![]() Goldmund comes upon a beautiful statue in a chapel that inspires him to track down the artist, who teaches him to carve. He meets a con man named Viktor who teaches him tricks of getting along as a vagrant, but when Viktor tries to rob and strangle Goldmund, he kills him in self-defense. He accepts their love indiscriminately and his original innocence eventually changes into the wiliness of the serial seducer. A handsome young man, he is a favorite among women, many of them the wives of villagers that he encounters on his travels. The young woman soon returns to her husband and years of wandering begin for Goldmund. A sexual encounter with a young village woman cements this decision, and a few years after his arrival at the cloister, Goldmund bids Narcissus goodbye and begins his life in the wider world. With this understanding comes a flood of remembrance, followed by a conviction that he must emulate the ways of his mother, who was open to romance and excitement. With the help of Narcissus, Goldmund realizes that he has blocked out memories of his mother. In a hesitating fashion, Narcissus and Goldmund become friends, and the prescient novice helps the boy to recognize that his father is the one who wants him to become a monk, to expiate the sins of his mother, who ran away from the family. He immediately develops admiration for both Narcissus as an intellectual and for the cloister's leader, Abbot Daniel, as a person of intense goodness and spirituality. ![]() ![]() Goldmund is brought to the cloister by his father, who wants him to become a monk, which the boy also believes will be his future. He is a brilliant scholar with a gift for making keen, intuitive analyses of others and of what their futures might be. Apparently in the medieval period, Narcissus is a novice at a cloister called Mariabronn. Narcissus is the first of the two title characters to be introduced. The novel takes the form of an extended parable, where the settings are generic rather than named and many of the characters represent specific qualities or modes of living. Hermann Hesse's Narcissus and Goldmund, first published in 1930, is the classic tale of two best friends, a monk and a wanderer, whose lives come together, diverge, and reunite over the years.
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