Lviv. At the German consulate in ul. Ossolińskich 4, Bruno Schulz receives a transit visa allowing him to travel through Germany. Probably on the same day, starting his journey to Paris, he goes by afternoon train to Warsaw.
Schulz’s initial plan, about which Romana Halpern* wrote in May, to travel to Paris via Italy (with a stop in Venice) was not fulfilled. Although he did not want to (“it would have depressed me”1), the writer had to cross the territory of the Third Reich on his way to France2. To this end, he applied for a transit visa, which was issued to him by the German consulate in Lviv, transformed after Anschluss from an Austrian post. It was temporarily managed by counsellor Hans Forner, “still employed at the Austrian honorary consulate”3. Schulz obtained the visa without any problem4. It had the number 3527 and allowed for two trips through Germany until August 28, 1938. The cost of it was 5 zlotys and 40 groszy. In the “purpose of departure” column, “transit” was written5.
Later that day, at 3:22 pm, Schulz got on a train that was supposed to take him to Warsaw. He got there at 10:23 pm6. (sr) (transl. mw)