Swiss Review 2/2020

Swiss Review / April 2020 / No.2 21 Literature ary was ready for printing by the time he left for Paris to open a gallery inMarch 1929. He also kept a diary of his stay by the River Seine, not only recounting his vain attempt to make it as a gallerist but also documenting the personal cri- sis he suffered as a result of his homosexuality, which he kept secret. Mettler’s liaisonwith a fascinating youngman is one of the most moving passages in the Paris diary – a journal that would remain unfinished after the author sud- denly died from blood poisoning on 12 September 1930 at the age of 25, leaving behind a considerable mountain of debt in the process. Inaugural publication 90 years later Mettler’s diarieswould never have found theirway into the public domain had they not been unearthed by distant re- lationDavid Streiff, the former head of the Federal Office of Culture. It was Streiffwho published them, commissioning historianAndréWeibel to produce an expertly edited edition. To the surprise of many, this forgotten young man has returned to prom- inence 90 years after his death with a book that not only depicts the America of that era just as vi- brantly as the Paris art scene, but is also quite visionary in many ways – Mettler’s foresight regard- ing technical advances such as avi- ation being one example. State- ments such as “You cannot be happy and know you’re happy at the same time” also reveal a re- markable depth of thought in someone so young. CHARLES LINSMAYER IS A LITERARY SCHOLAR AND JOURNALIST IN ZURICH CHARLES LINSMAYER “Americans are malleable to the point of naivety. They are docile and uncritical. You can lead themon amerry dance.” If you were unaware that these were the diary scribblings of a 22-year-old Swiss in 1927, you might mistake them for an astute remark about the current US president and his followers. Young man from a rich family KurtMettlerwas the youngman in question. Mettler hailed fromawealthy St. Gallen industrialist family. Hewas a very good cellist, possessed a doctorate in law, and had made a name for himself thanks to fast cars, skiing escapades and flying as a passenger on the world’s first air routes. Mettler quickly realised that diaries were the form of literary ex- pression to which he was most suited, viewing themas his “support system”, if not the central focus of his existence. He wanted to publish his “Tagebuch eines Einsamen” (Diary of a lonely soul) as early as 1927. However, it was not until he began travelling around the globe with his brother in the same year that the world properly opened up before him. Witness of his time Ready to share his musings with the wider public, Mettler saw himself as the chronicler of his era. He reported on a broad cross-section of social life in the USA in particular – where he portrayed fascinating people, described concerts featuring Furtwängler and Toscanini, and took an interest in early and contemporary art (with a view to opening an art gallery in Europe one day). His musings on the younger generation, of which he sawhimself as a fully paid-upmem- ber, are particularly worthy of note. “We are the new gen- eration, and it is up to us to think differently,” hewrote, add- ing that Plato, Spinoza and Schopenhauer were dilettantes in his opinion. “Did they invent anything absolute worth following?” Gallery owner in Paris Mettler returned to Switzerland via Japan, Korea and Rus- sia in 1928, but contracted amoebic dysentery along theway – an infection he found hard to shake off. His American di- A keen observer of late-1920s America Kurt Mettler died in 1930 aged 25, leaving behind a remarkable diary that remained hidden for many decades. “Women will understand neither the proper meaning of this diary nor its actual quality. But only because they will never dare to acknowledge anything without their husband’s permission. Essentially, they are the most capable of understanding the meaning and effect of this literary form, because they have a more immediate view of things com- pared to men.” (Kurt Mettler, 4 September 1927) BIBLIOGRAPHY: Kurt Mettler – “Tagebücher 1927–1930” (Diaries 1927–30); published and edited by André Weibel. Limmat Verlag, Zurich 2019, 1,040 pages, CHF 59.

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