumption and makes no claim whatsoever to clarifying the
questions being discussed within the Order itself on the problems and history
of the Game. The time for an objective
account of that subject is still far in the future.
Let no-one, therefore, expect from us
a complete history and theory of the Glass Bead Game. Even authors of higher rank and competence
than ourself would not be capable of providing that at the present time. That task must remain reserved to later ages,
if the sources and the intellectual prerequisites for the task have not
previously been lost. Still less is our
essay intended as a textbook of the Glass Bead Game; indeed, no such thing will
ever be written. The only way to learn
the rules of this Game of games is to take the usual prescribed course, which
requires many years; and none of the initiates could ever possibly have any
interest in making these rules easier to learn.
These rules, the sign language and
grammar of the Game, constitute a kind of highly developed secret language
drawing upon several sciences and arts, but especially mathematics and music
(and/or musicology), and capable of expressing and establishing
interrelationships between the content and conclusions of nearly all scholarly
disciplines. The Glass Bead Game is thus
a mode of playing with the total contents and values of our culture; it plays
with them as, say, in the great age of the arts a painter might have played
with the colours on his palette. All the
insights, noble thoughts, and works of art that the human race has produced in
its creative eras, all that subsequent periods of scholarly study have reduced
to concepts and converted into intellectual property - on all this immense body
of intellectual values the Glass Bead Game player plays like the organist on an
organ. And this organ has attained an
almost unimaginable perfection; its manuals and pedals range over the entire
intellectual cosmos; its stops are almost beyond number. Theoretically this instrument is capable of
reproducing in the Game the entire intellectual content of the universe. These manuals, pedals, and stops are now
fixed. Changes in their number and
order, and attempts at perfecting them, are actually no longer feasible except
in theory. Any enrichment of the
language of the Game by addition of new contents is subject to the strictest
conceivable control by the directorate of the Game. On the other hand, within this fixed
structure or, to abide by our image, within the complicated mechanism of this
giant organ, a whole universe of possibilities and combinations is available to
the individual player. For even two out
of a thousand stringently played games to resemble each other more than
superficially is hardly possible. Even
if it should so happen that two players by chance were to choose precisely the
same small assortment of themes for the content of their Game, these two Games
would present an entirely different appearance and run an entirely different
course, depending on the qualities of mind, character, mood, and virtuosity of
the players.
How far back the historian wishes to
place the origins and antecedents of the Glass Bead Game is, ultimately, a
matter of his personal choice. For like
every great idea it has no real beginning; rather, it has always been, at least
the idea of it. We find it foreshadowed,
as a dim anticipation and hope, in a good many earlier ages. There are hints of it in Pythagoras, for
example, and then among Hellenistic Gnostic circles in the late period of
classical civilization. We find it
equally among the ancient Chinese, then again at the several pinnacles of
Arabic-Moorish culture; and the path of its prehistory leads on through
Scholasticism and Humanism to the academies of mathematicians of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and on to the Romantic philosophies and
the runes of Novalis's hallucinatory visions.
The same eternal idea, which for us has been embodied in the Glass Bead
Game, has underlain every movement of Mind towards the ideal goal of a universitas
litterarum, every Platonic academy, every league of an intellectual elite,
every rapprochement between the exact and the more liberal disciplines,
every effort towards reconciliation between science and art or science and
religion. Men like Aberlard, Leibniz,
and Hegel unquestionably were familiar with the dream of capturing the universe
of the intellect in concentric systems, and pairing the living beauty of
thought and art with the magical expressiveness of the exact sciences. In that age in which music and mathematics
almost simultaneously attained classical heights, approaches and
cross-fertilizations between the two disciplines occurred frequently. And two centuries earlier we find in Nicholas
of Cusa sentences of the same tenor, such as this: "The mind adapts itself
to potentiality in order to measure everything in the mode of potentiality, and
to absolute necessity in order to measure everything in the mode of unity and
simplicity as God does, and to the necessity of nexus in order to measure
everything with respect to its peculiar nature; finally, it adapts itself to
determinate potentiality in order to measure everything with respect to its
existence. But furthermore the mind also
measures symbolically, by comparison, as when it employs numerals and geometric
figures and equates other things with them."
Incidentally, this is not the only one
of Nicholas's ideas that almost seems to suggest our Glass Bead Game, or
corresponds to and springs from a similar branch of the imagination as the play
of thought which occurs in the Game.
Many similar echoes can be found in his writings. His pleasure in mathematics also, and his
delight and skill in using constructions and axioms of Euclidean Geometry as
similes to clarify theological and philosophical concepts, likewise appear to
be very close to the mentality of the Game.
At times even his peculiar Latin (abounding in words of his own coinage,
whose meaning, however, was perfectly plain to any Latin scholar) calls to mind
the improvisatory agility of the Game's language.
As the epigraph of our treatise may
already have suggested, Albertus Secundus deserves an equal place among the
ancestors of the Glass Bead Game. And we
suspect, although we cannot prove this by citations, that the idea of the Game
also dominated the minds of those learned musicians of the sixteenth,
seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries who based their musical compositions on
mathematical speculations. Here and
there in the ancient literatures we encounter legends of wise and mysterious games
that were conceived and played by scholars, monks, or the courtiers of cultured
princes. These might take the form of
chess games in which the pieces and squares had secret meanings in addition to
their usual functions. And of course
everyone has heard those fables and legends from the formative years of all
civilizations which ascribe to music powers far greater than those of any mere
art: the capacity to control men and nations.
These accounts make of music a kind of secret regent, or a lawbook for
men and their governments. From the most
ancient days of China to the myths of the Greeks we find the concept of an
ideal, heavenly life for men under the hegemony of music. The Glass Bead Game is intimately bound up
with this cult of music ("in eternal transmutations the secret power of song
greets us here below," says Novalis).
Although we thus recognise the idea of
the Game as eternally present, and therefore existent in vague stirrings long
before it became a reality, its realization in the form we know it nevertheless
has its specific history. We shall now
attempt to give a brief account of the most important stages of that history.
The beginnings of the intellectual
movement whose fruits are, among many others, the establishment of the Order
and the Glass Bead Game itself, may be traced back to a period which Plinius
Ziegenhalss, the historian of literature, designated as the Age of the
Feuilleton, by which name it has been known ever since. Such tags are pretty, but dangerous; they
constantly tempt us to a biased view of the era in question. And as a matter of fact the Age of the
Feuilleton was by no means uncultured; it was not even intellectually
impoverished. But if we may believe
Ziegenhalss, the age appears to have had only the dimmest notion of what to do
with culture. Or rather, it did not know
how to assign culture its proper place within the economy of life and the
nation. To be frank, we really are very
poorly informed about that era, even though it is the soil out of which almost
everything that distinguishes our cultural life today has grown.
It was, according to Ziegenhalss, an
era emphatically "bourgeois" and given to an almost untrammelled
individualism. If in order to suggest
the atmosphere we cite some of its features from Ziegenhalss' description, we
may at least do so with the confidence that these features have not been
invented, badly drawn, or grossly exaggerated.
For the great scholar has documented them from a vast number of literary
and other sources. We take our cue from
this scholar, who so far has been the sole serious investigator of the
Feuilletonistic Age. As we read, we
should remember that it is easy and foolish to sneer at the mistakes or
barbarities of remote ages.
Since the end of the Middle Ages,
intellectual life in Europe seems to have evolved along two major lines. The first of these was the liberation of
thought and belief from the sway of all authority. In practice this meant the struggle of
Reason, which at last felt that it had come of age and won its independence,
against the domination of the Roman Church.
The second trend, on the other hand, was the covert but passionate
search for a means to confer legitimacy on this freedom, for a new and
sufficient authority arising out of Reason itself. We can probably generalize and say that Mind
has by and large often won this strangely contradictory battle for two aims
basically at odds with each other.
Has the gain been worth the countless
victims? Has our present structure of
the life of the mind been sufficiently developed, and is it likely to endure
long enough, to justify as worthwhile sacrifices, all the sufferings,
convulsions, and abnormalities: the trials of heretics, the burnings at stake,
the many "geniuses" who ended in madness or suicide? For us, it is not permissible to ask these
questions. History is as it has
happened. Whether it was good, whether
it would have been better not to have happened, whether we will or will not
acknowledge that it has had "meaning" - all this is irrelevant. Thus those struggles for the "freedom"
of the human intellect likewise "happened", and subsequently, in the
course of the aforementioned Age of the Feuilleton, men came to enjoy an
incredible degree of intellectual freedom, more than they could stand. For while they had overthrown the tutelage of
the Church completely, and that of the State partially, they had not succeeded
in formulating an authentic law they could respect, a genuinely new authority
and legitimacy. Ziegenhalss recounts
some truly astonishing examples of the intellect's debasement, venality, and
self-betrayal during that period.
We must confess that we cannot provide
an unequivocal definition of those products from which the age takes its name,
the feuilletons. They seemed to have
formed an uncommonly popular section of the daily newspapers, were produced by
the millions, and were a major source of mental pabulum for the reader in want
of culture. They reported on, or rather
"chatted" about, a thousand-and-one items of knowledge. It would seem, moreover, that the cleverer
among the writers of them poked fun at their own work. Ziegenhalss, at any rate, contends that many
such pieces are so incomprehensible that they can only be viewed as
self-persiflage on the part of the authors.
Quite possibly these manufactured articles do indeed contain a quantity
of irony and self-mockery which cannot be understood until the key is found
again. The producers of these trivia
were in some cases attached to the staffs of the newspapers; in other cases
they were free-lance scriveners. Frequently
they enjoyed the high-sounding title of "writer", but a great many of
them seem to have belonged to the scholar class. Quite a few were celebrated university
professors.
Among the favourite subjects of such
essays were anecdotes taken from the lives or correspondence of famous men and
women. They bore such titles as
"Friedrich Nietzsche and Women's Fashions of 1870", or "The
Composer Rossini's Favourite Dishes", or "The Role of the Lapdog in
the Lives of Great Courtesans", and so on.
Another popular type of article was the historical background piece on
what was currently being talked about among the well-to-do, such as "The
Dream of Creating Gold Through the Centuries", or "Psycho-chemical
Experiments in Influencing the Weather", and hundreds of similar
subjects. When we look at the titles
that Ziegenhalss cites, we feel surprise that there should have been people who
devoured such chitchat for their daily reading; but what astonishes us far more
is that authors of repute and of decent education should have helped to
"service" this gigantic consumption of empty whimsies. Significantly, "service" was the
expression used; it was also the word denoting the relationship of man to the
machine at that time.
In some periods interviews with
well-known personalities on current problems were particularly popular. Zigenhalss devotes a separate chapter to
these. Noted chemists or piano virtuosos
would be queried about politics, for example, or popular actors, or even poets
would be drawn out on the benefits and even drawbacks of being a bachelor, or
on the presumptive causes of financial crises, and so on. All that mattered in these pieces was to link
a well-known name with a subject of current topical interest. The reader may consult Ziegenhalss for some
truly startling examples; he gives hundreds.
As we have said, no doubt a goodly
dash of irony was mixed in with all this busy productivity; it may even have
been a demonic irony, the irony of desperation - it is very hard indeed for us
to put ourselves in the place of those people so that we can truly understand
them. But the great majority, who seem
to have been strikingly fond of reading, must have accepted all these grotesque
things with credulous earnestness. If a
famous painting changed owners, if a precious manuscript was sold at auction,
if an old palace burned down, if the bearer of an aristocratic name was
involved in a scandal, the readers of many thousands of feature articles at
once learned the facts. What is more, on
that same day or by the next day at the latest they received an additional dose
of anecdotal, historical, psychological, erotic, and other stuff on the
catchword of the moment. A torrent of
zealous scribbling poured out over every ephemeral incident, and in quality,
assortment, and phraseology all this material bore the mark of mass goods
rapidly and irresponsibly turned out.
Incidentally, there appear to have
been certain games which were regular concomitants of the feature article. The readers themselves took the active role
in these games, which put to use some of their glut of information fodder. A long disquisition by Ziegenhalss on the
curious subject of "Crossword Puzzles" describes the phenomenon. Thousands upon thousands of persons, the
majority of whom did heavy work and led a hard life, spent their leisure hours
sitting over squares and crosses made of letters of the alphabet, filling in
the gaps according to certain rules. But
let us be wary of seeing only the absurd or insane aspect of this, and let us
abstain from ridiculing it. For these
people with their childish puzzle games and their cultural feature articles
were by no means innocuous children or playful Phæacians. Rather, they dwelt anxiously among political,
economic, and moral ferments and earthquakes, waged a number of frightful wars
and civil wars, and their little cultural games were not just charming,
meaningless childishness. These games
sprang from their deep need to close their eyes and flee from unsolved problems
and anxious forebodings of doom into an imaginary world as innocuous as
possible. They assiduously learned to
drive automobiles, to play difficult card games and lose themselves in
crossword puzzles - for they faced death, fear, pain, and hunger almost without
defences, could no longer accept the consolations of the churches, and could
obtain no useful advice from Reason.
These people who read so many articles and listened to so many lectures
did not take the time and trouble to strengthen themselves against fear, to
combat the dread of death within themselves; they moved spasmodically on
through life and had no belief in a tomorrow.
For there was also a good deal of
lecturing, and we must briefly discuss this somewhat more dignified variant of
the feature article. Both specialists
and intellectual privateers supplied the middle-class citizens of the age (who
were still deeply attached to the notion of culture, although it had long since
been robbed of its former meaning) with large numbers of lectures. Such talks were not only in the nature of
festival orations for special occasions; there was a frantic trade in them, and
they were given in almost incomprehensible quantities. In those days the citizen of a medium-sized
town or his wife could at least once a week (in big cities pretty much every
night) attend lectures offering theoretical instruction on some subject or
other: on works of art, poets, scholars, researchers, world tours. The members of the audience at these lectures
remained purely passive, and although some relationship between audience and
content, some previous knowledge, preparation, and receptivity were tacitly
assumed in most cases nothing of the sort was present. There were entertaining, impassioned, or
witty lectures on Goethe, say, in which he would be depicted descending from a
post chaise wearing a blue frock-coat to seduce some Strassbourg or Wetzlar
girl; or on Arabic culture; in all of them a number of fashionable phrases were
shaken up like dice in a cup and everyone was delighted if he dimly recognized one
or two catchwords. People heard lectures
on writers whose works they had never read and never meant to, sometimes
accompanied by pictures projected on a screen.
At these lectures, as in the feature articles in the newspapers, they
struggled through a deluge of isolated cultural facts and fragments of
knowledge robbed of all meaning. To put
it briefly, they were already on the verge of that dreadful devaluation of the
Word which produced, at first in secret and in the narrowest circles, that
ascetically heroic countermovement which soon afterwards began to flow visibly
and powerfully, and ushered in the new self-discipline and dignity of the human
intellect.
It must be granted that many aspects
of the intellectual life of that era showed energy and grandeur. We moderns explain its concomitant
uncertainty and falseness as a symptom of the horror which seized men when at
the end of an era of apparent victory and success they found themselves
suddenly confronting a void: great material scarcity, a period of political and
military crises, and an accelerating distrust of the intellect itself, of its
own virtue and dignity and even of its own existence. Yet that very period, filled though it was
with premonitions of doom, was marked by some very fine intellectual
achievements, including the beginnings of a science of music of which we are
the grateful heirs.
But although it is easy to fit any
given segment of the past neatly and intelligibly into the patterns of world
history, contemporaries are never able to see their own place in the
patterns. Consequently, even as
intellectual ambitions and achievements declined rapidly during that period,
intellectuals in particular were stricken by terrible doubts and a sense of despair. They had just fully realized (a discovery
that had been in the air, here and there, from the time of Nietzsche on) that
the youth and the creative period of our culture was over, that old age and
twilight had set in. Suddenly everyone
felt this and many bluntly expressed this view; it was used to explain many of
the alarming signs of the time: the dreary mechanization of life, the profound
debasement of morality, the decline of faith among nations, the inauthenticity
of art. The "music of decline"
had sounded, as in that wonderful Chinese fable; like a thrumming base on the
organ its reverberations faded slowly out over decades; its throbbing could be
heard in the corruption of the schools, periodicals, and universities, in
melancholia and insanity among those artists and critics who could still be
taken seriously; it raged as untrammelled and amateurish overproduction in all
the arts. Various attitudes could be
taken towards this enemy who had breached the walls and could no longer be
exorcised. Some of the best tacitly
acknowledged and stoically endured the bitter truth. Some attempted to deny its existence, and
thanks to the shoddy thinking of some of the literary prophets of cultural
doom, found a good many weak points in their thesis. Moreover, those who took exception to the aforementioned
prophets could be sure of a hearing and influence among the bourgeoisie. For the allegation that the culture he had
only yesterday been proud to possess was no longer alive, that the education
and art he revered could no longer be regarded as genuine education and genuine
art, seemed to the bourgeois as brazen and intolerable as the sudden inflations
of currency and the revolutions which threatened his accumulated capital.
Another possible immunization against
the general mood of doom was cynicism.
People went dancing and dismissed all anxiety about the future as
old-fashioned folly; people composed heady articles about the approaching end
of art, science, and language. In that
feuilleton world they had constructed of paper, people postulated the total
capitulation of Mind, the bankruptcy of ideas, and pretended to be looking on
with cynical calm or bacchantic rapture as not only art, culture, morality, and
honesty, but also Europe and "the world" proceeded to their doom. Among the good there prevailed a quietly
resigned gloom, among the wicked a malicious pessimism. The fact was that a breakdown of outmoded
forms, and a degree of reshuffling both of the world and its morality by means
of politics and war, had to take place before the culture itself became capable
of real self-analysis and a new organization.
Yet during the decades of transition
this culture had not slumbered. Rather,
during the very period of its decay and seeming capitulation by the artists,
professors, and feature writers, it entered into a phase of intense alertness
and self-examination. The medium of
this change lay in the consciences of a few individuals. Even during the heyday of the feuilleton
there were everywhere individuals and small groups who had resolved to remain
faithful to true culture and to devote all their energies to preserving for the
future a core of good tradition, discipline, method, and intellectual
rigour. We are today ignorant of many
details, but in general the process of self-examination, reflection, and
conscious resistance to decline seems to have centred mostly in two
groups. The cultural conscience of
scholars found refuge in the investigations and didactic methods of the history
of music, for this discipline was just reaching its height at that time, and
even in the midst of the feuilleton world two famous seminaries fostered an
exemplary methodology, characterized by care and thoroughness. Moreover, as if destiny wished to smile
comfortingly upon this tiny, brave cohort, at this saddest of times there took
place that glorious miracle which was in itself pure chance, but which gave the
effect of a divine corroboration: the rediscovery of eleven manuscripts by
Johann Sebastian Bach, which had been in the keeping of his son Friedemann.
A second focus of resistance to
degeneration was the League of Journeyers to the East. The brethren of that League cultivated a
spiritual rather than an intellectual discipline. They fostered piety and reverence, and to
them we owe our important elements in our present form of cultural life and of
the Glass Bead Game, in particular the contemplative elements. The Journeyers also contributed to new
insights into the nature of our culture and the possibilities of its continuance,
not so much by analytical and scholarly work as by their capacity, based on
ancient secret exercises, for mystic identification with remote ages and
cultural conditions. Among them, for
example, were itinerant instrumentalists and minstrels who were said to have
the ability to perform the music of earlier epochs with perfect ancient
purity. Thus they could play and sing a
piece of music from 1600 or 1650 exactly as if all the subsequent modes,
refinements, and virtuoso achievements were still unknown. This was an astonishing feat in a period in
which the mania for dynamics and gradazione dominated all music-making,
when the music itself was almost forgotten in discussion of the conductor's
execution and "conception".
When an orchestra of the Journeyers first publicly performed a suite
from the time before Handel completely without crescendi and diminuendi,
with the naiveté and chasteness of another age and world, some among the
audience are said to have been totally uncomprehending, but others listened
with fresh attention and had the impression that they were hearing music for
the first time in their lives. In the
League's concert hall between Bremgarten and Morbio, one member built a Bach
organ as perfectly as Johann Sebastian Bach would have had it built had he had
the means and opportunity. Obeying a
principle even then current in the League, the organ builder concealed his
name, calling himself Silbermann after his eighteenth-century predecessor.
In discussing these matters we have
approached the sources from which our modern concept of culture sprang. One of the chief of these was the most recent
of the scholarly disciplines, the history of music and the aesthetics of
music. Another was the great advance in
mathematics that soon followed. To these
was added a sprinkling of the wisdom of the Journeyers to the East and, closely
related to the new conception and interpretation of music, that courageous new
attitude, compounded of serenity and resignation, towards the ageing of
cultures. It would be pointless to say
much about these matters here, since they are familiar to everyone. The most important consequence of this new
attitude, or rather this new subordination to the cultural process, was that
men largely ceased to produce works of art.
Moreover, intellectuals gradually withdrew from the bustle of the
world. Finally, and no less important -
indeed, the climax of the whole development - there arose the Glass Bead Game.
The growing profundity of musical
science, which can already be observed soon after 1900 when feuilletonism was
still at its height, naturally exerted enormous influence upon the beginnings
of the Game. We, the heirs of
musicology, believe we know more about the music of the great creative
centuries, especially the seventeenth and eighteenth, and in a certain sense
even understand it better than all previous epochs, including that of classical
music itself. As descendants, of course,
our relation to classical music differs totally from that of our predecessors
in the creative ages. Our
intellectualized veneration for true music, all too frequently tainted by
melancholic resignation, is a far cry from the charming, simple-hearted delight
in music-making of those days. We tend
to envy those happier times whenever our pleasure in their music makes us
forget the conditions and tribulations amid which it was begotten. Almost the entire twentieth century
considered philosophy, or else literature, to be the great lasting achievement
of that cultural era which lies between the end of the Middle Ages and modern
times. We, however, have for generations
given the palm to mathematics and music.
Ever since we have renounced - on the whole, at any rate - trying to vie
creatively with those generations, ever since we have also forsworn the worship
of harmony in music-making, and of that purely sensuous cult of dynamics - a
cult that dominated musical practices for a good two centuries after the time
of Beethoven and early Romanticism - ever since then we have been able to
understand, more purely and more correctly, the general image of that culture
whose heirs we are. Or so we believe in
our uncreative, retrospective, but reverent fashion! We no longer have any of the exuberant
fecundity of those days. For us it is
almost incomprehensible that musical style in the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries could be preserved for so long a time in unalloyed purity. How could it be, we ask, that among the vast
quantities of music written at that time we fail to find a trace of anything
bad? How could the eighteenth century,
the time of incipient degeneration, still send hurtling into the skies a
fireworks display of styles, fashions, and schools, blazing briefly but with
such self-assurance? Nevertheless, we
believe that we have uncovered the secret of what we now call classical music,
that we have understood the spirit, the virtue, and the piety of those
generations, and have taken all that as our model. Nowadays, for example, we do not think much
of the theology and the ecclesiastical culture of the eighteenth century, or
the philosophy of the Enlightenment; but we consider the cantatas, passions,
and preludes of Bach the ultimate quintessence of Christian culture.
Incidentally, there exists an ancient
and honourable exemplar for the attitude of our own culture towards music, a
model to which the players of the Glass Bead Game look back with great
veneration. We recall that in the
legendary China of the Old Kings, music was accorded a dominant place in state
and court. It was held that if music
throve, all was well with culture and morality and with the kingdom
itself. The music masters were required
to be the strictest guardians of the original purity of the "venerable
keys". If music decayed, that was
taken as a sure sign of the downfall of the regime and the state. The poets told horrific fables about the
forbidden, diabolic, heaven-offending keys, such as the Tsing Shang key, and
the Tsing Tse, the "music of decline"; no sooner were these wicked
notes struck in the Royal Palace than the sky darkened, the walls trembled and
collapsed, and kingdom and sovereign went to their doom. We might quote many other sayings by the
ancient writers, but we shall cite here only a few passages from the chapter on
music in Lü Bu We's Spring and Autumn:
"The origins of music lie far back
in the past. Music arises from Measure
and is rooted in the great Oneness. The
great Oneness begets the two poles; the two poles beget the power of Darkness
and of Light.
"When the world is at peace, when
all things are tranquil and all men obey their superiors in all their courses,
then music can be perfected. When
desires and passions do not turn into wrongful paths, music can be
perfected. Perfect music has its cause. It arises from equilibrium. Equilibrium arises from righteousness, and
righteousness arises from the meaning of the cosmos. Therefore one can speak about music only with
a man who has perceived the meaning of the cosmos.
"Music is founded on the harmony
between heaven and earth, on the concord of obscurity and brightness.
"Decaying states and men ripe for
doom do not, of course, lack music either, but their music is not serene. Therefore, the more tempestuous the music,
the more doleful are the people, the more imperilled the country, the more the
sovereign declines. In this way the
essence of music is lost.
"What all sacred sovereigns have
loved in music was its serenity. The
tyrants Giae and Jou Sin made tempestuous music. They thought loud sounds beautiful and massed
effects interesting. They strove for new
and rare tonal effects, for notes which no ear had ever heard hitherto. They sought to surpass each other, and
overstepped all bounds.
"The cause of the degeneration of
the Chu state was its invention of magic music.
Such music is indeed tempestuous enough, but in truth it has departed
from the essence of music. Because it
has departed from the essence of real music, this music is not serene. If music is not serene, the people grumble
and life is deranged. All this arises
from mistaking the nature of music and seeking only tempestuous tonal effects.
"Therefore the music of a
well-ordered age is calm and cheerful, and so is its government. The music of a restive age is excited and
fierce, and its government is perverted.
The music of a decaying state is sentimental and sad, and its government
is imperilled."
The words of this Chinese writer point
fairly distinctly to the origins and to the real although almost forgotten
meaning of all music. For in prehistoric
times music, like the dance and every other artistic endeavour, was a branch of
magic, one of the old and legitimate instruments of wonder-working. Beginning with rhythm (clapping of hands,
tramping, beating of sticks and primitive drums), it was a powerful,
tried-and-true device for putting large numbers of people "in tune"
with one another, engendering the same mood, co-ordinating the pace of their
breathing and heartbeats, encouraging them to invoke and conjure up the eternal
powers, to dance, to compete, to make war, to worship. And music has retained this original, pure,
primordially-powerful character, its magic, far longer than the other
arts. We need only recall the many
testimonies of historians and poets to the power of music, from the Greeks to
Goethe in his Novelle. In
practice, marches and the dance have never lost their importance.... But let us
return to our subject.
We shall now give a brief summary of
the beginnings of the Glass Bead Game.
It appears to have arisen simultaneously in Germany and England. In both countries, moreover, it was
originally a kind of exercise employed by those small groups of musicologists
and musicians who worked and studied in the new seminaries of musical
theory. If we compare the original state
of the Game with its subsequent developments and its present form, it is much
like comparing a musical score of the period before 1500, with its primitive
notes and absence of bar lines, with an eighteenth-century score, let alone
with one from the nineteenth with its confusing excess of symbols for dynamics,
tempi, phrasing, and so on, which often made the printing of such scores a
complex technical problem.
The Game was at first nothing more
than a witty method for developing memory and ingenuity among students and
musicians. And as we have said, it was
played both in England and Germany before it was "invented" here in
the Musical Academy of Cologne, and was given the name it bears to this day,
after so many generations, although it has long ceased to have anything to do
with glass beads.
The inventor, Bastian Perrot of Calw,
a rather eccentric but clever, sociable, and humane musicologist, used glass
beads instead of letters, numerals, notes, or other graphic symbols. Perrot, who incidentally has also bequeathed
to us a treatise on the Apogee and Decline of Counterpoint, found that
the pupils at the Cologne Seminary had a rather elaborate game they used to
play. One would call out, in the
standardized abbreviations of their science, motifs or initial bars of
classical compositions, whereupon the other had to respond with the
continuation of the piece, or better still with a higher or lower voice, a
contrasting theme, and so forth. It was
an exercise in memory and improvisation quite similar to the sort of thing
probably in vogue among ardent pupils of counterpoint in the days of Schütz,
Pachelbel, and Bach - although it would then not have been done in theoretical
formulas, but in practice on the cembalo, lute, or flute, or with the voice.
Bastian Perrot in all probability was
a member of the Journeyers to the East.
He was partial to handicrafts and had himself built several pianos and
clavichords in the ancient style. Legend
has it that he was adept at playing the violin in the old way, forgotten since 1800, with a high-arched
bow and hand-regulated tension of the bow hairs. Given these interests, it was perhaps only
natural that he should have constructed a frame, modelled on a child's abacus,
a frame with several dozen wires on which could be strung glass beads of
various sizes, shapes, and colours. The
wires corresponded to the lines of the musical staff, the beads to the
time-values of the notes, and so on. In
this way he could represent with beads musical quotations or invented themes,
could alter, transpose, and develop them, change them and set them in
counterpoint to one another. In
technical terms this was a mere plaything, but the pupils liked it; it was
imitated and became fashionable in England too.
For a time the game of musical exercises was played in this charmingly
primitive manner. And as is so often the
case, an enduring and significant institution received its name from a passing
and incidental circumstance. For what
later evolved out of that students' sport and Perrot's bead-strung wires bears
to this day the name by which it became popularly known, the Glass Bead Game.
A bare two or three decades later the
Game seems to have lost some of its popularity among students of music, but
instead was taken over by mathematicians.
For a long while, indeed, a characteristic feature in the Game's history
was that it was constantly preferred, used, and further elaborated by whatever
branch of learning happened to be experiencing a period of high development or
a renaissance. The mathematicians brought
the Game to a high degree of flexibility and capacity for sublimation, so that
it began to acquire something approaching a consciousness of itself and its
possibilities. This process paralleled
the general evolution of cultural consciousness, which had survived the great
crisis and had, as Plinius Ziegenhalss puts it, "with modest pride
accepted the fate of belonging to a culture past its prime, as was the case
with the culture of late antiquity: Hellenistic culture in the Alexandrian
age."
So much for Ziegenhalss. We shall now attempt to sketch the further
steps in the history of the Glass Bead Game.
Having passed from the musical to the mathematical seminaries (a change
which took place in France and England somewhat sooner than in Germany), the
Game was so far developed that it was capable of expressing mathematical
processes by special symbols and abbreviations.
The players, mutually elaborating these processes, threw these abstract
formulas at one another, displaying the sequences and possibilities of their
science. This mathematical and
astronomical game of formulas required great attentiveness, keenness, and
concentration. Among mathematicians,
even in those days, the reputation of being a good Glass Bead Game player meant
a great deal; it was equivalent to being a very good mathematician.
At various times the Game was taken up
and imitated by nearly all the scientific and scholarly disciplines, that is,
adapted to the special fields. There is
documented evidence for its application to the fields of classical philology
and logic. The analytical study of
musical values had led to the reduction of musical events to physical and
mathematical formulas. Soon afterwards
philology borrowed this method and began to measure linguistic configurations
as physics measures processes in nature.
The visual arts soon followed suit, architecture having already led the
way in establishing the links between visual art and mathematics. Thereafter more and more new relations,
analogies, and correspondences were discovered among the abstract formulas
obtained in this way. Each discipline
which seized upon the Game created its own language of formulas, abbreviations,
and possible combinations. Everywhere,
the elite intellectual youth developed a passion for these Games, with their
dialogues and progressions of formulas.
The Game was not mere practice and mere recreation; it became a form of
concentrated self-awareness for intellectuals.
Mathematicians in particular played it with a virtuosity and formal
strictness at once athletic and ascetic.
It afforded them a pleasure which somewhat compensated for their
renunciation of worldly pleasures and ambitions. For by then such renunciation had already
become a regular thing for intellectuals.
The Glass Bead Game contributed largely to the complete defeat of
feuilletonism and to that newly awakened delight in strict mental exercises to
which we owe the origin of a new, monastically austere intellectual discipline.
The world had changed. The life of the mind in the age of the
Feuilleton might be compared to a degenerate plant which was squandering its
strength in excessive vegetative growth, and the subsequent corrections to
pruning the plant back to the roots. The
young people who now proposed to devote themselves to intellectual studies no
longer took the term to mean attending a university and taking a nibble of this
or that from the dainties offered by celebrated and loquacious professors who
without authority offered them the crumbs of what had once been higher
education. Now they had to study just as
stringently and methodically as the engineers and technicians of the past, if
not more so. They had a steep path to
climb, had to purify and strengthen their minds by dint of mathematics and
scholastic exercises in Aristotelian philosophy. Moreover, they had to learn to renounce all
those benefits which previous generations of scholars had considered worth
striving for: rapid and easy money-making, celebrity and public honours, the
homage of the newspapers, marriages with daughters of bankers and industrialists,
a pampered and luxurious style of life.
The writers with heavy sales, Nobel Prizes, and lovely country houses,
the celebrated physicians with decorations and liveried servants, the
professors with wealthy wives and brilliant salons, the chemists with posts on
boards of directors, the philosophers with feuilleton factories who delivered
charming lectures in overcrowded halls, for which they were rewarded with
thunderous applause and floral tributes - all such public figures disappeared
and have not come back to this day. Even
so, no doubt, there were still plenty of talented young people for whom such
personages were envied models. But the
paths to honours, riches, fame, and luxury now no longer led through lecture
halls, academies, and doctoral theses.
The deeply debased intellectual professions were bankrupt in the world's
eyes. But in compensation they had
regained a fanatical and penitential devotion to art and thought. Those talented persons whose desires tended
more towards glory or comfortable living had to turn their backs on the
intellectual life, which had become so austere, and seek out occupations which
still provided opportunities for comfort and money-making.
It would lead us too far afield to
attempt to describe in detail how the world of Mind, after its purification,
won a place for itself in the State.
Experience soon showed that a few generations of lax and unscrupulous
intellectual discipline had also sufficed to inflict serious harm on practical
life. Competence and responsibility had
grown increasingly rare in all the higher professions, including even those
concerned with technology. To remedy
this, supervision of the things of the mind among the people and in government
came to be consigned more and more to the "intellectuals" in the best
sense of the word. This was particularly
the case with the entire educational system; and indeed the situation is little
changed to this day. In almost all the
countries of Europe today the schools that are not still administered by the
Roman Church are in the hands of those anonymous Orders which fill their ranks
from the elite among the intellectuals.
Although public opinion occasionally decries the strictness and the
reputed arrogance of this caste, and although individuals have occasionally
revolted against it, this leadership stands unshaken. Its integrity, its renunciation of all
benefits and advantages other than intellectual ones, maintains and protects
it. But it is also supported by what has
long since become common knowledge, or at least a universal sense, that the
continuance of civilization depends on this strict schooling. People know, or dimly feel, that if thinking
is not kept pure and keen, and if respect for the world of the mind is no
longer operative, ships and automobiles
will soon cease to run right, the engineer's slide rule and the computations of
banks and stock exchanges will forfeit validity and authority, and chaos will
ensue. It took long enough in all
conscience for realization to come that the externals of civilization -
technology, industry, commerce, and so on - also require a common basis of
intellectual honesty and morality.
To return now to the Glass Bead Game:
what it lacked in those days was the capacity for universality, for rising
above all the disciplines. The
astronomers, the classicists, the scholastics, the music students all played
their Games according to their ingenious rules, but the Game had a special
language and set of rules for every discipline and subdiscipline. It required half a century before the first
step was taken towards spanning these gulfs.
The reason for this slowness was undoubtedly more moral than formal and
technical. The means for building the
spans could even then have been found, but along with the newly regenerated
intellectual life went a puritanical shrinking from "foolish
digressions", from intermingling of disciplines and categories. There was also a profound and justified fear
of relapse into the sin of superficiality and feuilletonism.
It was the achievement of one
individual which brought the Glass Bead Game almost in one leap to an awareness
of its potentialities, and thus to the verge of its capacity for universal
elaboration. And once again this advance
was connected with music. A Swiss
musicologist with a passion for mathematics gave a new twist to the Game, and
thereby opened the way for its supreme development. This great man's name in civil life can no
longer be ascertained; by his time the cult of personality in intellectual
fields had already been dispensed with.
He lives on in history as Lusor (or also, Joculator) Basiliensis. Although his invention, like all inventions,
was the product of his own personal merit and grace, it in no way sprang solely
from personal needs and ambitions, but was impelled by a more powerful
motive. There was a passionate craving
among all the intellectuals of his age for a means to express their new
concepts. They longed for philosophy,
for synthesis. The erstwhile happiness
of pure withdrawal each into his own discipline was now felt to be
inadequate. Here and there a scholar
broke through the barriers of his speciality and tried to advance into the
terrain of universality. Some dreamed of
a new alphabet, a new language of symbols through which they could formulate
and exchange their new intellectual experiences.
Testimony to the strength of this
impulse may be found in the essay "Chinese Warning Cry", by a
Parisian scholar of those years. The
author, mocked by many his day as a sort of Don Quixote (incidentally, he was a
distinguished scholar in the field of Chinese philology), pointed out the
dangers facing culture, in spite of its present honourable condition, if it
neglected to develop an international language of symbols. Such a language, like the ancient Chinese
script, should be able to express the most complex matters graphically, without
excluding individual imagination and inventiveness, in such a way as to be
understandable to all the scholars of the world. It was at this point that Joculator Basiliensis
applied himself to the problem. He
invented for the Glass Bead Game the principles of a new language, a language
of symbols and formulas, in which mathematics and music played an equal part,
so that it became possible to combine astronomical and musical formulas, to
reduce mathematics and music to a common denominator, as it were. Although what he did was by no means
conclusive, this unknown man from Basel certainly laid the foundations for all
that came later in the history of our beloved Game.
The Glass Bead Game, formerly the
specialized entertainment of mathematicians in one era, philologists or
musicians in another era, now more and more cast its spell upon all true
intellectuals. Many an old university,
many a lodge, and especially the age-old League of Journeyers to the East,
turned to it. Some of the Catholic
Orders likewise scented a new intellectual atmosphere and yielded to its
lure. At some Benedictine abbeys the
monks devoted themselves to the Game so intensely that even in those early days
the question was hotly debated - it was subsequently to crop up again now and
then - whether this Game ought to be tolerated, supported, or forbidden by
Church and Curia.
After Joculator Basiliensis' grand
accomplishment, the Game rapidly evolved into what it is today: the
quintessence of intellectuality and art, the sublime cult, the unio mystica of
all separate members of the Universitas Litterarum. In our lives it has partially taken over the
role of art, partially that of speculative philosophy. Indeed, in the days of Plinius Ziegenhalss,
for instance, it was often called by a different name, one common in the
literature of the Feuilletonistic Age.
That name, which for many a prophetic spirit in those days embodied a
visionary ideal, was: Magic Theatre.
For all that the Glass Bead Game had
grown infinitely in technique and range since its beginnings, for all the
intellectual demands it made upon its players, and for all that it had become a
sublime art and science, in the days of Joculator Basiliensis it still was
lacking in an essential element. Up to
that time every game had been a serial arrangement, an ordering, grouping, and
confronting of concentrated concepts from many fields of thought and aesthetics,
a rapid recollection of eternal values and forms, a brief, virtuoso flight
through the realms of the mind. Only
after some time did there enter into the Game, from the intellectual stock of
the educational system and especially from the habits and customs of the
Journeyers to the East, the idea of contemplation.
This new element arose out of an
observed evil. Mnemonists, people with
freakish memories and no other virtues, were capable of playing dazzling games,
dismaying and confusing the other participants by their rapid muster of
countless ideas. In the course of time
such displays of virtuosity fell more and more under a strict ban, and
contemplation became a highly important component of the Game. Ultimately, for the audiences at each Game it
became the main thing. This was the
necessary turning towards the religious spirit.
What had formerly mattered was following the sequences of ideas and the
whole intellectual mosaic of a Game with rapid attentiveness, practised memory,
and full understanding. But there now
arose the demand for a deeper and more spiritual approach. After each symbol conjured up by the director
of a Game, each player was required to perform silent, formal meditation on the
content, origin, and meaning of this symbol, to call to mind intensively and
organically its full purport. The
members of the Order and of the Game associations brought the technique and
practice of contemplation with them from their elite schools, where the art of
contemplation and meditation was nurtured with the greatest care. In this way the hieroglyphs of the Game were
kept from degenerating into mere empty signs.
Hitherto, by the way, the Glass Bead
Game, in spite of its popularity among scholars, had remained a purely private
form of exercise. It could be played
alone, by pairs, or by many, although unusually brilliant, well-composed, and
successful Games were sometimes written down and circulated from city to city
and country to country for admiration or criticism. Now, however, the Game slowly began to be
enriched by a new function, for it became a public ceremonial. To this day everyone is free to play the Game
privately, and young people are especially fond of doing so. But nowadays virtually everyone associates
the Glass Bead Game with ceremonial public Games. They take place under the leadership of a few
superior Masters who are directly subordinate to the Ludi Magister, or Master
of the Game, of their country, with invited guests listening raptly, and a
wider audience all over the world following with closest attention. Some of these Games last for days and weeks,
and while such a Game is being celebrated all the players and guests - obeying
precepts which even govern the length of time they are allowed to sleep - live
an ascetic and selfless life of absolute absorption, comparable to the strictly
regulated penitence required of the participants in one of St. Ignatius
Loyola's exercises.
There is scarcely any more we need
add. Under the shifting hegemony of now
this, now that science or art, the Game of games had developed into a kind of
universal language through which the players could express values and set these
in relation to one another. Throughout
its history the Game was closely allied with music, and usually proceeding according
to musical or mathematical rules. One
theme, two themes, or three themes were stated, elaborated, varied, and
underwent a development quite similar to that of the theme in a Bach fugue or a
concerto movement. A Game, for example,
might start from a given astronomical configuration, or from the actual theme
of a Bach fugue, or from a sentence out of Leibniz or the Upanishads, and from
this theme, depending on the intentions and talents of the player, it could
either further explore and elaborate the initial motif or else enrich its expressiveness
by allusions to kindred concepts.
Beginners learned how to establish parallels, by means of the Game's
symbols, between a piece of classical music and the formula for some law of
nature. Experts and Masters of the Game
freely wove the initial theme into unlimited combinations. For a long time one school of players
favoured the technique of sitting side by side, developing in counterpoint, and
finally harmoniously combining two hostile themes or ideas, such as law and
freedom, individual and community. In
such a Game the goal was to develop both themes or theses with complete
equality and impartiality, to evolve out of thesis and antithesis the purest
possible synthesis. In general, aside
from certain brilliant exceptions, Games with discordant, negative, or
sceptical conclusions were unpopular and at times actually forbidden. This followed directly from the meaning the
Game had acquired at its height for the players. It represented an elite, symbolic form of
seeking for perfection, a sublime alchemy, an approach to that Mind which
beyond all images and multiplicities is one within itself - in other words, to
God. Pious thinkers of earlier times had
represented the life of creatures, say, as a mode of motion towards God, and
had considered that the variety of the phenomenal world reached perfection and
ultimate cognition only in the divine Unity.
Similarly, the symbols and formulas of the Glass Bead Game combined
structurally, musically, and philosophically within the framework of a
universal language, were nourished by all the sciences and arts, and strove in
play to achieve perfection, pure being, the fullness of reality. Thus "realizing" was a favourite
expression among the players. They
considered their Games a path from Becoming to Being, from potentiality to
reality. We would like to remind the
reader once again of the sentences quoted above from Nicholas of Cusa.
Incidentally, the terminology of
Christian theology, or at any rate that part of it which seemed to have become
a part of the general cultural heritage, was naturally absorbed into the
symbolic language of the Game. Thus one
of the principles of the Creed, a passage from the Bible, a phrase from one of
the Church Fathers, or from the Latin text of the Mass could be expressed and
taken into the Game just as easily and aptly as an axiom of geometry or a
melody of Mozart. We would scarcely be
exaggerating if we ventured to say that for the small circle of genuine Glass
Bead Game players the Game was virtually equivalent to worship, although it
deliberately eschewed developing any theology of its own.
In struggling for their continued
existence in the midst of soulless world powers, both the Glass Bead Game
players and the Roman Church had become too dependent upon each other for
either to permit a decisive confrontation between them, although that danger
was always present, since the intellectual honesty and the authentic impulse to
reach incisive, unequivocal formulations drove the partisans of both towards a
parting of the ways. That parting,
however, never took place. Rome
vacillated between a benevolent and a hostile attitude towards the Game, for a
good many of the most talented persons in the Roman congregations, and in the
ranks of the high and the highest clergy, were players. And the Game itself, ever since public
matches and a Ludi Magister had been instituted, enjoyed the protection of the
Order and of the education ministries, both of which always behaved with the
greatest possible courtesy and chivalry towards Rome. Pope Pius XV, who as a cardinal had been an
excellent and ardent Glass Bead Game player, as pontiff followed the example of
all his predecessors in bidding the Game farewell forever; but he went a step
further and actually attempted to put the Game on trial. It was a near thing; had he carried out his
intention, Catholics would have been forbidden to play the Game. But the pope died before matters came to that
point, and a widely read biography of this rather important man has represented
his attitude towards the Glass Bead Game as one of deep passion which in his
pontifical office he could vent only in the form of hostility.
The Game had been played freely by
individuals and cliques, and for a long time amiably promoted by the ministries
of education, before it acquired the status of a public institution. It was first organized as such in France and
England; other countries followed fairly rapidly. In each country a Game Commission and a
supreme head of the Game, bearing the title of Ludi Magister, were
established. Official matches, played
under the personal direction of the Magister, were exalted into cultural
festivals. Like all high functionaries
in cultural life, the Magister of course remained anonymous. Aside from a few intimates, no-one knew his
name. Official and international
communications media, such as radio and so on, were made available only for the
great official matches over which the Ludi Magister personally presided. Among the duties of the Magister, in addition
to conducting the public Games, was supervision of the players and the schools
of the Game. Above all, however, the
Magister had to keep strict watch over the further elaboration of the
Game. The World Commission of the
Magisters of all countries alone decided on the acceptance of new symbols and
formulas into the existing stock of the Game (which scarcely ever occurs
nowadays), on modifications of the rules, on the desirability of including new
fields within the purview of the Game.
If the Game is regarded as a kind of world language for thoughtful men,
the Games Commissions of the various countries under the leadership of their
Magisters form as a whole the Academy which guards the vocabulary, the
development, and the purity of this language.
Each country's Commission possesses its Archive of the Game, that is,
the register of all hitherto examined and accepted symbols and decipherments,
whose number long ago by far exceeded the number of the ancient Chinese
ideographs.
In general, a passing grade in the
final examination in one of the academies, especially one of the elite schools,
is considered sufficient qualification for a Glass Bead Game player; but in the
past and to this day superior competence in one of the principal fields of
scholarship or in music is tacitly assumed.
To rise some day to membership in one of the Games Commissions, or even
to Ludi Magister, is the dream of almost every fifteen-year-old in the elite
schools. But by the times these youths
have become doctoral candidates, only a tiny percentage still seriously cling
to their ambition to serve the Glass Bead Game and take an active part in its
further development. On the other hand,
all these lovers of the Game diligently study the lore of the Game and practise
meditation. At the "great"
Games they form that innermost ring of reverent and devoted participants which
gives the public matches their ceremonial character and keeps them from
devolving into mere aesthetic displays.
To these real players and devotees, the Ludi Magister is a prince or high
priest, almost a deity.
But for every independent player, and
especially for the Magister, the Glass Bead Game is primarily a form of
music-making, somewhat in the sense of those words that Joseph Knecht once
spoke concerning the nature of classical music:
"We consider classical music to
be the epitome and quintessence of our culture, because it is that culture's
clearest, most significant gesture and expression. In this music we possess the heritage of classical
antiquity and Christianity, a spirit of serenely cheerful and brave piety, a
superbly chivalric morality. For in the
final analysis every important cultural gesture comes down to a morality, a
model for human behaviour concentrated into a gesture. As we know, between 1500 and 1800 a wide
variety of music was made; styles and means of expression were extremely
variegated; but the spirit, or rather the morality, was everywhere the same. The human attitude of which classical music
is the expression is always the same; it is always based on the same kind of
insight into life and strives for the same kind of victory over blind
chance. Classical music as gesture
signifies knowledge of the tragedy of the human condition, affirmation of human
destiny, courage, cheerful serenity. The
grace of a minuet by Handel or Couperin, the sensuality sublimated into
delicate gesture to be found in many Italian composers or in Mozart, the
tranquil, composed readiness for death in Bach - always there may be heard in these
works a defiance, a death-defying intrepidity, a gallantry, and a note of
superhuman laughter, of immortal gay serenity.
Let that same note also sound in our Glass Bead Games, and in our whole
lives, acts, and sufferings."
These words were noted down by one of
Knecht's pupils. With them we bring to
an end our consideration of the Glass Bead Game.
_______________________
THE LIFE OF MAGISTER LUDI JOSEPH KNECHT
______________________________________
ONE
THE CALL
NO
KNOWLEDGE HAS come down to us of Joseph Knecht's origins. Like many other pupils of the elite schools,
he either lost his parents early in childhood, or the Board of Educators
removed him from unfavourable home conditions and took charge of him. In any case, he was spared the conflict
between elite school and home which complicates the youth of many other boys of
his type, makes entry into the Order more difficult, and in some cases
transforms highly gifted young people into problem personalities.
Knecht was one of those fortunates who
seem born for Castalia, for the Order, and for service in the Board of
Educators. Although he was not spared
the perplexities of the life of the mind, it was given to him to experience
without personal bitterness the tragedy inherent in every life consecrated to
thought. Indeed, it is probably not so
much this tragedy in itself that has tempted us to delve so deeply into the
personality of Joseph Knecht; rather, it was the tranquil, cheerful, not to say
radiant manner in which he brought his destiny and his talents to
fruition. Like every man of importance
he had his daimonion and his amor fati; but in him amor fati manifested
itself to us free of sombreness and fanaticism.
Granted, there is always much that is hidden, and we must not forget
that the writing of history - however dryly it is done and however sincere the
desire for objectivity - remains literature.
History's third dimension is always fiction.
Thus, to select some examples of
greatness, we have no idea whether Johann Sebastian Bach or Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart actually lived in a cheerful or a despondent manner. Mozart moves us with that peculiarly touching
and endearing grace of early blossoming and fading; Bach stands for the
edifying and comforting submission to God's paternal plan of which suffering
and dying form a part. But we do not
really read these qualities from their biographies and from such facts about
their private lives as have come down to us; we read them solely from their
works, from their music. Furthermore,
although we know Bach's biography and deduce his personality from his music, we
involuntarily include his posthumous destiny in the picture. We conceive him as living with the knowledge,
which causes him a silent smile, that all his work would be forgotten after his
death, that his manuscripts would be treated as so much waste paper, that one
of his sons instead of himself would be considered "the great Bach",
and harvest the success he himself merited, and that after his work had been
rediscovered it would be plunged into the misunderstandings and barbarities of
the Age of the Feuilleton, and so on.
Similarly, we tend to ascribe to Mozart, while still alive and
flourishing, and producing his soundest work, some knowledge of his security in
the hands of death, some premonition of the kindness with which death would
embrace him. Where a body of work
exists, the historian cannot help himself; he must sum it up, along with the
life of the creator of that work, as two inseparable halves of a living
unity. So we do with Mozart or with
Bach; so we do with Knecht, although he belongs to our essentially uncreative
era and has not left behind any body of work of the same nature as those
masters.
In attempting to trace the course of
Knecht's life we are also attempting to interpret it, and although as
historians we must deeply regret the scantiness of authenticated information on
the last period of his life, we were nevertheless encouraged to undertake the
task precisely because this last part of Knecht's life has become a legend. We have taken over this legend and adhere to
its spirit, whether or not it is merely a pious fiction. Just as we know nothing about Knecht's birth
and origins, we know nothing about his death.
But we have not the slightest reason for assuming that his death could
have been a matter of pure chance. We
regard his life, insofar as it is known, as built up in a clear succession of
stages; and if in our speculations about its end we gladly accept the legend
and faithfully report it, we do so because what the legend tells us about the
last stage of his life seems to correspond fully with the previous stages. We go so far as to admit that the manner in
which his life drifts gently off into legend appears to us organic and right,
just as it imposes no strain on our credulity to believe in the continued
existence of a constellation that has vanished below the horizon. Within the world in which we live - and by
"we" I mean the author of this present work and the reader - Joseph
Knecht reached the summit and achieved the maximum. As Magister Ludi he became the leader and
prototype of all those who strive towards and cultivate the things of the
mind. He administered and increased the
cultural heritage that had been handed down to him, for he was high priest of a
temple that is sacred to each and every one of us. But he did more than attain the realm of a
Master, did more than fill the office at the very summit of our hierarchy. He moved on beyond it; he grew out of it into
a dimension whose nature we can only reverently guess at. And for that very reason it seems to us
perfectly appropriate, and in keeping with his life, that his biography should
also have surpassed the usual dimensions and at the end passed on into
legend. We accept the miracle of this fact
and rejoice in it without any inclination to pry into it interpretively. But insofar as Knecht's life is historical -
and it is that up to one specific day - we intend to treat it as such. It has been our endeavour, therefore, to
transmit the tradition exactly as it has been revealed to us by our researches.
Concerning his childhood before he
entered the elite schools, we know only a single incident. It is, however, one of symbolic importance,
for it signifies the first great call of the realm of Mind to him, the voice of
his vocation. And it is characteristic
that this first call came not from science or scholarship, but from music. We owe this fragment of biography, as we do
almost all the recollections of Knecht's personal life, to the jottings of a
pupil of the Glass Bead Game, a loyal admirer who kept a record of many of the
remarks and stories of his great teacher.
Knecht must have been twelve or
thirteen years old at the time. For
quite a while he had been a scholarship pupil in the Latin school of
Berolfingen, a small town on the fringes of the Zaberwald. Probably Berolfingen was also his
birthplace. His teachers at the school,
and especially his music teacher, had already recommended him two or three
times to the highest Board for admission into the elite schools. But Knecht knew nothing about this and had as
yet had no encounters with the elite or with any of the masters of the highest
Board of Educators. His music teacher,
from whom he was learning violin and the lute, told him that the Music Master
would shortly be coming to Berolfingen to inspect music instruction at the
school. Therefore Joseph must practise
like a good boy and not embarrass his teacher.
The news stirred the boy deeply, for
of course he knew quite well who the Music Master was. He was not to be compared with the school
inspectors who visited twice a year, coming from somewhere in the higher
reaches of the Board of Educators. The
Music Master was one of the twelve demigods, one of the twelve supreme heads of
this most respected of Boards. In all
musical affairs he was the supreme authority for the entire country. To think that the Music Master himself, the
Magister Musicae in person, would be coming to Berolfingen! There was only one person in the world whom
Joseph might have regarded as still more legendary and mysterious: the Master
of the Glass Bead Game.
Joseph was filled in advance with an
enormous and timorous reverence for the impending visitor. He imagined the Music Master variously as a
king, as one of the Twelve Apostles, or as one of the legendary great artists
of classical times, a Michael Praetorius or a Claudio Monterverdi, a J.J.
Froberger or Johann Sebastian Bach. And
he looked forward with a joy as deep as his terror to the appearance of this mighty
star. That one of the demigods and
archangels, one of the mysterious and almighty regents of the world of thought,
was to appear in the flesh here in town and in the Latin school; that he was
going to see him, and that the Master might possibly speak to him, examine him,
reprimand or praise him, was a kind of miracle and rare prodigy in the
skies. Moreover, as the teachers assured
him, this was to be the first time in decades that a Magister Musicae in person
would be visiting the town and the little Latin school. The boy pictured the forthcoming event in a
great variety of ways. Above all he
imagined a great public festival and a reception such as he had once experienced
when a new major had taken office, with brass bands and streets strung with banners;
there might even be fireworks. Knecht's
schoolmates also had such fantasies and hopes.
His happy excitement was subdued only by the thought that he himself
might come too close to this great man, and that his playing and his answers
might be so bad that he would end up unbearably disgraced. But this anxiety was sweet as well as
tormenting. Secretly, without admitting
it to himself, he did not think the whole eagerly anticipated festival with its
flags and fireworks nearly so fine, so entrancing, important, and miraculously
delightful as the very possibility that he, little Joseph Knecht, would be
seeing this man at close quarters, that in fact the Master was paying this
visit to Berolfingen just a little on his, Joseph's, account - for he was after
all coming to examine the state of musical instruction, and the music teacher
obviously thought it possible that the Master would examine him as well.
But perhaps it would not come to that
- alas, it probably would not. After all,
it was hardly possible. The Master would
have better things to do than to listen to a small boy's violin-playing. He would probably want to see and hear only
the older, more advanced pupils.
Such were the boy's thoughts as he
awaited the day. And the day, when it
came, began with a disappointment. No
music blared in the streets, no flags and garlands hung from the houses. As on every other day, Joseph had to gather
up his books and notebooks and go to the ordinary classes. And even in the classroom there was not the
slightest sign of decoration or festivity.
Everything was ordinary and normal.
Class began; the teacher wore his everyday smock; he made no speeches,
did not so much as mention the great guest of honour.
But during the second or third hour
the guest came nevertheless. There was a
knock at the door; the school janitor came in and informed the teacher that
Joseph Knecht was to present himself to the music teacher in fifteen minutes. And he had better make sure that his hair was
decently combed and his hands and fingernails clean.
Knecht turned pale with fright. He stumbled from the classroom, ran to the
dormitory, put down his books, washed and combed his hair. Trembling, he took his violin case and his
book of exercises. With a lump in his
throat, he made his way to the music rooms in the annex. An excited schoolmate met him on the stairs,
pointed to a practice room, and told him: "You're supposed to wait here
till they call you."
The wait was short, but seemed to him
an eternity. No-one called him, but a
man entered the room. A very old man, it
seemed to him at first, not very tall, white-haired, with a fine clear face and
penetrating, light-blue eyes. The gaze
of those eyes might have been frightening, but they were serenely cheerful as
well as penetrating, neither laughing nor smiling, but filled with a calm,
quietly radiant cheerfulness. He shook
hands with the boy, nodded, and sat down with deliberation on the stool in
front of the old practice piano.
"You are Joseph Knecht?" he said. "Your teacher seems content with
you. I think he is fond of you. Come, let's make a little music together."
Knecht had already taken out his
violin. The old man struck the A, and
the boy tuned. Then he looked
inquiringly, anxiously, at the Music Master.
"What would you like to
play?" the Master asked.
The boy could not say a word. He was filled to the brim with awe of the old
man. Never had he seen a person like
this. Hesitantly, he picked up his
exercise book and held it out to the Master.
"No," the Master said,
"I want you to play from memory, and not an exercise but something easy
that you know by heart. Perhaps a song
you like."
Knecht was confused, and so enchanted
by this face and those eyes that he could not answer. He was deeply ashamed of his confusion, but
unable to speak. The Master did not
insist. With one finger, he struck the
first notes of a melody, and looked questioningly at the boy. Joseph nodded and at once played the melody
with pleasure. It was one of the old
songs which were often sung in school.
"Once more," the Master
said.
Knecht repeated the melody, and the
old man now played a second voice to go with it. Now the old song rang through the small
practice room in two parts.
"Once more."
Knecht played, and the Master played
the second part, and a third part also.
Now the beautiful old song rang through the room in three parts.
"Once more." And the Master played three voices along with
the melody.
"A lovely song," the Master
said softly. "Play it again, in the
alto this time."
The Master gave him the first note,
and Knecht played, the Master accompanying with the other three voices. Again and again the Master said, "Once
more," and each time he sounded merrier.
Knecht played the melody in the tenor, each time accompanied by two or
three parts. They played the song many
times, and with every repetition the song was involuntarily enriched with
embellishments and variations. The bare
little room resounded festively in the cheerful light of the forenoon.
After a while the old man
stopped. "Is that enough?" he
asked. Knecht shook his head and began
again. The Master chimed in gaily with
his three voices, and the four parts drew their thin lucid lines, spoke to one
another, mutually supported, crossed, and wove around one another in delightful
windings and figurations. The boy and
the old man ceased to think of anything else; they surrendered themselves to
the lovely, congenial lines and figurations they formed as their parts
criss-crossed. Caught in the network
their music was creating, they swayed gently along with it, obeying an unseen
conductor. Finally, when the melody had
come to an end once more, the Master turned his head and asked: "Did you like
that, Joseph?"
Gratefully, his face glowing, Knecht
looked at him. He was radiant but still
speechless.
"Do you happen to know what a
fugue is?" the Master now asked.
Knecht looked dubious. He had already heard fugues, but had not yet
studied them in class.
"Very well," the Master
said, "then I'll show you. You'll
grasp it quicker if we make a fugue ourselves.
Now then, the first thing we need for a fugue is a theme, and we don't
have to look far for the theme. We'll
take it from our song."
He played a brief phrase, a fragment
of the song's melody. It sounded
strange, cut out in that way, without head or tail. He played the theme once more, and this time
he went on to the first entrance; the second entrance changed the interval of a
fifth to a fourth; the third repeated the first an octave higher, as did the
fourth with the second. The exposition
concluded with a cadence in the key of the dominant. The second working-out modulated more freely
to other keys; the third, tending towards the subdominant, ended with a cadence
on the tonic.
The boy looked at the player's clever
white fingers, saw the course of the development faintly mirrored in his
concentrated expression, while his eyes remained quiet under half-closed
lids. Joseph's heart swelled with
veneration, with love for the Master.
His ear drank in the fugue; it seemed to him that he was hearing music
for the first time in his life. Behind
the music being created in his presence he sensed the world of Mind, the
joy-giving harmony of law and freedom, of service and rule. He surrendered himself, and vowed to serve
that world and this Master. In those few
minutes he saw himself and his life, saw the whole cosmos guided, ordered, and
interpreted by the spirit of music. And
when the playing had come to an end, he saw this magician and king for whom he
felt so intense a reverence pause for a little while longer, slightly bowed
over the keys, with half-closed eyes, his face softly glowing from within. Joseph did not know whether he ought to rejoice
at the bliss of this moment, or weep because it was over.
The old man slowly raised himself from
the piano stool, fixed those cheerful blue eyes piercingly and at the same time
with unimaginable friendliness upon him, and said: "Making music together
is the best way for two people to become friends. There is none easier. That is a fine thing. I hope you and I shall remain friends. Perhaps you too will learn how to make
fugues, Joseph."
He shook hands with Joseph and took
his leave. But in the doorway he turned
once more and gave Joseph a parting greeting, with a look and a ceremonious
little inclination of his head.
Many years later Knecht told his pupil
that when he stepped out of the building, he found the town and the world far
more transformed and enchanted than if there had been flags, garlands, and
streamers, or displays of fireworks. He
had experienced his vocation, which may surely be spoken of as a
sacrament. The ideal world, which
hitherto his young soul had known only be hearsay and in wild dreams, had
suddenly taken on visible lineaments for him.
Its gates had opened invitingly.
This world, he now saw, did not exist only in some vague, remote past or
future; it was here and was active; it glowed, sent messengers, apostles,
ambassadors, men like this old Magister (who by the way was not nearly so old
as he then seemed to Joseph). And
through this venerable messenger an admonition and a call had come from that
world even to him, the insignificant Latin school pupil.
Such was the meaning of the experience
for him. It took weeks before he
actually realized, and was convinced, that the magical events of that
sacramental hour corresponded to a precise event in the real world, that the
summons was not just a sense of happiness and admonition in his own soul and
his own conscience, but a show of favour and an exhortation from the earthly
powers. For in the long run it could not
be concealed that the Music Master's visit had been neither a matter of chance
nor a real inspection of the school.
Rather, Knecht's name had stood for some time on the lists of pupils who
seemed deserving of education in the elite school. At any rate, on the basis of his teachers'
reports he had been so recommended to the Board of Educators. The boy had been recommended for good
character and as a Latinist, but the highest praise had come from his music
teacher. Therefore the Music Master had
chosen to stop off for a few hours in Berolfingen, in the course of an official
mission, in order to see this pupil. In
his examination he was not so much interested in Joseph's Latin or his
fingering (in these matters he relied on the teaches' reports, which he
nevertheless spent an hour going over) as whether the boy had it in him by
nature to become a musician in the higher sense of the word, whether he had the
capacity for enthusiasm, subordination, reverence, worshipful service. As a rule, and for very good reasons, the
teachers in the public schools were anything but liberal in their
recommendations of pupils for the "elite". Nevertheless, now and then someone would be
pushed out of more or less unsavoury motives.
Quite often, too, from sheer lack of insight a teacher would stubbornly
recommend some pet pupil who had few virtues aside from diligence, ambition,
and a certain shrewdness in his conduct towards the teachers. The Music Master particularly disliked this
kind of boy. He could tell at once
whether a pupil was aware that his future career was at stake, and woe to the
boy who approached him too adroitly, too cannily, too cleverly, let alone one
who tried to flatter him. In a good many
cases such candidates were rejected without even an examination.
Knecht, on the other hand, had
delighted the old Music Master. He had
liked him very much. As he continued his
journey he recalled the boy with pleasure.
He had made no notes and entered no marks for him in his notebook, but
he took with him the memory of the unspoiled, modest boy, and upon his return
he inscribed his name in his own hand on the list of pupils who had been
examined personally by a member of the Board of Educators and been found worthy
of admission.
Joseph had occasionally heard talk in
school about this list, and in a great variety of tones. The pupils called it "the golden
book", but sometimes they disrespectfully referred to it as the
"climbers' catalogue".
Whenever a teacher mentioned the list - if only to remind a pupil that a
lout like him could never hope to win a place on it - there would be a note of
solemnity, of respect, and also of self-importance in his voice. But if the pupils mentioned the catalogue,
they usually spoke in a jeering tone and with somewhat exaggerated
indifference. Once Joseph had heard a
schoolmate say: "Go on, what do I care about that stupid climbers'
catalogue. You won't see a regular
fellow's name in it, that's for sure.
The teachers keep it for all the worst grinds and creeps."
A curious period followed Joseph's
wonderful experience with the Music Master.
He still did not know that he now belonged to the electi, to the flos
juventutis, as the elite pupils were called in the Order. At first it did not enter his mind that there
might be practical consequences and tangible effects of the episode upon his
general destiny or his daily life. While
for his teachers he was already marked by distinction and on the verge of
departure, he himself was conscious of his call almost entirely as a process
within himself. Even so, it made a clear
dividing line in his life. Although the
hour with the sorcerer (as he often thought of the Music Master) had only
brought to fruition, or brought closer, something he had already sensed in his
own heart, that hour nevertheless clearly separated the past from the present
and the future - just as an awakened dreamer, even if he wakes up in the same
surroundings that he has seen in his dream, cannot really doubt that he is now
awake. There are many types and kinds of
vocation, but the core of the experience is always the same: the soul is
awakened by it, transformed or exalted, so that instead of dreams and presentiments
from within a summons comes from without.
A portion of reality presents itself and makes it claim.
In this case the portion of reality
had been the Music Master. This remote,
venerated demigod, this archangel from the highest spheres of heaven, had
appeared in the flesh. Joseph had seen
his omniscient blue eyes. He had sat on
the stool at the practice piano, had made music with Joseph, made music
wonderfully; almost without words he had shown him what music really was, had
blessed him, and vanished.
For the present Joseph was incapable
of reflecting on possible practical consequences, on all that might flow out of
this event, for he was much too preoccupied with the immediate reverberations
of it within himself. Like a young plant
hitherto quietly and intermittently developing which suddenly begins to breathe
harder and to grow, as though in a miraculous hour it has become aware of the
law which shapes it and begins to strive towards the fulfilment of its being,
the boy, touched by the magician's hand, began rapidly and eagerly to gather
and tauten his energies. He felt
changed, growing; he felt new tensions and new harmonies between himself and
the world. There were times, now, in
music, Latin, and mathematics, when he could master tasks that were still far
beyond his age and the scope of his schoolmates. Sometimes he felt capable of any
achievements. At other times he might
forget everything and daydream with a new softness and surrender, listen to the
wind or the rain, gaze into the chalice of a flower or the moving waters of the
river, understanding nothing, divining everything, lost in sympathy, curiosity,
the craving to comprehend, carried away from his own self towards another,
towards the world, towards the mystery and sacrament, the at once painful and
lovely disporting of the world of appearances.
Thus, beginning from within and
growing towards the meeting and confirmation of self and world, the vocation of
Joseph Knecht developed into perfect purity.
He passed through all its stages, tasted all its joys and
anxieties. Unhampered by sudden
revelations and indiscretions, the sublime process moved to its
conclusion. His was the typical
evolution of every noble mind; working and growing harmoniously and at the same
tempo, the inner self and the outer world approached each other. At the end of these developments the boy
became aware of his situation and of the fate that awaited him. He realized that his teachers were treating
him like a colleague, even like a guest of honour whose departure is expected
at any moment, and this his schoolmates were half admiring or envying him, half
avoiding or even distrusting him. Some
of his enemies now openly mocked and hated him, and he found himself more and more
separated from and deserted by former friends.
But by then the same process of separation and isolation had been
completed within himself. His own
feelings had taught him to regard the teachers more and more as associates
rather than superiors; his former friends had become temporary companions of
the road, now left behind. He no longer
felt that he was among equals in his school and his town. He was no longer in the right place. Everything he had known had become permeated
by a hidden death, a solvent of unreality, a sense of belonging to the
past. It had all become a makeshift,
like worn-out clothing that no longer fitted.
And as the end of his stay at the Latin school approached, this slow
outgrowing of a beloved and harmonious home town, this shedding of a way of
life no longer right for him, this living on the verge of departure -
interspersed though the mood of parting was by moments of supreme rejoicing and
radiant self-assurance - became a terrible torment to him, an almost
intolerable pressure and suffering. For
everything was slipping from him without his being sure that it was not really
himself who was abandoning everything.
He could not say whether he should not be blaming himself for this
perishing and estrangement of his dear and accustomed world. Perhaps he had killed it by ambition, by
arrogance, by pride, by disloyalty and lack of love. Among the pangs inherent in a genuine
vocation, these are the bitterest. One
who has received the call takes, in accepting it, not only a gift and a
commandment, but also something akin to guilt.
Similarly, the soldier who is snatched from the ranks of his comrades
and raised to the status of officer is the worthier of promotion, the more he
pays for it with a feeling of guilty conscience towards his comrades.
Joseph Knecht, however, had the good
fortune to go through this evolution undisturbed and in utter innocence. When at last the faculty informed him of his
distinction and his impending admission to the elite schools, he was for the
moment completely surprised, although a moment later this novelty seemed to him
something he had long known and been expecting.
Yet only now did he recall that for weeks the word electus, or
"elite boy", had now and again been sneeringly called out behind his
back. He had heard it, but only half heard,
and had never imagined it as anything but a taunt. He had taken it to mean not that his
schoolmates were actually calling him an electus, but that they were
jeering: "You're so stuck up you think you're an electus." Occasionally he had suffered from the gulf
that had opened between himself and his schoolmates, but in fact he would never
have considered himself an electus.
He had become conscious of the call not as a rise in rank, but only as
an inward admonition and encouragement.
And yet - in spite of everything, had he not known it all along, divined
it, felt it again and again? Now it had
come; his raptures were confirmed, made legitimate; his suffering had had
meaning; the clothing he had worn, by now unbearably old and too tight, could
be discarded at last. A new suit was
waiting for him.
With his admission into the elite,
Knecht's life was transferred to a different plane. The first and decisive step in his
development had been taken. It is by no
means the rule for all elite pupils that official admission to the elite
coincides with the inner experience of vocation. That is a matter of grace, or to put it in
banal terms, sheer good fortune. The
young man to whom it does happen starts out with an advantage, just as it is an
advantage to be endowed with felicitous qualities of body and soul. Almost all elite pupils regard their election
as a piece of great good fortune, a distinction they are proud of, and a great many of them have
previously felt an ardent longing for that distinction. But for most of the elect the transition from
the ordinary schools of their home towns to the schools of Castalia comes
harder than they had imagined, and entails a good many unexpected
disappointments. Especially for pupils
who were happy and loved in their homes, the change represents a very difficult
parting and renunciation. The result is
a rather considerable number of transfers back home, especially during the
first two elite years. The reason for
these is not a lack of talent and industry, but the inability of the pupils to
adapt to boarding-school life and to the idea of more and more severing their
ties to family and home until ultimately they would cease to know and to
respect any allegiance other than to the Order.
On the other hand, there were
occasionally pupils for whom admission to the elite schools meant above all
freedom from home or an oppressive school, from an oversevere father, say, or a
disagreeable teacher. These youngsters
breathed easier for a while, but they had expected such vast and impossible
changes in their whole life that disillusionment soon followed.
The real climbers and model pupils,
the young pedants, could also not always hold their own in Castalia. Not that they would have been unable to cope
with their studies. But in the elite,
studies and marks were not the only criterion.
There were other pedagogical and artistic goals which sometimes proved
too much for such pupils. Nevertheless,
within the system of four great elite schools with their numerous subdivisions and
branch institutions there was room for a great variety of talents, and an
aspiring mathematician or a student of languages and literatures, if he really
had the makings of a scholar, would not be misprized for a lack of musical or
philosophical talent. Even in Castalia,
in fact, there were at times very strong tendencies towards cultivation of the
pure, sober disciplines, and the advocates of such tendencies not only
denigrated the "visionaries", that is, the devotees of music and the
other arts, but even sometimes went so far as to forswear and ban, within their
own circle, everything artistic, and especially the Glass Bead Game.
Since all that is known to us of
Knecht's life took place in Castalia, in that most tranquil and serene region
of our mountainous country, which in the old days used to be called, in the
poet Goethe's phrase, "the pedagogical province", we shall at the
risk of boring the reader with matters long familiar once more briefly sketch
the character of famous Castalia and the structure of her schools. These schools, for brevity known as the elite
schools, constitute a wise and flexible system by means of which the
administration (a Council of Studies consisting of twenty councillors, ten
representing the Board of Educators and ten representing the Order) draws
candidates from among the most gifted pupils in the various sections and
schools of the country, in order to supply new generations for the Order and
for all the important offices in the secondary school system and the universities. The multitude of ordinary schools, gymnasia,
and other schools in the country, whether technical or humanistic in character,
are for more than ninety percent of our students preparatory schools for the
professions. They terminate with an
entrance examination for the university.
At the university there is a specific course of study for each
subject. Such is the standard curriculum
for our students, as everyone knows.
These schools make reasonably strict demands and do their best to
exclude the untalented.
But alongside or above these schools
we have the system of elite schools, to which only the pupils of extraordinary
gifts and character are admitted.
Entrance to them is not controlled by examinations. Instead, the elite pupils are chosen by their
teachers, according to their judgement, and are recommended to the Castalian
authorities. One day a teacher suggests
to a child of eleven or twelve that if he wished he could perhaps enter one of
the Castalian schools next semester.
Does he feel attracted by the idea; does he feel any vocation for
it? The boy is given time to think it
over. If he then agrees, and if the
unqualified consent of both parents is obtained, one of the elite schools
admits him on probation. The directors
and the highest-level teachers of these elite schools (by no means the
faculties of the universities) form the Board of Educators, which has charge of
all education and all intellectual organizations in the country. Once a boy becomes an elite pupil (and
assuming he does not fail any of the courses, in which case he is sent back to
the ordinary schools) he no longer has to prepare for a profession or some
speciality that will subsequently become his livelihood. Rather, the Order and the hierarchy of
academics are recruited from among the elite pupils, everyone from the grammar
school teachers to the highest officers, the twelve Directors of Studies, also
called Masters, and the Ludi Magister, the director of the Glass Bead Game.
As a rule, the last courses in the
elite schools are completed between the ages of twenty-two and
twenty-five. The graduate is then
admitted to the Order. Thereafter, all
educational and research institutions of the Order and of the Board of
Educators are available to the former elite pupils, all the libraries,
archives, laboratories, and so on, together with a large staff of teachers, if
they desire further study, and all the faculties of the Glass Bead Game. A degree of specialization begins even during
the school years. In the upper ranges of
the elite schools those who show special aptitudes for languages, philosophy,
mathematics, or whatever are shifted to the curriculum which provides the best
nourishment for their talents. Most of
these pupils end up as subject teachers in the public schools and
universities. They remain, even though
they have left Castalia, members of the Order for life. That is to say, they stand at an austere
remove from the "normals" (those who were not educated in the elite
schools) and can never - unless they resign the Order - become professional
men, such as doctors, lawyers, engineers, and so on. They are subject for life to the rules of the
Order, which include poverty and bachelorhood.
The common people call them, in an half-derisive, half-respectful tone,
"the mandarins".
Thus the bulk of former elite pupils
find their ultimate destiny as schoolmasters.
The tiny remainder, the top flight of the Castalian schools, can devote
themselves to free study for as long as they please. A contemplative, diligent intellectual life
is reserved for them. Many a highly
gifted person who for one reason or another, perhaps some physical defect or
quirk of character, is not suited to become a teacher or to hold a responsible
post in the superior or inferior Boards of Educators, may go on studying,
researching, or collecting throughout his life as a pensioner of the
authorities. His contribution to society
then consists mostly of works of pure scholarship. Some are placed as advisors to dictionary
committees, archives, libraries, and so on; others pursue scholarship as art
for art's sake. A good many of them have
devoted their lives to highly abstruse and sometimes peculiar subjects, such as
Ludovicus Crudelis, who toiled for thirty years translating all extant ancient
Egyptian texts into both Greek and Sanskrit, or the somewhat peculiar Chattus
Calvensis II, who has bequeathed to us four immense folio volumes on The
Pronunciation of Latin in the Universities of Southern Italy towards the End of
the Twelfth Century. This work was
intended as Part One of a History of the Pronunciation of Latin from the
Twelfth to the Sixteenth Centuries. But
in spite of its one thousand manuscript pages, it has remained a fragment, for
no-one has carried on the work.
It is understandable that there has
been a good deal of joking about purely learned works of this type. Their actual value for the future of
scholarship and for the people as a whole cannot be demonstrated. Nevertheless, scholarship, as was true for
art in the olden days, must indeed have far-flung grazing grounds, and in
pursuit of a subject which interests no-one but himself a scholar can
accumulate knowledge as valuable as that stored in a dictionary or an archive.
As far as possible, scholarly works
such as the above-mentioned were printed.
The real scholars were left in almost total freedom to ply their studies
and their Games, and no-one objected that a good many of their works seemed to
bring no immediate benefits to the people or the community and, inevitably,
seemed to nonscholars merely luxurious frivolities. A good many of these scholars have been
smiled at for the nature of their studies, but none has ever been reproved, let
alone had his privileges withdrawn. Nor
were they merely tolerated; they enjoyed the respect of the populace, in spite
of being the butt of many jokes. This
respect was founded on the sacrifice with which all members of the scholarly
community paid for their intellectual privileges. They had many amenities; they had a modest
allotment of food, clothing, and shelter; they had splendid libraries,
collections, and laboratories at their disposal. But in return they renounced lush living,
marriage, and family. As a monastic
community they were excluded from competition in the world. They owned no property, received no titles
and honours, and in material things had to content themselves with a very
simple life. If one wanted to expend the
years of his life deciphering a single ancient inscription, he was free to do
so, and would even be helped. But if he
desired good living, rich clothing, money, or titles, he found these things
inexorably barred. Those for whom such
gratifications were important usually returned to "the world" quite
young; they became paid teachers or tutors or journalists; they married or in
other ways sought out a life to suit their tastes.
When the time came for Joseph Knecht
to leave Berolfingen, it was his music teacher who accompanied him to the
railroad station. Saying goodbye to his
teacher was painful, and his heart also swelled a little with a feeling of
loneliness and uncertainty after the train started and the whitewashed stepped
gable of the old castle tower dropped out of sight and did not reappear. Many another pupil has set out on his first
journey with far more turbulent feelings, frightened and in tears. Joseph had inwardly already transferred his
allegiance; he withstood the journey well.
And he did not have far to go.
He had been assigned to the Eschholz
school. There had been pictures of this
school hanging in his principal's office.
Eschholz was the largest and the newest complex of schools in
Castalia. The buildings were all
modern. There was no town in the
vicinity, only a village-like small settlement set among woods. Beyond the settlement the school spread out,
wide, level, and cheerful, the buildings enclosing a large open
quadrangle. In the centre of the
quadrangle, arranged like the five on a die, five enormous stately trees raised
their dark cones to the sky. The huge
rectangle was partly in lawn, partly in gravel, its expanse broken only by two
large swimming pools, fed by running water.
Wide shallow steps led down to the pools. At the entrance to this sunny plaza stood the
schoolhouse, the only tall building in the complex. There were two wings, each flanked by a
five-columned portico. All the rest of
the buildings enclosing the quadrangle were very low, flat, and unadorned,
divided into perfectly equal sections, each of which led out into the plaza
through an arcade and down a low flight of steps. Pots of flowers stood in the openings of most
of the arcades.
In keeping with Castalian custom,
Joseph was not received by a school attendant and taken to a principal or a
committee of teachers. Instead, a
schoolmate met him, a tall good-looking boy in clothes of blue linen, a few
years older than Joseph. He shook hands,
saying "My name is Oscar; I'm the senior boy in Hellas House, where you
will be living. I've been assigned to
welcome you and show you around. You're
not expected to attend classes until tomorrow, so we have plenty of time to
look around. You'll get the hang of
things soon enough. And until you have
become adjusted, please consider me your friend and mentor, and your protector
as well, in case some of the fellows bother you. There are always some who think they have to
haze the new boys a little. But it won't
be bad, take it from me. I'll show you
Hellas House first, so you'll see where you're going to live."
Thus, in the traditional fashion,
Oscar greeted the newcomer; the housemaster had appointed him Joseph's mentor,
and he in fact made an effort to play his part well. It is, after all, a part the seniors usually
find congenial, and if a fifteen-year-old takes the trouble to charm a
thirteen-year-old by employing a tone of affable comradeship with a touch of
patronage, he will almost always succeed.
During Joseph's first few days his mentor treated him like a guest whom
a courteous host pampers in the hope that he will, should he happen to depart
the next day, take away with him a good impression of host and house.
Joseph was shown to a room which he
would be sharing with two other boys. He
was served rusks and a cup of fruit juice.
He was shown the whole of Hellas House, one of the dormitories of the
large quadrangle; he was shown where to hang his towel in the steam bath, and
in which corner he was allowed to keep potted plants, if he wanted them. Before evening fell he was also taken to the
launderer at the washhouse, where a blue linen suit was selected and fitted for
him.
From the very first, Joseph felt at
ease in the place. He gaily fell in with
Oscar's tone and showed only the slightest trace of bashfulness, although he
naturally regarded this older boy, who had obviously been at home in Castalia
for a long time, as something of a demigod.
He even enjoyed the bits of showing-off, as when Oscar would weave a
complicated Greek quotation into his talk only to recall politely that the new
boy of course couldn't understand, naturally not, how could he be expected to!
In any case, life at the boarding
school was nothing new to Joseph. He
fitted in without difficulty. For that
matter, no important events of his years at Eschholz have been recorded. The terrible fire in the schoolhouse must
have happened after his time. Portions
of his scholastic record have been traced; they show that he occasionally had
the highest marks in music and Latin, and somewhat above average in mathematics
and Greek. Now and then there are
entries about him in the "House Book", such as "ingenium
valde capax, studia non angusta, mores probantur" or "ingenium
felix et profectuum avidissimum, moribus placet officiosis." What punishments he received at Eschholz can
no longer be determined; the disciplinary register was lost in the fire, along
with so much else. There is the
testimony of a fellow pupil that during the four years at Eschholz Knecht was
punished only once (by being excluded from the weekly outing), and that his
demerit had consisted in obstinately refusing to name a schoolmate who had done
something against the rules. The
anecdote sounds plausible. Knecht
undoubtedly was always a good comrade and never servile towards his superiors. Nevertheless, it seems highly unlikely that
this was actually his sole punishment in four years.
Since our data on Knecht's early
period in the elite school are so sparse, we cite a passage from one of his
later lectures on the Glass Bead Game.
Knecht's own manuscripts of these lectures for beginners are not available,
it should be noted: he delivered them extemporaneously, and a pupil took them
down in shorthand. At one point Knecht
speaks about analogies and associations in the Glass Bead Game, and in regard
to the latter distinguishes between "legitimate", universally
comprehensible associations and those that are "private", or
subjective. He remarks: "To give
you an example of private associations that do no forfeit their private value,
although they have no place in the Glass Bead Game, I shall tell you of one
such association that goes back to my own schooldays. I was about fourteen years old, and it was
the season when spring is already in the air, February or March. One afternoon a schoolmate invited me to go
out with him to cut a few elder switches.
He wanted to use them as pipes for a model water mill. We set out, and it must have been an
unusually beautiful day in the world or in my own mind, for it has remained in
my memory, and vouchsafed me a little experience. The ground was wet, but free of snow; strong
green shoots were already breaking through on the edge of streams. Buds and the first opening catkins were
already lending a tinge of colour to the bare bushes, and the air was full of
scent, a scent imbued with life and with contradictions. There were smells of damp soil, decaying
leaves, and young growth; any moment one expected to smell the first violets,
although there were none yet.
"We came to the elder
bushes. They had tiny buds, but no leaves,
and as I cut off a twig a powerful, bittersweet scent wafted towards me. It seemed to gather and multiply all the
other smells of spring within itself. I
was completely stunned by it; I smelled my knife, smelled my hand, smelled the
elder twig. It was the sap that gave off
so insistent and irresistible a fragrance.
We did not talk about it, but my friend also thoughtfully smelled for a
long time. The fragrance meant something
to him also.
"Well now, every experience has
its element of magic. In this case the
onset of spring, which had enthralled me as I walked over the wet, squishing
meadows and smelled the soil and the buds, had now been concentrated into a
sensual symbol by the fortissimo of that elder shrub's fragrance. Possibly I would never have forgotten this
scent even if the experience had remained isolated. Rather, every future encounter with that
smell deep into my old age would in all probability have revived the memory of
that first time I had consciously experienced the fragrance. But now a second element entered in. At that time I had found an old volume of
music at my piano teacher's. It was a
volume of songs by Franz Schubert, and it exerted a strong attraction upon
me. I had leafed through it one time
when I had a rather long wait for the teacher, and had asked to borrow it for a
few days. In my leisure hours I gave
myself up to the ecstasy of discovery.
Up to that time I had not known Schubert at all, and I was totally
captivated by him. And now, on the day
of that walk to the elderberry bush or the day after, I discovered Schubert's
spring song, "Die linden Lüfte sind erwacht", and the first
chords of the piano accompaniment assailed me like something already
familiar. Those chords had exactly the
same fragrance as the sap of the young elder, just as bittersweet, just as
strong and compressed, just as full of the forthcoming spring. From that time on the association of earliest
spring, fragrance of elder, and Schubert chords has been fixed, and absolutely
valid, for me. As soon as the
first chord is struck I immediately smell the tartness of the sap, and both
together mean to me: spring is on the way.
"This private association of mine
is a precious possession I would not willingly give up. But the fact that two sensual experiences
leap up every time I think 'spring is coming' - that fact is my own personal
affair. It can be communicated,
certainly, as I have communicated it to you just now. But it cannot be transmitted. I can make you understand my association, but
I cannot so affect a single one of you that my private association will become
a valid symbol for you in your turn, a mechanism which infallibly reacts on
call and always follows the same course."
One of Knecht's fellow pupils, who
later rose to the rank of First Archivist of the Glass Bead Game, maintained
that Knecht on the whole had been a merry boy, though without a trace of
boisterousness. When playing music he
would sometimes have a wonderfully rapt, blissful expression. He was rarely seen in an excited or
passionate mood, except at the rhythmic ball game, which he loved. But there were times when this friendly,
healthy boy attracted attention, and gave rise to mockery or anxiety. This happened when pupils were dismissed, a
fairly frequent occurrence in the lower classes of the elite schools. The first time a classmate was missing from
classes and games, did not return next day, and word went around that he was
not sick but dismissed, had already departed and would not be returning, Knecht
was more than subdued. For days on end
he seemed to be distraught.
Years later he himself commented on
this matter: "Every time a pupil was sent back from Eschholz and left us,
I felt as if someone had died. If I had
been asked the reason for my sorrow, I would have said that I felt pity for the
poor fellow who had spoiled his future by frivolity and laziness, and that
there was also an element of anxiety in my feeling, fear that this might
possibly happen to me some day. Only
after I had experienced the same thing many times, and basically no longer
believed that the same fate could overtake me as well, did I begin to see
somewhat more deeply into the matter. I
then no longer felt the expulsion of an electus merely as a misfortune
and punishment, but that the 'world' out there, from which we electi had
all come once upon a time, had not abruptly ceased to exist as it had seemed to
me. Rather, for a good many among us it
remained a great and attractive reality which tempted and ultimately recalled
these boys. And perhaps it was that not
only for individuals, but for all of us; perhaps it was by no means only the
weaker and inferior souls upon whom the remote world exerted so strong an
attraction. Possibly the apparent
relapse they had suffered was not a fall and a cause for suffering, but a leap
forward and a positive act. Perhaps we
who were so good about remaining in Eschholz were in fact the weaklings and the
cowards."
As we shall see, these thoughts were
to return to him, and very forcefully.
Every encounter with the Music Master
was a great joy to him. The Master came
to Eschholz once every two or three months at least to supervise the music
classes. He also frequently stayed a few
days as the guest of one of the teachers who was a close friend. Once he personally conducted the final
rehearsals for the performance of a vesper by Monteverdi. But above all he kept an eye on the more
talented of the music pupils, and Knecht was among the honoured recipients of
his paternal friendship. Every so often
he would sit at the piano with Joseph in one of the practice rooms and go
through the works of his favourite composers with him, or else play over a
classical example from one of the old handbooks on the theory of composition. "To construct a canon with the Music
Master, or to hear him develop a badly constructed one to its absurd logical
conclusion, frequently had about it a solemnity, or I might also say a gaiety,
like nothing else in the world.
Sometimes one could scarcely contain one's tears, and sometimes one
could not stop laughing. One emerged
from a private music lesson with him as from a bath or a massage."
Knecht's schooldays at Eschholz at
last drew to a close. Along with a dozen
or so other pupils of his level he was to be transferred to a school on the
next stage or level. The principal
delivered the usual speech to these candidates, describing once again the
significance and the rules of the Castalian schools and more or less sketching
for the graduates, in the name of the Order, the path they would be travelling,
at the end of which they would be qualified to enter the Order themselves. This solemn address was part of the program
for a day of ceremonies and festivities during which teachers and fellow pupils
alike treat the graduates like guests.
On such days there are always carefully prepared performances - this
time it was a great seventeenth-century cantata - and the Music Master had come
in order to hear it.
After the principal's address, while
everyone was on the way to the bravely bedecked dining-hall, Knecht approached
the Master with a question. "The
principal," he said, "told us how things are outside of Castalia, in
the ordinary schools and colleges. He
said that the students at the universities study for the 'free' professions. If I understood him rightly, these are
professions we do not even have here in Castalia. What is the meaning of that? Why are just those professions called
'free'? And why should we Castalians be
excluded from them?"
The Magister Musicae drew the young
man aside and stood with him under one of the giant trees. An almost sly smile puckered the skin around
his eyes into little wrinkles as he replied: "Your name is Knecht [Serf, servant.], my friend, and perhaps for that reason
the word 'free' is so alluring for you.
But do not take it too seriously in this case. When the non-Castalians speak of the free
professions, the word may sound very serious and even inspiring. But when we use it, we intend it
ironically. Freedom exists in those
professions only to the extent that the student chooses the profession
himself. That produces an appearance of
freedom, although in most cases the choice is made less by the student than by
his family, and many a father would sooner bite off his tongue than really allow
his son free choice. But perhaps that is
a slander; let us drop this objection.
Let us say that the freedom exists, but it is limited to the one unique
act of choosing the profession.
Afterwards, all freedom is over.
When he begins his studies at the university, the doctor, lawyer, or
engineer is forced into an extremely rigid curriculum which ends with a series
of examinations. If he passes them, he
receives his license and can thereafter pursue his profession in seeming
freedom. But in doing so he becomes the
slave of base powers; he is dependent on success, on money, on his ambition,
his hunger for fame, on whether or not people like him. He must submit to elections, must earn money,
must take part in the ruthless competition of castes, families, political
parties, newspapers. In return he has
the freedom to become successful and well-to-do, and to be hated by the
unsuccessful, or vice versa. For the
elite pupil and later member of the Order, everything is the other way
around. He does not 'choose' any
profession. He does not imagine that he
is a better judge of his own talents than are his teachers. He accepts the place and the function within
the hierarchy that his superiors choose for him - if, that is, the matter is
not reversed and the qualities, gifts, and faults of the pupil compel the
teachers to send him to one place or another.
In the midst of this seeming unfreedom every electus enjoys the
greatest imaginable freedom after his early courses. Whereas the man in the 'free' professions
must submit to a narrow and rigid course of studies with rigid examinations in
order to train for his future career, the electus, as soon as he begins
studying independently, enjoys so much freedom that there are many who all
their lives choose the most abstruse and frequently almost foolish studies, and
may continue without hindrance as long as their conduct does not
degenerate. The natural teacher is
employed as teacher, the natural educator as educator, the natural translator
as translator; each, as if of his own accord, finds his way to the place in
which he can serve, and in serving be free.
Moreover, for the rest of his life he is saved from that 'freedom' of
career which means such terrible slavery.
He knows nothing of the struggle for money, fame, rank; he recognizes no
parties, no dichotomy between the individual and the office, between what is
private and what is public; he feels no dependence upon success. Now do you see, my son, that when we speak of
the free professions, the word 'free' is meant rather humorously."
Knecht's departure from Eschholz
marked the end of an era in his life. If
hitherto he had lived a happy childhood, in a willing subordination and harmony
almost without problems, there now began a period of struggle, development, and
complex difficulties. He was about
seventeen years old when he was informed of his impending transfer. A number of his classmates received the same
announcement, and for a short while there was no more important question among
the elect, and none more discussed, than the place to which each of them would
be transplanted. In keeping with
tradition, they were told only a few days before their departure, and between
the graduation ceremony and departure there were several days of vacation.
During this vacation something
splendid happened to Knecht. The Music
Master proposed to take a walking trip and visit him, spending a few days as
his guest. That was a great and rare
honour. Early one morning Knecht set out
with a fellow graduate - for he was still considered an Eschholz pupil, and at
this level boys were not allowed to travel alone. They tramped towards the forest and the
mountains, and when after three hours of steady climbing through shady woods
they reached a treeless summit, they saw far below them, already small and easy
to grasp as a whole, their Eschholz, recognizable even at this distance by the
dark mass of the five giant trees, the quadrangle with its segments of lawn and
sparkling pools, the tall schoolhouse, the service buildings, the village, the
famous grove of ash trees from which the school took its name. The two youths stood still, looking
down. A good many of us cherish the
memory of this lovely view; it was then not very different from the way it
looks today, for the buildings were rebuilt after the great fire, and three of
the five tall trees survived the blaze.
They saw their school lying below them, their home for many years, to
which they would soon be bidding goodbye, and both of them felt their hearts
contract at the sight.
"I think I've never before really
seen how beautiful it is," Joseph's companion said. "But I suppose it's because I'm seeing
it for the first time as something I must leave and say farewell to."
"That's exactly it," Knecht
said. "You're right, I feel the
same way. But even though we are going
away, we won't after all be leaving Eschholz.
Only the ones who have gone away forever have really left it, like Otto,
for instance, who could make up such funny bits of Latin doggerel, or
Charlemagne, who could swim so long under water, and the others. They really said farewell and broke
away. It's a long time since I've
thought about them, but now they come back to me. Laugh at me if you like, but in spite of
everything there's something impressive to me about those apostates, just as
there is a grandeur about the fallen angel Lucifer. Perhaps they did the wrong thing or, rather,
undoubtedly they did the wrong thing, but all the same they did something,
accomplished something; they ventured a leap, and that took courage. We others have been hardworking and patient
and reasonable, but we haven't done anything, we haven't taken any leaps."
"I don't know," his
companion said. "Many of them
neither did anything nor ventured anything; they simply fooled around until
they were dismissed. But maybe I don't
quite understand you. What do you mean
about leaping?"
"I mean being able to take a
plunge, to take things seriously, to - well, that's just it, to leap. I wouldn't want to leap back to my former
home and my former life; it doesn't attract me and I've almost forgotten
it. But I do wish that if ever the time
comes and it proves to be necessary, that I too will be able to free myself and
leap, and not backwards into something inferior, but forwards and into
something higher."
"Well, that is what we are headed
for. Eschholz was one step; the next
will be higher, and finally the Order awaits us."
"Yes, but that isn't what I
meant. Let's move on, amice; walking
is so great, it will cheer me up again.
We've really given ourselves a case of the dumps."
This mood and those words, which his
classmate recorded, already sound the note which prevailed during the stormy
period of Knecht's adolescence.
The hikers tramped for two days before
they reached the Music Master's current home, Monteport, high in the mountains,
where the Master lived in the former monastery, giving a course for
conductors. Knecht's classmate was
lodged in the guesthouse, while Knecht himself was assigned a small cell in the
Magister's apartment. He had barely
unpacked his knapsack and washed when his host came in. The venerable man shook hands with the boy,
sat down with a small sigh, and for a few minutes closed his eyes, as was his
habit when he was very tired. Then,
looking up with a friendly smile, he said: "Forgive me; I am not a very
good host. You have just come from a
long hike and must be tired, and to tell the truth so am I - my day is somewhat
overcrowded - but if you are not yet ready for bed, I should like to have an
hour with you in my study. You will be
staying here two days, and tomorrow both you and your classmate will be dining
with me, but unfortunately my time is so limited, and we must somehow manage to
save the few hours I need for you. So
shall we begin right away?"
He led Knecht into a large vaulted
cell empty of furniture but for an old piano and two chairs. They sat down in the chairs.
"You will soon be entering
another stage," the Master said.
"There you will learn all sorts of new things, some of them very
pleasant. Probably you'll also begin
dabbling in the Glass Bead Game before long.
And that is very fine and important, but one thing is more important
than anything else: you are going to learn meditation there. Supposedly all the students learn it, but one
can't go checking up on them. I want you
to learn it properly and well, just as well as music; then everything else will
follow of its own accord. Therefore I'd
like to give you the first two or three lessons myself; that was the purpose of
my invitation. So today and tomorrow and
the day after tomorrow let us try to meditate for an hour each day, and
moreover on music. You will be given a
glass of milk now, so that hunger and thirst do not disturb you; supper will be
brought to us later."
He rapped on the door, and a glass of
milk was brought in.
"Drink slowly, slowly," he
admonished. "Take your time, and do
not speak."
Knecht drank his cool milk very
slowly. Opposite him, the dear man sat
with his eyes closed again. His face
looked very old, but friendly; it was full of peace, and he was smiling to
himself, as though he had stepped down into his own thoughts like a tired man
into a footbath. Tranquillity streamed
from him. Knecht felt it, and himself
grew calmer.
Now the Magister turned on his chair
and placed his hands on the piano. He
played a theme, and carried it forward with variations; it seemed to be a piece
by some Italian master. He instructed
his guest to imagine the progress of the music as a dance, a continuous series
of balancing exercises, a succession of smaller or larger steps from the middle
of an axis of symmetry, and to focus his mind entirely on the figure which
these steps formed. He played the bars
once more, silently reflected on them, played them again, then sat quite still,
hands on his knees, eyes half closed, without the slightest movement, repeating
and contemplating the music within himself.
His pupil, too, listened within himself, saw fragments of lines of notes
before him, saw something moving, something stopping, dancing, and hovering,
and tried to perceive and read the movement as if it were the curves in the
line of a bird's flight. The pattern
grew confused and he lost it; he had to begin over again; for a moment his
concentration left him and he was in a void.
He looked around and saw the Master's still, abstracted face floating
palely in the twilight, found his way back again to that mental space he had
drifted out of. He heard the music
sounding in it again, saw it striding along, saw it inscribing the line of its
movement, and followed in his mind the dancing feet of the invisible
dancers....
It seemed to him that a long time had
passed before he glided out of that space once more, again became aware of the chair
he sat on, the mat-covered stone floor, the dimmer dusk outside the
windows. He felt someone regarding him,
looked up and into the eyes of the Music Master, who was attentively studying
him. The Master gave him an almost
imperceptible nod, with one finger played pianissimo the last variation
of the Italian piece, and stood up.
"Stay on," he said. "I shall be back. Try once again to track down the music; pay
attention to the figure. But don't force
yourself; it's only a game. If you
should fall asleep over it, there's no harm."
He left; there was still a task
awaiting him, left over from the overcrowded day. It was no easy and pleasant task, none that
he would have wished for. One of the
students in the conducting course was a gifted but vain and overbearing
person. The Music Master would have to
speak to him now, curbing his bad habits, showing him his faults, all that with
an even balance of solicitude and superiority, love and authority. He sighed.
What a pity that no arrangements were ever final, that recognized errors
were never eliminated for good, that again and again the selfsame failings had
to be combated, the selfsame weeds plucked out.
Talent without character, virtuosity without values, had dominated
musical life in the Age of the Feuilleton, had been extirpated during the
musical Renaissance - and here was that same spirit again, making vigorous
growth.
When he returned from his errand to
have supper with Joseph, he found the boy sitting still, but contented and no
longer tired in the least. "It was
beautiful," Joseph said dreamily.
"While it was going on, the music vanished completely; it
changed."
"Let it reverberate inside
you," the Master said, leading him into a small chamber where a table was
set with bread and fruit. They ate, and
the Master invited him to sit in on the conducting course for a while in the
morning. Just before showing his guest
to his cell and retiring for the night, he said: "During your meditation
you saw something; the music appeared to you as a figure. If you feel so minded, try to copy it
down."
In the guest cell Knecht found pencils
and paper on the table, and before he went to bed he tried to draw the figure
which the music had assumed for him. He
drew a line, and moving diagonally off from the line at rhythmic intervals
short tributary lines. It looked
something like the arrangement of leaves on the twig of a tree. What he had produced did not satisfy him, but
he felt impelled to try it again and yet again.
At last he playfully curved the line into a circle from which the
tributary lines radiated, like flowers in a garland. Then he went to bed and fell asleep
quickly. He dreamed that he was once
again on that height above the woods, where he had rested with his classmate,
and saw dear Eschholz spread out below him.
And as he looked down, the quadrangle of the school building contracted
into an oval and then spread out to a circle, a garland, and the garland began
turning slowly; it turned with increasing speed, until at last it was whirling
madly and burst, flying apart into twinkling stars.
He had forgotten this dream by the
time he awoke. But later, during a
morning walk, the Master asked him whether he had dreamt, and it seemed to him
that he must have had an unpleasant experience in his dreams. He thought, recovered the dream, told it, and
was astonished at how innocuous it sounded.
The Master listened closely.
"Should we be mindful of
dreams?" Joseph asked. "Can we
interpret them?"
The Master looked into his eyes and
said tersely: "We should be mindful of everything, for we can interpret
everything."
After they had walked on a bit, he
asked paternally: "Which school would you most like to enter?"
Joseph flushed. He murmured quickly: "Waldzell, I
think!"
The Master nodded. "I thought so. Of course you know the old saying: 'Gignit
autem artificiosam''..."
Still blushing, Joseph completed the
saying familiar to every student: "Gignit autem artificiosam lusorum
gentem Cella Silvestris”: "But Waldzell breeds the skilful Glass Bead
Game players."
The old man gave him a warm look. "Probably that is you path, Joseph. As you well know, there are some who do not
think well of the Glass Bead Game. They
say it is a substitute for the arts, and that the players are mere
popularizers; that they can no longer be regarded as truly devoted to the
things of the mind, but are merely artistic dilettantes given to improvisation
and feckless fancy. You will see how
much or how little truth there is in that.
Perhaps you yourself have notions about the Glass Bead Game, expecting
more of it than it will give you, or perhaps the reverse. There is no doubt that the Game has its
dangers. For that very reason we love
it; only the weak are sent out on paths without perils. But never forget what I have told you so
often: our mission is to recognize contraries for what they are: first of all
as contraries, but then as opposite poles of a unity. Such is the nature of the Glass Bead Game. The artistically inclined delight in the Game
because it provides opportunities for improvisation and fantasy. The strict scholars and scientists despise it
- and so do some musicians also - because, they say, it lacks that degree of
strictness which their specialities can achieve. Well and good, you will encounter these
antinomies, and in time you will discover that they are subjective, not
objective - that, for example, a fancy-free artist avoids pure mathematics or
logic not because he understands them and could say something about them if he
wished, but because he instinctively inclines towards other things. Such instinctive and violent inclinations and
disinclinations are signs by which you can recognize the pettier souls. In great souls and superior minds, these
passions are not found. Each of us is
merely one human being, merely an experiment, a way station. But each of us should be on the way towards
perfection, should be striving to reach the centre, not the periphery. Remember this: one can be a strict logician
or grammarian, and at the same time full of imagination and music. One can be a musician or Glass Bead Game
player and at the same time wholly devoted to rule and order. The kind of person we want to develop, the
kind of person we aim to become, would at any time be able to exchange his
discipline or art for any other. He
would infuse the Glass Bead Game with crystalline logic, and grammar with
creative imagination. That is how we
ought to be. We should be so constituted
that we can at any time be placed in a different position without offering
resistance or losing our heads."
"I think I understand,"
Joseph said. "But are not those who
have such strong preferences and aversions simply more passionate natures,
others just more sober and temperate?"
"That seems to be true and yet it
is not," the Master replied, laughing.
"To be capable of everything, one certainly does not need less
spiritual force and élan and warmth, but more.
What you call passion is not spiritual force, but friction between the
soul and the outside world. Where
passion dominates, that does not signify the presence of greater desire and
ambition, but rather the misdirection of these qualities towards an isolated
and false goal, with a consequent tension and sultriness in the
atmosphere. Those who direct the maximum
force of their desires towards the centre, towards true being, towards
perfection, seem quieter than the passionate souls because the flame of their
fervour cannot always be seen. In
argument, for example, they will not shout and wave their arms. But I assure you, they are nevertheless
burning with subdued fires."
"Oh, if only it were possible to
find understanding," Joseph exclaimed.
"If only there were a dogma to believe in. Everything is contradictory, everything
tangential; there are no certainties anywhere.
Everything can be interpreted one way and then again interpreted in the
opposite sense. The whole of world
history can be explained as development and progress and can also be seen as
nothing but decadence and meaninglessness.
Isn't there any truth? Is there
no real and valid doctrine?"
The Master had never heard him speak
so fervently. He walked on in silence
for a little, then said: "There is truth, my boy. But the doctrine you desire, absolute,
perfect dogma that alone provides wisdom, does not exist. Nor should you long for a perfect doctrine,
my friend. Rather, you should long for
the perfection of yourself. The deity is
within you, not in ideas and books.
Truth is lived, not taught. Be
prepared for conflicts, Joseph Knecht - I can see they have already
begun."
During those few days Joseph for the
first time saw his beloved Magister in his everyday life and work, and he felt
intense admiration, although only a small part of what the Music Master
accomplished every day came into view. But
most of all the Master won his heart by taking such an interest in him, by
having invited him, and by managing to spare hours for him despite his being
often so overworked and overtired. Nor
was it only the lessons. If this
introduction to meditation made so deep and lasting an impression on him, it
did so, as he later learned to appreciate, not because the Master's technique
was so especially subtle and unique, but only because of the Master's
personality and example. His later
teachers, who instructed him in meditation during the following year, gave him
more guidance, more precise lessons; they controlled results more closely,
asked more questions, managed to do more correcting. The Music Master, confident of his power over
this young man, did very little teaching and talking. Mostly, he merely set themes and showed the
way by example. Knecht observed the way
the Master often looked so old and worn out, but after sinking into himself
with half-closed eyes he would once again manage to look so tranquil, vigorous,
cheerful, and friendly. To Joseph this
renewal was a persuasive demonstration of the right way to the true springs,
the way from restiveness to peace.
Whatever the Master had to say about this matter was casually imparted
to Knecht on brief walks or at meals.
We know also that at this time the
Magister gave Knecht some first hints and suggestions about the Glass Bead
Game, but none of his actual words has been preserved. Joseph was also struck by the fact that the
Master took some trouble with Joseph's companion, so that the boy would not
feel he was only a hanger-on. The old
man seemed to think of everything.
The brief stay in Monteport, the three
lessons in meditation, attendance at the course for conductors, the few talks
with the Master, meant a great deal to Joseph Knecht. There was no question but that the Master had
found the most effective time for interposing briefly in Knecht's life. The chief purpose of his invitation, as he
had said, had been to commend meditation to Joseph; but this invitation had
been no less important in itself, as a distinction and a token that he was well
thought of, that his superiors expected something of him. It was the second stage of vocation. He had been granted some insight into the
inner spheres. If one of the twelve
Masters summoned a pupil at his level to come so close, that was not just an
act of personal benevolence. What a
Master did was always more than personal.
Before they left, each of the boys
received a small gift: the scores of two Bach choral preludes for Joseph, a
handsome pocket addition of Horace for his friend. The Master, as he was bidding goodbye to
Joseph, said to him: "In a few days you will learn which school you have
been assigned to. I come to the higher
schools less frequently than to Eschholz, but I am sure we shall see each other
there too, if I keep in good health. If
you care to, you might write me a letter once a year, especially about the
course of your musical studies.
Criticism of your teachers is not prohibited, but I am not so concerned
about that. A great many things await
you; I hope you will meet the challenges.
Our Castalia is not supposed to be merely an elite; it ought above all
to be a hierarchy, a structure in which every brick derives its meaning only
from its place in the whole, and one who climbs higher and is assigned to
greater and greater tasks does not acquire more freedom, only more and more
responsibilities. Till we meet again,
young friend. It was a pleasure to me to
have you here."
The two boys tramped back, and both
were gayer and more talkative than they had been on the way to Monteport. The few days in different air and amid
different sights, the contact with a different sphere of life, had relaxed
them, made them freer from Eschholz and the mood of parting there. It had also made them doubly eager for change
and the future. At many a resting place
in the forest, or above one of the precipitous gorges in the vicinity of
Monteport, they took their wooden flutes from their pockets and played duets,
mostly folksongs. By the time they had
once again reached that peak above Eschholz, with its prospect of the
institution and its trees, the conversation they had had there seemed to both
of them far away in the past. All things
had taken on a new aspect. They did not
say a word about it; they felt a little ashamed of what they had felt and said
so short a while ago, which already had become outmoded and insubstantial.
In Eschholz they had to wait only
until the following day to learn their destinations. Knecht had been assigned to Waldzell.
TWO
WALDZELL
"BUT WALDZELL
BREEDS the skilful Glass Bead Game players," runs the old saying about the
famous school. Among the Castalian schools
of the second and third levels, it was the one most devoted to the arts. That is to say, whereas at other schools a
particular branch of scholarship was distinctly dominant, such as classical
philology in Keuperheim, Aristotelian and Scholastic philosophy in Porta,
mathematics in Planvaste, Waldzell traditionally cultivated a tendency towards
universality and towards an alliance between scholarship and the arts. The highest symbol of these tendencies was
the Glass Bead Game. Even here, as at
all the other schools, the Game was by no means taught officially and as a
compulsory subject. But Waldzell
students devoted their private studies almost exclusively to it. Then again, the town of Waldzell was after
all the seat of the official Glass Bead Game and its institutions. The famous Game Hall for the ceremonial games
was located here, as was the enormous Game Archives, with its officialdom and
its libraries. Here, too, was the
residence of the Ludi Magister. And
although these institutions existed altogether independently and the school was
in no way attached to them, the spirit of the institutions permeated the
school. Something of the hallowed
atmosphere of the great public Games spread over the whole area. The town itself was very proud of being the
home not only of a school, but of the Game also. The townspeople called the students
"scholars" and referred to those who attended the Game School as
"lusors" - a corruption of lusores.
The Waldzell school was, incidentally,
the smallest of the Castalian schools.
The number of students rarely exceeded sixty, and undoubtedly this
circumstance also helped to lend it an air of uniqueness and aristocracy, of
special distinction, for here was the very elite of the elite. Moreover, during the past several decades
this venerable school had produced many Masters and the majority of Glass Bead
Game players. Not that Waldzell's
brilliant reputation was entirely uncontested.
Some thought that the Waldzellers were priggish aesthetes and pampered
princes, useless for anything but the Glass Bead Game. At times there would be a vogue among the
schools for making sardonic comments on the Waldzell students; but the very
harshness of the jokes and criticisms proves that jealousy and envy underlay
them. All in all, the transfer to
Waldzell in itself implied a certain distinction. Joseph Knecht, too, realized that, and
although he was not ambitious in the vulgar sense of the word, he accepted the
distinction with a measure of joyous pride.
Along with several schoolmates, he
arrived in Waldzell on foot. Full of
high expectation and ready for whatever might come, he walked through the
southern gate and was instantly enchanted by the dark-brown aspect of the town
and the great bulk of the former Cistercian monastery in which the school had
been established. Even before he had
been given his new uniform, immediately after the reception snack in the
porter's lodge, he set out alone to explore his new home. He found the footpath that ran along the
remains of the ancient town wall above the river, stood on the arched bridge
and listened to the roaring of the millrace, walked past the graveyard and down
the lane of linden trees. He saw and
recognized, beyond the tall hedges, the Vicus Lusorum, the adjacent little
settlement of the Glass Bead Game players.
Here were the Festival Hall, the Archives, the classrooms, the houses
for guests and teachers. He saw coming
from one of these houses a man in the dress of the Glass Bead Game players, and
decided that this must be one of the fabulous lusores, possibly the
Magister Ludi in person. The spell of
this atmosphere exerted a tremendous force upon him. Everything here seemed old, venerable,
sanctified, rich with tradition; here one was quite a bit closer to the Centre
than in Eschholz. And as he returned
from the Glass Bead Game district, he began to feel other spells, possibly less
venerable, but no less exciting. They
came from the town itself, this sample of the profane world with its business
and commerce, its dogs and children, its smells of stores and handicrafts, its
bearded citizens and fat wives behind the shop doors, the children playing and
clamouring, the girls throwing mocking looks.
Many things reminded him of remote worlds he had once known, of
Berolfingen. He had thought all that
entirely forgotten. Now deep layers in
his soul responded to all this, to the scenes, the sounds, the smells. A world less tranquil than that of Eschholz,
but richer and more colourful, seemed to be awaiting him here.
As a matter of fact, the school at
first turned out to be the exact continuation of his previous school, although
with the addition of several new subjects.
Nothing was really new there except the meditation exercises; and after
all the Music Master had already given him a foretaste of these. He accepted meditation willingly enough, but
without regarding it as more than a pleasant, relaxing game. Only somewhat later - as we shall see in due
time - would he have a living experience of its true value.
The headmaster of Waldzell, Otto
Zbinden, was an unusual, somewhat eccentric man who inspired a certain amount
of fear. He was nearing sixty at the
time Knecht entered. A good many of the entries
we have examined concerning Joseph Knecht are set down in his handsome and
impetuous handwriting. But at the
beginning the young man's curiosity was captured far less by the teachers than
by his fellow students. With two of
these in particular Knecht struck up a lively relationship, for which there is
ample documentation. The first of these
was Carlo Ferromonte, a boy his own age to whom he became attached during his
very first months at Weldzell.
(Ferromonte later rose to the second-highest rank on the Board, as
deputy to the Music Master; we are indebted to him for, among other things, a History
of Styles in Sixteenth-Century Lute Music.)
The other boys called him "Rice Eater" and prized him for his
aptitude at sports. His friendship with
Joseph began with talks about music and led to joint studying and practicing
which continued for several years; we are informed about this partly by
Knecht's rare but copious letters to the Music Master. In the first of these letters Knecht calls
Ferromonte a "specialist and connoisseur in music rich in ornamentation,
embellishments, trills, etc." The
boys played Couperin, Purcell, and other masters of the period around
1700. In one of the letters Knecht gives
a detailed account of these practice sessions and this music "in which
many of the pieces have some embellishment over almost every note." He continues: "After one has played
nothing but turns, shakes, and mordents for a few hours, one's fingers feel as
if there are charged with electricity."
In fact he made great progress in
music. By his second or third year at
Waldzell he was reading and playing the notations, clefs, abbreviations, and
figured basses of all centuries and styles with tolerable fluency. He had made himself at home in the realm of
Western music, as much of it as has been preserved for us, in that special way that
proceeds from practical craftsmanship and is not above taking utmost heed of a
piece of music's sensuous and technical aspects as a means for penetrating the
spirit. His intense concern with the
sensuous quality of music, his efforts to understand the spirit of various
musical styles from the physical nature of the sounds, the sensations in the
ear, deterred him for a remarkably long time from devoting himself to the
elementary course in the Glass Bead Game.
In one of his lectures in subsequent years he remarked: "One who
knows music only from the extracts which the Glass Bead Game distils from it
may well be a good Glass Bead Game player, but he is far from being a musician,
and presumably he is no historian either.
Music does not consist only in those purely intellectual oscillations
and figurations which we have abstracted from it. All through the ages its pleasure has
primarily consisted in its sensuous character, in the outpouring of breath, in
the beating of time, in the colorations, frictions, and stimuli which arise
from the blending of voices in the concord of instruments. Certainly the spirit is the main thing, and
certainly the invention of new instruments and the alteration of old ones, the
introduction of new keys and new rules or new taboos regarding construction and
harmony are always mere gestures and superficialities, even as the costumes and
fashions of nations are superficialities.
But one must have apprehended and tasted these superficial and sensuous
distinctions with the senses to be able to interpret from them the nature of
eras and styles. We make music with our
hands and fingers, with our mouths and lungs, not with our brains alone, and
someone who can read notes but has no command of any instrument should not join
in the dialogue of music. Thus, too, the
history of music is hardly to be understood solely in terms of an abstract
history of styles. For example, the
periods of decadence in music would remain totally incomprehensible if we
failed to recognize in each one of them the preponderance of the sensuous and
quantitative elements over the 'spiritual element'."
For a time it appeared as if Knecht
had decided to become nothing but a musician.
In favour of music he neglected all the optional subjects, including the
introductory course in the Glass Bead Game, to such an extent that towards the
end of the first semester the headmaster called him to an accounting. Knecht refused to be intimidated; he
stubbornly insisted on his rights. It is
said that he told the headmaster: "If I fail in any official subject, you
could rightly reprimand me. On the other
hand, I have the right to devote three quarters or even four quarters of my
free time to music. I stand on the
statutes of the school." Headmaster
Zbinden was sensible enough not to insist, but he naturally remembered this
student and is said to have treated him with cold severity for a long time.
This peculiar period in Knecht's
student days lasted for more than a year, probably for about a year and a
half. He received normal but not
brilliant marks and - to judge by the incident with the headmaster - his
behaviour was marked by a rather defiant withdrawal, no noteworthy friendships,
but in compensation this extraordinary passion for music-making. He abstained from almost all private studies,
including the Glass Bead Game. Several
of these traits are undoubtedly signs of puberty; during this period he
probably encountered the other sex only by chance, and mistrustfully;
presumably he was quite shy - like so many Eschholz pupils if they do not
happen to have sisters at home. He read
a great deal, especially the German philosophers: Leizbiz, Kant, and the
Romantics, among whom Hegel exerted by far the strongest attraction upon him.
We must now give some account of that
other fellow student who played a significant part in Knecht's life at
Waldzell: the hospitant Plinio Designori.
Hospitants were boys who went through the elite schools as guests, that
is, without the intention of remaining permanently in the Pedagogic Province
and entering the Order. Such hospitants
turned up every so often, although they were quite rare, for the board of
educators was naturally averse to the idea of educating students who intended
to return home and into the world after they finished their studies at the
elite schools. However, the country had
several old patrician families who had performed notable services for Castalia
at the time of its foundation and in which the custom still prevailed (it has not
entirely died out to this day) of having one of the sons educated as a guest in
the elite schools. It had become an
established prerogative for those few families, although of course the boys in
question had to be gifted enough to meet the standards of the schools.
These hospitants, although in every
respect subject to the same rules as all elite students, formed an exceptional
group within the student body if only because they did not grow increasingly
estranged from their native soil and their families with each passing year. On the contrary, they spent all the holidays
at home and always remained guests and strangers among their fellow students,
since they preserved the habits and ways of thinking of their place of
origin. Home, a worldly career, a
profession and marriage awaited them. Only
on very rare occasions did it happen that such a guest student, captivated by
the spirit of the Province, would obtain the consent of his family and after
all remain in Castalia and enter the Order.
On the other hand, in the history of our country there have been several
statesmen who were guest students in their youth, and now and then, when public
opinion for one reason or another had turned against the elite schools and the
Order, these statesmen came strongly to the defence of both.
Plinio Designori, then, was one such
hospitant whom Joseph Knecht - slightly his junior - encountered in
Waldzell. He was a talented young man,
particularly brilliant in talk and debate, fiery and somewhat restive in
temperament. His presence often troubled
Headmaster Zbinden, for although he was a good student and gave no cause for
reprimands, he made no effort to forget his exceptional position as a hospitant
and to fall into line as inconspicuously as possible. On the contrary, he frankly and belligerently
professed a non-Castalian, worldly point of view.
Inevitably, a special relationship
sprang up between these two students.
Both were extremely gifted and both had a vocation; these qualities made
them brothers, although in everything else they were opposites. It would have required a teacher of unusual
insight and skill to extract the quintessence from the problem that those arose
and to employ the rules of dialectics to derive synthesis from the
antitheses. Headmaster Zbinden did not
lack the talent or will: he was not one of those teachers who find geniuses an
embarrassment. But for this particular
case he lacked the important prerequisite: the trust of both students. Plinio, who enjoyed the role of outsider and
revolutionary, remained permanently on his guard in his dealings with the
headmaster; and unfortunately the headmaster had clashed with Joseph Knecht
over that question of his private studies, so that Knecht, too, would not have
turned to Zbinden for advice.
Fortunately, there was the Music
Master. Knecht did turn to him with a
request for help and advice, and the wise old musician took the matter
seriously and directed the course of the game with masterly skill, as we shall
see. In the hands of this Master the
greatest danger and temptation in young Knecht's life was converted into an
honourable task, and the young man proved able to cope with it. The psychological history of the
friendship-and-enmity between Joseph and Plinio - a sonata movement on two themes,
or a dialectical interplay between two minds - went somewhat as follows.
At first, of course, it was Designori
who attracted his opponent. He was the
elder; he was a handsome, fiery, and well-spoken young man; and above all he
was one of those "from outside", a non-Castalian, a boy from the
world, a person with father and mother, uncles, aunts, brothers, and sisters,
one for whom Castalia with all its rules, traditions, and ideals represented
only a stage along the road, a limited sojourn.
For this rara avis Castalia was not the world; for him Waldzell
was a school like any other; for him the "return to the world" was no
disgrace and punishment; the future awaiting him was not the Order but career,
marriage, politics - in short, that "real life" which every Castalian
secretly longed to know more about. For
the "world" was the same thing for a Castalian that it had long ago
been for the penitents and monks: something inferior and forbidden, no doubt,
but nonetheless mysterious, tempting, fascinating. And Plinio truly made no secret of his attachment
to the world; he was not in the least ashamed of it. On the contrary, he was proud of it. With a zeal still half boyish and histrionic,
but also half consciously propagandistic, he stressed his own
differentness. He seized every pretext
for setting his secular views and standards against those of Castalia, and
contending that his own were better, juster, more natural, more human. In these arguments he bandied about words
like "nature" and "common sense", to the discredit of the
overrefined, unworldly spirit of the school.
He made use of slogans and hyperbole, but had the good taste and tact
not to descend to crude provocations, but more or less to give the methods of
disputation customary in Waldzell their due.
He wanted to defend the "world" and the unreflective life
against the "arrogant scholastic intellectuality" of Castalia, but he
also wanted to prove that he could do so with his opponents' weapons. He did not want to be thought the dull-witted
brute blindly trampling around in the flower garden of culture.
Now and then Joseph Knecht had stood,
a silent but attentive listener, on the edge of small groups of students whose
centre was Designori. Plinio usually did
most of the talking. With curiosity,
astonishment, and alarm Joseph had heard Plinio excoriating all authority,
everything that was held sacred in Castalia.
He heard everything questioned, everything he believed in exposed as
dubious or ridiculous. Joseph soon noted
that many in the audience did not take these speeches seriously; some, it was
clear, listened only for the fun of it, as people listen to a barker at a
fair. Frequently, too, he heard some of
the boys answer Plinio's charges sarcastically or seriously. Still, there were always several schoolmates
gathered around this boy Plinio; he was always the centre of attention, and
whether or not there happened to be an opponent in the group, he always exerted
an attraction so strong that it was akin to seduction.
Joseph himself was as much stirred as
those others who gathered around the lively orator and listened to his tirades
with astonishment or laughter. In spite
of the trepidation and even fear that he felt during such speeches, Joseph was
aware of their sinister attraction for him.
He was drawn to them not just because they were amusing. On the contrary, they seemed to concern him
directly and seriously. Not that he
would inwardly have agreed with the audacious orator, but there were doubts
whose very existence or possibility you had only to know about and you instantly
began to suffer them. At the beginning
it was not any serious suffering; it was merely a matter of being slightly
disturbed, uneasy - a feeling compounded of powerful urge and guilty
conscience.
The time had to come, and it came when
Designori noticed that among his listeners was one to whom his words meant more
than rousing entertainment and the fun of argument: a fair-haired boy who
looked handsome and finely wrought, but rather shy, and who blushed and gave
terse, embarrassed replies when Plinio said a friendly word to him. Evidently the boy had been trailing after him
for some time, Plinio thought, and decided to reward him with a friendly
gesture and win him over completely by inviting him to his room that
afternoon. To Plinio's surprise the boy
held off, would not linger to talk with him, and declined the invitation. Provoked, the older boy began courting the
reticent Joseph. Possibly he did so at
first only out of vanity, but later he went about it in all seriousness, for he
sensed an antagonist who would be perhaps a future friend, perhaps the
opposite. Again and again he saw Joseph
hanging around near him, and noted the intensity with which Joseph listened,
but the shy boy would always retreat as soon as he tried to approach him.
There were reasons behind his
conduct. Joseph had long since come to
feel that this other boy would mean something important to him, perhaps
something fine, an enlargement of his horizon, insight or illumination, perhaps
also temptation and danger. Whatever it was,
this was a test he had to pass. He had
told his friend Ferromonte about the first stirrings of scepticism and
restlessness that Plinio's talks had aroused in him, but his friend had paid
little attention; he dismissed Plinio as a conceited and self-important fellow
not worth listening to, and promptly buried himself in his music again. Instinct warned Joseph that the headmaster
was the proper authority to whom to bring his doubts and queries; but since
that little clash he no longer had a cordial and candid relationship with
Zbinden. He was afraid the headmaster
might regard his coming to him with this question as a kind of talebearing.
In this dilemma, which grew
increasingly painful because of Plinio's efforts to strike up a friendship, he
turned to his patron and guardian angel, the Music Master, and wrote him a very
long letter which has been preserved. In
part, it read:
"I am not yet certain whether
Plinio hopes to win me over to his way of thinking, or whether he merely wants
someone to discuss these matters with. I
hope it is the latter, for to convert me to his views would mean leading me
into disloyalty and destroying my life, which after all is rooted in
Castalia. I have no parents and friends
on the outside to whom I could return if I should ever really desire to. But even if Plinio's sacrilegious speeches
are not aimed at conversion and influencing, they leave me at a loss. For to be perfectly frank with you, dear
Master, there is something in Plinio's point of view that I cannot gainsay; he
appeals to a voice within me which sometimes strongly seconds what he
says. Presumably it is the voice of
nature, and it runs utterly counter to my education and the outlook customary
among us. When Plinio calls our teachers
and Masters a priestly caste and us a pack of spoon-fed eunuchs, he is of
course using course and exaggerated language, but there may well be some truth
to what he says, for otherwise I would hardly be so upset by it. Plinio can say the most startling and
discouraging things. For example, he
contends that the Glass Bead Game is a retrogression to the Age of the
Feuilleton, sheer irresponsible playing around with an alphabet into which we
have broken down the languages of the different arts and sciences. It's nothing but associations and toying
with analogies, he says. Or again he
declares that our resigned sterility proves the worthlessness of our whole
culture and our intellectual attitudes.
We analyze the laws and techniques of all the styles and periods of
music, he points out, but produce no new music ourselves. We read and exposit Pindar or Goethe and are
ashamed to create verse ourselves. Those
are accusations I cannot laugh at. And
they are not the worst; they are not the ones that wound me most. It is bad enough when he says, for example,
that we Castalians lead the life of artificially reared songbirds, do not earn
our bread ourselves, never face necessity and the struggle for existence,
neither know or wish to know anything about that portion of humanity whose labour
and poverty provide the base for our lives of luxury."
The letter concluded: "Perhaps I
have abused your friendliness and kindness, Reverendissime, and I am
prepared to be reproved. Scold me,
impose penances on me - I shall be grateful for them. But I am in dire need of advice. I can sustain the present situation for a
little while longer. But I cannot shape
it into any real and fruitful development, for I am too weak and
inexperienced. Moreover, and perhaps
this is the worst of all, I cannot confide in our headmaster unless you
explicitly command me to do so. That is
why I have troubled you with this affair, which is becoming a source of great
distress to me."
It would be of the greatest value to us
if we also possessed the Master's reply to this cry for help in black and
white. But the reply was given
orally. Shortly after Knecht wrote, the
Magister Musicae himself arrived in Waldzell to direct an examination in music,
and during the days he spent there he devoted considerable time to his young
friend. We know of this from Knecht's
later recollections. The Music Master
did not make things easy for him. He
began by looking closely into Knecht's grades and into the matter of his
private studies as well. The latter, he
decided, were much too one-sided; in this regard the headmaster had been right,
and he insisted that Knecht admit as much to the headmaster. He gave precise directives for Knecht's
conduct towards Designori, and did not leave until this question, too, had been
discussed with Headmaster Zbinden. The
outcome was two-fold: that remarkable joust between Designori and Knecht, which
none who looked on would ever forget; and an entirely new relationship between
Knecht and the headmaster. Not that this
relationship ever partook of the affection and mystery that linked Knecht to
the Music Master, but at least it was lucid and relaxed.
The course that had been traced for
Knecht determined the shape of his life for some time. He had been given leave to accept Designori's
friendship, to expose himself to his influence and his attacks without
intervention or supervision by his teachers.
But his mentor specifically charged him to defend Castalia against the
critic, and to raise the clash of views to the highest level. That meant, among other things, that Joseph
had to make an intensive study of the fundamentals of the prevailing system in
Castalia and in the Order, and to recall them to mind again and again. The debates between the two friendly
opponents soon became famous, and drew large audiences. Designori's aggressive and ironic tone became
subtler, his formulations stricter and more responsible, his criticism more
objective. Hitherto Plinio had been the
winner in this contest; coming from the "world", he possessed its
experience, its methods, its means of attack, and some of its ruthlessness as
well. From conversations with adults at
home he knew all the indictments the world could muster against Castalia. But now Knecht's replies forced him to
realize that although he knew the world quite well, better than any Castalian,
he did not by any means know Castalia and its spirit as well as those who were
at home here, for whom Castalia had become both native soil and destiny. He was forced to realize, and ultimately to
admit, that he was a guest here, not a native; that the outside world had no
exclusive claim on self-evident principles and truths arrived at through
centuries of experience. Here too, in
the Pedagogic Province, there was a tradition, what might even be called a
"nature", with which he was only imperfectly acquainted and which was
now being upheld by its spokesman, Joseph Knecht.
Knecht, for his part, in order to cope
with his part as apologist, was obliged to put a great deal of study,
meditation, and self-discipline into clarifying and deepening his understanding
of what he was required to defend.
Designori remained his superior; his worldly training and cleverness
supported his natural fire and ambition.
Even when he was being defeated on a point, he managed to think of the
audience and contrive a face-saving or witty line of retreat. Knecht, on the other hand, when his opponent
had driven him into a corner, was apt to say: "I shall have to think about
that for a while, Plinio. Wait a few
days; I'll come back to that point."
The relationship had thus been given a
dignified form. In fact, for the
participants and the listeners the dispute had already become an indispensable
element in the school life of Waldzell.
But the pressure and the conflict had scarcely grown any easier for
Knecht. Because of the high degree of
confidence and responsibility that had been placed upon him, he mastered his
assignment, and it is proof of the strength and soundness of his nature that he
carried it out without any visible damage.
But privately, he suffered a great deal.
If he felt friendship for Plinio, he felt it not only for an engaging
and clever cosmopolitan and articulate schoolmate, but also for that alien
world which his friend and opponent represented, with which he was becoming
acquainted, however dimly, in Plinio's personality, words, and gestures: that
so-called "real" world in which there were loving mothers and
children, hungry people and poorhouses, newspapers and election campaigns; that
primitive and at the same time subtle world to which Plinio returned at every
vacation in order to visit his parents, brothers, and sisters, to pay court to
girls, to attend union meetings, or stay as a guest at elegant clubs, while Joseph
remained in Castalia, went tramping or swimming, practised Froberger's subtle
and different fugues, or read Hegel.
Joseph had no doubt that he belonged
in Castalia and was rightly leading a Castalian life, a life without family,
without a variety of legendary amusements, a life without newspapers and also
without poverty and hunger - though for all that Plinio hammered away at the
drones' existence of the elite students, he too had so far never gone hungry or
earned his own bread. No, Plinio's world
was not better and sounder. But it was
there, it existed, and as Joseph knew from history it had always been and had
always been similar to what it now was.
Many nations had never known any other pattern, had no elite schools and
Pedagogic Province, no Order, Masters, and Glass Bead Game. The great majority of all human beings on the
globe lived a life different from that of Castalia, simpler, more primitive,
more dangerous, more disorderly, less sheltered. And this primitive world was innate in every
man; everyone felt something of it in his own heart, had some curiosity about
it, some nostalgia for it, some sympathy with it. The true task was to be fair to it, to keep a
place for it in one's own heart, but still not relapse into it. For alongside it and superior to it was the
second world, that of Castalia, the world of Mind - artificial, more orderly,
more secure, but still in need of constant supervision and study. To serve the hierarchy, but without doing an
injustice to that other world, let alone despising it, and also without eyeing
it with vague desire or nostalgia - that must be the right course. For did not the small world of Castalia serve
the great world, provide it with teachers, books, methods, act as guardian for
the purity of its intellectual functions and its morality? Castalia remained the training ground and
refuge for that small band of men whose lives were to be consecrated to Mind
and to truth. Then why were these two
worlds apparently unable to live in fraternal harmony, parallel and
intertwined; why could an individual not cherish and unite both within himself?
One of the rare visits from the Music
Master came upon a day when Joseph, exhausted by his task, was having a hard
time preserving his balance. The Master
diagnosed his state from a few of the boy's allusions; he read it even more
plainly in Joseph's strained appearance, his restive looks, his somewhat
nervous movements. He asked a few
probing questions, was met by moroseness and uncommunicativeness, and gave up
that approach. Seriously concerned, he
took the boy to one of the practice rooms under the pretext of telling him
about a minor musicological discovery.
He had Joseph bring in and tune a clavichord, and involved him in a long
tutoring session on the origin of sonata form until the young man somewhat
forgot his anxieties, yielded, and listened, relaxed and grateful, to the
Master's words and playing. Patiently,
the Music Master took what time was needed to put Joseph into a receptive
state. And when he had succeeded, when
his lecture was over and he had concluded by playing one of the Gabrieli
sonatas, he stood up, began slowly pacing the little room, and told a story.
"Many years ago I was once much
preoccupied with this sonata. That was
during the period of my free studies, before I was called to teaching and later
to the post of Music Master. At the time
I was ambitious to work out a history of the sonata form from a new point of
view; but then for a while I stopped making any progress at all. I began more and more to doubt whether all
these musical and historical researches had any value whatsoever, whether they
were really any more than vacuous play for idle people, a scanty aesthetic
substitute for living a real life. In
short, I had to pass through one of those crises in which all studies, all
intellectual efforts, everything that we mean by the life of the mind, appear
dubious and devalued and in which we tend to envy every peasant at the plough
and every pair of lovers at evening, or every bird singing in a tree and every
cicada chirping in the summer grass, because they seem to us to be living such
natural, fulfilled, and happy lives. We
know nothing of their troubles, of course, of the elements of harshness, danger,
and suffering in their lot. In brief, I
had pretty well lost my equilibrium. It
was far from a pleasant state; in fact it was very hard to bear. I thought up the wildest schemes for escaping
and gaining my freedom. For example, I
imagined myself going out into the world as an itinerant musician and playing
dances for wedding parties. If some
recruiting officer from afar had appeared, as in old tales, and coaxed me to
don a uniform and follow any company of soldiers into any war, I would have
gone along. And so things went from bad
to worse, as so often happens to people in such moods. I so thoroughly lost my grip on myself that I
could no longer deal with my trouble alone, and had to seek help."
He paused for a moment and chuckled
softly under his breath. Then he
continued: "Naturally, I had a studies advisor, as the rules require, and
of course it would have been sensible and right as well as my duty to ask him
for advice. But the fact is, Joseph,
that precisely when we run into difficulties and stray from our path and are
most in need of correction, precisely then we feel the greatest disinclination
to return to the normal way and seek out the normal form of correction. My adviser had been dissatisfied with my last
quarterly report; he had offered serious objections to it; but I had thought
myself on the way to new discoveries and had rather resented his
objections. In brief, I did not like the
idea of going to him; I did not want to eat humble pie and admit that he had
been right. Nor did I want to confide in
my friends. But there was an eccentric
in the vicinity whom I knew only by sight and hearsay, a Sanskrit scholar who
went by the nickname of 'the Yogi'. One
day, when my state of mind had grown sufficiently unbearable, I paid a call on
this man, whose solitariness and oddity I had both smiled at and secretly
admired. I went to his cell intending to
talk with him, but found him in meditation; he had adopted the ritual Hindu
posture and could not be reached at all.
With a faint smile on his face, he hovered, as it were, in total
aloofness. I could do nothing but stand
at the door and wait until he returned from his absorption. This took a very long time, an hour or two
hours, and at last I grew tired and slid to the floor. There I sat, leaning against the wall,
continuing to wait. At the end I saw the
man slowly awaken; he moved his head slightly, stretched his shoulders, slowly
uncrossed his legs, and as he was about to stand up his gaze fell upon me.
"'What do you want?' he asked.
"I stood up and said, without
thinking and without really knowing what I was saying: 'It's the sonatas of
Andrea Gabrieli.'
"He stood up at this point,
seated me in his lone chair, and perched himself on the edge of the table. 'Gabrieli?' he said. 'What has he done to you with his sonatas?'
"I began to tell him what had
been happening to me, and to confess the predicament I was in. He asked me about my background with an
exactness that seemed to me pedantic. He
wanted to know about my studies of Gabrieli and the sonata, at what hour I rose
in the morning, how long I read, how much I practised, when were my mealtimes
and when I went to bed. I had confided
in him, in fact imposed myself on him, so that I had to put up with his
questions, but they made me ashamed; they probed more and more mercilessly into
details, and forced me to an analysis of my whole intellectual and moral life
during the past weeks and months.
"Then the Yogi suddenly fell
silent, and when I looked puzzled he shrugged and said: 'Don't you see yourself
where the fault lies?' But I could not
see it. At this point he recapitulated
with astonishing exactness everything he had learned from me by his
questioning. He went back to the first
signs of fatigue, repugnance, and intellectual constipation, and showed me that
this could have happened only to someone who had submerged himself
disproportionately in his studies and that it was high time for me to recover
my self-control, and to regain my energy with outside help. Since I had taken the liberty of
discontinuing my regular meditation exercises, he pointed out, I should at
least have realized what was wrong as soon as the first evil consequences
appeared, and should have resumed meditation.
He was perfectly right. I had
omitted meditating for quite a while on the grounds that I had no time, was too
distracted or out of spirits, or too busy and excited with my studies. Moreover, as time when on I had completely
lost all awareness of my continuous sin of omission. Even now, when I was desperate and had almost
run aground, it had taken an outsider to remind me of it. As a matter of fact, I was to have the
greatest difficulty snapping out of this state of neglect. I had to return to the training routines and
beginners' exercises in meditation in order gradually to relearn the art of
composing myself and sinking into contemplation."
With a small sigh the Magister ceased
pacing the room. "That is what
happened to me, and to this day I am still a little ashamed to talk about
it. But the fact is, Joseph, that the
more we demand of ourselves, or the more our task at any given time demands of
us, the more dependent we are on meditation as a wellspring of energy, as the
ever-renewing concord of mind and soul.
And - I could if I wished given you quite a few more examples of this -
the more intensively a task requires our energies, arousing and exalting us at
one time, tiring and depressing us at another, the more easily we may come to
neglect this wellspring, just as when we are carried away by some intellectual
work we easily forget to attend to the body.
The really great men in the history of the world have all either known
how to meditate or have unconsciously found their way to the place to which
meditation leads us. Even the most
vigorous and gifted among the others all failed and were defeated in the end
because their task or their ambitious dream seized hold of them, made them into
persons so possessed that they lost the capacity for liberating themselves from
present things, and attaining perspective.
Well, you know all this; it's taught during the first exercises, of
course. But it is inexorably true. How inexorably true it is, one realizes only
after having gone astray."
The story had just enough effect upon
Joseph for him to apprehend the risk he himself was running, so that he turned
to his meditation exercises with renewed seriousness. What really impressed him was the fact that
the Master had for the first time revealed to him something of his personal
life, of his youth and early studies.
For the first time Joseph fully realized that even a demigod, even a
Master, had once been young and capable of erring. He felt gratitude, too, for the confidence
the revered Master had placed in him by making this confession. It was possible for one to go astray, to
flag, to make mistakes, to break rules, and still to deal with all such
difficulties, to find one's way back, and in the end even to become a
Master. Joseph overcame the crisis.
During the two or three years at
Waldzell during which the friendship between Plinio and Joseph continued, the
school watched the spectacle of these combative friends like a drama in which
everyone had at least some small part, from the headmaster to the youngest
freshman. The two worlds, the two principles,
had become embodied in Knecht and Designori; each stimulated the other; every
disputation became a solemn and symbolic contest which concerned everyone at
the school. From every contact with his
native soil on the holiday visits home Plinio would bring back new energy; and
from every withdrawal for reflection, from every new book, every meditation
exercise, every meeting with the Magister Musicae, Joseph also derived new
energy, made himself better fitted to be the representative and advocate of
Castalia. As a child he had experienced
his first vocation. Now he experienced
the second. These years shaped and
forged him into the perfect Castalian.
He had also some time ago completed
his elementary lessons in the Glass Bead Game and even then, during holidays
and under the eye of a Games Director, had begun sketching out his own Glass
Bead Games. In this activity he now
discovered one of the most abundant sources of joy and relaxation. Not since he had insatiably practised
harpsichord and piano pieces with Carlo Ferromonte had anything done him so
much good, so refreshed, strengthened, reassured, and delighted him as did
these first advances in the starry firmament of the Glass Bead Game.
During these same years young Joseph
Knecht wrote those poems which have been preserved in Ferromonte's copy. It is quite possible that there were
originally more of them than have come down to us, and it may be assumed that
the poems, the earliest of which dates back to a time before Knecht's
introduction to the Glass Bead Game, helped him to carry out his role and to
withstand the many tests of those critical years. Here and there in these poems, some skilfully
wrought and some hastily scribbled, every reader will discover traces of the
profound upheaval and crisis through which Knecht was then passing under the
influence of Plinio. A good many of the
lines sound a note of profound disturbance, of fundamental doubts about himself
and the meaning of his life - until, in the poem entitled "The Glass Bead
Game", he seems to have attained belief and surrender. Incidentally, a measure of concession to
Plinio's world, an element of rebellion against certain unwritten laws of
Castalia, is contained in the mere fact that he wrote these poems and even on
occasion showed them to several schoolmates.
For while Castalia has in general renounced the production of works of
art (even musical production is known and tolerated there only in the form of
stylistically rigid composition exercises), writing poetry was regarded as the
most impossible, ridiculous, and prohibited of conceivable acts. Thus these poems were anything but a game,
anything but an idle calligraphic amusement; it took high pressure to start
this flow of productivity, and a certain defiant courage was required to admit
to the writing of these verses.
It should also be mentioned that
Plinio Designori likewise underwent considerable change and development under
the influence of his antagonist. This
was reflected in more than the refinement of his methods of argument. During the comradely rivalry of those school
years Plinio saw his opponent steadily rising and maturing into an exemplary
Castalian. The figure of his friend more
and more vigorously and vividly embodied for him the spirit of the Province. Just as he himself had infected Joseph with
some of the atmospheric turbulence of his own world, he for his part inhaled
the Castalian air and succumbed to its charm and power. In his last year at the school, after a
two-hour disputation on the ideals and perils of monasticism, fought out in the
presence of the highest Glass Bead Game class, Plinio took Joseph out for a
walk and made a confession to him. We
quote it from a letter of Ferromonte's:
"Of course I've known for a long
time, Joseph, that you are not the credulous Glass Bead Game player and
Castalian saint whose part you have been playing so splendidly. Each of us stands at an exposed spot in this
battle, and each of us probably knows that what he is fighting against
rightfully exists and has its undeniable value.
You yourself take the side of intensive cultivation of the mind, I the
side of natural life. In our contest you
have learned to track down the dangers of the natural life and have made them
your target. Your function has been to
point out how natural, naive living without discipline of the mind is bound to
become a mire into which men sink, reverting to bestiality. And I for my part must remind you again and
again how risky, dangerous, and ultimately sterile is a life based purely upon mind. Good, each defends what he believes to be
primary, you mind and I nature. But
don't take offence - it sometimes seems to me that you actually and naively
consider me an enemy of your Castalian principles, a fellow who fundamentally
regards your studies, exercises, and games as mere tomfoolery, even though he
briefly joins in them for one reason or another. How wrong you would be if you really believed
that, my friend. I'll confess to you
that I am infatuated with your hierarchy, that it often enthrals me like
happiness itself. I'll confess to you
that some months ago, when I was at home with my parents for a while, I had it
out with my father and won his permission for me to remain a Castalian and
enter the Order if this should be my desire and decision at the end of my
schooldays. I was happy when he at last
gave his consent. As it happens, I shall
not make use of his permission; I've recently realized that. Not that I've lost my taste for it, not at
all. But I more and more see that for me
to remain among you would mean escaping.
It would be a fine, a noble escape perhaps, but still an escape. I shall return and become a man of the
outside world, but one who continues grateful to your Castalia, who will go on
practising a good many of your exercises, and will come every year to join in
the celebration of the great Glass Bead Game."
Knecht informed his friend Ferromonte
of Plinio's confession with deep emotion.
And Ferromonte himself added, in the letter we have just cited: "To
me, as a musician, this confession of Plinio, to whom I had not always been
entirely fair, was like a musical experience.
The contrast of world and Mind, or of Plinio and Joseph, had before my
eyes been transfigured from the conflict of two irreconcilable principles into
a double concerto."
When Plinio had come to the end of his
four-year course and was about to return home, he brought the headmaster a
letter from his father inviting Joseph Knecht to spend the coming vacation with
him. This was an unusual proposal. Leaves for journeys and stays outside the
Pedagogic Province did exist, chiefly for purposes of study. They were not so very rare, but were
exceptional and generally granted only to older and more seasoned researchers,
never to younger students still at school.
But since the invitation had come from so highly esteemed a family and
personage, Headmaster Zbinden did not presume to reject it on his own, but
presented it to a committee of the Board of Educators. The reply was a laconic refusal. The friends had to say goodbye to each other.
"We'll try the invitation again
sometime," Plinio said.
"Sooner or later it will work out.
You must someday see my home and meet my family, and realize that we are
not just commercial-minded scum. I shall
miss you very much. And make sure,
Joseph, that you rise quickly in this complicated Castalia of yours. Of course you're highly suited to become a
member of the hierarchy, but in my opinion more at the top than the bottom of
the heap - in spite of your name. I
prophesy a great future for you; one of these days you'll be a Magister and be
counted among the illustrious."
Joseph gave him a sad look.
"Go ahead and make fun of
me," he said, struggling with the emotion of parting. "I am not so ambitious as you, and if I
should ever attain to some office, you will long since have become president or
mayor, university professor or deputy.
Think kindly of us, Plinio, and of Castalia; don't become entirely
estranged from us. After all, there have
to be a few people in the outside world who know more about Castalia than the
jokes they make up about us there."
They shook hands, and Plinio departed.
For his last year in Waldzell, Joseph
remained out of the limelight. His
exposed and strenuous function as a more or less public personality had
suddenly come to an end. Castalia no
longer needed a defender. Joseph devoted
his free time during that year chiefly to the Glass Bead Game, which enthralled
him more and more. A notebook of
jottings from that period, dealing with the meaning and theory of the Game,
begins with the sentence: "The whole of both physical and mental life is a
dynamic phenomenon, of which the Glass Bead Game basically comprehends only the
aesthetic side, and does so predominantly as an image of rhythmic
processes."
THREE
YEARS OF FREEDOM
JOSEPH KNECHT WAS
about twenty-four years old at this time.
With graduation from Waldzell, his school days were over, and there now
began his years of free study. With the
exception of his uneventful boyhood in Eschholz, these were probably the most
serene and happy years of his life.
There is, after all, always something wonderful and touchingly beautiful
about a young man, for the first time released from the bonds of schooling,
making his first ventures towards the infinite horizons of the mind. At this point he has not yet seen any of his
illusions dissipated, or doubted either his own capacity for endless dedication
or the boundlessness of the world of thought.
Especially for young men with gifts
like those of Joseph Knecht, who have not been driven by a single talent to
concentrate on a speciality, but whose nature rather aims at integration,
synthesis, and universality, this springtide of free study is often a period of
intense happiness and very nearly of intoxication. Were it not preceded by the discipline of the
elite schools, by the psychic hygiene of meditation exercises and the lenient
supervision of the Board of Educators, this freedom would even be dangerous for
such natures and might prove a nemesis to many, as it used to be to innumerable
highly gifted young men in the ages before our present educational pattern was
set, in the pre-Castalian centuries. The
universities in those days literally swarmed with young Faustian spirits who
embarked with all sails set upon the high seas of learning and academic
freedom, and ran aground on all the shoals of untrammelled dilettantism. Faust himself, after all, was the prototype
of brilliant amateurishness and its consequent tragedy.
In Castalia, as it happens, the
intellectual freedom of the student is infinitely greater than it ever was at
the universities of earlier ages, since the available materials and
opportunities for study are far ampler.
Moreover, studies in Castalia are in no way restricted or coloured by
material considerations, by ambition, timidity, straitened circumstances of the
parents, prospects for livelihood and career, and so on. In the academies, seminars, libraries,
archives, and laboratories of the Pedagogic Province every student is completely
equal, no matter what his origins and prospects. The hierarchy grades the student solely by
his qualities of mind and character. On
the other hand most of the freedoms, temptations, and dangers to which so many
talented youths succumb at the secular universities simply do not exist in
Castalia. Not that there is a dearth of
danger, passion, and bedazzlement there - how could these elements ever be
completely absent from human life? But
at least certain opportunities for going off the rails, for disappointment and
disaster, have been eliminated. There is
no danger of the Castalian student's becoming a drinker. Nor can he waste the years of his youth in
tomfoolery, or the empty braggadocio of secret societies, as did some
generations of students in olden times.
Nor is he apt to make the discovery someday that his degree was a
mistake, that there are gaps in his preparatory education which can never be
filled. The Castalian order of things
protects him against such blunders.
The danger of wasting himself on women
or on losing himself in sports is also minimal.
As far as women are concerned, the Castalian student is not subject to
the temptations and dangers of marriage, nor is he oppressed by the prudery of
a good many past eras which imposed continence on students or else made them turn
to more or less venal and sluttish women.
Since there is no marriage for the Castalians, love is not governed by a
morality directed towards marriage.
Since the Castalian has no money and virtually no property, he also
cannot purchase love. It is customary in
the Province for the daughters of the citizenry not to marry early, and in the
years before marriage they look upon students and scholars as particularly
desirable lovers. The young men, for
their part, are not interested in birth and fortune, are prone to grant at
least equal importance to mental and emotional capacities, are usually endowed
with imagination and humour and, since they have no money, must make their
repayment by giving more of themselves than others would. In Castalia the sweetheart of a student does
not ask herself: will he marry me? She
knows he will not. Actually, there have
been occasions when he did; every so often an elite student would return to the
world by way of marriage, giving up Castalia and membership of the Order. But these few, rare cases of apostasy in the
history of the schools and of the Order amount to little more than a curiosity.
After graduation from the preparatory
schools the elite student truly enjoys a remarkable degree of freedom and
self-determination in choosing among the fields of knowledge and research. Unless a student's own talents and interests
dictate natural bounds from the start, the only limit on this freedom is his
obligation to present a plan of study for each semester. The authorities oversee the execution of this
plan in only the mildest way. For young
men of versatile talents and interests - and Knecht was one of these - the
scope thus allowed him is wonderfully enticing and a source of continual
delight. The authorities permit such
students, if they do not drift into sheer idleness, almost paradisiacal
freedom. The student may dabble in all
sorts of fields, combine the widest variety of subjects, fall in love with six
or eight disciplines simultaneously, or confine himself to a narrower selection
from the beginning. Aside from observing
the general rules of morality that apply to the whole Province and the Order,
nothing is asked of him except presentation once a year of the record of the lectures
he has attended, the books he has read, and the research he has undertaken at
the various institutes. His performance
comes in for closer check only when he attends technical courses and seminars,
including courses in the Glass Bead Game and at the Conservatory of Music. Here every student has to take the official
examinations and write the papers or do the work required by the head of the
seminar, as is only natural. But no-one
forces him to take such courses. For
semesters or for years he may, if he pleases, merely make use of the libraries
and listen to lectures. Students who
take a long while before deciding upon a single field of knowledge thereby
delay their admission into the Order, but the authorities show great patience
in allowing and even encouraging their explorations of all possible disciplines
and types of study. Aside from good
moral conduct, nothing is required of them except the composition of a
"Life" every year.
It is to this old and much-mocked
custom that we owe the three "Lives" by Knecht written during his years
of free study. These were, then, not a
purely voluntary and unofficial, not to say secret and more or less illicit
kind of literary activity, such as his poems written at Waldzell had been, but
a normal and official assignment. Far
back in the earliest days of the Pedagogic Province the custom had arisen of
requiring the younger students, those who had not yet been admitted to the
Order, to compose from time to time a special kind of essay or stylistic
exercise which was called a "Life".
It was to be a fictitious autobiography set in any period of the past
the writer chose. The student's
assignment was to transpose himself back to the surroundings, culture, and
intellectual climate of an earlier era and to imagine himself living a suitable
life in that period. Depending on the
times and the fashion, imperial Rome, seventeenth-century France, or
fifteenth-century Italy might be the period most favoured, or Periclean Athens
or Austria in the time of Mozart. Among
language specialists it had become the custom to compose their imaginary
biographies in the language of the country and the style of the period in which
they were best versed. Thus there had
been highly ingenious Lives written in the style of the Papal Curia at Rome
around the year 1200, in monastic Latin, in the Italian of the "Cento
Novelle Antiche", in the French of Montaigne, and the baroque German of
Martin Optiz.
A remnant of the ancient Asian
doctrine of reincarnation and the transmigration of souls survived in this
playful, highly flexible form. All
teachers and students were familiar with the concept that their present
existence might have been preceded by others, in other bodies, at other times,
under other conditions. To be sure, they
did not believe this in any strict sense; there was no element of dogma in the
idea. Rather, it was an exercise, a game
for the imaginative faculties, to conceive of oneself in different conditions
and surroundings. In writing such Lives
students made a stab at a cautious penetration of past cultures, times, and
countries, just as they did on many seminars on stylistics, and in the Glass
Bead Game as well. They learned to
regard their own person as masks, as the transitory garb of an entelechy. The custom of writing such Lives had its
charm, and a good many solid benefits as well, or it probably would not have
endured for so long.
Incidentally, there was a rather
considerable number of students who not only more or less believed in the idea
of reincarnation, but also in the truth of their own fictional Lives. Thus the majority of these imaginary
pre-existences were not merely stylistic exercises and historical studies, but
also creations of wishful thinking and exalted self-portraits. The authors cast themselves as the characters
they longed to become. They portrayed
their dream and their ideal.
Furthermore, from the pedagogic point of view the Lives were not a bad
idea at all. They provided a legitimate
channel for the creative urge of youth.
Although serious, creative literary work had been frowned on for
generations, and replaced partly by scholarship, partly by the Glass Bead Game,
youth's artistic impulse had not been crushed.
In these Lives, which were often elaborated into small novels, it found
a permissible means of expression. What
is more, while writing these Lives some of the authors took their first steps
into the land of self-knowledge.
Incidentally, the students frequently
used their Lives for critical and revolutionary outbursts on the contemporary
world and on Castalia. The teachers
usually regarded such sallies with understanding benevolence. In addition, these Lives were extremely
revealing to the teachers during those periods in which the students enjoyed
maximum freedom and were subject to no close supervision. The compositions often provided astonishingly
clear insight into the intellectual and moral state of the authors.
Three such Lives written by Joseph
Knecht have been preserved. We intend to
reproduce their full text, and regard them as possibly the most valuable part
of our book. There is much room for
conjecture as to whether he wrote only these three Lives, or whether there
might have been others which have been lost.
All we know definitely is that after Knecht handed in his third
"Indian" Life, the Secretariat of the Board of Educators suggested
that if he wrote any additional Lives he ought to set them in an era
historically closer to the present and more richly documented, and that he
should pay more attention to historical detail.
We know from anecdotes and letters that he thereupon actually engaged in
preliminary research for a Life set in the eighteenth century. He cast himself as a Swabian pastor who
subsequently turned from the service of the Church to music, who had been a
disciple of Johann Albrecht Bengel, a friend of Oetinger, and for a while a
guest of Zinzendorf's congregation of Moravian Brethren. We know that he was reading and taking notes
on a quantity of old and often out-of-the-way books on church organization,
Pietism, and Zinzendorf, as well as on the liturgy and church music of the
period. We know also that he was
fascinated with Oetinger, the charismatic prelate, and that he felt genuine
love and admiration for Magister Bengel; he went to some pains to have a
photograph made of Bengel's portrait and for a while had the picture standing
on his desk. He also honestly tried to
write an account of Zinzendorf, who both intrigued and repelled him. But in the end he dropped this project,
content with what he had learned from it.
He declared that he had lost the capacity for making a Life out of these
materials through having studied the subject from too many angles and
accumulated too many details. In view of
this statement, we may justifiably regard the three Lives he did complete
rather as the creations of a poetic spirit than the works of a scholar. In saying this we do not think we are doing
them any injustice.
In addition to the freedom of the
student at last permitted to range at will in self-chosen studies, Knecht now
enjoyed a different kind of freedom and relaxation. He had not, after all, been merely a student
like all the others; he had not only submitted to the strict training, the
exacting schedules, the careful supervision and scrutiny of the teachers, in a
word to all the rigour of elite schooling.
For along with all that, because of his relationship to Plinio he had
borne the far greater strain of a responsibility which had in part spurred him
to the utmost of his potentialities, in part drawn heavily on his
energies. In assuming the role of public
advocate of Castalia he had taken on a responsibility that was really too much
for his years and his strength. He had
run grave risks, and succeeded only by applying excessive will power and
talent. In fact, without the Music Master's
powerful assistance from afar, he would not have been able to carry his
assignment to its conclusion.
At the end of those unusual years at
Waldzell we find him, a young man of twenty-four, mature beyond his age and
somewhat overstrained, but, amazingly,
bearing no visible traces of damage.
But the degree to which his whole nature had been taxed and brought to
the verge of exhaustion is apparent, although there is no direct documentation
for it, from the way he employed the first few years of that freedom he had at
last attained, and for which he had no doubt deeply yearned. Having stood in so conspicuous a position
during his last years at school, he immediately and completely withdrew from
the public eye. Indeed, when we seek the
traces of his life at that time, we have the impression that if he could he
would have made himself invisible. No
surroundings and no society seemed undemanding enough for him, no mode of
living private enough. For example, he
replied curtly and reluctantly to several long and tempestuous letters from
Designori, then ceased to answer altogether.
The famous student Knecht vanished and could no longer be located; but
in Waldzell his fame continued to flower, and in time became almost a legend.
At the beginning of his years of free
study he avoided Waldzell for the reasons given. This meant that for the time being he
eschewed the graduate and postgraduate courses in the Glass Bead Game. But although to the superficial observer
Knecht was ostentatiously neglecting the Game, we know that on the contrary the
entire seemingly wayward and disconnected, and certainly altogether unusual
course of his studies had been influenced by the Glass Bead Game and led back
to it and to the service of the Game. We
mean to discuss this somewhat at length, for this trait was
characteristic. Joseph Knecht employed
his freedom for study in the strangest and most idiosyncratic fashion, one that
revealed an astonishing youthful genius.
During his years at Waldzell he had, as was usual, taken the official
introduction to the Glass Bead Game and the review course as well. During his last school year and among his
friends he already had the reputation of being an excellent player. But then he was gripped with such a passion
for this Game of games that after completing another course and while still in
school he had been admitted to a course for players of the second stage, which
was a very rare distinction indeed.
Some years later he told his friend
and later assistant, Fritz Tegularius (who had at school taken the review
course along with him) of an experience which not only decided his destiny as a
Glass Bead Game player, but also greatly influenced the course of his
studies. The letter is extant; the passage
runs: "Let me remind you of the time the two of us, assigned to the same
group, were so eagerly working on our first sketches for Glass Bead Games. Do you recall a certain day and a certain
game? Our group leader had given us
various suggestions and proposed all sorts of themes for us to choose
from. We had just arrived at the
delicate transition from astronomy, mathematics, and physics to the sciences of
language and history, and the leader was a virtuoso in the art of setting traps
for eager beginners like us and luring us on to the thin ice of impermissible
abstractions and analogies. He would
slip into our hands tempting baubles taken from etymology and comparative
linguistics, and enjoyed seeing us grab them and come to grief. We counted Greek quantities until we were
worn out, only to feel the rug pulled out from under us when he suddenly
confronted us with the possibility, in fact the necessity, of accentual instead
of a quantitative scansion, and so on.
In formal terms he did his job brilliantly, and quite properly, although
I did not like the spirit of it. He
showed us false trails and lured us into faulty conjectures, partly with the
good intention of familiarizing us with the perils, but also a little in order
to laugh at us for being such stupid boys an to instil a heavy dose of
scepticism into those of us who were most enthusiastic about the Game. And yet as things turned out it happened
under his instruction and in the course of one of his complicated trick
experiments - we were timidly and awkwardly trying to sketch a halfway decent
game problem - that I was all at once seized by the meaning and the greatness
of our Game, and was shaken by it to the core of my being. We were picking apart a problem in linguistic
history and, as it were, examining close up the peak period of glory in the
history of a language; in minutes we had traced the path which had taken it
several centuries. And I was powerfully
gripped by the vision of transitoriness: the way before our eyes such a
complex, ancient, venerable organism, slowly built up over many generations,
reaches its highest point, which already contains the germ of decay, and the
whole intelligently articulated structure begins to droop, to degenerate, to
totter towards its doom. And at the same
time the thought abruptly shot through me, with a joyful, startled amazement,
that despite the decay and death of that language it had not been lost, that
its youth, maturity, and downfall were preserved in our memory, in our
knowledge of it and its history, and would survive and could at any time be
reconstructed in the symbols of formulas of scholarship as well as in the
recondite formulations of the Glass Bead Game.
I suddenly realized that in the language, at any rate in the spirit of
the Glass Bead Game, everything actually was all-meaningful, that every symbol
and combination of symbols led not hither and yon, not to single examples,
experiments, and proofs, but into the centre, the mystery and innermost heart
of the world, into primal knowledge.
Every transition from major to minor in a sonata, every transformation
of a myth or a religious cult, every classical or artistic formulation was, I
realized in that flashing moment, if seen with a truly meditative mind, nothing
but a direct route into the interior of the cosmic mystery, where in the
alternation between inhaling and exhaling, between heaven and earth, between
Yin and Yang, holiness is forever being created.
"Of course by that time I had
attended many a well-constructed and well-executed Game. Listening I had often been exalted and
overjoyed by the insights such Games afforded; but up to that time I had
repeatedly been inclined to doubt the real value and importance of the
Game. After all, every neatly solved
problem in mathematics could provide intellectual pleasure; every good piece of
music could exalt and expand the soul towards universality when heard, and even
more when played; and every reverent meditation could soothe the heart and tune
it to harmony with the universe. But
perhaps for that very reason, my doubts whispered, the Glass Bead Game was
merely a formal art, a clever skill, a witty combination, so that it would be
better not to play this Game, but to occupy oneself with uncontaminated
mathematics and good music.
"But now for the first time I had
heard the inner voice of the Game itself, its meaning. It had reached me and penetrated me, and
since that moment I have believed that our royal game is truly a lingua
sacra, a sacred and divine language.
You will remember, for you remarked on it yourself at the time, that a
change had taken place within me, a summons had come to me. I can compare it only to that unforgettable
call which once lifted my heart and transformed my life when as a boy I was
tested by the Magister Musicae and summoned to Castalia. You noticed it; I felt that at the time,
although you said not a word about it.
Let us assume no more about it today.
But now I have something to ask you, and in order to explain my request
I must tell you something that no-one else knows or is to know: that my seemingly
disorganized studies at the present time are not the result of whim, but of a
definite underlying plan. You will
recall, at least in general outline, the Glass Bead Game exercise we
constructed at that time, as pupils in the Third Course, and with the leader's
assistance - in the course of which I heard that voice and experienced my
vocation as a lusor. That game
began with a rhythmic analysis of a fugal theme and in the centre of it was a
sentence attributed to Confucius. Now I
am studying that entire game from beginning to end. That is, I am working through each of its
phrases, translating it from the language of the Game back into its original
language, into mathematics, ornament, Chinese, Greek, and so on. At least this once in my life I intend to
restudy and reconstruct systematically the entire content of a Glass Bead
Game. I have already finished the first
part, and it has taken me two years. Of
course it is going to cost me quite a few years more. But since we are granted our famous freedom
of study in Castalia, this is how I mean to use it. I am familiar with the objections to such a
procedure. Most of our teachers would
say: We have devoted several centuries to inventing and elaborating the Glass
Bead Game as a universal language and method for expressing all intellectual
concepts and all artistic values and reducing them to a common
denominator. Now you come along and want
to check over everything to see if it is correct. That will take you a lifetime, and you will
regret it.
"Well, I shall not take a
lifetime and I hope I won't regret it.
And now for my request. Since at
present you are working in the Game Archives and I for special reasons prefer to
keep away from Waldzell for a good while longer, I hope you will answer quite a
barrage of questions for me every so often.
That is, I shall be asking you to send me from the Archives the
unabbreviated forms of the official clefs and symbols for all sorts of themes. I am counting on you, and counting on your
asking reciprocal favours as soon as there is anything I can do for you."
Perhaps this is the place to cite that
other passage from Knecht's letters which also deals with the Glass Bead Game,
although the letter in question, addressed to the Music Master, was written at
least a year or two later. "I
imagine," Knecht wrote to his patron, "that one can be an excellent
Glass Bead Game player, even a virtuoso, and perhaps even a thoroughly
competent Magister Ludi, without having any inkling of the real mystery of the
Game and its ultimate meaning. It might
even be that one who does guess or know the truth might prove a greater danger
to the Game, were he to become a specialist in the Game, or a Game leader. For the dark interior, the esoterics of the
Game, points down into the One and All, into those depths where the eternal
Atman eternally breathes in and out, sufficient unto itself. One who had experienced the ultimate meaning
of the Game within himself would by that fact no longer be a player; he would
no longer dwell in the world of multiplicity and would no longer be able to
delight in invention, construction, and combination, since he would know
altogether different joys and raptures.
Because I think I have come close to the meaning of the Glass Bead Game,
it will be better for me and for others if I do not make the Game my
profession, but instead shift to music."
The Music Master, who usually confined
his correspondence to a minimum, was evidently troubled by these remarks and replied
with a rather lengthy piece of friendly admonition: "It is good that you
yourself do not require a master of the Game to be an 'esoteric' in your sense
of the word, for I hope you wrote that without irony. A Game Master or teacher who was primarily
concerned with being close enough to the 'innermost meaning' would be a very
bad teacher. To be candid, I myself, for
example, have never in my life said a word to my pupils about the 'meaning' of
music; if there is one, it does not need my explanations. On the other hand, I have always made a great
point of having my pupils count their eighths and sixteenths nicely. Whatever you become, teacher, scholar, or
musician, have respect for the 'meaning', but do not imagine that it can be
taught. Once upon a time the
philosophers of history ruined half of world history with their efforts to
teach such 'meaning'; they inaugurated the Age of the Feuilleton and are partly
to blame for quantities of spilled blood.
If I were introducing pupils to Homer or Greek tragedy, say, I would
also not try to tell them that the poetry is one of the manifestations of the
divine, but would endeavour to make the poetry accessible to them by imparting
a precise knowledge of its linguistic and metrical strategies. The task of the teacher and scholar is to
study means, cultivate tradition, and preserve the purity of methods, not to
deal in incommunicable experiences which are reserved to the elect - who often
enough pay a high price for this privilege."
There is no other mention of the Glass
Bead Game and its "esoteric" aspect in all the rest of Knecht's
correspondence of that period. Indeed,
he does not seem to have written many letters, or else some of them have been
lost. At any rate, the largest and
best-preserved correspondence, that with Ferromonte, deals almost entirely with
problems of music and musical stylistic analysis.
Thus there was a special meaning and
resolution behind the peculiar zigzag course of Knecht's studies, which
consisted in nothing less than the circumstantial retracing and prolonged
analysis of a single Game pattern. In
order to assimilate the contents of this one pattern, which the schoolboys had
composed as an exercise within a few days, and which could be read off in a
quarter of an hour in the language of the Glass Bead Game, he spent year after
year sitting in lecture halls and libraries, studying Froberger and Alessandro
Scarlatti, fugues and sonata form, reviewing mathematics, learning Chinese,
working through a system of tonal figuration and the Feustelian theory of the
correspondence between the scale of colours and the musical keys.
We may ask why he had chosen this
toilsome, eccentric, and above all lonely path, for his ultimate goal (outside
of Castalia, people would say: his choice of profession) was undoubtedly the
Glass Bead Game. He might freely have
entered one of the institutes of the Vicus Lusorum, the settlement of Glass
Bead Game players in Waldzell, as a guest scholar. In that case all the special studies
connected with the Game would have been made easier for him. Advice and information on all questions of
detail would have been available to him at any time, and in addition he could
have pursued his studies among other scholars in the same field, young men with
the same devotion to the Game, instead of struggling alone in a state that
often amounted to a voluntary banishment.
Be that as it may, he went his own way.
We suspect that he avoided Waldzell partly to expunge as far as possible
from his own mind and the minds of others the memory of his role as a student
there, partly so that he would not stumble into a similar role among the
community of Glass Bead Game players.
For he probably bore away the feeling from those early days that he was
predestined to become a leader and spokesman, and he did all that he could to
outwit the obtrusiveness of fate. He
sensed in advance the weight of responsibility; he could already feel it
towards his fellow students from Waldzell, who went on adulating him even
though he withdrew from them. And he
felt it especially towards Tegularius, who would go through fire and water for
him - this he knew instinctively.
Therefore he sought seclusion and
contemplation, while his destiny tried to propel him forward into the public
realm. It is in these terms that we
imagine his state of mind at the time.
But there was another important factor that deterred him from taking the
usual courses at the higher Glass Bead Game academies and made an outsider of
him. That was an inexorable urge towards
research arising from his former doubts about the Glass Bead Game. To be sure, he had once tasted the experience
that the Game could be played in a supreme and sacred sense; but he had also
seen that the majority of the players and students of the Game, and even some
of the leaders and teachers, by no means shared that lofty and sacramental
feeling for the Game. They did not
regard the Game language as a lingua sacra, but more as an ingenious
kind of stenography. They practised the
Game as an interesting or amusing speciality, an intellectual sport or an arena
for ambition. In fact, as his letter to
the Music Master shows, he already sensed that the search for ultimate meaning
does not necessarily determine the quality of the player, that its superficial
aspects were also essential to the Game, that it comprised technique, science,
and social institution. In short, he had
doubts and divided feelings; the Game was a vital question for him, had become
the chief problem of his life, and he was by no means disposed to let
well-meaning spiritual guides ease his struggles or benignly smiling teachers
dismiss them as trivial.
Naturally he could have made any one
of the tens of thousands of recorded Glass Bead Games and the millions of
possible games the basis of his studies.
He knew this and therefore proceeded from that chance Game plan that he
and his schoolmates had composed in an elementary course. It was the game in which he had for the first
time grasped the meaning of all Glass Bead Games and experienced his vocation
as a player. During those years he kept
with him at all times an outline of that Game, noted down in the usual
shorthand. In the symbols, ciphers,
signatures, and abbreviations of the Game language an astronomical formula, the
principles of form underlying an old sonata, an utterance of Confucius, and so
on, were written down. A reader who
chanced to be ignorant of the Glass Bead Game might imagine such a Game pattern
as rather similar to the pattern of a chess game, except that the significances
of the pieces and the potentialities of their relationships to one another and
their effect upon one another multiplied manyfold, and an actual content must
be ascribed to each piece, each constellation, each chess move, of which this
move, configuration, and so on is the symbol.
Knecht's studies went beyond the task
of acquainting himself in the utmost detail with the contents, principles,
books, and systems contained in the Game plan, and retracting as he went a way
back through various cultures, sciences, languages, arts, and centuries. He had also set himself the task that none of
his teachers even recognized, of employing these objects to check in detail the
systems and possibilities of expression in the art of the Glass Bead Game.
To anticipate his results: here and
there he found a gap, an inadequacy, but on the whole our Glass Bead Game
withstood his stringent reassessment.
Otherwise he would not have returned to it at the end of his work.
If we were writing a study in cultural
history, a good many of the places and scenes of Knecht's student days would
certainly merit description. As far as
possible he preferred places where he could work alone, or with only a very few
others, and to some of these places he retained a lifelong grateful attachment. He frequently stayed in Monteport, sometimes
as the Music Master's guest, sometimes as a participant in a musicological
seminar. Twice we find him in Hirsland,
the headquarters of the Order, as a participant in the "Great
Exercise", the twelve-day period of fasting and meditation. He used later to tell his intimates which
special affection about the "Bamboo Grove", the lovely hermitage
which was the scene of his I Ching studies. There he learned and experienced things of
crucial importance. There, too, guided
by a wonderful premonition or Providence, he found unique surroundings and an
extraordinary person: the founder and inmate of the Chinese hermitage, who was
called Elder Brother. We think it proper
to describe at great length this most remarkable episode in his years of free
study.
Knecht had begun his studies of the
Chinese language and classics in the famous Far Eastern College which for
generations had been affiliated to St. Urban's, the academic complex devoted to
classical philology. There he had made
rapid progress in reading and writing and also struck up friendships with
several of the Chinese working there, and had learned a number of the odes of
the Shih Ching by heart. In the
second year of his stay he turned to a more and more intense study of the I
Ching, the Book of Changes. The
Chinese provided him with all sorts of information, but no introductory course;
there was no teacher available in the college, and after Knecht had repeated
petitioned them for an instructor for a thorough study of the I Ching,
he was told about Elder Brother and his hermitage.
It had become apparent to Knecht that
his interest in the Book of Changes was leading him into a field which the
teachers at the college preferred to keep at a distance, and he therefore grew
more cautious in his inquiries. Now, as
he made efforts to obtain further information about this legendary Elder
Brother, it became obvious to him that the hermit enjoyed a measure of respect,
and indeed a degree of fame, but more as an eccentric loner than as a
scholar. Knecht sensed that he would
have to help himself; he finished a paper he had begun for a seminar as quickly
as possible, and took his leave. On foot,
he made his way to the region in which the mysterious man, perhaps a sage and
Master, perhaps a fool, had long ago established his Bamboo Grove.
He had gathered a few bits of
information about the hermit. Some
twenty-five years before, the man had been the most promising student in the
Chinese Department. He seemed to have been
born for these studies, outdid his best teachers, both Chinese by birth and
Westerners, in the technique of brush writing and the deciphering of ancient
texts, but became somewhat notorious for the zeal with which he also tried to
make himself into a Chinese in outward matters too. Thus he obstinately refused to address his
superiors, from the instructor of a seminar to the Masters, by their titles, as
all other students did. Instead, he
called them "My Elder Brother", until at last this appellation became
attached to himself as a nickname. He
devoted special attention to the oracular game of the I Ching, and
developed a masterly skill at practising it with the traditional yarrow
stalks. Along with the ancient
commentaries on the Book of Changes, his favourite book was the philosophical
work of Chuang Tzu. Evidently the
rationalistic, somewhat antimystical, and declaredly Confucian spirit of the
Chinese Department of the college, as Knecht encountered it, had already been
prevalent at that time, for one day Elder Brother left the Institute, which
would gladly have kept him as a teacher, and set out on a walking tour, armed
with a brush, Chinese ink saucer, and two or three books. He made his way to the southern part of the
country, turning up here and there to visit for a while with brethren of the
Order. He looked for and finally found
the suitable spot for the hermitage he planned, stubbornly bombarded both the
secular authorities and the Order with written and oral petitions until they
granted him the right to settle there and cultivate the area. Ever since, he had been living in an idyllic
retreat strictly governed by ancient Chinese principles. Some referred to him with amusement as a
crank, others venerated him as a kind of saint.
But apparently he was content with himself and at peace with the world,
devoting his days to meditation and the copying of ancient scrolls whenever he
was not occupied with his Bamboo Grove, which sheltered from the north wind a
carefully laid out Chinese miniature garden.
Joseph Knecht, then, tramped towards
this hermitage, making frequent stops to rest, delighting in the landscape that
lay smiling beneath him as soon as he had climbed through the mountain passes,
stretching southwards in a blue haze, with sunlit terraced vineyards,
brownstone walls alive with lizards, stately chestnut groves, a piquant
mingling of southland and high mountain country. It was late afternoon when he reached the
Bamboo Grove. He entered and looked with
astonishment upon a Chinese pavilion set in the midst of a curious garden, with
a splashing fountain fed by a wooden pipe.
The overflow ran along a gravel bed into a masonry basin, in whose
crevices all sorts of green plants flourished.
A few goldfish swam around in the still, crystalline water. Fragile and peaceful, the feathery crowns of
the bamboos swayed on their strong, slender shafts. The sward was punctuated by stone slabs
carved with inscriptions in the classical style.
A frail man dressed in tan linen,
glasses over blue eyes that bore a tentative look, straightened up from a
flower bed over which he had been bending and slowly approached the
visitor. His manner was not unfriendly,
but it had that somewhat awkward shyness common among solitaries and
recluses. He looked inquiringly at
Knecht and waited for what he had to say.
With some embarrassment Knecht spoke the Chinese words he had already
formulated: "The young disciple takes the liberty of paying his respects
to Elder Brother."
"The well-bred guest is
welcome," Elder Brother said.
"May a young colleague always be welcome to a bowl of tea and a
little agreeable conversation; and a bed for the night may be found for him, if
this is desired."
Knecht kowtowed, expressed his thanks,
and was led into the pavilion and served tea.
Then he was shown the garden, the carved slabs, the pond, the goldfish,
and was even told the age of the fish.
Until suppertime they sat under the swaying bamboos exchanging
courtesies, verses from odes, and sayings from classical writers. They looked at the flowers and took pleasure
in the fading pinks of sunset along the mountain ranges. Then they re-entered the house. Elder Brother served bread and fruit, cooked
an excellent pancake for each of them on a tiny stove, and after they had eaten
he asked in German the purpose of his visit, and in German Knecht explained why
he had come and what he desired, which was to stay as long as Elder Brother
permitted him, and to become his disciple.
"We shall discuss that
tomorrow," the hermit said, and showed his guest to a bed.
Next morning Knecht sat down by the
goldfish pool and gazed into the cool small world of darkness and light and
magically shimmering colours, where the bodies of the golden fish glided in the
dark greenish blueness and inky blackness.
Now and then, just when the entire world seemed enchanted, asleep
forever in a dreamy spell, the fish would dart with a supple and yet alarming
movement, like flashes of crystal and gold, through the somnolent
darkness. He looked down, becoming more
and more absorbed, daydreaming rather than meditating, and was not conscious
when Elder Brother stepped softly out of the house, paused, and stood for a
long time watching his bemused guest.
When Knecht at last shook off his abstraction and stood up, he was no
longer there, but his voice soon called from inside an invitation to tea. They greeted each other briefly, drank tea,
and sat listening in the mututinal stillness to the sound of the small jet of
water from the fountain, a melody of eternity.
Then the hermit stood up, busied himself here and there about the
irregularly shaped room, now and then glancing, blinking rapidly, at
Knecht. Suddenly he asked: "Are you
ready to don your shoes and continue your journeying?"
Knecht hesitated. Then he said: "If it must be so, I am
ready."
"And if it should chance that you
stay here a little while, are you ready to be obedient and to keep as still as
a goldfish?"
Again Knecht said he was ready.
"It is well," Elder Brother
said. "Now I shall lay the stalks
and consult the oracle."
While Knecht sat and looked on with an
awe equal to his curiosity, keeping "as still as a goldfish", Elder
Brother fetched from a wooden beaker, which was rather a kind of quiver, a
handful of sticks. These were the yarrow
stalks. He counted them out carefully,
returned one part of the bundle to the vessel, laid a stalk aside, divided the
rest into two equal bundles, kept one in his left hand, and with the sensitive
fingertips of his right hand took tiny little clusters from the pack in the
left. He counted these and laid them
aside until only a few stalks remained.
These he held between two fingers of his left hand. After thus reducing one bundle by ritual
counting to a few stalks, he followed the same procedure with the other
bundle. He laid the counted stalks to
one side, then went through both bundles again, one after the other, counting,
clamping small remnants of bundles between two fingers. His fingers performed all this with
economical motions and quiet agility; it looked like an occult game of skill
governed by strict rules, practised thousands of times and brought to a high
degree of virtuoso dexterity. After he
had gone through the game process several times, three small bundles
remained. From the number of stalks in
them he read an ideograph which he drew with a tapering brush on a small piece
of paper. Now the whole complicated
procedure began anew; the sticks were divided again into two equal bundles,
counted, laid aside, thrust between fingers, until in the end again three tiny
bundles remained which resulted in a second ideograph. Moved about like dancers, making very soft,
dry clicks, the stalks came together, changed places, formed bundles, were
separated, were counted anew; they shifted positions rhythmically, with a
ghostly sureness. At the end of each
process an ideograph was written, until finally the positive and negative
symbols stood in six lines one above the other.
The stalks were gathered up and carefully replaced in their
container. The sage sat crosslegged on
the floor of reed matting, for a long time examining the result of the augury
on the sheet of paper.
"It is the sign Mong," he
said. "This sign bears the name:
youthful folly. Above the mountain,
below the water; above Gen, below
Youthful
folly wins success.
I do not
seek the young fool,
The young
fool seeks me.
At the
first oracle I give knowledge.
If he asks
again, it is importunity.
If he
importunes, I give no knowledge.
Perseverance
is beneficial."
Knecht had been holding his breath
from sheer suspense. In the ensuing
silence he involuntarily gave a deep sigh of relief. He did not dare to ask. But he thought he had understood: the young
fool had turned up; he would be permitted to stay. Even while he was still enthralled by the
sublime marionettes' dance of fingers and sticks, which he had watched for so
long and which looked so persuasively meaningful, the result took hold of
him. The oracle had spoken; it had
decided in his favour.
We would not have described this
episode in such detail if Knecht himself had not so frequently related it to
his friends with a certain relish. Now
we shall return to our scholarly account.
Knecht remained at the Bamboo Grove
for months and learned to manipulate the yarrow stalks almost as well as his
teacher. The latter spent an hour a day
with him, practising counting the sticks, imparting the grammar and symbolism of
the oracular language, and drilling him in writing and memorizing the
sixty-four signs. He read to Knecht from
ancient commentaries, and every so often, on particularly good days, told him a
story by Chuang Tzu. For the rest, the
disciple learned to tend the garden, wash the brushes, and prepare the Chinese
ink. He also learned to make soup and
tea, gather brushwood, observe the weather, and handle the Chinese
calendar. But his rare attempts to
introduce the Glass Bead Game and music into their sparing conversations
yielded no results whatsoever; they seemed to fall upon deaf ears, or else were
turned aside with a forbearing smile or a proverb such as, "Dense clouds,
no rain," or, "Nobility is without flaw." But when Knecht had a small clavichord sent
from Monteport and spent an hour a day playing, Elder Brother made no
objection. Once Knecht confessed to his
teacher that he wished to learn enough to be able to incorporate the system of
the I Ching into the Glass Bead Game.
Elder Brother laughed. "Go
ahead and try," he exclaimed.
"You'll see how it turns out.
Anyone can create a pretty little bamboo garden in the world. But I doubt that the gardener would succeed
in incorporating the world in his bamboo grove."
But enough of this. We shall mention only the one further fact
that some years later, when Knecht was already a highly respected personage in
Waldzell and invited Elder Brother to give a course there, he received no
answer.
Afterwards Joseph Knecht described the
months he lived in the Bamboo Grove as an unusually happy time. He also frequently referred to it as the
"beginning of my awakening" - and in fact from that period on the
image of "awakening" turns up more and more often in his remarks,
with a meaning similar to although not quite the same as that he had formerly
attributed to the image of vocation. It
could be assumed that the "awakening" signified knowledge of himself
and of the place he occupied within the Castalian and the general human order
of things; but it seems to us that the accent increasingly shifts towards
self-knowledge in the sense that from the "beginning of his
awakening" Knecht came closer and closer to a sense of his special, unique
position and destiny, while at the same time the concepts and categories of the
traditional hierarchy of the world and of the special Castalian hierarchy
became for him more and more relative matters.
His Chinese studies were far from
concluded during his stay in the Bamboo Grove.
They continued, and Knecht made particular efforts to acquire a
knowledge of ancient Chinese music.
Everywhere in the older Chinese writers he encountered praise of music
as one of the primal sources of all order, morality, beauty, and health. This broad, ethical view of music was
familiar to him from of old, for the Music Master could be regarded as the very
embodiment of it.
Without ever forsaking the fundamental
plan of his studies, which as we have seen he outlined in his letter to Fritz
Tegularius, he pushed forward energetically on a broad front wherever he
scented an element of essential value to himself, that is to say, wherever the
path of "awakening", on which he had already set out, seemed to lead
him. One of the positive results of his
period of apprenticeship with Elder Brother was that he overcame his resistance
against returning to Waldzell.
Henceforth he participated in one of the advanced courses there every
year, and without quite realizing how it had happened he became a personage
regarded with interest and esteem in the Vicus Lusorum. He belonged to that central and most
sensitive organ of the entire Game organization, that anonymous group of
players of proven worth in whose hands lay the destinies of the Game at any
given time, or at least the type of play that happened to be in fashion.
Officials of the Game institutes
belonged to but did not dominate this group, which usually met in several
remote, quiet rooms of the Game Archives.
There the members beguiled their time with critical studies of the Game,
championing the inclusion of new subject areas, or arguing for their exclusion,
debating for or against certain constantly shifting tastes in regard to the
form, the procedures, the sporting aspects of the Glass Bead Game. Everyone who had made a place for himself in
this group was a virtuoso of the Game; each new to a hair the talents and
peculiarities of all the others. The
atmosphere was like that in the corridors of a government ministry or an
aristocratic club where the rulers and those who will take over their
responsibilities in the near future meet and get to know one another. A muted, polished tone prevailed in this
group. Its members were ambitious
without showing it, keen-eyed and critical to excess. Many in Castalia, and some in the rest of the
country outside the Province, regarded this elite as the ultimate flower of
Castalian tradition, the cream of an exclusive intellectual aristocracy, and a
good many youths dreamed for years of some day belonging to it themselves. To others, however, this elect circle of
candidates for the higher reaches in the hierarchy of the Glass Bead Game
seemed odious and debased, a clique of haughty idlers, brilliant but spoiled
geniuses who lacked all feeling for life and reality, an arrogant and
fundamentally parasitic company of dandies and climbers who had made a silly
game, a sterile self-indulgence of the mind, their vocation and the content of
their life.
Knecht was untouched by either of
these attitudes. It did not matter to
him whether he figured in student gossip as some sort of phenomenon or as a
parvenu and climber. What was important
to him were his studies, all of which now centred around the Game. Another preoccupation was, perhaps, that one
question of really the Game really was the supreme achievement of Castalia and
worth devoting one's life to. For even
as he was familiarizing himself with the ever more recondite mysteries of the
Game's laws and potentialities, even as he became more and more at home in the
labyrinths of the Archives and the complex inner world of the Game's symbolism,
his doubts had by no means been silenced.
He had already learned by experience that faith and doubt belong
together, that they govern each other like inhaling and exhaling, and that his
very advances in all aspects of the Game's microcosm naturally sharpened his
eyes to all the dubiousness of the Game.
For a little while, perhaps, the idyll of the Bamboo Grove had reassured
him, or perhaps one might say confused him.
The example of Elder Brother had shown him that there were ways of escaping
from this dubiousness. It was possible,
for example, as that recluse had done, to turn oneself into a Chinese, shut
oneself off behind a garden hedge, and life in a self-sufficient and beautiful
kind of perfection. One might also
become a Pythagorean or a monk and scholastic - but these were still escapes,
renunciations of universality possible and permissible only to a few. They involved renunciation of the present and
the future in favour of something perfect enough, but past. Knecht had sensed in good time that this type
of escape was not the way for him. But
what then was the way for him? Aside
from his great talent for music and for the Glass Bead Game, he was aware of
still other forces within himself, a certain inner independence, a self-reliance
which by no means barred him or hampered him from serving, but demanded of him
that he serve only the highest master.
And this strength, this independence, this self-reliance, was not just a
trait in his character, it was not just inturned and effective only upon
himself; it also affected the outside world.
As early has his years at school, and
especially during the period of his contest with Plinio Designori, Joseph
Knecht had often noticed that many schoolmates his own age, but even more the
younger boys, liked him, sought his friendship, and moreover tended to let him
dominate them. They asked him for
advice, put themselves under his influence.
Ever since, this experience had been repeated frequently. It had its pleasant and flattering side; it
satisfied ambition and strengthened self-confidence. But it also had another, a dark and
terrifying side. For there was something
bad and unpalatable about the attitude one took towards these schoolmates so
eager for advice, guidance, and an example, about the impulse to despise them
for their lack of self-reliance and dignity, and about the occasional secret
temptation to make them (at least in thought) into obedient slaves. Moreover, during the time with Plinio he had
had a taste of the responsibility, strain, and psychological burden which is
the price paid for every brilliant and publicly representative position. He knew also that the Music Master sometimes
felt weighed down by his own position.
It was lovely, and tempting, to exert power over men and to shine before
others, but power also had its perditions and perils. History, after all, consisted of an unbroken
succession of rulers, leaders, bosses, and commanders who with extremely rare
exceptions had all begun well and ended badly.
All of them, at least so they said, had striven for power for the sake
of the good; afterward they had become obsessed and numbed by power and loved
it for its own sake.
What he must do was to sanctify and
make wholesome the power Nature had bestowed on him by placing it in the
service of the hierarchy. This was
something he had always taken for granted.
But where was his rightful place, where would his energies be put to
best use and bear fruit? The capacity to
attract and more or less to influence others, especially those younger than
himself, would of course have been useful to an army officer or a politician;
but in Castalia there was no place for such occupations. Here these qualities were useful only to the
teacher and educator, but Knecht felt hardly drawn to such work. If it had been a question of his own desires
alone, he would have preferred the life of the independent scholar to all
others - or else that of a Glass Bead Game player. And in reaching this conclusion he once more
faced the old, tormenting question: was this game really the highest, really
the sovereign in the realm of the intellect?
Was it not, in spite of everything and everyone, in the end merely a
game after all? Did it really merit full
devotion, lifelong service? Generations
ago this famous Game had begun as a kind of substitute for art, and for many it
was gradually developing into a kind of religion, allowing highly trained
intellects to indulge in contemplation, edification, and devotional exercises.
Obviously, the old conflict between
aesthetics and ethics was going on in Knecht.
The question never fully expressed but likewise never entirely
suppressed, was the very one that had now and then erupted, dark and
threatening, from beneath the surface of the schoolboy poems he had written in
Waldzell. That question was addressed
not just to the Glass Bead Game, but to Castalia as a whole.
There was a period when this whole
complex of problems troubled him so deeply that he was always dreaming of
debates with Designori. And one day, as
he was strolling across one of the spacious courtyards of the Waldzell
Player's' Village, he heard someone behind him calling his name. The voice sounded very familiar, although he
did not recognize it at once. When he
turned around he saw a tall young man with a trim beard rushing tempestuously
towards him. It was Plinio, and with a
surge of affection and warm memories, Joseph greeted him heartily. They arranged to meet that evening. Plinio, who had long ago finished his studies
in the universities in the outside world, and was already a government
official, had come to Waldzell on holiday for a short guest course in the Glass
Bead Game, as he had in fact done once before, several years earlier.
The evening they spent together,
however, proved an embarrassment to both friends. Plinio was here as a guest student, a
tolerated dilettante from outside; although he was pursuing his course with
great eagerness, it was nevertheless a course for outsiders and amateurs. The distance between them was too great; he
was facing a professional, an initiate whose very delicacy and polite interest
in his friend's enthusiasm for the Glass Bead Game inevitably made him feel
that he was not a colleague but a child playfully dabbling on the outer edges
of science which the other understood to its very core. Knecht tried to turn the conversation away
from the Game by asking Plinio about his official functions and his life on the
outside. And now Joseph was the laggard
and the child who asked innocent questions and was tactfully tutored. Plinio had gone into law, was seeing
political influence, and was about to become engaged to the daughter of a party
leader. He spoke a language that Joseph
only half understood; many recurrent expressions sounded empty to him, or
seemed to have no content. At any rate
he realized that Plinio counted for something in his world, knew his way about
in it, and had ambitious aims. But the
two worlds, which ten years ago both youths had each touched with tentative
curiosity and a measure of sympathy, had by now grown irreconcilably apart.
Joseph could appreciate the fact that
this man of the world and politician had retained a certain attachment to
Castalia. This was, after all, the
second time he was sacrificing a holiday to the Glass Bead Game. But in the end, Joseph thought, it was pretty
much the same as if he were one day to pay a visit to Plinio's district and
attend a few sessions of the court as a curious guest, and have Plinio show him
through a few factories or welfare institutions. Both were disappointed. Knecht found his former friend coarse and
superficial. Designori, for his part,
found his former schoolmate distinctly haughty in his exclusive esotericism and
intellectuality; he seemed to Plinio to have become a "pure
intellect" altogether absorbed by himself and his sport.
Both made an effort, however, and
Designori had all sorts of tales to tell, about his studies and examinations,
about journeys to England and to the south, political meetings,
parliament. At one point, moreover, he
said something that sounded like a threat or a warning. "You will see," he said. "Soon there will be times of unrest,
perhaps wars, in which case your whole existence in Castalia might well come
under attack."
Joseph did not take this too
seriously. He merely asked: "And
what about you, Plinio? In that case
would you be for or against Castalia?"
"Oh that," Plinio said with
a forced smile. "It's not likely
that I'd be asked my opinion. But of
course I favour the undisturbed continuance of Castalia; otherwise I wouldn't
be here, you know. Still and all,
although your material requirements are so modest, Castalia costs the country
quite a little sum every year."
"Yes," Joseph said,
laughing, "it amounts, I am told, to about a tenth of what our country
used to spend annually for armaments during the Century of Wars."
They met several more times, and the
closer the end of Plinio's course approached, the more assiduous they became in
courtesies towards each other. But it
was a relief to both when the two or three weeks were over and Plinio departed.
The Magister Ludi at that time was
Thomas von der Trave, a famous, widely travelled, and cosmopolitan man,
gracious and obliging towards everyone who approached him, but severe to the
point of fanaticism in guarding the Game against contamination. He was a great worker, something unsuspected
by those who knew him only in his public role, dressed in his festive robes to
conduct the great Games, or receiving delegations from abroad. He was said to be a cool, even icy
rationalist, whose relationship to the arts was one of mere distant
civility. Among the young and ardent
amateurs of the Glass Bead Game, rather deprecatory opinions of him could be
heard at times - misjudgements, for if he was not an enthusiast and in the
great public games tended to avoid touching on grand and exciting themes, the
brilliant construction and unequalled form of his games proved to the cognoscenti
his total grasp of the subtlest problems of the Game's world.
One day the Magister Ludi sent for
Joseph Knecht. He received him in his
home, in everyday clothes, and asked whether he would care to come for half an
hour every day at this same time for the next few days. Knecht, who had never before had any private
dealings with the Master, was somewhat astonished.
For the present, the Master showed him
a bulky memorandum, a proposal he had received from an organist - one of the
innumerable proposals which the directorate of the Game regularly had to
examine. Usually these were suggestions
for the admission of new material to the Archives. One man, for example, had made a meticulous
study of the history of the madrigal and discovered in the development of the
style a curve that he had expressed both musically and mathematically, so that
it could be included in the vocabulary of the Game. Another had examined the rhythmic structure
of Julius Caesar's Latin and discovered the most striking congruencies with the
results of well-known studies of the intervals in Byzantine hymns. Or again some fanatic had once more unearthed
some new cabala hidden in the musical notation of the fifteenth century. Then there were the tempestuous letters from
abstruse experimenters who could arrive at the most astounding conclusions from,
say, a comparison of the horoscopes of Goethe and Spinoza; such letters often
included pretty and seemingly enlightening geometric drawings in several
colours.
Knecht attacked the manuscript with
eagerness. He himself, after all, had
often pondered such proposals, although he had never submitted any. Every active Glass Bead Game player naturally
dreams of a constant expansion of the fields of the Game until they include the
entire universe. Or rather, he
constantly performs such expansions in his imagination and his private Games,
and cherishes the secret desire for the ones which seem to prove their
viability to be crowned by official acceptance.
The true and ultimate finesse in the private Games of advanced players
consists, of course, in their developing such mastery over the expressive,
nomenclatural, and formative factors of the Game that they can inject
individual and original ideas into any given Game played with objective
historical materials. A distinguished
botanist once whimsically expressed the idea in an aphorism: "The Glass
Bead Game should admit of everything, even that a single plant should chat in
Latin with Linnaeus."
Knecht, then, helped the Magister
analyze the suggestion. The half-hour
passed swiftly. He came punctually the next
day, and so for two weeks came daily for a half-hour session with the Magister
Ludi. During the first few days it
struck him that the Master was asking him to work carefully and critically
through altogether inferior memoranda, whose uselessness was evident at first
glance. He wondered that the Master had
time for this sort of thing, and gradually became aware that the purpose was
not just to lighten the Master's work load.
Rather, this assignment, although necessary in itself, was giving the
Master a chance to subject him, the young adept, to an extremely courteous but
stringent examination. What was taking
place was rather similar to the appearance of the Music Master in his boyhood;
he suddenly became aware of it now by the behaviour of his associates, who
treated him more shyly, reservedly, and sometimes with ironic respect. Something was in the wind; he sensed it; but
now it was far less a source of joy than it had been then.
After the last of these sessions the
Magister Ludi said in his rather high, courteous voice and in that carefully
enunciated speech of his, but without the slightest solemnity: "Very well;
you need not come tomorrow. Our business
is completed for the moment. But I shall
soon be having to trouble you again.
Many thanks for your collaboration; it has been valuable to me. Incidentally, in my opinion you ought to
apply for your admission to the Order now.
There will be no difficulties; I have already informed the heads of the
Order." As he rose he added:
"One word more, just by the way.
Probably you too sometimes incline, as most good Glass Bead Game players
do in their youth, to use our Game as a kind of instrument for
philosophizing. My words alone will not
cure you of that, but nevertheless I shall say them: Philosophizing should be
done only with legitimate tools, those of philosophy. Our Game is neither philosophy nor religion;
it is a discipline of its own, in character most akin to art. It is an art sui generis. One makes greater strides if one holds to
that view from the first than if one reaches it only after a hundred
failures. The philosopher Kant - he is
little known today, but he was a formidable thinker - once said that
theological philosophizing was 'a magic lantern of chimeras'. We should not make our Glass Bead Game into
that."
Joseph was surprised. His excitement was so great that he almost
failed to hear the last cautionary remarks.
It had flashed through his mind that this meant the end of his freedom,
the completion of his period of study, admission to the Order, and his eminent
enrolment in the ranks of the hierarchy.
He expressed his thanks with a low bow, and went promptly to the
secretariat of the Order in Waldzell, where sure enough he found himself already
inscribed on the list of new nominees to the Order. Like all students at his level, he knew the
rules of the Order fairly well, and remembered that the ceremony of admission
could be performed by every member of the Order who held an official post in
the higher ranks. He therefore requested
that this be done by the Music Master, obtained a pass and a short furlough,
and next day set out for Monteport, where his patron and friend was
staying. He found the venerable old
Master ailing, but was welcomed with rejoicing.
"You have come just in
time," the old man said. "Soon
I would no longer be empowered to receive you into the Order as a younger
brother. I am about to resign my office;
my release has already been granted."
The ceremony itself was simple. On the following day the Music Master invited
two brothers of the Order to be present as witnesses, as prescribed by the
statutes. Previously, he had given
Knecht a paragraph from the rules as the subject of a meditation exercise. It was the familiar passage: "If the
high Authority appoints you to an office, know this: every step upward on the
ladder of offices is not a step into freedom but into bondage. The higher the office, the tighter the
bondage. The greater the power of the
office, the stricter the service. The
stronger the personality, the less self-will."
The group then assembled in the
Magister's music cell, the same in which Knecht had long ago been introduced to
the art of meditation. The Master called
upon the novice, in honour of the initiation, to play a chorale prelude by
Bach. Then one of the witnesses read
aloud the abbreviated version of the rules of the Order, and the Music Master
himself asked the ritual questions and received his young friend's oath. He accorded Joseph another hour; they sat in
the garden and the Master advised him on how to identify himself with the rules
and live by them. "It is
good," he said, "that at the moment I am departing you are stepping
into the breach; it is as if I had a son who will stand in my stead." And when he saw Joseph's sad look he added:
"Come now, don't be downcast. I'm
not. I am very tired and looking forward
to the leisure I mean to enjoy, and which you will share with me frequently, I hope. And next time we meet, use the familiar
pronoun of address to me. I could not
offer that as long as I held office."
He dismissed him with that winning smile which Joseph had now known for
twenty years.
Knecht returned quickly to Waldzell,
for he had been given only three days leave.
He was barely back when the Magister Ludi sent for him, greeted him
affably as one colleague to another, and congratulated him on his admission to
the Order. "All that is now lacking
to make us completely colleagues and associates," he continued, "is
your assignment to a definite place in our organization."
Joseph was somewhat taken aback. So this would be the end of his freedom.
"Oh," he said timidly,
"I hope I can prove useful in some modest spot somewhere. But to be candid with you, I had been hoping
I would be able to continue studying freely for a while longer."
The Magister looked straight into his
eyes with a faintly ironic smile. "You say 'a while', but how long is
that?"
Knecht gave an embarrassed laugh. "I really don't know."
"So I thought," the Master
said. "You are still speaking the
language of students and thinking in student terms, Joseph Knecht. That is quite all right now, but soon it will
no longer be all right, for we need you.
Besides, you know that later on, even in the highest offices of our
Order, you can obtain leaves for purposes of study, if you can persuade the
authorities of the value of these studies.
My predecessor and teacher, for example, while he was still Magister
Ludi and an old man, requested and received a full year's furlough for studies
in the London Archives. But he received
his furlough not for 'a while', but for a specific number of months, weeks, and
days. Henceforth you will have to count
on that. And now I have a proposal to
make to you. We need a reliable man who
is as yet unknown outside our circle for a special mission."
The assignment was the following. The Benedictine monastery of Mariafels, one
of the oldest centres of learning in the country, which maintained friendly
relations with Castalia and in particular had favoured the Glass Bead Game for
decades, had asked him to send a young teacher for a prolonged stay, to give
introductory courses in the Game and also to stimulate the few advanced players
in the monastery. The Magister's choice
had fallen upon Joseph Knecht. That was
why he had been so discreetly tested; that was why his entry into the Order had
been accelerated.
FOUR
TWO ORDERS
IN A GOOD
many respects Joseph Knecht's situation was once again similar to that in his
Latin school days after the Music Master's visit. Joseph himself would scarcely have imagined
that the appointment to Mariafels represented a special distinction and a large
first step on the ladder of the hierarchy, but he was after all a good deal
wiser about such matters nowadays and could plainly read the significance of
his summons in the attitude and conduct of his fellow students. Of course he had belonged for some time to
the innermost circle within the elite of the Glass Bead Game players, but now
the unusual assignment marked him to all and sundry as a young man whom the
superiors had their eye on and whom they intended to employ. His associates and ambitious fellow players
did not exactly withdraw or become unfriendly - the members of this highly
aristocratic group were far too well-mannered for that - but an aloofness
nevertheless arose. Yesterday's friend
might well be tomorrow's superior, and this circle registered and expressed
such gradations and differentiations by the most delicate shades of behaviour.
One exception was Fritz Tegularius,
whom we may well call, next to Ferromonte, Joseph Knecht's closest friend
throughout his life. Tegularius,
destined by his gifts for the highest achievements but severely hampered by
certain deficiencies of health, balance, and self-confidence, was the same age
as Knecht at the time of Knecht's admission to the Order - that is, about
thirty-four - and had first met him some ten years earlier in a Glass Bead Game
course. At the time Knecht had sensed
how strong an attraction he exerted upon this quiet and rather melancholy
youth. With that psychological instinct
which he possessed even then, although without precisely knowing it, he
likewise grasped the essence of this love on the part of Tegularius. It was friendship ready for unconditional
devotion, a respect capable of the utmost subordination. It was imbued with an almost religious
fervour, but overshadowed and held in bounds by an aristocratic reserve and a
foreboding of inner tragedy. In the
beginning, still shaken and oversensitive, not to say suspicious, as a result
of the Designori episode, Knecht had held Tegularius at a distance by
consistent sternness, although he too felt drawn to this interesting and
unusual schoolfellow. For a
characterization of Tegularius we may use a page from Knecht's confidential
memoranda which, years later, he regularly drew up for the exclusive use of the
highest authorities. It reads:
"Tegularius. Personal friend of the writer. Recipient of several honours at school in
Keuperheim. Good classical philologist,
strong interest in philosophy, worked on Leibniz, Bolzano, subsequently
Plato. The most brilliant and gifted
Glass Bead Game player I know. He would
be predestined for Magister Ludi were it not that his character, together with
his frail health, make him completely unsuited for that position. T. should never be appointed to an
outstanding, representative, or organizational position; that would be a
misfortune for him and for the office.
His deficiency takes physical form in states of low vitality, periods of
insomnia and nervous aches, psychologically in spells of melancholy, a hunger
for solitude, fear of duties and responsibilities, and probably also in
thoughts of suicide. Dangerous though
his situation is, by the aid of meditation and great self-discipline he keeps
himself going so courageously that most of his acquaintances have no idea of
how severely he suffers and are aware only of his great shyness and
taciturnity. But although T.
unfortunately is not fitted for higher posts, he is nevertheless a jewel in the
Vicus Lusorum, an altogether irreplaceable treasure. He has mastered the technique of our game
like a great musician his instrument; he instinctively finds the most delicate
nuances, and is also an exceptional instructor.
In the advanced and highest review courses - for my part he would be
wasted in the lower ones - I could scarcely manage without him any longer. The way he analyzes the specimen Games of
boys without ever discouraging them, the way he detects their tricks,
infallibly recognizes and exposes every imitative or purely decorative, the way
he finds the sources of error in a Game that has started well but then gone
astray, and lays these errors bare like flawlessly prepared anatomical
specimens - is altogether unique. It is
this sharp and incorruptible talent for analysis and correction that assures
him the respect of students and colleagues, which otherwise might have been
jeopardized by his unstable demeanour and shyness.
"I should like to cite an example
to illustrate T.'s brilliance as a Glass Bead Game player. During the early days of my friendship with
him, when both of us were already finding little more to learn by way of
technique in our courses, he once - it was a moment of unusual trust - allowed
me to look at several games he had composed.
I saw at a glance that they were brilliantly devised and somehow novel
and original in style, asked to borrow the sketches for study, and discovered
that these Game compositions were true literary productions, so amazing and
singular that I feel I should speak of them here. These Games were little dramas, in structure
almost pure monologues, reflecting the imperilled but brilliant life of the
author's mind like a perfect self-portrait.
The various themes and groups of themes on which the Games were based,
and their sequences and confrontations, were brilliantly conceived,
dialectically orchestrated and counterpoised.
But beyond that, the synthesis and harmonization of the opposing voices
was not carried to the ultimate conclusion in the usual classical manner;
rather, this harmonization underwent a whole series of refractions, of
splintering into overtones, and paused each time, as if wearied and despairing,
just on the point of dissolution, finally fading out in questioning and doubt. As a result, these Games possessed a stirring
chromatics, of a kind never before ventured, as far as I know. Moreover, the Games as a whole expressed a
tragic doubt and renunciation; they became figurative statements of the
dubiousness of all intellectual endeavour.
At the same time, in their intellectual structure as well as in their
calligraphic technique and perfection, they were so extraordinarily beautiful
that they brought tears to one's eyes.
Each of these Games moved with such gravity and sincerity towards
solution, only at the last so nobly to forgo the attempt at solution, that it
was like a perfect elegy upon the transitoriness inherent in all beautiful
things and the ultimate dubiety immanent in all soaring flights of the
intellect.
"Item: I would recommend
Tegularius, if he should outlive me or my term in office, as an extremely fine,
precious, but imperilled treasure. He
should be granted maximum freedom; he should be consulted on all important
questions concerning the Game. But students
should never be placed in his sole guidance."
In the course of the years this
remarkable man had become Knecht's true friend.
He admired Knecht's capacity for leadership as well as his mind, and
showed a touching devotion towards him.
In fact, much of what we know about Knecht has been handed down by
Tegularius. In the innermost circle of
younger Glass Bead Game players he was perhaps the only one who did not envy
his friend for the important assignment he had received, and the only one for
whom Knecht's absence for an indefinite time meant an almost unbearable anguish
and sense of loss.
Joseph himself rejoiced in the new
state of affairs as soon as he recovered from the shock of suddenly being shorn
of his beloved freedom. He felt
eagerness to travel, pleasure in activity, and curiosity about the alien world
to which he was being sent.
Incidentally, he was not allowed to depart for Mariafels without
preparation; first he was assigned to the "Police" for three
weeks. That was the students' name for
the small department within the Board of Educators which might be called its
Political Department or even its Foreign Ministry, were these not somewhat
grandiose names for so small an affair.
These he received instruction in the rules of conduct for brothers of
the Order during their stays in the outside world. Dubois, the head of this office, personally
devoted an hour to him nearly every day.
This conscientious man seemed worried that an altogether untried young
man without the faintest knowledge of the world should be sent to such a
foreign post. He made no attempt to
conceal his disapproval of the Magister Ludi's decision, and took extra pains
to inform this new member of the Order on the facts of life in the outside
world and the means for effectively combating its perils. His sincere paternal solicitude fortunately
was matched by Joseph's willingness to be instructed. The result was that during those hours of
introduction into the rules of intercourse with the world, the teacher
conceived a real affection for Joseph Knecht, and finally felt able to dismiss
him reassured and fully confident that the young man would be able to carry out
his mission successfully. Dubois even
tried, more out of personal good will than the demands of politics, to give
Joseph a kind of additional assignment on his own behalf. As one of Castalia's few
"politicians", Dubois was one of that tiny group of officials whose
thoughts and studies were largely devoted to sustaining the legal and economic
continuance of Castalia, to regulating its relationship to the outside world
and the problems that arose from its dependence on the world. The great majority of Castalians, the
officials no less than the scholars and students, lived in their Pedagogic
Province and their Order as if these constituted a stable, eternal, inevitable
world. They knew, of course, that it had
not always existed, that it had come into being slowly and amid bitter
struggles in times of cruel distress; they knew it had originated at the end of
the Age of Wars out of a double source: the heroically ascetic efforts of
scholars, artists, and thinkers who had come to their senses, and the profound
craving of the exhausted, bled, and betrayed peoples for order, normality,
reason, lawfulness, and moderation.
Castalians knew this, and understood the function of all the Orders and
Pedagogic Provinces throughout the world: to abstain from government and
competition and instead to assure stability for the spiritual foundations of
moderation and law everywhere. But that
the present order of things was not to be taken for granted, that it
presupposed a certain harmony between the world and the guardians of culture,
that this harmony could always be disrupted, and that world history taken as a
whole by no means furthered what was desirable, rational, and beautiful in the
life of man, but at best only occasionally tolerated it as an exception - all
this they did not realize. Except for
those few political thinkers like Dubois, almost all Castalians were unaware of
the secret complex of problems underlying the existence of Castalia. Once Knecht won the confidence of Dubois, he
was given a glimpse of the political foundations of Castalia. At first the subject struck him as rather
repellent and uninteresting - which, indeed, was the reaction of most members
of the Order. But then he recalled
Plinio Designori's remark about possible dangers to Castalia. Along with that recollection there flooded
back into his mind the whole bitter aftertaste of his youthful debates with
Plinio, seemingly long since settled and forgotten. Now these suddenly seemed to him of the
highest importance and, moreover, a stage on the road to his
"awakening".
At the end of their last talk Dubois
said to him: "I think I can let you go now. You are to adhere strictly to the assignment
his honour the Magister Ludi has given you, and no less strictly to the rules
of conduct we have taught you here. It
was a pleasure to me to be able to help you.
You will see that the three weeks we have kept you were not time
lost. And if you should ever want to
recompense me for my contribution to your education, I can suggest a way. You will be entering a Benedictine abbey, and
if you stay there a while and commend yourself to the Father, you will probably
hear political conversations and sense political currents among the venerable
Fathers and their guests. If you would
occasionally inform me about such matters, I would be grateful. Please understand me aright: you are
certainly not to regard yourself as a kind of spy or in any way misuse
confidences. You are not to pass along
anything that goes against your conscience.
I guarantee that we will use any information we may receive only in the
interest of our Order and Castalia. We
are not real politicians and have no power at all, but we too are dependent on
the world, which either needs or tolerates us.
Circumstances may arise in which we might profit by knowing that a
statesman is making a retreat in a monastery, or that the Pope is said to be
ill, or that new candidates have been added to the list of future
cardinals. We are not dependent on your
information - we have quite a variety of sources - but one little source more
can do no harm. Go now, you need not say
yes or no in this matter. For the present
all that is needed is for you to comport yourself well in your official
assignment and do us honour among the spiritual Fathers. Bon voyage."
In the Book of Changes, which
Knecht consulted by means of the yarrow stalk ritual before he set out, he counted
out the hexagram Lü, which signifies "The Wanderer", and the augury:
"Success through smallness.
Persistence is good fortune to the wanderer." He found a six for the second place, which
yielded the interpretation:
The wanderer comes
to the inn.
He has possessions
with him.
He receives the
persistent attentions of a young servant.
Knecht's leave-taking went off
cheerfully, except that his last talk with Tegularius proved to be a hard test
of both their characters. Fritz
controlled himself by extreme effort and appeared absolutely frozen in the
coolness he forced himself to display.
For him, the best he had was departing with his friend. Knecht's nature did not permit so passionate
and above all so exclusive an attachment to a friend. If need be, he could get along without one
and could direct his affections easily towards new objects and people. This parting was not a painful loss for him;
but he knew his friend well enough to know what a shock and trial it meant for
him, and he was concerned. He had given
much thought to the nature of this friendship, and had once spoken about it
with the Music Master. To a certain
extent he had learned to objectify his own experience and feelings, and to
regard them critically. In so doing he
had become aware that it was not really, or at any rate not only, his friend's
great talent that attracted him to Tegularius.
Rather, it was the association of this talent with such serious defects,
such great fragility. And he realized
that the single-mindedness of the love Tegularius offered him had not only its
beautiful aspect, but also a dangerous attraction, for it tempted him to
display his power over one weaker in strength though not in love. Therefore in this relationship he had made
restraint and self-discipline his duty to the last. Fond though he was of Tegularius, the
friendship would not have acquired so deep a meaning for him if it had not
taught him something about the dominion he had over others weaker and less
secure than himself. He learned that this
power to influence others was part and parcel of the educator's gift, and that
it concealed dangers and imposed responsibility. Tegularius, after all, was only one of
many. In the eyes of quite a few others
Knecht read silent courtship.
At the same time, during the past year
he had become far more conscious of the highly charged atmosphere in which he
lived in the Glass Bead Game village.
For there he was part of an officially nonexistent but very sharply defined
circle, or class, the finest elite among the candidates and tutors of the Glass
Bead Game. Now and then one or another
of that group would be called upon to serve in an auxiliary capacity under the
Magister or Archivist, or to help teach one of the Game courses; but they were
never assigned to the lower or middle level of officialdom or the teaching
corps. They provided the reserve for
filling vacancies in leading posts. They
knew one another thoroughly; they had almost no illusions about talents,
characters, and achievements. And
precisely because among the initiates and aspirants for the highest dignities
each one was pre-eminent, each of the
very first rank in performance, knowledge, and academic record - precisely for
that reason those traits and nuances of character which predestined a candidate
for leadership and success inevitably counted for a great deal and were closely
observed. A dash more or less of
graciousness, of persuasion with younger men or with the authorities, of
amiability, was of great importance in this group and could give its possessor
a definitive edge over his rivals. Fritz
Tegularius plainly belonged to this circle merely as an outsider; he was
tolerated as a guest but kept at the periphery because he had no gift for rule. Just as plainly Knecht belonged to the
innermost circle. What appealed to the
young and made them his admirers was his wholesome vigour and still youthful
charm which appeared to be resistant to passions, incorruptible and then again
boyishly irresponsible - a kind of innocence, that is. And what commended him to his superiors was
the reverse side of this innocence: his freedom from ambition and craving for
success.
Of late, the effects of his
personality had begun to dawn upon the young man. He became aware of his attraction for those
below him, and gradually, belatedly, of how he affected those above him. And when he looked back from his new
standpoint of awareness to his boyhood, he found both lines running through his
life and shaping it. Classmates and
younger boys had always courted him; superiors had taken benevolent note of
him. There had been exceptions, such as
Headmaster Zbinden; but on the other hand he had been recipient of such
distinctions as the patronage of the Music Master, and latterly of Dubois and
the Magister Ludi. It was all perfectly
plain, in spite of which Knecht had never been willing to see it and accept it
in its entirety. Obviously, his fate was
to enter the elite everywhere, to find admiring friends and highly placed patrons. It happened of its own accord, without his
trying. Obviously he would not be
allowed to settle down in the shadows at the base of the hierarchy; he must
move steadily towards its apex, approach the bright light at the top. He would not be a subordinate or an
independent scholar; he would be a master.
That he grasped this later than others in a similar position gave him
that indescribable extra magic, that note of innocence.
But why was it that he realized it so
late, and so reluctantly? Because he had
not sought it at all, and did not want it.
He had no need to dominate, took no pleasure in commanding; he desired
the contemplative far more than the active life, and would have been content to
spend many years more, if not his whole life, as an obscure student, an
inquiring and reverent pilgrim through the sanctuaries of the past, the
cathedrals of music, the gardens and forests of mythology, languages and
ideas. Now that he saw himself being
pushed inexorably into the vita activa he was more than ever aware of
the tensions of the aspirations, the rivalries, the ambitions among those
around him. He felt his innocence
threatened and no longer tenable. Now,
he realized, he must desire and affirm the position that was being thrust upon
him; otherwise he would be haunted by a feeling of imprisonment and nostalgia
for the freedom of the past ten years.
And since he was not as yet altogether ready for that affirmation, he
felt his temporary departure from Waldzell and the Province, his journey out into
the world, as a great relief and release.
The monastery of Mariafels, through
the many centuries of its existence, had shared in the making and the suffering
of the history of the West. It had
experienced periods of flowering and decline, had passed through rebirths and new
nadirs, and had been at various times and in assorted fields famous and
brilliant. Once a centre of Scholastic
learning and the art of disputation, still possessing an enormous library of
medieval theology, it had risen to new glory after periods of slackness and
sluggishness. It then became famous for
its music, its much-praised choir, and the Masses and oratories composed and
performed by the Fathers. From those
days it still retained a fine musical tradition, half a dozen nut-brown chests
full of music manuscripts, and the finest organ in the country. Then the monastery had entered a political
era, which had likewise left behind a tradition and a certain skill. In times of war and barbarization Mariafels
had several times become a little island of rationality where the better minds
among the opposed parties cautiously sought each other out and groped their way
towards reconciliation. And once - that
was the last high point in its history - Mariafels had been the birthplace of a
peace treaty which for a while met the longings of the exhausted nations. Afterwards, when a new age began and Castalia
was founded, the monastery took an attitude of wait-and-see, was in fact rather
hostile, presumably on instructions from Rome.
A request from the Board of Educators to grant hospitality to a scholar
who wished to work for a time in the monastery's Scholastic library was
politely turned down, as was an invitation to send a representative to a
conference of musicologists. Intercourse
between Castalia and the monastery had first begun in the time of Abbot Pius,
who in his latter years became keenly interested in the Glass Bead Game. Ever since then a friendly though not very
lively relationship had developed. Books
were exchanged, reciprocal hospitality granted.
Knecht's patron, the Music Master, had spent a few weeks in Mariafels
during his younger years, copying music manuscripts and playing the famous
organ. Knecht knew of this, and rejoiced
at the prospect of staying in a place of which his venerated Master had
occasionally spoken with pleasure.
The respect and politeness with which
he was received went so far beyond his expectations that he felt rather
embarrassed. This was, after all, the
first time that Castalia had offered the monastery a Glass Bead Game player of
high distinction for an indefinite period.
Joseph had learned from Dubois that he was not to regard himself as an
individual, especially during the early period of his stay, but solely as the
representative of Castalia, and that he was to accept and respond both to
courtesies and possible aloofness solely as an ambassador. That attitude helped him through his initial
constraint.
He likewise soon overcame the feelings
of strangeness, anxiety, and mild excitability which troubled his first few
nights and kept him from sleeping. And
since Abbot Gervasius displayed a good-natured and merry benevolence towards
him, he quickly came to feel at ease in his new environment. The freshness and vigour of the landscape
delighted him. The monastery was
situated in rough, mountainous country, full of abrupt cliffs and pockets of
rich pasture where handsome cattle grazed.
He savoured with deep pleasure the massiveness and size of the ancient
buildings, in which the history of many centuries could be read. He enjoyed the beauty and simple comfort of
his apartment, two rooms on the top floor of the guest wing. For recreation he went on exploratory walks
through the fine little city-state with its two churches, cloisters, archives,
library, Abbot's apartment, and courtyards, with its extensive barns filled
with thrifty livestock, its gurgling fountains, gigantic vaulted wine and fruit
cellars, its two refectories, the famous chapter house, the well-tended gardens
and the workshops of the lay brothers: cooper, cobbler, tailor, smith, and so
on, all forming a small village around the largest courtyard. He was granted entry to the library; the
organist showed him the great organ and allowed him to play on it; and he was
strongly attracted to the chests in which an impressive number of unpublished
and to some extent quite unknown music manuscripts of earlier ages awaited
study.
The monks did not seem to be terribly
impatient for him to begin his official functions. Not only days but weeks passed before anyone
seriously brought up the real purpose of his presence there. From his first day, it was true, some of the
Fathers, and the Abbot himself in particular, had been eager to chat with
Joseph about the Glass Bead Game. But
no-one said anything about instruction or any other systematic work with the
Game. In other respects, too, Knecht
felt that the manners, style of life, and general tone of intercourse among the
monks was couched in a tempo hitherto unknown to him. There was a kind of venerable slowness, a
leisurely and benign patience in which all these Fathers seemed to share,
including those whose temperaments seemed rather more active. It was the spirit of their Order, the
millennial pace of an age-old, privileged community whose orderly existence had
survived hundreds of vicissitudes. They
all shared it, as every bee shares the fate of its hive, sleeps its sleep,
suffers its sufferings, trembles with its trembling. This Benedictine temper seemed at first
glance less intellectual, less supple and acute, less active than the style of
life in Castalia, but on the other hand calmer, less malleable, older, more
resistant to tribulation. The spirit and
mentality of this place had long ago achieved a harmony with nature.
With curiosity and intense interest,
and with great admiration as well, Knecht submitted to the mood of life in this
monastery, which at a time before Castalia existed had been almost the same as
it was now, and even then fifteen hundred years old, and which was so congenial
to the contemplative side of his nature.
He was an honoured guest, honoured far beyond his expectations and
deserts; but he felt distinctly that these courtesies were a matter of form and
custom and not specially addressed to him as a person, nor to the spirit of Castalia
or of the Glass Bead Game. Rather, the
Benedictines were displaying the majestic politeness of an ancient power to a
younger one. He had been only partly
prepared for this implicit superiority, and after a while, for all that his
life in Mariafels was proving so agreeable, he began to feel so insecure that
he asked his authorities for more precise instructions on how to conduct
himself. The Magister Ludi in person
wrote him a few lines: "Don't worry about taking all the time you need for
your study of the life there. Profit by
your days, learn, try to make yourself well liked and useful, insofar as you
find your hosts receptive, but do not obtrude yourself, and never seem more
impatient, never seem to be under more pressure than they. Even if they should go on treating you for an
entire year as if each day were your first as a guest in their house, enter
calmly into the spirit of it and behave as if two or even ten years more do not
matter to you. Take it as a test in the
practice of patience. Meditate
carefully. If time hands heavy on your
hands, set aside a few hours every day, no more than four, for some regular
work, study, or the copying of manuscripts, say. But avoid giving the impression of diligence;
be at the disposal of everyone who wishes to chat with you."
Knecht followed this advice, and soon
began feeling more relaxed. Hitherto he
had been thinking too much of his assignment to act as instructor to amateur
Glass Bead Game players - the ostensible reason for this mission here - whereas
the Fathers of the monastery were treating him rather as the envoy of a
friendly power who must be kept in good humour.
And when at last Abbot Gervasius recollected the assignment, and brought
him together with several of the monks who had already had an introduction to
the art of the Glass Bead Game and hoped he would give them a more advanced
course, it turned out to his astonishment and his intense disappointment that
the noble Game was cultivated in a most superficial and amateurish way at this
hospitable place. He would evidently
have to content himself with a very modest level of knowledge of the Game. Slowly, though, he came to realize that he
had not really been sent here for the sake of lifting the standards of the
Glass Bead Game in the monastery. The
assignment of coaching the few Fathers moderately devoted to the Game and
equipping them with a modest degree of skill was easy, much too easy. Any other adept at the Game, even if he were
still far from belonging to the elite, would have been equal to the task. Instruction, then, could not be the real
purpose of his mission. He began to
realize that he had probably been sent here less to teach than to learn.
However, just as he thought he had
grasped this, his authority in the monastery, and consequently his
self-assurance, was unexpected reinforced.
This came in the nick of time, for in spite of all the charms of being a
guest there, he had already at times begun to feel his stay as something like a
punitive transfer. One day, however, in
a conversation with the Abbot he inadvertently made some allusion to the
Chinese I Ching. The Abbot showed
marked interest, asked a few questions, and could not disguise his delight when
he found his guest so unexpectedly versed in Chinese and the Book of
Changes. The Abbot, too, was fond of
the I Ching. He knew no Chinese,
and his knowledge of the book of oracles and other Chinese mysteries was
limited - in all their scholarly interests the present inmates of the monastery
seemed content with a harmless smattering.
Nevertheless, this intelligent man, who was so much more experienced and
worldly-wise than his guest, obviously had a real feeling for the spirit of
ancient Chinese attitudes towards politics and life. A conversation of unusual liveliness
ensued. For the first time real warmth
was injected into the prevailing tone of remote courtesy between host and
guest. The consequence was the Knecht
was asked to give the Abbot instruction in the I Ching twice a week.
While his relationship to his host,
the Abbot, thus increased in liveliness and meaning, while his friendly
fellowship with the organist throve and the small ecclesiastical state in which
he lived gradually became familiar territory to him, the promise of the oracle
he had consulted before leaving Castalia also neared fulfilment. As the wanderer who carried his possessions
with him, he had been promised not only the shelter of an inn but also
"the persistent attentions of a young servant". The wanderer felt justified in taking the
consummation of this promise as a good sign, a sign that he in truth had
"his possessions with him". In
other words, far away from the schools, teachers, friends, patrons, and
helpers, far from the nourishing and salutary home atmosphere of Castalia, he
carried within himself the spirit and the energies of the Province, and with
their aid he was moving towards an active and useful life.
The foretold "young
servant", as it turned out, appeared in the shape of a seminary pupil
named Anton. Although this young man
subsequently played no part in Joseph Knecht's life, in Joseph's peculiarly
divided mood during his sojourn in the monastery the boy seemed a harbinger of
new and greater things. Anton was a
close-mouthed youngster, but temperamental and talented looking, and almost
ready for admission into the community of monks. Joseph's path often crossed his, whereas he
scarcely knew any of the other seminary pupils, who were confined in a wing by
themselves, where guests were not admitted.
In fact it was obvious that they were being kept from contact with
him. Seminary pupils were not permitted
to participate in the Game course.
Anton worked as a helper in the
library several times a week. Here it
was that Knecht met him, and occasionally had a few works with him. As time went on, it became evident to Knecht
that this young man with the intense eyes under heavy black brows was devoted
to him with that enthusiasm and readiness to serve so typical of the boyish
adoration he had encountered so often by now.
Although every time it happened he felt a desire to fend it off, he had
long ago come to recognize it as a vital element in the life of the Castalian
Order. But in the monastery he decided
to be doubly withdrawn; he felt it would be a violation of hospitality to exert
any sway over this boy who was still subject to the discipline of religious
education. Moreover, he was well aware
that strict chastity was the commandment here, and this, it seemed to him,
could make a boyish infatuation even more dangerous. In any case, he must avoid any chance of
giving offence, and he governed himself accordingly.
In the library, the one place where he
habitually met Anton, he almost made the acquaintance of a man he had at first
almost failed to notice, so modest was his appearance. In time, however, he was to know him very
well indeed, and to love him for the rest of his life with the kind of grateful
reverence he felt, otherwise, only towards the now retired Music Master. The man was Father Jacobus, perhaps the most
eminent historian of the Benedictine Order.
He was at that time about sixty, a spare, elderly man with a sparrow
hawk's head on a long, sinewy neck. Seen
from the front, his face had something dull and lifeless about it, since he was
chary of gazing outward; but his profile, with the boldly curved line of the
forehead, the deep furrow above the sharp bridge of the hooked nose, and the
rather short but attractively shaped chin, suggested a definite and original
personality.
This quiet old man - who, incidentally,
on closer acquaintance could be extremely vivacious - had a table of his own in
a small room off the main hall of the library.
Though the monastery possessed such priceless books, he seemed to be the
only really serious working scholar in the place. It was, by the way, the novice Anton who by
chance called Joseph Knecht's attention to Father Jacobus. Knecht had noticed that the room in which the
scholar had his table was regarded almost as a private domain. The few users of the library entered it only
if they had to, and then moved softly and respectfully on tiptoe, although the
Father bent over his books did not appear to be easily disturbed. Knecht, of course, quickly imitated this
circumspection, and thereby remained at a remove from the industrious old man.
One day, however, when Anton had
brought Father Jacobus some books, Knecht noticed how the young man lingered a
moment at the open door of the study, looking back at the scholar already
absorbed in his work again. There was
adoration in Anton's face, an expression of admiration and reverence mingled
with those emotions of affectionate consideration and helpfulness that
well-bred youth sometimes manifests towards the paltriness and fragility of
age. Knecht's first reaction was
delight; the sight was pleasing in itself, as well as evidence that Anton could
so look up to older men without any trace of physical feeling. A rather sarcastic thought followed
immediately, a thought Joseph felt almost ashamed of: how poor the state of
scholarship must be in this institution that the only seriously active scholar
in the place was stared at as if he were a fabulous beast. Nevertheless, Anton's look of reverent
admiration for the old man opened Knecht's eyes. He became aware of the learned Father's existence. He himself took to throwing a glance now and
then at the man, discovered his Roman profile, and gradually found out one
thing and another about Father Jacobus which seemed to suggest a most
extraordinary mind and character. Knecht
had already learned that he was a historian and regarded as the foremost
authority on the history of the Benedictine Order.
One day the Father spoke to him. His manner of speech had none of the broad,
deliberately benevolent, deliberately good-natured, somewhat avuncular tone
which seemed to be the style of the monastery.
Speaking in a low and almost timorous voice, but placing his stresses
with a wonderful precision, he invited Joseph to visit him in his room after
vespers. "You will find in
me," he said, "neither a specialist on the history of Castalia nor a
Glass Bead Game player. But since, as it
now seems, our two so different Orders are forming ever-closer ties of
friendship, I should not wish to exclude myself, and would be happy to take
personal advantage now and then of your presence among us."
He spoke with utter seriousness, but
his low voice and shrewd old face conferred upon his all-too-polite phrases
that wonderful note of equivocation, ranging through the whole compass from
earnestness to irony, from deference to faint mockery, from passionate
engagement to playfulness, such as may be sensed when two holy men or two
princes of the Church greet each other with endless bows in a game of mutual
courtesies and trial of patience. This
blending of superiority and mockery, of wisdom and obstinate ceremonial, was
deeply familiar to Joseph Knecht from his studies of Chinese language and
life. He found it marvellously
refreshing, and realized that it was some time since he had last heard this
tone - which, among others, the Glass Bead Game Master Thomas commanded with
consummate skill. With gratitude and
pleasure, Joseph accepted the invitation.
That evening he called at the Father's
rather isolated apartment at the end of a quiet side-wing of the
monastery. As he stood in the corridor,
wondering which door to knock at, he heard piano music, to his considerable
surprise. It was a sonata by Purcell,
played unpretentiously and without virtuosity, but cleanly and in impeccable
tempo. The pure music sounded through
the door; its heartfelt gaiety and sweet triads reminded him of the days in
Waldzell when he had practised pieces of this sort on various instruments with
his friend Ferromonte. He waited,
listening with deep enjoyment, for the end of the sonata. In the still, twilit corridor it sounded so
lonely and unworldly, and so brave and innocent also, both childlike and
superior, as all good music must in the midst of the unredeemed muteness of the
world. He knocked at the door. Father Jacobus called "Come in",
and received him with unassuming dignity.
Two candles were still burning by the small piano. "Yes," Father Jacobus said in
answer to Knecht's question, "I play for a half-hour or even an hour every
night. I usually call a halt to my day's
work when darkness falls and would rather not read or write during the hours
before sleep."
They talked about music, about
Purcell, Handel, the ancient musical tradition among the Benedictines - of all
the Catholic Orders the one most devoted to the arts. Knecht expressed a desire to know something
of the history of the Order. The
conversation grew lively and touched on a hundred questions. The old monk's historical knowledge seemed to
be truly astounding, but he frankly admitted that the history of Castalia, of
the Castalian idea and Order, had not interested him. He had scarcely studied it, he said, and did
not conceal his critical attitude towards this Castalia whose "Order"
he regarded as an imitation of the Christian models, and fundamentally a
blasphemous imitation since the Castalian Order had no religion, no God, and no
Church as its basis. Knecht listened
respectfully, but pointed out that other than Benedictine and Roman Catholic
views of religion, God and the Church were possible, and moreover had existed,
and that it would not do to deny the purity of their intentions nor their
profound influence on the life of the mind.
"Quite so," Jacobus
said. "No doubt you are thinking of
the Protestants, among others. They were
unable to preserve religion and the Church, but at times they displayed a great
deal of courage and produced some exemplary men. I spent some years studying the various
attempts at reconciliation among the hostile Christian denominations and
churches, especially those of the period around 1700, when we find such people
as the philosopher and mathematician Leibniz and that eccentric Count
Zinsendorf endeavouring to reunite the inimical brothers. Altogether, the eighteenth century, hasty and
shallow though it often seems in its judgements, has such a rich and
many-faceted intellectual history. The
Protestants of that period strike me as particularly interesting. There was one man I discovered, a
philologist, teacher, and educator of great stature - a Swabian Pietist, by the
way - whose moral influence can be clearly traced for two hundred years after
his death. But that is another
subject. Let us return to the question
of the legitimacy and historical mission of real Orders...."
"Oh no," Joseph Knecht broke
in. "Please say more about this
teacher you have just mentioned. I
almost think I can guess who he is."
"Guess."
"I thought at first of Francke of
Halle, but since you say he was a Swabian I can think of none other than Johann
Albrecht Bengel."
Jacobus laughed. An expression of pleasure transfigured his
face. "You surprise me, my
friend," he exclaimed. "It was
indeed Bengel I had in mind. How do you happen
to know of him? Or is it normal in your
astonishing Province that people know such abstruse and forgotten things and
names? I would vouch that if you were to
ask all the Fathers, teachers, and pupils in our monastery, and those of the
last few generations as well, not one would know this name."
"In Castalia, too, few would know
it, perhaps no-one besides myself and two of my friends. I once engaged in studies of
eighteenth-century Pietism for private reasons, and as it happened I was much
impressed by several Swabian theologians - chief among them Bengel. At the time he seemed to me the ideal teacher
and guide for youth. I was so taken with
the man that I even had a photo made of his portrait in an old book, and kept
it above my desk."
Father Jacobus continued to
chuckle. "Our meeting is certainly
taking place under unusual auspices," he said. "It is remarkable that you and I should
both have come upon this forgotten man in the course of our studies. Perhaps it is even more remarkable that this
Swabian Protestant should have been able to influence both a Benedictine monk
and a Castalian Glass Bead Game player.
Incidentally, I imagine that you Glass Bead Game is an art requiring a
great deal of imagination, and wonder that so stringently sober a man as Bengel
should have attracted you."
Knecht, too, chuckled with
amusement. "Well," he said,
"if you recall that Bengel devoted years of study to the Revelation of St.
John, and what sort of system he devised for interpreting its prophecies, you
will have to admit that our friend could be the very opposite of sober."
"That is true," Father
Jacobus admitted gaily. "And how do
you explain such contradictions?"
"If you will permit me a joke, I
would say that what Bengel lacked, and unconsciously longed for, was the Glass
Bead Game. You see, I consider him among
the secret forerunners and ancestors of our Game."
Cautiously, once again entirely in
earnest, Jacobus countered: "It strikes me as rather bold to annex Bengel,
of all people, for your pedigree. How do
you justify it?"
"It was only a joke, but a joke
that can be defended. While he was still
quite young, before he became engrossed in his great work on the Bible, Bengel
once told friends of a cherished plan of his.
He hoped, he said, to arrange and sum up all the knowledge of his time,
symmetrically and synoptically, around a central idea. That is precisely what the Glass Bead Game
does."
"After all, the whole eighteenth
century toyed with the encyclopaedic idea," Father Jacobus protested.
"So it did," Joseph
agreed. "But what Bengel meant was
not just a juxtaposition of the fields of knowledge and research, but an
interrelationship, an organic denominator.
And that is one of the basic ideas of the Glass Bead Game. In fact, I would go further in my claims: if
Bengel had possessed a system similar to that offered by our Game, he probably
would have been spared all the misguided effort involved in his calculation of
the prophetic numbers and his annunciation of the Antichrist and the Millennial
Kingdom. Bengel did not quite find what
he longed for: the way to channel all
his various talents towards a single goal.
Instead, his mathematical gifts in association with his philological
bent produced that weird blend of pedantry and wild imagination, the 'order of
the ages', which occupied him for so many years."
"It is fortunate you are not a
historian," Jacobus commented.
"You tend to let your own imagination run away with you. But I understand what you mean. I am myself a pedant only in my own
discipline."
It was a fruitful conversation, out of
which sprang mutual understanding and a kind of friendship. It seemed to the Benedictine scholar more
than coincidence, or at least a very special kind of coincidence, that the two
of them - each operating within his own, Benedictine or Castalian, limitations
- should have discovered this poor instructor at a Württemberg monastery, this
man at once fine-strung and rock-hard, at once visionary and practical. Father Jacobus concluded that there must be
something linking the two of them for the same unspectacular magnet to affect
them both so powerfully. And from that
evening on, which had begun with the Purcell sonata, that link actually
existed. Jacobus enjoyed the exchange of
views with so well trained yet so supple a young mind; that was a pleasure he
did not often have. And Knecht found his
association with the historian, and the education Jacobus provided, a new stage
on the path of awakening - that path which he nowadays identified as his
life. To put the matter succinctly: from
Father Jacobus he learned history. He
learned the laws and contradictions of historical studies and
historiography. And beyond that, in the
following years he learned to see the present and his own life as historical
realities.
Their talks often grew into regular
disputations, with formal attacks and rebuttals. In the beginning it was Father Jacobus who
proved to be the more aggressive of the pair.
The more deeply he came to know his young friend's mind, the more he
regretted that so promising a young man should have grown up without the
discipline of a religious education, rather in the pseudo-discipline of an
intellectual and aesthetic system of thought.
Whenever he found something objectionable in Knecht's way of thinking,
he blamed it on that "modern" Castalian spirit with its abstruseness
and its fondness for frivolous abstractions.
And whenever Knecht surprised him by wholesome views and remarks akin to
his own thought, he exulted because his young friend's sound nature had so well
withstood the damage of Castalian education.
Joseph took this criticism of Castalia very calmly, repelling the
attacks only when the old scholar seemed to him to have gone too far in his
passion. But among the good Father's
belittling remarks about Castalia were some whose partial truth Joseph had to
admit, and on one point he changed his mind completely during his stay in
Mariafels. This had to do with the
relationship of Castalian thought to world history, any sense of which, Father
Jacobus said, was totally lacking in Castalia.
"You mathematicians and Glass Bead Game players," he would say,
"have distilled a kind of world history to suit your own tastes. It consists of nothing but the history of
ideas and of art. Your history is
bloodless and lacking in reality. You
know all about the decay of Latin syntax in the second or third centuries and
don't know a thing about Alexander or Caesar or Jesus Christ. You treat world history as a mathematician
does mathematics, in which nothing but laws and formulas exist, no reality, no
good and evil, no time, no yesterday, no tomorrow, nothing but an eternal,
shallow mathematical present."
"But how is anyone to study
history without attempting to bring order into it?" Knecht asked.
"Of course one should bring order
into history," Jacobus thundered.
"Every science is, among other things, a method of ordering,
simplifying, making the indigestible digestible for the mind. We think we have recognized a few laws in
history and try to apply them to our investigations of historical truth. Suppose an anatomist is dissecting a
body. He does not confront wholly
surprising discoveries. Rather, he finds
beneath the epidermis a congeries of organs, muscles, tendons, and bones which
generally conform to a pattern he has brought to his work. But if the anatomist sees nothing but his
pattern, and ignores the unique, individual reality of his object, then he is a
Castalian, a Glass Bead Game player; he is using mathematics on the least
appropriate object. I have no quarrel
with the student of history who brings to his work a touchingly childish,
innocent faith in the power of our minds and our methods to order reality; but
first and foremost he must respect the incomprehensible truth, reality, and
uniqueness of events. Studying history,
my friend, is no joke and no irresponsible game. To study history one must know in advance
that one is attempting something fundamentally impossible, yet necessary and
highly important. To study history means
submitting to chaos and nevertheless retaining faith in order and meaning. It is a very serious task, young man, and possibly
a tragic one."
Among the remarks of Father Jacobus
which Knecht at the time quoted in letters to his friends, here is one more
characteristic outburst:
"Great men are to youth like the
raisins in the cake of world history.
They are also part of its actual substance, of course, and it is not so
simple and easy as might be thought to distinguish the really great men from
the pseudo-greats. Among the latter, it
is the historical moment itself, and their ability to foresee its coming and
seize it, that gives them the semblance of greatness. Quite a few historian and biographers, to say
nothing of journalists, consider this ability to divine and seize upon a
historical moment - in other words, temporary success - as in itself a mark of
greatness. The corporal who becomes a
dictator overnight, or the courtesan who for a while controls the good or ill
humour of a ruler of the world, are favourite figures of such historians. And idealistically minded youths, on the
other hand, most love the tragic failures, the martyrs, those who came on the
scene a moment too soon or too late. For
me, since I am after all chiefly a historian of our Benedictine Order, the most
amazing and attractive aspects of history, and the most deserving of study, are
not individuals and not coups, triumphs, or downfalls; rather I love and am
insatiably curious about such phenomena as our congregation. For it is one of those long-lived
organizations whose purpose is to gather, educate, and reshape men's minds and
souls, to make a nobility of them, not by eugenics, not by blood, but by the
spirit - a nobility as capable of serving as of ruling. In Greek history I was fascinated not by the
galaxy of heroes and not by the obtrusive shouting in the Agora, but by efforts
such as those of the Pythagorian brotherhood or the Platonic Academy. In Chinese history no other feature is so
striking as the longevity of the Confucian system. And in our own Occidental history the
Christian Church and the Orders which serve it as part of its structure, seem
to me historical elements of the foremost importance. The fact that an adventurer contrives to
conquer or found a kingdom which lasts twenty, fifty, or even a hundred years,
or that a well-meaning idealist on a royal or imperial throne once in a while
brings greater honesty into politics, or attempts to carry some visionary
cultural project to fruition; that under high pressure a nation or other
community has been capable of incredible feats of achievement and suffering -
all that interests me far less than the ever-recurrent efforts to establish
such organizations as our Order, and that some of these efforts have endured
for a thousand or two thousand years. I
shall say nothing of holy Church itself; for us believers it is beyond
discussion. But that communities such as
the Benedictines, the Dominicans, later the Jesuits and others, have survived
for centuries and, despite their ups and downs, the assaults upon them, and the
adaptations they have made, retain their face and their voice, their gesture,
their individual soul - this is, for me, the most remarkable and meritorious
phenomenon in history."
Knecht even admired Father Jacobus's
spells of angry unfairness. At the time,
however, he had no notion of who Father Jacobus really was. He regarded him solely as a profound and
brilliant scholar and was unaware that here was someone who was conspicuously
participating in world history, and helping to shape it as the leading
statesman of his Order. As an expert in
contemporary politics as well as political history, Father Jacobus was
constantly being approached from many sides for information, advice, and
mediation. For some two years, up to the
time of his first vacation, Knecht continued to think of Father Jacobus solely
as a scholar, knowing no more of the man's life, activity, reputation, and
influence than the monk cared to reveal.
The learned Father knew how to keep his counsel, even in friendship; and
his brothers in the monastery were also far abler at concealment than Joseph
would have imagined.
After some two years Knecht had
adapted to the life in the monastery as perfectly as any guest and outsider
could. From time to time he had helped
the organist modestly continue the thin thread of an ancient and great
tradition in the monastery's small chorus of motet singers. He had made several finds in the monastic
musical archives and had sent to Waldzell, and especially to Monteport, several
copies of old works. He had trained a
small beginners' class of Glass Bead Game players, among whom the most zealous
pupil was young Anton. He had taught
Abbot Gervasius no Chinese, but had at least imparted the technique of
manipulating the yarrow sticks and an improved method of meditating on the
aphorisms in the Book of Oracles. The
Abbot had grown accustomed to him, and had long since stopped trying to coax
his guest into taking an occasional glass of wine. The semiannual reports sent by the Abbot to
the Glass Bead Game Master, in reply to official inquiries as to the usefulness
of Joseph Knecht, were full of praise.
In Castalia, the lesson plans and marks in Knecht's Game course were
scrutinized even more closely than these reports; the middling level of
instruction was recognized, but the Castalian authorities were satisfied with
the way the teacher had adapted to this level and, in general, to the customs
and the spirit of the monastery. They
were even more pleased, and truly surprised - although they kept this to
themselves - by his frequent and friendly association with the famous Father
Jacobus.
This association had borne all sorts
of fruits, and perhaps we may be permitted to say a word about these even at
the cost of anticipating our story somewhat; or at any rate about the fruit
which Knecht most prized. It ripened
slowly, slowly, grew as tentatively and warily as the seeds of high mountain
trees that have been planted down in the lush lowlands: these seeds, consigned
to rich soil and a kindly climate carry in themselves as their legacy the
restrain and mistrust with which their forebears grew; the slow tempo of growth
belongs among their hereditary traits.
Thus the prudent old man, accustomed to keep close watch over all
possible influences upon him, permitted the element of Castalian spirit brought
to him by his young friend and antipodal colleague to strike root only
reluctantly and inch by inch. Gradually,
however, it sprouted; and of all the good things that Knecht experienced in his
years at the monastery, this was the best and most precious of all to him: this
scanty, hesitant growth of trust and openness from seemingly hopeless
beginnings on the part of the experienced older man, this slowly germinating
and even more slowly admitted sympathy for his younger admirer as a person and,
beyond that, for the specifically Castalian elements in his personality. Step by step the younger man, seemingly
little more than pupil, listener, and learner, led Father Jacobus - who
initially had used the words "Castalian" and Glass Bead Game player
only with ironic emphasis, and often as outright invective - towards a tolerant
and ultimately respectful acceptance of this other mentality, this other Order,
this other attempt to create an aristocracy of the spirit. Father Jacobus ceased to carp at the youth of
the Order, though with its little more than two centuries the Benedictines were
the elder by some fifteen hundred years.
He ceased to regard the Glass Bead Game as mere aesthetic dandyism; and
he ceased to rule out the prospect of friendship and alliance between the two
Orders so ill matched in age.
Joseph regarded this partial conquest
of Father Jacobus as a personal cause for rejoicing. He remained unaware that the authorities
considered it the utmost of his accomplishments on his mission to Mariafels. Now and again he wondered in vain what was
the real reason for his assignment to the monastery. Though initially it had seemed to be a
promotion and distinction envied by his competitors, could it not signify a
form of inglorious premature retirement, a relegation to a dead end? But then one could learn something
everywhere, so why not here too? On the
other hand, from the Castalian point of view this monastery, Father Jacobus
alone excepted, was certainly no garden of learning or model of scholarship. He wondered, too, whether his isolation among
nothing but unexacting dilettantes was not already affecting his prowess in the
Glass Bead Game. He could not quite tell
whether he was losing ground. For all
his uncertainty, however, he was helped by his lack of ambition as well as his
already quite advanced amor fati. On the whole his life as a guest and
unimportant teacher in this cosy old monastic world was more to his liking than
his last months at Waldzell as one of a circle of ambitious men. If fate wished to leave him forever in this
small colonial post, he would certainly try to change some aspects of his life
here - for example, contrive to bring one of his friends here or at least ask
for a longish leave in Castalia every year - but for the rest he would be
content.
The reader of this biographical sketch
may possibly be waiting for an account of another side of Knecht's experience
in the monastery, namely the religious side.
But we can venture only some tentative hints. It is certainly likely that Knecht had some
deeply felt encounter with religion, with Christianity as daily practised in
the monastery. In fact from some of his
later remarks and attitudes it is quite clear that he did. But whether and to what extent he became a
Christian is a question we must leave unanswered; these realms are closed to
our researches. In addition to the
respect for religions generally cultivated in Castalia, Knecht had a kind of
inner reverence which we would scarcely be wrong to call pious. Moreover, he had already been well instructed
in the schools on the classical forms of Christian doctrine, especially in
connection with his studies of church music.
Above all he was well acquainted with the sacramental meaning and ritual
of the Mass.
With a good deal of astonishment as
well as reverence, he had found among the Benedictines a living religion which
he had hitherto known only theoretically and historically. He attended many services, and after he had
familiarized himself with some of the writings of Father Jacobus, and taken to
heart some of their talks, he became fully aware of how phenomenal this
Christianity was - a religion that through the centuries had so many times
become unmodern and outmoded, antiquated and rigid, but had repeatedly recalled
the sources of its being and thereby renewed itself, once again leaving behind
those aspects which in their time had been modern and victorious. He did not seriously resist the idea,
presented to him every so often in these talks, that perhaps Castalian culture was
merely a secularized and transitory offshoot of Christian culture in its
Occidental form, which would someday be reabsorbed by its parent. Even if that were so, he once remarked to
Father Jacobus, his, Joseph Knecht's own place lay within the Castalian and not
the Benedictine system; he had to serve the former, not the latter, and prove
himself within it. His task was to work
for the system of which he was a member, without asking whether it could claim
perpetual existence, or even a long span of life. He could only regard conversion as a rather
undignified form of escape, he said. In
similar fashion Johann Albrecht Bengel, whom they both venerated, had in his
time served a small and transitory sect without neglecting his duties to the
Eternal. Piety, which is to say faithful
service and loyalty up to the point of sacrificing one's life, was part and
parcel of every creed and every stage of individual development; such service
and loyalty were the only valid measure of devoutness.
Knecht had been staying with the
Benedictine Fathers for some two years when a visitor appeared at the monastery
who was kept apart from him with great care.
Even a casual introduction was avoided.
His curiosity roused by these procedures, he observed the stranger for
the few days of his visit and indulged in all sorts of speculations. He became convinced that the stranger's
religious habit was a guise. The unknown
held long conferences behind closed doors with the Abbot and Father Jacobus,
and was always receiving and sending urgent messages. Knecht, who by now had at least heard rumours
about the political connections and traditions of the monastery, guessed that
the guest must be a high-ranking statesman on a secret mission, or a sovereign
travelling incognito. As he reflected on
the matter, he recalled several guests of the past few months whose visits, in
hindsight, seemed to him equally
mysterious or significant. Now he
remembered the chief of the Castalian "police", his friendly mentor
Dubois, and the request that he keep an eye on such events in the monastery. And although he still felt neither the urge
nor the vocation for making such reports, his conscience troubled him for
having not written to the kindly man for so long a time. No doubt Dubois was disappointed in him. So he wrote him a long letter, tried to
explain his silence, and in order to give some substance to his letter said a
few words about his association with Father Jacobus. He had no idea how carefully and by how many
important persons his letter would be read back in Castalia.
FIVE
THE MISSION
KNECHT'S
FIRST STAY at the monastery lasted two years.
At this time he was in his thirty-seventh year. One morning, some two months after his long
letter to Dubois, he was called into the Abbot's office. He expected the affable Abbot would want to
chat a bit about Chinese, and made his appearance promptly. Gervasius came forward to meet him, a letter
in hand.
"I have been honoured with a
commission for you, my esteemed friend," he said gaily in his amiably
patronizing manner, and promptly dropped into the ironically teasing tone that
had developed as an expression of the still unqualified amity between the
religious and the Castalian Orders - the tone that was actually a creation of
Father Jacobus. "Incidentally, my
respects to your Magister Ludi. What
letters he writes! The honourable
gentleman has written to me in Latin, Heaven knows why. When you Castalians do something, one never
knows whether you intend a courtesy or mockery, an honour or a rap on the
knuckles. At any rate, the venerable dominus
has written to me in the kind of Latin that no-one in our whole order could
manage at this time, except possibly Father Jacobus. It's a Latin that might have come directly
out of the school of Cicero, but laced with a carefully measured dash of Church
Latin - and of course it's again impossible to tell whether that is intended
naively as bait for us padres, or meant ironically, or simply springs from an
irresistible impulse to playact, stylize, and embellish. At any rate, his honour writes that your
esteemed authorities wish to see and embrace you once again, and all to
determine to what extent your long stay among semi-barbarians like us has had a
morally and stylistically corrupting effect upon you. In brief, if I have correctly interpreted the
lengthy epistle, a leave has been granted you, and I have been requested to
send my guest home to Waldzell for an indefinite term, but not forever; on the
contrary, the authorities contemplate your returning by and by, if that seems
agreeable to us. I must beg your pardon;
I am scarcely capable of appreciating all the subtleties of the letter. Nor do I imagine that Magister Thomas expected
me to. I have been asked to transmit to
you this notice; and now go and consider whether and when you wish to
depart. We shall miss you, my friend,
and if you should stay away too long we shall not fail to demand your
return."
In the envelope the Abbot had given
him Knecht found a terse notice from the Board informing him that a leave had
been granted him both as a vacation and for consultation with his superiors,
and that he was expected in Waldzell in the near future. He need not see the current Game course for
beginners through to the end unless the Abbot specifically asked him to. The former Music Master sent his
regards. As he read that line, Joseph
started and grew pensive. How had the
writer of the letter, the Magister Ludi, been asked to pass on this greeting,
which in any case did not really fit the official tone of the letter? There must have been a conference of the
entire Board, to which the former Music Master had been invited. Very well, the meetings and decisions of the
Board of Educators did not concern him, but the tone of these greetings struck
him as strange. The message sounded
curiously as if it were directed to an equal.
It did not matter what question had been discussed at the conference;
the regards proved that the highest authorities had also talked about Joseph
Knecht on that occasion. Was something
new in the offing? Was he to be
recalled? And would this be a promotion
or a setback? But the letter spoke only
of a leave. To be sure he was eager for
this leave; he would have gladly left the next day. But at least he must say goodbye to his pupils
and leave instruction for them. Anton
would be very saddened by his departure.
And he also owed a farewell visit to some of the Fathers.
At this point he thought of Jacobus,
and to his mild astonishment he felt a slight ache, an emotion, which told him
that his heart was more attached to Mariafels than he had realized. Here he lacked many of the things which he
was used to, and which were dear to him; and in the course of the two years,
distance and deprivation and made Castalia even more beautiful in his
imagination. But at this moment he saw
clearly that what Father Jacobus meant to him was irreplaceable, and that he
would miss it in Castalia. At the same
time he realized more clearly than ever how much he had learned in the
monastery. Because of his experiences
here, he looked forward with rejoicing and confidence to the journey to
Waldzell, to reunions, to the Glass Bead Game, and his holiday. But his happiness would have been far less
were it not for the prospect of returning.
Coming to an abrupt resolution, he
called on Father Jacobus. He told him of
his recall, and of his surprise to find underneath his pleasure at going home
and seeing friends a joyful anticipation of returning. This joy, he said respectfully, was chiefly
connected with Father Jacobus himself.
Therefore he had summoned up his courage and was venturing to ask a
great favour: when he returned, would Father Jacobus be his mentor, if only for
an hour or two a week?
Father Jacobus gave a deprecating
laugh, and once more came forth with elegantly sardonic compliments: a simple
monk could only gape in mute admiration and shake his head in wonder at the
surpassing range of Castalian culture.
But Joseph could gather that the refusal was not meant seriously, and as
he shook hands in parting Father Jacobus said amiably that he could rest easy
about his request, he would gladly do what he could for him, and he bade Joseph
goodbye with heartfelt warmth.
Gladly, he set out for his vacation at
home, already sure in his heart that his period in the monastery had not been
profitless. At departure he felt like a
boy, but he soon realized that he was no boy and no longer a youth either. He realized that by the feelings of
embarrassment and inner resistance that flooded him as soon as he tried, by a
gesture, a shout, some childish act, to give vent to the mood of release and of
schoolboy happiness at vacation time. No
doubt about it, the things that once had been natural and a relief, a jubilant
cry to the birds in a tree, a marching song chanted aloud, swinging along the
road in a light, rhythmical dance-step - these would not do any more. They would have come off stiff and forced,
would have been foolish and childish. He
felt that he was a man, young in feelings and youthful in strength, but no
longer used to surrendering to the mood of the moment, no longer free, instead
kept on his mettle, tied down and duty-bound - by what? By an official post? By the task of representing his country and
his Order to the monks? No, rather it
was the Order itself, the hierarchy. As
he engaged in this sudden self-analysis, he realized that he had
incomprehensibly grown into the hierarchy, become part of its structure. His constraint came from the responsibility,
from belonging to the higher collectivity.
This it was that made many young men old and many old men appear young,
that held you, supported you, and at the same time deprived you of your freedom
like the stake to which a sapling is tied.
This it was that took away your innocence even while it demanded ever
more limpid purity.
In Monteport he paid his respects to
the former Music Master, who in his younger years had himself been a guest at
Mariafels and studied Benedictine music there.
He plied Joseph with many questions about the place. Joseph found the old man somewhat more subdued
and withdrawn, but stronger and gayer in appearance than he had been at their
last meeting. The fatigue had departed
from his face; it was not that he had grown younger since resigning his office,
but he definitely looked handsomer and more spiritualized. Knecht was struck by the fact that though he
inquired about the organ, the chests of music manuscripts, and the choral
singing in Mariafels, and even wanted to hear whether the tree in the cloister
garden was still standing, he seemed to have no curiosity about Knecht's work
there, the Glass Bead Game course, or the purpose of his present leave. Before he continued his journey, however, the
old man gave him a valuable hint.
"I have heard," he said with seeming jocularity, "that
you have become something of a diplomat.
Not really a very nice occupation, but it seems our people are satisfied
with you. Interpret that as you like. But if it doesn't happen to be your ambition
to stay in this occupation forever, then be on your guard, Joseph. I think they want to capture you for it. Defend yourself; you have the right to....
No, ask me no questions; I shall not say a word more. You will see."
In spite of this warning, which he
carried with him like a thorn in his flesh, Joseph felt something like rapture
on returning to Waldzell. It was as
though Waldzell were not only home and the most beautiful place in the world,
but as if it had become even lovlier and more interesting in the meanwhile; or
else he was returning with fresh and keener eyes. And this applied not only to the gates,
towers, trees, and river, to the courtyards and halls and familiar faces. During this furlough he felt a heightened
receptivity to the spirit of Waldzell, to the Order and the Glass Bead
Game. It was the grateful understanding
of the homecoming traveller now grown matured and wiser. "I feel," he said to his friend
Tegularius at the end of an enthusiastic eulogy on Waldzell and Castalia,
"I feel as if I spent all my years here asleep, happy enough, to be sure,
but unconscious. Now I feel awake and
see everything sharply and clearly, indubitable reality. To think that two years abroad can so sharpen
one's vision."
He enjoyed his vacation as if it were
a prolonged festival. His greatest
pleasure came from the games and discussions with his fellow members of the
elite at the Vicus Lusorum, from seeing friends again, and from the genius
loci of Waldzell. This soaring sense of happiness did not reach
its peak, however, until after his first audience with the Glass Bead Game
Master; up to then his joy had been mingled with trepidation.
The Magister Ludi asked few questions
than Knecht had anticipated. He scarcely
mentioned the Game course for beginners and Joseph's studies in the music
archives. On the other hand, he could
not hear enough about Father Jacobus, referred back to him again and again, and
was interested in every morsel Joseph could tell him about this man. From the Magister's great friendliness Joseph
concluded that they were satisfied with him and his mission among the
Benedictines, very satisfied indeed. His
conclusion was confirmed by the conduct of Monsieur Dubois, to whom he was
promptly sent by Magister Thomas.
"You've done a splendid job," Dubois said. With a low laugh, he added: "My instinct
was certainly at fault when I advised against your being sent to the
monastery. Your winning over the great
Father Jacobus in addition to the Abbot, and making him more favourable towards
Castalia, is a great deal - more than anyone dared to hope for."
Two days later Magister Thomas invited
Joseph, together with Dubois and the current head of the Waldzell elite school,
Zbinden's successor, to dinner. During
the conversation hour after dinner the new Music Master unexpectedly turned up,
as did the Archivist of the Order - two more members of the Supreme Board. One of them took Joseph along to the
guesthouse for a lengthy talk. This
invitation for the first time moved Knecht publicly into the most intimate
circle of candidates for high office, and set up between himself and the
average member of the Game elite a barrier which Knecht, now keenly alert to
such matters, at once felt acutely.
For the present he was given a
vacation of four weeks and the customary official's pass to the guesthouses of
the Province. Although no duties were
assigned to him, and he was not even asked to report, it was evident that he
was under observation by his superiors.
For when he went on a few visits and outings, once to Keuperheim, once
to Hirsland, and once to the College of Far Eastern Studies, invitations from
the high officials in these places were immediately forthcoming. Within those few weeks he actually became
acquainted with the entire Board of the Order and with the majority of the
Masters and directors of studies. Had it
not been for these highly official invitations and encounters, these outings
would have betokened a return to the freedom of his years of study. He began to cut back on the visits, chiefly
out of consideration for Tegularius, who was painfully sensitive to these
infringements on their time together, but also for the sake of the Glass Bead
Game. For he was very eager to
participate in the newest exercises and to test himself on the latest
problems. For this, Tegularius proved to
be of invaluable assistance to him.
His other close friend, Ferromonte,
had joined the staff of the new Music Master, and Joseph was able to see him
only twice during this period. He found
him hard-working and happy in his work, engrossed in a major musicological task
involving the persistence of Greek music in the dances and folksongs of the
Balkan countries. Enthusiastically,
Ferromonte told his friend about his latest discoveries. He had been exploring the era at the end of
the eighteenth century, when baroque music was beginning to decline and was
taking in new materials from Slavic folk music.
However, Knecht spent the greater part
of these holidays in Waldzell occupied with the Glass Bead Game. With Fritz Tegularius he went over the notes
Fritz had taken on a private seminar the Magister had given for advanced
players during the past two semesters.
After his two years of deprivation Knecht again plunged with all his
energy into the noble world of the Game, whose magic seemed to him as
inseparable from his life and as indispensable to it as music.
The last days of his vacation arrived
before the Magister Ludi came around to mentioning Joseph's mission in
Mariafels, and his next task for the immediate future. He chatted casually at first, but soon
changed to a more earnest and insistent tone as he told Joseph about a plan
conceived by the Board which the majority of the Masters, as well as Monsieur
Dubois, considered highly important: the plan to establish a permanent Castalian
representative at the Holy See. The
historic moment had come, Master Thomas explained in his engaging, urbane
manner, or at any rate was drawing near, for bridging the ancient gulf between
Rome and the Order. In future dangers,
they would undoubtedly have common enemies, would share a common fate, and
hence were natural allies. In the long
run the present state of affairs was untenable and, properly speaking,
undignified. It would not do for the two
powers, whose historic task in the world was to preserve and foster the things
of the spirit and the cause of peace, to go on existing side by side almost as
strangers to each other. The Roman
Church had survived the shocks of the last great epoch of wars, had lived through
the crises despite severe losses, and had emerged renewed and purified, whereas
the secular centres of the arts and sciences had gone under in the general
decline of culture. It was out of their
ruins that the Order and the Castalian ideal had arisen. For that very reason, and because of its
venerable age, it was right and proper to grant the Church precedence. She was the older, more distinguished power,
her worth tested in more and greater storms.
For the present, the problem was to awaken the Roman Catholics to
greater awareness of the kinship between the two powers, and their dependence
upon each other in all future crises.
(At this point Knecht thought:
"Oh, so they want to send me to Rome, possibly forever." Mindful of the former Music Master's warning,
he inwardly put himself in a posture of defence.)
An important step forward, Master
Thomas continued, had already been taken as a result of Knecht's mission in
Mariafels. In itself this mission had
been only a polite gesture, imposing no obligations and undertaken without
ulterior motives at the invitation of the others. Otherwise, of course, the Board would not
have sent a politically innocent Glass Bead Game player, but some younger
official from Dubois's department. But
as it turned out, this experiment, this innocuous mission, had had astonishing
results. A leading mind of contemporary
Catholicism, Father Jacobus, had been made acquainted with the spirit of
Castalia and had come to take a favourable view of that spirit, which he had hitherto
flatly rejected. The authorities were
grateful to Joseph Knecht for the part he had played. Here lay the significance of his
mission. The further course of Knecht's
work must be regarded in the light of it, since all future efforts at rapprochement
would be built upon this success. He
had been granted a vacation - which could be somewhat extended if he wished -
and most of the members of the higher authorities had met and talked with
him. His superiors had expressed their
confidence in Knecht and had now charged the Magister Ludi to send him on a
special assignment and with broader powers back to Mariafels, where he was,
happily, sure of a friendly reception.
He paused as if to allow time for a
question, but Joseph only signified by a courteous gesture of submission that
he was all attention and was awaiting his orders.
"The assignment I have for you
now," the Magister went on, "is the following. We are planning, sooner or later, to
establish a permanent embassy of our Order at the Vatican, if possible on a
reciprocal basis. As the younger group,
we are ready to adopt a highly deferential though of course not servile
attitude towards Rome; we are quite willing to accept second place and allow
Rome the first. Perhaps - I am no more
sure of it than Dubois - the Pope would accept our offer straightaway. But we cannot risk a rebuff. As it happens, there is a man within our
reach whose voice has the greatest influence in Rome: Father Jacobus. And your assignment is to return to the
Benedictine monastery, live there as you have already done, engage in studies,
give an inconsequential course in the Glass Bead Game, and devote all your
attention and care to slowly winning Father Jacobus over to our side and seeing
to it that he promises to support our plans in Rome. In other words, this time the goal of your
mission is precisely defined. It does
not matter much how long you take to achieve it; we imagine that it will
require at least a year, but it might also be two or several years. You are by now acquainted with the
Benedictine tempo and have learned to adjust to it. Under no circumstances must we give the
impression of being impatient or overeager; the affair must ripen of its own
accord, right? I hope you agree to this
assignment, and that you will frankly express any objections you may have. You may have a few days to think it over if
you like."
Knecht, for whom the assignment was
not such a surprise, thanks to some recent conversations, replied that he had
no need to think it over. He obediently
accepted, but added: "You know, sir, that missions of this kind are most
successful when the emissary has no inner resistances and inhibitions to
overcome. I have no reluctance about
accepting; I understand the importance of the task and hope I can do justice to
it. But I do feel a certain anxiety
about my future. Be so kind, Magister,
as to hear me admit my entirely personal, egotistic concern. I am a Glass Bead Game player. As you know, due to my mission among the
Benedictines I have omitted my studies of the Game for two full years. I have learned nothing new and have neglected
my art. Now at least another year and
probably more will be added. I should
not like to fall still further behind during this time. Therefore I would like to be allowed frequent
brief leaves to visit Waldzell and continual radio contact with the lectures
and special exercises of your seminar for advanced players."
"But of course," the Master
said. There was already a note of
dismissal in his tone, but Knecht raised his voice and spoke of his other anxiety:
that if he mission in Mariafels succeeded he might be sent to Rome or employed
otherwise for diplomatic work. "Any
such prospect," he concluded, "would have a depressing effect upon me
and hamper my efforts at the monastery.
For I would not at all like to be permanently consigned to the
diplomatic service."
The Magister frowned and raised his
finger chidingly. "You speak of
being consigned. Really, the word is ill
chosen. No-one here ever thought of it
as a consigning, but rather as a distinction, a promotion. I am not authorized to give you any
information or make any promises in regard to the way we shall be employing you
in the future. But by a stretch of the
imagination I can understand your doubts, and probably I shall be able to help
you if your fears really prove to be justified.
And now listen to me: you have a certain gift for making yourself
agreeable and well liked. An enemy might
almost call you a charmer. Presumably
this gift of yours prompted the Board to make this second assignment to the
monastery. But do not use your gift too
freely, Joseph, and set no immoderate value on your achievements. If you succeed with Father Jacobus, that will
be the proper moment for you to address a personal request to the Board. Today it seems to me premature. Let me know when you are ready to
leave."
Joseph received these words in
silence, laying more weight on the benevolence behind them than the patent
reprimand. Soon thereafter he returned
to Mariafels.
There he found the security of a precisely
defined task a great benefaction.
Moreover, this task was important and honourable, and in one respect it
coincided with how own deepest desires: to come as close as possible to Father
Jacobus and to win his full friendship.
At the monastery he was evidently taken seriously as an envoy now, and
was thought to have been raised in rank.
The conduct of the dignitaries of the abbey, especially Abbot Gervasius
himself, made that plain to him. They
were as friendly as ever, but a discernible degree more respectful than
before. They no longer treated Joseph as
a young guest of no standing, towards whom they showed civility for the sake of
his origins and out of benevolence towards him personally. He was now received as a high-ranking
Castalian official, given the deference due to an ambassador
plenipotentiary. No longer blind in
these matters, Joseph drew his own conclusions.
Nevertheless, he could discover no
change in Father Jacobus's attitude towards him. The old scholar greeted him with friendliness
and pleasure. Without waiting to be
asked or reminded, he himself brought up the matter of their working
together. Joseph was deeply touched. He rearranged his schedule; his daily routine
was now very different from what it had been before his vacation. This time the Glass Bead Game course no
longer formed the centre of his work and duties. He gave up his studies in the music archives
and his friendly collaboration with the organist. Now his chief concern was the instruction he
received from Father Jacobus: lessons in several branches of historical
science. The monk introduced his special
pupil to the background and early history of the Benedictine Order and to the
sources for the early Middle Ages. He
set aside a special hour in which they would read together one of the old
chroniclers in the original. Father
Jacobus was not displeased when Knecht pleaded to have young Anton participate
in the lessons; but he had little difficulty in persuading Joseph that even the
best-intentioned third party could prove a serious hindrance to this kind of
intensely private instruction. In
consequence, Anton, who knew nothing of Knecht's efforts on his behalf, was
invited to take part only in the readings of the chronicler, and was
overjoyed. Undoubtedly these lessons
constituted a distinction for the young monk, concerning whose life we have no
further information. They must have been
a supreme pleasure and stimulus, for he was being allowed to share in the work
and intellectual exchange of two of the purest and most original minds of his
age. Share, however, is perhaps an
exaggeration; for the most part the young recruit merely listened.
Joseph repaid Father Jacobus by giving
him an introduction to the history and structure of Castalia and the main ideas
underlying the Glass Bead Game. This
instruction followed immediately after his own lessons in epigraphy and source
work, the pupil becoming the teacher and the honoured teacher an attentive
listener and often a captious critic and questioner. For a long while the reverend Father
continued to hold the whole Castalian mentality in distrust. Because he saw no real religious attitude in
it, he doubted its capacity to rear the kind of human being he could take
seriously, despite the fact that Knecht himself represented so fine a product
of Castalian education. Even long after
he had undergone a kind of conversion, insofar as that was possible, through
Knecht's teaching and example, and was prepared to recommend the rapprochement
of Castalia to Rome, this distrust never entirely died. Knecht's notes are full of striking examples
of it, jotted down at the moment. We
shall quote from one of them:
Father Jacobus: "You are great
scholars and aesthetes, you Castalians. You
measure the weight of the vowels in an old poem and relate the resulting
formula to that of a planet's orbit.
That is delightful, but it is a game.
And indeed your supreme mystery and symbol, the Glass Bead Game, is also
a game. I grant that you try to exalt
this pretty game into something akin to a sacrament, or at least to a device
for edification. But sacraments do not
spring from such endeavours. The game
remains a game."
Joseph: "You mean, reverend
Father, that we lack the foundation of theology?"
Father Jacobus: "Come now, of
theology we will not speak. You are much
too far from that. You could at least do
with a few simpler foundations, with a science of man, for example, a real
doctrine and real knowledge about the human race. You do not know man, do not understand him in
his bestiality and as the image of God.
All you know is the Castalian, a special product, a caste, a rare
experiment in breeding."
For Knecht, of course, it was an
extraordinary piece of good fortune that these hours of instruction and
discourse provided him with the widest field and the most favourable
opportunities to carry out his assignment of gaining Father Jacobus's approval
of Castalia and convincing him of the value of an alliance. The situation in fact was so favourable to
his purposes that he soon began to feel twinges of conscience. He came to think it shameful and unworthy
when they sat together, or strolled back and forth in the cloisters, that the
reverend man should be so trustfully sacrificing his time, when he was all the
while the object of secret political designs.
Knecht could not have accepted this situation in silence for long, and
he was already considering just how to make his disclosure when, to his surprise,
the old man anticipated him.
"My dear friend," he said to
him with seeming offhandedness one day, "we have really found our way to a
most pleasant and, I would hope, also a fruitful kind of exchange. The two activities that have been my favourites
throughout my life, learning and teaching, have fused into a fine new
combination during our joint working sessions, and for me that has come at just
the right time, for I am beginning to age and cannot imagine any better cure
and refreshment than our lessons. As far
as I am concerned, therefore, I am the one who gains from our exchange. On the other hand, I am not so sure, my
friend, that you and particularly those whose envoy you are and whom you serve
will have profited from the business as much as they may hope. I should like to avert any future
disappointment and would be sorry to have any unclear relationship arise
between us. Therefore permit an old hand
a question. I have of course had
occasion to think about the reason for your sojourn in our little abbey,
pleasant as it is for me. Until
recently, that is up to the time of your vacation, it seemed to me that the
purpose of your presence among us was not completely clear even to
yourself. Was my observation
correct?"
"It was."
"Good. Since your return from that vacation, this
has changed. You are no longer puzzling
or anxious about the reason for your presence here. You know why you are here. Am I right? - Good, then I have not guessed
wrong. Presumably I am also not guessing
wrong in my notion of the reason. You
have a diplomatic assignment, and it concerns neither our monastery nor our
Abbot, but me. As you see, not very much
is left of your secret. To clarify the
situation completely, I shall take the final step and ask you to inform me
fully about the rest of it. What is your
assignment?"
Knecht had sprung to his feet and
stood facing Father Jacobus, surprised, embarrassed, feeling something close to
dismay. "You are right," he
cried, "but at the same time that you relieve me of a burden, you also
shame me by speaking first. I have long
been considering how I could manage to give our relationship the clarity you
have established so rapidly. The one
saving thing is that my request for instruction and our agreement fell in the
period before my vacation. Otherwise it
truly would have seemed as if the whole thing had been diplomacy on my part,
and our studies merely a pretext."
The old man spoke with friendly
reassurance: "I merely wanted to help both of us move forward a step. There is no need for you to aver the purity
of your motives. If I have anticipated
you and helped speed the coming of something that also seems desirable to you,
all is well."
After Knecht had told him the nature
of his assignment, he commented: "Your superiors in Castalia are not
exactly brilliant diplomats, but they are not so bad either, and they know a
good thing when they see it. I shall
give all the consideration to your mission, and my decision will depend partly
on how well you can explain your Castalian constitution and ideals, and make them
seem plausible to me. Let us give
ourselves all the time we need for that."
Seeing that Knecht still looked somewhat crestfallen, he gave a brittle
laugh and said: "If you like, you can also regard my proceedings thus as a
kind of lesson. We are two diplomats,
and diplomats' intercourse is always a combat, no matter how friendly a form it
may take. In our struggle, as it
happens, I was momentarily at a disadvantage; I had lost the initiative. You knew more than I. Now the balance has been restored. The chess move was successful; therefore it
was the right one."
Knecht thought it important to win
Father Jacobus's approval for the Castalian authorities' project; but it seemed
to him far more important to learn as much as possible from him, and for his
own part to served this learned and powerful man as a reliable guide to the
Castalian world. A good many of Knecht's
friends and later disciples envied him as remarkable men are always envied, not
only for their greatness of soul and energy, but also for their seeming luck,
their seeming preferment by destiny. The
lesser man sees in the greater as much as he can see, and Joseph Knecht's
career cannot help striking ever observer as unusually brilliant, rapid, and
seemingly effortless. Certainly we are
tempted to say of that period in his life: he was lucky. Nor would we wish to try to explain this
"luck" rationalistically or moralistically, either as the casual
result of external circumstances or as a kind of reward for special
virtue. Luck has nothing to do with
rationality or morality; by its nature it has about it a quality akin to magic,
belonging to a primitive, more youthful stage of mankind's history. The lucky innocent, showered with gifts by
the fairies, pampered by the gods, is not the object of rational study, and
hence not a fit subject for biographical analysis; he is a symbol who always
stands outside the personal and the historical realms. Nevertheless, there are outstanding men with
whose lives "luck" is intimately bound up, even though that luck may
consist merely in the fact that they and the task proper to their talents
actually intersect on the plane of history and biography, that they are born
neither too soon nor too late. Knecht
seems to have been one of these. Thus
his life, at least for a considerable part of his way, gives the impression
that everything desirable simply fell into his lap. We do not wish to deny or to gloss over this
aspect of his life. Moreover, we could
explain it rationally only by a biographical method which is not ours, neither desired nor permitted in
Castalia; that is, we would have to enter into an almost unlimited discussion
of the most personal, most private matters, of health and sickness, the
oscillations and curves in his vitality and self-confidence. We are quite sure that any such biographical
approach - which is out of the question for us - would reveal a perfect balance
between Knecht's "luck" and his suffering, but nevertheless would
falsify our portrayal of his person and his life.
But enough digression. We are saying that many of those who knew
Knecht, or had only heard of him, envied him.
Probably few things in his life seemed to lesser folk so enviable as his
relationship to the old Benedictine Father, for he was at one and the same time
pupil and teacher, taker and giver, conquered and conqueror, friend and
collaborator. Moreover, none of Knecht's
conquests since his successful courting of Elder Brother in the Bamboo Grove
had given him such happiness. No other
had made him feel so intensely honoured and abashed, rewarded and
stimulated. Of his later favourite
pupils, almost all have testified to how frequently, gladly, and joyfully he
would refer to Father Jacobus. Knecht
learned from the Benedictine something he could scarcely have learned in the
Castalia of those days. He acquired an
overview of the methods of historical knowledge and the tools of historical
research, and had his first practice in applying them. But far beyond that, he experienced history
not as an intellectual discipline, but as reality, as life; and in keeping with
that, the transformation and elevation of his own personal life into
history. This was something he could not
have learned from a mere scholar. Father
Jacobus was not only far more than a scholar, a seer, and a sage; he was also a
mover and shaper. He had used the
position in which fate had placed him not just to warm himself at the cosy
fires of a contemplative existence; he had allowed the winds of the world to
blow through his scholar's den and admitted the perils and forebodings of the
age into his heart. He had taken action,
had shared the blame and the responsibility for the events of his time; he had
not contented himself with surveying, arranging, and interpreting the
happenings of the distant past. And he
had not dealt only with ideas, but with the refractoriness of matter and the
obstinacy of men. Together with his
associate and antagonist, a recently deceased Jesuit, he was regarded as the
real architect of the diplomatic and moral power and the impressive political
prestige that the Roman Church had regained after ages of meekly borne
ineffectuality and insignificance.
Although teacher and pupil scarcely
ever discussed current politics (the Benedictine's practice in holding his counsel
as well as the younger man's reluctance to be drawn into such issues combined
to prevent that), Father Jacobus's political position and activities so
permeated his mind that all his opinions, all of his glances into the thicket
of the world's squabbles were those of the practical statesman. Not that he was an ambitious or an intriguing
politician. He was no regent and leader,
no climber either, but a councillor and arbitrator, a man whose conduct was
tempered by sagacity, whose efforts were restrained by a profound insight into
the inadequacies and difficulties of human nature, but whose fame, experience,
knowledge of men and conditions, as well as his personal integrity and
altruism, had enabled him to gain significant power.
Knecht had known nothing of all this
when he came to Mariafels. He had even
been ignorant of Father Jacobus's name.
The majority of the inhabitants of Castalia lived in a state of
political innocence and naïveté such as had been quite common among the
professors of earlier ages, they had no political rights and duties, scarcely
ever saw a newspaper. Such was the habit
of the average Castalian, such his attitude.
Repugnance for current events, politics, newspapers, was even greater
among the Glass Bead Game players who liked to think of themselves as the real
elite, the cream of the Province, and went to some lengths not to let anything
cloud the rarefied atmosphere of their scholarly and artistic existences. As we have seen, at the time of his first
appearance at the monastery, Knecht had come not as a diplomatic envoy but
solely as a teacher of the Glass Bead Game, and had no political knowledge
aside from what Monsieur Dubois had managed to instil in a few weeks. He was by comparison much more knowing now,
but he had by no means surrendered the Waldzeller's distaste for engaging in
current politics. Although his
association with Father Jacobus had awakened him politically and taught him a
good deal, this had not happened because Knecht was drawn to this realm. It just happened, as an inevitable though
incidental consequence.
In order to add to his equipment and
the better to fulfil his honourable task of lecturing de rebus
castaliensibus to his pupil, Father Jacobus, Knecht had brought with him
from Waldzell literature on the constitution and history of the Province, on
the system of the elite schools, and on the evolution of the Glass Bead
Game. Some of these books had served him
twenty years before during his struggle with Plinio Designori - and he had not
looked at them since. Others, meant
specially for the officials of Castalia, had been barred to him as a
student. Now he read them for the first
time. The result was that at the very
time his areas of study were so notably expanding, he was also forced once
again to contemplate, understand, and reinforce his own intellectual and
historical base. In his efforts to
present the nature of the Order and of the Castalian system to Father Jacobus
with maximum simplicity and clarity, he inevitably stumbled over the weakest point
in his own and all Castalian education.
He found that he himself had only a pale and rigidly schematic notion of
the historical conditions which had led to the foundation of the Order and
everything that followed from it. His
picture of the conditions which had furthered the growth of the new system
lacked all vividness and orderliness.
Since Father Jacobus was anything but a passive pupil, the result was an
intensified collaboration, an extremely animated exchange of views. While Joseph tried to present the history of
his Castalian Order, Jacobus helped him to see many aspects of this history in
the proper light for the first time, and to discern its roots in the general
history of nations. Because of the Benedictine's
temperament, these discussions often turned into passionate disputes, and as we
shall see they continued to bear fruit years later and remained a vital
influence down to the end of Knecht's life.
On the other hand, the close attention Father Jacobus had given Knecht's
exposition, and the thoroughness with which he came to know and appreciate
Castalia, was evidenced by his subsequent conduct. Due to the work of these two men, there arose
between Rome and Castalia a benevolent neutrality and occasional scholarly
exchange which now and then developed into actual cooperation and alliance and
ultimately produced the concord which continues to this day. In time Father Jacobus asked to be introduced
to the theory of the Glass Bead Game - which he had originally pooh-poohed -
for he sensed that here lay the secret of the Order and what might be called
its faith or religion. Once he had
consented to penetrate into this world he had hitherto known only from hearsay,
and for which he had felt little liking, he resolutely proceeded in his shrewd
and energetic way straight towards its centre.
And although he did not become a Glass Bead Game player - he was in any
case far too old for that - the devotees of the Game and the Order outside the
borders of Castalia had hardly a friend as earnest and influential as the great
Benedictine.
Now and then, after a session of joint
work, Father Jacobus would indicate that he would be at home to Joseph that
evening. After the strenuous lessons and
the tense discussions, those were peaceful hours. Joseph frequently brought his clavichord
along, or a violin, and the old man would sit down at the piano in the gentle
light of a candle whose sweet fragrance of wax filled the small room like the
music of Corelli, Scarlatti, Telemann, or Bach, which they played alternately
or together. The old man's bedtime came
early, while Knecht, refreshed by these brief musical vespers, would continue
his studies into the night, to the limits his self-discipline permitted.
Aside from his lessons with Father
Jacobus, his perfunctory course in the Game, and an occasional Chinese
colloquium with Abbot Gervasius, we also find Knecht engaged at this time in an
elaborate task. He was taking part in
the annual competition of the Waldzell elite, from which he had abstained in
the past two years. The competition
involved working out sketches for Games based on three or four prescribed main
themes. Stress was placed on new, bold,
and original associations of themes, impeccable logic, and beautiful
calligraphy. Moreover, this was the sole
occasion when competitors were permitted to overstep the bounds of the
canon. That is, they could employ new
symbols not yet admitted to the official code and vocabulary of hieroglyphs. This made the competition - which in any case
was the most exciting annual event in Waldzell except for the great public
ceremonial games - a contest among the most promising advocates of new Game
symbols, and the very highest distinction for a winner in this competition
consisted in the recognition of his proposed additions to the grammar and
vocabulary of the Game and their acceptance into the Game Archives and the Game
language. This was a very rare
distinction indeed; usually the winner had to be content only with the ceremonial
performance of his Game as the best candidate's Game of the year. Once, some twenty-five years ago, the great
Thomas von der Trave, the present Magister Ludi, had been awarded this honour
with his new abbreviations for the alchemical significance of the signs of the
zodiac - later, too, Magister Thomas made large contributions to the study and
classification of alchemy as a highly meaningful secret language.
For his entry Knecht chose not to draw
on any new Game symbols such as virtually every candidate had in
readiness. He also refrained from using
his Game as an avowal of attachment to the psychological method of Game
construction, although that would have been closer to his inclinations. Instead, he built up a Game modern and
personal enough in its structure and themes, but of transparently clear,
classical composition and strictly symmetrical development in the vein of the
old masters. Perhaps distance from
Waldzell and the Game Archives forced him to take this line; perhaps his
historical studies made too great demands on his time and strength; but it may
also be that he was more or less consciously guided by the desire to shape his
Game so that it would correspond as closely as possible to the taste of his
teacher and friend, Father Jacobus. We
do not know.
We have used the phrase "psychological
method of Game construction", and perhaps some of our readers will not
immediately understand it. In Knecht's
day it was a slogan bandied about a good deal.
No doubt all periods have seen currents, vogues, struggles, and
differing views and approaches among the initiates of the Glass Bead Game. At that time two opposing concepts of the
Game called forth controversy and discussion.
The foremost players distinguished two principal types of Game, the
formal and the psychological. We know
that Knecht, like Tegularius - although the latter kept out of the arguments -
belonged to the champions of the latter type.
Knecht, however, instead of speaking of the "psychological"
mode of play usually preferred the word "pedagogical".
In the formal Game the player sought
to compose out of the objective content of every game, out of the mathematical,
linguistic, musical, and other elements, as dense, coherent, and formally
perfect a unity and harmony as possible.
In the psychological Game, on the other hand, the object was to create
unity and harmony, cosmic roundness and perfection, not so much in the choice,
arrangement, interweaving, association, and contrast of the contents as in the
meditation which followed every stage of the Game. All the stress was placed on this
meditation. Such a psychological - or to
use Knecht's word, pedagogical - Game did not display perfection to the outward
eye. Rather, it guided the player, by
means of its succession of precisely prescribed meditations, towards experiencing
perfection and divinity. "The Game
as I conceive it," Knecht once wrote to the former Music Master,
"encompasses the player after the completion of meditation as the surface
of a sphere encompasses its centre, and leaves him with the feeling that he has
extracted from the universe of accident and confusion a totally symmetrical and
harmonious cosmos, and absorbed it into himself."
Knecht's entry, then, was a formally
rather than a psychologically constructed Game.
Possibly he wanted to prove to his superiors, and to himself as well,
that in spite of his elementary course and diplomatic mission in Mariafels, he
had lost none of his deftness, elegance, and virtuosity and had not suffered
from lack of practice. If so, he
succeeded in proving it. Since the final
elaboration and clean copy of his Game outline could only be completed in the
Waldzell Archives, he entrusted his task to his friend Tegularius, who was
himself participating in the competition.
Joseph was able to hand his drafts to his friend personally, and to
discuss them with him, as well as to go over Tegularius's own outline; for
Fritz was finally able to come to the monastery for three days. Magister Thomas had at last authorized the
visit, after Knecht had made two previous requests in vain.
Eager as Tegularius had been to come,
and for all the curiosity he, as an insular Castalian, had about life in the
monastery, he felt extremely uncomfortable there. Sensitive as he was, he nearly fell ill amid
all the alien impressions and among these friendly but simple, healthy, and
somewhat rough-hewn people, not one of whom would have had the slightest
understanding for his thoughts, cares, and problems. "You live here as if you were on another
planet," he said to his friend, "and I don't see how you have been
able to stand it for three years. I
certainly admire you for that. To be
sure, your Fathers are polite enough towards me, but I feel rejected and
repelled by everything here. Nothing
meets me halfway, nothing is natural and easy, nothing can be assimilated
without resistance and pain. If I had to
live here for two weeks, I would feel as if I were in hell."
Knecht had a difficult time with
him. Moreover, it was disconcerting to
witness, for the first time as an onlooker, how alien the two Orders, the two
worlds were to one another. He felt,
too, that his oversensitive friend with his air of anxious helplessness was not
making a good impression among the monks.
Nevertheless, they revised their respective Game plans for the
competition thoroughly, each critically examining the other's work. When, after an hour of this Knecht went over
to Father Jacobus in the other wing, or to a meal, he had the feeling that he
was being suddenly transported from his native country to an entirely different
land, with a different soil and air, different climate, and different stars.
After Fritz had departed, Joseph drew
out Father Jacobus on his impressions.
"I hope," Jacobus said, "that the majority of Castalians
are more like you than your friend. You
have shown us an inexperienced, overbred, weakly, and nevertheless, I am
afraid, arrogant kind of person. I shall
go on taking you as more representative; otherwise I should certainly be unjust
to your kind. For this unfortunate,
sensitive, overintelligent, fidgety person could spoil one's respect for your
whole Province."
"Well," Knecht replied,
"I imagine that in the course of the centuries you noble Benedictines have
now and then had sickly, physically feeble, but for that very reason mentally
sound and able men, such as my friend. I
suppose it was imprudent of me to have invited him here, where everyone has a
sharp eye for his weaknesses but no sense of his great virtues. He has done me a great kindness by
coming." And he explained to Father
Jacobus about his joining in the competition.
The Benedictine was pleased with Knecht for defending his friend. "Well answered," he said with a
friendly laugh. "But it strikes me
that all of your friends are difficult to get along with."
He enjoyed Knecht's bewilderment and
astonished expression for a moment, then added casually: "This time I am
referring to someone outside Castalia.
Have you heard anything new about your friend Plinio Designori?"
Joseph's astonishment increased;
stunned, he asked for an explanation.
It seemed that Designori had written a
political polemic professing violently anticlerical views, and incidentally
strongly attacking Father Jacobus.
Through friends in the Catholic press, Jacobus had obtained information on
Designori, and in this way had learned of Plinio's schooldays in Castalia and
his relationship to Knecht.
Joseph asked to borrow Plinio's
article; and after he had read it he and Father Jacobus had their first
discussion of current politics. A few
more, but only a few, followed. "It
was strange and almost alarming," Joseph wrote to Ferromonte, "for me
to see the figure of our Plinio - and by-the-by my own - suddenly standing on
the stage of the world's politics. This
was something I had never imagined."
As it turned out, Father Jacobus spoke of Plinio's polemic in rather
appreciative terms. At any rate, he
showed no sign of having taken offence.
He praised Designori's style, commenting that his training in the elite
school showed up clearly; in the run of everyday politics, one had to settle
for a far lower level of intelligence, he said.
About this time Ferromonte send Knecht
a copy of the first part of his subsequently famous work entitled The
Reception and Absorption of Slavic Folk Music by German Art Music from Joseph
Haydn on. In Knecht's letter of
acknowledgement we find, among other things: "You have drawn a cogent
conclusion from your studies, which I was privileged to share for a while. The two chapters dealing with Schubert, and
especially with the quartets, are among the soundest examples of modern
musicology that I have read. Think of me
sometimes; I am very far from any such harvest as you have reaped. Although I have reason to be content with my
life here - for my mission in Mariafels appears to be meeting with some success
- I do occasionally feel that being so far from the Province and the Waldzell
circle to which I belong is distinctly oppressive. I am learning a tremendous amount here, but
adding neither to my certainties nor my professional skills, only to my
problems. I must grant, though, a
widening of horizon. However, I now feel
much easier about the insecurity, strangeness, despondency, distraitness,
self-doubt, and other ills that frequently assailed me during my first two
years here. Tegularius was here recently
- for only three days, but much as he had looked forward to seeing me and
curious though he was about Mariafels, by the second day he could scarcely bear
it any longer, so depressed and out of place did he feel. Since a monastery is after all a rather
sheltered, peaceful world, and favourable enough to things of the spirit, in no
way like a gaol, a barracks, or a factory, I conclude from my experience that
people from our dear Province are a good deal more pampered and oversensitive
than we realize."
At about the date of this letter to
Carlo, Knecht persuaded Father Jacobus to address a brief letter to the
directorate of the Castalian Order acquiescing in the proposed diplomatic
step. To this Jacobus added the request
that they would permit "the Glass Bead Game player Joseph Knecht, who is
universally popular here" and who was kindly giving him a private course de
rebus castaliensibus, to remain for a while longer. The Castalian authorities were, of course,
glad to oblige. Joseph, who had been
thinking that he was still very far from any such "harvest", received
a commendation, signed by the directorate and by Monsieur Dubois,
congratulating him on the success of his mission. But what struck him as most important about
this honorific document and what gave him the greatest pleasure (he reported it
in well-nigh triumphant tones in a note to Fritz) was a short sentence to the
effect that the Order had been informed by the Magister Ludi of his desire to
return to the Vicus Lusorum, and was disposed to grant this request after
completion of his present assignment.
Joseph also read this passage aloud to Father Jacobus and now confessed
how greatly he had feared possible permanent banishment from Castalia and being
sent to Rome. Laughing, Father Jacobus
commented: "Yes, my friend, there is something about Orders; one prefers
living in their bosom rather than out on the periphery, let alone in exile. You've touched the soiled fringes of politics
here, but now go right ahead and forget it, for you are not a politician. But do no break your troth with history, even
though it may remain forever a secondary subject and a hobby for you. For you had the makings of a historian. And now let us profit by our time together, as
long as I have you."
Joseph Knecht seems to have made
little use of his privilege to pay more frequent visits to Waldzell. However, he listened on the radio to one
seminar and to a good many lectures and games.
So also, from afar, sitting in his excellent guest room in the
monastery, he took part in that "solemnity" in the festive hall of
the Vicus Lusorum at which the results of the prize competition were
announced. He had handed in a rather
impersonal and not at all revolutionary, but solid and elegant piece of work
whose value he knew, and he was prepared for an honourable mention or a third
or second prize. To his surprise he now
heard that he had been awarded first prize, and even before surprise had given
way to delight, the spokesman for the Magister Ludi's office continued reading
in his beautiful low voice and named Tegularius as winner of the second
prize. It was certainly a moving and
rapturous experience that the two of them should emerge from this competition
hand in hand, as the crowned winners. He
sprang to his feet without listening to the rest, and ran down the stairs and
through the echoing corridors out into the open air.
In a letter to the former Music
Master, written at this time, we may read: "I am very happy, revered
Master, as you can imagine. First the
success of my mission and its commendation by the directorate of the Order,
together with the prospect - so important to me - of soon returning home to
friends and to the Glass Bead Game, instead of being kept in the diplomatic
service; and now this first prize for a Game whose formal aspects I did take
pains with, but which for good reasons by no means drained me of everything I
had to contribute. And on top of that
the joy of sharing this success with my friend - it really was too much all at
once. I am happy, yes, but I could not
well say that I am merry. Because of the
dearth of the preceding period - at any rate what seemed to me a dearth - my real
feeling is that these fulfilments are coming rather too suddenly and too abundantly. There is a measure of unease mingled with my
gratitude, as if the vessel is so filled to the brim that only another drop is
needed to tilt it. But, please, consider
that I have not said this: in this situation every word is already too
much."
As we shall see, the vessel filled to
the brim was destined to have more than just one additional drop added to
it. But at the moment Joseph Knecht
devoted himself to his happiness, and the concomitant unease, with great
intensity, as if he had a premonition of the impending great change. For Father Jacobus, too, these few months
were a happy, an exuberant time. He was
sorry that he would soon be losing this disciple and associate; and in their
hours of work together, still more in their free-ranging conversations, he
tried to bequeath to him as much as he could of the understanding he had
acquired during a long life of hard work and hard thinking, understanding of
the heights and depths in the lives of men and nations. He also had some things to say about the
consequences of Knecht's mission, assessing its meaning, and the value of amity
and political concord between Rome and Castalia. He recommended that Joseph study the epoch
which had seen the founding of the Castalian Order as well as the gradual recovery
of Rome after a humiliating time of tribulation. He also recommended two books on the
Reformation and schism of the sixteenth century, but strongly urged him to make
a principle of studying the primary sources.
He advised Joseph to confine himself to graspable segments of a field in
preference to reading ponderous tomes on world history. Finally, Father Jacobus made no bones about
his profound mistrust of all philosophies of history.
SIX
MAGISTER LUDI
KNECHT HAD
DECIDED to postpone his final return to Waldzell until the spring, the time of
the great public Glass Bead Game, the Lusus anniversarius or sollemnis.
The era when annual Games lasted for
weeks and were attended by dignitaries and representatives from all over the
world - what we may call the great age in the memorable history of these Games
- already belonged forever to the past.
But these spring sessions, with the one solemn Game that usually lasted
for ten days to two weeks, still remained the great festive event of the year
for all of Castalia. It was a festival
not without its high religious and moral importance, for it brought together
the advocates of all the sometimes disparate tendencies of the Province in an
act of symbolic harmony. It established
a truce between the egotistic ambitions of the several disciplines, and
recalled to mind the unity which embraced their variety. For believers it possessed the sacramental
force of true consecration; for unblievers it was at least a substitute for
religion; and for both it was a bath in the pure springs of beauty. The Passions of Johann Sebastain Bach had
once upon a time - not so much in the time they were written as in the century
following their rediscovery - been in similar fashion a genuine consecratory
act for some of the performers and audience, a form of worship and religious
substitute for others, and for all together a solemn manifestation of art and
of the Creator spiritus.
Knecht had had scant difficulty
obtaining the consent of both the monks and his home authorities for his
decision. He could not quite determine
the nature of his position after his reassignment to the little republic of the
Vicus Lusorum, but he suspected that he would not long be left unoccupied and
would soon be burdened and honoured with some new office or mission. For the present he looked forward happily to
returning home, to seeing his friends and participating in the approaching
festival. He enjoyed his last days with
Father Jacobus, and accepted with dignity and good humour the rather demonstrative
kindness of the Abbot and monks when the time came for farewells. Then he left, feeling some sadness at parting
from a place he had grown fond of and from a stage in his life he was now
leaving behind, but also in a mood of festive animation, for although he lacked
guidance and companions, he had, on his own initiative, scrupulously undertaken
the whole series of meditation exercises prescribed as preparations for the
festival Game. He had not been able to
prevail on Father Jacobus to accept the Magister Ludi's formal invitation to
attend the annual Game and accompany him, but this had not affected his good
spirits; he understood the old anti-Castalian's reserved attitude, and he
himself for the moment felt entirely relieved of all duties and restrictions
and ready to surrender his whole mind to the impending ceremonies.
Festivities have their own peculiar
nature. A genuine festival cannot go
entirely wrong, unless it is spoilt by the unfortunate intervention of higher
powers. For the devout soul, even in a
downpour a procession retains its sacral quality, and a burned feast does not
depress him. For the Glass Bead Game
player every annual Game is festive and in a sense hallowed. Nevertheless, as every one of us knows, there
are some festivals and games in which everything goes right, and every element
lifts up, animates, and exalts every other, just as there are theatrical and
musical performances which without any clearly discernible cause seem to ascend
miraculously to glorious climaxes and intensely felt experiences, whereas
others, just as well prepared, remain no more than decent tries. Insofar as the achievement of intense
experiences depends on the emotional state of the spectator, Joseph Knecht had
the best imaginable preparation: he was troubled by no cares, returning from
abroad loaded with honours, and looking forward with joyous anticipation to the
coming event.
Nevertheless, this time the Ludus
sollemnis was not destined to be touched by that aura of the miraculous and
so arise to a special degree of consecration and radiance. It turned out, in fact, a cheerless,
distinctly unhappy, and sometimes very close to an unsuccessful Game. Although many of the participants may have
felt edified and exalted all the same, the real actors and organizers of the
Game, as always in such cases, felt all the more inexorably that atmosphere of
apathy, lack of grace and failure, of inhibition and bad luck which
overshadowed this festival. Knecht, although
he of course sensed it and found his high expectations somewhat dashed, was by
no means among those who felt the fiasco most keenly. Even though the solemn act failed to reach
the true peak of perfection and blessing, he was able, because he was not
playing and bore no responsibility for it, to follow the ingeniously
constructed Game appreciatively, as a devout spectator, to let the meditations
quiver to a halt undisturbed, and with grateful devotion to share that
experience so familiar to all guests at these Games: the senses of ceremony and
sacrifice, of mystic union of the congregation at the feet of the divine, which
could be conveyed even by a ceremony that, for the narrow circle of initiates,
was regarded as a "failure".
Nevertheless, he too was not altogether unaffected by the unlucky star
that seemed to preside over this festival.
The Game itself, to be sure, was irreproachable in plan and
construction, like every one of Master Thomas's Games; in fact it was one of
his cleanest, most direct, and impressive achievements. But its performance was especially
ill-starred and has not yet been forgotten in the history of Waldzell.
When Knecht arrived, a week before the
opening of the great Game, he was received not by the Magister Ludi himself,
but by his deputy Bertram, who welcomed him courteously but informed him rather
curtly and distractedly that the venerable Master had recently fallen ill and
that he, Bertram, was not sufficiently informed about Knecht's mission to
receive his report. Would he therefore
go to Hirsland to report his return to the directorate of the Order and await
its commands.
As he took his leave Knecht
involuntarily betrayed, by tone or gesture, his surprise at the coolness and
shortness of his reception. Bertram
apologized. "Do forgive me if I
have disappointed you, and please understand my situation," he said. "The Magister is ill, the annual Game is
upon us, and everything is up in the air.
I don't know whether the Magister will be able to conduct the Game or
whether I shall have to leap into the breach." The revered Master's illness could not have
come at a more difficult moment, he went on to say. He was ready as always to assume the
Magister's official duties, but if in addition he had to prepare himself at
such short notice to conduct the great Game, he was afraid it would prove a
task beyond his powers.
Knecht felt sorry for the man, who was
so obviously depressed and thrown off balance; he was also sorry that the
responsibility for the festival might now lie in the deputy's hands. Joseph had been away from Waldzell too long
to know how well founded Bertram's anxiety was.
The worst thing that can happen
to a deputy had already befallen the man: some time past he had forfeited the
trust of the elite, so that he was truly in a very difficult position.
With considerable concern, Knecht
thought of the Magister Ludi, the great exponent of classical form and irony,
the perfect Master and Castalian. He had
looked forward eagerly to the Magister's receiving him, listening to his
report, and reinstalling him in the small community of players, perhaps in some
confidential post. It had been his
desire to see the festival Game presided over by Master Thomas, to continue
working under him and courting his recognition.
Now it was painful and disappointing to find the Magister withdrawn into
illness, and to be directed to other authorities. There was, however, some compensation in the
respectful good will with which the secretary of the Order and Monsieur Dubois
received him and heard him out. They
treated him, in fact, as a colleague.
During their first talks he discovered that for the present at any rate
they had no intention of using him to promote the Roman project. They were going to respect his desire for a
permanent return to the Game. For the
moment they extended a friendly invitation to him to stay in the guesthouse of
the Vicus Lusorum, attend the annual Game, and survey the situation. Together with his friend Tegularius, he
devoted the days before the public ceremonies to the exercises in fasting and
meditation. That was one of the reasons
he was able to witness in so devout and grateful a spirit the strange Game
which has left an unpleasant aftertaste in the memories of some.
The position of the deputy Masters,
also called "Shadows", is a very peculiar one - especially the
deputies to the Music Master and the Glass Bead Game Master. Every Magister has a deputy who is not
provided for him by the authorities.
Rather, he himself chooses his deputy from the narrow circle of his own
candidates. The Master himself bears the
full responsibility for all the actions and decisions of his deputy. For a candidate it is therefore a great
distinction and a sign of the highest trust when he is appointed deputy by his
Magister. Whenever the Magister is prevented
from performing his official duties, he sends the deputy in his stead. The deputy, however, is not entitled to act
in all capacities. For example, when the
Supreme Board votes, he may transmit only a yea or nay in the Master's name and
is never permitted to deliver an address or present motions on his own. There are a variety of other precautionary
restrictions on the deputies.
While the appointment elevates the
deputy to a very high and at times extremely exposed position, it is at a
certain price. The deputy is set apart
within the official hierarchy, and while he enjoys high honour and frequently
may be entrusted with extremely important functions, his position deprives him
of certain rights and opportunities which the other aspirants possess. There are two points in particular where this
is revealed: the deputy does not bare the responsibility for his official acts,
and he can rise no farther within the hierarchy. The law is unwritten, to be sure, but can be
read throughout the history of Castalia: At the death or resignation of a
Magister, his Shadow, who has represented him so often and whose whole
existence seems to predestine him for the succession, has never advanced to
fill the Master's place. It is as if
custom were determined to show that a seemingly fluid and moveable barrier is
in fact insuperable. The barrier between
Magister and deputy stands like a symbol for the barrier between the office and
the individual. Thus, when a Castalian
accepts the confidential post of deputy, he renounces the prospect of ever
becoming a Magister himself, or ever really possessing the official robes and
insignia that he wears so often in his representative role. At the same time he acquires the curiously
ambiguous privilege of never incurring any blame for possible mistakes in his
conduct of his office. The blame falls
upon his Magister, who is answerable for his acts. A Magister sometimes becomes the victim of
the deputy he has chosen and is forced to resign his office because of some
glaring error committed by the deputy.
The word "Shadow" originated in Waldzell to describe the
Magister Ludi's deputy. It is splendidly
apposite to his special position, his closeness amounting to quasi-identity
with the Magister, and the make-believe insubstantiality of his official
existence.
For many years Master Thomas von der
Trave had employed a Shadow named Bertram who seems to have been more lacking
in luck than in talent or good will. He
was an excellent Glass Bead Game player, of course. As a teacher he was at least adequate, and he
was also a conscientious official, absolutely devoted to his Master. Nevertheless, in the course of the past few
years, he had become distinctly unpopular.
The "new generation", the younger members of the elite, were
particularly hostile to him, and since he did not possess his Master's limpid,
chivalric temperament, this antagonism affected his poise. The Magister did not let him go, but had for
years shielded him from friction with the elite as much as possible, putting him
in the public eye more and more rarely and employing him largely in the
chanceries and the Archive.
This blameless but disliked man,
plainly not favoured by fortune, now suddenly found himself at the head of the Vicus
Lusorum due to his Master's illness. If
it should turn out that he had to conduct the annual Game, he would occupy for
the duration of the festival the most exposed position in the entire Province. He could only have coped with this great task
if the majority of the Glass Bead Game players, or at any rate the tutors as a
body, had supported him. Regrettably,
that did not happen. This was why the Ludus
sollemnis turned into a severe trial a very nearly a disaster for Waldzell.
Not until the day before the Game was
it officially announced that the Magister had fallen seriously ill and would be
unable to conduct the Game. We do not
know whether this postponement of the announcement had been dictated by the sick
Magister, who might have hoped up to the last moment that he would be able to
pull himself together and preside.
Probably he was already too ill to cherish any such ideas, and his
Shadow made the mistake of leaving Castalia in uncertainty about the situation
in Waldzell up to the last moment.
Granted, it is even disputable whether this delay was actually a
mistake. Undoubtedly it was done with
good intentions, in order not to discredit the festival from the start and
discourage the admirers of Master Thomas from attending. And had everything turned out well, had there
been a relation of confidence between the Waldzell community of players and
Bertram, the Shadow might actually have become his representative and - this is
really quite conceivable - the Magister's absence might have gone almost
unnoticed. It is idle to speculate
further about the matter; we have mentioned it only because we thought it
necessary to suggest that Bertram was not such an absolute failure, let alone
unworthy of his office, as public opinion in Waldzell regarded him at the
time. He was far more a victim than a
culprit.
As happened every year, guests poured
into Waldzell to attend the great Game.
Many arrived unsuspectingly, others were deeply anxious about the
Magister Ludi's health and had gloomy premonitions about the prospects of the
festival. Waldzell and the nearby
villages filled with people. Almost
every one of the directors of the Order and the members of the Board of
Educators were on hand. Travellers in
holiday mood arrived from the remoter parts of the country and from abroad,
crowding the guesthouses.
On the evening before the beginning of
the Game, the ceremonies opened with the meditation hour. In response to the ringing of bells the whole
of Waldzell, crowded with people as it was, subsided into a profound, reverent
silence. Next morning came the first of
the musical performances and announcement of the first movement of the Game,
together with meditation on the two musical themes of this movement. Bertram, in the Magister Ludi's festival
robes, displayed a stately and controlled demeanour, but he was very pale. As day followed day, he looked more and more
strained, suffering and resigned, until during the last days he really
resembled a shadow. By the second day of
the Game the rumour spread that Magister Thomas's condition had worsened, and
that his life was in danger. That
evening there cropped up here and there, and especially among the initiates,
those first contributions to the gradually developing legend about the sick
Master and his Shadow. This legend,
emanating from the innermost circle of the Vicus Lusorum, the tutors,
maintained that the Master had been willing and would have been able to conduct
the Game, but that he had sacrificed himself to his Shadow's ambition and
assigned the solemn task to Bertram. But
now, the legend continued, since Bertram did not seem equal to his lofty role,
and since the Game was proving a disappointment, the sick man felt to blame for
the failure of the Game and his Shadow's inadequacy, and was doing penance for
the mistake. This, it was said, this and
nothing else was the reason for the rapid deterioration of his condition and
the rise in his fever.
Naturally this was not the sole
version of the legend, but it was the elite's version and indicated that the
ambitious aspirants thought the situation appalling and were dead set against
doing anything to improve it. Their
reverence for the Master was balanced by their malice for his Shadow; they
wanted Bertram to fail even if the Master himself had to suffer as well.
By and by the story went the rounds
that the Magister on his sickbed had begged his deputy and two seniors of the
elite to keep the peace and not endanger the festival. The next day it was asserted that he had
dictated his will and had named the man he desired for his successor. Moreover, names were whispered. These and other rumours circulated along with
news of the Magister's steadily worsening condition, and from day to day
spirits sagged in the festival hall as well as in the guesthouses, although
no-one went so far as to abandon the festival and depart. Gloom hung over the entire performance all
the while that it proceeded outwardly with formal propriety. Certainly there was little of that delight
and uplift that everyone familiar with the annual festival expected; and when
on the day before the end of the game Magister Thomas, the author of the
festival Game, closed his eyes forever, not even the efforts of the authorities
could prevent the news from spreading.
Curiously, a good many participants felt relieved and liberated by the
outcome. The Game students, and the
elite in particular, were not permitted to don mourning before the end of the Ludus
sollemnis, nor to make any break in the strictly prescribed sequence of the
hours, with their alternation of performances and meditation exercises. Nevertheless, they unanimously went through
the last act and day of the festival as if it were a funeral service for the
revered deceased. They surrounded the
exhausted, pale, and sleepless Bertram, who continued officiating with
half-closed eyes, with a frigid atmosphere of isolation.
Joseph Knecht had been kept in close
contact with the elite by his friend Tegularius. As an old player, moreover, he was fully
sensitive to all these currents and moods.
But he did not allow them to affect him.
From the fourth or fifth day on he actually forbade Fritz to bother him
with news about the Magister's illness.
He felt, and quite well understood, the tragic cloud that hung over the
festival; he thought of the Master with sorrow and deep concern, and of the
Shadow Bertram - condemned as it were to sharing the Magister's death - with
growing disquiet and compassion. But he
sternly resisted being influenced by any authentic or mythical account, practised
the strictest concentration, surrendered gladly to the exercises and the course
of the beautifully structured game, and in spite of all the discords and dark
clouds his experience of the festival was one of grave exaltation.
At the end of the festival Bertram was
spared the additional burden of having to receive congratulants and the Board
in his capacity of vice-Magister. The
traditional celebration for students of the Glass Bead Game was also cancelled. Immediately after the final musical performance
of the festival, the Board announced the Magister's death, and the prescribed
days of mourning began in the Vicus Lursorum.
Joseph Knecht, still residing in the guesthouse, participated in the
rites. The funeral of this fine man,
whose memory is still held in high esteem, was celebrated with Castalia's
customary simplicity. His Shadow,
Bertram, who had summoned up his last reserves of strength in order to play his
part to the end during the festival, understood his situation. He asked for a leave and went on a walking
trip in the mountains.
There was mourning throughout the Game
village, and indeed everywhere in Waldzell.
Possibly no-one had enjoyed intimate, strikingly friendly relations with
the deceased Magister; but the superiority and flawlessness of his aristocratic
nature, together with his intelligence and his finely developed feeling for
form, had made of him a regent and representative such as Castalia with its
fundamentally democratic temper did not often produce. The Castalians had been proud of him. If he had seemed to hold himself aloof from
the realms of passion, love, and friendship, that made him all the more the
object for youth's craving to venerate.
This dignity and sovereign gracefulness - which incidentally had earned
him the half-affectionate nickname "His Excellency" - had in the
course of years, despite strong opposition, won him a special position in the
Supreme Council of the Order and in the sessions and work of the Board of
Educators.
Naturally, the question of his successor
was hotly discussed, and nowhere so intensely as among the elite of the Glass
Bead Game players. After the departure
of the Shadow, whose overthrow these players had sought and achieved, the
functions of the Magister's office were temporarily distributed by vote of the
elite itself among three temporary deputies - only the internal functions in
the Vicus Lusorum, of course, not the official work in the Board of
Educators. In keeping with tradition,
the Board would not permit the Magistracy to remain vacant more than three
weeks. In cases in which a dying or
departed Magister left a clear, uncontested successor, the office was in fact
filled immediately, after only a single plenary session of the Board. This time the process would probably take
rather longer.
During the period of mourning, Joseph
Knecht occasionally talked with his friend about the festival game and its
singularly troubled course.
"This deputy, Bertram,"
Knecht said, "not only played his part tolerable well right up to the end
- that is, tried to fill the role of a real Magister - but in my opinion did
far more than that. He sacrificed
himself to this Ludus sollemnis as his last and most solemn official
act. You all were harsh - no, the word
is cruel - to him. You could have saved
the festival and saved Bertram, and you did not do so. I don't care to express an opinion about that
conduct; I suppose you had your reasons.
But now that poor Bertram has been eliminated and you have had your way,
you should be generous. When he comes
back you must meet him halfway and show that you have understood his
sacrifice."
Tegularius shook his head. "We did understand it," he said,
"and have accepted it. You were
fortunate in being able to participate in the Game as a guest; as such you probably
did not follow the course of events so very closely. No, Joseph, we will not have an opportunity
to act on whatever feelings for Bertram we may have. He knows that his sacrifice was necessary and
will not attempt to undo it."
Only now did Knecht fully understand
him. He fell into a troubled
silence. Now he realized that he had not
experienced these festival days as a real Waldzeller and a comrade of the
others, but in truth much more like a guest; and only now did he grasp the
nature of Bertram's sacrifice. Hitherto
Bertram had seemed to him an ambitious man who had been undone by a task beyond
his powers and who henceforth must renounce further ambitious goals and try to
forget that he had once been a Master's Shadow and the leader of an annual Game. Only now, hearing his friend's last words,
had he understood - with shock - that Bertram had been fully condemned by his
judges and would not return. They had
allowed him to conduct the festival Game to its conclusion, and had cooperated
just enough so that it would go off without a public scandal; but they had done
so only to spare Waldzell, not Bertram.
The fact was that the position of
Shadow demanded more than the Magister's full confidence - Bertram had not
lacked that. It depended to an equal
degree on the confidence of the elite, and the unfortunate man had been unable
to retain it. If he blundered, the
hierarchy did not stand behind him to protect him, as it did behind his Master
and model. And without the backing of
such authority, he was at the mercy of his former comrades, the tutors. If they did not respect him, they became his
judges. If they were unyielding, the
Shadow was finished. Sure enough,
Bertram did not return from his outing in the mountains, and after a while the
story went round that he had fallen to his death from a cliff. The matter was discussed no further.
Meanwhile, day after day high
officials and directors of the Order and of the Board of Educators appeared in
the Game village. Members of the elite
and of the civil service were summoned for questioning. Now and then some of the matters discussed
leaked out, but only within the elite itself.
Joseph Knecht, too, was summoned and queried, once by two directors of
the Order, once by the philological Magister, then by Monsieur Dubois, and
again by two Magisters. Tegularius, who
was also called in for several such consultations, was pleasantly excited and
joked about this conclave atmosphere, as he called it. Joseph had already noticed during the
festival how little of his former intimacy with the elite had remained, and
during the period of the conclave he was made more painfully aware of it. It was not only that he lived in the
guesthouse like a visitor, and that the superiors seemed to deal with him as an
equal. The members of the elite
themselves, the tutors as a body, no longer received him in a comradely
fashion. They displayed a mocking
politeness towards him, or at best a temporizing coolness. They had already begun to drift away from him
when he received his appointment to Mariafels, and that was only right and
natural. Once a man had taken the step
from freedom to service, from the life of student or tutor to member of the
hierarchy, he was no longer a comrade, but on the way to becoming a superior or
boss. He no longer belonged to the
elite, and he had to realize that for the time being they would assume a
critical attitude towards him. That
happened to everyone in his position.
The difference was that he felt the aloofness and coolness with particular
intensity at this time, partly because the elite, orphaned as it now was and
about to receive a new Magister, defensively closed its ranks; partly because
it has just so harshly demonstrated its ruthlessness in the case of the Shadow,
Bertram.
One evening Tegularius came running to
the guesthouse in a state of extreme excitement. He found Joseph, drew him into an empty room,
closed the door behind him, and burst out: "Joseph, Joseph! My God, I should have guessed it, I ought to
have known, it was likely enough.... Oh, I'm altogether beside myself and truly
don't know whether I ought to be glad."
And he, who was privy to all the sources of information in the Game
village, babbled on: it was more than probable, already virtually certain, the
Joseph Knecht would be elected Master of the Glass Bead Game. The director of the Archives, whom many had
regarded as Master Thomas's predestined successor, had obviously been
eliminated from the sifted group of prospects the day before yesterday. Of the three candidates from the elite whose
names had hitherto headed the lists during the enquiries, none, apparently,
enjoyed the special favour and recommendation of a Magister or of the
directorate of the Order. On the other
hand, two directors of the Order as well as Monsieur Dubois were supporting
Knecht. In addition to that, there was
the weighty vote of the former Music Master, who to certain knowledge of
several persons had been consulted by several Masters.
"Joseph, they're going to make
you Magister!" Fritz exclaimed once more.
Whereupon his friend placed his hand over his mouth. For a moment Joseph had been no less
surprised and stirred by the possibility than Fritz, and it had seemed to him
altogether impossible. But even while
Tegularius was reporting the various opinions circulating in the Game village
about the status and course of the "conclave", Knecht began to
realize that his friend's guess was not likely to be wrong. Rather, in his heart he felt something akin
to assent, a sense that he had known and expected this all along, that it was
right and natural. And so he placed his
hand on his excited friend's mouth, gave him an aloof, reproving look, as if he
had suddenly been removed to a great distance, and said: "Don't talk so
much, amice; I don't want to hear this gossip. Go to your comrades."
Tegularius, though he had meant to say
a great deal more, fell silent at once.
He turned pale under the gaze of this utter stranger, and went out. Later he remarked that at first he had felt
Knecht's remarkable calm and iciness at this moment as if it were a blow and an
insult, a slap in the face and a betrayal of their old friendship and intimacy,
an almost incomprehensible overstressing and anticipation of his impending
position as supreme head of the Glass Bead Game. Only as he was leaving - and he actually went
out like a man who had been slapped - did the meaning of that unforgettable
look dawn on him, that remote, loyal, but likewise suffering look, and he realized
that his friend was not proud of what had fallen to his lot, but that he was
accepting it in humility. He had been
reminded, he said, of Joseph Knecht's thoughtful expression and the note of
deep compassion in his voice when, recently, he had inquired about Bertram and
his sacrifice. It was as if he himself
were now on the point of sacrificing and extinguishing himself like the
Shadow. His expression had been at once
proud and humble, exalted and submissive, lonely and resigned; it was as if
Joseph Knecht's face had become an effigy of all the Masters of Castalia who
had ever been. "Go to your
comrades," he had said. Thus, in
the very second he first heard of his new dignity, this incomprehensible man
had fitted himself into it and saw the world from a new centre, was no longer a
comrade, would never be one again.
Knecht might easily have guessed that
this last and highest of his calls, the appointment as Magister Ludi, was
coming, or at least he might have seen it as possible, or even probable. But this time, too, his promotion startled
him. He might have guessed it, he
afterwards told himself, and he smiled at his zealous friend Tegularius, who to
be sure had not expected the appointment from the start, but all the same had
calculated and predicted it several days before the decision and
announcement. There were in fact no
objections to Joseph's election to the highest Board except perhaps his youth;
most of his predecessors had entered on their high office at the age of
forty-five to fifty, whereas Joseph was still barely forty. But there was no law against any such early
appointment.
Now, when Fritz surprised his friend
with the results of his surmises and observations, the observations of an
experienced elite player who knew down to its smallest detail the complex
apparatus of the small Waldzell community, Knecht had immediately realized that
Fritz was right; he had instantly grasped the fact of his election and accepted
his fate. But his first reaction to the
news had been that rejection of his friend, the refusal to "hear this gossip". As soon as Fritz had left, stunned and very
nearly insulted, Joseph went to a meditation room to order his thoughts. His meditation started from a memory that had
assailed him with unusual force. In his
vision he saw a bare room and a piano.
Through the room fell the cool, blithe light of forenoon, and at the
door of the room appeared a handsome, friendly man, an elderly man with greying
hair and a lucid face full of kindness and dignity. Joseph himself was a small Latin school pupil
who had waited in the room for the Music Master, partly frightened, partly
overjoyed, and who now saw the venerated figure for the first time, the Master
from the legendary Province of elite schools, and the Magister who had come to
show him what music was, who then led him step by step into his Province, his
realm, into the elite and the Order, and whose colleague and brother he had now
become, while the old man had laid aside his magic wand, or his sceptre, and
had been transformed into an amiably taciturn, still kindly, still revered, but
still mysterious elder whose look and example hovered over Joseph's life and
who would always be a generation and several stages of life ahead of him, as
well as immeasurably greater in dignity and also modesty, in mastership and in
mystery, but would always remain his patron and model, gently compelling him to
walk in his steps, as a rising and setting planet draws its brothers after it.
As long as Knecht permitted the flow
of inner images to come without distinction, as they do, like dreams, in the
initial stage of relaxation, there were two principal scenes which emerged from
the stream and lingered, two pictures or symbols, two parables. In the first Knecht, as a boy, followed the
Master along a variety of ways. The
Music Master strode before him as his guide, and each time he turned around and
showed his face he looked older, more tranquil and venerable, visibly
approaching an ideal of timeless wisdom and dignity, while he, Joseph Knecht,
devotedly and obediently walked along after his exemplar, but all the time
remaining the selfsame boy, at which he alternately felt at one moment shame,
at another a certain rejoicing, if not something close to defiant
satisfaction. And the second picture was
this: the scene in the piano room, the old man's entering where the boy waited,
was repeated again and again, an infinite number of times; the Master and the
boy followed each other as if drawn along the wires of some mechanism, until
soon it could no longer be discerned which was coming and which going, which
following and which leading, the old or the young man. Now it seemed to be the young man who showed
honour and obedience to the old man, to authority and dignity; now again it was
apparently the old man who was required to follow, serve, worship the figure of
youth, of beginning, of mirth. And as he
watched this at once senseless and significant dream circle, the dreamer felt
alternately identical with the old man and the boy, now revering and now
revered, now leading, now obeying; and in the course of these pendulum shifts
there came a moment in which he was both, was simultaneously Master and small
pupil; or rather he stood above both, was the instigator, conceiver, operator,
and onlooker of the cycle, this futile spinning race between age and
youth. With shifting sensations he
alternately slowed the pace and speeded it to a frantic rush. Out of this process there evolved a new
conception, more akin to a symbol than a dream, more insight than image: the
conception or rather the insight that this meaningful and meaningless cycle of
master and pupil, this courtship of wisdom by youth, of youth by wisdom, this
endless, oscillating game was the symbol of Castalia. In fact it was the game of life in general,
divided into old and young, day and night, yang and yin, and pouring on without
end. Having arrived at this in his
meditation, Joseph Knecht found his way from a world of images to tranquillity,
and after long absorption returned strengthened and serenely cheerful.
When a few days later the director of
the Order summoned him, he went confidently.
He received the fraternal greeting of the superiors, a brief clasping of
hands and suggestion of an embrace, with composure and grave serenity. He was informed of his appointment as Magister
Ludi, and commanded to appear at the festival hall on the day after the morrow
for the investiture and swearing-in.
This was the same hall in which, so short a while ago, the deceased
Master's deputy had completed the dismay ceremonies as if he were a sacrificial
beast decked out with gold. The day
before the investiture was to be devoted to a careful study, accompanied by
ritual meditations, of the formula of the oath and the "breviary for the
Magister" under the guidance and supervision of two superiors. This time they were the Chancellor of the
Order and the Magister Mathematicae, and during the noon rest of this very
strenuous day Joseph vividly recalled his admission to the Order and how the
Music Master had talked with him beforehand.
This time, to be sure, the rite of admission did not lead him, as it
yearly did hundreds of others, through a wide gate into a large community. Rather, he was passing through the eye of the
needle into the highest and narrowest circle, that of the Masters. Later he confessed to the former Music Master
that on that day of intensive self-examination one thought had given him
trouble, one altogether ridiculous notion.
He had, he said, feared the moment in which one of the Masters would
point out to him how unusually young he was to be receiving the highest
dignity. He had seriously had to fight
this fear, this childishly vain thought, and to fight as well the impulse to
answer, if there should be some allusion to his age: "Why not then wait
until I am older? I have never aspired
to this elevation, you know." But
further self-examination showed him that unconsciously the thought of his
appointment, and the desire for it, could not after all have been so far from
his mind. And, he went on to tell the
Music Master, he had admitted this to himself, had recognized the vanity of his
thought and rejected it; moreover, neither on that day nor at any other time
did any of his colleagues remind him of his age.
The election of the new Master was,
however, all the more animatedly discussed and criticized among those who had
hitherto been Knecht's fellow aspirants.
He had no downright adversaries, but he had had rivals, among them some
who were of riper years than he. The
members of this circle were not at all minded to approve the choice without a
trial of strength, or at least without subjecting the new Master to extremely
exacting and critical scrutiny. Almost
in every case a new Magister's inauguration and early period in office is a
kind of purgatory.
The investiture of a Master is not a
public ceremony. Aside from the Board of
Educators and the directorate of the Order, the only participants are the
senior pupils, the candidates, and the officials of the faculty which is receiving
a new Magister. At the ceremony in the
festival hall, the Master of the Glass Bead Game had to take the oath of
office, to receive from the authorities the insignia of his office, consisting
of certain keys and seals, and to be clad by the Speaker of the Order in the
festive robe which the Magister wears at all the major ceremonies, especially
while celebrating the annual Game. Such
an act lacks the splash and mild intoxication of public festivities; it is by
nature ceremonious and rather sober. On
the other hand, the mere presence of all the members of the two highest
authorities confers an uncommon dignity upon it. The small republic of Glass Bead Game players
is receiving a new lord and master, who will preside over it and speak for its
interests within the Board. That is a
rare and important event, and although the younger students may not fully grasp
its significance and be conscious only of the ritual, all the other
participants are fully aware of just how important it is. They are sufficiently integrated with their
community, so substantially akin to it, that they experience the event as if it
were part and parcel of themselves.
This time the festive rejoicing was
overshadowed by mourning for the previous Master, by the unhappy temper of the
annual Game, and by the tragedy of the deputy, Bertram. The investiture was performed by the Speaker
of the Order and the Chief Archivist of the Game. Together, they held the robe high and then
placed it over the shoulders of the new Glass Bead Game Master. The brief festival oration was spoken by the
Magister Grammaticae, the Master of classical philology in Keuperheim. A representative of the elite of Waldzell
handed over the keys and seal, and the aged former Music Master in person stood
near the organ. He had come to see his
protégé invested, and to give him a glad surprise by his unexpected presence,
perhaps also to offer a helpful bit of advice.
The old man would have liked to provide the music for the ceremony with
his own hands, but he could no longer risk such exertions and therefore left
the playing to the organist of the Game Village, but stood behind him turning
the pages. He looked at Joseph with a
beatific smile, saw him receive the robes and keys, and heard him first repeat
the oath and then deliver his extemporaneous inaugural address to his future
associates, officials, and students.
Never before had this boy Joseph seemed to him as dear and pleasing as
he was today, when he had almost ceased to be Joseph and was beginning to be no
more than the wearer of robes and the keeper of an office, a jewel in a crown,
a pillar in the structure of the hierarchy.
But he was able to speak with his boy Joseph alone for only a few
minutes. He conferred his serenely
cheerful smile upon him, and admonished: "Make sure you manage the next three
or four weeks well; a great deal will be asked of you. Always think of the Whole, and always
remember that missing out on some detail does not count for much now. You must devote your entire attention to the
elite; don't think of anything else. Two
men will be sent to help initiate you.
One of them is the yoga specialist Alexander. I have instructed him myself. Pay close attention to him; he knows his
business. What you need is an
unshakeable confidence that the superiors were right in making you one of their
own. Trust them, trust the people who
have been sent to help you, and blindly trust your own strength. But be on your guard against the elite; that
is what they expect. You will win out,
Joseph, I know."
The new Magister was familiar with
most of the functions of his office, for he had already assisted in the
performance of them on various occasions, both in lowly and responsible
capacities. The most important were the
Game courses, stretching from courses for schoolboys and beginners, holidayers
and guests, to the practice sessions, lectures, and seminars for the
elite. Every newly appointed Magister
could feel himself equal to all but the last of these tasks, whereas the new
functions which had previously lain outside his scope caused him far more
concern and effort. Such was the case
with Joseph also. He would have liked to
turn first of all, with undivided zeal, to these new duties, the properly
magisterial duties: sitting on the Supreme Council of Educators, working with
the Council of Magisters and the directorate of the Order, representing the
Vicus Lusorum in dealings with all the authorities. He was all afire to familiarize himself with
these new tasks and to strip them of the menace of the unknown. He wished that he could initially set aside
several weeks for a careful study of the constitution, the formalities, the
minutes of previous sessions of the Board, and so on. He knew, of course, that information and
instruction on these matters were readily available to him. He need only turn to Monsieur Dubois and to
the specialist on magisterial forms and traditions, the Speaker of the
Order. Although not a Magister himself,
and therefore ranked below the Masters, the Speaker held the chair in all
sessions of the Board and took care that the traditional rules of order were
observed. In this he somewhat resembled
the master of ceremonies at a sovereign's court.
Joseph would only too gladly have
asked this prudent, experienced, inscrutably courteous man, whose hands had
just solemnly decked him with the robes of office, for a few private lessons,
if only the Speaker had lived in Waldzell instead of Hirsland, half a day's
journey away. How gladly, too, Joseph
would have fled to Monteport for a while to be instructed in these matters by
the former Music Master. But such
recourses were out of the question; it was not for a Magister to harbour any
such private desires, as if he were still a student. Instead, he had to start off by attending to
those very functions which he fancied would give him little trouble, and to
concentrate his whole mind on them.
During Bertram's festival Game he had
observed a Magister forsaken by his whole community, the elite, fighting and as
it were suffocating in airless space. He
had sensed something then, and his presentiment had been confirmed by the old
Music Master's words on the day of his investiture. Now he faced it every minute of his official
day, and every moment he could spare for reflection on his situation: that he
must above all concern himself with the elite and the tutorship, with the
highest stages of the Glass Bead Game studies, with the seminar practice
sessions, and with personal intercourse with the tutors. He could leave the Archives to the
archivists, the beginners' courses to the present set of teachers, the mail to
his secretaries, and would not be neglecting any serious matters. But he did not dare leave the elite to
themselves for a moment. He had to keep
after them, impose himself on them, and make himself indispensable to
them. He had to convince them of the
merit of his abilities and the purity of his will; he had to conquer them,
court them, win them, match wits with every candidate among them who showed a
disposition to challenge him - and there was no lack of such candidates.
In this struggle he was aided by a
number of factors which he had earlier considered drawbacks, in particular his
long absence from Waldzell and the elite, who therefore looked upon him as
something of a homo novis. Even
his friendship with Tegularius proved useful.
For Tegularius, that brilliant, sickly outsider, obviously did not have
to be considered a rival for office, and seemed so little career-minded himself
that any preference shown him by the new Magister would not be seen as an affront
to other candidates. Nevertheless it was
something of a task for Knecht to probe and penetrate this highest, most vital,
restive, and sensitive stratum in the world of the Glass Bead Game, and master
it as a rider masters a thoroughbred horse.
For in every Castalian institute, not only that of the Glass Bead Game,
the elite group of candidates, also called tutors - men who have completed
their formal education but are still engaged in free studies and have not yet
been appointed to serve on the Board of Educators or the Order - constitute the
most precious stock in Castalian society, the true reserve and promise for the
future. Everywhere, not only in the Game
Village, this dashing select band of the younger generation tends to resist and
criticize new teachers and superiors, accords a new head the bare minimum of
politeness and subordination, and must be convinced, overpowered, and won over
on a purely personal basis. The superior
must devote his whole being to courting them before they will acknowledge him
and submit to his leadership.
Knecht took up his task without
timidity, but he was nevertheless astonished at its difficulties; and while he
solved them and gradually won the arduous, consuming battle, those other duties
which he had been inclined to worry about receded of their own accord and
seemed to demand less of his attention.
He confessed to a colleague that he had participated in the first
plenary session of the Board - to which he travelled by the fastest express and
returned in the same way - almost in a dream and afterwards had no time to give
another thought to it, so completely did his current task claim all his
energies. In fact, even during the
conference itself, although the subject interested him and although he had
looked forward to it with some uneasiness, since this was his first appearance
as a member of the Board, he several times caught himself thinking not of his
colleagues here and the deliberations in progress, but of Waldzell. He saw himself rather in that blue room in the
Archives where he was currently giving a seminar on dialectics every third day,
with only five participants. Every hour
of that bred far greater tension and demanded a greater output of energy
than all the rest of his official duties, which were also not easy and which he
could not evade or postpone. For as the
former Music Master had informed him, the Board provided him with a timekeeper
and coach who supervised the course of his day hour by hour, advising him about
his schedule and guarding him against too much concentration on any one thing,
as well as against total overstrain.
Knecht was grateful to him, and even more grateful to Alexander, the man
deputized by the directorate of the Order, who enjoyed a great reputation as
master of the art of meditation.
Alexander saw to it that Joseph, even though he was working to the
utmost limit of his strength, practised the "little" or
"brief" meditation exercises three times daily, and that he abided
strictly by the prescribed course and number of minutes for each such exercise.
Before his evening meditation he and
his aides, the coach and the meditation master, were supposed to review each
official day, noting what had been well done or ill done, feeling his own
pulse, as meditation teachers call this practice, that is, recognizing and
measuring one's own momentary situation, state of health, the distribution of
one's energies, one's hopes and cares - in a word, seeing oneself and one's
daily work objectively and carrying nothing on unresolved into the night and
the next day.
While the tutors observed the
prodigious labours of their Magister with an interest partly sympathetic,
partly aggressive, missing no opportunity to set him new tests of strength,
patience, and quick-wittedness, trying one moment to inspire, the next to block
his work, an uncomfortable void had come into being around Tegularius. He understood, of course, that Knecht could
not spare any attention, any time, any thought or sympathy for him right now. But he could not harden himself sufficiently,
could not resign himself to being so neglected.
It was all the more painful to him because he not only seemed to have
lost his friend from one day to the next, but also found himself the object of
some suspicion on the part of his associates, and was scarcely spoken to. That was hardly surprising. For although Tegularius could not seriously
stand in the way of the ambitious climbers, he was known as one of the new Magister's
partisans and favourites.
Knecht could easily have grasped all
this. To be sure, the responsibilities
of the moment involved his laying aside all private, personal affairs for a
while, including this friendship. But,
as he later admitted to his friend, he did not actually do this wittingly and
willingly, but quite simply because he had forgotten Fritz. He had so thoroughly converted himself into
an instrument that such personal matters as friendship vanished into the realm
of the impossible. If on occasion, as
for example in that seminar he held for the five foremost Glass Bead Game
players, Fritz's face and figure appeared before him, he did not see Tegularius
as a friend or personality, but as a member of the elite, a student, candidate,
and tutor, a part of his work, a soldier in the regiment whom he had to train so
that he could march on to victory with it.
A shudder had gone through Fritz when the Magister for the first time
addressed him in that way. From Knecht's
look, it was clear that this remoteness and objectivity were not pretence, but
uncannily genuine, and that the man before him who treated him with this
matter-of-fact courtesy, accompanied by intense intellectual alertness, was no
longer his friend Joseph, was entirely a teacher and examiner, entirely Master
of the Glass Bead Game, enveloped and isolated by the gravity and austerity of
his office as if by a shining glaze which had been poured over him in the heat
of the fire, had had cooled and hardened.
During these hectic weeks a minor
incident connected with Tegularius occurred.
Sleepless and under severe psychological strain, he was guilty during
the seminar of a discourtesy, a minor outburst, not towards a Magister but
towards a colleague whose mocking tone had grated on his nerves. Knecht noticed, noticed also the delinquent's
overwrought state. He reproved him
wordlessly, merely by a gesture of his finger, but afterwards sent his
meditation master to him to calm the troubled soul. Tegularius, after weeks of deprivation, took
this concern as a first sign of reviving friendship, for he assumed that it was
an attention directed towards himself as a person, and willingly submitted to
the cure. In reality Knecht had scarcely
been aware of the object of his solicitude.
He had acted solely as the Magister, had observed irritability and a
lack of self-control in one of his tutors, and had reacted to it as an
educator, without for a moment regarding this tutor as a person or relating him
to himself. When, months later, his
friend reminded him of this scene and testified how overjoyed and comforted he
had been by this sign of goodwill, Joseph Knecht said nothing. He had completely forgotten the affair, but
did not disabuse his friend.
At last he attained his goal. The battle was won. It had been a great labour to subdue this
elite, to drill them until they were weary, to tame the ambitious, win over the
undecided, impress the arrogant. But now
the work was done; the candidates at the Game Village had acknowledged him
their Master and submitted to him.
Suddenly everything went smoothly, as if only a drop of oil had been
needed. The coach drew up a last agenda
with Knecht, expressed the Board's appreciation, and vanished. Alexander, the meditation master, likewise
departed. Instead of a morning massage,
Knecht resumed his customary walks. As
yet he could not even begin to think of anything like studying or even reading;
but now he was able to play a little music some days, in the evening before
going to sleep.
The next time he attended a meeting of
the Board, Knecht distinctly sensed, although the matter was never so much as
mentioned, that he was now regarded by his colleagues as tested and
proved. He was their equal. After the intensity of the struggle to prove
himself, he was now overcome once more by a sense of awakening, of cooling and
sobering. He saw himself in the
innermost heart of Castalia, sat in the highest rank of the hierarchy, and
discovered with strange sobriety and almost with disappointment that even this
very thin air was breathable, but that he who now breathed it as though he had
never known anything different was altogether changed. That was the consequence of this harsh period
of trial. It had burned him out as no
other service, no other effort, had previously done.
The elite's acknowledgement of him as
their sovereign was marked this time by a special gesture. When Knecht sensed the end of their
resistance, the confidence and consent of the tutors, and knew that he had
successfully put the hardest task behind him, he realized that the moment had
come for him to choose a "Shadow".
In point of fact he would never more sorely need someone to relieve him
of burdens than right now, after the victory was won, when he found himself
suddenly released into relative freedom after an almost superhuman trial of
strength. Many a Magister in the past
had collapsed just as this point in his path.
Knecht now renounced his right to choose among the candidates and asked
the tutors as a body to select a Shadow for him. Still under the impact of Bertram's fate, the
elite took this conciliatory gesture very seriously, and after several meetings
and secret polls, made their choice, providing the Magister with one of their
best men, a deputy who until Knecht's appointment had been regarded as one of
the most promising candidates for the office of Magister.
He had survived the worst. Now there was time for walks and music
again. After a while he could once more
think of reading. Friendship with
Tegularius, occasional correspondence with Ferromonte, would be possible. Now and then he would be able to take half a
day off, perhaps sometimes permit himself to go away for a short vacation. But all these amenities would benefit another
man, not the previous Joseph who had thought himself a keen Glass Bead Game
player and a tolerably good Castalian, but who had nevertheless had no inkling
of the innermost nature of the Castalian system. Hitherto he had lived in so innocuously
selfish, so puerilely playful, so inconceivably private and irresponsible a
way. Once he recalled the tart reproof
he had incurred from Master Thomas after he had expressed the desire to go on
studying freely for a while longer: "You say a while, but how long is
that? You are still speaking the
language of students, Joseph Knecht."
That had been only a few years ago.
He had listened with admiration, with profound reverence, along with a
mild horror of this man's impersonal perfection and discipline, and he had felt
Castalia reaching out for himself as well, seeking to draw him close in order,
perhaps, to make him just such a Thomas some day, a Master, a sovereign and
servant, a perfect instrument. And now
he stood on the spot where Master Thomas had stood, and when he spoke with one
of his tutors, one of those clever, sophisticated players and scholars, one of
those diligent and arrogant princes, he looked across to him into a different
world of alien beauty, a strange world that had once been his, exactly as
Magister Thomas had gazed into his own strange student world.
SEVEN
IN OFFICE
AT FIRST,
ASSUMPTION of the Magister's office seemed to have brought more loss than
gain. It had almost devoured his
strength and his personal life, had crushed all his habits and hobbies, had
left a cool stillness in his heart, and in his head something resembling the
giddiness after overexertion. But the
period that now followed brought recovery, reflection, and habituation. It also yielded new observations and
experiences.
The greatest of these, now that the
battle was won, was his collaboration with the elite on the basis of mutual trust
and friendliness. He conferred with his
Shadow. He worked with Fritz Tegularius,
whom he tried out as an assistant on his correspondence. He gradually studied, checked over, and
supplemented the reports and other notes on students and other associates which
his predecessor had left. And in the
course of this work Knecht familiarized himself, with increasing affection,
with this elite whom he had imagined he knew so well. Now its true nature, and the whole special
quality of the Game Village as well as its role in Castalian life, were
revealed to him in their full reality for the first time.
Of course he had belonged to this
artistic and ambitious elite and to the Players' Village in Waldzell for many
years. He had felt completely a part of
it. But now he was no longer just a
part. Not only did he intimately share
the life of this community, but he also felt himself to be something like its
brain, its consciousness, and its conscience as well, not only participating in
its impulses and destinies, but guiding them and being responsible for them.
In an exalted moment, at the end of a
training course for teachers of beginners in the Game, he once declared:
"Castalia is a small state in itself, and our Vicus Lusorum a miniature
state within the state, a small, but ancient and proud republic, equal in
rights and dignities to its sisters, but with its sense of mission lifted and
strengthened by the special artistic and virtually sacramental function it
performs. For our distinction is to
cherish the true sanctuary of Castalia, its unique mystery and symbol, the
Glass Bead Game. Castalia rears
pre-eminent musicians and art historians, philologists, mathematicians, and
other scholars. Every Castalian
institute and every Castalian should hold to only two goals and ideals: to
attain to the utmost command of his subject, and to keep himself and his
subject vital and flexible by forever recognizing its ties with all other
disciplines and by maintaining amicable relations with all. This second ideal, the conception of the
inner unity of all man's cultural efforts, the idea of universality, has found
perfect expression in our illustrious Game.
It may be that the physicist, the musicologist, or other scholar will at
times have to steep himself entirely in his own discipline, that renouncing the
idea of universal culture will further some momentary maximum performance in a
special field. But we, at any rate, we
Glass Bead Game players, must never allow ourselves such specialization. We must neither approve nor practise it, for
our own special mission, as you know, is the idea of the Universitas
Litterarum. Ours to foster its
supreme expression, the noble Game, and repeatedly to save the various
disciplines from their tendency to self-sufficiency. But how can we save anything that does not
have the desire to be saved? And how can
we make the archaeologists, the pedagogues, the astronomers, and so forth,
eschew self-sufficient specialization and throw open their windows to all the
other disciplines? We cannot do it by
compulsory means, say by making the Glass Bead Game an official subject in the
lower schools, now can we do it by invoking what our predecessors meant this
Game to be. We can prove only that our
Game and we ourselves are indispensable by keeping the Game ever at the summit
of our entire cultural life, by incorporating into it each new achievement,
each new approach, and each new complex of problems from the scholarly
disciplines. We must shape and cultivate
our universality, our noble and perilous sport with the idea of unity, endowing
it with such perennial freshness and loveliness, such persuasiveness and charm,
that even the soberest researcher and most diligent specialist will ever and
again feel its message, its temptation and allure.
"Let us imagine for the moment
that we players were to slacken in our zeal for a time, that the Game courses
for beginners became dull and superficial, that in the Games for advanced
players specialists of other disciplines looked in vain for vital, pulsating life,
for intellectual contemporaneity and interest.
Suppose that two or three times in a row our great annual Game were to
strike the guests as an empty ceremony, a lifeless, old-fashioned, formalistic
relic of the past. How quickly, then,
the Game and we ourselves would be done for.
Already we are no longer on those shining heights where the Glass Bead
Game stood a generation ago, when the annual Game lasted not one or two but
three or four weeks, and was the climax of the year not only for Castalia but
for the entire country. Today a
representative of the government still attends this annual Game, but all too
often as a somewhat bored guest, and a few cities and professions still send
envoys. Towards the end of the Game days
these representatives of the secular powers occasionally deign to suggest that
the length of the festival deters many other cities from sending envoys, and
that perhaps it would be more in keeping with the contemporary world either to
shorten the festival considerably or else to hold it only every other year, or
every third year.
"Well now, we cannot check this
development, or if you will, decadence.
It may well be that before long our Game will meet with no understanding
at all out in the world. Perhaps we
shall no longer be able to celebrate it.
But what we must and can prevent is the discrediting and devaluation of
the Game in its own home, in our Province.
Here our struggle is hopeful, and has repeatedly led to victory. Every day we witness the phenomenon: young
elite pupils who have signed up for their Game course without any special
ardour, and who have completed it dutifully, but without enthusiasm, are
suddenly seized by the spirit of the Game, by its intellectual potentialities,
its venerable tradition, its soul-stirring forces, and become our passionate
adherents and partisans. And every year
at the Ludus sollemnis we can see scholars of distinction who rather
looked down on us Glass Bead Game players during their work-filled year, and
who have not always wished our institution well. In the course of the great Game we see them
falling more and more under the spell of our art; we see them growing eased and
exalted, rejuvenated and fired, until at last, their hearts strengthened and
deeply stirred, they bid goodbye with words of almost abashed gratitude.
"Let us consider for a moment the
means at our command for carrying out our mission. We see a rich, fine, well-ordered apparatus
whose heart and core is the Game Archive, which we gratefully make use of every
hour of the day and which all of us serve, from Magister and Archivist down to
the humblest errand boy. The best and
the most vital aspect of our institution is the old Castalian principle of
selection of the best, the elite. The
schools of Castalia collect the best pupils from the entire country and educate
them. Similarly, we in the Players'
Village try to select the best among those endowed by nature with a love for
the Game. We train them to an
ever-higher standard of perfection. Our
courses and seminars take in hundreds, who then go their ways again; but we go
on training the best until they become genuine players, artists of the
Game. You all know that in ours as in
every art there is no end to development, that each of us, once he belongs to
the elite, will work away all his life at the further development, refinement,
and deepening of himself and our art, whether or not he belongs to our corps of
officials.
"The existence of our elite has
sometimes been denounced as a luxury. It
has been argued that we ought to train no more elite players than are required
to fill the ranks of our officialdom.
But in the first place, our corps of officials is not an institution
sufficient unto itself, and in the second place not everyone is suited for an
official post, any more than every good philologist is suited for
teaching. We officials, at any rate,
feel certain that the tutors are more than a reservoir of talented and
experienced players from which we fill our vacancies and draw our
successors. I am almost tempted to say
that this is only a subsidiary function of the players' elite, even though we
greatly stress it to the uninitiated as soon as the meaning and justification
of our institute is brought up.
"No, the tutors are not primarily
future Masters, course directors, Archive officials. They are an end in themselves; their little
band is the real home and future of the Glass Bead Game. Here, in these few dozen hearts and heads the
developments, modifications, advances, and confrontations of our Game with the
spirit of the age and with the various disciplines take place. Only here is our Game played properly and
correctly, to its hilt, and with full commitment. Only within our elite is it an end in itself
and a sacred mission shorn of all dilettantism, cultural vanity,
self-importance, or superstition. The
future of the Game lies with you, the Waldzell tutors. And since it is the heart and soul of
Castalia, and you are the soul and vital spark of Waldzell, you are truly the
salt of the Province, its spirit, its dynamism.
There is no danger that your numbers could grow too large, your zeal too
hot, your passion for the glorious Game too great. Increase it, increase it! For you, as for all Castalians, there is at
bottom only a single peril, which we all must guard against every single
day. The spirit of our Province and our
Order is founded on two principles: on objectivity and love of truth in study,
and on the cultivation of meditative wisdom and harmony. Keeping these two principles in balance means
for us being wise and worthy of our Order.
We love the sciences and scholarly disciplines, each his own, and yet we
know that devotion to a discipline does not necessarily preserve a man from
selfishness, vice, and absurdity.
History is full of examples of that, and folklore has given us the
figure of Doctor Faust to represent this danger.
"Other centuries sought safety in
the union of reason and religion, research and asceticism. In their Universitas Litterarum, theology
ruled. Among us we use meditation, the
fine gradations of yoga technique, in our efforts to exorcise the beast within
us and the diabolus dwelling in every branch of knowledge. Now you know as well as I that the Glass Bead
Game also has its hidden diabolus, that it can lead to empty virtuosity,
to artistic vanity, to self-advancement, to the seeking of power over others
and then to the abuse of that power.
This is why we need another kind of education beside the intellectual
and submit ourselves to the morality of the Order, not in order to reshape our
mentally active life into a psychically vegetative dream-life, but on the
contrary to make ourselves fit for the summit of intellectual achievement. We do not intend to flee from the vita
activa to the vita contemplativa, nor vice versa, but to keep moving
forward while alternating between the two, being at home in both, partaking of
both."
We have cited Knecht's words - and
many similar statements recorded by his students have been preserved - because
they throw so clear a light upon his conception of his office, at least during
the first few years of his magistracy.
He was an excellent teacher; the profusion of copies of his lectures
which have come down to us would alone provide evidence for that. Among the surprises that this high office
brought him right at the start was his discovery that teaching gave him so much
pleasure, and that he did so well at it.
He would not have expected that, for hitherto he had never really felt a
desire for teaching. Of course, like
every member of the elite, he had occasionally been given teaching assignments
for short periods even while he was merely an advanced student. He had substituted for other teachers in
Glass Bead Game courses at various levels, even more frequently had helped the participants
in such with reviews and drill; but in those days his freedom to study and his
solitary concentration had been so dear and important to him that he had
regarded these assignments as nuisances, despite the fact that he was even then
skilful and popular as a teacher. He
had, after all, also given courses in the Benedictine abbey, but they had been
of minor importance in themselves, and equally minor for him. There, his studies and association with
Father Jacobus had made all other work secondary. At the time, his greatest ambition had been
to be a good pupil, to learn, receive, form himself. Now the pupil had become a teacher, and as
such he had mastered the major task of his first period in office: the struggle
to win authority and forge an identity of person and office. In the course of this he made two
discoveries. The first was the pleasure
it gives to transplant the achievements of the mind into other minds and see
them being transformed into entirely new shapes and emanations - in other
words, the joy of teaching. The second
was grappling with the personalities of the students, the attainment and
practice of authority and leadership - in other words, the joy of educating. He never separated the two, and during his
magistracy he not only trained a large number of good and some superb Glass
Bead Game players, by also by example, by admonition, by his austere sort of
patience, and by the force of his personality and character, elicited from a
great many of his students the very best they were capable of.
In the course of this work he had made
a characteristic discovery - if we may be permitted to anticipate our
story. At the beginning of his
magistracy he dealt exclusively with the elite, with the most advanced students
and the tutors. Many of the latter were
his own age, and every one was already a thoroughly trained player. But gradually, once he was sure of the elite,
he slowly and cautiously, from year to year, began withdrawing from it an ever-larger
portion of his time and energy, until at the end he sometimes he could leave it
almost entirely to his close associates and assistants. This process took years, and each succeeding
year Knecht, in the lectures, courses, and exercises he conducted, reached
further and further back to ever-younger students. In the end he went so far that he several
times personally conducted beginners' courses for youngsters - something rarely
done by a Magister Ludi. He found,
moreover, that the younger and more ignorant his pupils were, the more pleasure
he took in teaching. Sometimes in the
course of those years it actually made him uneasy, and cost him tangible
effort, to return from these groups of boys to the advanced students, let alone
to the elite. Occasionally, in fact, he
felt the desire to reach even further back and to attempt to deal with even
younger pupils, those who had never yet had courses of any kind and knew
nothing of the Glass Bead Game. He found
himself sometimes wishing to spend a while in Escholz or one of the other
preparatory schools instructing small boys in Latin, singing, or algebra, where
the atmosphere was far less intellectual than it was even in the most
elementary course in the Glass Bead Game, but where he would be dealing with
still more receptive, plastic, educable pupils, where teaching and educating
were more, and more deeply, a unity. In
the last two years of his magistracy he twice referred to himself in letters as
"Schoolmaster", reminding his correspondent that the expression
Magister Ludi - which for generations had meant only "Master of the
Game" in Castalia - had originally been simply the name for the
schoolmaster.
There could, of course, be no question
of his realizing such schoolmasterly wishes.
They were arrant dreams, as a man may dream of a midsummer sky on a
grey, cold winter day. For Knecht there
were no longer a multitude of paths open.
His duties were determined by his office; but since the manner in which
he wished to fulfil these duties was left largely to his own discretion, he had
in the course of the years, no doubt quite unconsciously at first, gradually
concerned himself more and more with educating, and with the earliest
age-groups within his reach. The older
he became, the more youth attracted him.
At least so we can observe from our vantage point. At the time a critic would have had
difficulty finding any trace of vagary in his conduct of his office. Moreover, the position itself compelled him
again and again to turn his attention back to the elite. Even during periods in which he left the
seminars and Archives almost entirely to his assistants and his Shadow,
long-term projects such as the annual Game competitions or the preparations for
the grand public Game of the year kept him in vital and daily contact with the
elite. To his friend Fritz he once
jokingly remarked: "There have been sovereigns who suffered all their
lives from an unrequited love for their subjects. Their hearts drew them to the peasants, the
shepherds, the artisans, the schoolmasters, and schoolchildren; but they seldom
had a chance to see anything of these, for they were always surrounded by their
ministers and soldiers who stood like a wall between them and the people. A Magister's fate is the same. He would like to reach people and sees only
colleagues; he would like to reach the schoolboys and children and sees only
advanced students and members of the elite."
But we have run far ahead of our
story, and now return to the period of Knecht's first years in office. After gaining the desired relationship with the
elite, he had next to turn his attention to the bureaucracy of the Archives and
show it that he intended to be a friendly but alert master. Then came the problem of studying the
structure and procedures of the chancery, and learning how to run it. A constant flow of correspondence, and
repeated meetings or circular letters of the Boards, summoned him to duties and
tasks which were not altogether easy for a newcomer to grasp and classify
properly. Quite often questions arose in
which the various Faculties of the Province were mutually interested and
inclined towards jealousy - questions of jurisdiction, for instance. Slowly, but with growing admiration, he
became aware of the powerful secret functions of the Order, the living soul of
the Castalian state, and the watchful guardian of its constitution.
Thus strenuous and overcrowded months
had passed during which there had been no room in Joseph Knecht's thoughts for
Tegularius. However, and this was done
half instinctively, he did assign his friend a variety of jobs to protect him
from excessive leisure. Fritz had lost
his friend, who had overnight become his highest-ranking superior and whom he
had to address formally as "Reverend sir". But he took the orders the Magister issued to
him as a sign of solicitude and personal concern. Moody loner though he was, Fritz found
himself excited partly by his friend's elevation and the excitable mood of the
entire elite, partly by the tasks assigned to him, which were activating him in
a way compatible with his personality.
In any case, he bore the totally changed situation better than he
himself would have thought since that moment in which Knecht had responded to
the news that he was destined to be the Glass Bead Game Master by sending him
away. He was, moreover, both intelligent
and sympathetic enough to see something of the enormous strain his friend was
undergoing at this time, and to sense the nature of that great trial of
strength. He saw how Joseph was annealed
by the fire, and insofar as sentimental emotions were involved, he probably
felt them more keenly than the man who was undergoing the ordeal. Tegularius took the greatest pains with the
assignments he received from the Magister, and if he ever seriously regretted
his own weakness and his unfitness for office and responsibility, he did so
then, when he intensely wished to stand by the man he so warmly admired and
give him what help he could as an assistant, an official, a "Shadow".
The beech forests above Waldzell were
already browning when Knecht one day took a little book with him into the
Magister's garden adjoining his residence, that pretty little garden which the
late Master Thomas had so prized and often tended himself with Horatian
fondness. Knecht, like all the students,
had once imagined it as an awesome and sanctified spot, a Tusculum and magical
island of the Muses where the Master came for recuperation and meditation. Since he himself had become Magister and the
garden his, he had scarcely entered it and hardly ever enjoyed it at leisure. Even now he was coming only for fifteen
minutes after dinner, and he allowed himself merely a brief carefree stroll
among the high bushes and shrubs beneath which his predecessor had planted a
good many evergreens from southern climes.
Then, since it was already cool in the shade, he carried a high cane
chair to a sunlit spot, sat down, and opened the book he had brought with
him. It was the Pocket Calendar for
the Magister Ludi, written seventy or eighty years before by Ludwig
Wassermaler, the Glass Bead Game Master of the day. Ever since, each of his successors had made
in it a few corrections, deletions, or additions, as changing times
indicated. The calendar was intended as
a vade mercum for still inexperienced Masters in their first years in office,
and led the Magister through his entire working and official year, from week to
week, reminding him of his duties sometimes in mere cue phrases, sometimes with
detailed descriptions and personal recommendations. Knecht found the page for the current week
and read it through attentively. He came
upon nothing surprising or especially urgent, but at the end of the section
stood the following lines:
"Gradually begin to turn your
thoughts to the coming annual Game. It
seems early, and in fact might seem to you premature. Nevertheless I advise you: Unless you already
have a plan for the Game in your head, from now on let not a week pass,
certainly not a month, without turning your thoughts to the future Game. Make a note of your ideas; take the pattern
of a classical Game with you now and then, even on official journeys, and look
it over whenever you have a free half-hour.
Prepare yourself not be trying to force good ideas to come, but by
recalling frequently from now on that in the coming months a fine and festive
task awaits you, for which you must constantly strengthen, compose, and attune
yourself."
These words had been written some
three generations before by a wise old man and master of his art, at a time
incidentally in which the Glass Bead Game had probably reached its supreme
refinement in the formal sense. In those
days the Games had attained a delicacy and wealth of ornamentation in their
execution comparable to the arts of architecture and decoration in the late
Gothic or rococo periods. For some two
decades it had been a Game so fragile that it seemed as if it were really being
played with glass beads, a seemingly glassy game almost empty of content, a
seemingly coquettish and wanton pastime full of frail embellishments, an airy
dance, sometimes a tightrope dance, with the subtlest rhythmic structure. There were players who spoke of the style of
those days as if it were a lost talisman, and others who condemned it as
superficial, cluttered with ornamentation, decadent, and unmanly. It had been one of the masters and
co-creators of that style who had composed the sagacious advice and
admonishments in the Magister's calendar, and as Joseph Knecht searchingly read
his words a second and third time he felt a gay, blissful stirring in his heart,
a mood such as he had experienced only once before, it seemed to him. When he reflected, he realized that it had
been in that meditation before his investiture; it was the mood that had swept
him as he imagined that strange round-dance, the round between the Music Master
and Joseph, Master and beginner, age and youth.
It had been a very old man who had thought and set down these words:
"Let no week pass..." and "... not by trying to force good ideas." It had been a man who had held the high
office of Master of the Game for at least twenty years, perhaps much
longer. And in that sportively rococo
age he must undoubtedly have dealt with an extremely spoiled and arrogant
elite. He had devised and celebrated
more than twenty of those brilliant annual Games which in those days lasted for
a month - an old man for whom the annually recurring task of composing a grand,
solemn Game must long since have ceased to be merely a high honour and joy,
must have become far more a burden demanding great effort, a chore to which he
had to attune himself, and somewhat stimulate himself.
At this moment Knecht felt something
more than grateful reverence towards this wise old man and experienced advisor
- for the calendar had already served him frequently as a valuable guide. He also felt a joyous, a gay and
high-spirited superiority, the superiority of youth. For among the many cares of a Magister Ludi,
with which he had already become acquainted, this particular care did not
occur. He really did not have to force
himself to think about the annual Game in good time, or worry about not
encountering this task in a sufficiently joyful and composed spirit. He need not fear any lack of enterprise, let
alone ideas, for such a Game. On the
contrary, Knecht, who had at times during these few months given an impression
of being aged beyond his years, felt at the moment young and strong.
He was unable to yield to this fine
feeling for long. He could not savour it
to the full, for his brief period of rest was almost over. But the inspiriting joyful emotion remained
in him; he took it with him when he left; and so the brief rest in the
Magister's garden, and his reading of the calendar, had after all borne
fruit. It had given him relaxation and a
moment of happily heightened vitality, but it had also produced two inspired
thoughts, both of which at once assumed the character of decisions. First, whenever he too became old and weary
he would lay down his office the moment the composition of the annual Game
became a troublesome duty and he found himself at a loss for ideas. Secondly, he would in fact start work on his
first annual Game soon, and he would call in Tegularius to be his foremost
assistant in this work. That would
gratify and gladden his friend, and for himself it would be a good trial step
towards a new modus vivendi for their temporarily arrested
friendship. For the initiative could not
come from Fritz; it had to come from the Magister himself.
The task would certainly give his
friend plenty to do. Ever since his stay
in Mariafels, Knecht had been nurturing an idea for a Glass Bead Game which he
now decided to use for his first ceremonial Game as Magister. The pretty idea was to base the structure and
dimensions of the Game on the ancient ritual Confucian pattern for the building
of a Chinese house: orientation by the points of the compass, the gates, the
spirit wall, the relationships and functions of buildings and courtyards, their
co-ordination with the constellations, the calendar and family life, and the
symbolism and stylistic principles of the garden. Long ago, in studying a commentary on the I
Ching, he had thought the mythic order and significance of these rules made
an unusually appealing and charming symbol of the cosmos and of man's place in
the universe. The age-old mythic spirit
of the people in this tradition of domestic architecture had also seemed to him
wonderfully and intimately fused with the mandarin and magisterial spirit of
speculative scholarliness. He had
lovingly dwelt on the plan for this Game, though without so far setting down
any of it, often enough for the Game to have really been formulated as a whole
in his mind; but since taking office he had not had a chance to apply himself
to it. Now he resolved to construct his
festival Game on this Chinese idea; and if Fritz proved receptive to the spirit
of the plan, he would ask him to begin at once on the necessary background
studies and the procedure for translating it into the Game language. There was one difficulty: Tegularius knew no
Chinese. It was far too late for him to
learn it now. But with some briefing
from Knecht himself and from the Far Eastern College, and some reading up on
the subject, there was no reason why Tegularius could not become sufficiently
acquainted with the magical symbolism of Chinese architecture. After all, no philological questions were
involved. Still, that would take time,
especially for a pampered person like his friend who did not feel up to working
every day, and so it was well to start the business going at once. In this respect, then, he realized with a
smile and pleasant feelings of surprise, the cautious old author of the Pocket
Calendar had been perfectly right.
The very next day, since his office
hours happened to end early, he sent for Tegularius. He came, made his bow with that rather
markedly submissive and humble expression he had assumed in his dealings with
Knecht, and was quite astonished not to be addressed in the laconic manner his
friend had recently adopted. Instead,
Joseph nodded to him with a certain roguishness and asked: "Do you recall
that in our student years we once had something like a quarrel in which I
failed to convert you to my view? It was
about the value and importance of Far Eastern studies, particularly Chinese
subjects, and I tried to persuade you to spend a while in the college learning
Chinese? You do remember? Well, I am thinking again what a pity that I
could not persuade you at that time. It
would be so fortunate now if you knew Chinese.
There's a marvellous project on which we could collaborate."
He teased his friend a while longer,
holding him in suspense, and finally came out with his proposal: that he wanted
to begin working out the annual Game and would like Fritz, if it were agreeable
to him, to take over a large part of this work, just as he had helped with the
preparations for the prize Game in the elite competition while Knecht was
living among the Benedictines. Fritz
looked at him almost incredulously, profoundly surprised and delightfully upset
by the merry tone and smiling face of his friend, who had been comporting
himself solely as superior and Magister towards him. Joyfully stirred, he was conscious not only
of the honour and confidence expressed by this proposal, but also grasped the
significance of this handsome gesture.
He realized that it was an attempt at healing the breach, at reopening
the newly closed door between his friend and himself. He brushed aside the factor of his ignorance
of Chinese, and promptly declared his willingness to be wholly at the Reverend
Magister's disposal and to devote his full time to developing the Game.
"Good," the Magister said,
"I accept your offer. So we shall
once again be sharing periods of work and studies, as we used to in those days
that seem strangely far away, when we worked through and fought through so many
a Game. I am glad, Tegularius. And now the main thing is for you to inform
yourself concerning the underlying idea of the Game. You must come to understand what a Chinese
house is and the meaning of the rules for its construction. I shall give you a recommendation to the Far
Eastern College; they will help you there.
Or - something else occurs to me - a prettier notion. Perhaps we can try Elder Brother, the man in
the Bamboo Grove, whom I used to tell you so much about. He may feel it beneath his dignity, or too
much trouble to bother with someone who knows no Chinese, but we might try it
at any rate. If he cares to, this man
can make a Chinese of you."
A message was sent to Elder Brother,
cordially inviting him to come to Waldzell for a while as the Glass Bead Game
Master's guest, since the cares of office did not permit the Magister Ludi to
call on him and explain what help he wanted of him. Elder Brother, however, did not leave his Bamboo
Grove. The messenger returned with a
note in Chinese ink and script. It read:
"It would be honourable to behold the great man. But movement leads to obstacles. Let two small bowls be used for the
sacrifice. The younger one greets the
exalted one."
Knecht thereupon persuaded his friend,
not without difficulty, to make the trip to the Bamboo Grove and ask to be
received and instructed. But the journey
proved fruitless. The hermit in the
grove received Tegularius almost deferentially, but answered every one of his
questions with amiable aphorisms in the Chinese language and did not invite him
to stay, despite the fine letter of recommendation from the hand of the
Magister Ludi, drawn elegantly on handsome paper. Rather out of sorts, having accomplished
nothing, Fritz returned to Waldzell. He
brought back a gift for the Magister: a sheet of paper on which was carefully
brushed an ancient verse about a goldfish.
Tegularius now had to try his luck in
the College of Far Eastern Studies.
There Knecht's recommendations proved more effective. As a Magister's emissary, the petitioner was
given a friendly reception and all the help he needed. Before long he had learned as much about his
subject as could possibly be acquired without knowledge of Chinese, and in the
course of his work he became so intrigued with Knecht's idea of using house
symbolism for the underpinning of the Game that his failure in the Bamboo Grove
ceased rankling, and was forgotten.
While he listened to Fritz's report on
his visit to Elder Brother, and afterwards, by himself, while he read the lines
about the goldfish, Knecht felt surrounded by the hermit's atmosphere. Vivid memories arose of his long-ago stay in
the hut, with the rustling bamboos and yarrow stalks outside, along with other
memories of freedom, leisure, student days, and the colourful paradise of
youthful dreams. How this brave,
crotchety hermit had contrived to withdraw and keep his freedom; how his
tranquil Bamboo Grove sheltered him from the world; how deeply and strongly he
lived in his neat, pedantic and wise Sinicism; in how beautifully concentrated
and inviolable a way the magic spell of his life's dream enclosed him year
after year and decade after decade, making a China of his garden, a temple of
his hut, divinities of his fish, and a sage of himself! With a sigh, Knecht shook off this
notion. He himself had gone another way,
or rather been led, and what counted was to pursue his assigned way
straightforwardly and faithfully, not to compare it with the ways of others.
Together with Tegularius, he sketched
out and composed his Game, using whatever leisure hours he could find. He left the entire task of selection in the
Archives, as well as the first and second drafts, to his friend. Given this new content, their friendship
acquired life and form once more, though the form differed from that of the
past. Fritz's eccentricities and
imaginative subtlety coloured and enriched the pattern of their Game. He was one of those eternally dissatisfied
and yet self-sufficient individuals who can linger for hours over a bouquet of
flowers or a set table that anyone else would regard as complete, rearranging
the details with restive pleasure and nervous loving manipulations, turning the
littlest task into an absorbing day's work.
In future years the association
persisted: the ceremonial Game represented a joint accomplishment each time
thereafter. For Tegularius it was a
double satisfaction to prove that he was more than useful, indispensable, to
his friend and Master in so important a matter, and to witness the public
performance of the Game as the unnamed collaborator whose part was nevertheless
well known to the members of the elite.
One day in the late autumn of Knecht's
first year in office, while his friend was still deep in his initial studies of
China, the Magister paused as he was skimming through the entries in his
secretariat's daily calendar. He had
come upon a note that caught his interest: "Student Petrus, arrived from
Monteport, recommended by Magister Musicae, brings special greetings from
former Music Master, requests lodgings and admission to Archives. Has been put up in student
guesthouse." Knecht could be easy
in his mind about leaving the student and his request to the Archive staff;
that was routine. But "special
greetings from the former Music Master" was directed only to himself. He sent for the student - who turned out to
be a quiet young man, at once contemplative and intense. Evidently he belonged to the Monteport elite;
at any rate he seemed accustomed to audiences with a Magister. Knecht asked him what message the former
Music Master had given him.
"Greetings," the student
said, "very cordial and respectful greetings for you, reverend sir, along
with an invitation."
Knecht asked him to sit down. Carefully choosing his words, the young man
continued: "As I have said, the venerable former Magister requested me to
give you his warmest regards. He also
hinted that he hoped to see you in the near future, in fact as soon as
possible. He invites you, or urges you,
to visit him before too long a time has passed, assuming, of course, that the
visit can be fitted in to an official journey and will not excessively
discommode you. That is the burden of
the message."
Knecht studied the young man,
convinced that he was one of the old Master's protégés. Cautiously, he queried: "How long do you
linger in our Archives, studiose?"
"Until I see that you are setting
out for Monteport, reverend sir," was the reply.
Knecht considered a moment. "Very well," he said. "And why have you not repeated the exact
wording of the ex-Master's message, as you should have done?"
Petrus unflinchingly met Knecht's
eyes, and answered slowly, still circumspectly choosing his words, as if he
were speaking a foreign language.
"There is no message, reverend sir," he said, "and there
is no exact wording. You know my
reverend Master and know that he has always been an extraordinarily modest
man. In Monteport it is said that in his
youth, while he was still a tutor but already recognized by the entire elite as
predestined to be the Music Master, they nicknamed him 'the great
would-be-small'. Well, this modesty, and
his piety no less, his helpfulness, thoughtfulness, and tolerance have actually
increased ever since he grew old, and more so since he resigned his
office. Undoubtedly you know that better
than I. This modesty of his would forbid
him to do anything like asking your Reverence for a visit, no matter how much
he desired it. That is why, Domine, I
have not been honoured with any such message and nevertheless have acted as if
I received one. If that was a mistake,
you are free to regard the nonexistent message as actually nonexistent."
Knecht smiled faintly. "And what about your work in the Game
Archives, my good fellow? Was that mere
pretext?"
"Oh no. I have to obtain the ciphers for a number of
clefs, so that I would in any case have had to cast myself upon your
hospitality in the near future. But I
thought it advisable to speed this little journey somewhat."
"Very good," the Magister
said, nodding, his expression once again grave.
"Is it permissible to ask into the reason for this haste?"
The young man closed his eyes for a
moment. His forehead was deeply
furrowed, as though the question pained him.
Then he looked once more into the Magister's face with his searching,
youthfully incisive gaze.
"The question cannot be answered
unless you would be so good as to frame it more precisely."
"Very well then," Knecht
said. "Is the former Master's
health bad? Does it give reason for
anxiety?"
Although the Magister had spoken with
the greatest calm, the student perceived his affectionate concern for the old
man. For the first time since the
beginning of their conversation a gleam of good will appeared in his rather
fierce eyes, and as he at last prepared to state candidly the real object of
his visit, his voice sounded a trace friendlier and less distant.
"Reverend Magister," he
said, "rest assured that my honoured Master's condition is by no means
bad. He has always enjoyed excellent
health and does so still, although his advanced age has naturally greatly
weakened him. It is not that his
appearance has so much changed or that his strength has suddenly begun to
diminish rapidly. He takes little walks,
plays a little music every day, and until recently even continued to give two
pupils organ lessons, beginners moreover, for he has always preferred to be
surrounded by the youngest pupils. But
the fact that he dismissed these pupils a few weeks ago is a symptom that
caught my attention all the same, and since then I have watched the venerable
Master rather more closely, and drawn my conclusions about him. That is the reason I have come. If anything justifies my conclusions, and my
taking such a step, it is the fact that I myself was formerly one of the former
Music Master's pupils, more or less one of his favourites, if I may say so;
moreover, for the past year I have served him as a kind of secretary and
companion, the present Music Master having named me to look after him. It was a very welcome assignment; there is
no-one in the world for whom I feel such veneration and attachment as I do for
my old teacher and patron. It was he who
opened up the mystery of music for me, and made me capable of serving it; and
everything I may have acquired since in the way of ideas, respect for the
Order, maturity, and inner concord has all come from him and is his doing. This past year I have been living at his
side, and although I am occupied with a few studies and courses of my own, I am
always at his disposal, his companion at table and on walks, making music with
him, and sleeping in an adjoining room.
Being so close to him all the time, I have been able to keep close watch
over the stages of - I suppose I must say, of his ageing, his physical
ageing. A few of my associates comment
pityingly or scornfully now and then about its being a peculiar assignment that
so young a person as myself should be the servant and companion of a very old man. But they do not know, and aside from myself I
suspect no-one really knows, what kind of ageing the Master is privileged to
undergo. They do not see him gradually
growing weaker and frailer in the body, taking less and less nourishment,
returning from his short walks more fatigued every time, without ever being
really sick, and at the same time becoming, in the tranquillity of age, more
and more spiritual, devout, dignified, and simple in heart. If my office of secretary and attendant has
any difficulties at all, they arise solely from the fact that his Reverence
does not want to be waited on and tended at all. He still wants only to give and never to
take."
"Thank you," Knecht
said. "I am happy to know that his
Reverence has so devoted and grateful a pupil at his side. And now, since you are not speaking on his
orders, tell me plainly why you feel that I should visit Monteport."
"You asked with concern about the
reverend former Music Master's health," the young man answered,
"evidently because my request suggested to you that he might be ill and it
could be high time to pay him one last visit.
To be frank, I do think it is high time.
He certainly does not seem to me to be close to his end, but his way of
taking leave of the world is quite unique.
For the past several months, for example, he has almost entirely lost
the habit of speaking; and although he always preferred brevity to loquacity,
he has now reached a degree of brevity and silence that frightens me
somewhat. At first, when he did not answer
a remark or question of mine, I thought that his hearing was beginning to
weaken. But he hears almost as well as
ever; I have made many tests of that. I
therefore had to assume that he was distracted and could no longer focus his
attention. But this, too, is not an
adequate explanation. Rather, it is as
if he has been on his way elsewhere for some time, and no longer lives entirely
among us, but more and more in his own world.
He rarely visits anyone or sends for anyone; aside from me he no longer
sees another person for days. Ever since
this started, this absentness, this detachment, I have tried to urge the few
friends whom I know he loved most to see him.
If you were to visit him, Domine, you would make your old friend
happy, I am sure of that, and you would still find relatively the same man whom
you have revered and loved. In a few
months, perhaps only in a few weeks, his pleasure in seeing you and his
interest in you will probably be much less; it is even possible that he would
no longer recognize you, or at any rate pay attention to you."
Knecht stood up, went to the window,
and stood there for a while looking out and breathing deeply. When he turned back to Petrus he saw that the
student was also standing, as though he thought the audience over. The Magister extended his hand.
"I thank you once more,
Petrus," he said. "As you
surely know, a Magister has all sorts of duties. I cannot put on my hat and leave at once;
schedules have to be rearranged. I hope
that I shall be able to leave by the day after tomorrow. Would that be time enough, and would you be
able to finish your work in the Archives by then? Yes?
Then I shall send for you when I am ready."
A few days later Knecht left for
Monteport, accompanied by Petrus. When
they reached the pavilion in the gardens where the former Music Master now
lived - it was a lovely and beautifully tranquil monastic cell - they heard
music from the back room, delicate, thin, but rhythmically firm and deliciously
serene music. There the old man sat
playing a two-part melody with two fingers - Knecht guessed at once that it
must be from one of the many books of duets written at the end of the sixteenth
century. They remained outside until the
music ended; then Petrus called out to his master that he was back and had
brought a visitor. The old man appeared
in the doorway and gave them a welcoming look.
The Music Master's welcoming smile, which everyone loved, had always had
an open, childlike cordiality, a radiant friendliness; Joseph Knecht had seen
it for the first time nearly thirty years before, and his heart had opened and
surrendered to this friendly man during that tense but blissful morning hour in
the music room. Since then he had seen
this smile often, each time with deep rejoicing and a strange stirring of his
heart; and while the Master's grey-shot hair had gradually turned completely
grey and then white, while his face had grown softer, his handshake fainter,
his movements less supple, the smile had lost none of its brightness and grace,
its purity and depth. And this time
Joseph, the old man's friend and former pupil, saw the change beyond a
doubt. The radiant, welcoming message of
that smiling old man's face, whose blue eyes and delicately flushed cheeks had
grown paler with the passing years, was both the same and not the same. It had grown deeper, more mysterious, and
intense. Only now, as he was exchanging
greetings, did Knecht really begin to understand what the student Petrus had
been concerned about, and how greatly he himself, while thinking he was making
a sacrifice for the sake of this concern, was in fact receiving a benefaction.
His friend Carlo Ferromonte was the
first person to whom he spoke about this.
Ferromonte was at this time librarian at the famous Monteport music
library, and Knecht called on him a few hours later. Their conversation has been preserved in a
letter of Ferromonte's.
"Our former Music Master was your
teacher, of course," Knecht said, "and you were very fond of
him. Do you see him often nowadays?"
"No," Carlo replied. "That is, I see him fairly often, of
course, when he is taking his walk, say, and I happen to be coming out of the
library. But I haven't talked with him
for months. He is more and more
withdrawing and no longer seems able to bear sociability. In the past he used to set aside an evening
for people like me, those among his former subordinates who are officials in
Monteport now; but that stopped about a year ago. It amazed us all that he went to Waldzell for
your investiture."
"Ah yes," Knecht said. "But when you do see him occasionally,
haven't you been struck by any change in him?"
"Oh yes. You mean his fine appearance, his
cheerfulness, his curious radiance? Of
course we have noticed that. While his
strength is diminishing, that serene cheerfulness is constantly
increasing. We have grown accustomed to
it. But I suppose it would strike
you."
"His secretary Petrus sees far
more of him than you do," Knecht exclaimed, "but he hasn't grown
accustomed to it, as you say. He came
specially to Waldzell, on a plausible excuse, of course, to urge me to make
this visit. What do you think of
him?"
"Of Petrus? He has a first-rate knowledge of music,
though he's more on the pedantic than the brilliant side - a rather slow-moving
if not slow-witted person. He's totally
devoted to the former Music Master and would give his life for him. I imagine his serving the master he idolizes
is the whole content of his life; he's obsessed by him. Didn't you have that impression too?"
"Obsessed? Yes, but I don't think this young man is
obsessed simply by a fondness and passion; he's not just infatuated with his
old teacher and making an idol out of him, but obsessed and enchanted by an
actual and genuine phenomenon which he sees better, or has better understood
emotionally, than the rest of you. I
want to tell you how it struck me. When
I went to the former Master today, after not having seen him for six months, I
expected little or nothing from this visit, after the hints his secretary had
dropped. I had simply been alarmed to
think that the revered old man might suddenly depart from us in the near
future, and had hastened here in order to see him at least once more. When he recognized and greeted me, his face
glowed, but he said no more than my name and shook hands with me. That gesture, too, and his hand, seemed to me
also to glow; the whole man, or at least his eyes, his white hair, and his rosy
skin, seemed to emit a cool, gentle radiance.
I sat down with him. He sent the
student away, just with a look, and there began the oddest conversation I have
ever had. At the beginning, I admit, it
was very disturbing and depressing for me, and shaming also, for I kept
addressing the old man, or asking questions, and his only answer to anything
was a look. I could not make out whether
my questions and the things I told him were anything but an annoying noise to
him. He confused, disappointed, and
tired me; I felt altogether superfluous and importunate. Whatever I said to the Master, the only
response was a smile and a brief glance.
If those glances had not been so full of good will and cordiality, I
would have been forced to think that he was frankly making fun of me, of my
stories and questions, of the whole useless trouble I had taken to come and
visit him. As a matter of fact, his
silence and his smile did indeed contain something of the sort. They were actually a form of fending me off
and reproving me, except that they were so in a different way, on a different
plane of meaning from, say, mocking words.
I had first to wear myself out and suffer total shipwreck with what had
seemed to me my patient efforts to start a conversation, before I began to
realize that the old man could easily have manifested a patience, persistence,
and politeness a hundred times greater than mine. Perhaps the episode lasted only fifteen
minutes or half an hour; it seemed to me like half a day. I began to feel sad, tired, and angry, and to
repent my journey. My mouth felt
dry. There sat the man I revered, my
patron, my friend, whom I had loved and trusted ever since I could think, who
had always responded to whatever I might say - there he sat and listened to me
talk, or perhaps did not listen to me, and had barricaded himself completely
behind his radiance and smile, behind his golden mask, unreachable, belonging
to a different world with different laws; and everything I tried to bring by
speech from our world to his ran off him like rain from a stone. At last - I had already given up hope - he
broke through the magic wall; at last he helped me; at last he said a few
words. Those were the only words I heard
him speak today.
"'You are tiring yourself,
Joseph," he said softly, his voice full of that touching friendliness and
solicitude you know so well. That was
all. 'You are tiring yourself,
Joseph.' As if he had long been watching
me engaged in a too-strenuous task and wanted to admonish me to stop. He spoke the words with some effort, as
though he had not used his lips for speaking for a long time. And at that moment he laid his hand on my arm
- it was light as a butterfly - looked penetratingly into my eyes, and
smiled. At that moment I was
conquered. Something of his cheerful
silence, something of his patience and calm, passed into me; and suddenly I
understood the old man and the direction his nature had taken, away from people
and towards silence, away from words and towards music, away from ideas and
towards unity. I understood what I was
privileged to see here, and now for the first time grasped the meaning of this
smile, this radiance. A saint, one who
had attained perfection, had permitted me to dwell in his radiance for an hour;
and blunderer that I am, I had tried to entertain him, to question him, to
seduce him into a conversation. Thank
God the light had not dawned on me too late.
He might have sent me away and thus rejected me forever. And I would have been deprived of the most
remarkable and wonderful experience I have ever had."
"I see," Ferromonte said
thoughtfully, "that you have discovered something akin to a saint in our
former Music Master. A good thing that
you and none other has told me about this.
I confess that I would have received such a story with the greatest
distrust from anyone else. I am, taken
all in all, not fond of mysticism; as a musician and historian I am
pedantically given to neat classification.
Since we Castalians are neither a Christian congregation nor a Hindu or
Taoist monastery, I do not see that any of us qualify for sainthood - that is,
for a purely religious category. Coming
from anyone but you, Joseph - excuse me, I mean Domine - I would regard
any such ascription as going off the deep end.
But I imagine that you do not mean to initiate canonization proceedings
for our former Master; you would scarcely find a competent consistory for them
in our Order. No, don't interrupt me, I
am speaking seriously; I don't mean that as a joke at all. You have told me about an experience, and I
must admit that I feel somewhat ashamed, because neither I nor any of my
colleagues here at Monteport has entirely overlooked the phenomenon you
describe. No, we have merely noticed it
and paid it little heed. I am reflecting
on the reason for my failure and my indifference. One explanation of course is the fact that you
encountered the Master's transformation as a finished product, whereas I
witnessed its slow evolution. The former
Magister you saw months ago and the one you saw today differed sharply from
each other, whereas we, his neighbours, meeting him every so often, observed
almost imperceptible changes. But I
admit that this explanation doesn't satisfy me.
If something like a miracle is taking place before our eyes, however
quietly and slowly, we ought to have been more stirred by it than we have been,
and would have been if we had been unbiased.
Here, I think, I've hit on the reason for my obtuseness: I was not in
the least unbiased. I failed to observe
the phenomenon because I did not want to observe it. Like everyone else, I noticed our Master's
increasing withdrawal and taciturnity, and the concurrent increase in his
friendliness, the every brighter and more ethereal radiance of his face when we
met and he responded mutely to my greeting.
I noticed that, of course, and so did everyone else. But I fought against seeing anything more in
it, and I fought against it not from lack of reverence for the old Magister,
but in part out of distaste for the cult of personality and enthusiasm in
general, in part out of distaste for such enthusiasm in this special case, for
the kind of cult the student Petrus practises with his idolization of the
Master. I've only fully realized all
this as you were telling your story."
Knecht laughed. "That was quite a roundabout way for you
to discover your own dislike for poor Petrus," he said. "But what now? Am I also a mystic and enthusiast? Am I too indulging in the forbidden cult of
personality and hagiolatry? Or are you
admitting to me what you won't admit to the student, that we have seen and
experienced something real, objective, not mere dreams and fancies?"
"Of course I admit it to
you," Carlo replied slowly and thoughtfully. "No-one is going to deny your experience
or doubt the beauty and serenity of the Magister who can smile at us in that
incredible way. The question is only:
Where do we classify this phenomenon?
What do we call it, how explain it?
That sounds like the pedantic schoolmaster, but we Castalians are
schoolmasters, after all; and if I want to classify and find a term for your
and our experience, it is not because I wish to destroy its beauty by
generalizing it, but because I want to describe and preserve it as distinctly
as possible. If on a journey I hear a
peasant or child humming a melody I have never heard before, that is likewise
an important experience for me, and if I immediately try to transcribe this
melody as precisely as I can, I am not dismissing and filing it away, but
paying due honour to my experience, and taking care that it is not lost."
Knecht gave him a friendly nod. "Carlo," he said, "it is a
great pity we can so rarely see each other any more. Not all friendships of youth survive
reunions. I came to you with my story
about the old Magister because you are the only person here whose knowing and
sharing it matters to me. Now I must
leave it to you to do with my story whatever you like, and to assign whatever
term you will to our Master's transfigured state. It would make me happy if you would call on
him and stay in his aura for a little while.
His state of grace, perfection, wisdom of age, bliss, or whatever you
want to call it, may belong to religious life.
But although we Castalians have neither denominations nor churches,
piety is not altogether unknown to us.
And our former Music Master in particular was always a thoroughly pious
person. Since there are accounts of
blessed, perfected, radiant, transfigured souls in many religions, why should
not our Castalian piety occasionally have this kind of blossoming?... It is
late by now - I ought to go to sleep - I must leave early tomorrow
morning. But I hope to come back
soon. Let me just briefly tell you the
end of my story. After he had said to
me, 'You are tiring yourself', I was at last able to stop straining at
conversation; I managed not only to be still, but to turn my will away from the
foolish goal of using words in the effort to probe this man of silence and draw
profit from him. And the moment I gave
up that effort and left everything to him, it all went of its own accord. You may want to substitute terms of your own
for mine, but please listen to me, even if I seem vague or confound
categories. I stayed about an hour or an
hour and a half with the old man, and I cannot communicate to you what went on
between us or what was exchanged; certainly no words were spoken. I felt, after my resistance was broken, only
that he received me into his peace and his brightness; cheerful serenity and a
wonderful peace enclosed the two of us.
Without my having deliberately and consciously meditated, it somewhat
resembled an unusually successful and gladdening meditation whose subject might
have been the Magister's life. I saw or
felt him and the course of his growth from the time he first entered my life,
when I was a boy, up to this present moment.
His was a life of devotion and work, but free of obstructions, free of
ambition, and full of music. It was as
if by becoming a musician and Music Master he had chosen music as one of the
ways towards man's highest goal, inner freedom, purity, perfection, and as
though ever since making that choice he had done nothing but let himself be
more and more permeated, transformed, purified by music - his entire self from
his nimble, clever pianist's hands and his vast, well-stocked musician's memory
to all the parts and organs of body and soul, to his pulses and breathing, to
his sleep and dreaming - so that he was now only a symbol, or rather a
manifestation, a personification of music.
At any rate, I experienced what radiated from him, or what surged back
and forth between him and me like rhythmic breathing, entirely as music, as an
altogether immaterial esoteric music which absorbs everyone who enters its
magic circle as a song for many voices absorbs an entering voice. Perhaps a non-musician would have perceived
this grace in different images: an astronomer might have seen it as a moon
circling around a planet, or a philologist heard it as some magical primal
language containing all meanings. But
enough for now, I must be going. It's
been a great pleasure, Carlo."
We have reported this episode in some
detail, since the Music Master held so important a place in Knecht's life and
heart. We have also been drawn into
prolixity by the chance circumstance that Knecht's talk with Ferromonte has
come down to us in the latter's own record of it in a letter. This is certainly the earliest and most
reliable account of the Music Master's "transfiguration"; later, of
course, there was a swarm of legends and embroideries.
EIGHT
THE TWO POLES
THE ANNUAL
GAME, remembered to this day as the Chinese House Game, and often quoted, was
for Knecht and his friend Tegularius a happy outcome to their labours, and for
Castalia and the Boards proof that they had done well to summon Knecht to the
highest office. Once more Waldzell, the
Players' Village, and the elite had the satisfaction of a splendid and exultant
festival. Not for many years had the
annual Game been such an event as it was this time, with the youngest and most-discussed
Magister in Castalian history making his first public appearance and showing
what he could do. Moreover, Waldzell was
determined to make up for the failure and disgrace of the previous year. This time no-one lay ill, no cowed deputy
awaited the great ceremony with apprehension, coldly ringed by the malevolent
distrust of the elite, faithfully but listlessly supported by nervous
officials. Quiet, inaccessible, entirely
the high priest, white-and-gold-clad major piece of the solemn chessboard of symbols,
the Magister celebrated his and his friend's work. Radiating calm, strength, and dignity, beyond
the reach of any profane summons, he appeared in the festival hall in the midst
of his many acolytes, conducting step after step of his Game with the ritual
gestures. With a luminous golden stylus
he delicately inscribed character after character on the small tablet before
him, and the same characters promptly appeared in the script of the Game,
enlarged a hundredfold, upon the gigantic board on the rear wall of the hall,
to be spelled out by a thousand whispering voices, called out by the Speakers,
broadcast to the country and the world.
And when at the end of the first act he wrote the summary formula for
that act upon his tablet, with graceful and impressive poise gave instructions
for the meditation, laid down the stylus and, taking his seat, assumed the
perfect meditation posture, in the hall, in the Players' Village, throughout
Castalia and beyond, in many countries of the globe, the faithful devotees of
the Glass Bead Game reverently sat down for the selfsame meditation and
sustained it until the moment the Magister in the hall rose to his feet once
again. It was all as it had been many
times before, and yet it was all stirring and new. The abstract and seemingly timeless world of
the Game was flexible enough to respond, in a hundred nuances, to the mind,
voice, temperament, and handwriting of a
given personality, and the personality in this case was great and cultivated
enough to subordinate his own inspirations to the inviolable inner laws of the
Game itself. The assistants and fellow
players, the elite, obeyed like well-drilled soldiers, yet each one of them,
even though he might be executing only the bows or helping to draw the curtain
around the meditating Master, seemed to be performing his own Game, inspired by
his own ideas. But it was the crowd, the great congregation filling
the hall and all of Waldzell, the thousands of souls who followed the Master
down the hieratic and labyrinthine ways through the endless, multidimensional
imagery of the Game, who furnished the fundamental chord for the ceremony, the
low, throbbing base bellnote, which for the more simple-hearted members of the
community is the best and almost the only experience the festival yields, but
which also awakens awe in the subtle virtuosi and critics of the elite, in the
acolytes and officials all the way up to the leader and Master.
It was an exalted festival. Even the envoys from the outside world sensed
this, and proclaimed it; and in the course of those days a good many new
converts were won over to the Glass Bead Game forever. In the light of this triumph, however, Joseph
Knecht, at the end of the ten-day festival, made some highly curious remarks in
summing up the experience of his friend Tegularius. "We may be content," he said. "Yes, Castalia and the Glass Bead Game
are wonderful things; they come close to being perfect. Only perhaps they are too much so, too
beautiful. They are so beautiful that
one can scarcely contemplate them without fearing for them. It is not pleasant to think that some day
they are bound to pass away as everything else does. And yet one must think of that."
With this historic statement, the
biographer is forced to approach the most delicate and mysterious part of his
task. Indeed, he would have preferred to
postpone it for a while longer and continue - with that placidity which clear
and unambiguous conditions afford to the narrator of them - to depict Knecht's
successes, his exemplary conduct of his office, the brilliant peak of his
life. But it would seem to us
misleading, and out of keeping with our subject, if we failed to take account
of the duality, or call it polarity, in the revered Master's life and
character, even though it was so far known to no-one but Tegularius. From now on our task, in fact, will be to
accept this dichotomy in Knecht's soul, or rather this ever-alternating
polarity, as the central feature of his nature, and to affirm it as such. As a matter of fact, a biographer who thought
it proper to deal with the life of a Castalian Magister entirely in the spirit
of hagiography, ad maiorem gloriam Castaliae, would not find it at all
difficult to describe Joseph Knecht's years as Magister, with the sole
exception of the last moments, entirely as a glorious list of achievements,
duties performed, and successes. To the
eye of the historian who holds solely to the documented facts, Magister
Knecht's conduct in office appears as blameless and praiseworthy as that of any
Glass Bead Game Master in history, not even excepting that of Magister Ludwig
Wassermaler, who reigned during the era of Waldzell's most exuberant passion
for the Game. Nevertheless, Knecht's
period in office came to a most unusual, sensational, and to the minds of many
judges scandalous end, and this end was not mere chance or misfortune but a
wholly logical outcome of what went before.
It is part of our task to show that it by no means contradicts the
reverend Master's brilliant and laudable achievements. Knecht was a great, an exemplary administrator,
an honour to his high office, an irreproachable Glass Bead Game Master. But he saw and felt the glory of Castalia,
even as he devoted himself to it, as an imperilled greatness that was on the
wane. He did not participate in its life
thoughtlessly and unsuspectingly, as did the great majority of his fellow
Castalians, for he knew about its origins and history, was conscious of it as a
historical entity, subject to time, washed and undermined by time's pitiless
surges. This sensitivity to the pulse of
historical progress and this feeling for his own self and activities as a cell
carried along in the stream of growth and transformation, had ripened within
him in the course of his historical studies.
Much was due to the influence of the great Benedictine Father Jacobus,
but the germs of such consciousness had been present within him long
before. Anyone who honestly tries to
explore the meaning of that life, to analyze its idiosyncrasy, will easily
discover these germs.
The man who could say, on one of the
finest days of his life, at the end of his first festival Game and after a
singularly successful and impressive demonstration of the Castalian spirit,
"It is not pleasant to think that some day Castalia and the Glass Bead
Game are bound to pass away - and yet one must think of that" - this man
had early on, long before he had acquired insight into history, borne within
himself a metaphysical sense of the transitoriness of all that has evolved and
the problematical nature of everything created by the human mind. If we go back to his boyhood we will remember
his depression and uneasiness whenever a fellow pupil disappeared from Escholz
because he had disappointed his teachers and been demoted from the elite to the
ordinary schools. There is no record
that a single one of those expelled had been a close friend of young Joseph;
what disturbed him was not personal loss, not the absence of this or that
individual. Rather, his grief was caused
by the mild shock to his child's faith in the permanence of Castalian order and
Castalian perfection. He himself took
his vocation so seriously as something sacred, and yet there were boys and
youths who had been granted the happiness of acceptance into the elite schools
of the Province and had squandered this boon, thrown it away. This was shocking, and a sign of the power of
the world outside Castalia. Perhaps also
- though here we can only speculate - such incidents aroused the boy's first
doubts of the Board of Educators' infallibility, since this Board now and then
brought to Castalia pupils whom it subsequently had to dismiss again. There is no saying whether these earliest
stirrings of criticism of authority also affected his thinking.
In any case, the boy felt every
dismissal of an elite pupil not only as a misfortune, but also as an
impropriety, an ugly glaring stain, whose presence was in itself a reproach
involving all of Castalia. This, we
think, is the basis for that feeling of shock and distraction which Knecht as a
schoolboy experienced on such occasions.
Outside, beyond the boundaries of the Province, was a way of life which
ran counter to Castalia and its laws, which did not abide by the Castalian
system and could not be tamed and sublimated by it. And of course he was aware of the presence of
this world in his own heart also. He too
had impulses, fantasies, and desires which ran counter to the laws that
governed him, impulses which he had only gradually managed to subdue by hard
effort.
These impulses, he concluded, could be
so strong in a good many pupils that they erupted despite all restraints and
led those who yielded to them away from the elite world of Castalia and into
that other world which was dominated not by discipline and cultivation of the
mind, but by instincts. To one striving
for Castalian virtue that world seemed sometimes a wicked underworld, sometimes
a tempting playground and arena. For
generations many young consciences have experienced the concept of sin in this
Castalian form. And many years later, as
an adult student of history, Knecht was to perceive more distinctly that
history cannot come into being without the substance and the dynamism of this
sinful world of egoism and instinctuality, and that even such sublime creations
as the Order were born in this cloudy torrent and sooner or later will be
swallowed up by it again. This is what
underlay all the powerful movements, aspirations, and upheavals in Knecht's
life. Nor was this ever merely an
intellectual problem for him. Rather, it
engaged his innermost self more than any other problem, and he felt it as
partly his responsibility. His was one
of those natures which can sicken, languish, and die when they see an ideal
they have believed in, or the country and community they love, afflicted with
ills.
Tracing this same thread further, we
come in Knecht's first period in Waldzell, his final years as a schoolboy, and
his significant meeting with the great pupil Designori, which we have described
in detail in its proper place. This
encounter between the ardent adherent of the Castalian ideals and the worldling
Plinio was not only intense and long-lasting in its effects, but also had a
deeply symbolic significance for young Knecht.
For the strenuous and important role imposed upon him at that time,
seemingly sent his way by sheer chance, in fact so closely corresponded with
his whole nature that we are tempted to say his later life was nothing but a
reiteration of this role, an ever more perfect adaptation to it. The role, of course, was that of champion and
representer of Castalia. He had to play
it once more some ten years later against Father Jacobus, and as Master of the
Glass Bead Game he played it to the end: champion and representer of the Order
and its laws, but one who was constantly endeavouring to learn from his
antagonist and to promote not the rigid isolation of Castalia, but its vital
collaboration and confrontation with the outside world. The oratorical contest with Designori had
been partly a game. With his far more
substantial friendly antagonist, Father Jacobus, it was altogether
serious. He had proved himself against
both opponents, had matured in his encounter with them, had learned from them,
had given as much as he had taken in the course of their disputes and exchanges
of views. In neither case had he
defeated his antagonist; from the start that had not, after all, been the goal
of the disputations. But he had
succeeded in making each of them respect him as a person, and the principles
and ideal he advocated. Even if the
disputation with the learned Benedictine had not led directly to its practical
result, the establishment of a semi-official Castalian envoy at the Holy See,
it would have been of greater value than the majority of Castalians could have
guessed.
These embattled friendships with
Plinio Designori and with the wise old Benedictine had provided Knecht, who
otherwise had had little to do with the world outside Castalia, with some
knowledge, or at any rate some intuitions, about that world. Few persons in Castalia could say the same
for themselves. Except for his stay in
Mariafels, which could scarcely give him any acquaintance with the real life of
the outside world, he had neither seen nor experienced this worldly life since
his early childhood. But through
Designori, through Jacobus, and through his historical studies he had acquired
a lively sense of its reality. His
intimations, though they were most intuitive and accompanied by very meagre
experience, had made him more knowledgeable and more receptive to the world
than the majority of his Castalian fellow citizens, including the higher
authorities. He had always been a loyal
and authentic Castalian, but he never forgot that Castalia was only a small
part of the world, though for him the most valuable and beloved part.
What was the character of his
friendship with Fritz Tegularius, that difficult and problematical character,
that sublime acrobat of the Glass Bead Game, that pampered and high-strung pure
Castalian whose brief visit among the coarse Benedictines in Mariafels had made
him so wretched that he declared he could not have stayed there a week, and
enormously admired his friend for enduring the life there quite well for two
years? We have entertained a wide
variety of thoughts about this friendship, have had to reject some of them,
while others seemed to stand up to examination.
All these thoughts centred around the question of what the root and the
significance of this lasting friendship must have been. Above all we should not forget that in all of
Knecht's friendships, with the possible exception of that with the Benedictine
Father, he was not the seeking, courting, and needy partner. He attracted, he was admired, envied, and
loved simply for his noble nature; and from a certain stage of his
"awakening" on he was even conscious of this gift. Thus he had already been admired and courted
by Tegularius in his early student years, but had always kept him at a certain
distance.
Nevertheless, there are many tokens
that he was really fond of his friend.
As we see it, it was not just the latter's outstanding talent, his
nervous brilliance and receptivity, particularly to all the problems of the
Glass Bead Game, that drew Knecht to him.
Rather, Knecht took so strong an interest not only in his friend's great
gifts, but also in his faults, in his sickliness, in precisely those qualities
that other Waldzellers found disturbing and frequently intolerable in
Tegularius. This eccentric was utterly
Castalian. His whole mode of existence,
inconceivable outside the Province, was so entirely consonant with its
atmosphere and level of culture that if he had not been so eccentric and hard
to get along with he might have deserved the epithet arch-Castalian. And yet this arch-Castalian hardly fitted in
with his fellows; he was no more popular with them than with his superiors, the
officials. He constantly disturbed
people, repeatedly offended them, and but for the stout protection and guidance
of his prudent friend he would probably have been destroyed very early. For what was called his illness was primarily
a vice, a character defect, a form of rebelliousness. He was profoundly unhierarchical, totally
individualistic in his attitudes and his conduct. He adjusted to the system only enough to pass
muster within the Order.
He was a good, even a shining light as
a Castalian to the extent that he had a many-sided mind, tirelessly active in
scholarship as well as in the art of the Glass Bead Game, and enormously
hard-working; but in character, in his attitude towards the hierarchy and the
morality of the Order he was a very mediocre, not to say bad Castalian. The greatest of his vices was a persistent
neglect of meditation, which he refused to take seriously. The purpose of meditation, after all, is
adaptation of the individual to the hierarchy, and application in it might very
well of cured him of his neurasthenia.
For it infallibly helped him whenever, after a period of bad conduct,
excessive excitement, or melancholia, his superiors disciplined him by
prescribing strict meditation exercises under supervision. Even Knecht, kindly disposed and forgiving
though he was, frequently had to resort to this measure.
There was no question about it:
Tegularius was a wilful, moody person who refused to fit in to his
society. Every so often he would display
the liveliness of his intellect. When
highly stimulated he could be entrancing; his mordant wit sparkled and he
overwhelmed everyone with the audacity and richness of his sometimes sombre
inspirations. But basically he was
incurable, for he did not want to be cured; he cared nothing for co-ordination
and a place in the scheme of things. He
loved nothing but his freedom, his perpetual student status, and preferred
spending his whole life as the unpredictable and obstinate loner, the gifted
fool and nihilist, to following the path of subordination to the hierarchy and
thus attaining peace. He cared nothing
for peace, had no regard for the hierarchy, hardly minded reproof and
isolation. Certainly he was a most
inconvenient and indigestible component in a community whose ideal was harmony
and orderliness. But because of this
very troublesomeness and indigestibility he was, in the midst of such a limpid
and prearranged world, a constant source of vital unrest, a reproach, an
admonition and warning, a spur to new, bold, forbidden, intrepid ideas, an
unruly, stubborn sheep in the herd. And,
to our mind, this was the very reason his friend cherished him.
Certainly there was always a measure
of pity in Knecht's relationship to Tegularius.
His imperilled and usually unhappy state appealed to all his friend's
chivalric feelings. But this would not
have sufficed to sustain this friendship after Knecht's elevation to an
official life overburdened with work, duties, and responsibilities. We take the view that Tegularius was no less
necessary and important in Knecht's life than Designori and Father Jacobus had
been. Moreover, exactly like the other
two, he was a dynamic element, a small open window that looked out upon new
prospects. In this peculiar friend
Knecht sensed, we think, the features of a type. As time went on he realized that the type was
one not yet existent except for Tegularius.
For Tegularius was a portent of the Castalian as he might some day
become unless the life of Castalia were rejuvenated and revitalized by new
encounters, new forces. Like most
solitary geniuses, Tegularius was a forerunner.
He actually lived in a Castalia that did not yet exist, but might come
into being in the future; in a Castalia still sequestered from the world, but
inwardly degenerating from senility and from relaxation of the meditative
morality of the Order; a Castalia in which the highest flights of the mind were
still possible, as well as totally absorbed devotion to sublime values - but
this highly developed, freely roaming intellectual culture no longer had any
goals beyond egotistic enjoyment of its own overbred faculties. Knecht saw Tegularius as the two things in
one: embodiment of the finest gifts to be found in Castalia, and at the same time
a portent of the demoralization and downfall of those abilities. Measures must be taken to keep Castalia from
becoming a dream-ridden realm populated entirely by Tegulariuses.
The danger was remote, but it was
there. Castalia as Knecht knew it needed
only to build its walls of aristocratic isolation slightly higher, needed only
to undergo a decline in the discipline of the Order, a lowering of the
hierarchical morality, and Tegularius would cease to be an eccentric
individual; he would become the prototype of a deteriorating Castalia. Magister Knecht's most important insight, the
source of all his concern, was that the potentiality for such decadence
existed. The disposition for it was
there; in fact it had already begun.
Probably he would have realized this much later, perhaps never at all,
had not this future Castalian, whom he knew so intimately, lived at his
side. To Knecht's keen instincts,
Tegularius was a danger signal, as the first victim of a still unknown disease
would be for a clever physician. And
Fritz was after all no average man; he was an aristocrat, a supremely gifted
person. If the still unknown disease
just coming to light in this forerunner Tegularius were ever to spread and
change the whole image of Castalian man, if the Province and the Order were
ever to assume the degenerate, morbid form latent in them, these future
Castalians would not be all Tegulariuses.
Not everyone would have his precious gifts, his melancholy genius, his
flickering intensity and acrobatic artistry.
Rather, the majority of them would have only his unreliability, his
tendency to fritter away his talents, his lack of any discipline or sense of
community. In times of anxiety Knecht
seems to have had such gloomy premonitions; and surely it cost him a great deal
of strength to overcome them, partly by meditation, partly by intensified
activity.
The very case of Tegularius offers an
instructive example of the way Knecht attempted to overcome morbidity and
temperamental difficulties by meeting them directly. But for Knecht's watchfulness and pedagogic
guidance, his imperilled friend would in all likelihood have come to grief
early in his life. What is more, he
would have undoubtedly introduced endless disturbances into the Players'
Village. There had in any case been a
good deal of such discord ever since Fritz had become a member of the
elite. With consummate art the Magister
kept his friend tolerably well on course, while at the same time contriving to
employ his gifts in the interests of the Glass Bead Game and to extract fine
achievements from Fritz's talent. The
patience with which he coped with the latter's eccentricities, overcoming them
by tirelessly appealing to his virtues, must be called a masterpiece in the
technique of human relations. Incidentally,
it would be a fine project which might yield some surprising insights (we
should like to recommend it strongly to some of our historians of the Glass
Bead Game) to subject the annual Games of Knecht's magistracy to a close
analysis of their stylistic peculiarities.
These Games, so majestic and yet sparkling with delightful inspirations
and formulations, so scintillating and original in their rhythms, yet such a
far cry from smug virtuosity, owed their underlying idea, their development,
and the slant of their series of meditations exclusively to Knecht's mind,
whereas the fine polishing and the minor details of Game technique were mostly
the work of his collaborator Tegularius.
Even had these Games been forgotten, Knecht's life and work would lose none
of its attractiveness and pertinence for posterity. But to our great good fortune they have been
recorded and preserved like all official Games.
And they do not merely lie dead in the Archives. They survive in our traditions to this day,
are studied by the young, supply cherished examples for many a Game course and
many a seminar. And in them the
collaborator survives, who otherwise would be forgotten, or would at any rate
be no more than a strange, shadowy figure out of the past, haunting a host of
anecdotes.
Thus, in managing to assign a place to
his refractory friend Fritz, and in providing him with an area in which he
could work effectively, Knecht enriched the history and culture of Waldzell,
while at the same time assuring his friend's memory a certain permanence. Incidentally, this great educator was well
aware of the real basis of his educational influence on his friend. That basis was his friend's love and admiration. As we have seen, the Magister's harmonious
personality, his innate sense of mastery, had almost from the first won over so
many other fellow aspirants and pupils that he counted on this more than on his
high office to sustain his authority, despite his kindly and conciliatory
nature. He sensed precisely the effect
of a friendly word of greeting or appreciation, or of withdrawal and
disregard. Long afterwards one of his
most ardent disciples related that one time Knecht did not speak a single word
to him in class and in his seminar, seemingly did not see him, ignored him completely
- and that in all the years of his schooling this had been the bitterest and
most effective punishment he had ever known.
We have considered these retrospective
observations essential in order that our reader may perceive the two antipodal
tendencies in Knecht's personality.
Having followed our account to the present peak of Knecht's remarkable
life, the reader will then be prepared for its final phases. The two tendencies or antipodes of this life,
its Yin and Yang, were the conservative tendency towards loyalty, towards
unstinting service of the hierarchy on the one hand, and on the other hand the
tendency towards "awakening", towards advancing, towards apprehending
reality. For Joseph Knecht in his role
of believer and devoted servant, the Order, Castalia, the Glass Bead Game were
sacrosanct. To him in his awakened,
clairvoyant, pioneering role they were, irrespective of their value, full-grown
institutions, their struggles long past, vulnerable to the danger of ageing,
sterility, and decadence. The idea
underlying them always remained sacred to him, but he had recognized the
particular forms that idea had assumed as mutable, perishable, in need of
criticism. He served a community of the
mind whose strength and rationality he admired; but he thought it was running
grave risks by tending to see its own existence as the be-all and end-all, by
forgetting its duties to the country and the outside world. If it continued along this course, growing
increasingly separated from the whole of life, it was doomed to fall into
sterility. In those earlier years he had
the presentiments of this peril; that was why he had so often hesitated,
fearing to devote himself solely to the Glass Bead Game. In discussions with the monks, and especially
with Father Jacobus, the problem had come to mind ever more forcibly, even
while he was bravely defending Castalia.
Ever since he had been back in Waldzell, and holding office as Magister
Ludi, he had continually seen tangible symptoms of that danger: in the loyal
but unworldly and formalistic methods of work among his own officials and in
many of the other departments; in the highly intelligent but arrogant expertise
of the Waldzell elite; and last but not least, in the touching but worrisome
personality of his friend Tegularius.
With his first difficult year in
office behind him, he resumed his historical studies. For the first time he examined the history of
Castalia with his eyes open, and soon became convinced that things were not
going as well as the inhabitants of the Province thought. Castalia's relationships with the outside
world, the reciprocal influences operating between Castalia and the life,
politics, and culture of the country, had been on the downgrade for decades. Granted, the Federal Council still consulted
the Board of Educators on pedagogical and cultural matters; the Province
continued to supply the country with good teachers and to pronounce on all
questions of scholarship. But these
matters had assumed a routine and mechanical cast. Young men from the various elites of Castalia
nowadays volunteered less eagerly, and less frequently, for teaching
assignments extra muros.
Individuals and authorities in the rest of the country less frequently
turned for advice to Castalia, whose opinion had in earlier times been sought
and listened to even, for example, on important cases of law. If the cultural level of Castalia were
compared with that of the country at large, it became apparent that the two
were by no means approaching each other; rather, they were moving apart in a
deeply troubling way. The more
cultivated, specialized, overbred that Castalian intellectuality became, the
more the world inclined to let the Province be and to regard it not as a
necessity, as daily bread, but as a foreign body, something to be a little
proud of, like a precious antique which for the time being the owners would not
like to give up or give away, but which they would happily keep stored in the
attic. Without fully grasping the situation,
people on the outside attributed to Castalians a mentality, a morality, and a
sense of self which was no longer viable in real, active life.
The interest of the country's citizens
in the life of the Pedagogic Province, their sympathy with its institutions and
especially with the Glass Bead Game, were likewise on the downgrade, as was the
sympathy of the Castalians for the life and the fate of the country. Knecht had long ago realized that this lack
of interest in each other was a grave fault in both, and it was a grief to him
that as Master of the Glass Bead Game in his Players' Village he dealt
exclusively with Castalians and specialists.
Hence his endeavours to devote himself more and more to beginners'
courses, his desire to have the youngest pupils - for the younger they were, the
more they were still linked with the whole of life and the outside world, the
less tamed, trained, and specialized they were.
Often he felt a wild craving for the world, for people, for unreflective
life - assuming that such still existed out there in the unknown world. Most of us have now and then been touched by
this longing, this sense of emptiness, this feeling of living in far too
rarefied an atmosphere. The Board of Educators,
too, is familiar with this problem; at least it has from time to time looked
for methods to combat it, such as by laying more stress on physical exercises
and games, and by experimenting with various crafts and gardening. If our observations are correct, the
directorate of the Order had of late shown a tendency to abandon some
overrefined specialities in the scholarly disciplines and to emphasize instead
the practice of meditation. One need not
be a sceptic or prophet of doom, nor a disloyal member of the Order, to concede
that Joseph Knecht was right in recognizing, a considerable time before the
present day, that the complicated and sensitive apparatus of our republic had
become an ageing organism, in many respects badly in need of rejuvenation.
As we have mentioned, from his second
year in office on we find him engaging in historical studies again. In addition to his investigations of
Castalian history, he spent much of his leisure reading all the large and small
papers that Father Jacobus had written on the history of the Benedictine
Order. He also found opportunities to
vent some of his opinions on historical matters, and have his interest kindled
anew in conversations with Monsieur Dubois and with one of the Keuperheim
philologists, who as secretary of the Board was present at all its sessions. Such talk was always a delight to him, and a
welcome refreshment, for among his daily associates he lacked such
opportunities. In fact the apathy of
these associates towards any dealings with history was embodied in the person
of his friend Fritz. Among other
materials we have come across a sheet of notes on a conversation in which
Tegularius insisted that history was a subject altogether unfit for study by a
Castalian.
"Of course it's possible to talk
wittily, amusingly, even emotionally, if need be, about interpretations of
history, the philosophy of history," he declared. "There's as much sport in that as in
discussing other philosophies, and I don't have any objection if someone wants
to entertain himself that way. But the
thing itself, the subject of this amusement, history, is both banal and
diabolic, both horrible and boring. I
don't understand how anyone can waste time on it. It sole content is sheer human egotism and
the struggle for power. Those engaged in
the struggle forever overestimate it, for ever glorify their own enterprises -
but it is nothing but brutal, bestial, material power they seek - a thing that
doesn't exist in the mind of the Castalian, or if it does has not the slightest
value. World history is nothing but an
endless, dreary account of the rape of the weak by the strong. To associate real history, the timeless
history of Mind, with this age-old stupid scramble of the ambitious for power
and the climbers for a place in the sun - to link the two let alone to try to
explain the one by the other - is in itself betrayal of the living sprit. It reminds me of a sect fairly widespread in
the nineteenth or the twentieth century whose members seriously believed that
the sacrifices, the gods, the temples and myths of ancient peoples, as well as
all other pleasant things, were the consequences of a calculable shortage or
surplus of food and work, the results of a tension measurable in terms of wages
and the price of bread. In other words,
the arts and religions were regarded as mere façades, so-called ideologies
erected above a human race concerned solely with hunger and feeding."
Knecht, who had listened with good
humour to this outburst, asked casually: "Doesn't the history of thought,
of culture and the arts, have some kind of connection with the rest of
history?"
"Absolutely not," his friend
exclaimed. "That is exactly what I
am denying. World history is a race with
time, a scramble for profit, for power, for treasures. What counts is who has the strength, luck, or
vulgarity not to miss his opportunity.
The achievements of thought, of culture, of art are just the
opposite. They are always an escape from
the serfdom of time, man crawling out of the muck of his instincts and out of
his sluggishness and climbing to a higher plane, to timelessness, liberation
from time, divinity. They are utterly unhistorical and
antihistorical."
Knecht went on drawing Tegularius out
on this theme for a while longer, smiling at his hyperbole. Then he quietly brought the conversation to a
close by commenting: "Your love for culture and the products of the mind
does you credit. But it happens that
cultural creativity is something we cannot participate in quite so fully as
some people think. A dialogue of Plato's
or a choral movement by Heinrich Isaac - in fact all the things we call a
product of the mind or a work of art or objectified spirit - are the outcomes
of a struggle for purification and liberation.
They are, to use your phrase, escapes from time into timelessness, and in
most cases the best such works are those which no longer show any signs of the
anguish and effort that preceded them.
It is a great good fortune that we have these works, and of course we
Castalians live almost entirely by them; the only creativity we have left lies
in preserving them. We live permanently
in that realm beyond time and conflict embodied in those very works and which
we would know nothing of, but for them.
And we go ever further into the realms of pure mind, or if you prefer,
pure abstraction: in our Glass Bead Game we analyze those products of the sages
and artists into their components, we derive rules and patterns of form from
them, and we operate with these abstractions as though they were building
blocks. Of course all this is very fine;
no-one will contend otherwise. But not
everyone can spend his entire life breathing, eating, and drinking nothing but
abstractions. History has one great
strength over the things a Waldzell tutor feels to be worthy of his interest:
it deals with reality. Abstractions are
fine, but I think people also have to breathe air and eat bread."
Every so often Knecht found time for a
brief visit to the aged former Music Master.
The venerable old man, whose strength was now visibly ebbing and who had
long since completely lost the habit of speech, persisted in his state of
serene composure to the last. He was not
sick, and his death was not so much a matter of dying as a form of progressive
dematerialization, a dwindling of bodily substance and the bodily functions,
while his life more and more gathered in his eyes and in the gentle radiance of
his withering old man's face. To most of
the inhabitants of Monteport this was a familiar sight, accepted with due
respect. Only a few persons, such a
Knecht, Ferromonte, and young Petrus, were privileged to share after a fashion
in this sunset glow, this fading out of a pure and selfless life. These few, when they had put themselves into
the proper frame of mind before stepping into the little room in which the Master
sat in his armchair, succeeded in entering into this soft iridescence of
disembodiment, in sharing in the old man's silent movement towards
perfection. They stayed for rapt moments
in the crystal sphere of this soul, as if in a realm of invisible radiation,
listening to unearthly music, and then returned to their daily lives with
hearts cleansed and strengthened, as if descending from a high mountain peak.
One day Knecht received the news of
his death. He hastened to Monteport and
found the old man, who had passed peacefully away, lying on his bed, the small
face shrunken to a silent rune and arabesque, a magical figure no longer
readable but nevertheless somehow conveying smiles and perfect happiness. Knecht spoke at the funeral, after the
present Music Master and Ferromonte. He
did not talk about the enlightened sage of music, nor of the man's greatness as
a teacher, nor of his kindness and wisdom as the eldest member of the highest
ruling body in Castalia. He spoke only
of the grace of such an old age and death, of the immortal beauty of the spirit
which had been revealed through him to those who had shared his last days.
We know from several statements of
Knecht's that he wanted to write the former Music Master's biography, but
official duties left him no time for such a task. He had learned to curb his own wishes. Once he remarked to one of his tutors:
"It is a pity that you students aren't fully aware of the luxury and
abundance in which you live. But I was
exactly the same when I was still a student.
We study and work, don't waste much time, and think we may rightly call
ourselves industrious - but we are scarcely conscious of all we could do, all
that we might make of our freedom. Then
we suddenly receive a call from the hierarchy, we are needed, we are given a
teaching assignment, a mission, a post, and from then on move up to a higher
one, and unexpectedly find ourselves caught in a network of duties that
tightens the more we try to move inside it.
All the tasks are in themselves small, but each one has to be carried
out at its proper hour, and the day has far more tasks than hours. That is well; one would not want it to be
different. But if we ever think, between
classroom, Archives, secretariat, consulting room, meetings, and official
journeys - if we ever think of the freedom we possessed and have lost, the
freedom for self-chosen tasks, for unlimited, far-flung studies, we may well
feel the greatest yearning for those days, and imagine that if we ever had such
freedom again we would fully enjoy its pleasures and potentialities."
Knecht had an extraordinary aptitude
for fitting his students and officials into their proper place in the service
of the hierarchy. He chose his men for
every assignment, for every post, with great care. His reports on them show keen judgement,
especially of character. Other officials
often sought his advice on the handling of personality problems. There was, for example, the case of the
student Petrus, the former Music Master's last favourite pupil. This young man, the typical quiet fanatic,
had done remarkably well in his unique role of companion, nurse, and adoring
disciple. But when this role came to its
natural end with the former Magister's death, he lapsed into melancholia that
was understood and tolerated for a while.
Soon, however, his symptoms began to cause Music Master Ludwig, the
present director of Monteport, serious concern.
For Petrus insisted on remaining on in the pavilion where the deceased
Master had spent his last days. He
guarded the cottage, continued to keep its furnishing and arrangements
painstakingly in their former state, and especially regarded the room in which
the Master had died, with its armchair, deathbed, and harpsichord, as a sort of
shrine. In addition to caring for these
relics, his only other activity consisted in attending the grave of his beloved
Master. He vocation, he felt, was to
devote his life to a permanent cult of the dead man, watching over the places
associated with his memory as if he were a
temple servant. Perhaps he hoped
to see them become places of pilgrimage.
During the first few days after the funeral he had taken no food;
afterwards he limited himself to the tiny and rare meals with which the Master
had been content during his last days.
It appeared that he intended to go so far in imitatio of the
Master that he would soon follow him into death. Since he could not sustain this for long,
however, he shifted to the mode of conduct which would presumably entitle him
to become guardian of house and grave, permanent custodian of this memorial
site. From all this it was plain that
the young man, naturally obstinate in any case and having enjoyed for some time
a distinctive position, was bent on holding on to that position and had not the
slightest desire to return to the commonplace duties of life; no doubt he
secretly felt that he could no longer cope with them. "By the way, that fellow Petrus who was
assigned to the late Master is cracked," Ferromonte reported acidly in a
note to Knecht.
Strictly speaking, a Monteport music
student was no concern of the Waldzell Magister, who should have felt no call
to add to his own responsibilities by interfering in a Monteport affair. But things went from bad to worse. The unfortunate young man had to be removed
by force from his pavilion. His
agitation did not subside with the passage of time. Distraught, still mourning, he had lapsed
into a state of withdrawal in which he could not very well be subjected to the
usual punishments for infractions of discipline. And since his superiors were well aware of
Knecht's benevolent feelings towards the young man, the Music Master's office
applied to him for advice and intervention.
In the meantime the refractory student was being kept under observation
in a cell in the infirmary.
Knecht had been reluctant to become
involved in this troublesome affair. But
once he had given some thought to it and had decided to try to help, he took
the matter vigorously in hand. He
offered to take Petrus under his wing as an experiment, on condition that the
young man be treated as if he were well and permitted to travel alone. With his letter to the Music Master's office
he enclosed a brief, cordial invitation to Petrus, asking him to pay a short
visit if it were convenient, and hinting that he hoped for an account of the
former Music Master's last days.
The Monteport doctor hesitantly
consented. Knecht's invitation was
handed to the student, and as Knecht had rightly guessed, nothing could have
been more welcome to the young man, trapped as he was in the deplorable
situation he had created for himself, than a swift escape from the scene of his
difficulties. Petrus immediately agreed
to undertake the journey, accepted a proper meal, was given a travel pass, and
set out on foot. He arrived in Waldzell
in fair condition. On Knecht's orders,
everyone ignored the jitteriness in his manner.
He was put up among the guests of the Archive and found himself treated
neither as a delinquent nor as a patient, nor for that matter as a person in
any way out of the ordinary. He was
after all not so ill as to fail to appreciate this pleasant atmosphere; and he
took the road back into life thus offered him, although during the several
weeks of his stay he remained a considerable nuisance to the Magister. Knecht assigned him the sham task of
recording, under strict supervision, his Master's last musical exercises and
studies, and in addition systematically employed him for minor routine jobs in
the Archives. This on the pretext that
the Archives personnel were overburdened at the moment, and it would be good of
him to lend a hand whenever he had the time.
In short, the temporary deviant was
guided back to the right road. After he
had calmed down and seemed ready to fit himself into the hierarchy, Knecht
began exerting a direct educational influence upon him. In a series of brief talks the Magister
relieved the youth of his delusion that setting up the deceased Music Master as
the subject of an idolatrous cult was either a religious act or one tenable in
Castalia. Since, however, Petrus was
still terror-stricken at the prospect of returning to Monteport, although he
seemed otherwise cured, a post of assistant music teacher in one of the lower
elite schools was provided for him. In
that capacity he henceforth behaved quite acceptably.
We might cite a good many other
examples of Knecht's psychiatric and educative work. Moreover, there were many young students who
fell under the gentle sway of his personality and were won over to a life in
the genuine spirit of Castalia much the way Knecht himself had been won over by
the Music Master. All these examples
show us the Magister Ludi as anything but a problematical character; all are
testimonies to his soundness and balance.
But his kindly efforts to help unstable and imperilled personalities
such as Petrus or Tegularius do suggest an unusually alert sensitivity to such
maladies or susceptibilities on the part of Castalians. They suggest that since his first
"awakening" he had remained keenly alive to the problems and the
dangers inherent in Castalian life. No
doubt the majority of our fellow citizens thoughtlessly or smugly refuse to see
these dangers; but he in his forthright courage could not take such a course. And presumably he could never follow the
practice of most of his associates in authority, who were cognizant of these
dangers but as a matter of principle treated them as nonexistent. He recognized their existence, and his
familiarity with the early history of Castalia led him to regard life in the
midst of such dangers as a struggle, and one which he affirmed. He loved these very perils, whereas most
Castalians considered their community, and the lives they led within it, as a
pure idyll. From Father Jacobus's works
on the Benedictine Order he had also absorbed the concept of an order as a
militant community, and of piety as a combative attitude. "No noble and exalted life exists,"
he once said, "without knowledge of devils and demons, and without
continual struggle against them."
In our Province explicit friendships among
the holders of high office are most rare.
We need therefore not be surprised that during his first years in office
Knecht entered into no such ties with any of his colleagues. He cordially liked the classical philologist
in Keuperheim, and felt profound esteem for the directors of the Order; but in
these relationships personal affection is almost entirely excluded, private
concerns objectified, so that intimacies beyond the joint work on an official
level are scarcely possible.
Nevertheless, one such friendship did develop.
The secret archives of the Board of
Educators are not at our disposal. What
we know about Knecht's demeanour at sessions of the Board, or how he voted,
must therefore be deduced from his occasional remarks to friends. During his early days in office he tended to
keep silent at such meetings, but although later on he spoke up, he seems to
have done so only rarely, unless he himself had launched a motion. Mention is made of how quickly he learned the
tone traditional at the summit of our hierarchy, and the gracefulness,
ingenuity, and wit with which he used these forms. As is well known, the heads of our hierarchy,
the Masters and directors of the Order, treat each other in a carefully sustained
ceremonial style. Moreover, it has been
their custom, or inclination, or secret ruling - since when, we cannot say - to
employ more and more carefully polished and strict courtesies, the greater
their differences of opinion and the larger the controversial question under
discussion. Presumably this formality
handed down from the past serves, along with any other functions it may have,
primarily as a safety valve. The
extremely courteous tone of the debates protects the persons engaged from
yielding to passion and helps them preserve impeccable bearing; but in addition
it upholds the dignity of the Order and of the high authorities
themselves. It drapes them in the robes
of ceremonial and conceals them behind veils of sanctity. Such no doubt is the rationale of this
elaborate art of exchanging compliments, which the students often make fun
of. Before Knecht's time his
predecessor, Magister Thomas von der Trave, had been a particularly admired
master of this art. Knecht cannot really
be called his successor in it, still less his imitator; rather, he was more a
disciple of the Chinese, so that his mode of courtesy was less pointed and
peppered with irony. But he too was
considered among his colleagues unsurpassed in the art of courtesy.
NINE
A CONVERSATION
WE HAVE COME
to that point in our study when we must focus our attention entirely upon the
remarkable change of course which occupied the last years of the Master's life
and led to his bidding farewell to his office and the Province, his crossing
into a different sphere of life, and his death.
Although he administered his office with exemplary faithfulness up to
the moment of his departure, and to his last day enjoyed the affectionate
confidence of his pupils and colleagues, we shall not continue our description
of his conduct of the office now that we see him already weary of it in his
innermost soul, and turning towards other aims.
He had already explored all the possibilities the office provided for
the utilization of his energies and had reached the point at which great men
must leave the path of tradition and obedient subordination and, trusting to
supreme, indefinable powers, strike out on new, trackless courses where
experience is no guide.
When he became conscious that this had
happened, he dispassionately examined his situation and what might be done to
change it. He had arrived, at an
unusually early age, upon that summit which was all that all talented and
ambitious Castalian could imagine as worth striving for. Yet neither ambition nor exertion had brought
him there. He had neither tried for his
high honour nor consciously adapted himself to it. It had come almost against his will, for an
inconspicuous, independent scholar's life free of official duties would have
been much more in keeping with his own desires.
He did not especially prize many of the benefits and powers that
followed from his position. In fact,
within a short time after he assumed office, he seemed already to have tired of
some of these distinctions and privileges.
In particular, he always regarded political and administrative work in
the highest Board as a burden, although he gave himself to it with unfailing
conscientiousness. Even the special, the
characteristic and unique task of his position, the training of an elite group
of perfected Glass Bead Game players, for all the joy it sometimes brought him,
and despite the fact that this elite took great pride in their Magister, seems
in the long run to have been more of a burden than a pleasure to him. What delighted him and truly satisfied him
was teaching, and in this he discovered by experience that both his pleasure
and his success were the greater, the younger his pupils were. Hence he felt it as a loss that his post
brought to him only youths and adults instead of children.
There were, however, other
considerations, experiences, and insights which caused him to take a critical
view of his own work, and of a good many of the conditions in Waldzell; or at
the least to consider his office as a great hindrance to the development of his
finest and most fruitful abilities. Some
of these matters are known to all of us; some we only surmise. Was Magister Knecht right in seeking freedom
from the burden of his office, in his desire for less majestic but more
intensive work? Was he right in his
criticisms of the state of Castalia?
Should he be regarded as a pioneer and bold militant, or as a kind of
rebel, if not a deserter from the cause?
We shall not go into these questions, for they have been discussed to
excess. For a time the controversy over
them divided the entire Province into two camps, and it has still not entirely
subsided. Although we profess ourselves
grateful admirers of the great Magister, we prefer not to take a position in
this dispute; the necessary synthesis which will ultimately emerge from the
conflict of opinions on Joseph Knecht's personality and life has long since
begun taking shape. We prefer neither to
judge nor to convert, but rather to tell the history of our venerated Master's
last days with the greatest possible truthfulness. Properly speaking, however, it is not really
history; we prefer to call it a legend, an account compounded of authentic
information and mere rumours, exactly as they have flowed from various
crystalline and cloudy sources to form a single stream among us, his posterity
in the Province.
Joseph Knecht had already begun
thinking of how he might find his way into fresher air when he unexpectedly
came upon a figure out of his youth, whom he had in the meanwhile half
forgotten. It was none other than Plinio
Designori, scion of the old family that had served Castalia well in the distant
past. The former guest pupil, now a man
of influence, member of the Chamber of Deputies as well as a political writer,
was paying an official call on the Supreme Board of the Province. Every few years elections were held for the
government commission in charge of the Castalian budget, and Designori had
become a member of this commission. The
first time he appeared in this capacity at a session of the directorate of the
Order in Hirsland, the Magister Ludi happened to be present. The encounter made a profound impression on
him, and was to have certain consequences.
Some of our information about this
meeting comes from Tegularius, some from Designori himself. For during this period in Knecht's life,
which is somewhat obscure to us, Designori became his friend again, and even
his confidant.
At their first meeting after decades,
the Speaker as usual introduced the new members of the budget commission to the
Magisters. When Knecht heard Designori's
name, he felt somewhat stricken at not having immediately recognized the friend
of his youth. But he was quick to
rectify this by omitting the official bow and the set formula of greeting, and
smilingly holding out his hand.
Meanwhile he searched his friend's features, trying to fathom the
changes which had foiled recognition.
During the session itself his glance frequently rested on the
once-familiar face. Designori,
incidentally, had addressed him by his title of Magister; Joseph had to ask him
twice before he could be persuaded to return to the first-name basis of their
boyhood.
Knecht had known Plinio as a
high-spirited, communicative, and brilliant young man, a good student and at
the same time a young man of the world who felt superior to the unworldly
Castalians and often baited them for the fun of it. Perhaps he had been somewhat vain, but he had
also been open-hearted, without pettiness, and had charmed, interested, and
attracted his schoolmates. Some of them,
in fact, had been dazzled by his good looks, his self-assurance, and the aura
of foreignness that surrounded him, the hospitant from the outside world. Years later, towards the end of his student
days, Knecht had seen him again, and had been disappointed; Plinio had then
seemed to him shallower, coarsened, wholly lacking his former magic. They had parted coolly, with constraint.
Now Plinio once more seemed a totally
different person. Above all he seemed to
have wholly laid aside or lost his youthful gaiety, his delight in
communication, argument, talk, his active, winning, extroverted character. His diffidence on meeting his former friend,
his slowness to greet Knecht, and his qualms at taking up the Magister's
request to address him with their old-time intimacy, were signs of a change
evident also in his bearing, his look, his manner of speech and movements. In place of his former boldness, frankness,
and exuberance there was now constraint.
He was subdued, reticent, withdrawn; perhaps it was stiffness, perhaps
only fatigue. His youthful charm had
been submerged and extinguished in it, but the traits of superficiality and
blatant worldliness had also vanished. The
whole man, but especially his face, seemed marked, partly ravaged, partly ennobled
by the expression of suffering.
While the Glass Bead Game Master
followed the proceedings, he dwelt with part of his mind on this change,
wondering what kind of suffering had overwhelmed this lively, handsome,
life-loving man, and set such a mark on him.
It seemed to Knecht an alien suffering, of a kind he had never known,
and the more he pondered and probed, the more he felt sympathetically drawn to
this suffering man. Mingled with this
sympathy and affection was a faint feeling as if he were somehow to blame for
his friend's sorrow, as if he must in some way make amends.
After considering and rejecting a
variety of suppositions about Plinio's sadness, it occurred to him that the
suffering in the man's face was most uncommon.
It was, rather, a noble, perhaps a tragic suffering, and its mode of
expression was also of a type unknown in Castalia. Knecht recalled having sometimes seen a
similar expression on the faces of people who lived in the world, although he
had never seen it in so pronounced and fascinating a form. He realized that he knew it also from
portraits of men of the past, portraits of scholars or artists in which a
touching, half morbid, half fated sorrow, solitariness, and helplessness could be
read. To the Magister, with his artist's
fine sensitivity to the secrets of expressions and his educator's perception of
the various shades of character, there were certain physiognomic signs which he
instinctively went by, without ever having reduced them to a system. So, for example, he could recognize a
peculiarly Castalian and a peculiarly worldly way of laughing, smiling, showing
merriment, and likewise a peculiarly worldly type of suffering or sadness. He now detected this worldly sadness in Designori's
face, expressed there with the greatest purity and intensity, as though this
face were meant to be representative of many, to epitomize the secret
sufferings and morbidity of a multitude.
He was disturbed and moved by this
face. It seemed to him highly
significant that the world should have sent his lost friend here, so that
Plinio and Joseph might truly and validly represent respectively the world and
the Order, just as they had once done in their schoolboy debates. But it struck him as even more important and
symbolic that in this lonely countenance, overlaid by sorrow, the world had
despatched to Castalia not its laughter, its joy in living, its pleasure in
power, its crudeness, but rather its distress, its suffering. That Designori seemed rather to avoid then to
seek him, that he responded so slowly and with such resistance, gave Knecht
much food for thought. It also pleased
him, for he had no doubt that he would nonetheless be able to win Plinio
over. To be sure, his former schoolmate,
thanks to his education in Castalia, was not one of those unyielding, sulky, or
downright hostile commission members, such as Knecht had dealt with more than
once. On the contrary, he was an admirer
of the Order and a patron of the Province, which was indebted to him for many a
service in the past. He had, however,
given up the Glass Bead Game many years before.
We are in no position to report in
detail how the Magister gradually regained his friend's trust. Those of us who are familiar with the
Master's serenity and affectionate courtesy may imagine the process in our own
way. Knecht steadily continued to court
Plinio, and who in the long run could have resisted the Magister when he was
seriously concerned to win someone's heart?
In the end, several months after that
first reunion, Designori accepted the repeated invitation to visit
Waldzell. One windy, slightly overcast
autumn afternoon, the two men drove through a countryside constantly
alternating between light and shade towards the site of their schooldays and
early friendship. Knecht was in a blithe
frame of mind, while his guest was silent but moody, undergoing abrupt
alternations, like the harvested fields between sunlight and shadow, between
the joys of return and the sadness of alienation. Near the village they alighted and tramped on
foot along the old paths which they had walked together as schoolboys,
remembering schoolmates and teachers and some of their topics of discussion in
those long-ago days. Designori stayed a
day as Knecht's guest, looking on at all his official acts and labours, as had
been agreed. At the end of the day - the
guest was due to leave early next morning - they sat together in Knecht's
living room, already on the verge of their old intimacy. The course of the day, during which he had
been able to observe the Magister's work hour by hour, had made a great
impression upon Designori. That evening
the two men had a conversation which Designori recorded immediately after his
return home. Although it incorporates a
few unimportant matters which some readers may feel disturb the even flow of
our account, we think it advisable to set down the complete text.
"I had in mind to show you so
many things," the Magister said, "and now I did not get to them after
all. For example, my lovely garden - do
you still recall the Magister's Garden and Master Thomas's plantings? Yes, and so many other things. I hope there will be future occasions for
seeing them. But in any case, you have
had the chance to check on a good many of your recollections, and you also have
some idea of the nature of my official duties and my routine."
"I am grateful to you for
that," Plinio said. "Only
today have I begun to divine again what your Province really is, and what
remarkable secrets it contains, although over the years I have thought about
all of you here far more than you suspect.
You have afforded me a glimpse of your office and of your life, Joseph,
and I hope this will not be the last time and that we shall have many
opportunities to discuss the things I have seen here, which I cannot yet talk
about today. On the other hand, I am
well aware that I should in some way be requiting your cordiality, and that my
reserve must have taken you aback.
However, you will visit me too some day, and see my native ground. For the present I can only tell you a little,
just enough for you to know something about my situation. Speaking frankly, though it will be
embarrassing and something of a penance for me, will probably unburden my
heart.
"You know that I come from an old
family that has served the country well and also been well disposed towards
your Province - a conservative family of landowners and moderately high
officials. But you see, even this simple
fact brings me sharply up against the gulf that separates the two of us. I say 'family' and imagine that I am saying
something simple, obvious, and unambiguous.
But is it? You people of the
Province have your Order and your hierarchy, but you do not have a family, you
do not know what family, blood, and descent are, and you have no notion of the
powers, the hidden and mighty magic of what is called 'family'. I fear that this is also true for most of the
words and concepts which express the meaning of our lives. The things that are important to us are not
to you; very many are simply incomprehensible to you, and others have entirely
different meanings among you and among us.
How can we possibly talk to each other?
You see, when you speak to me, it is as if a foreigner were addressing
me, although a foreigner whose language I learned and spoke myself in my youth,
so that I understand most of what is said.
But the reverse is not the case; when I speak to you, you hear a
language whose very phrases are only half familiar to you, while you are
entirely ignorant of the nuances and overtones.
You hear tales about a life, a way of existing, which is not your
own. Most of it, even if it happens to
interest you, remains alien and at best only half understood. You remember our many debates and talks
during our schooldays. On my part they
were nothing but an attempt, one of many, to bring the world and language of
your Province into harmony with my own.
You were the most receptive, the most willing and honest among all those
with whom I attempted to communicate in those days; you stood up bravely for
the rights of Castalia without being against my different world and
unsympathetic to its rights, not to speak of despising it. In those days we certainly came rather close
to each other. But that is a subject we
will return to later."
As he paused to marshal his thoughts,
Knecht said cautiously: "This matter of not being able to understand may
not be as drastic as you make it out. Of
course two peoples and two languages will never be able to communicate with
each other so intimately as two individuals who belong to the same nation and
speak the same language. But that is no
reason to forgo the effort at communication.
Within nations there are also barriers which stand in the way of
complete communication and complete natural understanding, barriers of culture,
education, talent, individuality. It
might be asserted that every human being on earth can fundamentally hold a
dialogue with every other human being, and it might also be asserted that there
are no two persons in the world between whom genuine, whole, intimate
understanding is possible - the one statement is as true as the other. It is Yin and Yang, day and night; both are
right and at times we have to be reminded of both. To be sure, I too do not believe that you and
I will ever be able to communicate fully, and without some residue of
misunderstanding, with each other. But
though you may be an Occidental and I a Chinese, though we may speak different
languages, if we are men of good will we shall have a great deal to say to each
other, and beyond what is precisely communicable we can guess and sense a great
deal about each other. At any rate let
us try."
Designori nodded and continued:
"For the time being I want to tell you the little you must know in order
to have some inkling of my situation.
Well, then, first of all, the family is the supreme power in a young
person's life, whether or not he acknowledges it. I got on well with my family as long as I was
a guest student in your elite school.
Throughout the year I was well taken care of among you; during the
holidays I was pampered at home, for I was the only son. I had a deep and in fact a passionate love
for my mother; separation from her was the only grief I felt each time I
departed. My relationship to my father
was cooler, but friendly, at least during all the years of my boyhood and youth
that I spent among you. He was an old
admirer of Castalia and proud to see me being educated in the elite schools and
initiated into such elevated matters as the Glass Bead Game. My vacations at home were gay and festive; I
might almost say that the family and I in a sense knew each other only in party
dress. Sometimes, when I set out for
vacation, I pitied all of you who were left behind for having nothing of such
happiness.
"I need not say much about those
days; you knew me better than anyone else, after all. I was almost a Castalian, a little gayer,
coarser, and more superficial, perhaps, but happy and enthusiastic, full of
high spirits. That was the happiest
period in my life, although of course at the time I never suspected that this
would be so, for during those years in Waldzell I expected that happiness and
the crowning experiences of my life would come after I returned home from your
schools and used the superiority I had acquired in them to conquer the outside
world. Instead, after my departure from
you a conflict began which has lasted to this day, and I have not been the
victor in this struggle. For the place I
returned to no longer consisted in just my home; and the country had not been
simply waiting to embrace me and acknowledge my Waldzell superiority. Even at home I soon encountered
disappointments, difficulties, and discords.
It took a while before I noticed.
I was shielded by my naive confidence, my boyish faith in myself, and my
happiness, and shielded also by the morality of the Order which I had brought
back with me, by the habit of meditation.
"But what a disappointment and
disillusionment I had at the university where I wanted to study political
subjects. The general tone among the
students, the level of their education and social life, the personalities of so
many of the teachers - how all this contrasted with what I had become
accustomed to among you. You recall how
in defending our world against yours I used to extol the unspoiled, naive
life? If that was a piece of foolishness
deserving punishment, my friend, I have been harshly punished. Because this naive, innocent, instinctual life,
this childlike, untrammelled brilliance of the simple soul, may possibly exist
among peasants or artisans, or somewhere, but I never succeeded in finding it,
let alone sharing it. You remember too,
don't you, how I would speechify about the arrogance and affectation of
Castalians, attacking them for being a conceited and decadent lot with their
caste spirit and their elite haughtiness.
Now I had to discover that people in the world were no less proud of
their bad manners, their meagre culture, their coarse, loud humour, the
dull-witted shrewdness with which they kept themselves to practical, egotistic
goals. They regarded themselves as no
less precious, sanctified, and elect in their narrow-minded crudity than the
most affected Waldzell show-off could ever have done. They laughed at me or patted me on the back,
but a good many of them reacted to the alien, Castalian qualities in me with
the outright enmity that the vulgar always have for everything finer. And I was determined to take my dislike as a
distinction."
Designori paused briefly, and threw a
glance at Knecht to see whether he was tiring him. His eyes met his friend's and found in them
an expression of close attention and friendliness which comforted and reassured
him. He saw that Knecht was totally
absorbed; he was listening not as people listen to casual talk or even to an
interesting story, but with fixed attention and devotion, as if concentrating
on a subject of meditation. At the same
time Knecht's eyes expressed a pure, warm-hearted goodwill - so warm that it
seemed to Plinio almost childlike. He
was swept with a kind of amazement to see such an expression upon the face of
the same man whose many-sided daily labours, whose wisdom and authority in the
governance of his office he had admired all through the day. Relieved, he continued:
"I don't know whether my life has
been useless and merely a misunderstanding, or whether it has a meaning. If it does have a meaning, I should say it
would be this: that one single specific person in our time has recognized
plainly and experienced in the most painful way how far Castalia has moved away
from its motherland. Or for my part it
might be put the other way around: how alien our country has become from our
noblest Province and how unfaithful to that Province's spirit; how far body and
soul, ideal and reality have moved apart in our country; how little they know
about each other, or want to know. If I
had any one task or ideal in life, it was to make myself a synthesis of the two
principles, to be mediator, interpreter, and arbitrator between the two. I have tried and failed. And since after all I cannot tell you my
whole life, and you would not be able to understand it all anyhow, I will
describe only one of the situations in which my failure was revealed.
"The difficulty after I began
attending the university consisted not so much in my being unable to deal with
the teasing or hostility that came my way as a Castalian, a show-off. Those few among my new associates who
regarded my coming from the elite schools as a glory gave me more trouble, in
fact, and caused me greater embarrassment.
No, the hard part, perhaps the impossible task I set myself, was to
continue a life in the Castalian sense in the midst of worldliness. At first I scarcely noticed; I abided by the
rules I had learned among you, and for some time they seemed to prove their
validity in the world. They seemed to
strengthen and shield me, seemed to preserve my gaiety and inner soundness and
to increase my resolve to pass my student years in the Castalian way as far as
possible, following the paths that my craving for knowledge indicated and not
letting anything coerce me into a course of studies designed to prepare the
student as thoroughly as possible in the shortest possible time for a
speciality in which he could earn his livelihood, and to stamp out whatever
sense of freedom and universality he may have had.
"But the protection that Castalia
had given me proved dangerous and dubious, for I did not want to be like a
hermit, cultivating my peace of soul and preserving a calm, meditative state of
mind. I wanted to conquer the world, you
see, to understand it, to force it to understand me. I wanted to affirm it and if possible renew
and reform it. In my own person I wanted
to bring Castalia and the world together, to reconcile them. When after some disappointment, some clash or
disturbance, I retired to meditate, I derived great benefit at first; each
time, meditation was like relaxation, deep breathing, a return to good,
friendly powers. But in time I realized
that this very practice of meditation, the cultivation and exercising of the
psyche, was what isolated me, made me seem so unpleasantly strange to others,
and actually rendered me incapable of really understanding them. I saw that I could really understand those
others, those people in the world and of it, if I once again became like them,
if I had no advantage over them, including this recourse to meditation.
"Of course it may be that I am
putting it in a better light when I describe it in this way. Perhaps it was simply that without associates
trained to the same practices, without supervision by teachers, without the
bracing atmosphere of Waldzell, I gradually lost the discipline, that I grew
sluggish and inattentive and succumbed to carelessness, and that in moments of
guilty conscience I then excused myself on the grounds that carelessness was
one of my the attributes of this world, and that by giving way to it I was
coming closer to an understanding of my environment. I'm not trying to make things out better than they are for your sake, but
neither do I want to deny or conceal the fact that I went to considerable
lengths, that I strove and fought, even where I was mistaken. I was serious about the whole problem. But whether or not my attempt to find a
meaningful place for myself was mere conceit on my part - in any case, it ended
as it was bound to end. The world was
stronger than I was; it slowly overwhelmed and devoured me. It was exactly as if life took me at my word
and moulded me wholly to the world whose rightness, naive strength, and
ontological superiority I so highly praised and defended against your logic in
our Waldzell disputations. You remember.
"And now I must remind you of
something else which you probably forgot long ago, since it meant nothing to
you. But it meant a great deal to me; it
was important, important and terrible.
My student years had come to an end; I had adapted, had been defeated,
but not entirely. Inwardly I still thought
of myself as your equal and imagined that I had made certain adjustments, shed
certain customs, more out of prudence and free choice than as the consequence
of defeat. And so I also clung to a good
many of the habits and needs of my earlier years. Among them was the Glass Bead Game, which
probably had little point, since without constant practice and constant
association with equal and especially with better players, it's impossible to
learn anything, of course. Playing alone
can at best replace such practice the way talking to oneself replaces real,
serious dialogue. So without really
understanding how I stood, what had happened to my player's skill, my culture,
my status as an elite pupil, I struggled to save at least some of these
values. In those days, whenever I
sketched a Game pattern or analyzed a Game movement for one of my friends who
knew something about the Game but had no notion of its spirit, it probably
seemed akin to magic to these total ignoramuses. Then, in my third or fourth year at the
university, I took part in a Game course in Waldzell. Seeing the countryside and the town again,
visiting our old school and the Players' Village, gave me melancholy pleasure;
but you were not here; you were studying somewhere in Monteport or Keuperheim
at the time, and were considered an ambitious eccentric. My Game course was only a series of summer
classes for pitiable worldlings and dilettantes like myself. Nevertheless, I worked hard at it and was
proud at the end of the course to receive the usual C, that passing mark which
qualifies the holder for future vacation courses of the same sort.
"Well, then, a few years later I
once again summoned up the energy and signed up for a vacation course under
your predecessor. I tried to prepare
myself for Waldzell. I read through my
old exercise books, made some stabs at the technique of concentration - in
short, within my modest limits I composed myself, gathered my energies, and put
myself in the mood for the course rather the way a real Glass Bead Game player
readies himself for the great annual Game.
And so I arrived in Waldzell, where after this longer interval I found
myself a good deal more alienated, but at the same time enchanted, as if I were
returning to a lovely land I had lost, in whose language I was no longer very
fluent. And this time my fervent wish to
see you again was granted. Do you by any
chance recall, Joseph?"
Knecht looked earnestly into his eyes,
nodded and smiled slightly, but said not a word.
"Good," Designori
continued. "So you remember. But just what do you remember? A casual reunion with a schoolmate, a brief
encounter and disappointment, after which one goes on and thinks no more about
it, unless the other fellow tactlessly reminds one about it decades later. Isn't that it? Was it anything else, was it more than that
for you?"
Although he was obviously trying very
hard to hold himself in check, it was apparent that emotions accumulated over
many years, and never mastered, were on the brink of eruption.
"You are anticipating,"
Knecht said carefully. "We will
speak of my impressions when it is my turn to render an accounting. You have the floor now, Plinio. I see that the meeting was not pleasant for
you. It was not for me either, at the
time. And now go on and tell me what it
was like. Speak bluntly."
"I'll try," Plinio
said. "I certainly don't want to
blame you for anything. I must concede
that you behaved with absolute courtesy towards me - more than that. When I accepted your invitation to come here
to Waldzell, where I have not been since the second course, not even since my
appointment to the Castalian Commission, I made up my mind to confront you with
what I experienced at that time, whether or not this visit turned out
pleasantly. And now I mean to continue. I had come to the course and been put up in
the guest house. The people in the
course were almost all about my age; some were even a good deal older. There were at most twenty of us, the majority
Castalians, but either poor, indifferent, or slack Glass Bead Game players, or
rank beginners who had tardily decided that they ought to obtain some
familiarity with the Game. It was a
relief to me that I knew none of them.
Although our instructor, one of the Archive assistants, really tried
hard and was most friendly towards us, the whole thing had from the start the
feeling of being a half-baked, useless affair, a make-up course whose random
collection of students no more believes in its importance or chance of success
than does the teacher, although no-one involved will admit it. Why, you might have wondered, should this handful
of people get together to engage in something they had no capacity for nor
enough interest in to go at it with perseverance and devotion, and why should a
skilled specialist bother to give them instruction and assign them exercises
which he himself scarcely thought would come to anything? At the time I didn't know - I found out from
more experienced persons later on - that I simply had bad luck with this
course, that another group of participants might have made it stimulating and
useful, even inspiring. It often
suffices, I was later told, to have two members of the class who kindle each
other, or who already know each other and are good friends, to give the whole
course, for all the participants and the teacher as well, the necessary
impetus. But you are the Game Master,
after all; you must know all about such matters.
"Well, then, I had rotten
luck. The animating spark was missing
from our haphazard group; there was no impetus, not even a little warmth. The whole thing remained a feeble extension
course for grown-up schoolboys. The days
passed, and my disappointment increased with each passing day. Still, besides the Glass Bead Game there was
Waldzell, a place of sacred and cherished memories for me. If the Game course were a failure, I still ought
to be able to celebrate a homecoming, to chat with former schoolmates, perhaps
have a reunion with the friend who more than anyone else represented to me our
Castalia - you, Joseph. If I saw a few
of the companions of my schooldays again, if on my walks through this
beautiful, beloved region I met again the lairs and penates of my youth, and if
good fortune would have it that we might come close to each other again and a
dialogue should spring up between us as in the old days, less between you and me
than between my problem with Castalia and myself - then this vacation would not
be wasted; then it would not so much matter about the course and all the rest.
"The first two old schoolfellows
who crossed my path were innocuous enough.
They were glad to see me, patted me on the back and asked childish
questions about my legendary life out in the world. But the next few were not so innocuous; they
were members of the Players' Village and the younger elite and did not ask
naive questions. On the contrary, when
we ran into one another in one of the rooms of your sanctuaries and they could
not very well avoid me, they greeted me with a pointed and rather tense
politeness, or rather a condescending geniality. They made it clear that they were busy with
important matters quite closed to me, that they had no time, no curiosity, no
sympathy, no desire to renew old acquaintance.
Well, I did not force myself on them; I let them alone in their
Olympian, sardonic, Castalian tranquillity.
I looked across at them and their busy, self-satisfied doings like a
prisoner watching through bars, or the way the poor, hungry, and oppressed eye
the wealthy and aristocratic, the handsome, cultivated, untroubled, well-bred,
well-rested members of an upper class with their clean faces and manicured
hands.
"And then you turned up, Joseph,
and when I saw you I felt rejoicing and new hope. You were crossing the yard; I recognized you
from behind by your walk and at once called you by name. At last a human soul, I thought; at last a
friend, or perhaps an opponent, but someone I can talk to, a Castalian to the
bone, certainly, but someone in whom the Castalian spirit has not frozen into a
mask and a suit of armour. A man,
someone who understands. You must have
noticed how glad I was and how much I expected from you, and in fact you met me
half-way with the greatest courtesy. You
still recognized me, I meant something to you, it gave you pleasure to see my
face again. And so we did not leave it
at that brief warm greeting in the yard; you invited me and devoted, or rather
sacrificed, an evening to me. But what
an evening that was! The two of us
tormented ourselves trying to seem jocose, civil, and comradely towards each
other, and how hard it was for us to drag that lame conversation from one
subject to another. Where the others had
been indifferent to me, with you it was worse - this strained and profitless
effort to revive a lost friendship was much more painful. That evening finally put an end to my
illusions. It made me realize with
unsparing clarity that I was not one of your comrades, not seeking the same
goals, not a Castalian, not a person of importance, but a nuisance, a fool
trying to ingratiate himself, an uncultivated foreigner. And the fact that all this was conveyed to me
with such politeness and good manners, that the disappointment and impatience
were so impeccably masked, actually seemed to me the worst of it. If you had upbraided me: 'What has become of
you, my friend, how could you let yourself degenerate this way?' the ice would
have been broken and I would have been happy.
But nothing of the sort. I saw
that my notion of belonging to Castalia had come to nothing, that my love for all
of you and my studying the Glass Bead Game and our comradeship were all nothing. Elite Tutor Knecht had taken note of my
unfortunate visit to Waldzell; for my sake he had put himself through a whole
evening of boredom, and shown me the door with undeviating courtesy."
Designori, struggling with his
agitation, broke off and with tormented expression looked across at the
Magister. Knecht sat there, all
attention, absorbedly listening, but not in the least upset; he sat looking at
his old friend with a smile that was full of friendly sympathy. Since Designori did not continue, Knecht
rested his eyes on him with a look of good will and satisfaction, in fact with
a touch of amusement. For a minute or
longer Plinio bleakly met that gaze.
Then he cried out forcefully, although not angrily: "You're
laughing! Laughing? You think it was all fine?"
"I must admit," Knecht said
smilingly, "that you have described that episode remarkably well,
splendidly. That is exactly how it was,
and perhaps the lingering sense of insult and accusation in your voice was
needed for you to bring it out as effectively as you did and to recall the
scene to my mind with such perfect vividness.
Also, although I'm afraid you still see the whole affair in somewhat the
same light as you did then, and have not fully come to terms with it, you told
your story with objective correctness - the story of two young men in a rather
embarrassing situation in which both had to dissemble, and one of whom - that
is, you - made the mistake of concealing the painfulness of the whole matter
behind a gay exterior, instead of dropping the masquerade. It seems as if you were to this day blaming
me more than yourself for the fruitlessness of that encounter, although it was
absolutely up to you to have set its terms.
Have you really failed to see that?
But still you have described it very well, I must say. You've called back the whole sense of
oppression and embarrassment over that weird evening. For a while I've felt as if I had to fight
for composure again, and I've been ashamed for the two of us. No, your story is exactly right. It's a pleasure to hear a story so well
told."
"Well now," Plinio began,
rather astonished, and with an offended and mistrustful note lingering in his
voice, "it's good that my story has amused at least one of us. If you want to know, it didn't amuse
me."
"But you do see," Knecht
said, "how merrily we can now regard this story, which isn't exactly to
the credit of either of us? We can laugh
at it."
"Laugh? Why should we?"
"Because this story about the
ex-Castalian Plinio who struggled to master the Glass Bead Game and worked so
hard for his former friend's appreciation is now past and over with for good,
exactly like the story of the tutor Knecht who in spite of all his training in
Castalian manners was a total duffer when it came to dealing with this Plinio
who suddenly blew in on him, so that today after so many years that clumsy
behaviour can be held up to him as in a
mirror. Once again, Plinio, you have an
excellent memory and you've told the story well - I couldn't have done it
justice. It's fortunate that the tale is
over and done with and we can laugh at it."
Designori was perplexed. He could not help feeling the warmth and
pleasantness of the Magister's good humour.
It was obviously far removed from mockery. And he felt also that an intense seriousness
lay behind this gaiety. But in telling
his story he had too painfully relived the bitterness of that episode, and his
narrative had been so much in the nature of a confession that he could not
change key so readily.
"Perhaps you forget," he
said hesitantly, already half persuaded, "that what I related was not the
same for me as it was for you. For you
it was at most chagrin; for me it was defeat and collapse, and incidentally
also the beginning of important changes in my life. When I left Waldzell that time, just as soon
as the course ended, I resolved never to return here, and I was close to hating
Castalia and all of you. I had lost my
illusions and had realized that I would never again belong among you, perhaps
had never belonged as much as I had imagined.
It would not have taken much more to make me into a renegade and an
outright enemy of everything Castalian."
Knecht fixed him with a look at once
cheerful and penetrating.
"Certainly," he said,
"and of course you're going to tell me all about that soon, I very much
hope. But for the present I see our
relationship as this: In our early youth we were friends, were parted and took
very different paths. Then we met again
- this at the time of your unlucky holiday course. You'd become half or entirely a person of the
world; I was a rather conceited Waldzeller, much preoccupied with Castalian
forms; and today we have recalled this disappointing and shaming reunion. We have seen ourselves and our awkwardness at
that time and we have been able to laugh at it, because today everything is
completely different. I freely admit
that the impression you made on me at that time did in fact embarrass me
greatly; it was an altogether unpleasant, negative impression. I could make nothing of you; to me you
unexpectedly, disturbingly, and annoyingly seemed unfinished, coarse,
worldly. I was a young Castalian who
knew nothing of the world and actually wanted to know nothing of it. And you, well, you were a young foreigner
whose reason for visiting us I could not rightly understand. I had no idea why you were taking a Game
course, for you seemed to have almost nothing of the elite pupil left in
you. You grated on my nerves as I did on
yours. Of course I could not help
striking you as an arrogant Waldzeller without any basis for his arrogance who
was bent on keeping his distance from a non-Castalian and amateur at the
Game. And to me you were a kind of
barbarian, semicultured, who seemed to be making bothersome and groundless
claims upon my interest and my friendship.
We fended each other off; we came close to hating each other. There was nothing we could do but part,
because neither of us had anything to give the other and neither of us could be
fair to the other.
"But today, Plinio, we have been
able to revive that shamefully buried memory and we may laugh at that scene and
at the pair of us, because today we have come together as different men and
with quite different intentions and potentialities - without sentimentality,
without repressed feelings of jealousy and hatred, without conceit. Both of us grew up long ago; both of us are
men now."
Designori smiled with relief. But still he asked: "Are we so sure of
that? After all, we had good will enough
even then."
"I should think we had,"
Knecht said, laughing. "And with
all our good will we drove and strained ourselves until we couldn't bear it any
longer. At that time we disliked each
other instinctively. To each of us the
other was unfamiliar, disturbing, alien, and repugnant, and only an imaginary
sense of obligation, of belonging together, forced us to play out that tedious
farce for a whole evening. I realized
that soon after your visit. Neither of us
had properly outgrown either our former friendship or our former opposition. Instead of letting that relationship die we
thought we had to exhume it and somehow continue it. We felt indebted to it and had no idea how to
pay the debt. Isn't that so?"
"I think," Plinio said
thoughtfully, "that even today you are still being somewhat
overpolite. You say 'wee both', but in
fact it was not the two of us who were seeking and unable to find each
other. The seeking, the love, was all on
my side, and so the disappointment and suffering also. And now I ask you: What has changed in your
life since that meeting? Nothing. In my case, on the other hand, it was a deep
and painful dividing line, and I cannot accept your laughing way of dismissing
it."
"Forgive me," Knecht amiably
apologized. "I have probably rushed
matters. But I hope that in time you too
will be able to laugh at that incident.
Of course you were wounded then, though not by me, as you thought and
still seem to think. You were wounded by
the gulf between yourself and Castalia, by the chasm between your world and
mine which we seemed to have bridged in the course of our schoolboy friendship
but which suddenly yawned before us so fearfully wide and deep. Insofar as you blame me personally, I beg you
to state your accusation frankly."
"Oh, it was never an accusation. But it was a plaint. You didn't hear it at the time, and it seems
you don't want to hear it even now. At
the time you answered it with a smile and a show of good manners, and you're
doing the same thing again."
Although he sensed the friendship and
profound good will in the Magister's eyes, he was impelled to stress this
point; it was necessary for this burden he had borne for so long to be at last
thrown off.
Knecht's expression did not
change. After a moment's reflection he
said cautiously: "Only now am I beginning to understand you, friend. Perhaps you are right and we must discuss
this too. Still, may I remind you that
you could legitimately have expected me to enter into what you call your plaint
only if you had really expressed it. But
the fact was that during that evening's conversation in the guest house you
expressed no plaints whatsoever. Instead
you put as brisk and brave a face as possible on the whole thing, just as I
did. Like me, you acted the fearless
warrior who has no grievances. But
secretly you expected, as you now tell me, for me to hear the hidden plaint
somehow and to recognize your true face behind your mask. Well, I fancy I did notice something of the
sort at the time, though far from everything.
But how was I to suggest to you that I was worried about you, that I
pitied you, without offending your pride?
And what would have been the good of my extending my hand, since my hand
was empty and I had nothing to give you, no advice, no comfort, no friendship,
because our ways had parted so completely?
As a matter of fact, at the time the hidden uneasiness and unhappiness
that you concealed behind a brash manner annoyed me; to be frank, I found it
repugnant. It contained a claim on my
sympathy which was contradicted by your manner.
I felt there was something importunate and childish about it, and it
made my feelings chill towards you all the more. You were making claims on my comradeship. You wanted to be a Castalian, a Glass Bead
Game player; and at the same time you seemed so uncontrolled, so odd, so lost
in egotistic emotions. That was the tenor of my opinion at the time, for I
could see clearly that virtually nothing was left of the Castalian spirit in
you. You had apparently forgotten even
the elementary rules. Very well, that
wasn't my affair. But then why were you
coming to Waldzell and wanting to hail us as your fellows? As I've said, I found that annoying and
repugnant, and at the time you were absolutely right if you interpreted my
assiduous politeness as rejection. I did
instinctively reject you, and not because you were a worldly person, but
because you were asserting a claim to be regarded as a Castalian. But when you recently reappeared after so
many years, there was no longer any trace of that. You looked worldly and talked like a man from
outside. I noticed the difference
especially in the expression of sadness, grief or unhappiness on your
face. But I liked everything about you,
your bearing, your words, even your sadness.
They were beautiful, suited you, worthy of you. None of that bothered me; I could accept you and affirm it all without
the slightest inner resistance. This time
no excessive politeness and good manners were necessary, and so I promptly met
you as a friend and tried to show you my affection and concern. But this time the situation was reversed;
this time it was I who tried to win you while you held back. My only encouragement was that I tacitly understood
your appearance in our Province and your interest in our affairs as a sign of
attachment and loyalty. So then, finally
you responded to my wooing, and we have now come to the point of opening our
hearts to each other and in this way, I hope, being able to renew our old
friendship.
"You were just saying that our
meeting at that time was painful for you, but insignificant for me. We won't argue about that; you might be
right. But our present meeting, amice,
is by no means insignificant for me. It
means a great deal more to me than I can possibly tell you, more than you can
possibly guess. Just to give you the
briefest of hints, it means more to me than the return of a lost friend and the
resurrection of times past with new force and in a new light. Above all it represents to me a kind of call,
an approach towards me from outside. It
opens a way for me into your world; it confronts me once more with the old
problem of a synthesis between you and us.
And this occurs at the right moment.
This time the call does not find me deaf; it finds me more alert than I
have ever been, because it does not really surprise me. It does not come to me as something alien,
something from outside which I may or may not respond to, as I please. Rather, it comes out of myself; it is the
twin to a very powerful and insistent desire, to a need and a longing within
myself. But let us talk of this some
other time; it is already late and we both need our rest.
"You spoke of my good cheer and
your sadness, and you meant, it seems to me, that I was not being fair to what
you call your 'plaint', and that I have not been fair to it today either, since
I respond to this plaint with smiles.
There is something here I don't quite understand. Why should not a complaint be listened to
with cheerfulness; why must one wear a doleful face instead of a smile? From the fact that you came to Castalia
again, and to me, with your grief and your burden, I think I may conclude that
our cheerful serenity means something to you.
But if I do not go along with your sadness, do not let myself be
infected by it, that does not mean I don't recognize it or take it
seriously. I fully recognize and honour
your demeanour, which your life in the world had imprinted upon you. It becomes you and belongs to you; it is dear
to me and deserves respect, although I hope to see it change. Of course I can only guess at its source; you
will tell me or not tell me about it later, as seems right to you. I can see only that you seem to have a hard
life. But why do you think I would not
or cannot be fair to you and your burdens?"
Designori's face had clouded over once
more. "Sometimes," he said
resignedly, "it seems to me that we have not only two different languages
and ways of expressing ourselves, each of which can only vaguely be translated
into the other, but that we are altogether and fundamentally different
creatures who can never understand each other.
Which of us is really the authentic and integral human being, you or
me? Every so often I doubt that either
of us is. There were times when I looked
up to you members of the Order and Glass Bead Game players with such reverence,
such a sense of inferiority, and such envy that you might have been gods or
supermen, forever serene, forever playing, forever enjoying your own
existences, forever immune to suffering.
At other times you seemed to me either pitiable or contemptible,
eunuchs, artificially confined to an eternal childhood, childlike and childish
in your cool, tightly fenced, neatly tidied playground and kindergarten, where
every nose is carefully wiped and every troublesome emotion is soothed, every
dangerous thought repressed, where everyone plays nice, safe, bloodless games
for a lifetime and every jagged stirring of life, every strong feeling, every
genuine passion, every rapture is promptly checked, deflected, and neutralized
by meditation therapy. Isn't it an
artificial, sterilized, didactically pruned world, a mere sham world in which
you cravenly vegetate, a world without vices, without passions, without hunger,
without sap and salt, a world without family, without mothers, without
children, almost without women? The
instinctual life is tamed by meditation.
For generations you have left to others dangerous, daring, and
responsible things like economics, law, and politics. Cowardly and well-protected, fed by others,
and having few burdensome duties, you lead your drones' lives, and so that they
won't be too boring you busy yourselves with all these erudite specialities,
count syllables and letters, make music, and play the Glass Bead Game, while
outside in the filth of the world poor harried people live real lives and do
real work."
Knecht had listened to him with
unswervingly friendly attentiveness.
"My dear friend," he said
deliberately, "how strongly your words remind me of the spirited battles
of our schooldays. The difference is
that today I no longer need play the same part as I did then. My task today is not defence of the Order and
the Province against your assaults, and I am very glad that this troublesome
task, which overtaxed me at the time, is mine no longer. You see, it's become rather difficult to
repel the sort of glorious cavalry charge you've once again mounted. You talk, for example, of people out in the
rest of the country who 'live real lives and do real work'. That sounds so find and absolute -
practically axiomatic - and if one wanted to oppose it one would have to rudely
remind the speaker that his own 'real work' consists partly in sitting on a
committee for the betterment of Castalia.
But let us leave joking aside for the moment. It is apparent from your words and your tone
that your heart is still full of hatred for us, and at the same time full of
despairing love towards us, full of envy and longing. To you we are cowards, drones, or children playing
in a kindergarten, but at times you have also seen us as godlike in our
serenity. From all this, though, I think
I may rightly conclude one thing: Castalia is not to blame for your sadness,
your unhappiness, or whatever we choose to call it. That must come from elsewhere. If we Castalians were to blame, your
accusations against us would not be just what they were in the discussions of
our boyhood. In later conversations you
must tell me more, and I don't doubt that we shall find a way to make you
happier and more serene, or at least to change your relationship towards
Castalia into a freer and more pleasant one.
As far as I can see right now, you have a false, constrained,
sentimental attitude towards us. You
have divided your own soul into a Castalian and worldly part, and you torment
yourself excessively about things for which you bear no responsibility. Possibly you also do not take seriously
enough other things for which you do bear responsibility. I suspect that it is some time since you have
done any meditation exercises. Isn't
that so?"
Designori gave an anguished
laugh. "How keen you are, Domine!
Some time, you say? Many, many years have passed since I gave up
the magic of meditation. Now you are
suddenly so concerned about me! That
time you met me here in Waldzell during the vacation course and showed me so
much courtesy and contempt, and turned down my plea for comradeship in so
polished a manner, I left here with the firm resolve to put an end to
everything Castalian about me. From then
on I gave up the Glass Bead Game, ceased meditating; even music was spoiled for
me for a considerable time. Instead I
found new friends who gave me instruction in worldly amusements. We drank and whored; we tried all available
narcotics; we sneered at decency, reverence, idealism. Of course the thing didn't go on very long at
such a crude level, but long enough to remove completely the last traces of
Castalian veneer. And then, years later,
when I occasionally realized that I had gone too far and badly needed some of
the techniques of meditation, I had become too proud to start again."
"Too proud?" Knecht
murmured.
"Yes, too proud. I had meanwhile plunged into the world and
become a man of the world. I wanted
nothing more than to be one with the others; I wanted no other life than the
world's life - its passionate, childlike, crude, ungoverned life vacillating
forever between happiness and fear. I
disdained the idea of procuring a degree of relief and some transcendence over
others by employing your methods."
The Magister gave him a sharp
look. "And you endured that for
many years? Didn't use any other methods
to cope with it all?"
"Oh yes," Plinio
confessed. "I did and still
do. At times I go back to drinking, and
usually I need all kinds of sedatives so that I can sleep."
For a second Knecht closed his eyes,
as though suddenly weary; then he fixed his gaze upon his friend once
more. Silently, he looked into his face,
earnestly probing at first, but with his own expression gradually growing
gentler, friendlier, serener. Designori
has recorded that he had never before encountered such a look in anyone's eyes,
a look at once so searching and so loving, so innocent and so critical,
radiating such kindness and such omniscience.
He admits that this look disturbed him unpleasantly at first, but
gradually reassured and overcame him by its gentle insistence. But he was still trying to fight back.
"You said that you know ways to
make me happier and more serene. But you
don't ask whether that is what I really want."
"Well," Joseph Knecht said,
laughing, "if we can make a person happier and more serene, we should do
it in any case, whether or not he asks us to.
And how could you not want that and not be seeking it? That's why you are here, that's why we are
once again sitting face to face, that's why you returned to us, after all. You hate Castalia, you despise it, you're far
too proud of your worldliness and your sadness to wish to find relief through
the use of reason and meditation. And
yet a secret, unquenchable longing for us and our serenity remained with you
all through these years, luring you to return, to try us once more. And I must tell you that you have come at the
right moment, when I too have been longing intensely for a call from your
world, for an opening door. But we'll
talk about that next time. You've
confided a great deal to me, friend, and I thank you for it. You will see that I too have some things to
confess to you. It is late, you're
leaving tomorrow, and another day of official routines awaits me. We must go to bed. But please give me another fifteen
minutes."
He stood up, went to the window, and
looked up at the starry, crystalline night sky overlaid by the scudding
clouds. Since he did not return to his
chair at once, his guest also stood up and came over to the window beside
him. The Magister stood there, drinking
in the cool, thin air of the autumnal night with rhythmic inhalations. He pointed towards the sky.
"Look," he said. "This landscape of clouds and sky. At first glance you might think that the
depths are there where it is darkest; but then you realize that the darkness
and softness are only the clouds and that the depths of the universe begin only
at the fringes and fjords of this mountain range of clouds - solemn and supreme
symbols of clarity and orderliness. The
depths and the mysteries of the universe lie not where the clouds and blackness
are; the depths are to be found in the spaces of clarity and serenity. Please, just before going to sleep look up
for a while at these bays and straits again, with all their stars, and don't
reject the ideas or dreams that come to you from them."
A strange quiver went through Plinio's
heart - he could not tell whether it was of grief or happiness. An unimaginably long time ago, he recalled,
in the lovely, serene beginnings of his life as a Waldzell student, he had been
summoned in similar words to his first meditation exercises.
"And let me say one word
more," the Glass Bead Game Master resumed, again in a low voice. "I would like to say something more to
you about cheerful serenity, the serenity of the stars and of the mind, and
about our Castalian kind of serenity also.
You are averse to serenity, presumably because you have had to walk the
ways of sadness, and now all brightness and good cheer, especially our
Castalian kind, strikes you as shallow and childish, and cowardly to boot, a
flight from the terrors and abysses of reality into a clear, well-ordered world
of mere forms and formulas, mere abstractions and refinements. But, my dear devotee of sadness, even though
for some this may well be a flight, though there may be no lack of cowardly,
timorous Castalians playing with mere formulas, even if the majority among us
were in fact of this sort - all this would not lessen the value and splendour
of genuine serenity, the serenity of the sky and the mind. Granted there are those among us who are too
easily satisfied, who enjoy a sham serenity; but in contrast to them we also
have men and generations of men whose serenity is not playful shallowness, but
earnest depth. I knew one such man - I
mean our former Music Master, whom you used to see in Waldzell now and
then. In the last years of his life this
man possessed the virtue of serenity to such a degree that it radiated from him
like the light from a star; so much that it was transmitted to all in the form
of benevolence, enjoyment of life, good humour, trust, and confidence. It continued to radiate outwards from all who
received it, all who had absorbed its brightness. His light shone upon me also; he transmitted
to me a little of his radiance, a little of the brightness in his heart, and to
our friend Ferromonte as well, and a good many others. To achieve this cheerful serenity is to me,
and to many others, the finest and highest of goals. You will also find it among some of the
patriarchs in the directorate of the Order.
Such cheerfulness is neither frivolity nor complacency; it is supreme
insight and love, affirmation of all reality, alertness on the brink of all
depths and abysses; it is a virtue of saints and of knights; it is
indestructible and only increases with age and nearness to death. It is the secret of beauty and the real
substance of all art. The poet who
praises the splendours and terrors of life in the dance-measures of his verse,
the musician who sounds them in a pure, eternal present - these are bringers of
light, increasers of joy and brightness on earth, even if they lead us first
through tears and stress. Perhaps the
poet whose verses gladden us was a sad solitary, and the musician a melancholic
dreamer; but even so their work shares in the cheerful serenity of the gods and
the stars. What they give us is no
longer their darkness, their suffering or fears, but a drop of pure light,
eternal cheerfulness. Even though whole
peoples and languages have attempted to fathom the depths of the universe in
myths, cosmogonies, and religions, their supreme, their ultimate attainment has
been this cheerfulness. You recall the
ancient Hindus - our teachers in Waldzell once spoke so beautifully about
them. A people of suffering, of
brooding, of penance and asceticism; but the great ultimate achievements of
their thought were bright and cheerful; the smile of the ascetics and the
Buddhas are cheerful; the figures in their profound, enigmatic mythologies are
cheerful. The world these myths
represent begins divinely, blissfully, radiantly, with a springtime loveliness:
the golden age. Then it sickens and
degenerates more and more; it grows coarse and subsides into misery; and at the
end of four ages, each lower than the others, it is ripe for annihilation. Therefore it is trampled underfoot by a
laughing, dancing Siva - but it does not end with that. It begins anew with the smile of dreaming
Vishnu whose hands playfully fashion a young, new, beautiful, shining
world. It is wonderful - how these
Indians, with an insight and capacity for suffering scarcely equalled by any
other people, looked with horror and shame upon the cruel game of world
history, the eternally revolving wheel of avidity and suffering; they saw and
understood the fragility of created being, the avidity and diabolism of man,
and at the same time his deep yearning for purity and harmony; and they devised
these glorious parables for the beauty and tragedy of the creation: might Siva
who dances the completed world into ruins, and smiling Vishnu who lies
slumbering and playfully makes a new world arise out of his golden dreams of
gods.
"But to return to our own,
Castalian cheerfulness, it may be only a lateborn, lesser variety of this great
universal serenity, but it is a completely legitimate form. Scholarship has not been cheerful always and
everywhere, although it ought to be. But
with us scholarship, which is the cult of truth, is closely allied to the cult of
the beautiful, and allied also with the practice of spiritual refreshment by
meditation. Consequently it can never
entirely lose its serene cheerfulness.
Our Glass Bead Game combines all three principles: learning, veneration
of the beautiful, and meditation; and therefore a proper Glass Bead Game player
ought to be drenched in cheerfulness as a ripe fruit is drenched in its sweet
juices. He ought above all to possess
the cheerful serenity of music, for after all music is nothing but an act of
courage, a serene, smiling, striding forward and dancing through the terrors
and flames of the world, the festive offering of a sacrifice. This kind of cheerful serenity is what I have
been concerned with ever since I began dimly to sense its meaning during my student
days, and I shall never again relinquish it, not even in unhappiness and
suffering.
"We shall go to sleep now, and
tomorrow morning you are leaving. Come
back soon, tell me more about yourself, and I shall begin to tell you,
too. You will hear that even in Waldzell
and even in the life of a Magister there are doubts, disappointments, despairs,
and dangerous passions. But now I want
you to take an ear filled with music to bed with you. A glance into the starry sky and an ear
filled with music is a better prelude to sleep than all your sedatives."
He sat down and carefully, very
softly, played a movement from the Purcell sonata which was one of Father
Jacobus's favourite pieces. The notes
fell into the stillness like drops of golden light, so softly that along with
them the songs of the old fountain in the yard could be heard. Gently, austerely, sparingly, sweetly, the
lovely separate voices met and mingled; bravely and gaily they paced their
tender rondo through the void of time and transitoriness, for a little while
making the room and the night hour vast as the universe. And when the friends bade each other
goodnight, the guest's face had changed and brightened, although his eyes had
filled with tears.
TEN
PREPARATIONS
NOW THAT KNECHT had
managed to break the ice, a vital association, revitalizing to the two of them,
began between himself and Designori. The
latter, who for long years had lived in resigned melancholia, had to admit that
his friend was right: what had drawn him back to the Pedagogic Province was in
fact the longing for a cure, for brightness, for Castalian cheerfulness. While Tegularius observed the new development
with jealous mistrust, Plinio began visiting frequently, even when he had no
commission business. Soon Magister
Knecht knew all he needed to know about him.
Designori's life had been neither so extraordinary nor so complicated as
Knecht had imagined after those initial revelations. In his youth Plinio had suffered certain
disappointments and humiliations, the more painful to one of his active,
enthusiastic temperament, of which we have already heard. He had failed in his efforts to become a
mediator between the world and Castalia; he had not contrived to create a
synthesis of the worldly and Castalian components in his background and
character, and had instead turned into an isolated and embittered
outsider. Nevertheless, he was not
simply a failure. In defeat and
renunciation he had in spite of everything shaped a selfhood.
In him Castalian education seemed to
have miscarried. At least it had so far
produced nothing but conflicts and disappointments for him, and a profound
loneliness difficult for a man of his sort to bear. It seemed, moreover, that since he had once
stumbled into the thorny path of maladjustment, he was driven to commit all
kinds of acts that increased his isolation and his difficulties. Thus while still a student he found himself
irreconcilably at odds with his family, in particular with his father.
Although not reckoned among actual political
leaders, his father like all the Designoris had been a lifelong supporter of
the conservative, pro-government party.
He was hostile to all innovations, opposed to the claims of the
underprivileged to new rights and a fair share in the economy. He was suspicious of men without name or
rank, devoted to the old order, and prepared to make sacrifices for everything
he regarded as legitimate and sacred.
Without having any special religious vein, he was friendly towards the
Church. And although he did not lack a
sense of justice, benevolence, charity, and helpfulness, he was obstinately and
on principle opposed to the efforts of tenant-farmers to better their lot. He was wont to cite the programme and slogans
of his party as a rationalization for this harshness. In reality, what motivated him was neither
conviction nor insight, but blind loyalty to his class and the traditions of
his family. This loyalty was in keeping
with a deep chivalrousness and feeling for chivalric honour, and an outspoken
contempt for everything that pretended to be modern, progressive, and
contemporary.
It was a bitter blow to a man of this
sort when his son Plinio, while still in his student days, joined a distinctly
oppositional and modernistic party. In
those days a youthful left wing of an old middle-class liberal party had been
formed, led by a man named Veraguth, a publicist, deputy, and forceful
orator. He was a highly emotional
populist and libertarian with a tendency to become intoxicated by his own
rhetoric. This man courted the students
by giving public lectures in university towns, and met with considerably
success. Among other enthusiastic
followers, he won over Designori. The
young man, disappointed with the university and seeking something to sustain
him, some substitute for the Castalian morality which had lost its hold on him,
seeking some kind of new idealism and programme, was carried away by Veraguth's
lectures. He admired the man's passion
and fighting spirit, his wit, his hortatory style, his good looks and fine
speech. Soon Plinio joined a faction of
students who had been converted by Veraguth's lectures and were working for his
party and aims.
When Plinio's father learned of this,
he set out at once for the university town.
In a thundering rage, shouting at his son for the first time in his
life, he charged him with conspiracy, betrayal of his father, his family, and
the traditions of his house, and ordered him to undo his error at once by
severing all ties with Veraguth and his party.
This was certainly not the right way to influence the young man, who saw
his position turning into a kind of martyrdom.
Plinio stood up to his father's thunder.
He hadn't attended the elite school for ten years and the university for
several, he declared, in order to give up his power of judgement. He was not going to let a clique of selfish
landowners prescribe his views on government, economics, and justice. In framing this reply, he profited by the
example of Veraguth, who modelled himself on the great tribunes of the people
in never speaking of his own or class interests, but only of pure, absolute
justice and humanity.
Plinio's father burst into bitter
laughter and suggested that his son at least finish his studies before he
meddled in grown-up affairs and fancied that he knew more about human life and
justice than venerable generations of noble families whose degenerate scion he
was and whom he was now traitorously stabbing in the back. With every word the quarrel grew more bitter
and insulting, until the father suddenly stopped in icy shame, as though a
mirror had shown him his own face distorted with rage. In silence, he took his leave.
From then on, Plinio's old pleasant
and intimate relationship to his paternal home was never restored. He remained loyal to his faction and its
neo-liberalism. What is more, after
completing his studies he became Veraguth's disciple, assistant, and intimate
associate, and a few years later his son-in-law. Since Designori's psychic equilibrium had
been disturbed by his education in the elite schools, or perhaps we should say
by his difficulties in readjusting to the world and to life back home, so that
he was already beset by problems, these new relationships threw him into an
exposed, complex, and delicate situation.
He gained something of indubitable value, a kind of faith, political
convictions, and membership in a party which satisfied his youthful craving for
justice and progressiveness. In Veraguth
he acquired a teacher, leader, and older friend whom at first he uncritically
admired and loved, and who moreover seemed to need him and appreciate him. He gained a direction and goal, work and a
mission in life. That was a good deal,
but it had to be dearly bought. To some
degree the young man came to terms with the loss of his natural position in his
father's family and among his peers; to some degree he managed to meet
expulsion from a privileged caste, and its subsequent hostility, with a sort of
relish in martyrdom. But there were some
things he could never get over, above all the gnawing sense that he had
inflicted pain on his beloved mother, had placed her in an uncomfortable
position between his father and himself, and by doing so had probably shortened
her life. She died soon after his
marriage. After her death Plinio
scarcely ever visited his home, and when his father died he sold the ancient
family seat.
Among those who have made heavy
sacrifices for a position in life, a government post, a marriage, a profession,
there are some who contrive to love their position and affirm it the more on
the strength of these very sacrifices.
What they have suffered for constitutes their happiness and their
fulfilment. Designori's case was different. Although he remained loyal to his party and
its leader, his political beliefs and work, his marriage and his idealism, he
began to doubt everything connected with these things. His whole life had become problematical to
him. The political and ideological
fervour of youth subsided. In the long
run, the struggle to prove oneself right no more made for gladness than had the
trials undertaken out of defiance.
Experience in professional life had its sobering effect. Ultimately he wondered whether he had become
a follower of Veraguth out of a sense of truth and justice or whether he had
not been at least half seduced by the man's gifts as a speaker and
rabble-rouser, his charm and nimble wit in public appearances, the sonority of
his voice, his splendid virile laughter, and the intelligence and beauty of his
daughter.
More and more he began to doubt
whether old Designori with his class loyalty and his obduracy towards the
tenant-farmers had really held the baser view.
He became uncertain whether good and bad, right and wrong, had any absolute
existence at all. Perhaps the voice of
one's own conscience was ultimately the only valid judge, and if that were so,
then he, Plinio, was in the wrong. For
he was not happy, calm, and balanced; he was not confident and secure. On the contrary, he was plagued by
uncertainty, doubts, and guilts. His
marriage was not unhappy and mistaken in any crude sense, but still it was
fully of tensions, complications, and resistances. It was perhaps the best thing he possessed,
but it did not give him that tranquillity, that happiness, that innocence and
good conscience he so badly missed. It
required a great deal of circumspection and self-control. It cost him much effort. Moreover, his handsome and gifted small son
Tito very soon became a focal point of struggle and intrigue, of courting and
jealousy, until the boy, pampered and excessively loved by both parents,
inclined more and more to his mother's side and became her partisan. That was the latest and, so it seemed, the
bitterest sorrow and loss in Designori's life.
It had not broken him; he had assimilated it and found an attitude
towards it, a dignified, but grave, worn, and melancholy way of bearing it.
While Knecht was gradually learning
all this from his friend in the course of frequent visits, he had also told him
a great deal about his own experiences and problems. He was careful not to let Plinio fall into
the position of the one who has made his confession only to regret it at a
later hour or, with a change of mood, to wish to take it all back. On the contrary, he won Plinio's confidence
by his own candour and strengthened it by his own revelations. In the course of time he showed his friend
what his own life was like - a seemingly simple, upright, regulated life within
a carefully structured hierarchic order, a career filled with success and
recognition, but nevertheless a hard and completely lonely life of many
sacrifices. And although as an outsider
there was much that Plinio could not entirely grasp, he did understand the main
currents and basic emotions. Certainly
he could understand Knecht's craving to reach out to the youth, to the younger
pupils unspoiled by miseducation, and sympathize with his desire for some
modest employment such as that of a Latin or music teacher in a lower school,
free of glamour and of the eternal obligation to play a public role. It was wholly in the style of Knecht's
methods of teaching and psychotherapy that he not only won over this patient by
his frankness, but also planted the thought in Plinio's mind that he could help
his friend, and thus spurred him really to do so. For in fact Designori could be highly useful
to the Magister, not so much in helping him to solve his main problem, but in
satisfying his curiosity and thirst for knowledge about innumerable details of
life in the world.
We do not know why Knecht undertook
the difficult task of teaching his melancholy boyhood friend to smile and laugh
again, or whether any thought of a reciprocal service was involved. Designori, at any rate, who was certainly in
a position to know, did not think so. He
later said: "Whenever I try to fathom how my friend Knecht managed to do
anything with a person as confirmedly unhappy as myself, I see more and more
plainly that his power was based on magic and, I must add, on a streak of
roguishness. He was an arch-rogue, far
more than his own underlings realized, full of playfulness, wit, slyness,
delighting in magician's tricks, in guises, in surprising disappearances and
appearances. I think that the very
moment I first turned up at the Castalian Board meeting he resolved to snare me
and exert his special sort of influence on me - that is, to awaken and reform
me. At any rate, he took pains to win me
over from the very first. Why he did it,
why he bothered with me, I cannot say. I
think men of his sort usually do things unconsciously, as a kind of
reflex. When they encounter someone in
distress they feel it as their task to respond to that appeal immediately. He found me distrustful and shy, by no means
ready to fall into his arms, let alone ask him for help.
"He found me, his once frank and
communicative friend, disillusioned and reticent; yet this very obstacle seemed
to stimulate him. He did not give up,
prickly though I was, and he finally achieved what he wanted. Among other things he made it seem that our
relationship was one of mutual aid, as though my strength were equal to his, my
worth to his, my need of help paralleled by an equal need on his part. In our very first long conversation he
implied that he had been waiting for something like my appearance, that he had
in fact been longing for it, and gradually he admitted me into his plan of
resigning his office and leaving the Province.
He always made me aware of how much he counted on my advice, my assistance,
my secrecy, since aside from me he had not a single friend in the world
outside, and no experience at all with the world. I admit that I liked to feel this, and that
it contributed a good deal towards my trusting him completely and my putting
myself more or less at his mercy. I
believed him absolutely. But later, in
the course of time, the whole thing began to seem totally dubious and
improbable, and I would have been unable to say whether and to what extent he
really expected something from me, and whether his way of capturing me was innocent
or politic, naive or sly, sincere or contrived and a kind of game. He was so far superior to me, and did me so
much good, that I would never have ventured to look deeper into the matter. In any case, nowadays I regard the fiction
that his situation was similar to mine, and he just as dependent on my sympathy
and aid as I on his, as merely a form of politeness, an engaging and pleasant
web of suggestion that he wove around me.
Only that to this day I cannot say to what extent his game with me was
conscious, preconceived, and deliberate, to what extent it was in spite of
everything naive and a pure product of his nature. For Magister Joseph was certainly a great
artist. On the one hand his urge to
educate, to influence, to heal and help and develop the personalities of
others, was so strong that he scarcely scrupled about the means he used; on the
other hand it was impossible for him to undertake even the smallest task
without devoting himself totally to it.
But one thing is certain: that at the time he took me under his wing
like a friend and like a great physician and guide. He did not let go of me once he held me, and
ultimately he awakened me and cured me as far as that was possible. And the remarkable thing, so utterly typical
of him, was that while he pretended to be asking me to help him escape from his
office, and while he listened calmly and often with actual approval to my crude
and simple-minded jibes at Castalia, and while he himself was struggling to
free himself from Castalia, he actually lured and guided me back there. He persuaded me to return to meditation. He schooled and reshaped me by means of
Castalian music and contemplation, Castalian serenity, Castalian
fortitude. He made me, who in spite of
my longing for your way had become so utterly un-Castalian and anti-Castalian,
into one of your sort again; he transformed my unrequited love for you into a
requited love."
Such were Designori's comments, and no
doubt he had reason for his admiring gratitude.
It may not be too difficult to teach boys and young men the lifestyle of
the Order, with the aid of our tried and true methods. It was surely a difficult task in the case of
a man who was already approaching his fiftieth year, even if this man were
himself full of good will. Not that
Designori ever became anything like a model Castalian. But Knecht succeeded fully in what he had set
out to do; in lifting the bitter weight of unhappiness, in leading Designori's
touchy, vulnerable soul back to something like harmony and serenity, and in
replacing a number of his bad habits by good ones. Naturally the Magister Ludi could not himself
undertake all the detailed work that was involved. He enlisted the apparatus and energies of
Waldzell and the Order on behalf of this honoured guest. For a while he even dispatched a meditation
master from Hirsland, the seat of the Order's directorate, to stay a while with
Designori and supervise his exercises.
But the whole plan and direction of the cure remained in Knecht's hand.
It was in his eighth year as Magister
that he at last yielded to his friend's repeated invitations and visited him at
his home in the capital. With permission
from the directorate of the Order, with whose President, Alexander, he had
close and affectionate relations, he devoted a holiday to his visit. Although he expected a great deal of it, he
had been putting it off for a whole year, partly because he first wished to be
sure of his friend, partly, no doubt, out of a natural timidity. This was, after all, his first step into the
world from which his friend Plinio had brought his stony sadness, the world
which held so many important secrets for him.
He found the modern house which his
friend had exchanged for the old Designori townhouse presided over by a
stately, highly intelligent, and reserved lady.
She, however, was dominated by her handsome, cheeky, and rather
ill-behaved son, who seemed to be the centre of everything here and who had
apparently taken over from his mother a supercilious and rather insulting
attitude towards his father.
Initially rather cool and suspicious
of everything Castalian, both mother and son soon came under the spell of the
Magister, whose office gave him, in their eyes, an almost mythical aura of
mystery and consecration. Nevertheless,
the atmosphere during this first visit was stiff and forced. Knecht remained rather quiet, observing and
awaiting events. The lady of the house
received him with formal politeness and inner distaste, as if he were a high
officer of some enemy army being quartered on her. Tito, the son, was the least constrained of
the three; probably he had often enough looked on in amusement on similar
situations. No doubt he had also
profited by them. His father seemed to
be only playing the part of master of the house. Between him and his wife the prevailing tone
was one of gentle, cautious, rather anxious politeness, as if each of them were
walking on tiptoe. This tone was
maintained far more easily and naturally by the wife than by her husband. As for the son, Plinio was always making
overtures of comradeship to the boy which were at times taken up for selfish
reasons, at other times impudently rebuffed.
In short, the three lived together in
a sultry atmosphere of effort, guiltiness, and sternly repressed impulses,
filled with fear of friction and eruptions, in a state of perpetual
tension. The style of behaviour and
speech, like the style of the whole house, was a little too careful and
deliberate, as though a solid wall had to be built against eventual breaches and
assaults. Knecht also noted that a great
deal of Plinio's regained serenity had vanished from his face again. Though in Waldzell or in the guesthouse of
the Order in Hirsland he was by now almost free of gloom, in his own house he
still stood in the shadows, and provoked as much criticism as pity.
The house was a fine one. It bespoke wealth and luxurious tastes. In each room the furnishings were of the
right proportions for the space; each was tuned to a pleasant harmony of two or
three colours, with here and there a valuable work of art. Knecht looked about him with pleasure; but in
the end all these delights to the eye struck him as a shade too handsome, too
perfect, and too well thought out. There
was no sense of growth, of movement, of renewal. He sensed that this beauty of the house and
its belongings was also meant as a kind of spell, a defensive gesture, and that
these rooms, pictures, vases, and flowers enclosed and accompanied a life of
vain longing for harmony and beauty which could be attained only in the form of
tending such well co-ordinated surroundings.
It was in the period after this visit,
with its somewhat unedifying impressions, that Knecht sent a meditation teacher
to his friend's home. After having spent
a single day in the curiously taut and charged atmosphere of this house, the
Magister understood much that he had not wished to know but needed to learn for
his friend's sake. Nor was this first
visit the last. He came again, several
times, and on some of these occasions the talk turned to education and the
difficulties with young Tito. In these
conversations Tito's mother took a lively part.
The Magister gradually won the confidence and liking of this highly
intelligent and sceptical woman. Once,
when he said half-jokingly that it was a pity her boy had not been sent to
Castalia early, while there was still time for him to be educated there, she
took the remark seriously as if it were a reproof, and came to her own
defence. She doubted, she said, whether
Tito would have been admitted; he was gifted enough, certainly, but hard to
handle, and she would never have wished to impose her own ideas on the
boy. After all, a similar attempt in the
case of his father had not worked out well.
Besides, neither she nor her husband had ever thought to claim the old
Designori family privilege for their son, since they had broken with Plinio's
father and the whole tradition of the ancient house. Finally, she added, with a painful smile,
that in any case she would not have been able to part with her child, since he
was all that made her life worth living.
Knecht gave a great deal of thought to
this last remark, which obviously had been made without reflection. So her house, in which everything was so
distinguished, elegant, and harmonious, so her husband, her politics, her
party, the heritage of the father she had once adored - so all this was not
enough to give meaning to her life. Only
her child could make it worth living.
And she would rather allow this child to grow up under the harmful
conditions that prevailed in this house than be separated from him for his own
good. For so sensible and seemingly so
cool and intellectual a woman, this was an astonishing confession. Knecht could not help her as directly as he
had her husband, nor did he have the slightest intention of trying. But as a result of his rare visits and of the
fact that Plinio was under his influence, some moderation and a reminder of
better ways were introduced into the warped and wrong-headed family
situation. The Magister himself,
however, as he gained increasing influence and authority in the Designori
household with each succeeding visit, found himself more and more puzzled by
the life of these worldly people.
Unfortunately we know very little about his visits in the capital and
the things he saw and experienced there, so that we must content ourselves with
the matters we have already indicated.
Knecht had not hitherto approached the
President of the Order in Hirsland any more closely than his official functions
demanded. He probably saw him only at
those plenary sessions of the Board of Educators which took place in Hirsland,
and even then the President generally performed only the more formal and
ornamental duties, the reception and congé of his colleagues, with the
principal work of conducting the session being left to the Speaker. The previous President, who at the time of
Knecht's assuming office was already an old man, had been highly respected by
the Magister Ludi, but had made not a single gesture towards lessening the
distance between them. For Knecht, he
was scarcely a human being, no longer had any personality; he hovered, a high
priest, a symbol of dignity and composure, silent summit and crowning glory,
above the entire hierarchy. This
venerable man had recently died, and the Order had elected Alexander its new
President.
Alexander was the same Meditation
Master whom the heads of the Order had assigned to our Joseph Knecht years ago,
during the early period of his magistracy.
Ever since, the Magister had retained an affectionate gratitude for this
exemplary representative of the spirit of hierarchy. And Alexander himself, during the time he
daily watched over the Magister Ludi and became virtually his father confessor,
had seen enough of his personality and conduct to come to love him. Both grew aware of the hitherto latent
friendship from the moment that Alexander became Knecht's colleague and
President of the Order. Henceforth they
saw each other frequently and had work to do together. It was true that this friendship lacked a
foundation in everyday, commonplace tasks, just as it lacked shared experiences
in youth. It was rather the mutual
sympathy of the colleagues at the summit of their respective vocations, who
expressed their friendliness by a slightly greater warmth in greetings and
leave-takings, by the deftness of their mutual comprehension, at most by a few
minutes of chatting during brief breaks at the sitting of the Board.
Constitutionally, the President, who
was also called Master of the Order, was in no way superior to his colleagues,
the other Magisters. But he had acquired
an indefinable superiority due to the tradition that the Master of the Order
presided over the meetings of the Supreme Board. And as the Order had grown more meditative
and monastic during the last several decades, his authority had increased -
although only within the hierarchy and the Province, not outside it. Within the Board of Educators, the President
of the Order and the Master of the Glass Bead Game had more and more become the
twin exponents and representatives of the Castalian spirit. As against the ancient disciplines handed
down from pre-Castalian eras - such as grammar, astronomy, mathematics, or
music - the Glass Bead Game and discipline of the mind through meditation had
become the truly characteristic values of Castalia. It was therefore of some significance that
the two present leaders in these fields stood in a friendly relationship to
each other. For each it was a vindication
of his own worth, for each an extra dash of warmth and satisfaction in his
life; for both it was an additional spur to the fulfilment of their task of
embodying in their own persons the deepest values, the sacral energies of the
Castalian world.
To Knecht, therefore, this meant one
more tie, one more counterpoise to his growing urge to renounce everything and
achieve a breakthrough into a new and different sphere of life. Nevertheless, this urge developed inexorably. Ever since he himself had become fully aware
of it - that may have been in the sixth or seventh year of his magistracy - it
had grown steadily stronger. Subscribing
as he did to the idea of "awakening", he had unfalteringly received
it into his conscious life and thinking.
We believe we may say that from that time on the thought of his coming
departure from his office and from the Province was familiar to him. Sometimes it seemed like a prisoner's belief
in eventual freedom, sometimes like knowledge of impending death as it must
appear to a man gravely ill.
During his first frank conversation
with Plinio, he had for the first time expressed the thing in words. Perhaps he had done so only in order to win
over his friend and persuade him to open his heart; but perhaps also he had
intended, by this initial act of communication, to turn this new awakening of
hi, this new attitude towards life, in an outward direction. That is, by letting someone into his secret
he was taking a first step towards making it a reality. In his further conversations with Designori,
Knecht's desire to shed his present mode of life sooner or later, to undertake
the leap into a new life, assumed the status of a decision. Meanwhile, he carefully built on his
friendship with Plinio, who by now was bound to him not only by his former
admiration, but also by the gratitude of a cured patient. In that friendship Knecht now possessed a
bridge to the outside world and to its life so laden with enigmas.
It need not surprise us that the
Magister waited so long before allowing his friend Tegularius a glimpse of his
secret and of his plan for breaking away.
Although he had shaped each of his friendships with kindness and with
regard for the good of the other, he had always managed to keep a clear,
independent view of these relationships, and to direct their course. Now, with the re-entry of Plinio into his
life, a rival to Fritz had appeared, a new-old friend with claims upon Knecht's
interest and emotions. Knecht could
scarcely have been surprised that Tegularius reacted with signs of violent
jealousy. For a while, until he had
completely won over Designori, the Magister may well have found Fritz's sulky
withdrawal a welcome relief. But in the
long run another consideration took a larger place in his thoughts. How could he reconcile a person like
Tegularius to his desire to slip away from Waldzell and out of his
magistracy? Once Knecht left Waldzell,
he would be lost to this friend forever.
To take Fritz along on the narrow and perilous path that lay before him
was unthinkable, even if Fritz should unexpectedly manifest the desire and the
courage for the enterprise.
Knecht waited, considered, and
hesitated for a very long time before initiating Fritz into his plans. But he finally did so, after his decision to
leave had long been settled. It would
have been totally unlike him to keep his friend in the dark, and more or less
behind his back prepare steps whose consequences would deeply affect him as
well. If possible Knecht wanted to make
him, like Plinio, not only an initiate, but also a real or imaginary aide,
since activity makes every situation more bearable.
Knecht had, of course, long ago made
his friend privy to his ideas about the doom threatening the Castalian
organization, as far as he cared to communicate these ideas and Tegularius to
receive them. After he resolved to tell
Fritz of his intentions, the Magister used these ideas as his link. Contrary to his expectations, and to his
great relief, Fritz did not take a tragic view of the plan. Rather, the notion that a Magister might
fling his post back at the Board, shake the dust of Castalia from his feet, and
seek out a life that suited his tastes, seemed to please Fritz. The idea actually amused him. Individualist and enemy of all
standardization that he was, Tegularius invariably sided with the individual
against authority. If there were
prospect of fighting, taunting, outwitting the powers of officialdom, he was
always for it.
His reaction gave Knecht a valuable
clue as to how to go on. With an easier
conscience, and laughing inwardly, the Magister promptly entered into his
friend's attitude. He did not disabuse
Fritz of his notion that the whole thing was a kind of coup de main against
bureaucracy, and assigned him the part of an accomplice, collaborator, and
conspirator. It would be necessary to
work out a petition from the Magister to the Board, he said - an exposition of
all the reasons that prompted him to resign his office. The preparation of this petition was to be
chiefly Tegularius's task. Above all he
must assimilate Knecht's historical view of the origins, development, and
present state of Castalia, then gather historical materials with which Knecht's
desires and proposals could be documented.
That this would lead him into a field he had hitherto rejected and
scorned, the field of history, seemed not to disturb Tegularius at all, and
Knecht quickly taught him the necessary procedures. Soon Tegularius had immersed himself in his
new assignment with the eagerness and tenacity he always had for odd and
solitary enterprises. This obstinate
individualist took a fierce delight in these studies which would place him in a
position to challenge the bigwigs and the hierarchy in general, and show them
their shortcomings.
Joseph Knecht took no such pleasure in
these endeavours, nor had he any faith in their outcome. He was determined to free himself from the
fetters of his present situation, leaving himself unencumbered for tasks which
he felt were awaiting him. But he fully
realized that he could not overpower the Board by rational arguments, nor
delegate Tegularius any part of the real work that had to be done. Nevertheless, he was very glad to know that
Fritz was occupied and diverted for the short while that they would still be
living in proximity to each other. The
next time he saw Plinio Designori he was able to report: "Friend
Tegularius is now busy, and compensated for what he thinks he has lost because
of your reappearance on the scene. His
jealous is almost cured, and working on something for me and against my
colleagues is doing him good. He is
almost happy. But don't imagine, Plinio,
that I count on anything concrete coming out of this project, aside from the
benefit to himself. It is most unlikely
that our highest authority will grant this petition of mine. In fact, it's out of the question. At best they will reply with a mild
reprimand. What dooms my request is the
nature of our hierarchy itself. A Board
that would release its Magister Ludi in response to a petition, no matter how
persuasively argued, and would assign him to work outside Castalia, wouldn't be
to my liking at all. Besides, there is
the character of our present Master of the Order. Master Alexander is a man whom nothing can
bend. No, I shall have to fight this
battle out alone. But let us allow
Tegularius to exercise his mind for the present. All we lose by that is a little time, so well
arranged that my departure will cause no harm to Waldzell. But meanwhile you must find me some place to
live on the outside, and some employment, no matter how modest; if necessary I
shall be content with a position as a music teacher, say. It need only be a beginning, a
springboard."
Designori said he thought something
could be found, and when the time came his house was at his friend's disposal
for as long as he liked. But Knecht
would not accept that.
"No," he said, "I
wouldn't do as a guest; I must have some work.
Besides, my staying more than a few days in your house, lovely as it is,
would only add to the tensions and troubles there. I have great confidence in you, and your
wife, too, nowadays treats me in a friendly way, but all this would look
entirely different as soon as I ceased to be a visitor and Magister Ludi, and
became a refugee and permanent guest."
"Surely you're being a little too
literal-minded about it," Plinio said.
"Once you've made your break and are living in the capital, you'll
soon be offered a suitable post, at least a professorship at the university -
you can count on that as a certainty. But
such things take time, as you know, and of course I can only begin working on
your behalf after you have won your freedom."
"Of course," the Master
said. "Until then my decision must
remain secret. I cannot offer myself to
your authorities before my own authority here has been informed and has made
its decision; that goes without saying.
But for the present, you know, I am not at all seeking a public
appointment. My wants are few, probably
fewer than you can imagine. I need a
little room and my daily bread, but above all work to do, some task as a
teacher; I need one or a few pupils to whom I can be near and whom I can
influence. A university post is the last
thing on my mind. I would be just as
glad - no, I would by far prefer - to work with a boy as a private tutor, or
something of the sort. What I am seeking
and what I need is a simple, natural task, a person who needs me. Appointment at a university would from the start
mean my fitting into a traditional, sanctified, and mechanized bureaucracy, and
what I crave is just the opposite of that."
Hesitantly, Designori brought up the
project that had been on his mind for some time.
"I do have something to
propose," he said, "and hope you will at least think it over. If you can possibly accept it, you would be
doing me a service too. Since that first
day I visited you here you have given me a great deal of help. You've also come to know my household and
know how things stand there. My
situation isn't good, but it is better than it has been for years. The thorniest problem is the relationship
between me and my son. He is spoiled and
impudent; he's made himself a privileged position in our house - as you know,
this was virtually pressed on him while he was still a child and courted by
both his mother and myself. Since then
he's decidedly gone over to his mother's side, and gradually whatever authority
I might have had over him has been adroitly taken out of my hands. I have resigned myself to that, as I have to
so much else in my botched life. But now
that I have recovered somewhat, thanks to you, I've regained hope. You can see what I am driving at. I would think it a piece of great good
fortune if Tito, who is having difficulties in school anyhow, were to have a
tutor who would take him in hand. It's a
selfish request, I know, and I have no idea whether the task appeals to you at
all. But you've encouraged me to make
the suggestion, at least."
Knecht smiled and extended his
hand.
"Thank you, Plinio. No proposal could be more welcome to me. The only thing lacking is your wife's
consent. Furthermore, the two of you
must be prepared to leave your son entirely to me for the time being. If I am to do anything with him, the daily
influence of his home must be excluded.
You must talk to your wife and persuade her to accept this
condition. Go at it cautiously; give
yourselves time."
"Do you really think you can do
something with Tito?" Designori asked.
"Oh yes, why not? He has good blood and high endowments from
both parents. What is missing is the
harmony of these forces. My task will be
to awaken in him the desire for this harmony, or rather to strengthen it and
ultimately to make him conscious of it.
I shall be happy to try."
Thus Joseph Knecht had his two friends
occupied with his affair, each in a different way. While Designori in the capital presented the
new plan to his wife and tried to couch it in terms acceptable to her,
Tegularius sat in a carrel in the library at Waldzell following up Knecht's
leads and gathering material for the petition.
The Magister had put out good bait in the reading matter he had
prescribed. Fritz Tegularius, the fierce
despiser of history, sank his teeth into the history of the warring epoch, and
became thoroughly infatuated with it.
With his enthusiasm for any pastime, he ferreted out more and more
anecdotes from that epoch in the dark prehistory of the Order. Soon he had collected such copious notes that
when he presented them to his friend, Knecht could only use a tenth of them.
During this period Knecht made several
visits to the capital. Because a sound,
integrated personality often finds easy access to troubled and difficult
people, Designori's wife came to trust him more and more. Soon she consented to her husband's
plan. Tito himself, on one of these
visits, boldly informed the Magister that he no longer wished to be addressed
with the familiar pronoun, as if he were a child, since everyone nowadays,
including his teacher, used the polite pronoun to him. Knecht thanked him with perfect courtesy and
apologized. In his Province, he
explained, the teachers used the familiar form to all students, even those who
were quite grown up. After dinner he
invited the boy to go for a walk with him and show him something of the city.
In the course of the walk Tito guided
him down a stately street in the old part of the city, where the centuries-old
houses of wealthy patrician families stood in an almost unbroken row. Tito paused in front of one of these substantial,
tall, and narrow buildings and pointed to a shield over the doorway. "Do you know what that is?" he
asked. When Knecht said he did not, he
explained: "Those are the Designori arms, and this is our old house. It belonged to the family for three hundred
years. But we are living in our meaningless,
commonplace house just because after grandfather's death my father took it into
his head to sell this marvellous old mansion and build himself a fashionable
place that by now isn't so modern any more.
Can you understand anyone's acting like that?"
"Are you very sorry about the old
house?" Knecht asked.
"Very sorry," Tito said
passionately, and repeated his question: "Can you understand anyone's
acting like that?"
"Things become understandable if
you look at them in the right light," the Magister said. "An old house is a fine thing, and if
the two had stood side by side and your father were choosing between them, he
probably would have kept the old one.
Certainly, old houses are beautiful and distinguished, especially so
handsome a one as this. But it is also a
beautiful thing to build one's own house, and when an ambitious young man has
the choice of comfortably and submissively settling into a finished nest, or
building an entirely new one, one can well see that he may decide to
build. As I know your father - and I
knew him when he was a spirited fellow just about as old as you are - the sale
of the house probably hurt no one more than himself. He had had a painful conflict with his father
and his family, and it seems his education in our Castalia was not altogether
the right thing for him. At any rate it
could not deter him from several impatient acts of passion. Probably the sale of the house was one of
those acts. He meant it as a thrust at
tradition, a declaration of war upon his family, his father, the whole of his
past and his dependency. At least that
is one way to see it. But man is a
strange creature, and so another idea does not appear altogether improbable to
me, the idea that by selling this old house your father wanted primarily to
hurt himself rather than the family. To
be sure, he was angry at the family; they had sent him to our elite schools,
had given him our kind of education, only to confront him on his return with
tasks, demands, and claims he could not handle.
But I would rather go no further in psychological analysis. In any case the story of this sale shows how
telling the conflict between fathers and sons can be - this hatred, this love
turned to hate. In forceful and gifted
personalities this conflict rarely fails to develop - world history is full of
examples. Incidentally, I could very
well imagine a later young Designori who would make it his mission in life to
regain possession of the house for the family at all costs."
"Well," Tito exclaimed,
"wouldn't you think he was right?"
"I would not like to judge
him. If a later Designori recalls the
greatness of his family and the obligations that such greatness imposes, if he
serves the city, the country, the nation, justice, and welfare with all his
energies and in the process grows so strong that he can recover the house, then
he will be a worthy person and we would want to take our hats off to him. But if he knows no other goal in life besides
this house business, then he is merely obsessed, a fanatic, a man surrendering
to a passion, and in all probability someone who never grasped the meaning of
such youthful conflicts with a father and so went on shouldering their load
long after he became a man. We can
understand and even pity him, but he will not increase the fame of his
lineage. It is fine when an old family
remains affectionately attached to its residence, but rejuvenation and new
greatness spring solely from sons who serve greater goals than the aims of the family."
Although on this walk Tito listened
attentively and quite willingly to his father's guest, on other occasions he
exhibited dislike and fresh defiance. In
this man, whom his otherwise discordant parents both seemed to hold in high
esteem, Tito sensed a power which threatened his own pampered freedom, so that
at times he treated Knecht with outright rudeness. Each time, however, he would be sorry and try
to make up for such breaches, for it offended his self-esteem to have shown
weakness in the face of the serene courtesy that surrounded the Magister like a
coat of shining armour. Secretly, too,
in his inexperienced and rather unruly heart, he sensed that this was a man he
might love and revere.
He felt this particularly one
half-hour when he came upon Knecht alone, waiting for his father, who was busy
with affairs. At Tito entered the room
he saw their guest sitting still, with eyes half closed, in a statuesque pose,
radiating such tranquillity and peace in his meditation that the boy
instinctively checked his stride and began to tiptoe out of the room
again. But at the point the Magister
opened his eyes, gave him a friendly greeting, rose, indicated the piano in the
room, and asked whether he liked music.
Tito said he did, although he had not
had music lessons for quite some time and had left off practising because he
was not doing so well in school and those drill-masters who called themselves
teachers were always keeping after him.
Still and all he'd always enjoyed listening to music. Knecht opened the piano, sat down at it,
found it was tuned, and played an andante movement of Scarlatti's which he had
recently used as the basis for a Glass Bead Game exercise. Then he stopped, and seeing the boy rapt and
attentive, began outlining more or less what took place in such an
exercise. He dissected the music, giving
examples of some of the analytical methods that could be used and the ways the
music could be translated into the hieroglyphs of the Game.
For the first time Tito saw the
Magister not as a guest, not as a learned celebrity whom he resented as a
danger to his own self-esteem. Rather,
he saw him at his work, a man who had acquired a subtle, exacting art and
practised it with a masterly hand. Tito
could only dimly sense the meaning of that art, but it seemed to be deserving
of full devotion and to call forth all the powers of an integrated
personality. That this man thought him
grown-up and intelligent enough to be interested in these complicated matters also
gave him greater assurance. He grew
quiet, and during this half-hour he began to divine the sources of this
remarkable man's cheerfulness and unruffled calm.
During this last period Knecht's
official activities were almost as strenuous as they had been in the difficult
time after his assumption of office. He
was determined to leave all the areas under his control in exemplary
condition. Moreover, he achieved this
aim, although he failed in his further aim of making his own person appear
dispensable, or at least easily replaceable.
That is almost always the case with the highest offices in our
Province. The Magister hovers rather
like a supreme ornament, a gleaming insignia, above the complex affairs of his
domain. He comes and goes rapidly,
flitting amiably by, says a few words, nods an assent, suggests an assignment
by a gesture, and is already gone, already talking to the next
subordinate. He plays on his official
apparatus like a musician on his instrument, seems to expend no force and
scarcely any thought, yet everything runs as it should. But every official in this apparatus knows
what it means when the Magister is away or ill, what it means to find a
substitute for him even for a few hours or a day.
Knecht spent his time rushing once
more through the whole principality of the Vicus Lusorum, checking everything
and especially taking pains to secretly groom his Shadow for the task the man
would soon confront, that of representing him in all earnest. But all the while he could observe that at heart
he had already liberated himself from all this, had moved far away from
it. The preciosity of this well-arranged
little world no longer enraptured him.
He saw Waldzell and his magisterial function as something that already
virtually lay behind him, a region he had passed through, which had given him a
great deal and taught him much, but which could no longer tempt him to new
accomplishments, to a fresh outpouring of energy. More and more, during this period of slowly
breaking loose and bidding farewell, he came to see the real reason for his
alienation and desire to escape. It was
probably not, he thought, his knowledge of the dangers to Castalia and his
anxiety about her future, but simply that a hitherto idle and empty part of his
self, of his heart and soul, was now demanding the right to fulfil itself.
At this time he once again carefully
studied the Constitution and Statutes of the Order. His escape from the Province would not, he
saw, be so hard to accomplish, so nearly impossible as he had initially
imagined. He did have the right to
resign his office on grounds of conscience, and even to leave the Order. The Order's vow was not a lifetime matter,
although members had claimed this freedom seldom, and a member of the highest
Board never. What made the step seem so
difficult to him was not so much the strictness of the law but the hierarchic
spirit itself, the loyalty within his own heart. Of course he was not planning to skip out; he
was preparing a circumstantial petition for release, and that dear fellow
Tegularius was working day and night at it.
But he had no confidence in the success of this petition. He would receive soothing assurances,
admonishments, would perhaps be offered a vacation in Mariafels, where Father
Jacobus had recently died, or perhaps in Rome.
But the authorities would not let him go; that seemed more and more
clear. To release him would violate all
the traditions of the Order. If the
Board were to do so, it would be admitting that his request was justified,
admitting that life in Castalia, and what was more in such a high post, might
in some circumstances not be satisfying to a man, might mean renunciation and
imprisonment.
ELEVEN
THE CIRCULAR LETTER
WE ARE
APPROACHING the end of our tale. As we
have already indicated, our knowledge of this end is fragmentary, rather more
in the nature of a legend than of a historical narrative. We shall have to be content with that. We therefore take all the more pleasure in
being able to fill out this next-to-last chapter of Knecht's life with an
authentic document, namely with that voluminous memorandum in which the Glass
Bead Game Master himself presents the authorities with the reasons for his
decision and asks them to release him from his office.
As we have repeatedly stated, Joseph
Knecht no longer believed in the success of this memorandum which he had had so
conscientiously prepared. We must admit,
moreover, that when the time came he wished he had neither written nor handed
in this "petition". He
suffered the fate of all who exercise a natural and initially unconscious power
over other men: this power is not exercised without a certain cost to its
possessor. Although the Magister had
been glad to win his friend Tegularius's support for his plans, and to have made
him a promoter and associate of them, the consequences went far beyond what he
had conceived or wished. He had coaxed
or misled Fritz into undertaking a task whose value he himself, as its author,
no longer believed in; but when his friend at last presented him with the
fruits of his labours, he could no longer undo the work. Nor, since the purpose of the assignment had
been to make Fritz better able to bear their separation, could he lay the data
aside and leave them unused without thoroughly offending and disappointing his
friend. At the time, we are convinced,
Knecht would much rather have brusquely resigned his office and declared his
withdrawal from the Order instead of choosing the roundabout mode of the
"petition", which in his eyes had become virtually a farce. But consideration for Tegularius caused him
to restrain his impatience for a while longer.
It would no doubt be interesting if we
had his industrious friend's manuscript at our disposal. It consisted mainly of historical material
meant to serve as proof or illustration; but we may safely assume that it
contained a good many sharp and witty epigrams on the hierarchy, as well as on
the world and world history. But even if
this document, composed as it was in months of tenacious labour, were still in
existence - as it quite possibly may be - we would have to forbear from
publishing it here, since this book of ours would not be the proper place for
it.
Our concern is only with the use the
Magister Ludi made of his friend's work.
When Tegularius solemnly presented this document to him, he accepted it
with cordial words of gratitude and appreciation, and knowing what pleasure
this would give, asked Fritz to read it aloud.
For several days, therefore, Tegularius spent half an hour in the Magister's
garden, for it was summertime, and read with gusto the many pages of his
manuscript. Often the reading was
interrupted by peals of laughter on the part of both. These were good days for Tegularius. Afterwards, however, Knecht went into
seclusion in order to compose his letter to the Board. We present here its exact text. No further commentary on it is necessary.
The Magister Ludi's Letter to the
Board
of Educators
Various considerations have prompted
me, the Magister Ludi, to present to the Board a special request in this separate
and somewhat more private memorandum, instead of including it in my official
report. Although I am appending this
memorandum to the official accounting that is now due, and await an official
reply, I regard it rather as a circular letter to my colleagues in office.
Every Magister is required to inform
the Board of any hindrances or danger to his conducting his office in keeping
with the Rule. Although I have
endeavoured to serve with all my strength, the conduct of my office is (or
seems to me to be) threatened by a danger which resides in my own person,
although that is probably not its sole origin.
At any rate, I see my suitability to serve as Magister Ludi as
imperilled, and this by circumstances beyond my control. To put it briefly: I have begun to doubt my
ability to officiate satisfactorily because I consider the Glass Bead Game
itself in a state of crisis. The purpose
of this memorandum is to convince the Board that the crisis exists, and that my
awareness of it demands that I seek a position other from the one I now hold.
Permit me to clarify the situation by
a metaphor. A man sits in an attic room
engaged in a subtle work of scholarship.
Suddenly he becomes aware that fire has broken out in the house
below. He will not consider whether it
is his function to see to it, or whether he had not better finish his
tabulations. He will run downstairs and
attempt to save the house. Here I am
sitting in the top storey of our Castalian edifice, occupied with the Glass
Bead Game, working with delicate, sensitive instruments, and instinct tells me,
my nose tells me, that down below something is burning, our whole structure is
imperilled, and that my business now is not to analyze music or define rules of
the Game, but to rush to where the smoke is.
Most of us brothers of the Order take
Castalia, our Order, our system of scholarship and schooling, together with the
Game and everything associated with it, as much for granted as most men take
the air they breathe and the ground they stand on. Hardly anyone ever thinks that this air and
this ground could sometime not be there, that we might some day lack air or
find the ground vanishing from under us.
We have the good fortune of living well protected in a small, neat, and
cheerful world, and the great majority of us, strange as it may seem, hold to
the fiction that this world has always existed and that we were born into
it. I myself spent my younger years in
this extremely pleasant delusion, although I was perfectly well aware of the
reality that I was not born in Castalia, but only sent here by the educational
authorities and raised here. I knew also
that Castalia, the Order, the Board, the colleges, the Archives, and the Glass
Bead Game have not always existed, are by no means a product of nature, but a
belated and noble creation of man's will, and transitory like all such
things. I knew all this, but it had no
reality for me; I simply did not think of it, ignored it, and I knew that more
than three-quarters of us will live and die in this strange and pleasant
illusion.
But just as there have been centuries
and millennia without the Order and without Castalia, there will again be such
eras in the future. And if today I
remind my colleagues and the honourable Board of this platitude, and call upon
them to turn their eyes for once to the dangers that threaten us, if I assume
for a moment the unenviable and often ludicrous role of prophet, warner, and
sermonizer, I do so fully prepared to accept mocking laughter; but I hope
nevertheless that the majority of you will read my memorandum to the end and
that some of you may even agree with me on a few of its points. That in itself would be a good deal.
An institution such as our Castalia, a
small Province dedicated to the things of the mind, is prone to internal and
external perils. The internal perils, or
at least a good many of them, are known to us; we keep watch for them and take
the necessary measures. Every so often we
send individual pupils back, after having admitted them to the elite schools,
because we discover in them ineradicable traits and impulses which would make
them unfitted for our community and dangerous to it. Most of them, we trust, are not lesser human
beings on that score, but merely unsuited to Castalian life, and after their return
to the world are able to find conditions more appropriate to them, and develop
into capable men. Our practice in this
respect has proved its value, and on the whole our community can be said to
sustain its dignity and self-discipline and to fulfil its task of being and
constantly recruiting a nobility of the mind.
Presumably we have no more than a noble and tolerable quota of the
unworthy and slothful among us.
The conceit that can be observed among
the members of our Order is rather more objectionable. I am referring to that class arrogance to
which every aristocracy inclines, and with which every privileged group is
charged, with or without justification.
The history of societies shows a constant tendency towards the formation
of a nobility as the apex and crown of any given society. It would seem that all efforts at
socialization have as their ideal some kind of aristocracy, of rule of the
best, even though this goal may not be admitted. The holders of power, whether they have been
kings or an anonymous group, have always been willing to further the rise of a
nobility by protection and the granting of privileges. This has been so no matter what the nature of
the nobility: political, by birth, by selection and education. The favoured nobility has always basked in
the sunlight; but from a certain stage of development on, its place in the sun,
its privileged state, has always constituted a temptation and led to its
corruption. If, now, we regard our Order
as a nobility and try to examine ourselves to see to what extent we earn our
special position by our conduct towards the whole of the people and towards the
world, to what extent we have already been infected by the characteristic
disease of nobility - hubris, conceit, class arrogance, self-righteousness,
exploitativeness - if we conduct such a self-examination, we may be seized by a
good many doubts. The present-day
Castalian may not be lacking in obedience to the rules of the Order, in
industry, in cultivated intelligence; but does he not often suffer from a
severe lack of insight into his place in the structure of the nation, his place
in the world and world history? Is he
aware of the foundation of his existence; does he know himself to be a leaf, a
blossom, a twig or root of a living organism?
Does he have any notion of the sacrifices the nation makes for his sake,
by feeding and clothing him, by underwriting his schooling and his manifold
studies? And does he care very much
about the meaning of our special position?
Does he have any real conception of the purpose of our Order and life?
There are exceptions, granted, many
and praiseworthy exceptions.
Nevertheless I am inclined to answer all these questions with a No. The average Castalian may regard the man of
the outside world, the man who is not a scholar, without contempt, envy, or
malice, but he does not regard him as a brother, does not see him as his
employer, does not in the least feel that he shares responsibility for what is
going on outside in the world. The
purpose of his life seems to him to be cultivation of the scholarly disciplines
for their own sake, or perhaps even to be taking pleasurable strolls in the
garden of a culture that pretends to be a universal culture without ever being
quite that. In brief, this Castalian culture
of ours, sublime and aristocratic though it certainly is, and to which I am
profoundly grateful, is for most of those associated with it not an instrument
they play on like a great organ, not active and directed towards goals, not
consciously serving something greater or profounder than itself. Rather, it tends somewhat towards smugness
and self-praise, towards the cultivation and elaboration of intellectual
specialism. I know there are a large
number of Castalians who are men of integrity and worth, who really desire only
to serve. I mean the teachers who are
the products of our system, who then go out into the country to engage in
unselfish and incalculably important service far from the pleasant climate and
the intellectual luxuries of our Province.
These fine teachers out there are, strictly speaking, the only ones
among us who are really carrying out the purpose of Castalia. Through their work alone we are repaying the
nation for the many benefits we receive from it. Granted that every one of us brothers of the
Order knows that our supreme and most sacred task consists in preserving the
intellectual foundation of our country and our world. That foundation has proved to be a moral
element of the highest efficacy, for it is nothing less than the sense of truth
- on which justice is based, as well as so much else. But if we examine our real feelings, most of
us would have to admit that we don't regard the welfare of the world, the
preservation of intellectual honesty and purity outside as well as inside our
tidy Province, as the chief thing. In
fact, it is not at all important to us.
We are only too glad to leave it to those brave teachers out there to
pay our debt to the world by their self-sacrificing work, and so more or less
justify the privileges we enjoy, we Glass Bead Game players, astronomers,
musicians, and mathematicians. It is
part of the above-mentioned arrogance and caste spirit that we do not much care
whether we earn our privileges by accomplishments. Even though our abstemious way of life is
prescribed by the Order, a good many of us plume ourselves on it, as if it were
a virtue we were practising purely for its own sake instead of its being the
least that we owe to the country that makes our Castalian existence possible.
I shall content myself with merely
referring to these internal defects and dangers. They are not insignificant, although in
peaceful times they would not come anywhere near imperilling our existence. But as it happens, we Castalians are
dependent not only on our own morality and rationality. We depend vitally on the condition of the
country and the will of the people. We
eat our bread, use our libraries, expand our schools and archives - but if the
nation no longer wants to authorize this, or if it should be struck by
impoverishment, war, and so on, then our life and studying would be over in a
minute. Some day our country might
decide that its Castalia and our culture are a luxury it can no longer afford. Instead of being genially proud of us, it may
come round to regarding us as noxious parasites, tricksters, and enemies. Those are the external dangers that threaten
us.
To portray these dangers in any
graphic form, I would probably have to draw upon examples from history. And if I were talking to the average
Castalian, I would surely encounter a measure of passive resistance, an almost
childish ignorance and indifference. As
you know, among Castalians interest in world history is extremely weak. Most of us, in fact, not only lack interest
but also respect for history. We fail to
do it justice, I might say. Over the
years I have done considerable searching into the sources of this feeling -
this mixture of indifference and arrogance towards world history - and I have
found that it derives from two causes.
First, the content of history strikes us as rather inferior - I am not
speaking of intellectual and cultural history, which is of course within our
purview. Insofar as we have any notion
at all about world history, we see it as consisting in brutal struggle for
power, goods, lands, raw materials, money - in short, for those material and
quantitative things which we regard as far from the realm of Mind and rather
contemptible. For us the seventeenth
century is the age of Descartes, Pascal, Froberger, not of Cromwell or Louis
XIV.
The second reason we fight shy of
history is our traditional and I would say valid distrust of a certain kind of
history writing which was very popular in the age of decadence before the
founding of our Order. A priori we have
not the slightest confidence in that so-called philosophy of history of which
Hegel is the most brilliant and also most dangerous representative. In the following century it led to the most
repulsive distortion of history and destruction of all feeling for truth. To us, a bias for this sham philosophy of
history is one of the principal features of that era of intellectual debasement
and vast political power struggles which we occasionally call the Century of Wars,
but more often the Age of the Feuilleton.
Our present culture, the Order and Castalia, arose out of the ruins of
that age, out of the struggle with and eventual defeat of its mentality - or
insanity.
But it is part of our intellectual
arrogance that we confront world history, especially in modern times, in much
the same spirit that the hermits and ascetics of early Christianity confronted
the theatrum mundi, the great theatre of the world. History seems to us an arena of instincts and
fashions, of appetite, avarice, and craving for power, of blood lust, violence,
destruction, and wars, of ambitious ministers, venal generals, bombarded
cities, and we too easily forget that this is only one of its many
aspects. Above all we forget that we
ourselves are a part of history, that we are the product of growth and are
condemned to perish if we lose the capacity for further growth and change. We are ourselves history and share the
responsibility for world history and our position in it. But we gravely lack awareness of this
responsibility.
Let us glance at our own history, at
the periods in which the present pegagogic provinces arose, in our own country
and in so many others. Let us glance at
the origins of the various Orders and hierarchies of which our Order is
one. We see immediately that our
hierarchy and our homeland, our beloved Castalia, was certainly not founded by
people who held so proudly detached an attitude towards world history as we
do. Our predecessors and founders began
their work in a shattered world at the end of the Age of Wars. Our official explanation of that age, which
began approximately with the so-called First World War, is all too
one-sided. The trouble was, we say, that
the things of the mind did not count in those days; that the powerful rulers
considered intellect itself merely a weapon of inferior quality, and meant only
for occasional use. This attitude, we
say, was a consequence of "feuilletonistic" corruption.
Very well - the anti-intellectuality
and brutality of that period are all too visible to us. When I call it anti-intellectual, I do not
mean to deny its imposing achievements in intelligence and methodology. But we in Castalia are taught to consider
intellect primarily in terms of striving for truth, and the kind of intellect
manifested in those days seems to have had nothing in common with striving for
truth. It was the misfortune of that age
that there was no firm moral order to counter the restiveness and upheaval
engendered by the tremendously rapid increase in the human population. What remnants there were of such a moral
order were suppressed by the contemporary sloganizing. And those struggles produced their own
strange and terrible conflicts. Much
like the era of Church schism introduced by Luther four centuries earlier, the
entire world was gripped by an immense unrest.
Everywhere lines of battle formed; everywhere bitter enmity sprang up
between old and young, between fatherland and humanity, between Red and
White. We in our day can no longer
reconstruct, let along comprehend and sympathize with the impetus and power of
such labels as Red and White, let alone the real meanings of all those battle
cries. Much as in Luther's time, we find
all over Europe, and indeed over half the world, believers and heretics, youths
and old men, advocates of the past and advocates of the future, desperately
flailing at each other. Often the
battlefronts cut across frontiers, nations, and families. We may no longer doubt that for the majority
of the fighters themselves, or at least for their leaders, all this was highly
significant, just as we cannot deny many of the spokesmen in those conflicts a
measure of robust good faith, a measure of idealism, as it was called at the
time. Fighting, killing, and destroying
went on everywhere, and everywhere both sides believed they were fighting for
God against the devil.
Among us, that savage age of high
enthusiasms, fierce hatreds, and altogether unspeakable sufferings has fallen
into a kind of oblivion. That is hard to
understand, since it was so closely linked with the origin of all our
institutions, was the basis and cause of those institutions. A satirist might compare this loss of memory
with the kind of forgetfulness that parvenu adventurers who have at last
obtained a patent of nobility have for their birth and parentage.
Let us continue to dwell a little
longer on those warlike times. I have
read a good many of their documents, taking less interest in the subjected
nations and destroyed cities than in the attitude of the intellectuals of the
day. They had a hard time of it, and
most of them did not endure. There were
martyrs among the scholars as well as among the clergy, and the example of
their martyrdom was not entirely without some effect, even in those times so accustomed
to atrocities. Still and all, most men
of mind did not stand up under the pressures of that violent age. Some capitulated and placed their talents,
knowledge, and techniques at the disposal of the rulers - let us recall the
well-known statement of a university professor in the Republic of the
Massagetes: "Not the faculty but His Excellency the General can properly
determine the sum of two and two."
Others put up a struggle as long as it was possible to do so in a
reasonably safe fashion, and published protests. A world-famous author of the time - so we
read in Ziegenhalss - in a single year signed more than two hundred such
protests, warnings, appeals to reason, and so on - probably more than he had
actually read. But most learned the art
of silence; they also learned to go hungry and cold, to beg and hide from the
police. They died before their time and
were envied for this by the survivors.
Countless numbers took their own lives.
There was truly no pleasure and no honour in being a scholar or a
writer. Those who entered the service of
the rulers and devised slogans for them had jobs and livelihoods, but they
suffered the contempt of the best among their fellows, and most of them surely
suffered pangs of conscience also. Those
who refused such service had to go hungry, live as outlaws, and die in misery
or exile. A cruel, an incredibly harsh
weeding out took place. Scientific
research that did not directly serve the needs of power and warfare rapidly
sank into decadence. The same was true
for the whole educational system. History,
which each of the leading nations of any given period referred exclusively to
itself, underwent revision and fantastic simplification. Historical philosophy and feuilletonism
dominated the field.
So much for details. Those were wild and violent times, chaotic
and Babylonian times in which peoples and parties, old and young, Red and
White, no longer understood each other.
After sufficient bloodletting and
debasement, it came to its end; there arose a more and more powerful longing
for rationality, for the rediscovery of a common language, for order, morality,
valid standards, for an alphabet and multiplication table no longer decreed by
power blocs and alterable at any moment.
A tremendous craving for truth and justice arose, for reason, for overcoming
chaos. This vacuum at the end of a
violent era concerned only with superficial things, this sharp universal hunger
for a new beginning and the restoration of order, gave rise to our Castalia. The insignificantly small, courageous,
half-starved but unbowed band of true thinkers began to be aware of their
potentialities. With heroic asceticism
and self-discipline they set about establishing a constitution for
themselves. Everywhere, even in the
tiniest groups, they began working once more, clearing away the rubble of
propaganda. Starting from the very
bottom, they reconstructed intellectual life, education, research, culture.
Their labours were fruitful. Out of those intrepid and impoverished
beginnings they slowly erected a magnificent edifice. In the course of generations they created the
Order, the Board of Educators, the elite schools, the Archives and collections,
the technical schools and seminaries, and the Glass Bead Game. Today we live as their heirs in a building
almost too splendid. And let it be said
once again, we live in it like rather vapid and complicated guests. We no longer want to know anything about the
enormous human sacrifices our foundation walls were laid on, nor anything about
the ordeals of which we are the beneficiaries, nor anything about history which
favoured or at least tolerated the building of our mansion, which sustains and
tolerates us today and possibly will go on doing so for a good many Castalians
and Magisters after our day, but which sooner or later will overthrow and
devour our edifice as it overthrows and devours everything it has allowed to
grow.
Let me return from history and draw my
conclusion. What all this means to us at
the present time is this: Our system has already passed its flowering. Some time ago it reached that summit of
blessedness which the mysterious game of world history sometimes allows to
things beautiful and desirable in themselves.
We are on the downward slope. Our
course may possibly stretch out for a very long time, but in any case nothing
finer, more beautiful, and more desirable than what we have already had can
henceforth be expected. The road leads
downhill. Historically we are, I
believe, ripe for dismantling. And there
is no doubt that such will be our fate, not today or tomorrow, but the day
after tomorrow. I do not draw this
conclusion from any excessively moralistic estimate of our accomplishments and
our abilities; I draw it far more from the movements which I see already on the
way in the outside world. Critical times
are approaching; the omens can be sensed everywhere; the world is once again
about to shift its centre of gravity.
Displacements of power are in the offing. They will not take place without war and
violence. From the Far East comes a
threat not only to peace, but to life and liberty. Even if our country remains politically
neutral, even if our whole nation unanimously abides by tradition (which is not
the case) and attempts to remain faithful to Castalian ideals, that will be in
vain. Some of our representatives in
Parliament are already saying that Castalia is a rather expensive luxury for
our country. The country may very soon
be forced into serious rearmament - armaments for defensive purposes only, of
course - and great economies will be necessary.
In spite of the government's benevolent disposition towards us, much of
the economizing will strike us directly.
We are proud that our Order and the cultural continuity it provides have
cost the country as little as they have.
In comparison with other ages, especially the early period of the
Feuilletonistic Age with its lavishly endowed universities, its innumerable
consultants and opulent institutes, this toll is really not large. It is infinitesimal compared with the sums
consumed for war and armaments during the century of wars. But before too long this kind of armament may
once again be the supreme necessity; the generals will again dominate
Parliament; and if the people are confronted with the choice of sacrificing
Castalia or exposing themselves to the danger of war and destruction, we know
how they will choose. Undoubtedly a
bellicose ideology will burgeon. The
rash of propaganda will affect youth in particular. Then scholars and scholarship, Latin and
mathematics, education and culture, will be considered worth their salt only to
the extent that they can serve the ends of war.
The wave is already gathering; one day
it will wash us away. Perhaps that will
be as it should be. But for the present,
my revered colleagues, we still possess that limited freedom of decision and
action which is the human prerogative and which makes world history the history
of mankind. We may still choose, in
proportion to our understanding of events, in proportion to our alertness and
our courage. We can, if we will, close
our eyes, for the danger is still fairly far away. Probably we who are Magisters today will be
able to complete our terms of office in peace and lie down to die in peace
before the danger comes so close that it is visible to all. But for me, and no doubt for others like me,
such peace could not be had with a clear conscience. I would rather not continue to administer my
office in peace and play Glass Bead Games, contented that the coming upheavals
will probably find me no longer alive.
Rather, it seems to me urgent to recollect that we too, nonpolitical
though we are, belong to world history and help to make it. Therefore I said at the beginning of this
memorandum that my competence as Magister Ludi is compromised, since I cannot
keep my mind from dwelling anxiously upon the future danger. I do not allow myself to imagine what form
the disaster might assume for us and for me.
But I cannot close my mind to the question: What have we and what have I
to do in order to meet the danger? Permit
me to say a few words more about this.
I am not inclined to urge Plato's
thesis that the scholar, or rather the sage, ought to rule the state. The world was younger in his time. And Plato, although the founder of a sort of
Castalia, was by no means a Castalian.
He was a born aristocrat, of royal descent. Granted, we too are aristocrats and form a
nobility, but one of the mind, not the blood.
I do not believe that man will ever succeed in breeding a hereditary
nobility that is at the same time an intellectual nobility. That would be the ideal aristocracy, but it
remains a dream. We Castalians are not
suited for ruling, for all that we are civilized and highly intelligent people. If we had to govern we would not do it with
the force and naïveté that
the genuine ruler needs. Moreover, our
proper field and real concern, cultivation of an exemplary cultural life, would
be quickly neglected. Ruling does not
require qualities of stupidity and coarseness, as conceited intellectuals
sometimes think. But it does require
wholehearted delight in extroverted activity, a bent for identifying oneself
with outward goals, and of course also a certain swiftness and lack of scruple
about the choice of ways to attain success.
And these are traits that a scholar - for we do not wish to call
ourselves sages - may not have and does not have, because for us contemplation
is more important than action, and in the choice of ways to attain our goals we
have learned to be as scrupulous and wary as is humanly possible.
Therefore it is not our business to
rule and not our business to engage in politics. We are specialists in examining, analysing,
and measuring. We are the guardians and
constant verifiers of all alphabets, multiplication tables, and methods. We are the bureaus of standards for cultural
weights and measures. Granted we are
many other things also. In some
circumstances we can also be innovators, discoverers, adventurers, conquerors,
and reinterpreters. But our first and
most important function, the reason the people need us and keep us, is to
preserve the purity of all sources of knowledge. In trade, in politics, and what have you,
turning an X into a Y may occasionally prove to be a stroke of genius; but never
with us.
In former age, during the wars and
upheavals of so-called periods of "grandeur", intellectuals were
sometimes urged to throw themselves into politics. This was particularly the case during the
late Feuilletonistic Age. That age went
even further in its demands, for it insisted that Mind itself must serve
politics or the military. Just as the
church bells were being melted down for cannon, as hapless schoolboys were
drawn on to fill the ranks of the decimated troops, so Mind itself was to be harnessed
and consumed as one of the materials of war.
Naturally, we could not accept this
demand. In emergencies a scholar might
be called from his lectern or his desk and made into a soldier. In some circumstances he might volunteer for
such service. In a country exhausted by
war the scholar must restrict himself in all material things, even to the point
of sheer starvation. Surely all this is
taken for granted. The higher a person's
cultivation, the greater the privileges he has enjoyed, the greater must be his
sacrifices in case of need. We hope that
every Castalian would recognize this as a matter of course, if the time should
come. But although we are prepared to
sacrifice our well-being, our comfort, and our lives to the people, when danger
threatens, that does not mean that we are ready to sacrifice Mind itself, the
tradition and morality of our spiritual life, to the demands of the hour, of
the people, or of the generals. He would
be a coward who withdrew from the challenges, sacrifices, and dangers his
people had to endure. But he would be no
less a coward and traitor who betrayed the principles of the life of the mind
to material interests - who, for example, left the decision on the product of
two times two to the rulers. It is
treason to sacrifice love of truth, intellectual honesty, loyalty to the laws
and methods of the mind, to any other interests, including those of one's
country. Whenever propaganda and the
conflict of interests threatens to devalue, distort, and do violence to truth
as it has already done to individuals, to language, to the arts, and to
everything else that is organic and highly cultivated, then it is our duty to
resist and save the truth, or rather the striving for truth, since that is the
supreme article in our creed. The
scholar who knowingly speaks, writes, or teaches falsehood, who knowingly
supports lies and deceptions, not only violates organic principles. He also, no matter how things may seem at the
given moment, does his people a grave disservice. He corrupts its air and soil, its food and drink;
he poisons its thinking and its laws, and he gives aid and comfort to all the
hostile, evil forces that threaten the nation with annihilation.
The Castalian, therefore, should not
become a politician. If need be, he must
sacrifice his person, but never his fealty to the life of the mind. The mind of man is beneficent an noble only
when it obeys truth. As soon as it
betrays truth, as soon as it ceases to revere truth, as soon as it sells out,
it becomes intensely diabolical. Then it
becomes far worse than instinctual bestiality, which always retains something
of the innocence of nature.
I leave it to each of you, my esteemed
colleagues, to reflect upon the duties of the Order when the country and the
Order itself are imperilled. Certainly
there will be a variety of opinions. I
have my own, and after much consideration of all the questions I have posed
here, I have for my part come to a clear conception of what seems to me
desirable, of what my duty is. This
leads me to a personal petition to the honourable Board, with which I shall
conclude my memorandum.
Of all the Masters composing our
Board, I as Magister Ludi am probably most remote from the outside world, by
virtue of my office. The mathematician,
the philologist, the physicist, the pedagogue, and all the other Masters labour
in fields which they share with the profane world. In the ordinary, non-Castalian schools of our
country, mathematics and linguistics are part of the normal curriculum. Astronomy and physics have a place in the
secular universities. Even the
completely untutored make music. All
these disciplines are age-old, much older than our Order; they existed long
before it and will outlive it. Only the
Glass Bead Game is our invention, our speciality, our favourite, our toy. It is the ultimate, subtlest expression of
our Castalian type of intellectuality.
It is both the most precious and the most nonutilitarian, the most
beloved and the most fragile jewel in our treasury. It is the first precious stone that will be
destroyed if the continuance of Castalia is imperilled, not only because it is
the frailest of our possessions, but also because to laymen it is undoubtedly
the most dispensable aspect of Castalia.
Therefore when the time comes to save the country every needless expenditure,
the elite schools will be contracted, the funds for the maintenance and
expansion of the libraries and collections will be trimmed and ultimately
eliminated, our meals will be cut down, our clothing allowance withdrawn, but
all the principal subjects in our Universitas Litterarum will be allowed
to continue except for the Glass Bead Game.
Mathematics is needed, after all, to devise new firearms, but no-one
will believe - least of all the military - that closing the Vicus Lusorum and
abolishing our Game will cause the country and people the slightest loss. The Glass Bead Game is the most outlying and
most vulnerable part of our structure.
Perhaps this explains why the Magister Ludi, head of our unworldliest
discipline, should be the first to sense the coming calamity, or at any rate
the first to express this feeling to our Board.
In case of political upheavals,
therefore, especially if they involve war, I regard the Glass Bead Game as a
lost cause. It will deteriorate rapidly,
however many individuals cling to it, and it will never be restored. The atmosphere which will follow a new era of
wars will not condone it. It will vanish
just as surely as did certain highly cultivated customs in musical history,
such as the choruses of professional singers of the period around 1600, or the
Sunday concerts of figurate music in churches around 1700. In those days men's ears heard sounds whose
angelic purity cannot be conjured up again by any amount of science or
magic. In the same way the Glass Bead
Game will not be forgotten, but it will be irrecoverable, and those who study
its history, its rise, flourishing, and doom, will sigh and envy us for having
been allowed to live in so peaceful, cultivated, and harmonious a world of the
mind.
Although I am now Magister Ludi, I do
not at all consider it my (or our) mission to prevent or postpone the ultimate
end of our Game. Beauty, even surpassing
beauty, is perishable like all other things, as soon as it has become a
historical phenomenon upon this earth.
We know that and can grieve that it is so, but cannot seriously try to
change it, for it is unalterable law.
When the Glass Bead Game is destroyed, Castalia and the world will
suffer a loss, but they will scarcely be aware of it at the moment, for at the
time of great crisis they will be absorbed in saving whatever can still be
saved. A Castalia without the Game is
conceivable, but not a Castalia without reverence for truth, without fidelity
to the life of the mind. A Board of
Educators can function without a Magister Ludi.
But although we have almost forgotten it, "Magister Ludi" of
course originally meant not the office we have in mind when we use the word,
but simply schoolmaster. And the more
endangered Castalia is, the more its treasures stale and crumble away, the more
our country will need its schoolmasters, its brave and good schoolmasters. Teachers are more essential than anything
else, men who can give the young the ability to judge and distinguish, who
serve them as examples of the honouring of truth, obedience to the things of
the spirit, respect for language. That
holds not only for our elite schools, which will be closed down sooner or
later, but also and primarily for the secular schools on the outside where
burghers and peasants, artisans and soldiers, politicians, military officers,
and rulers are educated and shaped while they are still malleable
children. That is where the basis for
the cultural life of the country is to be found, not in the seminars or in the
Glass Bead Game. We have always
furnished the country with teachers and educators, and they are, as I have
said, the best among us. But we must do
far more than we have done hitherto. We
must no longer rely on a constant influx of the best from the schools outside
to help maintain our Castalia. More and
more we must recognize the humble, highly responsible service to the secular
schools as the chief and most honourable part of our mission. That is what we must seek to extend.
Which brings me to my personal petition
to the esteemed Board. I herewith
request the Board to relieve me of my office as Magister Ludi and entrust to me
an ordinary school, large or small, outside in the country; to let me staff it
with a group of youthful members of our Order.
I would recruit as teachers those whom I could confidently expect to
help instil our principles into young people out in the world.
I hope that the esteemed Board will
deign to examine my petition and its reasoning with due benevolence and let me
know its decisions.
THE
MASTER OF THE GLASS BEAD GAME.
Postscript:
Permit me to cite a remark of
the Reverend Father Jacobus, which I noted down in the course of one of his
private lessons:
"Times of terror and deepest
misery may be in the offing. But if any happiness
at all is to be extracted from that misery, it can only be a spiritual
happiness, looking backward towards the conservation of the culture of earlier
times, looking forward towards serene and stalwart defence of the things of the
spirit in an age which otherwise might succumb wholly to material things."
Tegularius did not know how little of
his work was present in this memorandum; he was not shown the final version,
although Knecht did let him read two earlier, much more detailed drafts. The Magister Ludi dispatched the memorandum
and awaited the Board's answer with far less impatience than his friend. He had come to the decision not to involve
Fritz in his further actions. He
therefore forbade him to discuss the matter any more, merely indicating that it
would surely be a long time before the Board reacted to the memorandum.
When in fact the reply arrived sooner
than he had expected, Tegularius heard nothing about it. The letter from Hirsland read:
To His
Excellency the Magister Ludi in Waldzell.
Esteemed
Colleague:
The Directorate of the Order and the
Assembly of Masters have taken note of your warm-hearted and perspicacious
circular letter with more than ordinary interest. We have found your historical observations no
less absorbing than your ominous picture of the future, and some of us will
undoubtedly long continue to ponder and to draw profit from your reflections,
which surely are not groundless. We
have all recognized, with gladness and deep appreciation, the principles that
inspire you, the truly Christian principles of altruism. We see that you are motivated by a profound
and by now almost instinctive love for our Province, for its life and its
customs, a concerned and at the moment somewhat overanxious love. With equal gladness and appreciation we
observe the personal overtones of that love, its spirit and sacrifice, its
active impulse, its earnestness and zeal, and its heroic element. In all this we recognize the character of our
Glass Bead Game Master as we know it; we see his energy and ardour, his
daring. How characteristic of the famous
Benedictine's disciple that he does not study history as a mere scholarly end
in itself, an aesthetic game to be regarded without emotion, but rather applies
his historical knowledge directly to current needs; that his perceptions impel
him to take certain measures. And,
revered colleague, how perfectly it corresponds with your character that you
should feel drawn not to political missions, not to posts of influence and
honour, but to the role of simple Ludi Magister, that of a schoolmaster.
Such are some of the impressions, some
of the thoughts that are awakened by the very first reading of your circular
letter. Most of your colleagues
responded in much the same way. The
Board has not, however, been able to take a stand on your warnings and
requests. We have met and held a lively
discussion of your view that our very existence is threatened. Much was said about the nature, extent, and
possible imminence of the dangers. The
majority of our members obviously took these questions most seriously indeed,
and grew quite heated in discussing them.
But we are compelled to inform you that on none of these questions did a
majority favour your view. The
imaginative power and farsightedness of your historico-political observations
was acknowledged; but none of your specific conjectures, or shall we say
prophecies, was fully approved. None was
accepted as wholly convincing. Only a
few of us agreed with you (and then with reservations) even on the question of
the degree to which the Order and our Castalian system had shared the
responsibility for the unusually long era of peace, or whether the Order can
even be held a factor in political history.
In the view of the majority, the calm that has descended upon our
Continent must be ascribed partly to the general prostration following the
bloodlettings of the terrible wars, but far more to the fact that the Occident
has ceased to be the focal point of world history and the arena in which claims
to hegemony are fought out. Certainly we
would not wish to cast doubt upon the true achievements of our Order. Nevertheless, we cannot grant that the
Castalian ideal, the ideal of high culture under the aegis of disciplined
meditation, has any powers to shape history, any vital influence upon world
political conditions. Urges or ambitions
of this sort are totally alien to our Castalian mentality. Several serious disquisitions on the subject
have stressed the point that Castalia seeks neither political sway nor
influence on peace or war. Indeed, there
could be no question of Castalia's having any such purpose, so the argument has
gone, because everything Castalian is related to reason and operates within the
framework of rationality - which certainly could not be said of world history,
or said only by someone willing to revert to the theological and poetic
sentimentalities of romantic historical philosophy. From that vantage point, of course, the whole
murderous, destructive course of political history could be explained as merely
the method of cosmic Reason. Moreover,
even the most casual survey of the history of thought shows that the great ages
of culture have never been adequately explained by political conditions. Rather, culture, or mind, or soul, has its
own independent history - a second, secret, bloodless, and sanctified history -
running parallel to what is generally called world history, by which we mean
incessant struggles for material power.
Our Order deals only with this sanctified and secret history, not with
"real", brutal world history.
It can never be our task to be continually taking soundings in political
history, let alone to help to shape it.
It therefore does not matter whether
or not the political constellation is really as your circular letter
suggests. In any case, our Order has no
right to do anything about it. Our only
position must be one of patient waiting to see what comes. And therefore your argument that this
constellation requires us to take an active position was decisively rejected by
the majority, with only a few votes in its favour.
Your views of the present world
situation and your suggestions regarding the immediate future obviously
impressed most of our colleagues. In
fact, some of them were thunderstruck.
But here too, although most of the speakers manifested respect for your
knowledge and acuity, there was no evidence that the majority agreed with
you. On the contrary, the consensus was
that your comments on this matter were remarkable and extremely interesting,
but excessively pessimistic. One
colleague raised his voice to ask whether it might not be described as
dangerous, if not outrageous - but surely frivolous - for a Magister to alarm
his Board by such sinister images of allegedly imminent perils and tribulations. Certainly an occasional reminder of the
perishability of all things was permissible; every man, and especially everyone
holding a high position of responsibility, must occasionally cry out to himself
the momento mori. But to announce
in such sweeping terms the impending doom of the entire body of Masters, the
entire Order, and the entire hierarchy was a tasteless assault upon the
tranquillity and the imagination of his colleagues, and threatened the
efficiency of the Board itself. The work
of a Magister surely could not profit by his going to his office every day with
the thought that his position itself, his labours, his pupils, his
responsibility to the Order, his life for and in Castalia - that all this might
be wiped out by tomorrow or the day after.... Although the majority did not
support the colleague who raised this objection, he received considerable
applause.
We shall keep our present
communication brief, but are you at your disposal for a discussion in
person. From our brief summary you can
already see that your circular letter has not had the effect you may have hoped
for. In large part its failure no doubt
is based on objective grounds, the incompatibility of your opinions with those
of the majority. But there are also
purely formal reasons. At any rate it
seems to us that a direct personal discussion between yourself and your
colleagues would have taken a significantly more harmonious and positive
course. We would moreover suggest that
it was not only your couching of the matter in the form of a written memorandum
that affected the Board adversely. Far
more striking was your combining, in a way highly unusual among us, a
professional communication with a personal request, a petition. Most of your colleagues consider this fusion an
unfortunate attempt at innovation; some bluntly called it impermissible.
This brings us to the most delicate
point of all, your request for release from your office and transfer to some
secular school system. The petitioner
should have realized from the outset that the Board could not possibly approve
so sudden and curiously argued a request.
Of course the Board's reply is, "No".
What would become of our hierarchy if
the Order no longer assigned each man to his place? What would become of Castalia if everyone
wished to assess his own gifts and aptitudes and choose his position for
himself? We suggest that the Master of
the Glass Bead Game reflect upon this subject for a few minutes, and bid him to
continue administering the honourable office he has been entrusted with.
In saying this we have met your
request for a reply to your letter. We
have been unable to give the answer you may have hoped for. But we should also like to express our appreciation
for the stimulating and admonitory value of your document. We trust we will be able to discuss its
content with you orally, and in the near future. For although the directorate of the Order
believes that it can rely on you, that point in your memorandum in which you
speak of an incapacity to conduct the affairs of your office naturally gives us
grounds for concern.
Knecht read the letter without any
great expectations, but with the closest attention. He had expected that the Board would have
"grounds for concern", and moreover had had signs that it was truly
worried. A guest from Hirsland had
recently come to the Players' Village, provided with a regular pass and a
recommendation from the directorate of the Order. He had requested hospitality for a few days,
supposedly for work in the Archives and library, and had also asked permission
to audit a few of Knecht's lectures. An
elderly man, silent and attentive, he had turned up in almost all the
departments and buildings of the Village, had inquired after Tegularius, and
had several times called on the director of the Waldzell elite school, who
lived in the vicinity. There could
scarcely be any doubt that the man had been sent as an observer to determine
whether there were any traces of negligence in the Players' Village, whether
the Magister was in good health and at his post, the officials diligent, the
students stimulated. He had stayed for a
full week and missed none of Knecht's lectures.
Two of the officials had even commented on his quiet
ubiquitousness. Evidently the
directorate of the Order had waited for the report from this investigation
before dispatching its reply to the Magister.
What was he to think of this answer,
and who had probably been its author?
The style betrayed nothing; it was the conventional, impersonal officialese
the occasion demanded. But on subtler
analysis the letter revealed more individuality than he had thought at first
reading. The basis of the entire
document was the hierarchic spirit, a sense of justice and love of order. It was plain to see how unwelcome,
inconvenient, not to say troublesome and annoying Knecht's petition had
been. Its rejection had undoubtedly been
decided at once by the author of this reply, without regard to the opinion of
others. On the other hand, the vexation
was leavened by another emotion, for there was a clear note of sympathy present
in the letter, with its mention of all the more lenient and friendly comments
Knecht's petition had received during the meeting of the Board. Knecht had no doubt that Alexander, the President
of the Order, was the author of this reply.
We have now reached the end of our
journey, and hope that we have reported all the essentials of Joseph Knecht's
life. A later biographer will no doubt
be in a position to ascertain and impart a good many additional details about
that life.
We forbear to present our own account
of the Magister's last days, for we know no more about them than every Waldzell
student and could not tell the story any better than the Legend of the
Magister Ludi, many copies of which are in circulation. Presumably it was written by some of the
departed Magister's favourite students.
With this legend we wish to conclude our book.
TWELVE
THE LEGEND
WHEN WE
LISTEN to our fellow students talk about our Master's disappearance, about the
reasons for it, the rightness or wrongness of his decisions and acts, the
meaning or meaninglessness of his fate, it sounds to us like Diodorus Siculus
explaining the supposed causes for the flooding of the Nile. We would think it not only useless but wrong
to add to such speculations. Instead, we
wish to preserve in our hearts the memory of our Master, who so soon after his
mysterious departure into the world passed over into a still more mysterious
beyond. His memory is dear to us, and
for this reason we wish to set down what we have learned about these events.
After the Master had read the letter
in which the Board denied his petition, he felt a faint shiver, a matutinal
coolness and sobriety which told him that the hour had come, that from now on
there could be no more hesitating or lingering.
This peculiar feeling, which he was wont to call "awakening",
was familiar to him from other decisive moments in his life. It was both vitalizing and painful, mingling
a sense of farewell and of setting out on new adventures, shaking him deep down
in his unconscious mind like a spring storm.
He looked at the clock. In an
hour he had to face a class. He decided
to devote the next hour to meditation, and went into the quiet Magister's
garden. On his way a line of verse
suddenly sprang into his mind:
In
all beginnings is a magic source ...
He
murmured this under his breath, uncertain where he had read it. The line appealed to him and seemed to suit
the mood of this hour. In the garden, he
sat down on a bench strewn with the first faded leaves, regulated his
breathing, and fought for inner tranquillity, until with a purged heart he sank
into contemplation in which the patterns of this hour in his life arranged
themselves in universal, suprapersonal images.
But on the way to the small lecture room, the line of verse came back to
him. He turned the words over in his
mind, and thought that he did not have them quite right. Suddenly his memory cleared. Under his breath he recited:
In
all beginnings dwells a magic force
For
guarding us and helping us to live.
But it was
not until nearly evening, long after his lecture was over and he had passed on
to all sorts of other routine matters, that he discovered the origin of the
verses. They were not the work of some
old poet; they came from one of his own poems, which he had written in his
student days. He remembered now that he
poem had ended with the line:
So
be it, heart: bid farewell without end!
That very evening he sent for his
deputy and informed him that on the morrow he would have to leave for an
indefinite time. He put him in charge of
all current affairs, with brief instructions, and bade goodbye in a friendly
and matter-of-fact way, as he would ordinarily have done before departing on a
brief official journey.
He had realized some time earlier that
he would have to leave without informing his friend Tegularius and burdening
him with farewells. This course was
essential, not only to spare his oversensitive friend, but also in order not to
endanger his whole plan. Presumably
Fritz would make his peace with the accomplished fact, whereas an abrupt
disclosure and a farewell scene might lead to a regrettable emotional upheaval. Knecht had for a while even thought of departing
without seeing Fritz for the last time.
But now he decided that it would seem too much like evading a difficult
encounter. However wise it was to spare
his friend agitation and an occasion for follies, he had no right to make the
thing so easy for himself. A half-hour
remained before bedtime; he could still call on Tegularius without disturbing
him or anyone else.
Night had already settled in the broad
inner courtyard as he crossed to his friend's cell. He knocked with that strange feeling of: this
is the last time, and found Tegularius alone.
Delighted, Fritz laid aside the book he had been reading and invited
Knecht to sit down.
"An old poem came to my mind
today," Knecht remarked casually, "or rather a few lines from
it. Perhaps you know where the rest can
be found." And he quoted: "In
all beginnings dwells a magic force ..."
Tegularius traced it with no great
trouble. After a few minutes of
reflection he recognized the poem, got up, and produced from a desk drawer the
manuscript of Knecht's poems, the original manuscript which Knecht had once
presented to him. He looked through it
and brought out two sheets of paper containing the first draft of the
poem. Smilingly, he held them out to the
Magister.
"Here," he said, "your
Excellency may examine them himself.
This is the first time in many years that you have deigned to remember
these poems."
Joseph Knecht studied the two sheets
attentively and with some emotion. IN
his student days, during his stay in the College of Far Eastern Studies, he had
covered these two sheets of paper with lines of verse. They spoke to him of a remote past. Everything about them, the faintly yellowed
paper, the youthful handwriting, the deletions and corrections in the text,
reminded him painfully of almost forgotten times. He thought he could recall not only the year
and the season when these verses had been written, but even the day and the
hour. There came to him now the very mood,
that proud and strong feeling that had gladdened him and found expression in
the poem. He had written it on one of
those special days on which he had experienced that spiritual shock which he
called "awakening".
The title of the poem had obviously
been written even before the poem itself, and had seemingly been intended as
the first line. It had been set down in
a large impetuous script, and read: "Transcend!"
Later, at some other time, in a
different mood and situation, this title as well as the exclamation mark had
been crossed out, and in smaller, thinner, more modest letters another title
had been written in. It read:
"Stages".
Knecht now remembered how at the time,
filled with the idea of his poem, he had written down the word
"Transcend!" as an invocation and imperative, a reminder to himself,
a newly formulated but strong resolve to place his actions and his life under
the aegis of transcendence, to make of it a serenely resolute moving on,
filling and then leaving behind him every place, every stage along the
way. Almost whispering, he read some
lines to himself:
Serenely
let us move to distant places
And let no
sentiments of home detain us.
The Cosmic
Spirit seeks not to restrain us
But lifts
us stage by stage to wider spaces.
"I had forgotten these lines for
many years," he said, "and when they happened to come to my mind
today, I no longer knew how I knew them and didn't realize they were mine. How do they strike you today? Do they still mean anything to you?"
Tegularius considered.
"I have always had a rather odd
feeling about this particular poem," he said finally. "The poem itself is among the very few
you've written that I didn't really like.
there was something about it that repelled or disturbed me. At the time I had no idea what it was. Today I think I see it. I never really liked this poem of yours,
which you headed 'Transcend!' as if that were a marching order - thank God you
later substituted a better title - I never really liked it because it has
something didactic, moralizing, or schoolmasterly about it. If this element could be stripped away, or
rather if this whitewash could be scrubbed off, it would be one of your finest
poems - I've just realized that again.
The real meaning is rather well suggested by the title 'Stages',
although you might just as well and perhaps better have called it 'Music' or
'The Nature of Music'. For if we
discount the moralizing or preachy attitude, it is really about the nature of
music or, if you will, a song in praise of music, of its serenity and
resolution, its quality of being constantly present, its mobility and unceasing
urge to hasten on, to leave the space it has only just entered. If you contented yourself with this
contemplation or praise of the spirit of music, if you had not turned it into
an admonition and sermon - though obviously you had pedagogic ambitions even
then - the poem might have been a perfect jewel. But as it stands it seems to me not only too
hortatory but also afflicted by faulty logic.
It equates music and life solely for the sake of the moral lesson. But that is highly questionable and
disputable, for it transforms the natural and morally neutral impulse which is
the mainspring of music into a 'Life' that summons, calls, commands us, and
wants to impart good lessons to us. To
put it briefly, in this poem a vision, something unique, beautiful, and
splendid, has been falsified and exploited for didactic ends, and it is this
aspect that always prejudiced me again it."
The Magister had been listening with
pleasure as his friend worked himself up into that angry ardour which he so
liked in him.
"Let's hope you're right,"
he said half jokingly. "You
certainly are right in what you say about the poem's relationship to
music. The idea of serenely moving to
distant places and the underlying concept of the lines actually does come from
music, without my having been conscious of it.
I really don't know whether I corrupted the idea and falsified the
vision; you may be right. When I wrote
the poem, at any rate, it no longer dealt with music, but with an experience -
the very experience that the lovely parable of music had revealed its moral
aspect to me and become, within me, an awakening and an admonition to respond
to the summons of life. The imperative
form of the poem, which so particularly displeases you, is not the expression
of any desire to command or teach, because the command is addressed to myself
alone. That should have been clear from
the last line, my friend, even if you weren't already well aware of it. I experienced an insight, a perception, an
inward vision, and was bent on telling the content and the moral of this
insight to myself, and impressing it on my mind. That is why the poem remained in my memory,
although I was not conscious of it. So
whether these lines are good or bad, they've accomplished their purpose; the
admonition remained alive inside me and was not forgotten. Today I hear it again as if it were brand
new. That's a fine little experience,
and your mockery can't spoil it for me.
But it's time for me to go. How
lovely were those days, my friend, when we were both students and could so
often allow ourselves to break the rules and stay together far into the nights,
talking. A Magister can no longer allow
himself such luxuries - more's the pity."
"Oh," Tegularius said,
"he could allow it - it's a question of not having the courage."
Laughing, Knecht placed a hand on his
shoulder.
"As far as courage goes, my boy,
I might be guilty of worse pranks than that.
Goodnight, old grumbler."
Gaily, he left the cell. But on the way out through the deserted
corridors and courtyards of the Vicus Lusorum his seriousness returned, the
seriousness of parting. Leave-takings
always stir memories. Now, on this nocturnal
walk, he remembered that first time he had strolled through Waldzell and the
Vicus Lusorum as a boy, a newly arrived Waldzell pupil, filled with misgivings
and hopes. Only now, moving through the
coolness of the night in the midst of silent trees and buildings, did he
realize with painful sharpness that he was seeing all this for the last time,
listening for the last time to silence and slumber stealing over the Players'
Village, by day so lively; for the last time seeing the little light above the
gatekeeper's lodge reflected in the basin of the fountain; for the last time
watching the clouds in the night sky sailing over the trees of his Magister's
garden. Slowly, he went over all the
paths and into all the nooks and corners of the Players' Village. He felt an impulse to open the gate of his
garden once more and enter it, but he did not have the key with him, and that
fact swiftly sobered him and caused him to collect himself. He returned to his apartment, wrote a few
letters, including one to Designori announcing his arrival in the capital, and
then spent some time in careful meditation to calm his intense emotions, for he
wanted to be strong in the morning for his last task in Castalia, the interview
with the Head of the Order.
The following morning the Magister
rose at his accustomed hour, ordered his car, and drove off; only a few persons
noticed his departure and none gave it any thought. The morning seemed to be drowning in the
mists of early autumn as he drove towards Hirsland. He arrived towards noon and asked to be
announced to Magister Alexander, the President of the Order. Under his arm he carried, wrapped in a cloth,
a handsome metal casket normally kept in a secret compartment in his
office. It contained the insignia of his
office, the seals and the keys.
He was received with some surprise in
the "main" office of the Order.
It was almost unprecedented for a Magister to appear there unannounced
and uninvited. On instructions from the
President of the Order he was given lunch, then shown to a rest cell in the old
cloisters and informed that His Excellency hoped to be able to find time for
him in two or three hours. He asked for
a copy of the rules of the Order, settled down with it and read through the
entire booklet, to assure himself once more of the simplicity and legality of
his plan. Nevertheless, even at this
late hour he could not see how to put into words its meaning and its
psychological justification.
There was a paragraph in the rules
that had once been assigned to him as a subject for meditation, in the last
days of his youthful freedom. That had
been shortly before his admission into the Order. Now, reading the paragraph again, he
meditated on it once more, and while doing so he became aware of how utterly
different a person he was now from the rather anxious young tutor he had then
been. "If the High Board summons
you to a post," the passage read, "know this: Each upward step on the
ladder of officialdom is not a step into freedom, but into constraint. The greater the power of the office, the
stricter the servitude. The stronger the
personality, the more forbidden is the arbitrary exercise of will." How final and unequivocal all that had once
sounded, but how greatly the meaning of so many of the words had changed,
especially such insidious words as "constraint",
"personality", "will".
And yet how beautifully clear, how well-formed and admirably suggestive
these sentences were; how absolute, timeless, and incontestably true they could
appear to a young mind! Ah yes, and so
they would have been, if only Castalia were the world, the whole multifarious
but indivisible world, instead of being merely a tiny world within the greater,
or a section boldly and violently carved out of it. If the earth were an elite school, if the
Order were the community of all men and the Head of the Order God, how perfect
these sentences would be, and how flawless the entire Rule. Ah, if only that had been so, how lovely, how
fecund and innocently beautiful life would be.
And once that had really been so; once he had been able to see it that
way: the Order and the Castalian spirit as equivalent to the divine and the
absolute, the Province as the world, Castalians as mankind, and the
non-Castalian sphere as a kind of children's world, a threshold to the
Province, virgin soil still awaiting cultivation and ultimate redemption, a
world looking reverently up to Castalia and every so often sending charming
visitors such as young Plinio.
How strange was his own situation, how
strange the nature of Joseph Knecht's own mind!
In former days, and in fact only yesterday, had he not considered his
own special kind of perception - that way of experiencing reality which he
called "awakening" - as a slow, step-by-step penetration into the
heart of the universe, into the core of truth; as something in itself absolute,
a continuous path or progression which nevertheless had to be achieved
gradually? In his youth he had thought
it right and essential to acknowledge the validity of the outside world as
Plinio represented it, but at the same time deliberately to hold aloof from it. At that time it had seemed to him progress,
awakening, to make himself a Castalian.
And again it had been progress, and his own truth, when after years of
doubting he had decided in favour of the Glass Bead Game and the life of
Waldzell. It had been the same again
when at Master Thomas's command he entered the service, was inducted into the
Order by the Music Master, and later when he accepted the appointment as
Magister. Each time he had taken a
larger or smaller step on a seemingly straight road - and yet he now stood at
the end of this road, by no means at the heart of the universe and the
innermost core of truth. Rather, his
present awakening, too, was no more than a brief opening off his eyes, a
finding himself in a new situation, a fitting into new constellations. The same strict, clear, unequivocal, straight
path that had brought him to Waldzell, to Mariafels, into the Order, into the
office of Magister Ludi, was now leading him out again. What had been a consequence of acts of
awakening had likewise been a consequence of partings. Castalia, the Game, the magistracy - each had
been a theme which needed to be developed and dismissed; each had been a space
to pass through, to transcend. Already
they lay behind him. And evidently, even
in times past when he had thought and done the opposite of the things he was
thinking and doing today, he had somehow known or at least dimly divined the
dubiousness of it all. Had he not, in
the poem written in his student days and dealing with stages and partings,
placed above it the imperative title "Transcend!"?
Thus his path had been a circle, or an
ellipse or spiral or whatever, but certainly not straight; straight lines
evidently belonged only to geometry, not to nature and life. Yet he had faithfully obeyed the exhortation
and self-encouragement of his poem, even after he had long forgotten the poem
and the awakening he had then experienced.
Granted, he had not obeyed perfectly, not without falterings, doubts,
temptations, and struggles. But he had
courageously passed through stage upon stage, space upon space, composedly and
with reasonable serenity - not with such radiant cheerfulness as the old Music
Master, but without weariness and dejection, without disloyalty and defection. And if at this point he had at last become a
defector from the Castalian point of view, if he were flouting all the morality
of the Order, seemingly serving only the needs of his own individuality -
still, this too would be done in the spirit of courage and of music. No matter how it turned out, he would de it
with serenity and a clean tempo. If only
he had been able to clarify to Master Alexander what seemed so clear to him; if
only he had been able to prove that the apparent wilfulness of his present
action was in reality service and obedience, that he was moving not towards
freedom, but towards new, strange, and hitherto unknown ties; that he was not a
fugitive, but a man responding to a summons; not headstrong, but obedient; not
master, but sacrifice!
And what about the virtues of
serenity, firm tempo and courage? They
dwindled in size perhaps, but remained intact.
Even if he might not be advancing on his own, but was only being led,
even if what he was undergoing was not independent transcending, but merely a
revolving of the space outside him around himself as its centre, the virtues
persisted and retained their value and their potency. They consisted in affirmation instead of
negation, in acceptance instead of evasion.
And perhaps thee might even be some small virtue in his conducting
himself as if he were the master and an active focus, in accepting life and
self-deception - with its corollary self-determination and responsibility -
without examining these things too closely.
Perhaps it was inherently virtuous that for unknown reasons he was by
nature more inclined to acting than acquiring knowledge, that he was more
instinctual than intellectual. Oh, if
only he could have a talk with Father Jacobus about these matters!
Thoughts or reveries of this sort
reverberated in him after his meditation.
"Awakening", it seemed, was not so much concerned with truth
and cognition, but with experiencing and proving oneself in the real
world. When you had such an awakening,
you did not penetrate any closer to the core of things, to truth; you grasped,
accomplished, or endured only the attitude of your own ego to the momentary
situation. You did not find laws, but
came to decisions; you did not thrust your way into the centre of the world, but
into the centre of your own individuality.
That, too, was why the experience of awakening was so difficult to
convey, so curiously hard to formulate, so remote from statement. Language did not seem designed to make
communications from this realm of life.
If, once in a great while, someone were able to understand, that person
was in a similar position, was a fellow sufferer or undergoing a similar
awakening. Fritz Tegularius had to some
degree shared this insight; Plinio's understanding had gone somewhat
further. Whom else could he name? No-one.
Twilight was already beginning to
fall; he had been completely lost in his reflections, was altogether remote
from his actual situation, when there came a knock on the door. Since he did not respond at once, the person
outside waited a little and then tried once more, knocking softly. This time Knecht answered; he rose and went
along with the messenger, who led him into the secretariat and without any
further ado into the President's office.
Master Alexander came forward to meet him.
"A pity you came without warning,
so that we had to keep you waiting," he said. "I am eager to hear what has brought you
here so suddenly. Nothing bad, I
hope?"
Knecht laughed. "No, nothing bad. But do I really come so unexpectedly and have
you no idea why I want to see you?"
Alexander gave him a troubled
look. "Well, yes," he said,
"I do have some idea. I had, for
example, been thinking in the past few days that the subject of your circular
letter had certainly not been treated adequately as far as you were
concerned. The Board was obliged to
answer rather tersely, and perhaps both the tone and the substance of the
answer were disappointing to you, Domine."
"Not at all," Joseph Knecht
replied. "I hardly expected any
other answer as far as the substance of the Board's reply went. And as for the tone, that pleased me
greatly. I could tell that the reply had
cost the author considerable effort, almost sorrow, and that he felt the need
to mingle a few drops of honey in an answer that was necessarily unpleasant and
rather a snub to me. Certainly he
succeeded remarkably well, and I am grateful to him for that."
"Then you have taken the
substance of the reply to heart, esteemed Master?"
"Taken note of it, and I should
say that at bottom I have also understood it and approved it. I suppose the reply could not have been
anything but a rejection of my petition, together with a gentle reprimand. My circular letter was something untoward,
and altogether inconvenient to the Board - I never for a moment doubted
that. Moreover, insofar as it contained
a personal petition, it probably was not couched in a suitable way. I could scarcely expect anything but a
negative reply."
"We are pleased," the
President of the Order said with a hint of acerbity, "that you regard it
in this light and that our letter therefore could not have surprised you in any
painful way. We are very pleased by
that. But I still do not
understand. If in writing your letter
you already - I do understand you aright, don't I? - did not believe in its
success, did not expect an affirmative answer, and in fact were convinced in
advance that it would fail, why did you persist with it and go tot he farther
trouble - the whole things must have involved considerable effort - of making a
clean copy and sending it out?"
Knecht gave him an amiable look as he
replied: "Your Excellency, my letter had two purposes, and I do not think
that both were entirely fruitless. It
contained a personal request that I be relieved of my post and employed at some
other place. I could regard this
personal request as relatively subsidiary, for every Magister ought to regard
hiss personal affairs as secondary, insofar as that is possible. The petition was rejected; I had to make the
best of that. But my circular letter
also contained something quite different from that request, namely a
considerable number of facts and ideas which I thought it my duty to call to
the attention of the Board and to ask you all to weigh carefully. All the Masters, or at any rate the majority
of them, have read my exposition - let us not say my warnings - and although
most of them were loath to ingest them and reacted with a good deal of
annoyance, they have at any rate read and registered what I believed it
essential to say. The fact that they did
not applaud the letter is, to my mind, no failure. I was not seeking applause and assent; I
intended rather to stir uneasiness, to shake them up. I would greatly regret if I had desisted from
sending my letter on the grounds you mention.
Whether it has had much or little effect, it was at least a cry of
alarm, a summons."
"Certainly," the President
said hesitantly. "But that
explanation does not solve the riddle for me.
If you wished your admonitions, warnings, cries of alarm to reach the
Board, why did you weaken or at least diminish the effectiveness of your golden
words by linking them with a private request, moreover a request which you
yourself did not seriously believe would be or could be granted? For the present I don't understand that. But I suppose the matter will be clarified if
we talk it over. In any case, there is
the weak point in your circular letter: your connecting the cry of alarm with
the petition. I should think that you
surely had no need to use the petition as a vehicle for your sermon. You could easily have reached your colleagues
orally or in writing if you thought they had to be alerted to certain dangers. And then the petition would have proceeded
along its own way through official channels."
Knecht continued to look at him with
the utmost friendliness.
"Yes," he said lightly, "it may be that you are
right. Still - consider the
complications of the matter once more.
Neither the admonition nor the sermon was anything commonplace,
ordinary, or normal. Rather, both
belonged together in being unusual and in having arisen out of necessity and a
break with convention. It is not usual
and normal for anyone, without some urgent provocation from outside, to
suddenly implore his colleagues to remember their mortality and the dubiousness
of their entire lives. Nor is it usual
and commonplace for a Castalian Magister to apply for a post as schoolteacher
outside the Province. To that extent the
two separate messages of my letter do belong together quite well. As I see it, a reader who had really taken
the entire letter seriously would have had to conclude that this was no matter
of an eccentric's announcing his premonitions and trying to preach to his
colleagues, but rather that this man was in deadly earnest about his ideas and
his distress, that he was ready to throw up his office, his dignity, his past,
and begin from the beginning in the most modest of places; that he was weary of
dignity, peace, honour, and authority and desired to be rid of them, to throw
them away. From this conclusion - I am
still trying to put myself into the mind of the readers of my letter - two
corollaries would have been possible, so it seems to me: the writer of this
sermon is unfortunately slightly cracked; or else the writer of this
troublesome sermon is obviously not cracked, but normal and sane, which means
there must be more than whim and eccentricity behind his pessimistic
preachments. And that 'more' must then
be a reality, a truth. I had imagined
some such process in the minds of my readers, and I must admit that I
miscalculated. My petition and my
admonition did not support and reinforce each other. Instead, they were both not taken seriously
and were laid aside. I am neither greatly
saddened nor really surprised by this rejection, for at bottom, I must repeat,
I did expect it to turn out that way.
And I must also admit that I desired it so. For my petition, which I assumed would fail,
was a kind of feint, a gesture, a formula."
Master Alexander's expression had
become even graver and overcast with gloom.
But he did not interrupt the Magister.
"The case was not," Knecht
continued, "that in dispatching my petition I seriously hoped for a
favourable reply and looked forward joyfully to receiving it; but it is also
not the case that I was prepared to accept obediently a negative answer as an
unalterable decision from above."
"... not prepared to accept
obediently a negative answer as an unalterable decision from above - have I heard
you aright, Magister?" the President broke in, emphasizing every
word. Evidently he had only at this
point realized the full gravity of the situation.
Knecht bowed slightly. "Certainly you have heard aright. The fact was that I could scarcely believe my
petition had much prospect of success, but I thought I had to make it to
satisfy the requirements of decorum. By
doing so I was, so to speak, providing the esteemed Board with an opportunity
to settle the matter in a relatively harmless way. But if it eschewed such a solution, I was in
any case resolved neither to be put off nor soothed, but to act."
"And to act how?" Alexander
asked in a low voice.
"As my heart and my reason
command. I was determined to resign my
office and take on work outside Castalia even without an assignment or leave
from the Board."
The Head of the Order closed his eyes
and seemed to be no longer listening.
Knecht saw that he was performing that emergency exercise used by
members of the Order in moments of sudden danger to regain self-control and
inner calm; it consisted in twice emptying the lungs and holding the breath for
long moments. As Knecht watched,
Alexander's face paled slightly, then regained colour as he inhaled slowly,
beginning with the muscles of the stomach.
Knecht was sorry to be inflicting psychic distress on a man whom he so
highly esteemed, indeed loved. He saw
Alexander's eyes open with a staring, abstracted look, then focus and grow
keener. With a faint sense of alarm he
saw those clear, controlled, disciplined eyes, the eyes of a man equally great
in obeying and commanding, fixed upon him now, regarding him with cool
composure, probing him, judging him. He
withstood that gaze in silence for what seemed long minutes.
"I believe I have now understood
you," Alexander said at last in a quiet voice. "You have been weary of your office or
weary of Castalia for a long time, or tormented by a craving for live in the
world. You chose to pay more heed to
this mood than to the laws and your duties.
You also felt no need to confide in us and ask the Order for advice and
assistance. For the sake of form and to
relieve your conscience, you then addressed that petition to us, a petition you
knew would be unacceptable, but which you could refer to when the matter came
up for discussion. Let us assume that
you have reasons for such unusual conduct and that your intentions are
honourable - I really cannot conceive them to have been otherwise. But how was it possible that with such
thoughts, cravings, and decisions in your heart, inwardly already a defector,
you could keep silent and remain in your office for so long a time, continuing
to conduct it flawlessly, so far as anyone can see?"
"I am here," the Magister
Ludi replied with unaltered friendliness, "to discuss all this with you,
to answer all your questions. And since
I have resolved upon a course of self-will, I have made up my mind not to leave
Hirsland and your house until I know that you have gained some understanding of
my situation and my action."
Master Alexander considered. "Does that mean you expect me to endorse
your conduct and your plans?" he asked hesitantly.
"Oh, I have no thought of winning
your endorsement. But I hope that you
will understand me and that I shall retain a remnant of your respect when I
go. This will be my one and only
leave-taking of our Province. Today I
left Waldzell and the Vicus Lusorum forever."
Again Alexander closed his eyes for a
few seconds. He felt battered by the
revelations coming all at once from this incomprehensible man.
"Forever?" he said. "Then you are thinking of not returning
to your post at all? I must say, you are
a master of surprises. One question, if
I may ask it: Do you still regard yourself as Magister Ludi?"
Joseph Knecht picked up the small
casket he brought with him.
"I was until yesterday," he
said, "and consider myself liberated today by returning to you, as
representative of the Board, the seals and keys. The insignia are intact, and when you go to
inspect things in the Players' Village you will find everything in order."
Slowly, the President of the Order
rose. He looked weary and suddenly aged.
"Let us leave your casket
standing here for the present," he said drily. "If by receiving the seals I am supposed
to be accepting your resignation, let me remind you that I am not so
empowered. At least a third of the Board
would have to be present. You used to
have so much feeling for the old customs and forms that I cannot adjust so
quickly to this new mode of doing things.
Perhaps you will be kind enough to give me until tomorrow before we go
on with you conversation?"
"I am completely at your
disposal, your Reverence. You have known
me and known my respect for you for a good many years. Believe me, that has not changed in the slightest. You are the only person I am bidding goodbye
to before leaving the Province, and I am addressing you now not only in your
capacity as President of the Order. Just
as I have returned the seals and keys to your hands, I also hope you will
release me from my oath as a member of the Order, once we have discussed
everything fully, Domine."
Alexander met his eyes with a
sorrowful, searching look, and stifled a sigh.
"Leave me now. You have
given me cares enough for one day and provided material enough for
reflection. Let that do for today. Tomorrow we shall speak further; return here
about an hour before noon."
He dismissed the Magister with a
courteous gesture, and that gesture, full of resignation, full of deliberate politeness
of the kind no longer meant for a colleague, but for a total stranger, pained
the Glass Bead Game Master more than anything he had said.
The attendant who fetched Knecht for the evening meal a while later led him to
a guest table and informed him that Master Alexander had withdrawn for
meditation and assumed that the Magister would not wish company tonight, and
that a guest room had been prepared for him.
The Magister Ludi's visit and
announcement had taken Alexander completely by surprise. Ever since he had edited the Board's reply to
the circular letter, he had of course counted on Knecht's turning up sooner or
later, and had thought of the ensuing discussion with faint uneasiness. But that Magister Knecht, noted for his
exemplary obedience, his cultivated formalities, his modesty and profound tact,
could one day descend on him without warning, resign his office on his own
initiative and without previously consulting the Board, and throw over all
usage and tradition in this startling manner - these were acts he would have
considered absolutely impossible.
Granted, Knecht's manner, tone, and language, his unobtrusive courtesy,
were the same as ever; but now appalling and offensive, now novel and surprising,
and above all how totally un-Castalian were the substance and spirit of
everything he said. No-one hearing and
seeing the Magister Ludi would have suspected him of being ill, overworked,
irritated, and not completely master of himself. The scrutiny which the Board had recently
ordered in Waldzell had turned up not the slightest vestige of disturbance,
disorder, or neglect in the life and work of the Players' Village. And nevertheless this appalling man, until
yesterday the dearest of his colleagues, now stood there and deposited the
chest with the insignia of office as if it were a suitcase, declaring that he
had ceased to be Magister, had ceased to be a member of the Board, a brother of
the Order and a Castalian, and had dropped in only to say goodbye. This was the most disturbing situation his
office as President of the Order had ever involved him in, and he had had great
difficulty in preserving his outward composure.
And what now? Should he resort to force - place the
Magister Ludi under house arrest, say, and at once, this very evening, send
emergency messages to all members of the Board and all a meeting? Was there any objection to his doing so? Was that not the most logical and correct
procedure? It was, and yet something
within him protested. What would he
really achieve by such measures? Nothing
but humiliation for Magister Knecht, and nothing at all for Castalia; at most
some alleviation for himself who would no longer have to face this ugly and
complex situation alone, bearing all the responsibility. If anything could still be saved out of this
vexatious affair, if any appeal to Knecht's sense of honour were possible and
if it were conceivable that he might change his mind, such an outcome could
only be achieved in a private interview.
The two of them, Knecht and Alexander, would have to fight out this
bitter conflict to the end - no-one else.
And even as he thought this he had to concede that basically Knecht had
acted correctly and honourably by refraining from further contact with the
Board, which he no longer recognized, but coming personally to consult him, the
President, for the final struggle and leave-taking. This man, Joseph Knecht, even when he did
something so outrageous and repulsive, nevertheless acted with taste and tact.
Master Alexander decided to trust to
his own powers of persuasion and leave the entire official apparatus out of the
affair. Only now, after he had come to
this decision, did he begin to reflect upon the details of the matter and to
ask himself to what extent the Magister's action was right or wrong - for,
after all, Knecht seemed to have no doubt of the integrity and justness of his
incredible step. Now that he tried to
classify the Magister Ludi's audacious plan and determine where it stood
legally - for no-one knew the rules of the Order better than he - he came to
the surprising conclusion that Joseph Knecht was not in fact violating the
letter of the rules. Granted, for
decades no-one had ever tested the relevant clauses, but the rules did provide
that every member of the Order was at liberty to resign any time he so
desired. Of course, he would at the same
time renounce all his privileges and separate himself from the Castalian
community. If Knecht now returned his
seals, informed the Order of his resignation, and betook himself into the
world, he was to be sure doing something unheard of in living memory, something
highly unusual, alarming, and perhaps unseemly, but he was committing no
infraction of the rules.
Incomprehensible the step might be, but it was not illegal in any formal
way. And that he chose not to take it
behind the President's back, but was ready to come and announce his decision,
was in fact more than punctilious. - But how had this venerated man, one of the
pillars of the hierarchy, come to such a decision? After all, what he was planning was nothing
short of desertion. How could he invoke
the written rules when a hundred unwritten but no less sacred and self-evident
ties should have kept him from taking this step?
Alexander heard a clock strike. He wrenched himself away from his profitless
thoughts, took his bath, spent ten minutes on careful breathing exercises, and
then went to his meditation cell in order to store up strength and tranquillity
for an hour before going to sleep. He
would think no more of this matter until the morrow.
Next morning a young servant of the
directorate's guesthouse led the Magister Ludi to the President, and was thus
privy to the way the two men greeted each other. Accustomed as the youth was to the manner
prevalent among these masters of meditation and self-discipline, he was
nevertheless struck by something in the appearance, the bearing, and the tone
of these two notables as they greeted each other. There was something new, an extraordinary
degree of composure and clarity. It was,
so he told us, not quite the usual situation between two of the highest
dignitaries of the Order, which might be either a serene and casual ceremony or
an act of formal but joyful festivity - although occasionally it also turned
into a competition in courtesy, deference, and stressed humility. It was rather as though a stranger were being
received, say a great master of yoga come from afar to pay his respects to the
President of the Order and cross swords with him. In word and gesture both men were exceedingly
modest and sparing, but their eyes and their expressions, though tranquil,
collected, and composed, were charged with a hidden tension, as though both
were luminescent or carrying an electric current. Our informant did not have the opportunity to
see or hear any more of the encounter.
The two vanished into the office, presumably going to Master Alexander's
study, and remained there for several hours.
No-one was permitted to disturb them.
What record we have of their conversations comes from accounts set down
on various occasions by the honourable Delegate Designori, to whom Joseph
Knecht related some details.
"You took me by surprise
yesterday," the President began, "and very nearly disconcerted
me. In the meantime I have been able to
reflect upon the matter somewhat. My
viewpoint has not changed, of course; I am a member of the Board and the
directorate of the Order. According to
the letter of the Rule, you have the right to announce your withdrawal and
resign your post. You have come to the
point of regarding your post as burdensome and of feeling an attempt to live
outside the Order as a necessity. What
if I were now to propose that you make this trial, but not in terms of your
categorical decisions - rather in the form of a prolonged or even an
indeterminate leave? Actually, this is
what your petition sought to accomplish."
"Not entirely," Knecht
said. "If my petition had been
approved, I would certainly have remained in the Order, but not in office. Your kind proposal would be an evasion. Incidentally, Waldzell and the Glass Bead
Game would scarcely be well served by a Magister who was absent on leave for a
long or indeterminate period of time and who might or might not return. Moreover, if he did return after a year or
two, his skills in the conduct of his office and in his discipline, the Glass
Bead Game, would only have suffered, not advanced."
Alexander: "He might have
profited in all sorts of ways. Perhaps
he would have learned that the world outside is not what he imagined and needs
him no more than he does it. He might
come back reassured and glad to remain in old and well-tested paths."
"Your kindness goes very far
indeed. I am grateful for it;
nevertheless I cannot accept it. What I
am seeking is not so much fulfilment of idle curiosity or of a hankering for
worldly life, but experience without reservations. I do not want to go out into the world with
insurance in my pocket, in case I am disappointed. I don't want to be a prudent traveller taking
a bit of a look at the world. On the
contrary, I crave risk, difficulty, and danger; I am hungry for reality, for
tasks and deeds, and also for deprivations and suffering. May I ask you not to press your kind
proposal, and altogether to abandon any attempt to sway me and coax me
back? It would lead to nothing. My visit with you would lose its value and
its solemnity for me if it now brought me approval of my petition after all,
when I no longer desire that. I have not
stood still since writing that petition; the way I have embarked on is now my
one and all, my law, my home, my service."
With a sigh, Alexander nodded
assent. "Let us assume then,"
he said patiently, "that you in fact cannot be influenced or
dissuaded. Let us assume that contrary to
all appearances you are deaf to all representations, all reason, all kindness,
that you are running amok or going berserk, so that people must simply keep out
of your path. For the time being I will
not try to change your mind or influence you.
But tell me what you came here to tell me. Let me hear the story of your defection. Explain the acts and decisions which are to
us so shocking. Whether what you have to
offer is a confession, a justification, or an indictment, I want to hear
it."
Knecht nodded. "Running amok though I am, I pause to
express my gladness. I have no
indictments to make. What I wish to say
- if only it were not so hard, so incredibly hard to put into words - seems to
me a justification; to you it may be a confession."
He leaned back in his chair and looked
up, where traces of Hirsland's former days as a monastery showed in the vault
of the ceiling, in sparse, dreamlike lines and colours, patterns of flowers and
ornamentation.
"The idea that even a Magister
could tire of his post and resign it first came to me only a few months after
my appointment as Magister Ludi. One day
I was sitting reading a little book by my once-famous predecessor Ludwig
Wassermaler, a journal of the official year, in which he offers guidance to his
successors. There I read his admonition
to give timely thought to the public Glass Bead Game for the coming year. If you felt no eagerness for it and lacked
ideas, he wrote, you should try to put yourself into the right mood by
concentration. With my strong awareness
of being the youngest Magister, I smiled when I read this. With the brashness of youth I was a bit
amused at the anxieties of the old man who had written it. But still I also heard in it a note of
gravity and dread, of something menacing and oppressive. Reflecting on this, I decided that if ever
the day came when the thought of the next festival game caused me anxiety
instead of gladness, fear instead of pride, I would not struggle to work out a
new festival game, but would at once resign and return the emblems of my office
to the Board. This was the first time
that such a thought presented itself to me.
At the time I had just come through the great exertions of mastering my
office, and had all my sails spread to the wind, so to speak. In my heart I did not really believe in the
possibility that I too might some day be an old man, tired of the work and of
life, that I might some day be unequal to the task of tossing off ideas for new
Glass Bead Games. Nevertheless, I made
the decision at that time. You knew me
well in those days, your Reverence, better perhaps than I knew myself. You were my adviser and father confessor
during that first difficult period in office, and had taken your departure from
Waldzell only a short while before."
Alexander game him a searching
look. "I have scarcely ever had a
finer assignment," he said, "and was then content, in a way that one
rarely is, with you and myself. If it is
true that we must pay for everything pleasant in life, then I must now atone
for my elation at that time. I was truly
proud of you then. I cannot be so
today. If you cause the Order
disappointment, if you shock all of Castalia, I know that I share the
responsibility. Perhaps at that time,
when I was your companion and adviser, I should have stayed in your Players'
Village a few weeks longer, or handled you somewhat more roughly, subjected you
to stricter examination."
Knecht cheerfully returned the
look. "You must not have such
misgivings, Domine, or I should have to remind you of various
admonishments you felt called upon to give me at the time when I, as the
youngest Magister, took the duties of my office too seriously. At one such moment you told me - I have just
remembered this - that if I, the Magister Ludi, were a scoundrel or an
incompetent and did everything a Magister is forbidden to do, in fact if I
deliberately set out to use my high position to do as much harm as possible,
all this would no more disturb our dear Castalia or affect it any more
profoundly than a pebble that is thrown into a lake. A few ripples and circles and all trace is
gone. That is how firm, how secure our
Castalian Order is, how inviolable its spirit, you said. Do you recall? No, you are certainly not to blame for any
efforts of mine to be as bad a Castalian as possible and to do the greatest
possible harm to the Order. Moreover,
you also know that what I do cannot shake your own tranquillity. But I want to go on with my story. The fact that I could make such a decision at
the very beginning of my magistracy, and that I did not forget it, but am now
about to carry it out - that fact is related to a kind of spiritual experience
I have from time to time, which I call awakening. But you already know about that; I once spoke
to you about it, when you were my mentor and guru. In fact I complained to you at the time that
since my accession to office that experience had not come to me, and seemed to
be vanishing more and more into the distance."
"I remember," the President
agreed. "I was somewhat taken aback
at the time by your capacity for this kind of experience; it is rather rare
among us, whereas in the world outside it occurs in so many varied forms:
sometimes in the genius, especially in statesmen and generals, but also in
feeble, semi-pathological and, on the whole, rather meagrely gifted persons
such as clairvoyants, telepaths, and mediums.
You seemed to me to have no kinship at all with these two types, the
aggressive heroes or the clairvoyants and diviners. Rather, you seemed to me then, and until
yesterday, to be a good Castalian, prudent, clearheaded, obedient. I thought it completely out of the question
that you should ever be the victim of mysterious voices, whether of divine or
diabolic origin, or even voices from within your own self. Therefore I interpreted the states of
'awakening' which you described to me simply as your becoming aware
occasionally of personal growth. Given
that interpretation, it followed that these spiritual insights would not be
coming your way for a considerable time.
After all, you had just entered office and had assumed a task which
still hung loosely around you like an overcoat too big for you - you would
still have to grow into it. But tell me
this: have you ever believed that these awakenings are anything like
revelations from higher powers, communications or summons from the realm of an
objective, eternal, or divine truth?"
"In saying this," Knecht
replied, "you bring me to my present difficulty: to express in words
something that refuses to be put into words; to make rational what is obviously
extra-rational. No, I never thought of
those awakenings as manifestations of a god or daimon or of some absolute
truth. What gives these experiences
their weight and persuasiveness is not their truth, their sublime origin, their
divinity or anything of the sort, but their reality. They are tremendously real, somewhat the way
a violent physical pain or a surprising natural event, a storm or earthquake,
seem to us charged with an entirely different sort of reality, presence,
inexorability, from ordinary times and conditions. The gust of wind that precedes a
thunderstorm, sending us into the house and almost wrenching the front door
away from our hand - or a bad toothache which seems to concentrate all the
tensions, sufferings, and conflicts of the world in our jaw - these are such
realities. Later on we may start to
question them or examine their significance, if that is our bent; but at the
moment they happen they admit no doubts and are brimful of reality. My 'awakening' has a similar kind of
intensified reality for me. That is why
I have given it this name; at such times I really feel as if I had lain asleep
or half asleep for a long time, but am now awake and clearheaded and receptive
in a way I never am ordinarily. In
history, too, moments of tribulation or great upheavals have their element of
convincing necessity; they create a sense of irresistible immediacy and
tension. Whatever the consequences of
such upheavals, be it beauty and clarity or savagery and darkness, whatever
happens will bear the semblance of grandeur, necessity and importance, and will
stand out as utterly different from everyday events."
He paused to catch his breath, then
continued: "But let me try to examine this matter from another angle. Do you recall the legend of St.
Christopher? Yes? Well now, Christopher was a man of great
strength and courage, but he wanted to serve rather than to be a master and
govern. Service was his strength and his
art; he had a faculty for it. But whom
he served was not a matter of indifference to him. He felt that he had to serve the greatest,
the most powerful master. And when he
heard of a mightier master, he promptly offered his services. I have always been fond of this great
servant, and I must in some way resemble him. At any rate, during the one period in my life
when I had command over myself, during my student years, I searched and
vacillated for a long time before deciding what master to serve. For years I remained mistrustful of the Glass
Bead Game and fended it off, although I had long ago recognized it as the most
precious and characteristic fruit of our Province. I had tasted the bait and knew that there was
nothing more attractive and more subtle on earth than the Game. I had also observed fairly early that this
enchanting Game demanded more than naive amateur players, that it took total
possession of the man who had succumbed to its magic. And an instinct within me rebelled against my
throwing all my energies and interests into this magic forever. Some naive feeling for simplicity, for
wholeness and soundness, warned me against the spirit of the Waldzell Vicus
Lusorum. I sensed in it a spirit of
specialism and virtuosity, certainly highly cultivated, certainly richly elaborated,
but nevertheless isolated from humanity and the whole of life - a spirit that
had soared too high into haughty solitariness.
For years I doubted and probed, until the decision had matured within me
and in spirit of everything I decided in favour of the Game. I did so because I had within me that urge to
seek the supreme fulfilment and serve only the greatest master."
"I understand," Master
Alexander said. "But no matter how
I regard it and no matter how you try to represent it, I come up against the
same reason for your singularities. You
have an excessive sense of your own person, or dependence on it, which is far
from the same thing as being a great personality. A man can be a star of the first magnitude in
gifts, willpower, and endurance, but so well balanced that he turns with the
system to which he belongs without any friction or waste of energy. Another may have the same great gifts, or
even finer ones, but the axis does not pass precisely through the centre and he
squanders half his strength in eccentric movements which weaken him and disturb
his surroundings. You evidently belong
to this type. Only I must admit that you
have contrived to conceal it remarkably.
For that very reason the malady seems to be breaking out now with all
the greater virulence. You spoke of St. Christopher,
and I must say that although there is something grand and touching about this
saint, he is not a model for a servant of our hierarchy. One who wishes to serve should abide by the
master he has sworn to serve for good and ill, and not with the secret
reservation that he will change as soon as he finds a more magnificent
master. In assuming such an attitude the
servant makes himself his master's judge, and this indeed is what you are
doing. You always want to serve the
highest master, and are naive enough to decide for yourself the rank of the
masters among whom you make your choice."
Knecht had listened attentively,
although a shadow of sadness passed across his face. Now he continued: "I respect your
opinion, and could not have imagined that it would be any different. But let me go on with my story just a little
longer. I became Magister Ludi and in
fact was sure for a good while that I was serving the highest of all
masters. At any rate my friend
Designori, our patron in the Federal Council, once described to me in extremely
vivid terms what an arrogant, conceited, blasé elitist and virtuoso of the Game
I once was. But I must also tell you the
meaning that the word 'transcend' has had for me since my student years and my
'awakening'. It came to me, I think,
while reading a philosopher of the Enlightenment, and under the influence of
Master Thomas von der Trave, and ever since then it has been a veritable magic
word for me, like 'awakening', an impetus, a consolation, and a promise. My life, I resolved, ought to be a perpetual
transcending, a progression from stage to stage; I wanted it to pass through
one area after the next, leaving each behind, as music moves on from theme to
theme, from tempo to tempo, playing each out to the end, completing each and
leaving it behind, never tiring, never sleeping, forever wakeful, forever in
the present. In connection with the
experiences of awakening, I had noticed that such stages and such areas exist,
and that each successive period in one's life bears within itself, as it is
approaching its end, a note of fading and eagerness for death. That in turn leads to a shifting to a new
area, to awakening and new beginnings. I
am telling you about the significance to me of transcending in order to provide
another clue which may help you interpret my life. The decision in favour of the Glass Bead
Game was an important stage, as was the first time I took my place in the
hierarchy by accepting an assignment. I
have also experienced such movements from stage to stage in my office as
Magister. The best thing the office has
given me was the discovery that making music and playing the Glass Bead Game
are not the only happy activities in life, that teaching and educating can be
just as exhilarating. And I gradually
discovered, furthermore, that teaching gave me all the more pleasure, the
younger and more unspoiled by miseducation the pupils were. This too, like many other things, led me in
the course of the years to desire younger and younger pupils, so that I would
have liked most to have become a teacher in an elementary school. In short, at times my imagination dwelt on
matters which in themselves lay outside my functions."
He paused for a moment to rest. The President remarked: "You astonish me
more and more, Magister. Here you are
speaking about your own life, and you mention scarcely anything but subjective
experiences, personal wishes, personal developments and decisions. I really had no idea that a Castalian of your
rank could see himself and his life in such a light."
His voice had a note between reproach
and sorrow. It pained Knecht, but he
remained equable and exclaimed merrily: "Esteemed Magister, we are not
speaking about Castalia, about the Board and the hierarchy at the moment, but
only about me, about the psychology of a man who unfortunately has been forced
to cause you great inconvenience. It
would be improper for me to speak of my conduct of office, the way I have met
my obligations, my value or lack of it as a Castalian and Magister. My conduct of office lies open before
you. You can easily look into it, as you
can into the entire exterior of my life.
You will not find much to censure.
But what we are concerned with here is something wholly different. I am trying to show you the path I have
trodden as an individual, which has led me out of Waldzell and will lead me out
of Castalia tomorrow. Please, be so kind
as to listen to me a little while longer.
"My consciousness of a world
outside our little Province I owe not to my studies, in which this world
occurred only as the remote past, but primarily to my fellow student Designori,
who was a guest from outside, and later to my stay among the Benedictines, and
to Father Jacobus. What I have seen of
the world with my own eyes is very little, but Father Jacobus gave me an
inkling of what is called history. And
it may be that in acquiring that I was laying the groundwork for the isolation
into which I stumbled after my return. I
returned from the monastery into a land where history virtually didn't exist,
into a Province of scholars and Glass Bead Game players, a highly refined and
extremely pleasant society, but one in which I seemed to stand entirely alone
with my smattering of the world, my curiosity about that world, and my sympathy
for it. To be sure, there was enough to
compensate me here. There were several
men I revered, so that I felt all at once abashed, delighted, and honoured to
work with them as their colleague, and there were a large number of well-bred
and highly cultivated people. There was
also work aplenty and a great many talented and loveable students. The trouble was that during my apprenticeship
under Father Jacobus I had made the discovery that I was not only a Castalian,
but also a man; that the world, the whole world, concerned me and exerted
certain claims upon me. Needs, wishes,
demands, and obligations arose out of this discovery, but I was in no position
to meet any of them. Life in the world,
as the Castalian sees it, is something backward and inferior, a life of
disorder and crudity, of passions and distractions, devoid of all that is
beautiful and desirable. But the world
and its life was in fact infinitely vaster and richer than the notions a
Castalian has of it; it was full of change, history, struggles, and eternally
new beginnings. It might be chaotic, but
it was the home and native soil of all destinies, all exaltations, all arts,
all humanity; it had produced languages, peoples, governments, cultures; it had
also produced us and our Castalia and would see all these things perish again,
and yet survive. My teacher Jacobus had
kindled in me a love for this world which was forever growing and seeking
nourishment. But in Castalia there was
nothing to nourish it. He we were
outside of the world; we ourselves were a small, perfect world, but one no
longer changing, no longer growing."
He took a deep breath and fell silent
for a while. Since the President made no
reply, and only looked expectantly at him, he gave a pensive nod and continued:
"For me, this meant bearing two burdens, and I did so for a good many
years. I had to administer an important
office and meet its responsibilities, and I had to deal with this love for the
world. My office, I realized from the
outside, must not suffer because of this love.
On the contrary, I thought it ought to benefit. I hoped to carry out my duties as thoroughly
and irreproachably as a Magister is expected to; but if I should fall short in
these, I nevertheless knew that inwardly I was more alert and alive than a good
many of my more punctilious colleagues, and that I had something to give to my
students and associates. I regarded it
as my mission to expand Castalian life and thought slowly and gently without
breaking with tradition, to add to its warmth, to infuse it with new blood from
the world and from history. By the happy
workings of Providence, at the same time, outside in our country, a man of the
world had precisely the same thought. He
dreamed of a rapprochement and interpenetration of Castalia and the
world. That man was Plinio
Designori."
Master Alexander's mouth took on a
slightly sour expression as he said: "Well yes, I have never hoped for
anything very good from this man's influence upon you, any more than I have
from your spoiled protégé Tegularius. So
it is Designori who brought you to the point of a complete breach with the
system?"
"No, Domine, but he helped
me, in part without being aware of it.
He brought fresh air into my quietude.
Through him I came into contact with the outside world again, and only
then was I able to realize and to admit to myself that I was at the end of my
career here, that I had lost all real joy in my work, and that it was time to
put an end to the ordeal. One more stage
had been left behind; I had passed through another area, another space, which
this time was Castalia."
"How you phrase that!"
Alexander remarked, shaking his head.
"As if Castalian space were not large enough to serve a great many
people worthily all their lives! Do you
seriously believe that you have traversed this space and gone beyond it?"
"Oh no," Knecht replied with
strong feeling. "I've never
believed anything of the sort. When I
say that I have reached the border of this space, I mean only that I have done
all that I as an official could do here.
In this sense I have reached my limits.
For some time I have been standing at the frontier where my work as Magister
Ludi has become eternal recurrence, an empty exercise and formula. I have been doing it without joy, without
enthusiasm, sometimes even without faith.
It was time to stop."
Alexander sighed. "That is your view, but not the view of
the Order and its rules. A brother in
our Order has moods, and at times he wearies of his work - there is nothing new
and remarkable about that. The rules
show him the way to regain harmony, to find his centre again. Had you forgotten that?"
"I do not think so, your
Reverence. My administration is open to
your inspection, and only recently, after you had received my circular letter,
you conducted an investigation of the Players' Village and of me
personally. You learned that the work
was being done, that Secretariat and Archive were in order, that the Magister
Ludi showed no signs of illness or vagary.
I was able to carry on, and sustain my strength and composure, because
of those very rules which you so skilfully taught me. But it cost me great effort. And now, unfortunately, it is costing me
almost as much effort to convince you that I am not giving in to moods, whims,
or vague yearnings. But whether or not I
succeed, I insist at least on your acknowledging that my personality and my
work were sound and useful up to the moment you last evaluated them. Is that asking too much of you?"
Master Alexander's eyes twinkled
rather sardonically.
"My dear colleague," he
said, "you address me as if we were two private individuals holding a
casual conversation. But that applies
only to yourself; you are now in fact a private individual. I am not, and whatever I think and say, I do
not speak for myself, but as President of the Order, and he is responsible to
his Board for every word. What you are
saying here today will remain without consequences. No matter how earnest your intentions, yours
is the speech of a private person urging his own interests. But for me, my office and responsibility
continue, and what I say or do today may have consequences. I shall plead your cause before the
Board. You want the Board to accept your
account of the circumstances, or perhaps even acknowledge that you have made a
correct decision. You case then is that
until yesterday, though you may have had all sorts of weird ideas in your head,
you were an irreproachable Castalian, an exemplary Magister; that you may have
experienced temptations, spells or weariness, but that you consistently fought
and overcame them. Let us assume that I
accept that; but then how I am to understand that the upright Magister who only
yesterday obeyed every rule today suddenly defects? You must admit this is more understandable in
terms of a Magister whose mind had in fact been impaired, who was suffering
from psychic illness, so that he went on considering himself an excellent
Castalian long after he had in reality ceased to be one. I also wonder why you make such a point of
your having been a dutiful Magister up to the very end. Since you have after all taken the step,
broken your vow of obedience, and committed the act of desertion, why be
concerned about establishing such a point?"
Knecht protested. "I beg your pardon, your Reverence, but
why should I not be concerned about that?
My name and reputation is involved, the memory I shall leave behind here. Also involved is the possibility of my
working for Castalia on the outside. I
am not here to salvage something for myself, or even to win the Board's
approval of my action. I counted on
being regarded by my colleagues henceforth as a dubious phenomenon, and am
prepared for that. But I don't want to
be regarded as I have done something you must disapprove of, but I have done it
because I had to, because it was incumbent upon me, because that is my destiny,
which I believe in and which I assume with good will. If you cannot concede this much, then I have
been defeated and have spoken with you in vain."
"Again and again it comes down to
the same thing," Alexander replied.
"You want me to concede that in some circumstances an individual
has the right to break the laws in which I believe and which it is my task to
represent. But I cannot simultaneously
believe in our system and in your personal right to violate it - please, don't
interrupt me. I can concede that to all
appearances you are convinced of the rightness and meaningfulness of your
dreadful step, and that you believe you have been called to take such
action. You certainly don't expect me to
approve the step itself. On the other
hand, you have achieved something, for I have given up my initial thought of
winning you back and changing your decision.
I accept your withdrawal from the Order and shall pass on to the Board
the news of your voluntary resignation of your post. I cannot make any further concessions to you,
Joseph Knecht."
The Magister Ludi made a gesture of
submission. Then he said quietly:
"Thank you. I have already given
you the casket. I now turn over to you,
as representative of the Board, my notes on the state of affairs in Waldzell,
especially on the body of tutors and my recommendations on the persons I
consider possible successors to my office."
He took a few folded sheets of paper
from his pocket and placed them on the table.
Then he rose, and the President rose also. Knecht took a step towards him, looked into
his eyes for a long moment in sorrowful friendliness, then bowed and said:
"I had wanted to ask you to shake hands with me in parting, but I suppose
I must forgo this now. You have always
been especially dear to me, and today has not changed that in any way. Goodbye, dear and revered Master."
Alexander stood still. He was rather pale. For a moment it seemed as though he meant to
extend his hand to the departing Magister.
He felt his eyes growing moist.
Then he inclined his head, responded to Knecht's bow, and let him go.
After Knecht had closed the door
behind him, the President stood unmoving, listening to the departing
footsteps. When the last one had faded
away and there was nothing more to be heard, he walked back and forth across
the room for a while, until footsteps again sounded outside and there was a
soft knock at the door. The young
servant entered and reported that a visitor wished to see him.
"Tell him that I can receive him
in an hour and that I request him to be brief; there are urgent matters to
attend to. No, wait a moment. Also go to the Secretariat and inform the
First Secretary to convoke a meeting of the entire Board for the day after
tomorrow. All members must attend; only
severe illness will be acceptable as an excuse for absence. Then go to the steward and tell him I must
leave Waldzell early tomorrow morning; have my car ready by seven."
"I beg your pardon," the
young man said, "but the Magister Ludi's car is at your disposal."
"How is that?"
"His Reverence came by car
yesterday. He has just left word that he
is continuing his journey on foot and leaving the car here at your
disposal."
"Very well, I'll take the
Waldzell car tomorrow. Repeat,
please."
The servant repeated: "The
visitor will be received in an hour; he is to be brief. The First Secretary is to convoke the Board
for the day after tomorrow, attendance mandatory, absence excused only on
grounds of severe illness. Departure for
Waldzell at
Master Alexander took a deep breath
once the young man had gone. He went
over to the table where he had sat with Knecht.
Still echoing in his ears were the footsteps of that incomprehensible
man whom he had loved above all others and who had inflicted this great grief
upon him. He had loved this man ever
since the days he had first helped him; and among other traits it had been
Knecht's way of walking that had appealed so strongly to him - a firm, rhythmic
step that was also light, almost airy, expressing something between dignity and
childlikness, between priestliness and the dance - a strange, loveable, and
elegant walk that accorded with Knecht's face and voice. It accorded equally well with his peculiar
way of being a Castalian and Magister, his kind of mastership and serenity,
which sometimes reminded Alexander of the aristocratically measured manner of
his predecessor, Master Thomas, sometimes of the simple, heart-warming former
Music Master. So he had already left, in
his haste, and on foot, who could say where, and probably he, Alexander, would
never see him again, never again hear his laugh and watch the fine, long and
slender fingers of his hand drawing the hieroglyphs of a Glass Bead Game
phrase. Alexander reached for the sheets
of paper that had been left lying on the table and began reading them. They amounted to a brief testament, extremely
terse and matter-of-fact, frequently consisting only of cue words rather than
sentences: their purpose was to facilitate the Board's work in the forthcoming
investigation of the Vicus Lusorum and the appointment of a new Magister. The laconic, sensible remarks stood there in
neat, small letters, the words and handwriting just as uniquely and
unmistakably typical of Joseph Knecht as his face, his voice, his gait. The Board would scarcely find a man of his
stature for his successor; real masters and real personalities were all too
rare, and each one was a matter of good luck and a pure gift, even here in
Castalia, the Province of the elite.
Joseph Knecht enjoyed walking; it was
years since he had last travelled on foot.
In fact, when he reviewed the matter it seemed to him that his last real
walking tour had been the one that had long ago taken him from Mariafels
monastery back to Castalia and to that annual game in Waldzell which had been
so overshadowed by the death of Magister Thomas von der Trave and had resulted
in his own appointment to succeed the Magister Ludi. Ordinarily, when he thought back upon those
days, let alone upon his student years and the Bamboo Grove, it had always been
as if he were gazing from a cool, dull room out into broad, brightly sunlit
landscapes, into the irrevocable past, the paradise of memory. Such recollections had always been, even when
they were free of sadness, a vision of things remote and different, separated
from the prosaic present by a mysterious festiveness. But now, on this bright and cheerful
September afternoon, with the strong greens and browns all around him and the
ethereal, gently misted tones of blue verging into violet in the distance, as
he trudged along at an easy pace, with frequent pauses to look about him, that
walking tour of so long ago did not seem a distant paradise cut off from a
resigned present. Rather his present
journey was the same as that of the past, the present Joseph Knecht was close
as a brother to the Knecht of those days.
Everything was new again, mysterious, promising; all that had been could
recur, and many new things as well. It
was long, long since he had looked out upon the day and the world and seen them
as so unburdened, so beautiful and innocent.
The happiness of freedom, of commanding his own destiny, flooded through
him like a strong drink. How long it was
since he had last had this feeling, last entertained this lovely and rapturous
illusion. He pondered that, and recalled
the time this precious feeling had first been bruised, then given a fatal
blow. It had happened during a
conversation with Magister Thomas, under the latter's friendly and ironic
glance. He now recalled the strange
sensation of that hour in which he had lost his freedom. It had not really been a pang, a burning
anguish, but rather an onset of timidity, a faint shiver at the nape of his
neck, an organic warning somewhere above his diaphragm, a change in the
temperature and especially in the tempo of his consciousness of life. That anxious, constricting sensation, the
hidden threat of suffocation of that fateful hour, was being recompensed now,
or healed.
The day before, during his drive to
Hirsland, Knecht had decided that whatever might happen there, he would not
repine. Now he forbade himself to think
over the details of his conversations with Alexander, of his struggle with him
and his struggle to win him. He felt
himself entirely open to the feeling of relaxation and freedom that filled him
like the approach of evening leisure for a peasant whose day's work lies behind
him. He was conscious of being safe and
under no obligations. For a moment he
was utterly dispensable, exempt from all responsibilities, not required to
perform any tasks, to do any thinking.
The bright, varicoloured day surrounded him with a gentle radiance,
wholly visual, wholly present, imposing no demands, having neither yesterday
nor tomorrow. Now and then as he walked
he contentedly hummed one of the marching songs he and his schoolmates used to
sing in three or four parts on outings, when he was an elite pupil at Escholz,
and out of that serene early morning of his life small bright memories and
sounds came fluttering to him like the chirping of birds.
Under a cherry tree with leaves
already showing glints of purple he stopped to rest and sat down in the
grass. He reached into the pocket of his
coat and took out a thing that Master Alexander would never have guessed he
would be carrying, a small wooden flute, which he contemplated for a moment
with tenderness. He had not owned this
naive, childish-looking instrument for long, perhaps half a year, and he
recalled with pleasure the day he had acquired it. He had ridden to Monteport to discuss some
problems of musical theory with Carlo Ferromonte. Their conversation had turned to the
woodwinds of certain ages, and he had asked his friend to show him the
Monteport instrument collection. After
an enjoyable stroll through several halls filled with the organ manuals, harps,
lutes, and pianos, they had come to a building where instruments for the
schools were stored. There Knecht had
seen a whole drawer full of such little flutes; he had examined and tried one,
and asked his friend whether he might have one.
Laughing, Carlo had invited him to choose; still laughing, he had
presented him with a receipt to sign; but then he had seriously explained the
structure of the instrument, its fingering, and the technique of playing
it. Knecht had taken the pretty little
toy with him, and practised on it occasionally - for he had not played a wind instrument since the recorder
of his boyhood in Escholz, and had often resolved to learn one again. In addition to scales, he had used a book of
old melodies which Ferromonte had edited for beginners, and every so often the
soft, sweet notes of the flute had sounded from the Magister's garden on from
his bedroom. He was far from a master of
the instrument, but had learned to play a number of chorales and songs; he knew
the music by heart, and also the words of a good many of them. One of these songs now sprang into his mind;
it seemed highly suitable to the moment.
He sang a few lines under his breath:
My
body and head
Lay
asleep like the dead,
But
now I stand strong,
Gay
as the day is long
And
turn my face to heaven.
He brought the instrument to his lips
and blew the melody, looking out into the radiant plain that arched towards the
distant mountains, listening to the serenely devout song ringing out in the
sweet notes of the flute, and feeling at one and content with the sky, the
mountains, the song, and the day. With
pleasure, he felt the smooth wand between his fingers and reflected that aside
from the clothes on his body this toy flute was the only piece of property he
had allowed himself to take from Waldzell.
In the course of years he had accumulated a good many things that could
be more or less regarded as personal property, above all writings, notebooks,
and so on. He had left all these things
behind; the Players' Village might use them as it wished. But he had taken the flute, and he was glad
to have it with him; it was a modest and loveable travelling companion.
On the second day he arrived in the
capital on foot and called at the Designori home. Plinio sped down the steps to meet him and
embraced him with emotion.
"We have been longing for you,
and anxiously waiting for you!" he exclaimed. "You have taken a great step, friend -
may it bring good things to all of us.
But to think that they let you go!
I never would have believed it."
Knecht laughed. "You see, I am here. But I'll tell you about it by and by. But now I'd like to greet my pupil, and of
course your wife, and discuss everything with you - how we are going to arrange
my new position. I am eager to start on
it."
Plinio called a maid and told her to
bring his son at once.
"The young gentleman?" she
asked, seemingly astonished, but hurried off while Plinio showed his friend to
the guest room. He began eagerly
describing what preparations he had made for Knecht's arrival, and how he
imagined the tutoring of young Tito would work out. Everything had been arranged as Knecht wished
it, he said; Tito's mother, after some initial reluctance, had also grasped the
reasons for these wishes and assented to them.
The family owned a vacation cottage in the mountains, called Belpunt,
pleasantly situated on a lake. There
Knecht would live with his pupil for the time being. An elderly servant would keep house for them;
she had already left several days ago to put the place in order. Of course they could stay there only for a
short time, at most till the onset of winter; but such isolation would
certainly be beneficial, especially for the initial period. Fortunately, Tito loved the mountains and
Belpunt, so the boy made no difficulties about going there. He was even looked forward to the
project. At this point Designori
remembered that he had an album of photos of the house and its environs. He drew Knecht along into his study, searched
eagerly for the album, and when he had found it began showing his guest the
house and describing the big farm kitchen-living room, the tile stove, the
arbours, the lake shore, the waterfall.
"Does it seem nice to you?"
he asked insistently. "Will you
feel comfortable there?"
"Why not?" Knecht said
calmly. "But I wonder where Tito
is. It's been quite some time since he
was sent for."
They chatted for a while longer. Then they heard footsteps outside. The door opened, but neither Tito nor the
maid dispatched for him entered. It was
Tito's mother, Madame Designori. Knecht
rose to greet her. She extended her
hand, smiling with a somewhat artificial friendliness; he could see beneath
this polite smile an expression of anxiety and vexation. She barely managed a few words of welcome and
then turned to her husband and impetuously burst out with what was troubling
her.
"It's really so awkward,"
she exclaimed. "Imagine, the boy
has vanished and is nowhere to be found."
"Oh well, I imagine he has gone
out," Plinio said soothingly.
"He'll be along."
"Unfortunately that isn't
likely," his wife said. "He's
been gone all day. I noticed his absence
early this morning."
"And why am I only now being told
about it?"
"Because I naturally expected him
back any minute and saw no reason to trouble you needlessly. At first I took it for granted that he had
simply gone for a walk. When he didn't
return by noon I began to worry. You
were not lunching with us today or I would have spoken to you. Even then, I tried to persuade myself that it
was simply carelessness on his part to make me wait so long. But it seems it wasn't that."
"Permit me a question,"
Knecht said. "The young man knew I
would be arriving soon, didn't he, and about your plans for him and me?"
"Of course, Magister. And he seemed to be agreeable to those plans
- or at least he preferred having you as his teacher to being sent back to some
school."
"Oh well," Knecht said,
"then there is nothing to worry about.
Your son is used to a great deal of freedom, Signora, especially of
late. It's understandable that the
prospect of a tutor and disciplinarian should be rather dreadful to him. And so he's made of at just the moment he was
to be turned over to his new teacher - probably less with the hope of actually
escaping his fate than with the thought that he'll lose nothing by
postponement. Besides, he probably
wanted to play a trick on his parents and the schoolmaster they've found for
him, and so show his defiance to the whole world of grown-ups and
teachers."
Designori was glad that Knecht took the
incident so lightly. He himself was full
of anxiety; with his intense love for his son, he imagined all sorts of
dangers. Perhaps, he thought, the boy
had run away in all earnest; perhaps he even intended to do himself some
harm. It seemed as if they were going to
pay for all their faults of omission and commission in the boy's upbringing,
just when they were hoping to remedy things.
Against Knecht's advice, he insisted
that something must be done; he could not take this latest crisis passively,
and worked himself up to a pitch of impatience and nervous agitation which his
friend found deplorable. It was
therefore decided to send messages to the homes of a few of Tito's friends,
where he sometimes stayed overnight.
Knecht was relieved when Madame Designori left to attend to this, and he
had Plinio to himself for a while.
"Plinio," he said, "you
look as if your son had just been carried dead into the house. He is no longer a small child and is not
likely to have been run over or to have eaten deadly nightshade. So get a grip on yourself, my dear
fellow. Since the boy isn't here, permit
me for a moment to teach you something in his stead. I have been observing you and find that
you're not in the best of form. The
moment an athlete receives an unexpected blow or pressure, his muscles react of
their own accord by making the necessary movements, stretching or contracting
automatically and so helping him master the situation. You too, my pupil Plinio, the moment you
received the blow - or what you exaggeratedly thought a blow - should have
applied the first defensive measure against psychic assaults and retorted to
slow, carefully controlled breathing.
Instead you breathed like an actor when he seeks to represent extreme
emotion. You are not sufficiently
armoured; you people in the world seem to be singularly exposed to suffering
and cares. There is something helpless
and touching about your state; though often, when real suffering is involved
and there is meaning to such pangs, it is also magnificent. But for everyday life these protective
measures are most valuable and should not be ignored. I will make sure that your son will be better
armed when he needs such equipment. And
now, Plinio, be so kind as to do a few exercises with me, so that I can see
whether you have really forgotten it all."
With the breathing exercises, which he
guided by strictly rhythmical commands, he was able to distract Plinio from his
self-induced agonies until he was willing to listen to rather arguments and
dismantle the structure of alarm and anxiety he had so lavishly built. They went up to Tito's room, where Knecht
looked benignly around at the confusion of boyish possessions. He picked up a book lying on the night table,
saw a slip of paper jutting from it, and found it was a note from the vanished
boy. Laughing, he handed the paper to
Designori, whose expression immediately brightened. Tito had written that he was leaving at
daybreak and going to the mountains alone, where he would wait at Belpunt for
his new teacher. He hoped, the message
said, that his parents would not mind his having this last little jaunt before
his freedom was once more awfully restricted; his spirits sank when he thought
of having to make this pleasant little journey accompanied by his teacher, a
prisoner under supervision.
"Quite understandable,"
Knecht commented. "I'll leave for
Belpunt tomorrow and will probably find the boy already there. But now you'd better go to your wife and tell
her the news."
For the rest of the day the atmosphere
in the house was happy and relaxed. That
evening, on Plinio's insistence, Knecht summarized the events of the past
several days, and in particular described his two conversations with Master
Alexander. On that evening he also
scribbled some curious lines of verse on a scrap of paper which is today in the
possession of Tito Designori. That came
about in the following way.
Before dinner his host had left him
alone for an hour. Knecht saw a bookcase
full of old books which aroused his curiosity.
Idle reading was another pleasure which he had unlearned and almost
forgotten in years of abstinence. This
moment now reminded him intensely of his student years: to stand before a shelf
of unknown books, reach out at random, and choose one or another volume whose
gilt or author's name, format or the colour of the binding, appealed to
him. With pleasure he glanced over the
titles on the spines and saw that the shelf consisted entirely of nineteenth-
and twentieth-century belles-lettres.
Finally he picked out a faded cloth-bound volume whose title, Wisdom
of the Brahmans, tempted him.
Standing for a while, then seated, he leafed through the book, which
contained many hundreds of didactic poems.
It was a curious composite of genuine poetry. This strange and touching book held, it
seemed to him, a good deal of important esoteric philosophy, but this was
almost lost in the heavy-handed treatment.
The best poems were by no means the ones in which the poet tried hard to
give form to a theory or a truth, but the
ones in which the poet's temperament, his capacity for love, his sincerity,
humanitarianism, and deep respectability, found expression. As Knecht delved into the book, with mixed
feelings of esteem and amusement, he was struck by a stanza which he absorbed
with satisfaction and assent. Reading
it, he nodded smilingly, as if it had been specially sent to him for this day
in his life. It went:
Our days are
precious but we gladly see them going
If in their place we
find a thing more precious growing:
A rare, exotic
plant, our gardener's heart delighting;
A child whom we are
teaching, a booklet we are writing.
He opened the drawer of the desk,
found a sheet of paper, and copied out the stanza. Later he showed it to Plinio, and commented:
"I liked these lines. There is
something special about them; they are so dry and at the same time so deeply
felt. And they so well suit me and my
momentary situation and mood. Although I
am not a gardener and don't intend to devote my days to the cultivation of an
exotic plant, I am a teacher, and am on the way to my task, to the child I mean
to teach. How I am looking forward to
it! As for the author of these lines,
the poet Rückert, I would suppose he possessed all three of these noble
passions: that of gardener, teacher, and writer. I suppose the third ranked highest with him;
he shapes the stanza so that it receives the maximum stress, and dotes so on
the object of his passion that he becomes positively tender and calls it not a
book, but a booklet. How touching that
is."
Plinio laughed. "Who knows," he observed,
"whether the diminutive is not just a rhymester's trick because he needed
a two-syllable instead of a one-syllable word there."
"Let us not underestimate
him," Knecht replied. "A man
who wrote tens of thousands of lines of verse in his lifetime would not be
driven into a corner by shabby metrical necessity. No, just listen to it, how loving it sounds,
and at the same time just a little sheepish: a booklet we are writing. Perhaps it isn't only his affection that
transforms the book into a booklet.
Perhaps he also meant it apologetically.
Probably this poet was so devoted to his writing that now and again he
felt his own passion for making books as a kind of vice. In that case the word booklet would have not
only the sense of an endearment, but also a propitiating, disarming
connotation, as when a gambler invites someone to a 'little game' or a drinker
asks for 'just a drop'. Well, these are
speculations. In any case, I find myself
in full agreement and sympathy with the poet about the child he wishes to teach
and the booklet he wants to write.
Because I am not only familiar with the passion for teaching; I'm also
rather inclined to do a little scribbling too.
And now that I have liberated myself from officialdom, I am much drawn
to the idea of using my leisure and good spirits one of these days to write a
book - or rather, a booklet, a little thing for friends and those who share my
views."
"What about?" Designori
asked with curiosity.
"Oh, anything, the subject would
not matter. It would only be a pretext
for me to seclude myself and enjoy the happiness of having a great deal of
leisure. The tone would be what mattered
to me, a proper mean between the solemn and the intimate, earnestness and jest,
a tone not of instruction, but of friendly communication and discourse on
various things I think I have learned. I
don't suppose the way this poet Friedrich Rückert mixes instruction and
thinking, information and casual talk, would be my way, and yet something about
it appeals strongly to me; it is personal and yet not arbitrary, playful and
yet submits to strict rules of form. I
like that. Well, for the present I shall
not enter upon the joys and problems of writing little books; I have to keep my
mind on other tasks. But some time
later, I imagine, I might very well experience the joys of authorship, of the
sort I foresee: an easygoing but careful examination of things not just for my
solitary pleasure, but always with a few good friends and readers in
mind."
Next morning Knecht set out for
Belpunt. Designori had wanted to
accompany him, but Knecht had firmly vetoed the idea, and when the father
attempted to press it, had almost snapped at him. "The boy will have enough to do coming
to terms with this nuisance of a new teacher," he said curtly. "To foist his father on him at the same
time would scarcely help things."
As he rode through the brisk September
morning in the car Plinio had hired for him, his good humour of yesterday
returned. He chatted frequently with the
chauffeur, asking him to stop and drive slowly every so often when the
landscape looked particularly attractive, and several times he played his
little flute. It was a beautiful and exciting
ride from the lowlands in which the capital lay towards the foothills and on
into the high mountains. The journey
also led from fading summer deeper into autumn.
About noon the last great climb began, over sweeping serpentines,
through thinning evergreen forest, past foaming mountain streams roaring
between cliffs, over bridges and by solitary, massive walled farmhouses with
tiny windows, into a stony, ever rougher and more austere world of mountains,
amid whose bleakness and sobriety the flowering meadows bloomed like tiny
paradises with doubled loveliness.
The small cottage they reached at last
was tucked away near a mountain lake, among grey cliffs with which it scarcely
contrasted. The traveller was at once
aware of the austerity, even the gloom, of this kind of building, which so accorded
with the ruggedness of the mountains.
But then a cheerful smile lighted his face, for in the open door of the
house he saw a figure standing, a young man in a colourful jacket and shorts. It could only be his pupil Tito, and although
he had not really been seriously concerned about the fugitive, he nevertheless
breathed a grateful sigh of relief. If
Tito were here and welcoming his teacher on the threshold, all was well; that
disposed of a good many possible complications he had been considering during
the ride.
The boy came forward to meet him,
smiling, friendly, and a little embarrassed.
While helping Knecht out of the car, he said: "I didn't mean to be
horrid, letting you travel alone."
And before Knecht had a chance to reply, he added trustfully: "I
think you understood my feelings.
Otherwise you would have brought my father with you. I've already let him know that I arrived
safely."
Laughing, Knecht shook hands with the
boy. He was guided into the house, where
the servant welcomed him and promised that supper would soon be ready. Yielding to an unwonted need, he lay down for
a little while before the meal, and only then realized that he was curiously
tired, in fact exhausted, from the lovely automobile trip. During the evening, moreover, as he chatted
with his pupil and looked at Tito's collections of mountain flowers and
butterflies, his fatigue increased. He
even felt something akin to giddiness, a kind of emptiness in the head that he
had never experienced before, and an annoying weakness and irregularity of his
heartbeat. But he continued to sit with
Tito until their agreed bedtime, and took pains not to show any sign that he
was not feeling well. Tito was somewhat
surprised that the Magister said not a word about the beginning of school,
schedules, report cards, and similar matters.
In fact, when he ventured to capitalize on this good mood and proposed a
long walk for the morning, to acquaint his teacher with his new surroundings,
the proposal was readily accepted.
"I am looking forward to the
walk," Knecht added, "and want to ask you a favour right now. While looking at your plant collection I
could see that you know far more about mountain plants than I do. One of the purposes of our being together is,
among other things, that we exchange knowledge and reach a balance with each
other. Let us begin by your checking
over my meagre understanding of botany and helping me go further in this
field."
By the time they bade each other
goodnight, Tito was in excellent spirits and had made some good
resolutions. Once again he had found
this Magister Knecht very much to his liking.
Without using fancy language and going on about scholarship, virtue, the
aristocracy of intellect, and so on, as his schoolteachers were prone to do,
this serene, friendly man had something in his manner and his speech that
imposed an obligation and brought out your good, chivalric, higher aspirations
and forces. It could be fun, and
sometimes you felt it as a badge of honour, to deceive and outwit the ordinary
schoolmaster, but in the presence of this man such notions never even occurred
to you. He was - why, what exactly was
he like? Tito reflected on this, trying
to determine what it was about this stranger that was so likeable and at the
same time so impressive. He decided that
it was the man's nobility, his innate aristocratic quality. This was what drew him to Knecht, this above
all. He was a nobleman, although no-one
knew his family and his father might have been a shoemaker. He was nobler and more aristocratic than most
of the people Tito knew, more aristocratic than Tito's own father. The boy, who highly prized the patrician
instincts and traditions of his house and could not forgive his father for
having broken with them, was for the first time encountering intellectual
aristocracy, cultivated nobility. Knecht
was an example of that power which under favourable conditions can sometimes
work miracles, overleaping a long succession of ancestors and within a single
human life transforming a plebeian child into a member of the highest
nobility. In the proud and fiery boy's
heart there stirred an inkling that to belong to this kind of nobility, and to
serve it, might be a duty and honour for him; that here perhaps, embodied in
this teacher who for all his gentleness and friendliness was a nobleman through
and through, the meaning of his own life was drawing near to him, that his own
goals were being set.
Knecht, after being shown to his room,
did not lie down at once, although he craved rest. The evening had cost him a great effort. He had found it difficult to comport himself
so that nothing in his expression, posture, or voice would reveal his peculiar
fatigue or depression or illness to the young man, who was undoubtedly
observing him closely. Still, he seemed
to have succeeded. But now he had to
meet and master this vacuity, this nausea, this alarming giddiness, this
deathly tiredness which was at the same time restiveness. He could master it only if he recognized its
cause. This was not hard to find
although it took him some time. The
reason for his indisposition, he decided, was simply the journey which had
taken him in so short a time from the lowlands to an altitude of close to seven
thousand feet. Except for a few outings
in his early youth, he was unaccustomed to such heights and had not reacted
well to the rapid ascent. Probably this
disability would last another day or two.
If it did not disappear by then, he would have to return home with Tito
and the housekeeper, in which case Plinio's plan for a stay in lovely Belpunt
would come to nothing. That would be a
pity, but no great misfortune.
After these reflections he went to
bed, and since sleep refused to come spent the night partly in reviewing his
travels since his departure from Waldzell, partly trying to quiet his heartbeat
and his exacerbated nerves. He also
thought a good deal about his pupil, with pleasure, but without making any
plans. It seemed to him wiser to tame
this noble but refractory colt by kindness and slow domestication; nothing must
be hasty or forced in this case. He
thought that he would gradually bring the boy to an awareness of his gifts and
powers, and at the same time nourish in him that noble curiosity, that aristocratic
dissatisfaction from which springs love for the sciences, the humanities, and
the arts. The task was a rewarding one,
and his pupil was not just any talented young man whom he had to awaken and
train. As the only son of a wealthy and
influential patrician he was also a future leader, one of the social and
political shapers of the country and the nation, destined to command and to be
imitated. Castalia had failed the
Designori family; it had not educated Tito's father thoroughly enough, had not
made him strong enough for his difficult position poised between the world and
culture. As a result, gifted and
charming young Plinio had become an unhappy man with a life out of balance and
ill managed. As a further result, his
only son was endangered in his turn and had been drawn into his father's
difficulties. Here was something to heal
and make good; here was a debt to be paid.
It seemed meaningful, and gladdened him, that this task should fall to
him of all persons, to him the disobedient and seemingly apostate Castalian.
In the morning, when he sensed the
house awakening, he rose. Finding a
dressing gown laid ready beside his bed, he put it on and stepped out through
the rear door that Tito had shown him the night before into the arcade that connected
the house with the bath hut by the lake.
Before him the little lake lay
motionless, grey-green. Further off was
a steep cliff, its sharp, jagged crest still in shadow, rearing sheer and cold
into the thin, greenish, cool morning sky.
But he could sense that the sun had already risen behind this crest;
tiny splinters of its light glittered here and there on corners of rock. In a few minutes the sun would appear over
the crenellations of the mountain and flood lake and valley below with light. In a mood of earnest attentiveness, Knecht
studied the scene, whose stillness, gravity, and beauty he felt as unfamiliar
and nevertheless of deep concern and instructiveness to him. Now, even more strongly than during
yesterday's ride, he felt the ponderousness, the coolness and dignified strangeness
of this mountain world, which does not meet men halfway, does not invite them,
scarcely tolerates them. And it seemed
to him strange and significant that his first step into the freedom of life in
the world should have led him to this very place, to this silent and cold
grandeur.
Tito appeared, in bathing trunks. He shook hands with the Magister and pointing
to the cliffs opposite said: "You've come at just the right moment; the
sun will be rising in a minute. Oh, it's
glorious up here."
Knecht gave him a friendly nod. He had learned long ago that Tito was an
early riser, a runner, wrestler, and hiker, if only from protest against his
father's casual, unsoldierly, comfort-loving ways. For the same reason he refused to drink
wine. These leanings occasionally led
him into a pose of being an anti-intellectual child of nature - the Designoris
seemed to have this bent for exaggeration.
But Knecht welcomed it all, and was determined to share his interest in
sports as a means for winning over and taming the temperamental young man. It would be only one means among several, and
not at all the most important; music, for example, would lead them much
further. Of course he had no thought of
matching the young man in physical feats, let alone surpassing him. But harmless participation would suffice to
show the boy that his tutor was neither a coward nor a mere bookworm.
Tito looked eagerly towards the dark
crest of the mountain, behind which the sky pulsed in the morning light. Now a fragment of the rocky ridge flashed
violently like a glowing metal beginning to melt. The crest blurred and seemed suddenly lower,
as if it were melting down, and from the fiery gap the dazzling sun appeared. Simultaneously, the ground, the house, and
their shore of the lake were illuminated, and the two, standing in the strong
radiance, instantly felt the delightful warmth of this light. The boy, filled with the solemn beauty of the
moment and the glorious sensation of his youth and strength, stretched his
limbs with rhythmic arm movements, which his whole body soon took up,
celebrating the break of day [daybreak] in an enthusiastic dance and expressing
his deep oneness with the surging, radiant elements. His steps flew in joyous homage towards the
victorious sun and reverently retreated from it; his outspread arms embraced
mountain, lake, and sky; kneeling, he seemed to pay tribute to the earth
mother, and extending his hands, to the waters of the lake; he offered himself,
his youth, his freedom, his burning sense of his own life, like a festive
sacrifice to the powers. The sunlight
gleamed on his tanned shoulders; his eyes were half-closed to the dazzle; his
young face stared masklike with an expression of inspired, almost fanatical
gravity.
The Magister, too, was overpowered by
the solemn spectacle of dawn breaking in this silent, rocky solitude. But he was even more fascinated by the human
spectacle taking place before his eyes, this ceremonial dance performed by his
pupil to welcome the morning and the sun.
The dance elevated this moody, immature youth, conferring upon him a
priestly solemnity, suddenly in a single moment irradiating and revealing to
the onlooker his deepest and noblest tendencies, gifts, and destinies just as
the appearance of the sun opened and illuminated this cold, gloomy mountain
dale. In this moment the young man
seemed to him stronger and more impressive than he had hitherto thought, but
also harder, more inaccessible, more remote from culture, more pagan. This ceremonial and sacrificial dance under
the sign of Pan meant more than young Plinio's speeches and versemaking ever
had; it raised the boy several stages higher, but also made him seem more
alien, more elusive, less obedient to any summons.
The boy himself was in the grip of his
impulse, without knowing what was happening to him. He was not performing a dance he already
knew, a dance he had practised before.
This was no familiar rite of celebrating sun and morning that he had
long ago invented. Only later would he
realize that his dance and his transported state in general were only partly
caused by the mountain air, the sun, the dawn, his sense of freedom. They were also a response to the change
awaiting him, the new chapter in his young life that had come into the friendly
and awe-inspiring form of the Magister.
In that morning hour many elements conspired in the soul of young Tito
to shape his destiny and distinguish this hour above a thousand others as a
high, a festive, a consecrated time.
Without knowing what he was doing, asking no questions, he obeyed the
command of this ecstatic moment, danced his worship, prayed to the sun,
professed with devout movements and gestures his joy, his faith in life, his
piety and reverence, both proudly and submissively offered up in the dance his
devout soul as a sacrifice to the sun and the gods, and no less to the man he
admired and feared, the sage and musician, the Master of the magic Game who had
come to him from mysterious realms, his future teacher and friend.
All this, like the torrent of light
from the sunrise, lasted only a few minutes.
Stirred to the core, Knecht watched the wonderful show, in which his
pupil before his eyes changed and revealed himself, presenting himself in a new
light, alien and entirely his equal.
Both of them stood on the walk between house and hut, bathed in the
radiance from the east and deeply shaken by their experience. Tito, having barely completed the last step
of his dance, awoke from his ecstasy and stood still, like an animal surprised
in solitary play, aware that he was not alone, that not only had he experienced
and performed something unusual, but that he had also had a spectator. His first thought was how to extricate
himself from the situation, which struck him now as somehow dangerous and shaming. He had to act vigorously, and smash the magic
of these strange moments, which had totally absorbed and overwhelmed him.
His face, but a moment before an
ageless, stern mask, assumed a childish and rather foolish expression, like
that of a person awakened too abruptly from a deep sleep. His knees swayed slightly; he looked into his
teacher's face with vapid astonishment, and in sudden haste, as though
something very important had just occurred to him, something he had neglected,
he stretched out his right arm and pointed towards the opposite shore of the
lake, which along with half the lake's waters still lay in the great, rapidly
contracting shadow of the cliff whose top had already been conquered by the
brilliance of the dawn.
"If we swim very fast," he
called out with boyish impetuosity, "we can just reach the other shore
before the sun."
The words were barely uttered, the
challenge to a swimming race with the sun barely issued, when Tito with a
tremendous leap plunged headfirst into the lake, as if in his high spirits or
his shyness he could not get away fast enough and obliterate all memory of the
preceding ritual by intensified activity.
The water splashed up and closed around him. A few moments later his head, shoulders, and
arms reappeared and remained visible on the blue-green surface, swiftly moving
away.
Knecht had not, when he came out, had
in mind to bathe or swim. Both air and
water were much too cool, and after his night of semi-illness, swimming would
probably do him little good. But now, in
the beautiful sunlight, stirred by the scene he had just witnessed, and with
his pupil urging him into the water in this comradely fashion, he found the
venture less deterring. Above all he
feared that the promise born in this morning hour would be blasted if he
disappointed the boy by opposing cool, adult rationality to this invitation to
a test of strength. It was true that his
feeling of weakness and uncertainty, incurred by the rapid ascent into the mountains,
warned him to be careful; but perhaps this indisposition could be soonest
routed by forcing matters and meeting it head-on. The summons was stronger than the warning,
his will stronger than his instinct. He quickly
shed the light dressing gown, took a deep breath, and threw himself into the
water at the same spot where his pupil had dived.
The lake, fed by glacial waters so
that even in the warmest days of summer one had to be inured to it, received
him with an icy cold, slashing in its enmity.
He had steeled himself for a thorough chilling, but not for this fierce
cold which seemed to surround him with leaping flames and after a moment of
fiery burning began to penetrate rapidly into him. After the dive he had risen quickly to the
surface, caught sight of Tito swimming far ahead of him, felt bitterly assailed
by this icy, wild, hostile element, but still believed he could lessen the
distance, that he was engaging in the swimming race, was fighting for the boy's
respect and comradeship, for his soul - when he was already fighting with
Death, who had thrown him and was now holding him in a wrestler's grip. Fighting with all his strength, Knecht held
him off as long as his heart continued to beat.
The young swimmer had looked back
frequently and seen with satisfaction that the Magister had followed him into
the water. Now he peered once again, no
longer saw him, and became uneasy. He
looked and called, then turned and swam rapidly back. He could not find him. Swimming and diving, he searched for the lost
swimmer until his strength too began to give out in the bitter cold. Staggering, breathless, he reached land at
last, saw the dressing gown lying on the shore, and picking it up began
mechanically rubbing his body and limbs until the numbed skin warmed
again. Stunned, he sat down in the
sunlight and stared into the water, whose cool blue-green now blinked at him
strangely empty, alien, and evil. He
felt overpowered by perplexity and deep sorrow, for with the waning of his
physical weakness, awareness and the terror of what had happened returned to
him.
Oh! he thought in grief and horror,
now I am guilty of his death. And only
now, when there was no longer need to save his pride or offer resistance, he
felt, in shock and sorrow, how dear this man had already become to him. And since in spite of all rational objections
he felt responsible for the Master's death, there came over him, with a
premonitory shudder of awe, a sense that this guilt would utterly change him
and his life, and would demand much greater things of him than he had ever
before demanded of himself.
THE GLASS BEAD GAME (polychrome version)