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In this intimate diary, a young pupil of the enigmatic Benjamenta Institute records his daily life with wry honesty. The school offers little formal teaching; instead, the boys are drilled in patience and obedience, lessons that feel more like a rehearsal for insignificance than preparation for the world. He dreams of wealth, of riding in hansom cabs and spending money, even as his classmates—especially the aloof Kraus— embody a quiet, self‑satisfied resignation. The narrator’s voice oscillates between sardonic humor and a lingering sense of being a “tiny zero” in a future that seems predetermined.
The only real authority comes in the form of Miss Lisa Benjamenta, the institute head’s sister, who commands the class with a small white baton and a strict ritual. Her sparse lessons revolve around a single, endlessly repeated question: how should a boy behave? Through his observations of the school’s absurd routines and his own puzzling inner conflicts, the diary captures the strange blend of confinement and fleeting dignity that defines his early adolescence.
Language
de
Duration
~4 hours (265K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jana Srna and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2008-01-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1878–1956
A quietly original Swiss writer in the German language, he turned ordinary walks, small jobs, and passing thoughts into fiction that feels light on its feet and unexpectedly deep. Once admired by writers like Kafka and Hesse, his work has grown into a lasting touchstone of modern literature.
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