The Return of Gustav Mahler
 (1915)  
 He has come home, the great exile of the past, returned
 in glory to the city that he, as an outcast, departed only
 a few years ago. In the same hall where formerly his compelling
 will exercised its demonic effect, his long-absent nature
 now takes on new spiritual form, resounding in the work.
 Nothing can restrain it, not opprobrium or rancour; irresistibly
 burgeoning with its unique qualities, feeling the purer for
 no longer being locked in struggle, it now fills and expands
 our inner world. No war, no event could hinder this elemental
 blossoming of his fame, and the same man who appeared to
 people here as something of an irritant and almost a monster
 has overnight become consoler and liberator. Pain and loss—
 his 
Kindertotenlieder express his spirit more powerfully than any
 others of the time, and who today does not wish to learn, with
 empathy, how sorrow transmogrifies itself through depth of
 feeling in his farewell song, the ‘Song of the Earth’? Never was
 Gustav Mahler so revitalized and inspired by this city as now,
 when he is far removed from us and the ungrateful city that
 abandoned him is his eternal homeland. Those who truly loved
 him were patiently awaiting this hour, but now that it has come
 it scarcely brings us joy. For while he was engaged in work, our
 desire was to witness his creations, see them come alive. And
 now that they have achieved renown, it is he himself we long
 for, the man who will not return.
 Because for us, an entire generation, he was far more than
 a musician, a master, a conductor, more than an artist: he was
 the unforgettable presence of our youth. To be young ultimately
 means to be conscious of the extraordinary, of some
 wondrously beautiful happening that transcends the narrow
 world of appearances, of a phenomenon, the fulfilment of a
 once-dreamt vision. And everything, admiration, enthusiasm,
 humility—they all stir up powers of devotion, of exuberance,
 they only seem so fiery and chaotic when concentrated in
 unfinished beings, burning deep within when they appear—
 recognized as such or intimated—in art, in love. And there is
 a certain grace in experiencing such fulfilment in art, in those
 days of premature, unspent love to observe something truly
 meaningful, yet free with the fullest flow of feeling. It happened
 to us. Anyone who has experienced those ten years of opera
 from Mahler’s youth has enriched his life in ways that cannot
 be measured in words. With the keen sense of impatience, we
 sensed from the outset the rare thing, the miracle he harboured,
 the demonic man, the rarest of all, one who isn’t entirely at
 one with creativity, but with something far more mysterious in
 its essence, possessing a distinctly natural power, the inspired
 element. There is nothing to distinguish it from the external,
 the influence it exerts constitutes its own singularity, something
 indescribable, which can only be compared to a certain magical
 arbitrariness of nature. It can be likened to the magnet;
 thousands of iron filings may cling to it. All are tragic. They
 know only how to plunge downwards, commanded by their
 inner weight, alien to all else and inactive. But there is one
 piece of iron, seemingly no brighter or richer than any of the
 rest, which inwardly retains a power, the power of stars or the
 furthest depths of the earth, that pulls all relatives together,
 weaves its own form and frees itself from the internal weight.
 What the magnet seizes it enlivens through its own power; if it
 can hold it long enough, its secret flows forth. It draws towards
 it kindred metals in order to enter them, dividing itself without
 weakening the whole: its very nature and instinct are effect. And
 this power—whether from the stars or the remotest depths of
 the earth—constitutes the will of the demonic man. Thousands
 mill around him, thousand upon thousand, each one rushing
 headlong into his own life, inherently tragic and inanimate.
 But he drags them towards himself, he fills the essence of the
 oblivious with his own will, his rhythm; he propagates himself
 in them by animating them. Through a kind of hypnosis, he
 forces them all to draw near, tensing their nerves in time with
 his own, wrenching them often painfully into his rhythm. He
 enslaves them, imposes his will on them, lends the willing something
 of the mystery of his force. It is precisely this demonic will
 that was in Mahler, a power which suppressed and resisted all
 opposition, but also one that inspired and enriched. About him
 was a molten sphere where everyone seemed to glow, always
 fiery, but working towards clarity. It was impossible to resist.
 They say that sometimes musicians tried, but his will was just
 too hot: all resistance simply melted. With unrivalled energy
 he transforms his entire world of singers, assistants, directors,
 musicians, moulding the chaotic interplay of hundreds of
 individuals into his single unit in the space of a mere three
 hours. He literally wrenches the will from them, he hammers,
 pounds and files their individual qualities, he drives them on,
 already they are aglow with fervour, moving inexorably into
 his rhythm, until the point when he has salvaged the unique
 from the ordinary, art from enterprise, until he is fulfilled in
 the work and the work is fulfilled in him.								
									Copyright © 2020 by Stefan Zweig. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.