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A bold translation of Nobel Prize-winner Herman Hesse's most inspirational and beloved work in a Penguin Classics deluxe edition
 Hesse's famous and influential novel,�Siddartha, is perhaps the most important and compelling moral allegory our troubled century has produced. Integrating Eastern and Western spiritual traditions with psychoanalysis and philosophy, this strangely simple tale, written with a deep and moving empathy for humanity, has touched the lives of millions since its original publication in 1922. Set in India,�Siddhartha�is the story of a young Brahmin's search for ultimate reality after meeting with the Buddha. His quest takes him from a life of decadence to asceticism, through the illusory joys of sensual love with a beautiful courtesan, and of wealth and fame, to the painful struggles with his son and the ultimate wisdom of renunciation. This new translation by award-winning translator Joachim Neugroschel includes an introduction by Hesse biographer Ralph Freedman.
For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.
- Sales Rank: #57011 in Books
- Published on: 2002-12-31
- Released on: 2002-12-31
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.37" h x .49" w x 5.71" l, .49 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 176 pages
 Review 
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 About the Author 
 In the 1960s, especially in the United States, the novels of�Hermann Hesse�were widely embraced by young readers who found in his protagonists a reflection of their own search for meaning in a troubled world. Hesse’s rich allusions to world mythologies, especially those of Asia, and his persistent theme of the individual striving for integrity in opposition to received opinions and mass culture appealed to a generation in upheaval and in search of renewed values.
Born in southern Germany in 1877, Hesse came from a family of missionaries, scholars, and writers with strong ties to India. This early exposure to the philosophies and religions of Asia—filtered and interpreted by thinkers thoroughly steeped in the intellectual traditions and currents of modern Europe—provided Hesse with some of the most pervasive elements in his short stories and novels, especially�Siddhartha�(1922) and�Journey to the East�(1932).
Hesse concentrated on writing poetry as a young man, but his first successful book was a novel,Peter Camenzind�(1904). The income it brought permitted him to settle with his wife in rural Switzerland and write full-time. By the start of World War I in 1914, Hesse had produced several more novels and had begun to write the considerable number of book reviews and articles that made him a strong influence on the literary culture of his time.
During the war, Hesse was actively involved in relief efforts. Depression, criticism for his pacifist views, and a series of personal crises—combined with what he referred to as the “war psychosis” of his times—led Hesse to undergo psychoanalysis with J. B. Lang, a student of Carl Jung. Out of these years came�Demian�(1919), a novel whose main character is torn between the orderliness of bourgeois existence and the turbulent and enticing world of sensual experience. This dichotomy is prominent in Hesse’s subsequent novels, including�Siddhartha�(1922),�Steppenwolf�(1927), and�Narcissus and Goldmund�(1930). Hesse worked on his magnum opus,�The Glass Bead Game�(1943), for twelve years. This novel was specifically cited when he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1946. Hesse died at his home in Switzerland in 1962.
Calling his life a series of “crises and new beginnings,” Hesse clearly saw his writing as a direct reflection of his personal development and his protagonists as representing stages in his own evolution. In the 1950s, Hesse described the dominant theme of his work: “From Camenzind to Steppenwolf and Josef Knecht [protagonist of�The Glass Bead Game], they can all be interpreted as a defense (sometimes also as an SOS) of the personality, of the individual self.”�
Joachim Neugroschel�has won three PEN translation awards and the French-American translation prize. He has also�translated Thomas Mann's�Death in Venice�and Sacher-Masoch's�Venus in Furs, both for Penguin Classics.�He lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Ralph Freedman, Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature at Princeton University, is acclaimed for his biographies�Hermann Hesse: Pilgrim of Crisis, and�Life of a Poet: Rainer Maria Rilke 
 Excerpt. � Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 
 Chapter 1
    The Son of the Brahmin
    In the shade of the house, in the sunlight on the riverbank where the   boats were moored, in the shade of the sal wood and the shade of the   fig tree, Siddhartha grew up, the Brahmin’s handsome son, the young   falcon, together with his friend Govinda, the son of a Brahmin.   Sunlight darkened his fair shoulders on the riverbank as he bathed,   performed the holy ablutions, the holy sacrifices. Shade poured into   his dark eyes in the mango grove as he played with the other boys,   listened to his mother’s songs, performed the holy sacrifices, heard   the teachings of his learned father and the wise men’s counsels.   Siddhartha had long since begun to join in the wise men’s counsels, to   practice with Govinda the art of wrestling with words, to practice with   Govinda the art of contemplation, the duty of meditation. He had   mastered Om, the Word of Words, learned to speak it soundlessly into   himself while drawing a breath, to speak it out soundlessly as his   breath was released, his soul collected, brow shining with his mind’s   clear thought. He had learned to feel Atman’s presence at the core of   his being, inextinguishable, one with the universe.
    Joy leaped into his father’s heart at the thought of his son, this   studious boy with his thirst for knowledge; he envisioned him growing   up to be a great wise man and priest, a prince among Brahmins.
    Delight leaped into his mother’s breast when she beheld him, watched   him as he walked and sat and stood, Siddhartha, the strong handsome boy   walking on slender legs, greeting her with flawless grace.
    Love stirred in the hearts of the young Brahmin girls when Siddhartha   walked through the streets of their town with his radiant brow, his   regal eye, his narrow hips.
    But none of them loved him more dearly than Govinda, his friend, the   Brahmin’s son. He loved Siddhartha’s eyes and his sweet voice, loved   the way he walked and the flawless grace of his movements; he loved all   that Siddhartha did and all he said and most of all he loved his mind,   his noble, passionate thoughts, his ardent will, his noble calling.   Govinda knew: This would be no ordinary Brahmin, no indolent pen pusher   overseeing the sacrifices, no greedy hawker of incantations, no vain,   shallow orator, no wicked, deceitful priest, and no foolish, good sheep   among the herd of the multitude. Nor did he, Govinda, have any   intention of becoming such a creature, one of the tens of thousands of   ordinary Brahmins. His wish was to follow Siddhartha, the beloved,   splendid one. And if Siddhartha should ever become a god, if he were   ever to take his place among the Radiant Ones, Govinda wished to follow   him, as his friend, his companion, his servant, his spear bearer, his   shadow.
    Thus was Siddhartha beloved by all. He brought them all joy, filled   them with delight.
    To himself, though, Siddhartha brought no joy, gave no delight.   Strolling along the rosy pathways of the fig garden, seated in the   blue-tinged shade of the Grove of Contemplation, washing his limbs in   the daily expiatory baths, performing sacrifices in the deep-shadowed   mango wood, with his gestures of flawless grace, he was beloved by all,   a joy to all, yet was his own heart bereft of joy. Dreams assailed him,   and troubled thoughts—eddying up from the waves of the river, sparkling   down from the stars at night, melting out of the sun’s rays; dreams   came to him, and a disquiet of the soul wafting in the smoke from the   sacrifices, murmuring among the verses of the Rig-Veda, welling up in   the teachings of the old Brahmins.
    Siddhartha had begun to harbor discontent. He had begun to feel that   his father’s love and the love of his mother, even the love of his   friend Govinda, would not always and forever suffice to gladden him,   content him, sate him, fulfill him. He had begun to suspect that his   venerable father and his other teachers, all wise Brahmins, had already   given him the richest and best part of their wisdom, had already poured   their plenty into his waiting vessel, yet the vessel was not full: His   mind was not content, his soul not at peace, his heart restless. The   ablutions were good, but they were only water; they could not wash away   sin, could not quench his mind’s thirst or dispel his heart’s fear. The   sacrifices and the invocations of the gods were most excellent—but was   this all? Did the sacrifices bring happiness? And what of the gods? Was   it really Prajapati who had created the world? Was it not rather Atman,   He, the Singular, the One and Only? Weren’t the gods mere shapes,   creations like you and me, subject to time, transitory? And was it then   good, was it proper, was it meaningful, a noble act, to sacrifice to   the gods? To whom else should one sacrifice, to whom else show   devotion, if not to Him, the Singular, Atman? And where was Atman to be   found, where did He reside, where did His eternal heart lie beating?   Where else but within oneself, in the innermost indestructible core   each man carries inside him. But where, where was this Self, this   innermost, utmost thing? It was not flesh and bone, it was not thought   and not consciousness, at least according to the wise men’s teachings.   Where was it then, where? To penetrate to this point, to reach the   Self, oneself, Atman—could there be any other path worth seeking? Yet   this was a path no one was showing him; it was a path no one knew, not   his father, not the teachers and wise men, not the holy songs intoned   at the sacrifices! They knew everything, these Brahmins and their holy   books, everything, and they had applied themselves to everything, more   than everything: to the creation of the world, the origins of speech,   of food, of inhalation and exhalation; to the orders of the senses, the   deeds of the gods—they knew infinitely many things—but was there value   in knowing all these things without knowing the One, the Only thing,   that which was important above all else, that was, indeed, the sole   matter of importance?
    To be sure, many verses in the holy books, above all the Upanishads of   the Sama-Veda, spoke of this innermost, utmost thing: splendid verses.   “Your soul is the entire world” was written there, and it was written   as well that in sleep, the deepest sleep, man entered the innermost   core of his being and dwelt in Atman. There was glorious wisdom in   these verses; all the knowledge of the wisest men was collected here in   magic words, pure as the honey collected by bees. It was not to be   disregarded, this massive sum of knowledge that had been collected here   by countless generations of wise Brahmins.
    But where were the Brahmins, where the priests, where the wise men or   penitents who had succeeded not merely in knowing this knowledge but in   living it? Where was the master who had been able to transport his own   being-at-home-in-Atman from sleep to the waking realm, to life, to all   his comings and goings, his every word and deed?
    Siddhartha knew a great many venerable Brahmins, above all his father,   a pure, learned, utterly venerable man. Worthy of admiration was his   father, still and regal his bearing, his life pure, his words full of   wisdom; fine and noble thoughts resided in his brow. But even he, who   was possessed of such knowledge, did he dwell in bliss, did he know   peace? Was not he too only a seeker, a man tormented by thirst? Was he   not compelled to drink again and again from the holy springs, a thirsty   man drinking in the sacrifices, the books, the dialogues of the   Brahmins? Why must he, who was without blame, wash away sin day after   day, labor daily to cleanse himself, each day anew? Was not Atman   within him? Did not the ancient source of all springs flow within his   own heart? This was what must be found, the fountainhead within one’s   own being; you had to make it your own! All else was searching, detour,   confusion.
    Such was the nature of Siddhartha’s thoughts; this was his thirst, this   his sorrow.
    Often he recited to himself the words of a Chandogya Upanishad:   “Verily, the name of the Brahman is Satyam; truly, he who knows this   enters each day into the heavenly world.” It often seemed near at hand,   this heavenly world, but never once had he succeeded in reaching it, in   quenching that final thirst. And of all the wise and wisest men he knew   and whose teachings he enjoyed, not a single one had succeeded in   reaching it, this heavenly world; not one had fully quenched that   eternal thirst.
    “Govinda,” Siddhartha said to his friend. “Govinda, beloved one, come   under the banyan tree with me; let us practice samadhi.”
    To the banyan they went and sat down beneath it, Siddhartha here and   Govinda at a distance of twenty paces. As he sat down, ready to speak   the Om, Siddhartha murmured this verse:
    “Om is the bow; the arrow is soul.
    Brahman is the arrow’s mark;
    Strike it with steady aim.”
    When the usual time for the meditation exercise had passed, Govinda   arose. Evening had come; it was time to begin the ablutions of the   eventide. He called Siddhartha’s name; Siddhartha gave no answer.   Siddhartha sat rapt, his eyes fixed unmoving upon a far distant point;   the tip of his tongue stuck out from between his teeth; he seemed not   to be breathing. Thus he sat, cloaked in samadhi, thinking Om, his soul   an arrow on its way to Brahman.
    One day, Samanas passed through Siddhartha’s town: ascetic pilgrims,   three gaunt lifeless men, neither old nor young, with bloody,   dust-covered shoulders, all but naked, singed by the sun, shrouded in   isolation, foreign to the world and hostile to it, strangers and   wizened jackals among men. The hot breath of air that followed them   bore the scent of silent passion, a duty that meant destruction, the   merciless eradication of ego.
    In the evening, when the hour of contemplation had passed, Siddhartha   said to Govinda, “Tomorrow morning, my friend, Siddhartha will go to   the Samanas. He will become a Samana.”
    Govinda turned pale when he heard these words and saw in his friend’s   impassive face a resolve as unwavering as an arrow shot from the bow.   At once, with a single glance, Govinda realized: Now it is beginning,   now Siddhartha is on his way, now his destiny is beginning to bud and,   along with it, mine as well. And he turned as pale as a dried-out   banana peel.
    “Oh, Siddhartha,” he cried, “will your father permit this?”
    Siddhartha glanced over at him like a man awakening. Swift as an arrow   he read Govinda’s soul, read the fear, read the devotion.
    “Oh, Govinda,” he said softly, “let us not squander words. Tomorrow at   daybreak I begin the life of a Samana. Speak no more of it.”
    Siddhartha went into the room where his father was seated upon a mat   made of bast fiber; he came up behind him and remained standing there   until his father felt there was someone behind him. “Is that you,   Siddhartha?” the Brahmin said. “Then say what you have come here to   say.”
    Said Siddhartha, “With your permission, my father. I have come to tell   you that it is my wish to leave your house tomorrow and join the   ascetics. I must become a Samana. May my father not be opposed to my   wish.”
    The Brahmin was silent and remained silent so long that the stars   drifted in the small window and changed their shape before the silence   in the room reached its end. Mute and motionless stood the son with his   arms crossed, mute and motionless upon his mat sat the father, and the   stars moved across the sky. Then the father said, “It is not fitting   for a Brahmin to utter sharp, angry words. But my heart is filled with   displeasure. I do not wish to hear this request from your lips a second   time.”
    Slowly the Brahmin rose to his feet. Siddhartha stood in silence with   his arms crossed.
    “Why do you wait here?” the father asked.
    “You know why I wait,” Siddhartha replied.
    Full of displeasure, the father left the room; full of displeasure, he   went to his bed and lay down.
    An hour later, as no sleep would enter his eyes, the Brahmin got up,   paced back and forth, and went out of the house. He looked through the   small window of the room and saw Siddhartha standing there, his arms   crossed, unmoving. The light cloth of his tunic was shimmering pale.   His heart full of disquiet, the father went back to bed.
    An hour later, as no sleep would yet enter his eyes, the Brahmin got up   once more, paced back and forth, and went out of the house. The moon   had risen. He looked through the window into the room; there stood   Siddhartha, unmoving, his arms crossed, moonlight gleaming on his bare   shins. His heart full of apprehension, the father returned to bed.
    An hour later, and again two hours later, he went out and looked   through the small window to see Siddhartha standing there: in the   moonlight, in the starlight, in the darkness. He went again from hour   to hour, in silence, looked into the room, and saw his son standing   there unmoving, and his heart filled with anger, with disquiet, with   trepidation, with sorrow.
    And in the last hour of night before day began, he got up once more,   went into the room, and saw the youth standing there; he looked tall to   him and like a stranger.
    “Siddhartha,” he said, “why do you wait here?”
    “You know why.”
    “Will you remain standing here, waiting, until day comes, noon comes,   evening comes?”
    “I will remain standing here, waiting.”
    “You will grow tired, Siddhartha.”
    “I will grow tired.”
    “You will fall asleep, Siddhartha.”
    “I will not fall asleep.”
    “You will die, Siddhartha.”
    “I will die.”
    “And you would rather die than obey your father?”
    “Siddhartha has always obeyed his father.”
    “So you will give up your plan?”
    “Siddhartha will do as his father instructs him.”
    The first light of day fell into the room. The Brahmin saw that   Siddhartha’s knees were trembling quietly. In Siddhartha’s face he saw   no trembling; his eyes gazed into the distance straight before him. The   father realized then that Siddhartha was no longer with him in the   place of his birth. His son had already left him behind.
    The father touched Siddhartha’s shoulder.
    “You will go,” he said. “Go to the forest and be a Samana. If you find   bliss in the forest, come and teach it to me. If you find   disappointment, return to me and we will once more sacrifice to the   gods side by side. Now go and kiss your mother; tell her where you are   going. It is time for me to go to the river and begin my first   ablutions.”
    He took his hand from his son’s shoulder and went out. Siddhartha   lurched to one side when he tried to walk. Forcing his limbs into   submission, he bowed before his father and went to find his mother to   do as his father had instructed.
    In the first light of dawn, as he was slowly leaving the town on his   stiff legs, a shadow rose up beside the last hut, a shadow that had   been crouching there and now joined the pilgrim: Govinda.
    “You came,” said Siddhartha, and smiled.
    “I came,” Govinda said. 
Most helpful customer reviews
103 of 105 people found the following review helpful.
 Masterpiece of western literature 
 By Kedar Deshpande 
Siddhartha is both a western and eastern tale. Though it was written by a westerner, it has the soul and power of an ancient eastern myth. It is at once a timeless story and one that the reader will wish to continually revisit at different phases in his or her life.
Hesse does a remarkable job in capturing the tone, cadence and moral complexity of ancient Indian religious stories. His "revisionist" take on the life of Buddha is at once fresh and familiar to anyone who has read the sermons of the Buddha or who has studied ancient Hinduism and Buddhism. The themes of self-doubt, denial, asceticism and spiritual rejuvenation are both profoundly and cleverly handled in Hesse's superb narrative. In many ways, this is a book that serves as a summation, and improvement on, all of the religious texts one has read. The fictional aspect allows Hesse to interweave common literary devices, such as heroic journeys and coming-of-age revelations, to make the text, as a whole, much stronger and more impacting than a dry sermon.
Siddhartha's narrative works as a cycle, with each chapter offering commentary on the vices and victories of mankind and the ultimate futility of the material world. Like the river that Siddhartha comes to love, the book flows, and never missteps or hesitates in reaching remarkable insights into the nature and philosophy of humanity.
This is a book that will stay with the reader for a lifetime. Its simple structure belies a greater complexity; be sure that this book leaves the reader with no easy answers, but it is sure to inspire thought and joy.
*A note on translations:
-For readability, flow and consistency, I find the Joachim Neugroschel translation to be the best of the many options. It never feels forced or awkward and the introduction by Ralph Freedman is also a wonderful asset to understanding the importance of the story. Neugroschel seems to best capture the ebbing German of Hesse's original, while also capturing the tone of an Indian sermon.
-The Sherab Chodzin Kohn translation is also well-done, though I find it slightly overstated in certain parts.
-The oldest translation, by Hilda Rosner, is the most commonly available version, though I find it to be clunky, awkward and halting. Avoid it, if possible.
-A newer translation by Susan Bernofsky has received good reviews, but I have yet to read it.
-Finally, two low-grade translations by Applebaum and Edwards should be avoided.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
 Good but not Wow 
 By Reham 
It's a good book but not as profound as I had hoped. There are a lot of spelling mistakes in the book which makes it a bit annoying and there's a lot of repetition. But, overall it's o.k.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
 Handsome Edition Fun Addition to Your Library 
 By Bill Gallagher 
Maybe I'm a  bit slow on the uptake, but when I first saw the Drop Cap series I was confused about what the point was. In case you're wondering too, it's a handsome way to organize your library--yes, your physical library (you'll notice no digital edition here.) And the assumption is to choose books that every reader would want in their library. Now that I get it, it's a clever idea well executed.
That said, I have some doubts about some of the Penguin choices for letters, but NOT for this book. Siddhartha is one of many favorite books of all time. I have read or listened to it at least three times. Happily, Penguin has chosen an excellent translation, which flows well, is consistent, lyrical, and gets the wisdom of Hesse's words. I haven't read all the translations, but I'm happy to report Joachim Neugroschel's as an excellent one.
So if you're looking to organize your library in a fun way or don't own a copy of Siddhartha, this is an excellent edition to get. And if not this edition, if you haven't already, do yourself a favor and read Siddhartha.
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