This article will cover a few more incidents
of particular interest. It describes some minor accidents and bizarre and
offensive behaviour by random strangers that ruined Strindberg’s enjoyment when
he visited a café and a restaurant.
After describing one accident, Strindberg assures
the reader that he is speaking the truth. I believe that Strindberg is indeed telling
the truth in his accounts of all these incidents. You couldn’t make all this up!
The small details are very convincing, and once again there are some familiar
elements in his stories.
Strindberg and the café incidents
Not long after he had performed his evil
action, Strindberg experienced a string of small but very annoying and
sometimes amusing - although not to him - incidents every time he went to a
certain Paris café.
Strindberg’s main pleasure in life at the time was to sit with a glass of absinthe, a cigarette and some newspapers under a chestnut tree on the terrace of a café that he favoured. He would go in the early evening to relax for an hour or so after finishing his day’s work; he favoured a particular spot that he thought of as his place. Then it all started to go wrong:
Strindberg’s main pleasure in life at the time was to sit with a glass of absinthe, a cigarette and some newspapers under a chestnut tree on the terrace of a café that he favoured. He would go in the early evening to relax for an hour or so after finishing his day’s work; he favoured a particular spot that he thought of as his place. Then it all started to go wrong:
“...this hour of a visionary happiness, for
from this evening onwards it is disturbed by a series of annoyances which
cannot be attributed to chance. ... I find my place, which has been reserved
for me daily for nearly two years, occupied; all the other chairs are also
taken. Deeply annoyed, I have to go to another café.”
He returned the next day, only for this to
happen:
“My old corner ... is again vacant, and I am
again under my chestnut behind the Marshal, feeling contented, even happy. My
well-concocted absinthe is there, my cigarette lighted, and
the Temps spread out.
Then a drunken man passes; a hateful-looking
fellow, whose mischievous, contemptuous air annoys me. His face is red, his
nose blue, his eyes malicious. I taste my absinthe, and feel happy not to be
like this sot.... There! I don't know how, but my glass is upset and empty.
Without sufficient money to order another, I pay for this and leave the café.
Certainly it was again the Evil One who played me this trick.”