Another was that he was numbered among the suicides. And here it must
be said that to call suicides only those who actually destroy
themselves is false. Among these, indeed, there are many who in a sense
are suicides only by accident and in whose being suicide has no
necessary place. Among the common run of men there are many of little
personality and stamped with no deep impress of fate, who find their
end in suicide without belonging on that account to the type of the
suicide by inclination; while on the other hand, of those who are to be
counted as suicides by the very nature of their beings are many,
perhaps a majority, who never in fact lay hands on themselves. The
"suicide," and Harry was one, need not necessarily live in a peculiarly
close relationship to death. One may do this without being a suicide.
What is peculiar to the suicide is that his ego, rightly or wrongly, is
felt to be an extremely dangerous, dubious, and doomed germ of nature;
that he is always in his own eyes exposed to an extraordinary risk, as
though he stood with the slightest foothold on the peak of a crag
whence a slight push from without or an instant's weakness from within
suffices to precipitate him into the void. The line of fate in the case
of these men is marked by the belief they have that suicide is their
most probable manner of death. It might be presumed that such
temperaments, which usually manifest themselves in early youth and
persist through life, show a singular defect of vital force. On the
contrary, among the "suicides" are to be found unusually tenacious and
eager and also hardy natures. But just as there are those who at the
least indisposition develop a fever, so do those whom we call suicides,
and who are always very emotional and sensitive, develop at the least
shock the notion of suicide. Had we a science with the courage and
authority to concern itself with mankind, instead of with the mechanism
merely of vital phenomena, had we something of the nature of an
anthropology, or a psychology, these matters of fact would be familiar
to every one.
What was said above on the subject of suicides touches
obviously nothing but the surface. It is psychology, and, therefore,
partly physics. Metaphysically considered, the matter has a different
and a much clearer aspect. In this aspect suicides present themselves
as those who are overtaken by the sense of guilt inherent in
individuals, these souls that find the aim of life not in the
perfecting and molding of the self, but in liberating themselves by
going back to the mother, back to God, back to the all. Many of these
natures are wholly incapable of ever having recourse to real suicide,
because they have a profound consciousness of the sin of doing so. For
us they are suicides nonetheless; for they see death and not life as
the releaser. They are ready to cast themselves away in surrender, to
be extinguished and to go back to the beginning.
As every strength may become a weakness (and under some
circumstances must) so, on the contrary, may the typical suicide find a
strength and a support in his apparent weakness. Indeed, he does so
more often than not. The case of Harry, the Steppenwolf, is one of
these. As thousands of his like do, he found consolation and support,
and not merely the melancholy play of youthful fancy, in the idea that
the way to death was open to him at any moment. It is true that with
him, as with all men of his kind, every shock, every pain, every
untoward predicament at once called forth the wish to find an escape in
death. By degrees, however, he fashioned for himself out of this
tendency a philosophy that was actually serviceable to life.
He gained
strength through familiarity with the thought that the emergency exit
stood always open, and became curious, too, to taste his suffering to
the dregs. If it went too badly with him he could feel sometimes with a
grim malicious pleasure: "I am curious to see all the same just how
much a man can endure. If the limit of what is bearable is reached, I
have only to open the door to escape." There are a great many suicides
to whom this thought imparts an uncommon strengthOn the other hand, all suicides have the responsibility of fighting
against the temptation of suicide. Every one of them knows very well in
some corner of his soul that suicide, though a way out, is rather a
mean and shabby one, and that it is nobler and finer to be conquered by
life than to fall by one's own hand. Knowing this, with a morbid
conscience whose source is much the same as that of the militant
conscience of so-called self-contented persons, the majority of
suicides are left to a protracted struggle against their temptation.
They struggle as the kleptomaniac against his own vice. The Steppenwolf
was not unfamiliar with this struggle. He had engaged in it with many a
change of weapons. Finally, at the age of forty-seven or thereabouts, a
happy and not unhumorous idea came to him from which he often derived
some amusement. He appointed his fiftieth birthday as the day on which
he might allow himself to take his own life. On this day, according to
his mood, so he agreed with himself, it should be open to him to employ
the emergency exit or not. Let happen to him what might, illness,
poverty, suffering and bitterness, there was a time-limit. It could not
extend beyond these few years, months, days whose number daily
diminished. And in fact he bore much adversity, which previously would
have cost him severer and longer tortures and shaken him perhaps to the
roots of his being, very much more easily. When for any reason it went
particularly badly with him, when peculiar pains and penalties were
added to the desolateness and loneliness and savagery of his life, he
could say to his tormentors: "Only wait, two years and I am your
master." And with this he cherished the thought of the morning of his
fiftieth birthday. Letters of congratulation would arrive, while he,
relying on his razor, took leave of all his pains and closed the door
behind him. Then gout in the joints, depression of spirits, and all
pains of head and body could look for another victim.
Steppen Wolf - Treatise on Steppenwolf .