ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author would like to thank the following for the supply of material: Munich City Library for photographs: 5, 11, 12 and frontispiece. Frankfurt University Library for photograph 1. Despite the best efforts of the author, it has not proved possible to identify the sources of all the photographs used in this edition. We would be grateful, therefore, if any rights holders would contact Dedalus. I would also like to thank the following for making archive material available: the Kubin Archive in the Lenbachhaus Gallery, Munich; the Goethe-Schiller Archive, Marbach; the Monacensia Archive of Munich City Library; the Bavarian State Library, Munich – unless otherwise indicated, letters, manuscripts and documents quoted from are in the Meyrinkiana in the Manuscript Department of the Bavarian State Library. Dundee University Library for the supply of journal photocopies. I am grateful to the authors of the German biographies of Meyrink: Eduard Frank: Gustav Meyrink: Werk und Wirkung, Manfred Lube: Gustav Meyrink: Beiträge zur Biographie und Studien zu seiner Kunsttheorie, Mohammad Qasim: Gustav Meyrink: Eine monographische Untersuchung, Frans Smit: Gustav Meyrink: Auf der Suche nach dem Übersinnlichen (originally in Dutch). I have made uninhibited use of their researches to support my own. Page numbers of quotations from the above will be given, after the first occurrence, in brackets after the text; the translations are my own. The same will apply to works by Meyrink: quotations will be from the published translations; where these do not exist, the first reference will give the German title, with an English translation in brackets; further references will use the translated title. For essays and stories reference will be given to the anthology in which they are collected. The private Meyrinkiana collections of Robert Karle, Lambert Binder and Eduard Frank are now in the Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica, Amsterdam. CONTENTS Title Acknowledgements Prefatory Note 1 Birth and Childhood 2 Prague 3 The Occult 4 The End of Life in Prague 5 Meyer becomes Meyrink 6 Unsettled Years 7 The Golem 8 The First World War 9 Meyrink in Starnberg 10 Meyrink’s Beliefs 11 His Death Index About the Author Copyright Prefatory note Especially in his early years, Gustav Meyrink enjoyed a notoriety which, as Josef Strelka suggests1 matched that of any of the characters from his novels. Unfortunately there is a dearth of documentary evidence. Meyrink did not keep a diary, nor did he keep the personal letters he received; most of those surviving relate to his dealings with occult societies and with publishers; relatively few personal letters from Meyrink exist, most is business correspondence such as that with his publisher, Kurt Wolff, in Yale University Library. On the other hand, there is a wealth of anecdote about Meyrink, much of it published after his death, and much of it recounting fantastic events. How much of this is true is difficult to assess, but what it does attest is Meyrink’s notorious reputation in fin-de-siècle society in Prague and Munich. The aim of this biography, then, is to provide the reader with the facts of Meyrink’s life, as far as they are ascertainable, but also to give the reader some idea of Meyrink as he appeared to his contemporaries, especially the younger contemporaries who gathered round him. To this end I have tried, as far as possible, to let Meyrink and his acquaintances speak in their own voices and I hope this will make accessible to the English-speaking reader much material which has so far only been available in German. Note 1 Gustav Meyrink: Der Engel vom westlichen Fenster, selected and with an introduction by Josef Strelka, Graz, 1966, p.7. 1 Birth and childhood Meyrink was illegitimate. He was born on 19 January 1868 in the Blauer Bock hotel in the Mariahilferstrasse in Vienna. Seven weeks later he was christened ‘Gustav Meyer’ in the Protestant church in the same street in Vienna. His mother, Marie Meyer (she was christened Maria Wilhelmine Adelheide but used the name ‘Marie’ professionally), was an actress. At the time of Meyrink’s birth she was 27 and engaged at the court theatre in Stuttgart.1 She was described as ‘temporarily resident’ in Vienna; presumably she had gone there for the birth in order to avoid scandal. Her elder sister, Dustmann-Meyer, had been a singer at the Vienna Court Opera since 1857. Perhaps her sister’s presence in the city was the reason Marie Meyer chose Vienna. Meyrink’s father was a wealthy aristocrat, Baron Friedrich Karl Gottlieb Varnbüler von und zu Hemmingen. Aged 59, he was also much older that his mistress. In the course of his career he occupied various important positions in the Württemberg administration (Stuttgart was the capital of Württemberg); at the time of Meyrink’s birth he was foreign minister and president of the privy council, and in 1866 he had played a significant role in the Austro-Prussian conflict. He died in 1889. Although official acknowledgment was doubtless out of the question – as well as being an aristocrat, Varnbüler was also married – he appears to have deposited a large sum for his son, the interest from which his mother used to help finance his education. According to Alfred Schmid Noerr, a younger friend of Meyrink, in 1919, at the height of his fame as a writer, the Varnbülers offered to acknowledge him as a member of the family, but he refused. An unpublished chronicle written by one of Marie Meyer’s uncles,2 claims the family had noble origins, came from Bavaria and was originally called Meyerink, but had changed their name to Meyer by the end of the seventeenth century. By the end of the eighteenth century the Meyers were settled in Hamburg, where Meyrink’s grandfather was born. Both of Meyrink’s grandparents, who were married in Aachen in 1831, worked in the theatre. Meyrink’s grandfather was an unsuccessful actor; when his daughter Marie was born in 1841, he was described on the birth certificate as an ‘out-of-work theatre cashier’. His wife, who came from Hengsberg, a village to the south of Graz in Austria, was a singer and much more successful; she became the family breadwinner, along with her eldest daughter, Marie Luise, who was to become one of Wagner’s favourite singers. When the second daughter took up an engagement in Braunschweig, the family split up. Friedrich Meyer went to live with his brother and their youngest daughter Marie stayed with her mother, foreshadowing Meyrink’s own childhood as the offspring of an actress single mother. After the birth of her son, Marie Meyer left Stuttgart and was engaged at the court theatre in Munich, her contract starting on 1 April 1869. She was said to have been one of Ludwig II’s favourite actresses, taking part in the ‘private theatre performances attended only by the king and perhaps one of two special friends or the minion of the moment, who would sit in the box immediately below the king’s’3 leaving him with the sense of being alone in the theatre, of being able to enjoy the spectacle without feeling he was himself a spectacle for the audience. Marie Meyer remained in Munich until 1880, when she went to Hamburg. From 1883–1885 she was at the Deutsches Landestheater in Prague, then in St Petersburg until 1891, when she joined the Lessingtheater in Berlin, her last engagement. She retired from the stage in 1902 and died in 1906. There is almost no documentary evidence for Meyrink’s childhood years, no surviving letters from his mother or father, no memories of friends or classmates. He was apparently initially looked after by his grandmother in Hamburg but by 1874 he had joined his mother in Munich and attended primary school there, then secondary school, the Wilhelmsgymnasium. From 1881–1883 he attended secondary school, the Johanneum, in Hamburg and then completed his schooling in Prague. When his mother moved on to St Petersburg, he remained in Prague, where he took a course in banking at the commercial college there. His school reports from Hamburg indicate that he was an outstanding scholar and top of the class in both of the years he was there: ‘Gustav has again completed the year to our complete satisfaction through his excellent achievements and good behaviour.’ This contradicts his own later statement to his children, reported by Schmid Noerr, that his marks were always unsatisfactory and yet he had still made something of himself.4 However, Schmid Noerr, a long-standing friend of Meyrink, suggests he took his school-leaving examination in Munich (he went on to Hamburg and finished in Prague) and describes the school there as a Realgymnasium (specialising in science and modern languages), whereas the Wilhelmsgymnasium was the oldest school in Munich and a well-known humanistisches Gymnasium, ie based on classical studies. All of this demonstrates the care one must take in assessing the evidence for Meyrink’s life. Both Meyrink himself and his friends and acquaintances are unreliable, though not necessarily always wrong. The same care must be taken in assessing descriptions of his childhood: ‘His childhood was bleak, as was to be expected for an illegitimate child in those days’;5 ‘an emotionally deprived childhood, lacking any parental love, had left a deep mark on his character’;6 ‘his to all appearances unhappy childhood’;7 ‘little is known of Meyrink’s childhood, but it was presumably unhappy’.8 Meyrink’s own comment on Bavaria, where he spent most of his childhood, suggests it was more normal than is generally supposed: ‘When, forty-five years ago, I was brought by the Pilot to this city [Prague] from foggy Hamburg, I was dazzled by a bright sun … a sun which seemed quite different from the cheerfully shining skies of bright, carefree Bavaria.’9 Commentators, then, are unanimous in their conjecture that Meyrink’s childhood was unhappy. But it remains a conjecture based on the few known facts: his illegitimate birth; being an only child; having no father, and a working mother; changes of school because of his mother’s engagements at different theatres (three after the birth of her son: Munich – Hamburg – Prague, though for some commentators that tends to become ‘numerous’). That is the sum total of what is known. It doubtless influenced Meyrink’s development, but there will have been other factors that are unknown. His relationship with his mother Much more space is taken up with discussions of Meyrink’s relationship with his mother. Again, almost nothing is known of this. The one letter from his mother that has survived is a card with a few words in rather spidery writing and difficult to read in detail, but the tone seems warm and appropriate for a mother to her married 29-year-old son, ending as it does ‘with most affectionate kisses … for you and Hedwig from your mother.’ The fact that it is the only letter from his mother that was not thrown away or destroyed is not of significance. As mentioned above, the only letters Meyrink appears to have kept are either those
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