Caspar Hauser; oder, Die Trägheit des Herzens, Roman

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Caspar Hauser; oder, Die Trägheit des Herzens, Roman

by Jakob Wassermann

DE·~14 hours

Chapters

Description

In the summer of 1828 a bewildering rumor spreads through Nürnberg: a lone teenager, barely able to speak, is being held in a tower of the city’s old castle. He moves with the tentative steps of a child learning to walk, eyes that seem to shy away from light, and a habit of clutching a tiny wooden horse. The townspeople swarm the stone steps, half‑amused and half‑terrified, trying to decipher the strange gestures of a creature that refuses ordinary food and answers questions with only fragmented sounds.

When the boy is finally taken from his prison to the estate of a cavalry officer, his fragile condition and mute demeanor deepen the mystery. Doctors, soldiers, and curious locals attempt to probe his past, each encounter revealing more about his isolation than about his origins. The novel follows the delicate balance between compassion and exploitation, inviting listeners to contemplate what it means to be human when language fails and the heart remains stubbornly inert.

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Details

Language

de

Duration

~14 hours (841K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Markus Brenner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2008-06-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Jakob Wassermann

Jakob Wassermann

1873–1934

Known for psychological novels that explored identity, conscience, and the pressures of society, this German writer became one of the most widely read authors of his time. His best-known book, "Caspar Hauser or The Inertia of the Heart," helped secure his place in early 20th-century European literature.

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