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Nobel |
Hermann Hesse |
I was born in Calw in the Black Forest
on July 2, 1877. My father, a Baltic German, came from Estonia; my mother was
the daughter of a Swabian and a French Swiss. My father's father was a doctor,
my mother's father a missionary and Indologist. My father, too, had been a
missionary in India for a short while, and my mother had spent several years of
her youth in India and had done missionary work there.
My childhood in Calw was interrupted by several years of living in Basle
(1880-86). My family had been composed of different nationalities; to this was
now added the experience of growing up among two different peoples, in two
countries with their different dialects.
I spent most of my school years in boarding schools in Wuerttemberg and some
time in the theological seminary of the monastery at Maulbronn. I was a good
learner, good at Latin though only fair at Greek, but I was not a very
manageable boy, and it was only with difficulty that I fitted into the framework
of a pietist education that aimed at subduing and breaking the individual
personality. From the age of twelve I wanted to be a poet, and since there was
no normal or official road, I had a hard time deciding what to do after leaving
school. I left the seminary and grammar school, became an apprentice to a
mechanic, and at the age of nineteen I worked in book and antique shops in Tübingen
and Basle. Late in 1899 a tiny volume of my poems appeared in print, followed by
other small publications that remained equally unnoticed, until in 1904 the
novel Peter Camenzind, written in Basle and set in Switzerland, had a
quick success. I gave up selling books, married a woman from Basle, the mother
of my sons, and moved to the country. At that time a rural life, far from the
cities and civilization, was my aim. Since then I have always lived in the
country, first, until 1912, in Gaienhofen on Lake Constance, later near Bern,
and finally in Montagnola near Lugano, where I am still living.
Soon after I settled in Switzerland in 1912, the First World War broke out, and
each year brought me more and more into conflict with German nationalism; ever
since my first shy protests against mass suggestion and violence I have been
exposed to continuous attacks and floods of abusive letters from Germany. The
hatred of the official Germany, culminating under Hitler, was compensated for by
the following I won among the young generation that thought in international and
pacifist terms, by the friendship of Romain
Rolland, which lasted until his death, as well as by the sympathy of men who
thought like me even in countries as remote as India and Japan. In Germany I
have been acknowledged again since the fall of Hitler, but my works, partly
suppressed by the Nazis and partly destroyed by the war; have not yet been
republished there.
In 1923, I resigned German and acquired Swiss citizenship. After the dissolution
of my first marriage I lived alone for many years, then I married again.
Faithful friends have put a house in Montagnola at my disposal.
Until 1914 I loved to travel; I often went to Italy and once spent a few months
in India. Since then I have almost entirely abandoned travelling, and I have not
been outside of Switzerland for over ten years.
I survived the years of the Hitler regime and the Second World War through the
eleven years of work that I spent on the Glasperlenspiel (1943) [Magister
Ludi], a novel in two volumes. Since the completion of that long book, an
eye disease and increasing sicknesses of old age have prevented me from engaging
in larger projects.
Of the Western philosophers, I have been influenced most by Plato, Spinoza,
Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche as well as the historian Jacob Burckhardt. But they
did not influence me as much as Indian and, later, Chinese philosophy. I have
always been on familiar and friendly terms with the fine arts, but my
relationship to music has been more intimate and fruitful. It is found in most
of my writings. My most characteristic books in my view are the poems (collected
edition, Zürich, 1942), the stories Knulp (1915), Demian (1919), Siddhartha
(1922), Der Steppenwolf (1927) [Steppenwolf], Narziss und
Goldmund. (1930), Die Morgenlandfahrt (1932) [The Journey to the
East], and Das Glasperlenspiel (1943) [Magister Ludi]. The
volume Gedenkblätter (1937, enlarged ed. 1962) [Reminiscences] contains
a good many autobiographical things. My essays on political topics have recently
been published in Zürich under the title Krieg und Frieden (1946) [War
and Peace].
I ask you, gentlemen, to be contented with this very sketchy outline; the state
of my health does not permit me to be more comprehensive.
Biographical note on Hermann Hesse
Hermann Hesse (1877-1962) received the Goethe Prize of Frankfurt in 1946 and the Peace Prize of the German Booksellers in 1955. A complete edition of his works in six volumes appeared in 1952; a seventh volume (1957) contains essays and miscellaneous writings. Beschwörungen (1955) [Evocations], a volume of late prose, and his correspondence with Romain Rolland (1954) were published separately.
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Hermann Hesse died on August 9, 1962.