The Clown (Mann Short Story)

"The Clown" or "The Joker" as it is usually translated in English (orig. German Der Bajazzo), is one of Thomas Mann's short stories which were collected in Little Herr Friedemann and later, after his death, in the collection Death in Venice and other Stories.

It is a satirical story about a man who wastes his whole life idling, but simply lives on the interest of his father's inheritance. When he was alive, his father had often told him that he 'was just a joker and would do nothing.' He views his inactivity initially with optimism, calling it "philosophical loneliness". In the end, he is no longer able to deny his loneliness for what it actually is. This makes itself known in a reunion with an old acquaintance who originally believes that he (the first-person narrator) has "arranged his life so comfortably" and that he is surely "the smarter of the two", but leaves town early upon seeing through his façade. He toys shortly with the idea of suicide but gives the thought up after noting that such an act would be too heroic for a clown. Instead, he laments that his life will continue in the same monotonous manner.

Thomas Mann
Novels
  • Buddenbrooks
  • Tristan
  • Tonio Kröger
  • Death in Venice
  • The Magic Mountain
  • Mario and the Magician
  • Joseph and His Brothers
  • Lotte in Weimar: The Beloved Returns
  • The Tables of the Law
  • Doctor Faustus
  • The Holy Sinner
  • The Black Swan
  • Confessions of Felix Krull
Short stories
  • "Little Herr Friedemann"
  • "The Clown"
Other works
  • The Coming Victory of Democracy
  • Listen, Germany!


Famous quotes containing the words clown and/or short:

    They tell us sometimes that if we had only kept quiet, all these desirable things would have come about of themselves. I am reminded of the Greek clown who, having seen an archer bring down a flying bird, remarked, sagely: “You might have saved your arrow, for the bird would anyway have been killed by the fall.”
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815–1902)

    Never mind if you fall far short of the thing you want to do,—encourage your effort. If no one else will say it to you, say it to yourself. “Not so bad.” It will make the next effort easier and better.
    Josephine Demott Robinson (1865–1948)