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Writing to the woman who would become his third wife, Hermann Hesse complained: “Life for me now holds almost no pleasures any more, in fact I am living in Hell.” The event that had reduced Hesse to this state of near-despair was that his wife-to-be Ninon Dolbin had moved some of his books without his permission. For him this was an intolerable disruption of the orderly existence he believed essential to a writer who had detached himself from the world. His independence required that he hold all of humankind, and even his closest companion, at a rigorously policed distance. Accordingly, although the two of them lived under the same roof, he communicated with Ninon mainly in writing. As his latest biographer, Gunnar Decker, relates:....

My question has to do with “orderly existence” , I am going to translate this article to a different language and I am not sure if this really means simply organized life for any person or it is a technical philosophical expression?

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Yes, the phrase orderly existence is a common expression. Here it could be replaced with the noun orderliness. The implication is of a rigorous, unbending, quasi-monastic observance of order, there being a designated place, time, and manner for everything.

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