The Seventh Cross

The Seventh Cross

The Seventh Cross (German: Das siebte Kreuz) is an novel by Anna Seghers, one of the better-known examples of German literature circa World War II. It was published first in the United States, in an abridged version, in September 1942 by Little, Brown and Company. Its publication was surrounded by a certain amount of fanfare; by the end of September, there were already plans for a comic strip version of The Seventh Cross, it having already been selected as a Book-of-the-Month Club book. According to Dorothy Rosenberg, who wrote the afterword for the 1987 Monthly Review Press edition, statistics indicate that 319,000 copies of The Seventh Cross were sold in the first twelve days alone, and the novel was printed in German, Russian, Portuguese, Yiddish and Spanish by 1943. A film version starring Spencer Tracy and produced by MGM premiered in 1944; a publicity stunt, in which MGM organized a pretend "manhunt" for a Tracy look-alike in seven cities for the public to take part in, accompanied the normal film promotions. The book was well received in Germany, and particularly in the East; the author, Seghers, was known to be a Communist, and some of the "heroic" or sympathetic characters in The Seventh Cross are also members of the Communist Party. The libretto of German composer Hans Werner Henze's Ninth Symphony is based on The Seventh Cross. There is a 1944 MGM film starring Spencer Tracey based on the book.

Genre: Drama, War
Year:
1944
1,064 Views

Frau Hedy Sauer:
I heard what he said.

Bruno Sauer:
Did you see the little rat slipping around? He tried to drag me into something.

Frau Hedy Sauer:
You've cut yourself. He was speaking of George Heisler, wasn't he?

Bruno Sauer:
How do I know?

Frau Hedy Sauer:
Who was he?

Bruno Sauer:
I never saw the fellow before.

Frau Hedy Sauer:
But he seemed to know what you had said to Heisler.

Bruno Sauer:
He might very well have been the Gestapo.

Frau Hedy Sauer:
He might very well have been sent by Heisler! You didn't even try to find out. You're a coward.

Bruno Sauer:
How could I be sure?

Frau Hedy Sauer:
You've been telling yourself for years that someday you would do something. You never really meant it. You've been fooling yourself, excusing your own weakness. Today you had your chance, and you didn't take it.

Bruno Sauer:
Hedy!

Frau Hedy Sauer:
You were afraid!

Bruno Sauer:
Hedy, please, why do you torture me? What's wrong between us?

Frau Hedy Sauer:
What do you think? When I left home to marry you, it was because everything there was repulsive to me. My father, my brothers, their way of living. I think sometimes of the plans you used to have. What's become of them? The things you used to say, the things you planned to do.

Bruno Sauer:
I can't help it. I don't dare to risk anything. My home, my family, you. I'm very much in love with you, Hedy.

Frau Hedy Sauer:
You've chosen the wrong way to keep me. I'd risk all this, all of it. It's no use to me now, because I've lost my respect for you. It's a shame. It shouldn't have happened.


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