raddled, squashed, downtrodden, shot full of holes. Mortars have mortared me to bits. I am a little crumbly, decaying, yes, yes. I am sinking and drying up a little. I am a bit scalded and scorched, yes, yes. Thatâs what it does to you. Thatâs life. I am not old, not in the least, certainly I am not eighty, by no means, but I am not sixteen any more either. Quite definitely I am a bit old and used up. Thatâs what it does to you. I am decaying a little, and I am crumbling, peeling a little. Thatâs life. Am I a little bit over the hill? Hmm! Maybe. But that doesnât make me eighty, not by a long way. I am very tough, I can vouch for that. I am no longer young, but I am not old yet, definitely not. I am aging, fading a little, but that doesnât matter; I am not yet altogether old, though I am probably a little nervous and over the hill. Itâs natural that one should crumble a bit with the passage of time, but that doesnât matter. I am not very nervous, to be sure, I just have a few grouches. Sometimes I am a bit weird and grouchy, but that doesnât mean I am altogether lost, I hope. I donât propose to hope that I am lost, for I repeat, I am uncommonly hard and tough. I am holding out and holding on. I am fairly fearless. But nervous I am, a little, undoubtedly I am, very probably I am, possibly I am a little nervous. I hope that I am a little nervous. No, I donât hope so, one doesnât hope for such things, but I am afraid so, yes, afraid so. Fear is more appropriate here than hope, no doubt aboutit. But I certainly am not fear-stricken, that I might be nervous, quite definitely not. I have grouches, but I am not afraid of the grouches. They inspire me with no fear at all. âYou are nervous,â someone might tell me, and I would reply cold-bloodedly, âMy dear sir, I know that quite well, I know that I am a little worn out and nervous.â And I would smile, very nobly and coolly, while saying this, which would perhaps annoy the other person a little. A person who refrains from getting annoyed is not yet lost. If I do not get annoyed about my nerves, then undoubtedly I still have good nerves, itâs clear as daylight, and illuminating. It dawns on me that I have grouches, that I am a little nervous, but it dawns on me in equal measure that I am cold-blooded, which makes me uncommonly glad, and that I am blithe in spirit, although I am aging a little, crumbling and fading, which is quite natural and something I therefore understand very well. âYou are nervous,â someone might come up to me and say. âYes, I am uncommonly nervous,â would be my reply, and secretly I would laugh at the big lie. âWe are all a little nervous,â I would perhaps say, and laugh at the big truth. If a person can still laugh, he is not yet entirely nervous; if a person can accept a truth, he is not yet entirely nervous; anyone who can keep calm when he hears of some distress is not yet entirely nervous. Or if someone came up to me and said: âOh, you are totally nervous,â then quite simply I would reply in nice polite terms: âOh, I am totally nervous, I know I am.â And the matter would be closed. Grouches, grouches, one must have them, and one must have the courage to live with them. Thatâs the nicest way to live. Nobody should be afraid of his little bit of weirdness. Fear is altogether foolish. âYou are very nervous!â
âYes, come by all means and calmly tell me so! Thank you!â
That, or something like it, is what Iâd say, having my gentle and courteous bit of fun. Let man be courteous, warm, and kind, andif someone tells him heâs totally nervous, still thereâs no need at all for him to believe it.
1916
The Walk
I have to report that one fine morning, I do not know any more for sure what time it was, as the desire to take a walk came over me, I put my hat on my head, left my writing room, or room of