| Hermann Hesse who won the
Nobel Prize for literature in 1946 was a son of
our town. He was born on July 2, 1877 in a house
opposite the town hall and he lived in Calw for
the greater part of his youth. Hermann Hesse`s life as well as the
effect he and his works had on the world is shown
in nine different rooms.
We will accompany you on
your tour through the museum and will present the
themes of the different rooms to you.
1. In the first room you will
find some information about Hesse`s parents and
grandparents and some of their books, as well as
the distribution and publications of the Calw
Publishing House, which was directed by Dr.
Gundert and Johannes Hesse.
Dr. Hermann Gundert and Julie Dubois, who were
Hesse`s grandparents on his mother`s side, had
worked for a long time in India as missionaries
of the Basler Mission. To this day Dr. Hermann
Gundert is well known as a linguist. Hesse`s
grandparents on his father`s side, doctor Hermann
Hesse and his wife Jenny, lived in
Weißenstein/Estonia. They were practising
Christians. Hermann Hesse`s parents, Johannes
Hesse and Marie Gundert, the widow of Mr.
Isenberg, were also missionaries and writers of
religious literature.
2. In the second room the
numerous publications and translations of Hesse`s
works are shown. Worldwide there are more than 90
million publications. As you know, Hesse also
became famous for his letters (more than 35 000)
and for being the editor of other writers. In a
special display case you can see his writing
utensils with the inscription "Was man
schreibt, das immer bleibt" (written words
remain forever).
In the sixties Hesse and his works became
increasingly important, primarily in the USA and
in Japan. This period is reflected by Andy Warhol
the prophet of the flower-power and
hippie-movement.
Hesse wrote more than 50 novels and stories, as
well as at least 600 poems, which have been
translated into nearly every language of the
world.
3. The probably most
beautiful room of the museum is dedicated to
Hesse`s childhood and youth in Calw: his school
years in the Latein Schule and the Monastery
school of Maulbronn. Adolescence problems made
him spend some time in a psychiatric institution
in Stetten in the Rems Valley. He then started an
apprenticeship as a mechanic at Perrot`s in Calw
and later became an apprentice in a second-hand
bookshop in Tübingen (Heckenhauer`s Bookstore).
This room shows what Calw meant to Hesse
"... die schönste Stadt von allen aber, die
ich kenne, ist Calw an der Nagold, ein kleines,
altes, schwäbisches Schwarzwaldstädtchen"
("... of all the towns I know, Calw on the
banks of the river Nagold is the most beautiful -
a small, old, Swabian town in the Black
Forest"). To Hesse Calw was the "Urbild
aller Menschenheimat und Menschengeschicke"
("symbol of all the homes and fates of
mankind").
4. Hesse lived in Tübingen,
Basle and Italy until his first novel "Peter
Camenzind" was finally and succesfully
published. After that he was a free-lance writer.
Together with his first wife Mia Bernouilli (1869
- 1963), a professional photographer, he moved to
Gaienhofen on Lake Constance (1904). His three
sons were born there (Bruno in 1905, Heiner in
1909 and Martin in 1911).
Hesse became co-editor of the magazine
"März" and co-author of the
"Simplicissimus".
In 1911 he felt very depressed and travelled to
India. He returned disappointed, dissatisfied and
sick.
5. The beginning of
World War I changed his life significantly. Hesse
moved to Bern (Switzerland) to live in the house
of his friend Welti. In 1914 he volunteered as a
soldier, but was not accepted because he was very
shortsighted. Hesse felt a deep need to help
people. He worked for the spiritual welfare of
prisoners of war in France; he wanted to make
people understand, that it is necessary to look
after the body as well as the soul. Hesse`s life
continued to be filled with agony: when his
articles about the war were not allowed to be
published he took on the pseudonym of "Emil
Sinclair", and it was not easy to get
"Demian" published. His father`s death
in 1916 together with all his personal problems
finally made Hermann Hesse undergo
psychoanalytical treatment.
6. The next room is dedicated
to the Ticino, especially to the village of
Montagnola, his pleasure in painting water
colors, his working in the garden, which to him
was mystifying and it also balanced his
intellectual work. The story of
"Siddhartha" was developed here
"...Here (in the Ticino) life was livable
...", "... how beautiful it is to cross
borders". Here he started his life all over
again. So this room is the link to the following
and final 35 years of Hesse`s life.
7. Most important in these
years were his second marriage to Ruth Wenger and
the third marriage to Ninon Dolbin - Ausländer.
You will be able to follow the writer`s
development from the "Steppenwolf" to
the "Magister ludi" of the
"Glasperlenspiel". Hesse indirectly
suggests to use self-criticism to criticize
contemporary history. His "way to one`s
inner self" is the way from the magical
theatre and alternative utopia of those
travelling to the Orient in the
"Glasperlenspiel".
Hesse was attacked and slandered by Germany`s
national socialists but his prevailing trend
comes to light in the typoscript of 1933: "
It is better to be killed by the fascists than to
be a fascist; it is better to be killed by the
communists than to be a communist".
Especially his "Criticism of
Literature", published in Sweden, shows his
position: he did not differenciate between the
refugees and those who stayed behind nor between
Jews and Christians.
The first President of the German Federal
Republic, Dr. Theodor Heuss rehabilitated Hesse
and thus helped him to become an esteemed writer
and poet in Germany once again.
The huge photograph in the door frame shows
Hesse`s upright figure looking back upon his life
and work. Hesse died on August 9, 1962 in his
house in Montagnola and was buried in the
cemetery of San Abbondio, Switzerland.
8. In the museum`s
entrance hall it is planned to show in special
exhibitions different topics and works of the
most popular German writer of this century, of
Hermann Hesse.
9. Another room is
reserved for reading to enable visitors to get to
know Hermann Hesse`s works.
We hope this little tour was a pleasant
introduction to this famous son of our town and
we also hope that you will enjoy the exhibition.
The official catalogue, The Marbacher Magazin
about Hesse is available in the museum, as well
as the English version of "Die Stadt als
literarisches Museum, Hermann Hesse-Stätten in
Calw" ( "The Town as a Literary Museum,
Hermann Hesse-Memorials in Calw").
|