Władysław Moes

Władysław Gerard Jan Nepomuk Marya Moes (17 November 1900 – 17 December 1986 ) was a Polish nobleman and has been claimed as the inspiration for the character Tadzio in Thomas Mann’s novella Death in Venice.

Władysław Moes was born in the Moes Palace near Wierbka, in southern Poland. He was the second son of the six children of Aleksander Juliusz Moes (1856–1928), a large landowner, factory owner, and philanthropist, and his wife Countess Janina Miączyńska (1869–1946) Suchekomnaty Coat of Arms, and he was also the grandson of Christian August Moes (1810–1872), an important Polish industrialist of Dutch origins.[1]

In May 1911, on the advice of doctors, he spent a spring holiday at the Lido in Venice, in the Grand Hotel des Bains. There, he attracted the attention of the German writer Thomas Mann, who used him for the inspiration of Tadzio – a character of his novel Death in Venice, published in 1912.[2]

Katia Mann recalled that her husband's idea for the story came during a holiday at the Grand Hôtel des Bains in 1911:

All the details of the story... are taken from experience ... In the dining-room, on the very first day, we saw the Polish family, which looked exactly the way my husband described them: the girls were dressed rather stiffly and severely, and the very charming, beautiful boy of about 13 was wearing a sailor suit with an open collar and very pretty lacings. He caught my husband's attention immediately. This boy was tremendously attractive, and my husband was always watching him with his companions on the beach. He didn't pursue him through all of Venice—that he didn't do—but the boy did fascinate him, and he thought of him often...[3]

He was taught by private tutors and later studied at Saint Stanislaus Kostka's Gymnasium in Warsaw. In 1920 Moes was a volunteer uhlan in the Polish-Soviet War. Later he ran a landed estate and a horse farm in Udorz inherited from his father, who died in 1928. In 1935 he married a noblewoman - Anna Belina-Brzozowska (1911–1978) Belina coat of arms, and had two children, Aleksander (1936 - 1955) and Maria (born 1946). He was also the uncle of the Polish film and television actor Jerzy Moes.[2]

In 1939, after the German invasion of Poland, Moes was taken prisoner and sent to Oflag, where he spent almost six years. With the establishment of the communist regime in Poland in 1945, he was deprived of his entire property. He was forced to earn his living mainly as a translator and worked at the Iranian Embassy in Warsaw.[2]

In August 1965 Moes gave an interview to Andrzej Dołegowski, the Polish translator of Mann’s works, which was published in the German magazine Twen, revealing that he himself had been the inspiration for the writer’s character Tadzio in Death in Venice:

I am that boy! Yes, even then in Venice I was called Adzio or sometimes Władzio… But in the story I am named Tadzio… this is how the Master understood it… In the story I found everything described exactly, even my clothes, my behavior – good or bad – and the rough jokes I played on the sands with my friend.[4]
I was considered to be a very beautiful child and women admired and kissed me when I walked along the promenade. Some of them sketched and painted me. But in my memories all that seemed insignificant to me. I had those childlike negligent manners shown by pampered early matured children now and again. In Death in Venice this plot is much better narrated than I myself could ever do. The writer must have been highly impressed by my unconventional clothes and he described them without missing a detail: a striped linen suit and a red bow-tie as well as my favorite blue jacket with gold buttons.[5]

During the last years of his life Moes often stayed with his daughter Maria in France. He died in Warsaw and was buried in the graveyard of Pilica, in the Moes family plot.[6]

References

  1. http://www.jura-pilica.com/?1872-1874-aleksander-moes,34,
  2. 1 2 3 Gilbert Adair, The Real Tadzio (Short Books, 2001)
  3. Katia Mann, Unwritten Memories (1974)
  4. Donald Mitchel and Richard Wagner (editors), Benjamin Britten: Death in Venice (Cambridge University Press, 1987), p. 184
  5. Peter De Mendelssohn, Das Leben des Deutsches Schriftstellers - Thomas Mann, 2 (S. Fischer, 1996), p. 1426
  6. http://www.jura-pilica.com/?cmentarze,271#cmentarzswpiotra
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