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Franz Kafka (1883 - 1924) worked for much of his life as
an official in an insurance company. His extrordinary works of fiction
were written largely in his spare time and many of his novels were
published after his death from tuberculosis. Kafka first met Felice
Bauer in 1912; for five years they pursued a tempestuous and ultimately
unfulfilled love affair.
11 November, 1912
Fräulein Felice!
I am now going to ask you a favor which sounds quite crazy, and which I
should regard as such, were I the one to receive the letter. It is also
the very greatest test that even the kindest person could be put to.
Well, this is it:
Write to me only once a week, so that your letter arrives on Sunday --
for I cannot endure your daily letters, I am incapable of enduring them.
For instance, I answer one of your letters, then lie in bed in apparent
calm, but my heart beats through my entire body and is conscious only of
you. I belong to you; there is really no other way of expressing it, and
that is not strong enough. But for this very reason I don't want to know
what you are wearing; it confuses me so much that I cannot deal with
life; and that's why I don't want to know that you are fond of me. If I
did, how could I, fool that I am, go on sitting in my office, or here at
home, instead of leaping onto a train with my eyes shut and opening them
only when I am with you? Oh, there is a sad, sad reason for not doing
so. To make it short: My health is only just good enough for myself
alone, not good enough for marriage, let alone fatherhood. Yet when I
read your letter, I feel I could overlook even what cannot possibly be
overlooked.
If only I had your answer now! And how horribly I torment you, and how I
compel you, in the stillness of your room, to read this letter, as nasty
a letter as has ever lain on your desk! Honestly, it strikes me
sometimes that I prey like a spectre on your felicitous name! If only I
had mailed Saturday's letter, in which I implored you never to write to
me again, and in which I gave a similar promise. Oh God, what prevented
me from sending that letter? All would be well. But is a peaceful
solution possible now? Would it help if we wrote to each other only once
a week? No, if my suffering could be cured by such means it would not be
serious. And already I foresee that I shan't be able to endure even the
Sunday letters. And so, to compensate for Saturday's lost opportunity, I
ask you with what energy remains to me at the end of this letter: If we
value our lives, let us abandon it all.
Did I think of signing myself Dein? No, nothing could be more
false. No, I am forever fettered to myself, that's what I am, and that's
what I must try to live with.
Franz
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