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The Youth of Goethe

Chapter 17: PREFACE
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A chronological account of a major literary figure's formative years, beginning with upbringing in a lively commercial city and the shaping effects of family, schooling, and religious influence. It follows restless student life and youthful passions, then a pivotal period in another university town where new friendships and intellectual contacts redirect his ambitions. The narrative traces early poems and dramatic efforts, mentorships that hone aesthetic judgment, episodes of private struggle and self-discipline, and the gradual consolidation of talent that lays the groundwork for later achievement.

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Title: The Youth of Goethe

Author: P. Hume Brown

Release date: November 11, 2006 [eBook #19753]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Suzanne Lybarger, Linda Cantoni, and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUTH OF GOETHE ***

THE YOUTH OF GOETHE

BY P. HUME BROWN, LL.D., F.B.A.


LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
1913


TO

THE VISCOUNT HALDANE OF CLOAN,
LORD CHANCELLOR OF GREAT BRITAIN.

MY DEAR CHANCELLOR,—AS THE "ONLY BEGETTER" OF THIS BOOK, IT SEEMS ALMOST OBLIGATORY THAT IT SHOULD BE ASSOCIATED WITH YOUR NAME.

THE AUTHOR.


GOETHE'S BIOGRAPHIE.

"Anfangs ist es ein Punkt der leise zum Kreise sich öffnet,
Aber, wachsend, umfasst dieser am Ende die Welt."
Friedrich Hebbel.

"In the beginning a point that soft to the circle expandeth,
But the circle at length, growing, enclaspeth the world."

CONTENTS

Preface

CHAPTER I

EARLY YEARS IN FRANKFORT

1749—1765

 PAGE
GOETHE'S BIRTHPLACE AND ITS INFLUENCE ON HIM1
PERIOD OF HIS BIRTH4
HIS FATHER6
HIS MOTHER8
HIS SISTER10
FAMILY FRIENDS11
HIS EDUCATION12
RELIGIOUS INFLUENCES14
THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR18
FRENCH OCCUPATION OF FRANKFORT19
GOETHE'S FIRST LOVE21
DESTINED FOR THE STUDY OF LAW23
THE BOY THE FATHER OF THE MAN25
HIS CHARACTER AND EARLY TASTES27

CHAPTER II

STUDENT IN LEIPZIG

OCTOBER, 1765—SEPTEMBER, 1768

GOES TO LEIPZIG29
HIS WILD LIFE THERE29
SOCIETY OF LEIPZIG31
HIS IRREGULAR STUDIES33
ADOPTS LEIPZIG FASHIONS35
FEMININE INFLUENCES36
DANDYISM37
FALLS IN LOVE WITH KÄTHCHEN SCHÖNKOPF38
FRIENDSHIP WITH BEHRISCH39
HIS RELATIONS TO KÄTHCHEN40
MISCELLANEOUS INTERESTS44
FRIENDSHIP WITH OESER46
STATE OF GERMAN LITERATURE48
POEMS OF THE PERIOD49
DIE LAUNE DES VERLIEBTEN51
DIE MITSCHULDIGEN52
INSPIRATION54

CHAPTER III

AT HOME IN FRANKFORT

SEPTEMBER, 1768—APRIL, 1770

RETURNS TO FRANKFORT57
HIS BROKEN HEALTH58
RELATIONS TO HIS FATHER58
HIS SISTER60
INTEREST IN RELIGION61
FRIENDSHIP WITH FRÄULEIN VON KLETTENBERG62
A MYSTERIOUS MEDICINE63
EVOLVES A RELIGIOUS CREED65
INFLUENCE OF FRÄULEIN VON KLETTENBERG66
INTEREST IN LITERATURE AND ART67
LESSING AND WIELAND70
RIPENING POWERS71

CHAPTER IV

GOETHE IN STRASSBURG

APRIL, 1770—AUGUST, 1771

SETTLEMENT IN STRASSBURG75
INFLUENCES OF STRASSBURG75
CHANGE IN HIS RELIGIOUS FEELINGS76
MANNER OF LIFE IN STRASSBURG78
FRIENDSHIP WITH DR. SALZMANN79
RELATIONS TO JUNG STILLING83
COMES UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF HERDER84
YOUNG'S CONJECTURES ON ORIGINAL COMPOSITION90
ITS INFLUENCE ON GOETHE'S GENIUS93
FRIEDERIKE BRION95
HIS RELATIONS TO HER96
PARTING FROM HER101
MISCELLANEOUS STUDIES102
SELF-DISCIPLINE103
POEMS ADDRESSED TO FRIEDERIKE105

CHAPTER V

FRANKFORT—GÖTZ VON BERLICHINGEN

AUGUST, 1771—DECEMBER, 1771

GOETHE'S RETURN TO FRANKFORT108
CREATIVE PRODUCTIVENESS OF THE PERIOD108
POET OR ARTIST?111
MENTAL CONFLICT112
EPOCHS IN HIS LAST FRANKFORT YEARS113
HIS SISTER CORNELIA116
GROWING DISTASTE FOR FRANKFORT117
DEPRESSION119
WORSHIP OF SHAKESPEARE120
GÖTZ VON BERLICHINGEN121
ITS INFLUENCE ON EUROPEAN LITERATURE131

CHAPTER VI

INFLUENCE OF MERCK AND THE DARMSTADT CIRCLE

1772

FRIENDSHIP WITH MERCK133
CHARACTER OF MERCK133
HIS INFLUENCE ON GOETHE135
THE DARMSTADT CIRCLE136
ITS INFLUENCE ON GOETHE136
CAROLINE FLACHSLAND AND GOETHE137
POEMS OF GOETHE INSPIRED BY THE DARMSTADT CIRCLE138
WANDERERS STURMLIED139
DER WANDERER141

CHAPTER VII

WETZLAR AND CHARLOTTE BUFF

MAY—SEPTEMBER, 1772

DEPARTURE FROM WETZLAR143
WETZLAR AND ITS SOCIETY144
LOTTE BUFF147
GOETHE'S RELATIONS TO HER147
KESTNER, LOTTE'S BETROTHED148
GOETHE, KESTNER, AND LOTTE149
DEPARTURE FROM WETZLAR150
KESTNER'S CHARACTERISATION OF GOETHE151

CHAPTER VIII

AFTER WETZLAR

1772—1773

SUICIDE OF JERUSALEM154
GOETHE VISITS THE FAMILY VON LA ROCHE155
FRAU VON LA ROCHE155
MAXIMILIANE VON LA ROCHE157
UNREST158
LETTERS TO KESTNER159
ESTRANGEMENT FROM HIS FATHER161
SOLITUDE162

CHAPTER IX

SATIRICAL DRAMAS AND FRAGMENTS

POET OR ARTIST?163
LITERARY ACTIVITY164
FRANKFURTER GELEHRTEN ANZEIGEN165
LETTER OF THE PASTOR166
TWO BIBLICAL QUESTIONS167
RECASTS GÖTZ VON BERLICHINGEN167
SATIRICAL PLAYS169
PROMETHEUS175
MAHOMET181
ADLER UND TAUBE183
KÜNSTLERS ERDEWALLEN184

CHAPTER X

WERTHERCLAVIGO

1774

GOETHE'S NEED OF EXTERNAL STIMULUS185
GOETHE AND THE BRENTANOS186
ORIGIN OF WERTHER187
ENGLISH INFLUENCE ON WERTHER188
PUBLICATION OF WERTHER189
GOETHE AND WERTHER190
SECOND PART OF WERTHER191
WERTHER AND GOETHE193
INFLUENCE OF WERTHER196
THE KESTNERS AND WERTHER198
WERTHERISM199
CLAVIGO200
DRAMATISED FROM BEAUMARCHAIS200
ORIGIN OF CLAVIGO202
ITS PLOT202
CONSTRUCTED ON CLASSICAL MODELS205
CLAVIGO AND GOETHE206

CHAPTER XI

GOETHE AND SPINOZA—DER EWIGE JUDE

1773—1774

GOETHE'S DEBT TO SPINOZA209
MISDATES SPINOZA'S INFLUENCE210
DER EWIGE JUDE212
ORIGINAL PLAN OF IT213
AS IT WAS ACTUALLY WRITTEN216
ITS DIVISIONS216
ITS CHARACTERISTICS216
UNPUBLISHED TILL AFTER GOETHE'S DEATH218

CHAPTER XII

GOETHE IN SOCIETY

1774

JOHANN KASPAR LAVATER220
HIS CHARACTER220
HIS INTEREST IN GOETHE222
VISITS FRANKFORT224
HIS INTERCOURSE WITH GOETHE225
JOHANN BERNHARD BASEDOW227
HIS CHARACTER AND CAREER227
HIS VISIT TO FRANKFORT228
GOETHE, LAVATER, AND BASEDOW AT EMS228
THEIR VOYAGE DOWN THE RHINE230
JUNG STILLING231
SCENE AT ELBERFELDT232
FRITZ JACOBI233
GOETHE MAKES HIS ACQUAINTANCE233
THEIR INTERCOURSE234
JACOBI'S ESTIMATE OF GOETHE237
KLOPSTOCK238
GOETHE'S ADMIRATION OF HIM238
THEIR MEETING IN FRANKFORT239
AN SCHWAGER KRONOS240
BOIE AND WERTHES ON GOETHE241
MAJOR VON KNEBEL AND GOETHE242
GOETHE AND THE PRINCES OF WEIMAR243
VON KNEBEL ON GOETHE244
DEATH OF FRÄULEIN VON KLETTENBERG245

CHAPTER XIII

LILI SCHÖNEMANN

1775

THE SCHÖNEMANN FAMILY247
GOETHE'S INTRODUCTION TO LILI SCHÖNEMANN248
HIS SUBSEQUENT MEMORY OF HER249
LILI COMPARED WITH HIS PREVIOUS LOVES250
GOETHE'S SONGS ADDRESSED TO HER251
COUNTESS STOLBERG253
GOETHE'S RELATIONS TO HER253
ERWIN UND ELMIRE255
STELLA257
CLAUDINE VON VILLA BELLA263
A DISTRACTED LOVER266
BETROTHED TO LILI268
SHRINKS FROM MARRIAGE269
COUNTS STOLBERG IN FRANKFORT270
GOETHE STARTS WITH THEM FOR SWITZERLAND271
VISITS HIS SISTER AT EMMENDINGEN273
WITH LAVATER IN ZURICH275
ACCOMPANIES PASSAVANT TO ST. GOTHARD276
LYRICS TO LILI276
RETURN TO FRANKFORT278

CHAPTER XIV

LAST MONTHS IN FRANKFORT—THE URFAUST

1775

RELATIONS TO LILI ON HIS RETURN279
A CRISIS IN THEIR RELATIONS281
MISCELLANEOUS INTERESTS282
ESTIMATES OF GOETHE BY SULZER AND ZIMMERMANN283
INVITATION TO WEIMAR284
PROPOSED JOURNEY TO ITALY285
A DELAYED MESSENGER286
DEPARTS FOR WEIMAR287
EGMONT AND THE URFAUST287
THE URFAUST288
CHARACTERISTICS293

Index


PREFACE

"Generally speaking," Goethe has himself said, "the most important period in the life of an individual is that of his development—the period which, in my case, breaks off with the detailed narrative of Dichtung und Wahrheit." In reality, as we know, there is no complete breach at any point in the lives of either nations or individuals. But if in the life of Goethe we are to fix upon a dividing point, it is his departure from Frankfort and his permanent settlement in Weimar in his twenty-seventh year. Considered externally, that change of his surroundings is the most obvious event in his career, and for the world at large marks its division into two well-defined periods. In relation to his inner development his removal from Frankfort to Weimar may also be regarded as the most important fact in his life. From the date of his settlement in Weimar he was subjected to influences which equally affected his character and his genius; had he continued to make his home in Frankfort, it is probable that, both as man and literary artist, he would have developed characteristics essentially different from those by which the world knows him. There were later experiences—notably his Italian journey and his intercourse with Schiller—which profoundly influenced him, but none of these experiences penetrated his being so permanently as the atmosphere of Weimar, which he daily breathed for more than half a century.

As Goethe himself has said, the first twenty-six years of his life are essentially the period of his "development." During that period we see him as he came from Nature's hand. His words, his actions have then a stamp of spontaneity which they gradually lost with advancing years as the result of his social and official relations in Weimar. He has told us that it was one of the painful conditions of his position there that it made impossible that frank and cordial relation with others which it was his nature to seek, and from which he had previously derived encouragement and stimulus; as a State official, he adds, he could be on easy terms with nobody without running the risk of a petition for some favour which he might or might not be able to confer.

For the portrayal of the youthful Goethe materials are even superabundant; of no other genius of the same order, indeed, have we a record comparable in fulness of detail for the same period of life. And it is this abundance of information and the extraordinary individuality to whom it relates that give specific interest to any study of Goethe's youth. From month to month, even at times from day to day, we can trace the growth of his character, of his opinions, of his genius. And the testimonies of his contemporaries are unanimous as to the unique impression he made upon them. "He will always remain to me one of the most extraordinary apparitions of my life," wrote one; and he expressed the opinion of all who had the discernment to appreciate originality of gifts and character. What they found unique in him was inspiration, passion, a zest of life, at a pressure that foreshadowed either a remarkable career or (at times his own dread) disaster.

It was said of Goethe in his latest years that the world would come to believe that there had been, not one, but many Goethes; and, as we follow him through the various stages of his youth, we receive the same impression. It results from this manifoldness of his nature that he defies every attempt to formulate his characteristics at any period of his life. In the present study of him the object has been to let his own words and actions speak for themselves; any conclusions that may be suggested, the reader will thus have it in his own power to check.

After Goethe's own writings, the works to which I have been chiefly indebted are Goethes Gespräche, Gesamtausgabe von Freiherrn v. Biedermann, Leipzig, 1909-11 (5 vols.), in which are collected references to Goethe by his contemporaries; and Der junge Goethe: Neue Ausgabe in sechs Bänden, besorgt von Max Morris, Leipzig, 1910-12, containing the literary and artistic productions of Goethe previous to his settlement in Weimar. The references throughout are to the Weimar edition of Goethe's works. Except where otherwise indicated, the author is responsible for the translations, both in prose and verse.

I have cordially to express my gratitude to Dr. G. Schaaffs, Lecturer in German in the University of St. Andrews, and to Mr. Frank C. Nicholson, Librarian in the University of Edinburgh, for the trouble they took in revising my proofs.

P.H.B.

Edinburgh.