The Wild Child

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The Wild Child Page 28

by Jeffrey Masson


  Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 59

  Griessenbeck, Karl Ernst Freiherr von, 201

  Guérin, Madame, 41

  Hahnemann, Samuel, 45, 224

  Hamilton, Marie von, 34, 222

  Handke, Peter, 70, 230

  Hauser, Kaspar

  animals and, 42-43, 53, 121-122, 124

  appearance in Nuremberg, 75-78, 96-97

  attempt on life of, 3, 15-16, 137-143, 179, 215

  attempts to discredit, 3, 4, 24-25, 51-52, 61, 64, 156, 180-182, 220, 229-230, 235

  autobiography of, 10-14, 50, 94, 135, 136, 152, 187-195, 214

  autopsy on, 217

  in Biberbach household, 16

  Binder’s proclamation and, 5-8, 94, 154, 161-172, 212, 232

  captivity and abandonment of, 11-13, 35-37, 50, 53, 60, 68, 69, 95-104, 154, 164-171, 189-195

  clothing worn by, 11, 13, 79, 152, 164, 167, 193

  colors and, 108-109

  in Daumer household, 8-10, 18, 41-42, 45-47, 93, 108, 118-135, 214

  doctors’ examination of, 5, 83, 153, 162-163

  drawing by, 35, 91, 109-110, 200

  dreams of, 27, 35, 97, 119, 197-202

  food and, 4, 12, 13, 45-46, 49, 76, 78, 84-85, 95, 119, 150, 154, 157, 162-165, 189-191, 195, 214

  horseback riding and, 124-125, 131, 158, 175, 180

  language and speech of, 5, 49, 75-77, 86, 87, 92, 93, 107, 144, 152, 212, 221, 229, 230

  letter carried by, 4, 80-81, 152-153, 161-162, 193, 212

  memory of, 110-111, 150, 163

  in Meyer household, 18-23, 158, 216, 217, 229-230

  murder of, 3, 19-26, 65, 217-218

  music and, 86

  name, 78, 152

  nature and, 120, 122-123, 148-149

  obedience of, 111, 170

  orderliness and cleanliness of, 112

  parentage of, 3, 4, 27-35, 51, 158, 179, 181-182, 218-219, 232, 233, 235

  physical appearance of, 4, 81-83, 144, 161-163, 212

  religion and, 18, 19, 79-80, 90, 131-135, 149, 158

  senses of, 10,42,46, 112-116, 122, 125-131, 150, 224

  Stanhope’s attempts to discredit, 24-25, 156, 220

  Stanhope’s interest in, 14, 17-19, 25, 156, 158, 216

  Hauser, Kaspar (cont.)

  toys and, 8, 11, 13, 87-89, 91, 95, 105, 128-129, 164, 189-191, 201, 213

  in Tucher household, 17

  in Vestner Gate Tower, 78-79, 85-92, 104-117

  visitors to, 8, 15-16, 43-45, 116, 118, 156, 163, 179, 212

  writing of, 10, 13, 78, 96, 155, 214

  Hegel, Georg Wilhelm, 9, 17

  Heidenreich, Friedrich Wilhelm, 217

  Hengstenberg, Ernst Wilhelm, 149, 158

  Hennenhofer, Johann von, 36, 216

  Hermann, Professor, 129, 157, 189

  Herodotus, 48

  Herzog, Werner, 230

  Hesse, wolf child of, 51, 223, 236

  Heydenreich, Wilhelm, 220

  Hickel, Joseph, 30-32, 220, 232, 234

  Hiltel, Andreas, 90-92, 152, 155, 194, 195

  Hiltel, Julius, 91, 92, 152

  Hiltel, Margareta, 91, 152

  Historical Mysteries (Lang), 26

  History (Herodotus), 48

  Hitzig, 180, 233

  Hochberg, Countess of (Luise Geyer von Geyersberg), 27-28, 31, 33, 36, 217, 220, 222

  Hofer, Klara, 35

  Hofmann, Andreas, 20

  Hofmannsthal, Hugo von, 53

  Homeopathy, 8, 45

  Horn, Doctor, 97

  Hoven, Doctor von, 153

  Hubenstricher, Heinrich, 233

  Hutten-Czapski, Bogdan Graf von, 222

  Incest, 66

  Isabella, 154

  Itard, Jean-Marc-Gaspard, 39-41, 223, 224

  Jarrell, Randall, 208

  Jungle books, the (Kipling), 207-208

  Kamala, 67, 205, 207, 209

  Karl, Grand Duke of Baden, 19, 27, 29, 30, 32, 35-36, 221-222

  Karl Friedrich von Baden, 27-28

  Karoline, Queen Mother of Bavaria, 29-31, 219, 234

  Kaspar Hauser (film), 54, 216

  Kaspar Hauser (Handke), 70, 230

  Kaspar Hauser: Biespiel eines Verbrechens am Seelenleben des Menschen (Feuerbach), 8, 32

  translation of, 73-158, 182

  Kaspar Hauser: Sein Wesen, seine Unschuld, seine Erduldungen und sein Ursprung (Daumer), 202, 214, 216, 225, 230

  Kaspar Hauser Question, The (A. Feuerbach), 37, 223

  Kaspar Hauser syndrome, 3, 211

  Kennedy, John F., 37

  Kipling, Rudyard, 207-209, 236, 237

  Klee, Fritz, 36, 54, 200, 223

  Klüber, Friedrich von, 217

  Klüber, Johann Ludwig von, 20, 31-33, 217, 221

  “Knabe, Der” (Rilke), 53

  Kolb, Georg Friedrich, 23, 183

  Koppen, Doctor, 22

  Lane, Harlan, 39, 40, 224

  Lang, Andrew, 26

  Lang, Karl Heinrich Ritter von, 21

  Leopold, Grand Duke of Baden, 28, 31, 34, 220

  Leroux, Didier, 223

  Leuchtenberg, August, 30

  Leuchtenberg, Eugen von, 222

  Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 224

  Lieber, Francis, 213

  Life Is a Dream (Calderón de la Barca), 74, 151, 155

  Linberg, Henning Gottfried, 213

  Linde, Antonius von der, 182, 187, 235

  Lübeck, Schmidt von, 99

  Ludwig I, King of Bavaria, 28, 29, 34, 38, 222, 232

  Maclean, Charles, 207

  Malson, Lucien, 223, 224

  Mann, Golo, 52

  Mann, Klaus, 53

  Mann, Thomas, 53, 213

  Mannoni, Octave, 224

  Marx, Karl, 213

  Mayer, Johannes, 9, 24, 26, 32, 33, 54, 176, 186, 215, 216, 220-223, 231

  Melville, Herman, 3, 53, 226

  Mémoire: Wer möchte wohl Kaspar Hauser Sein? (Feuerbach), 29-30, 181, 202, 218, 219, 233, 234

  Memoirs of My Mental Illness (Schreber), 60

  Merk, Johann Mathias, 152

  Merker, Johann Friedrich Karl, 51, 125, 180-182, 211, 229, 233, 234

  Meyer, Johann George, 18-23, 65, 66, 156, 218, 229-230

  Meyer, Julius, 179, 182, 220, 232

  Mitteilungen über Kaspar Hauser (Daumer), 180, 187-188, 214, 215, 233

  Mittelstädt, Otto, 182, 183, 235

  Money, John, 211

  Montagu, Ashley, 206

  Montaigne, Michel de, 47

  Montessori, Maria, 224

  Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon (Sterndal), 208

  Nepos, Cornelius, 147

  Ogburn, William F., 206

  Osterhausen, Johann Karl, 37, 83, 117-118, 130, 153, 223

  Öttingern-Wallerstein, Prince of, 23-24

  Paul Johann Anselm Feuerbach: Ein Juristenleben (Radbruch), 177, 213, 232

  Peter from Halin, 51, 223

  Philip Henry Lord Stanhope (Mayer), 215, 216, 220, 222

  Pies, Hermann, 54, 176-185, 187, 189,211,214,217,218,220, 222, 232-235

  Pinel, Philippe, 39-40

  Pino, Louise Baronin Belli di, 222

  Pitt, William (the Younger), 14

  Plato, 84

  Preu, Doctor, 5, 37, 50, 140, 153, 223

  “Psychoanalytic Notes on an Autobiographical Account of a Case of Paranoia” (Freud), 60-61

  Radbruch, Gustav, 177, 178, 183-184, 213, 232, 233

  “Recall of Childhood Trauma: A Prospective Study of Women’s Memories of Child Sexual Abuse” (Williams), 62

  Recke, Elise von der, 43-45, 70, 179

  Repression, 55, 67

  Rilke, Rainer Maria, 53

  Rimbaud, Arthur, 52

  Romulus and Remus, 39, 203

  Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 38, 39, 47-49

  Russell, Diana, 63

  Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm, 9

  Schloss Pilsach, 35, 200-201

  Schmidt, Friedrich Ludwig von, 30, 182, 234 />
  Schreber, Daniel Paul, 60-61

  Sehr, Peter, 54, 216

  Sexual abuse, 40, 55-65, 227-229

  Shakespeare, William, 39

  Singh, J. A. L., 203-207, 209

  Sleeman, William Henry, 236

  Something of Myself (Kipling), 209

  Sophie, Archduchess of Austria, 30, 34,219

  “Soul murder,” 64-65, 102

  Spenser, Edmund, 4

  Stanhope, Charles, Earl of, 14

  Stanhope, Hester, 14

  Stanhope, Philip Henry, Earl of attacks Feuerbach’s account, 174-175, 181, 234

  attempts to discourage Daumer from publishing, 173-174, 231

  attempts to discredit Hauser, 24-25, 156, 220

  complicity in Hauser’s murder, 24-26, 32, 218

  dedication of Feuerbach’s book to, 74, 151

  final letter to Hauser, 23

  interest in Hauser, 14, 17-19, 25, 156, 158, 216

  Stéphanie de Beauharnais, Grand Duchess of Baden, 3, 19, 21, 27, 29-32, 35, 218, 219, 222

  Sterndal, Robert A., 208

  Struve, Ulrich, 54

  Thesis against Feuerbach (Marx), 213

  Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (Freud), 227

  Tittman, Carl August, 101

  Tolstoy, Leo, 67

  Tradowsky, Peter, 217, 233

  Trakl, Georg, 53

  Truffaut, François, 39

  Tucher, Gottlieb Freiherr von, 16, 17, 34, 49, 197-199, 216, 222, 229, 231

  Tucholsky, Kurt, 53

  Turm, Der (Hofmannsthal), 53

  Über Kaspar Hauser (Lübeck), 99

  “Unsolved Riddle of Nuremberg, The” (anonymous), 22

  Unverstand und schlechte Erziebung (Eschricht), 52

  Vega, Suzanne, 3

  Verlaine, Paul, 52

  Victoria, Queen of England, 32

  Voltaire, 114, 156

  Wagner, Richard, 217

  Wassermann, Jakob, 53

  Weickmann, Georg Leonhard, 75

  Wessenig, Friedrich von, 75-78, 151

  White Wolf (Brandenburg), 209

  Wild Boy of Aveyron, The (Lane), 224

  Wild Boy of Aveyron (Victor), 4, 39-41, 223

  Wild Child, The (film), 39

  Wild children, 38-41, 50-51, 223-224

  Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre (Goethe), 59

  Williams, Linda, 62

  Winter’s Tale, The (Shakespeare), 39

  Wolf Child and Human Child (Gesell), 206

  Wolf children, 67, 203-209

  Wolf Children and Feral Man (Singh and Zingg), 203, 205-207

  Wolf Children and the Problem of Human Nature (Malson), 223, 224

  “Wood Horse (Caspar Hauser’s Song)” (Vega), 3

  Zimmer, Dieter, 225

  Zingg, R. M., 203, 236

  This is a contemporary portrait of Kaspar Hauser, that Feuerbach used as the frontispiece to the book translated in this volume. Kaspar sent signed copies of this portrait to various friends. The one reproduced here was sent to Elise, one of Feuerbach’s daughters. (Reproduced with permission from Kaspar Hauser: Das Kind von Europa, by Johannes Mayer. All illustrations here are from this source unless otherwise noted.)

  This is a contemporary picture of the Unschlittplatz in Nuremberg, where Kaspar Hauser first appeared on May 26, 1828. It was about four o’clock in the afternoon when he suddenly turned up looking lost, dazed, confused, and helpless.

  A contemporary photograph of the dungeon at Schloss Pilsach in which Kaspar Hauser was probably imprisoned. The novelist Klara Hoffer bought the castle and discovered the dungeon in 1924.

  This tempera drawing by Kaspar Hauser is the earliest one to have survived. Dated April 22, 1829, it bears an astonishing resemblance to the ironwork around the window in the dungeon of Schloss Pilsach (below) where it is now believed that Kaspar Hauser was imprisoned and isolated for twelve years.

  This small white wooden horse was found recently during renovations made in Schloss Pilsach.It answer almost perfectly to the description of the horse Kaspar Hauser played with in his dungeon and is probably the original.

  A portrait of Anselm von Feuerbach (1775-1833) done in 1831, two years before he died. He was a German judge (renowned for outlawing torture in Bavaria) who first investigated Kaspar Mauser’s „scase,” wrote a famous book about him, and became his staunches! ally, protector, and friend.

  Georg Friedrich Daumer (1800-1875) was Kaspar Hauser’s first teacher and remained his steadfast friend to the end. He wrote a series of books defending the authenticity of Kaspar Hauser, the first in 1832 while Kaspar was still alive, the last published shortly before Daumer’s own death. His contemporary notes about Kaspar Hauser were found only in 1994.

  Philip Henry, 4th Earl of Stanhope (1781-1855), is the most mysterious figure in the drama of Kaspar Hauser’s life. He befriended Kaspar, offered to take him to his castle in Chevening and adopt him, and handed over large sums of money for his upkeep. Recent research has clearly demonstrated that he was in the pay of the house of Baden and was involved, directly or indirectly, in the murder of Kaspar Hauser.

  A contemporary portrait of Stéphanie (Beauharnais) of Baden. She was adopted by Emperor Napoleon, who arranged her marriage to Karl of Baden. She is widely believed by historians to be the real mother of Kaspar Hauser. When she read Feuerbach’s book on January 24, 1832, she asked Stanhope to bring Kaspar Hauser to her. He promised to do so but did not fulfil his promise. Although many people even at that time thought Kaspar Hauser was her son, she appears either not to have believed it or to have been unable to bear the thought.

  Gottlieb Freiherr von Tucher (1798-1877) in old age. He was Kaspar Hauser’s benefactor and attempted in vain to protect him against Stanhope.

  These are two drawings made by Kaspar Hauser of the weapon with which an attempt was made on his life on October 17, 1829. He made the first drawing on November 5, 1829, and did the second in 1830. The handwriting on the page is by Kaspar Hauser and reads, “This is an instrument similar to the one with which I was wounded on October 17, and which was supposed to have killed me.” (Drawing after Pies, “Eyewitness Accounts,” 1925. Drawing and photo: Germanic National Museum, Nuremberg)

  A contemporary colored lithograph of Ansbach, the small city where Kaspar Hauser was sent for his safety. He lived here with a rigid school teacher, Johann Georg Meyer. On the right is the “Orangerie,” the grove where he was lured by a promise that he would receive news of his mother, and then murdered at the age of twenty-one, on December 14, 1833, a few years he arrived in Ansbach.

  This is one of the most unusual of Kaspar Hauser’s drawings, done in 1831. The original, which I saw in Ansbach, has amazing colors.

 

 

 


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