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Goethe and Schiller's Xenions cover

Goethe and Schiller's Xenions

Chapter 67: Dilettante.
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About This Book

A selection of concise satirical epigrams rendered in elegiac distich form by two leading German poets, offering pointed judgments on literary taste, critics, fashionable opinion, and the conflicts between pietism and rationalism. Many couplets target named figures and domestic literary squabbles, while others condense reflections on philosophy, science, art, morality, and religion into aphoristic remarks. The collection is organized into thematic sections and supplemented by a historical preface, critical notes, and translator commentary, producing a compact volume that alternates personal satire with succinct philosophical and aesthetic observation.

Dilettante.

If thou succeed with a verse
in a language worked out and consummate,
Shaping thy thought and thy rhyme,
think’st thou a poet thou art.

Dilettant.

Weil ein Vers dir gelingt
in einer gebildeten Sprache,
Die für dich dichtet und denkt,
glaubst du schon Dichter zu sein.