How paradoxical was our time-experience!
In this connection we are reminded of Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain, which contains some very pointed psychological remarks.
Mann studies the spiritual development of people who are in an analogous psychological position,
i.e., tuberculosis patients in a sanatorium who also know no date for their release.
They experience a similar existence—without a future and without a goal.
One of the prisoners, who on his arrival marched with a long column of new inmates from the station to the camp,
told me later that he had felt as though he were marching at his own funeral.
His life had seemed to him absolutely without future.
He regarded it as over and done, as if he had already died.
This feeling of lifelessness was intensified by other causes: in time,
it was the limitlessness of the term of imprisonment which was most acutely felt;
in space, the narrow limits of the prison. Anything outside the barbed wire became remote—out of reach and, in a way, unreal.
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