Presentation Speech by Hans Hildebrand, Acting Secretary of the Swedish Academy, on December 10, 1912
There is an old saying that times change
and men change with them. If we look back on past ages we
discover its truth. We, who are no longer young, have had the
opportunity in our bustling lives to experience the truth of the
saying, and every day confirms it anew. As far back as history
extends we find that new things emerged, but were not at first
recognized although they were to be important in the future. A
seed came alive and grew to magnificent size. Certain names in
contemporary science illustrate the discrepancy between modest
beginnings and later developments.
The same is true of dramatic poetry. This is not the place to
trace its development through twenty-five centuries. There is a
tremendous difference, however, between the satyr choruses of the
Dionysiac festivals, called tragedies because of the goat skins
worn by the chorus, and the demands the modern age makes on
dramatic poetry, and this difference indicates considerable
progress.
In our time Gerhart Hauptmann has been a great name in the field
of drama. He turned fifty recently; he is thus in his prime of
life and can look back on an exceptionally rich career as an
artist. He submitted his first work to the stage at the age of
twenty-seven. At the age of thirty he proved himself a mature
artist with his play Die Weber (1892) [The
Weavers]. This work was followed by others which confirmed
his reputation. In most of his plays he deals with conditions of
the low-class life which he had numerous occasions to study,
especially in his native Silesia. His descriptions are based on
keen observations of man and his milieu. Each of his characters
is a fully developed personality - there is not a trace of types
or clichés. Nobody even for a moment could doubt the
truthfulness of his observations; they have established Hauptmann
as a great realist. But he nowhere praises the life of these
so-called low characters. On the contrary, when one has seen or
read these plays and identified himself deeply with the
conditions they represent, he feels the need for fresh air and
asks how such misery can be abolished in the future. The realism
in Hauptmann's plays leads necessarily to brighter dreams of new
and better conditions and to the wish for their fulfilment.
Hauptmann has also written dramas of a totally different nature:
he calls them «Märchendramen». Among them is the
delightful Hanneles Himmelfahrt (1893) [The Assumption
of Hannele], in which the misery of life and the bliss of
heaven emerge with such striking contrast. Among these plays is
also Die versunkene Glocke (1897) [The Sunken
Bell], the most popular of his plays in his own country. The
copy used by the Nobel Committee of the Swedish Academy bore the
stamp of the sixtieth impression.
Hauptmann has also distinguished himself in the genres of
historical drama and comedy. He has not published a collection of
his lyrical poems, but incidental poems in his plays bear witness
to his talent in this field.
In his early years he had published a few short stories, but in
1910 he brought out his novel Der Narr in Christo Emanuel
Quint [The Fool in Christ: Emanuel Quint], the result
of many years of work. The story «Der Apostel» of 1892
is a sketch of the final work in which we learn about the inner
life of a poor man who, without any education other than that
acquired from the Bible and without any critical judgment of what
he has read, finally reaches the conclusion that he is the
reincarnation of Christ. It is not easy to give a correct account
of the development of a human soul that can be considered normal,
in view of all the forces and circumstances that affect its
development. But it is even more difficult to attain the truth if
one describes the inner development of a soul that is in certain
respects abnormal. The attempt is bold; its execution took
decades of creative work. Judgment of the work has differed
widely. I am happy to join the many who consider Emanuel
Quint a masterly solution of a difficult problem.
Hauptmann's particular virtue is his penetrating and critical
insight into the human soul. It is this gift that enabled him in
his plays and in his novels to create truly living individuals
rather than types representing some particular outlook or
opinion. All the characters we meet, even the minor ones, have a
full life. In his novels one admires the descriptions of the
setting, as well as the sketches of the people that come in more
or less close contact with the protagonist of the story. The
plays reveal his great art by their powerful concentration which
holds the reader or spectator from beginning to end. Whatever
subject he treats, even when he deals with life's seamy side, his
is always a noble personality. That nobility and his refined art
give his works their wonderful power.
The preceding remarks were intended to sketch the reasons why the
Swedish Academy has awarded this year's Nobel Prize to Gerhart
Hauptmann.
Dr. Hauptmann - In your significant and controversial book Der
Narr in Christo Emanuel Quint you say: «It is impossible
to uncover the necessary course of a human life in all its
stages, if only because every human being is something unique
from beginning to end and because the observer can comprehend his
object only within the limits of his own nature.»
That is indeed true. But there are many kinds of observers. The
everyday man in the midst of his bustling life has neither the
opportunity nor the will to study his fellow men in greater
depth. We see the outside but do not care to see beneath it
unless we happen to have a special interest in learning another's
motives. Even those who are not drawn into the turmoil of present
life, who limit their intercourse with the outside world and are
on intimate terms with their immediate surroundings, do not
generally go very far in their study of the human soul. We are
attracted or repelled; we love or hate, if we are not
indifferent. We praise or blame.
The poet, however, is not an everyday man. He is able to extend
the scope of his imagination much further. For he has the divine
gift of intuition. And you, Dr. Hauptmann, possess this wonderful
gift to the highest degree. In your many works you have created
innumerable characters. But they do not exist merely as so many
types of such and such a nature. To the reader and spectator of
your plays, each of your characters is a fully developed
individual, living and acting together with others, but different
from all of them. That is the reason for much of the magic of
your work.
It has been said that at least in some of your works you have
been a marked realist. You have had rich opportunities to use
your gift of observation and become acquainted with the misery of
whole classes of people, and you have described it faithfully. If
after seeing or reading such a play one is deeply moved by it, he
cannot help thinking, «These conditions must be
improved.» One cannot deny the existence of the seamy side
of life, and it must have its place in literature in order to
teach wisdom to the living.
Your manifold activities as a writer have given us other
marvellous works. I shall mention only two here, Hanneles
Himmefahrt and Die versunkene Glocke. The latter seems
to enjoy great popularity in your country.
Through the mouth of the ambitious and unfortunate Michael Kramer
you say:
If someone has the effrontery to paint the man with the crown
of thorns - it will take him a lifetime to do it. No pleasures
for him: lonely hours, lonely days, lonely years. He must be
alone with himself and with his God. He must consecrate himself
daily. Nothing common must be about him or in him. And then when
he struggles and toils in his solitude the Holy Ghost comes. Then
he can sometimes catch a glimpse. It swells, he can feel it. Then
he rests in the eternal and he has it before him in quiet and
beauty. He has it without wanting it. He sees the Saviour. He
feels him.
Although in your work you have not represented the Saviour with
the crown of thorns, you have represented a poor man ultimately
driven to the delusion that he is the second Christ. But Kramer's
words reflect your own attitude. Your novel Der Narr in
Christo Emanuel Quint appeared in 1910, but the story
«Der Apostel» of 1892 shows that the plan for writing
the novel had occurred to you twenty years earlier.
True art does not consist in writing down and handing to the
public the thoughts of the moment, but rather in subjecting
potentially useful ideas to close scrutiny, to the conflict of
different opinions and the apprehensive consideration of their
eventual effect. This process will gradually lead the true artist
to the precious conviction, «I have finally reached the
truth.» You have attained the highest rank of art by
painstaking but never pedantic preparatory research, by the
consistency of your feelings, thoughts, and actions, and by the
strict form of your plays.
The Swedish Academy has found the great artist Gerhart Hauptmann
worthy of receiving this year's Nobel Prize, which his Majesty
the King will now present to him.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1912