Tuesday, August 25, 2009

The 'Third Man' Phenomenon


Some of you have seen the excellent movie The Third Man (1950). Well, here's a "third man" of a different sort: Today's Wall Street Journal carries a review of an interesting new book called The Third Man Factor:

In 1953, Austrian mountaineer Herman Buhl became the first person to climb Nanga Parbat in the ­Himalayas—at 26,660 feet, the ninth tallest peak in the world. He climbed by himself and not far from the summit was forced to spend the night out in the open without a sleeping bag or tent. It was an agonizing ­bivouac, but Buhl survived—in part, he later wrote, ­because he sensed that he shared the ordeal with a ­companion. "I had an extraordinary feeling," he wrote, "that I was not alone."

Accounts of experiencing a supportive presence in extreme situations—sometimes called the "third-man phenomenon"—are common in mountaineering ­literature. In 1933, Frank Smythe made it to within a 1,000 feet of the summit of Mount Everest before ­turning around. On the way down, he stopped to eat a mint cake, cutting it in half to share with . . . someone who wasn't there but who had seemed to be his ­partner all day. Again on Nanga Parbat, on a 1970 climb during which his brother died, Reinhold Messner ­recalled being accompanied by a companion who ­offered ­wordless comfort and encouragement.

In "The Third Man Factor," John Geiger, a fellow at the University of Toronto, presents many accounts of such experiences, and not only from climbers. Among those who have felt a ghostly companionship he cites Charles Lindbergh on his solo flight across the ­Atlantic in 1927 and the last man to walk out of the South Tower of the World Trade ­Center before it ­collapsed on 9/11.
read on at WSJ...

3 comments:

  1. OK, I see that another man is involved but isn't he only the second man or am I missing the real second man?

    ReplyDelete
  2. TS Eliot's epic poem "The Waste Land" (1922) describes an arduous journey through a desolate land. Along the way, his narrator has a haunting experience: He encounters a mysterious, phantasmal being - a "Third" - as he describes it: "Who is the third who walks always beside you? When I count, there are only you and I together."

    The "second man" represents the man you can see, whereas the "third man" represents the presence you can't see. Some chalk it up to the Guardian Angel.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.