The experience was profoundly affecting.....
I’ll return with some thoughts - will include passages that resonate with me...
But I just finished it...
I’m going to close my eyes ... snuggle longer under these covers.
I’m back....with my review....THIS DEEPLY MOVING NON-FICTION book....which reads like fiction. ( but sadly ...it’s all true)....
As I sit here this morning with anticipation on this pivotal day - Election Day - November 3rd, 2020....with other Americans and friends around the world...
I realize I will forever associate reading “The World of Yesterday”, this historic autography, with significant memorable appreciation.
It was remarkably eerie with the relevances of our current events today.
This is only the second book I’ve read by Stefan Zweig - so far - I’m still hungry to read more of his work. He was a fascinating and brilliant man.
Stefan Zweig, ( 1881-1942), born in Austria, was a famous biographer, novelist, dramatist, and journalist, who spent his formative years living in Old Vienna. He earned a doctorate in Philosophy at the University of Vienna.
He was second born - had an older brother. Their family was wealthy. His father a shrewd businessman.
Zweig followed in his parents footsteps regarding religion: Jewish, but not observant.....yet Zweig was profoundly sensitive to the dire perplexities of the German and Austrian Jews during the rise of Nazism.
In the opening chapters ....it was easy to marvel at the joys of grandeur in Vienna. The years before WWI...were less political, instead, more culturally driven ....with poets, novelists, musicians, sculptors, painters, and mental health professionals, delighting in intellectual conversations about the arts. Sitting in cafes, was relaxing. They read newspapers- played cards, and sat in coffeehouses for hours.
I learned about many people I didn’t know. Famous colorful textured people that Zweig was friends with - and collaborated with some of them. I took time reading about each of the following on google.
Some of these people mentioned in “The World of Yesterday” ....gave me a warm ( almost envious), feelings for the joys of cerebral richness connecting.
Stefan ‘did’ experience rich fulfillment in his life - with many bright minds that were a perfect fit for Zweig’s own brilliant mind.
Some of Zweig’s friends were:
Rainer Maria Rilke, August Rodin, Sigmund Freud, Theodore Herzl, Jean Jaures, Hoffmanstahl, Paul Verlaine, Emile Verhaeren, Rathenau, James Joyce, Hermann Hesse, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Salvador Dali, Joseph Roth, Charles Dickens, Honore de Balzac,
Romain Rolland, Friderike von Winternitz,
Bruno Walter, Arturo Toscanini, Richard Strauss...
These next three people ....intrigued me...reading more about their lives - thanks to the help on google.
....Hugo von Hofmannsthal: an Australian novelist, poet, dramatist, narrator, essayist.
.... Arthur Rimbaud: French poet, known for his simplistic prose poems and for his stormy relationship with..
....Paul Verlaine: another French poet - who fired two shots at Rimbaud (injuring his wrist), and Verlaine was arrested and imprisoned. Later Verlaine underwent a re-conversion to Roman Catholicism—which again influenced his work and provoked Rimbaud’s sharp criticism.
SO MUCH DRAMA IN THE LITERATURE WORLD... 🤨✍️...(luxury challenges)....
Life was good ....until it wasn’t
“Making music, dancing, the theater, conversation, proper in urban deportment, seas were cultivated here as particular arts. It was not the military, nor the political, nor the commercial, that was predominate in the life of the individual and the masses”.
Zweig gave readers a direct experience of the contrast between the beautiful years in Vienna...and the devastation years....(especially to the Jewish community with so much anti-Semitism).
Society changed so dramatically and quickly.
It felt similar to what many of us have felt in 2020...with the ways the covid-19 pandemic, and the horrors of present day racism, hit us like a brick wall before most of us saw what was coming.
But....
Stefan Zweig ‘did’ see the heavy impact of the world wars before many did. He saw, and felt life’s deterioration during one of the most progressive periods of European history.
His exceptional- intimate - storytelling gave us comprehensive cognizance into how life was in Europe before WWI, between the wars, and the beginning of WWII.
“Before the war I knew the highest degree and form of individual freedom, and later its lowest level in hundreds of years; I have been celebrated and despised, free and unfree, rich and poor. All the livid
steeds of the Apocalypse have stormed through my life—revolution and famine, and terror, epidemics, and emigration”.
“I have seen the great mass ideologies grow and spread before my eyes—Fascism in Italy, National Socialism in Germany, Bolshevism in Russia, and above all else arch-plague nationalism which has poisoned the flower of European culture”.
“I saw the catastrophe coming, inevitability: on hundreds of mornings during those years, when everybody else reached for the newspapers confidently, I was gripped by an inner fear of the headline: ’Finis Austrice’. Oh, how had I deceived myself when I had pretended to myself that I had long since prided myself loose from her fate! From afar I suffered her long and feverish agony daily, infinitely more than my friends in the country itself, for they deceived themselves with patriotic demonstrations and reassured each other with ‘France and England cannot let us down. And above all, Mussolini Will never stand for it’. They believed in the League of Nations and in the peace treaties as sick people do in neatly labeled medicines. They lived on carefree and happy while I,seeing more plainly, worried my heart out”.
"To give witness to this tense, dramatic life of ours, filled with the unexpected, seems to me a duty; for, I repeat, everyone was a witness of this gigantic transformation, everyone was forced to be a witness".
The history- politics - war - ( pointless war) - anti-Semitism - ( pointless as well), fleeing one country to the next: Austria, Paris, the UK, US, Brazil ( the country that disappointed his expectations and where he and his wife committed suicide)....
is one heck of an unforgettable phenomenal book....
Stefan Zweig’s sentences had a life of their own, at the same time his writing felt so completely natural. There was an ease about his writing
and his words pierced my heart.
His humanity and kind sweet soul was subtly beautiful.
Of course the ending is sad.....
That said... I still want to read more of his work.
I’ll end with this quote I read in the ‘New Republic’:
“The very success with which this book evokes both the beauty of the past and the fatality of its passing is what gives it tragic effectiveness.
It is not so much a memoir of a life as it is the memento of an age, and the author seems, in his own phrase, to be the narrator at an illustrated lecture. The illustrations are provided by time, but his choice is brilliant and the narration is evocative”.
5 stars....
....and wishing everyone a peaceful next few days - while we watch and witness history unfold in front of our eyes.
Prayers for healing of this country.