The Wall (100 page)

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Authors: H. G. Adler

BOOK: The Wall
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Segue back to Herr and Frau Lever, who are about to leave the museum. They ask what Arthur’s last name is and, upon learning that it is Landau, remember buying clothes in his father’s shop. Herr Lever reveals that his name used to be Lebenhart, which causes Arthur to remember two portraits bearing that name in the museum. The Levers then insist on seeing the portraits and claim them as their own, though the museum refuses to release them. In the middle of heated discussions about this, a Mrs. Mackintosh arrives to ask if she can purchase some of the furniture that is stored in the museum, though Herr Schnabelberger will not allow it. Arthur then takes the Levers to see the portraits of their relatives. Nonetheless, the museum denies their request.

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Frau Dr. Kulka comes to Arthur’s office to accuse him of betraying the museum in telling the Levers about the portraits. At the end of their conversation, all Arthur wants to do is flee this life and this city for good.

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While waiting for Anna to arrive at the museum, Arthur thinks of his life as one that is constantly in flight, forever on the move, and realizes that he can truly exist only within his own intellect and mind.

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Stirred from sleep on West Park Row, Arthur awakens to the mailman delivering a letter from Anna saying that Helmut has died and asking if she can come to Arthur and Johanna. Another package contains a book titled
Stereotyping Through Prejudice
, which carries a jacket comment from Professor Kratzenstein that Johanna and Arthur find pretentious. Another letter is from Resi Knispel, saying she would like to talk to Arthur about a project that she has in mind for him.

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Arthur visits Resi Knispel, who along with Herr Buxinger wishes to start a new journal, and she wants Arthur’s help in recruiting talent to write for it. Knispel
tries to persuade Arthur to popularize his work, eventually revealing that the journal’s name will be
Eusemia
. Arthur says he has to think about it and prepares to leave. In the foyer, Knispel throws herself at Arthur, claiming that she’s in love with him and scratching his hand as he tries to release it from her desperate hold.

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Arthur and Johanna then visit her cousin Betty for two weeks in South Wales, where they enjoy the simple country people and the countryside. Despite the frosty cold, he and Johanna hike for hours over the hills and through the fields, stopping to picnic along the way. Once again, they declare their love for each other and realize that they must begin again, like Adam and Eve. Arthur presents Johanna with Franziska’s pearls. Arthur tells Johanna that Franziska spoke to him in a dream right before he departed the Old Country, declaring that he was free to go, and that he now realizes that he indeed exists.

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Back on West Park Row, while anticipating the arrival of Anna, Arthur is astonished when the mailman knocks on the door to announce the arrival of the pallbearers, Brian and Derek, who have orders to bring Arthur to the Sociology Conference, at which he is to be honored. They are supposed to convey Arthur there in a coffin and a hearse, but instead Arthur rides atop the coffin while Johanna and the children travel behind in the truck of a neighborhood grocer. The conference takes place at Shepherd’s Field, the site of the earlier carnival, which is still up and running and now contains exhibitions hosted by all the characters encountered thus far from Arthur’s past and present.

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After appearing onstage with Roy Rogers, Arthur slinks to the side and escapes by crawling under the circus tent, fleeing Shepherd’s Field. On his way back to West Park Row, he can only be grateful for the stability his wife and children provide him in a world that remains suspended between the past and the present, the only hope being that his children will enjoy a future that is free of such duress.

BY H. G. ADLER

The Wall
The Journey
Panorama

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Born in Prague in 1910, H. G. A
DLER
spent two and a half years in Theresienstadt before being deported to Auschwitz, Niederorschel, and Langenstein, where he was liberated in April 1945. Leaving Prague for London in 1947, Adler worked as a freelance scholar and writer until his death in 1988. The author of twenty-six books of fiction, stories, poems, history, philosophy, and religion, he was awarded the Leo Baeck Prize for his monograph
Theresienstadt 1941–1945: The Face of a Coerced Community
in 1958.
The Wall
was completed in 1956 but did not appear in print until 1989, a year after Adler’s death in London.

ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR

Peter Filkins is a poet and translator. He is the recipient of a Distinguished Translation Award from the Austrian Ministry for Education, Art, and Culture, a Berlin Prize from the American Academy in Berlin, and an Outstanding Translation Award from the American Literary Translators Association. He teaches literature and writing at Bard College at Simon’s Rock and translation at Bard College. His translations of H. G. Adler’s novels
The Journey
and
Panorama
were published by Random House in 2008 and 2011, respectively, and also appear under the Modern Library imprint.

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