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The Magic Mountain > Week 1.3 - through One Word Too Many

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message 1: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 7718 comments Hans Castorp’s first day at the International Sanatorium Berghof.


message 2: by Lily (last edited Mar 30, 2013 08:59PM) (new)

Lily (joy1) | 5240 comments Ahhh.. This thread IS here. We have been so busy posting on the first two, I think it got buried. Maybe says something about time and space as Mann explores the concepts?

In terms of structure, it is interesting that Mann devotes, what, two chapters to Day 1 and the remaining five to the seven years Hans C. spends at Davos? Are there writers among us that can comment on that technique and its significance?

Seven is one of those so magical numbers overlaid with symbolism in at least Western culture. (Anyone know about Eastern?) It starts with its position as one of the prime numbers, i.e., a number that can be divided evenly only by 1 and itself. But why its choice here by Mann?


message 3: by Laurel (new)

Laurel Hicks (goodreadscomlaurele) | 2438 comments Were we reading about a seven-story mountain not so long ago?


message 4: by Lily (last edited Mar 30, 2013 08:45PM) (new)

Lily (joy1) | 5240 comments Almost too embarrassed to ask this on-line (rather than go check), but was Purgatory seven stories? I had totally missed that allusion for Thomas Merton's The Seven Storey Mountain (I haven't read it). How dumb can one get?

Why is a week seven days?


message 5: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 7718 comments Lily wrote: "Seven is one of those so magical numbers overlaid with symbolism in at least Western culture. "

And it is so here. Not only seven chapters, and another seven you mention which is perhaps a teeny spoiler but let it pass, but also seven tables in the dining hall. And wasn't Hans seven when his grandfather died, and maybe also his father? I'm not clear about the exact timing, but we are told that he lost all three "between his fifth and seventh years," so at the age of 7 he was an orphan. I wouldn't be surprised if we see more instances of seven as the work proceeds.


message 6: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 7718 comments Laurele wrote: "Were we reading about a seven-story mountain not so long ago?"

Ah ha. The International Sanatorium as Purgatory? Where one's bodily sins are cleansed (or not)?


message 7: by Thorwald (last edited Mar 31, 2013 02:57AM) (new)

Thorwald Franke | 215 comments Thomas Mann mentioned that he had (among others) the fairy tale "Little Longnose" (or "Longnose the Dwarf") by Wilhelm Hauff in mind. German original title is "Zwerg Nase".

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/86...

It is about young Jacob who is stolen from his family by a wicked witch and transformed to a dwarf with a long nose, and who serves in her household for seven years (together with hamsters and squirrels as cooking and cleaning personnel) without noticing that seven years pass by.

It was my favourite fairy tale when I was a child. Find some nice pictures on the story on this page (aren't the hamsters and squirrels cute?):
http://sankt-georg.schulen-hattingen....


message 8: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 7718 comments Thorwald wrote: "Thomas Mann mentioned that he had (among others) the fairy tale "Little Longnose" (or "Longnose the Dwarf") by Wilhelm Hauff in mind. German original title is "Zwerg Nase".."

Here is one translation of the story:
http://digital.library.upenn.edu/wome...

Select The Dwarf's Nose from the contents.


message 9: by Laurel (new)

Laurel Hicks (goodreadscomlaurele) | 2438 comments Lily wrote: "Almost too embarrassed to ask this on-line (rather than go check), but was Purgatory seven stories? I had totally missed that allusion for Thomas Merton's
The Seven Storey Mountain
(I haven't ..."


Check the diagram here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purgatorio

A week is seven days because of Genesis 1 and 2: six days of creation and one day of rest. The French revolutionists tried to change the week to ten days, but even the horses could not handle it.


message 10: by [deleted user] (new)

“7” No spoilers.

(view spoiler)


message 11: by Lily (last edited Mar 31, 2013 04:27PM) (new)

Lily (joy1) | 5240 comments Adelle wrote: "(7) My favorite: Hans Castrop is put in room number 34. 3+4=7."

Good catch! Did Mann chuckle when he wrote that?


message 12: by Sue (last edited Mar 31, 2013 05:07PM) (new)

Sue Pit (cybee) | 329 comments H.C. no longer cares for his cigar and is feeling palpitations... altitude or ? (i.e. the body putting on such airs with no connection to the soul!) ha! H.C. seems to be taking well to certain aspects of the way of horizontallers.
Some of the language is quite delightful...I have not heard the word "zounds" for ever so long (not sure if all our translations would have that word) and Settembrini's statement that "curiosity is another of the prescriptive rights of the shadows" is interesting. Settembrini is a curious fellow indeed....


message 13: by Steven (new)

Steven Green Sue wrote: Some of the language is quite delightful.

There are a couple of phrases that took my breath away so far.

"Fluctuating permanence"... He goes on to amplify what he means by that but the phrase is beautiful.

The second phrase that stopped me cold also in The Baptismal Bowl is: " 'license of old age' the kind of carelessness that age either consciously and merrily permits itself or brings with it, cloaked in dignified oblivion."

I view my parents and in-laws in a new way having reflected on "the license of old age".

What have I missed so far?


message 14: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 02, 2013 07:59AM) (new)

Sue wrote: ".Settembrini is a curious fellow indeed.... "

Isn't he though. I'm quite drawn to him myself. Sigh. 'Though I suspect that he might not actually be a good influence. But so engaging. So entertaining.

Mann has the man with the limp at the beginning of MM, *** as Dante had the man with the limp at the beginning of Inferno. info from next reading section: (view spoiler)

Btw. I googled "seven in Italian." Answer: Sette. Cool, eh?

*** EDIT ADDED: Just thoughts/musings. (view spoiler)


message 15: by [deleted user] (new)

Lily wrote: "Adelle wrote: "(7) My favorite: Hans Castrop is put in room number 34. 3+4=7."

Good catch! Did Mann chuckle when he wrote that?"


:)


message 16: by Thorwald (last edited Apr 01, 2013 03:22AM) (new)

Thorwald Franke | 215 comments Adelle wrote: "Btw. I googled "seven in Italian." Answer: Sette. Cool, eh? "

Settembrini: From Italian "settembre" = September.

Ending -ini is diminutive and plural.
Cf. http://italian.about.com/cs/grammar/h...

So "Settembrini" = "the small Septembers".

What ever this means ...?!

September was the 7th month in the Roman calendar, therefore the 7 in the name.


message 17: by [deleted user] (new)

! Of course! I should have thought of that. Didn't.

Thx Thorwald.


message 18: by Lily (new)

Lily (joy1) | 5240 comments For what it is or isn't worth, September is also the beginning of fall, the season before winter. Whether there is any symbolism carrying over into MM??

Since we are playing with seven, let us also keep in mind those seven ledges of Dante's Purgatorio:

First terrace (the proud)
Second terrace (the envious)
Third terrace (the wrathful)
Fourth terrace (the slothful)
Fifth terrace (the covetous)
Sixth terrace (the gluttonous)
Seventh terrace (the lustful)

These correspond to the "seven deadly sins"?

"Beginning in the early 14th century, the popularity of the seven deadly sins as a theme among European artists of the time eventually helped to ingrain them in many areas of Catholic culture and Catholic consciousness in general throughout the world. One means of such ingraining was the creation of the mnemonic "SALIGIA" based on the first letters in Latin of the seven deadly sins: superbia, avaritia, luxuria, invidia, gula, ira, acedi."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_de...


message 19: by Wendel (new)

Wendel (wendelman) | 609 comments
"The main entrance was on the south-west side of the white building, the central portion of which was a storey higher than the wings, and crowned by a turret with a roof of slatecoloured tin."


message 20: by Thomas (new)

Thomas | 4978 comments Laurele wrote: "Were we reading about a seven-story mountain not so long ago?"

Settembrini refers to the doctors as "Minos and Rhadamanthus" when he asks HC how many months he has been saddled with. "Our smallest unit of time is the month. We measure on a grand scale -- it is one of the privileges of shades."


message 21: by Thorwald (new)

Thorwald Franke | 215 comments Thomas wrote: "Laurele wrote: "Were we reading about a seven-story mountain not so long ago?"

Settembrini refers to the doctors as "Minos and Rhadamanthus" ..."


Aaah, "Minos" and "mountain", now I see another connection:

In Plato's Laws the dialogue participants climb up a mountain on Crete while talking. It is the way to the cave of Zeus where king Minos received the laws from Zeus!

(Remember that according to legend the founder of Islam also climbed up a mountain to a cave where he received the laws of god, i.e. the Quran.)

As we learn from Plato's Gorgias, Minos and Radamanthys were considered to be the judges over the dead in the afterlife.


message 22: by Thomas (new)

Thomas | 4978 comments Thorwald wrote: "As we learn from Plato's Gorgias, Minos and Radamanthys were considered to be the judges over the dead in the afterlife..."

Yes, and we've also met them in the past few group readings here: Homer, Virgil, and Dante. It seems we can't escape them!


message 23: by Kathy (new)

Kathy (klzeepsbcglobalnet) | 525 comments On an entirely different topic, I was really struck by all of the physical descriptions of apparently minor characters in this chapter. And then there's HC deeply offended by the blatant sexuality of the couple nextdoor. And the woman who can whistle from her pneumothorax (really??). The physical body is really important, not just as something that dies, but also as something that lives and something that, as with Hans's grandfather's body, is normally avoided or covered up, but apparently not here in the sanatorium. By the end of the chapter, Hans's heartbeat is too rapid and he's stumbling ("falling ill"?) as if his body, too, is failing him. I don't know what to make of it all, except to say that it's clearly important...


message 24: by Kathy (new)

Kathy (klzeepsbcglobalnet) | 525 comments And then there's this curious quotation from Joachim: "I sometimes think that illness and death aren't really serious matters, that it's all more like loafing around, and that, strictly speaking, things are serious only down below in real life."


message 25: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 7718 comments Sue wrote: "H.C. no longer cares for his cigar and is feeling palpitations... altitude or ? (i.e. the body putting on such airs with no connection to the soul!) ha! H.C. seems to be taking well to certain as..."

The cigar thing is very interesting, and I think if we had the energy to study it carefully would be instructive.

Even as a schoolboy (? or later? not clear) he would take a leisurely Sunday breakfast with Joachim, have the old port that had been prescribed for him, and "then lean back in his chair and puff devotedly on his cigar." (Woods 31). Still in the section "At the Tienappels" we read the suggestion that "for him, work was simply something that stood in the way of the unencumbered enjoyment of a Maria Mancini." Then early in the "Teasing/Viaticum..." section we have the paean to smoking, "I can actually say that I only eat so that I can smoke" (55) and "a day without tobacco, that would be...a totally wasted day."

But now, suddenly there are moments when the cigar satisfies, and others where he finds it failing to please or even disgusting, and throws it away. These episodes have to mean something, but I'm not yet sure just what. (I suspect that this pattern may continue, and its meaning may at some point emerge more clearly. Or maybe others have already figured it out?)


message 26: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 7718 comments Kathy wrote: "On an entirely different topic, I was really struck by all of the physical descriptions of apparently minor characters in this chapter. ... The physical body is really important, "

Nice point. And Mann not only describes the minor characters, but he has the trick, as Shakespeare did, of being able to take us into their characters with a few lines of dialogue. These minor characters aren't just background, but they seem integral to HC's experience.


message 27: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 01, 2013 08:58PM) (new)

At 24, Kathy, I agree. Feel free to disagree with my take.

No spoilers. Longish. Maybe off-track. (view spoiler)


message 28: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 01, 2013 09:39PM) (new)

At 25 Jeremy wrote: "He can't understand why he can't enjoy his cigar

Good points.

Two quotes.

HC: “but when a man has a good cigar in his mouth a man is perfectly safe, nothing can touch him—literally” (48).

Since he says nothing can "literally" touch him---maybe? the cigar is some sort of talisman of Grandfather for him --- and as long as he has the cigar he won't be touched by the emotional pain in his life.


“You can be very miserable: I might be feeling perfectly wretched, for instance; but I could always stand it if I had my smoke” (49).

The CARE Hans Castrop puts into his tobaco.
Perhaps he is very miserable indeed. 7-8 cigars per day.

And he’s not smoking NOW. Or at least less and less. Maybe now he will have to feel his miserableness. ???
Maybe find out what's making him ill?

EDIT ADDED: Ah! Another appropriate quote. Hans then says, when his cigar doesn't taste right, “But what is the matter with me” (52)


message 29: by Thomas (new)

Thomas | 4978 comments Adelle wrote: "The CARE Hans Castrop puts into his tobaco.
Perhaps he is very miserable indeed. 7-8 cigars per day."


Then Mark Twain must have been really miserable. (22 cigars a day, reportedly.)


message 30: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 01, 2013 09:26PM) (new)

LOL!


message 31: by [deleted user] (new)

Regarding the business aspect of the Internation Sanatorium Berghof.

No spoilers. Just possibly interesting background/sideground info.

(view spoiler)


message 32: by [deleted user] (new)

Satana [Why is this section called that?][Thoughts on]

No spoilers.

(view spoiler)


message 33: by [deleted user] (new)

At 7 Thorwald wrote: "(aren't the hamsters and squirrels cute?):


They are! They are! (The little animals reminded me of Redwall, which my daughter had so enjoyed.)

Thanks.


message 34: by [deleted user] (new)

at 7, Thorwald wrote: "without noticing that seven years pass by.


So...time had that Magic Mountain quality there too.


message 35: by [deleted user] (new)

At 8 Everyman posted a link: from the English translation:

"What strange things dreams are!" said he.


message 36: by [deleted user] (new)

Steven wrote: "The second phrase that stopped me cold also in The Baptismal Bowl is: " 'license of old age' the kind of carelessness that age either consciously and merrily permits itself or brings with it, cloaked in dignified oblivion."


What a fabulous sentence.


message 37: by Wendel (new)

Wendel (wendelman) | 609 comments Life on the Mountain
(view spoiler)


message 38: by Wendel (last edited Apr 02, 2013 02:33AM) (new)

Wendel (wendelman) | 609 comments A table for good Russians and one for bad Russians.

We have yet to find out what is the reason for this division on the mountain. But often the good one are those who want to become less 'barbarian', more like 'us'. While the bad ones cling to their own ways. Still, sometimes our sentiments get the better of us, and we let 'deep' Russians like Dostoyevsky or Solzhenitsyn figure among the good ones.


message 39: by Thorwald (new)

Thorwald Franke | 215 comments Wendel wrote: "Life on the Mountain
People on the mountain live under the shadow of death. But are encouraged (even forced) to go on like everything were normal. And mostly they succeed in doing so: they chatter..."


When I read this or that posting here, I have the feeling that people read a totally different book than I do :-)

Many put stress on the desease, on illness and death. Somehow I must have missed this topic while reading ... well, not factually of course, but for me it looks like decoration only, whereas the important part of the story is something else: The development of Hans Castorp.

Or is it that I as a reader am so close to Hans Castorp who does not take so much notice of this all, at least on the surface, and I identify myself too much with him? Or is it that I just take the freedom like Settembrini to ignore it because I don't like it? It is so necrophile ...


message 40: by Wendel (new)

Wendel (wendelman) | 609 comments Thorwald wrote: "Wendel wrote: "Life on the Mountain ...but the important part of the story is something else: The development of Hans Castorp. ."

Thorwald, you already read the book, but we can only take one step at a time. And isn't it the peculiar quality of life on the mountain that sets HC's development in motion?


message 41: by Thorwald (new)

Thorwald Franke | 215 comments Wendel wrote: "Thorwald, you already read the book, but we can only take one step at a time. And isn't it the peculiar quality of life on the mountain that sets HC's development in motion? "

Hm, I am only some chapters ahead.

I think the story could take place in a hotel, too. I think of "Evil under the Sun" by Agatha Christie :-) There are strange characters, too, united in an extraordinary situation, and development is possible.

So far I have not understood why the setting of illness and death is so important to the story.


message 42: by Kathy (new)

Kathy (klzeepsbcglobalnet) | 525 comments What about Katherine Anne Porter's Ship of Fools? It has been a long time since I read it, so I'm not really making an argument for a connection, just throwing it out there... another big cast of somewhat odd characters isolated together on a ship (mountain). This is a great, classic set-up for many stories. Christie's And Then There Were None, too, as I recall (an English country manor). We could go on and on...


message 43: by Kathy (new)

Kathy (klzeepsbcglobalnet) | 525 comments Adelle wrote: "At 24, Kathy, I agree. Feel free to disagree with my take.

No spoilers. Longish. Maybe off-track.
That sentence: "this curious quotation from Joachim: "I sometimes think that illness an..."


Hmmm, interesting psychological reading. I think I took a more naturalist approach to the quotation, at least at this point, as if what Joachim is saying is very detached, almost as if spoken from beyond death, telling us that very little really matters at all. We spend our lives "down there" so very seriously, and we are misguided to do so. [All that really matters is a good cigar? ;)]


message 44: by [deleted user] (new)

Thorwald, others.

I DO think that this is going to be a book about the growth of the character Hans Castorp. Similar to Jeremy's view (I think) in post 43: {Symbolic of a sick and dying society, maybe? This is indeed the story of Hans' growth and maturation, but that occurs during a specific time and place.]

I just happen to believe that his growth will be a result of his psychological growth.

And I DO realize that my posts aren't concise.
And I DO realize that I do a good deal of reading, as it were, between the lines, or just under the surface.

I believe Mann intends for me to. I believe that is why there are those tantalizing little details....to prompt me as a reader to think.

And yes, my thinking may be well off the mark.

And because my posts run lengthy---that's the only way I can think the book through, and because my reading may run counter to the readings --- the totally legitimate readings --- of others, I have been trying to remember to enclose longer or more ... questionable ... posts in "spoiler" mood so that people can easily skip them should they choose.

Ah, yes, Kathy, I really do lean towards that sort of reading. But I don't wish to influence people away from their own readings/interpretations.

I am really loving this book.


message 45: by Thorwald (new)

Thorwald Franke | 215 comments Adelle ...

You try a lot of possibilities of interpretation and thus you have a great chance to find something we others could not find, because we did not try ...


message 46: by Thomas (new)

Thomas | 4978 comments Adelle wrote: "Satana [Why is this section called that?]

"


Perhaps Settembrini is a rebel angel? Mann has a bit of fun with the comparison --

"Yes, yes, yes" [Settembrini] repeated, hissing the s all three times...

"We are creatures who have fallen to great depths, are we not, lieutenant?"

"Sarcastic? You mean malicious. Yes, I am a little malicious. ...Malice, sir, is the spirit of criticism, and criticism marks the origin of progress and enlightenment."

I love HC's reaction to all this: "What a windbag."


message 47: by [deleted user] (new)

Thorwald wrote: "Adelle ...

You try a lot of possibilities of interpretation and thus you have a great chance to find something we others could not find, because we did not try ..."


Oh, good. ;) anyway, I can find, maybe, whar I'm looking for. ha ha.


message 48: by [deleted user] (new)

Thomas wrote: "Adelle wrote: "Satana [Why is this section called that?]

"

Perhaps Settembrini is a rebel angel? Mann has a bit of fun with the comparison --

"Yes, yes, yes" [Settembrini] repeated, hissing the ..."


Mmm, I like that. That maybe Settembrini is Satana?

And that line you quoted. Maybe? The s sounds are to make us think of the snake in the Garden of Eden. Mann does seem to mention gardens every so often.


message 49: by Lily (last edited Apr 02, 2013 01:39PM) (new)

Lily (joy1) | 5240 comments Jeremy wrote: "...He [Hans Castorp] is quite immature, and I find him quite annoying...."

LOL! I am quite sure if I were reading MM on my own, by about now I would have set it aside, neglecting to return to it. (In fact, I think that is what happened to me in the past -- there was a very old musty copy on some storage shelves that I finally discarded a year or so ago, but I did remember thinking -- you should really read this.) I have always said likeable characters weren't particularly important to me in assessing a book, but Hans Castorp challenges the truth of what I have mouthed. (On the other hand, an atmosphere of illness and death isn't particularly appealing either -- unlike Thorwald, I haven't been able to dismiss it as decoration only [see msg 40&42].)


message 50: by Wendel (new)

Wendel (wendelman) | 609 comments Thorwald @42 wrote: "So far I have not understood why the setting of illness and death is so important to the story. "

Because we just started out, I don't think it's possible to be very concrete. But here is one attempt at an answer, for what it is worth.

Mann starts out telling us that HC is an average young man. So while most literary heroes come with a whole bag of problems that need to be solved, HC does not. That is, until unusual things start to happen to him. Another way in which this book contrasts Death in Venice?

Sure, a single body in the library might have done the trick. But it would have been another story (Settembrini as Poirot). We can be sure of that, even though we don't know which direction developments will take. HC's personal development may become an issue, and it may turn out, as Jeremy suggested, that the mountain represents pre-war Europe. We will see.

Meanwhile I did wonder whether the people on the mountain really differ from any random group (and maybe that's what you had in mind too). To me it seems that the peculiar quality of life on the mountain is a matter of degree. Think of the difference between a pan and a pressure-cooker.


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