Scottish Daily Mail

I was Hitler’s best friend

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QUESTION

What became of Adolf Hitler’s teenage friend August Kubizek?

August KubizeK met Adolf Hitler in 1904 when the teenagers were competing for standing room at the opera in Linz. the young Hitler was an avid fan of Wagnerian opera, which he attended at every opportunit­y.

For the next four years, the pair were inseparabl­e. ‘i lived side by side with Adolf,’ said Kubizek.

‘in these decisive years, when he grew from a boy of 15 to a young man, Adolf confided to me things that he had told to no one, not even his mother.’

When Kubizek wanted to study music rather than the family trade of upholstery, Hitler persuaded his friend’s father to allow him to go to Vienna. in 1908, the two young men shared a small room on No. 29 stumpergas­se.

A fracture in their friendship was caused when Kubizek was admitted to the Academy of Music while Hitler was twice rejected by the Academy of Fine Arts, a blow that would affect him all his life.

According to Kubizek, Hitler took the rejection extremely badly: ‘Choking with his catalogue of hates, he would pour his fury over everything, against mankind in general, who did not understand him, who did not appreciate him and by whom he was persecuted and cheated.’

Hitler became increasing­ly difficult to live with. He flew into a jealous fury when Kubizek brought a girl back to their room. On November 20, 1908, Kubizek returned home to No.29 stumpergas­se to find that Hitler had disappeare­d, leaving no forwarding address.

Kubizek passed his exams and became conductor of the orchestra of the Austrian town of Marburg.

in 1914, he married Anna Funke and they had three sons: Augustin, Karl Maria and Rudolf.

At the outbreak of World War i, he joined Austro-Hungarian infantry Regiment No. 2. Wounded in 1915 fighting the Russians on the galician front, he was not fit to return to action until 1918.

After the war, Kubizek found little work as a musician. He briefly conducted a sixpiece band in a Vienna cinema to provide the ‘musical illustrati­on’ for silent films.

He found little satisfacti­on in this, so took a job in the municipal council of eferding, not far from his birthplace.

in 1933, Kubizek sent Hitler a letter congratula­ting him on becoming Chancellor of germany. Five years later, in April, 1938, they met again after 30 years of separation.

the Fuhrer, who had just annexed Austria, offered his old friend a job as a conductor under his powerful patronage, but Kubizek declined.

Hitler insisted on financing Kubizek’s sons’ education at the Anton bruckner Conservato­ry in Linz and hired him to write two short propaganda booklets about their early life.

Kubizek remained in local government in eferding, except for a short time when detained by u.s. Forces in 1945. When asked why he hadn’t killed Hitler, he replied: ‘because he was my friend.’

His book, the Young Hitler i Knew, was published in 1953, and Kubizek retired as head of the council the following year. He died in 1956, aged 68.

Adam Foxton, Bournemout­h.

QUESTION Why do sixcylinde­r petrol engines sound so different from those with four cylinders?

eACH engine type, or configurat­ion, has a characteri­stic sound.

in four-stroke (or Otto cycle) engines, which are in common use, a combustion stroke occurs once, for a single cylinder engine, for every two revolution­s of the crankshaft.

the sound of a single cylinder, four-stroke engine is a characteri­stic ‘thump thump’ at tick-over.

this is the typical sound of a small boat engine or some motorcycle­s because only one revolution of two is producing work. As the number of cylinders is increased, the work increases for each revolution.

A typical four-cylinder engine will have two cylinders per revolution producing power, while a six-cylinder engine will have three cylinders producing power for each crankshaft revolution.

As the angles of the cranks relative to the shaft for a six-cylinder engine are set at 120 degrees, the times between each cylinder firing are closer to each other than on a four-cylinder engine, where the cranks are angled at 180 degrees.

this also means six-cylinder engines are inherently well balanced and smoother in operation.

it was said of the six-cylinder RollsRoyce silver ghost that you could balance a 12-sided threepenny bit on the radiator at tick-over because the engine was so smooth.

Laurence Cooper, Swansea.

QUESTION Is it possible to have triple or even quadruple rainbows?

A PReViOus answer about double rainbows described how each droplet of water acts as a tiny prism that disperses the light and reflects it back to your eye.

since an ever-decreasing fraction of light will undergo additional internal reflection instead of re-entering the air, a single drop of water can, in theory, give an infinite number of rainbows.

However, the higher the order, the fainter the rainbow. A secondary rainbow caused by light reflected twice inside the raindrops is often visible. A tertiary bow has been seen by only a few.

As astronomer edmund Halley predicted, the third arc is centred on the sun, unlike the primary and secondary bows, which are centred on the anti-solar point. the glare of the sun means that it is difficult to see, and it wasn’t photograph­ed until 2011.

the fourth order bow is close to the tertiary one, but with reversed colours.

Rainbows with light reflecting 13 times before re-entering the air have been observed in a single drop of water suspended from the end of a wire in a laboratory. Rainbows reflecting 19 times have been observed in thin, falling streams of water in lab conditions.

Dr Ian Smith, Cambridge.

IS THERE a question to which you want to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question here? Write to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Scottish Daily Mail, 20 Waterloo Street, Glasgow G2 6DB; or email charles.legge@dailymail.co.uk. A selection is published, but we’re unable to enter into individual correspond­ence. Visit mailplus.co.uk to hear the Answers To Correspond­ents podcast

 ??  ?? Inseparabl­e: The young August Kubizek (left) and Adolf Hitler
Inseparabl­e: The young August Kubizek (left) and Adolf Hitler
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