The Story, courtesy of the kafka page
A Hunger Artist
by Franz Kafka
During these last decades the interest
in professional fasting has markedly diminished. It used to pay very well to
stage such great performances under one's own management, but today that is
quite impossible. We live in a different world now. At one time the whole town
took a lively interest in the hunger artist; from day to day of his fast the
excitement mounted; everybody wanted to see him at least once a day; there were
people who bought season tickets for the last few days and sat from morning till
night in front of his small barred cage; even in the nighttime there were
visiting hours, when the whole effect was heightened by torch flares; on fine
days the cage was set out in the open air, and then it was the children's
special treat to see the hunger artist; for their elders he was often just a
joke that happened to be in fashion, but the children stood openmouthed, holding
each other's hands for greater security, marveling at him as he sat there pallid
in black tights, with his ribs sticking out so prominently, not even on a seat
but down among straw on the ground, sometimes giving a courteous nod, answering
questions with a constrained smile, or perhaps stretching an arm through the
bars so that one might feel how thin it was, and then again withdrawing deep
into himself, paying no attention to anyone or anything, not even to the
all-important striking of the clock that was the only piece of furniture in his
cage, but merely staring into vacancy with half-shut eyes, now and then taking a
sip from a tiny glass of water to moisten his lips.
Besides casual
onlookers there were also relays of permanent watchers selected by the public,
usually butchers, strangely enough, and it was their task to watch the hunger
artist day and night, three of them at a time, in case he should have some
secret recourse to nourishment. This was nothing but a formality, instigated to
reassure the masses, for the initiates knew well enough that during his fast the
artist would never in any circumstances, not even under forcible compulsion,
swallow the smallest morsel of food; the honor of his profession forbade it. Not
every watcher, of course, was capable of understanding this, there were often
groups of night watchers who were very lax in carrying out their duties and
deliberately huddled together in a retired corner to play cards with great
absorption, obviously intending to give the hunger artist the chance of a little
refreshment, which they supposed he would draw from some private hoard. Nothing
annoyed the artist more than these watchers; they made him miserable; they made
his fast seem unendurable; sometimes he mastered his feebleness sufficiently to
sing during their watch for as long as he could keep going, to show them how
unjust their suspicions were. But that was of little use; they only wondered at
his cleverness in being able to fill his mouth even while singing. Much more to
his taste were the watchers who sat close up to the bars, who were not content
with the dim night lighting of the hall but focused him in the full glare of the
electric pocket torch given them by the impresario. The harsh light did not
trouble him at all, in any case he could never sleep properly, and he could
always drowse a little, whatever the light, at any hour, even when the hall was
thronged with noisy onlookers. He was quite happy at the prospect of spending a
sleepless night with such watchers; he was ready to exchange jokes with them, to
tell them stories out of his nomadic life, anything at all to keep them awake
and demonstrate to them again that he had no eatables in his cage and that he
was fasting as not one of them could fast. But his happiest moment was when the
morning came and an enormous breakfast was brought for them, at his expense, on
which they flung themselves with the keen appetite of healthy men after a weary
night of wakefulness. Of course there were people who argued that this breakfast
was an unfair attempt to bribe the watchers, but that was going rather too far,
and when they were invited to take on a night’s vigil without a breakfast,
merely for the sake of the cause, they made themselves scarce, although they
stuck stubbornly to their suspicions.
Such suspicions, anyhow, were a
necessary accompaniment to the profession of fasting. No one could possibly
watch the hunger artist continuously, day and night, and so no one could produce
first-hand evidence that the fast had really been rigorous and continuous; only
the artist himself could know that, he was therefore bound to be the sole
completely satisfied spectator of his own fast. Yet for other reasons he was
never satisfied; it was not perhaps mere fasting that had brought him to such
skeleton thinness that many people had regretfully to keep away from his
exhibitions, because the sight of him was too much for them, perhaps it was
dissatisfaction with himself that had worn him down. For he alone knew, what no
other initiate knew, how easy it was to fast. It was the easiest thing in the
world. He made no secret of this, yet people did not believe him, at best they
set him down as modest, most of them, however, thought he was out for publicity
or else was some kind of cheat who found it easy to fast because he had
discovered a way of making it easy, and then had the impudence to admit the
fact, more or less. He had to put up with all that, and in the course of time
had got used to it, but his inner dissatisfaction always rankled, and never yet,
after any term of fasting - this must be granted to his credit - had he left the
cage of his own free will. The longest period of fasting was fixed by his
impresario at forty days, beyond that term he was not allowed to go, not even in
great cities, and there was good reason for it, too. Experience had proven that
for about forty days the interest of the public could be stimulated by a
steadily increasing pressure of advertisement, but after that the town began to
lose interest, sympathetic support began notably to fall off; there were of
course local variations as between one town and another or one country and
another, but as a general rule forty days marked the limit. So on the fortieth
day the flower-bedecked cage was opened, enthusiastic spectators filled the
hall, a military band played, two doctors entered the cage to measure the
results of the fast, which were announced through a megaphone, and finally two
young ladies appeared, blissful at having been selected for the honor, to help
the hunger artist down the few steps leading to a small table on which was
spread a carefully chosen invalid repast. And at this very moment the artist
always turned stubborn. True, he would entrust his bony arms to the outstretched
helping hands of the ladies bending over him, but stand up he would not. Why
stop fasting at this particular moment, after forty days of it? He had held out
for a long time, an illimitably long time, why stop now, when he was in his best
fasting form, or rather, not yet quite in is bet fasting form? Why should he be
cheated of the fame he would get for fasting longer, for being not only the
record hunger artist of all time, which presumably he was already, but for
beating his own record by a performance beyond human imagination, since he felt
that there were no limits to his capacity for fasting? His public pretended to
admire him so much, why should it have so little patience with him; if he could
endure fasting longer, why shouldn’t the public endure it? Besides, he was
tired, he was comfortable sitting in the straw, and now he was supposed to lift
himself to his full height and go down to a meal the very thought of which gave
him a nausea that only the presence of the ladies kept him from betraying, and
even that with an effort. And he looked up into the eyes of the ladies who were
apparently so friendly and in reality so cruel, and shook his head, which felt
too heavy on its strengthless neck. But then there happened again what always
happened. The impresario came forward, without a word - for the band made speech
impossible - lifted his arms in the air above the artist, as if inviting Heaven
to look down upon this creature here in the straw, this suffering martyr, which
indeed he was, although in quite another sense; grasped him around the emaciated
waist, with exaggerated caution, so that the frail condition he was in might be
appreciated; and committed him to the care of the blenching ladies, not without
secretly giving him a shaking so that his legs and body tottered and swayed. The
artist now submitted completely; his head lolled on his breast as if it had
landed there by chance; his body was hollowed out; his legs in a spasm of
self-preservation clung close to each other at the knees, yet scraped on the
ground as if it were not really solid ground, as if they were only trying to
find solid ground; and the whole weight of his body, a featherweight after all,
relapsed onto one of the ladies, who, looking around for help and panting a
little - this post of honor was not at all what she had expected it to be -
first stretched her neck as far as she could to keep her face at least free from
contact with the artist, then finding this impossible, and her more fortunate
companion not coming to her aid but merely holding extended in her own trembling
hand the little bunch of knucklebones that was the artist’s, to the great
delight of the spectators burst into tears and had to be replaced by an
attendant who had long been stationed in readiness. Then came the food, a little
of which the impresario managed to get between the artist’s lips, while he sat
in a kind of half-fainting trance, to the accompaniment of cheerful patter
designed to distract to public’s attention for the artist’s condition; after
that, a toast was drunk to the public, supposedly prompted by a whisper from the
artist in the impresario’s ear; the band confirmed it with a mighty flourish,
the spectators melted away, and no one had any cause to be dissatisfied with the
proceedings, no one except the hunger artist himself, he only, as always.
So he lived for many years, with small regular intervals of
recuperation, in visible glory, honored by the world, yet in spite of that,
troubled in spirit, and all the more troubled because no-one would take his
trouble seriously. What comfort could he possibly need? What more could he
possibly wish for? And if some good-natured person, feeling sorry for him, tried
to console him by pointing out that his melancholy was probably caused by
fasting, it could happen, especially when he had been fasting for some time,
that he reacted with an outburst of fury and to the general alarm began to shake
the bars of his cage like a wild animal. Yet the impresario had a way of
punishing these outbreaks which he rather enjoyed putting into operation. He
would apologize publicly for the artist’s behaviour, which was only to be
excused, he admitted, because of the irritability caused by fasting; a condition
hardly to be understood by well-fed people; then by natural transition he went
on to mention the artist’s equally incomprehensible boast that he could fast for
much longer than he was doing; he praised the high ambition, the good will, the
great self-denial undoubtedly implicit in such a statement; and then quite
simply countered it by bringing out photographs, which were also on sale to the
public, showing the artist on the fortieth day of a fast lying in bed almost
dead from exhaustion. This perversion of the truth, familiar to the artist
though it was, always unnerved him afresh and proved too much for him. What was
a consequence of the premature ending of his fast was here presented as the
cause of it! To fight against this lack of understanding, against a whole world
of non-understanding, was impossible. Time and again in good faith he stood by
the bars listening to the impresario, but as soon as the photographs appeared he
always let go and sank with a groan back onto his straw, and the reassured
public could once more come close and gaze at him.
A few years later
when the witnesses of such scenes called them to mind, they often failed to
understand themselves at all. For meanwhile the aforementioned change in public
interest had set in; it seemed to happen almost overnight; there may have been
profound causes for it, but who was going to bother about that; at any rate the
pampered hunger artist suddenly found himself deserted on fine day by the
amusement-seekers, who went streaming past him to other more-favored
attractions. For the last time the impresario hurried him over half Europe to
discover whether the old interest might still survive here and there; all in
vain; everywhere, as if by secret agreement, a positive revulsion from
professional fasting was in evidence. Of course it could not really have sprung
up so suddenly as all that, and many premonitory symptoms which had not been
sufficiently remarked or suppressed during the rush and glitter of success now
came retrospectively to mind, but it was now too late to take any
countermeasures. Fasting would surely come into fashion again at some future
date, yet that was no comfort for those living in the present. What, then, was
the hunger artist to do? He had been applauded by thousands in his time and
could hardly come down to showing himself in a street booth at village fairs,
and as for adopting another profession, he was not only too old for that but too
fanatically devoted to fasting. So he took leave of the impresario, his partner
in an unparalleled career, and hired himself to a large circus; in order to
spare his own feelings he avoided reading the conditions of his contract.
A large circus with its enormous traffic in replacing and recruiting
men, animals, and apparatus can always find a use for people at any time, even
for a hunger artist, provided of course that he does not ask too much, and in
this particular case anyhow it was not only the artist who was taken on but his
famous and long-known name as well, indeed considering the peculiar nature of
his performance, which was not impaired by advancing age, it could not be
objected that here was an artist past his prime, no longer at the height of his
professional skill, seeking a refuge in some quiet corner of a circus; on the
contrary, the hunger artist averred that he could fast as well as ever, which
was entirely credible, he even alleged that if he were allowed to fast as he
liked, and this was at once promised him without more ado, he could astound the
world by establishing a record never yet achieved, a statement that certainly
provoked a smile among the other professionals, since it left out of account the
change in public opinion, which the hunger artist in his zeal conveniently
forgot.
He had not, however, actually lost his sense of the real
situation and took it as a matter of course that he and his cage should be
stationed, not in the middle of the ring as a main attraction, but outside, near
the animal cages, on a site that was after all easily accessible. Large and
gaily painted placards made a frame for the cage and announced what was to be
seen inside it. When the public came thronging out in the intervals to see the
animals, they could hardly avoid passing the hunger artist’s cage and stopping
there for a moment, perhaps they might even have stayed longer, had not those
pressing behind them behind them in the narrow gangway, who did not understand
why they should be held up on their way towards the excitements of the
menagerie, made it impossible for anyone to stand gazing for any length of time.
And that was the reason why the hunger artist, who had of course been looking
forward to these visiting hours as the main achievement of his life, began
instead to shrink from them. At first he could hardly wait for the intervals; it
was exhilarating to watch the crowds come streaming his way, until only too soon
- not even the most obstinate self-deception, clung to almost consciously, could
hold out against the fact - the conviction was borne in upon him that these
people, most of them, to judge from their actions, again and again, without
exception, were all on their way to the menagerie. And the first sight of them
from a distance remained the best. For when they reached his cage he was at once
deafened by the storm of shouting and abuse that arose from the two contending
factions, which renewed themselves continuously, of those who wanted to stop and
stare at him - he soon began to dislike them more than the others - not out of
real interest but only out of obstinate self-assertiveness, and those who wanted
to go straight on to the animals. When the first great rush was past, the
stragglers came along, and these, whom nothing could have prevented from
stopping to look at him as long as they had breath, raced past with long
strides, hardly even glancing at him, in their haste to get to the menagerie in
time. And all too rarely did it happen that he had a stroke of luck, when some
father of a family fetched up before him with his children, pointed a finger at
the hunger artist, and explained at length what the phenomenon meant, telling
stories of earlier years when he himself had watched similar but much more
thrilling performances, and the children, still rather uncomprehending, since
neither inside or outside school had they been sufficiently prepared for this
lesson - what did they care about fasting? - yet showed by the brightness of
their intent eyes that new and better times might be coming. Perhaps, said the
hunger artist to himself, many a time, things would be a little better if his
cage were set not quite so near the menagerie. That made it too easy for people
to make their choice, to say nothing of what he suffered from the stench of the
menagerie, the animals’ restlessness by night, the carrying past of raw lumps of
flesh for the beasts of prey, the roaring at feeding times, depressed him
continually. But he did not dare to lodge a complaint with the management; after
all, he had the animals to thank for the troops of people who passed his cage,
among whom there might always be one here and there to take an interest in him,
and who could tell where they might seclude him if he called attention to his
existence and thereby to the fact that, strictly speaking, he was only an
impediment on the way to the menagerie.
A small impediment, to be sure,
one that grew steadily less. People grew familiar with the strange idea that
they could be expected, in times like these, to take an interest in a hunger
artist, and with this familiarity the verdict went out against him. He might
fast as much as he could, and he did so; but nothing could save him now, people
passed him by. Just try to explain to anyone the art of fasting! Anyone who has
no feeling for it cannot be made to understand it. The fine placards grew dirty
and illegible, they were torn down; the little notice board showing the number
of fast days achieved, which at first was changed carefully every day, had long
stayed at the same figure, for after the first few weeks even this small task
seemed pointless to the staff; and so the artist simply fasted on and on, as he
had once dreamed of doing, and it was no trouble to him, just as he had always
foretold, but no one counted the days, no one, not even the artist himself, knew
what records he was already breaking, and his heart became heavy. And when once
in a while some leisurely passer-by stopped, made merry over the old figure on
the board and spoke of swindling, that was in its way the stupidest lie ever
invented by indifference and inborn malice, since it was not the hunger artist
who was cheating, he was working honestly, but the world was cheating him of his
reward.
Many more days went by, however, and that too came to an
end. An overseer’s eye fell on the cage one day and he asked the attendants why
this perfectly good cage should be left standing there unused with dirty straw
inside it; nobody knew, until one man, helped out by the notice board,
remembered about the hunger artist. They poked into the straw with sticks and
found him in it. “Are you still fasting?” asked the overseer, “when on earth do
you mean to stop?” “Forgive me, everybody,” whispered the hunger artist; only
the overseer, who had his ear to the bars, understood him. “Of course,” said the
overseer, and tapped his forehead with a finger to let the attendants know what
state the man was in, “we forgive you.” “I always wanted you to admire my
fasting,” said the hunger artist. “We do admire it,” said the overseer, affably.
“But you shouldn’t admire it,” said the hunger artist. “Well then we don’t
admire it,” said the overseer, “but why shouldn’t we admire it?” “Because I have
to fast, I can’t help it,” said the hunger artist. “What a fellow you are,” said
the overseer, “and why can’t you help it?” “Because,” said the hunger artist,
lifting his head a little and speaking, with his lips pursed, as if for a kiss,
right into the overseer’s ear, so that no syllable might be lost, “because I
couldn’t find the food I liked. If I had found it, believe me, I should have
made no fuss and stuffed myself like you or anyone else.” These were his last
words, but in his dimming eyes remained the firm though no longer proud
persuasion that he was still continuing to fast.
“Well, clear this out
now!” said the overseer, and they buried the hunger artist, straw and all. Into
the cage they put a young panther. Even the most insensitive felt it refreshing
to see this wild creature leaping around the cage that had so long been dreary.
The panther was all right. The food he liked was brought to him without
hesitation by the attendants; he seemed not even to miss his freedom; his noble
body, furnished almost to the bursting point with all that it needed, seemed to
carry freedom around with it too; somewhere in his jaws it seemed to lurk; and
the joy of life streamed with such ardent passion from his throat that for the
onlookers it was not easy to stand the shock of it. But they braced themselves,
crowded around the cage, and did not ever want to move away.
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