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Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff

Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff (10 March 1788 – 26 November 1857) was a German poet, novelist, playwright, literary critic, translator, and anthologist.[1] Eichendorff was one of the major writers and critics of Romanticism.[2] Ever since their publication and up to the present day, some of his works have been very popular in Germany.[3]

Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff
BornJoseph Karl Benedikt Freiherr (Baron) von Eichendorff
(1788-03-10)10 March 1788
Schloss Lubowitz (Polish: Pałac Eichendorffów) near Ratibor, Prussian Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia
Died26 November 1857(1857-11-26) (aged 69)
Neisse (Polish: Nysa), Prussian Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia
OccupationNovelist, poet, essayist
EducationHeidelberg University
Period19th century
GenreNovellas, Fairy tales, poetry
Literary movementRomanticism
Notable worksMemoirs of a Good-for-Nothing, The Marble Statue
Signature
Joseph von Eichendorff as a young man
Eichendorff, etching by Franz Kugler, 1832
Eichendorff's birthplace, Lubowitz Castle, Ratibor (photo from 1939). It was destroyed in March 1945 during the Upper Silesian Offensive. The territory was awarded to Poland after World War II.
The remains of Lubowitz Castle, Racibórz (Poland), 2008. Note Eichendorff's portrait on the wall. The German inscription (Keinen Dichter noch ließ seine Heimat los) translates to "No poet's homeland has ever relinquished its hold on him", a quote from his novel Dichter und ihre Gesellen.
Matthias Claudius' works, vol.1
Heidelberg Castle by Carl Blechen, 1829

Eichendorff first became famous for his 1826 novella Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts (freely translated: Memoirs of a Good-for-Nothing)[4] and his poems.[5] The Memoirs of a Good-for-Nothing is a typical Romantic novella whose main themes are wanderlust and love. The protagonist, the son of a miller, rejects his father's trade and becomes a gardener at a Viennese palace where he subsequently falls in love with the local duke's daughter. As, with his lowly status, she is unattainable for him, he escapes to Italy – only to return and learn that she is the duke's adopted daughter, and thus within his social reach.[1] With its combination of dream world and realism, Memoirs of a Good-for-Nothing is considered to be a high point of Romantic fiction. One critic stated that Eichendorff's Good-for-Nothing is the "personification of love of nature and an obsession with hiking."[6] Thomas Mann called Eichendorff's Good-for-Nothing a combination of "the purity of the folk song and the fairy tale."[7]

Many of Eichendorff's poems were first published as integral parts of his novellas and stories, where they are often performed in song by one of the protagonists.[8] The novella Good-for-Nothing alone contains 54 poems.[9]

Biography Edit

Origin and early youth Edit

Eichendorff, a descendant of an old noble family, was born in 1788 at Schloß Lubowitz near Ratibor (now Racibórz, Poland) in Upper Silesia, at that time part of the Kingdom of Prussia. His parents were the Prussian officer Adolf Freiherr von Eichendorff (1756–1818) and his wife, Karoline née Freiin von Kloche (1766–1822), who came from an aristocratic Roman Catholic family.[10] Eichendorff sold the family estates in Deutsch-Krawarn, Kauthen, and Wrbkau and acquired Lubowitz Castle from his mother-in-law. The castle's Rococo reconstruction, which was begun by her, was very expensive and almost bankrupted the family.[11] Young Joseph was close to his older brother Wilhelm (1786–1849). From 1793 to 1801, they were home-schooled by tutor Bernhard Heinke. Joseph began writing diaries as early as 1798, witnesses to his budding literary career.[12] The diaries present many insights into the development of the young writer, ranging from simple statements about the weather to notes about finances to early poems. At a young age, Eichendorff was already well aware of his parents' financial straits. On 19 June 1801, the thirteen-year old noted in his diary: "Father travelled to Breslau, on the run from his creditors," adding on 24 June, "mom become terribly faint."[13] With his brother Wilhelm, Joseph attended the Catholic Matthias Gymnasium in Breslau (1801–1804). While previously preferring chapbooks, he was now introduced to the poetry of Matthias Claudius and Voltaire's La Henriade, an epic poem about the last part of the wars of religion and Henry IV of France in ten songs. In 1804 his sister Luise Antonie Nepomucene Johanna was born (died 1883), who was to become a friend of Austrian writer Adalbert Stifter. After their final exams, both brothers attended lectures at the University of Breslau and the Protestant Maria-Magdalena-Gymnasium. Eichendorff's diary from this time shows that he valued formal education much less than the theatre, recording 126 plays and concerts visited. His love for Mozart also goes back to these days.[14] Joseph himself seems to have been a talented actor and his brother Wilhelm a good singer and guitar player.[15]

College days Edit

Together with his brother Wilhelm, Joseph studied law and the humanities in Halle an der Saale (1805–1806), a city near Jena, which was a focal point of the Frühromantik (Early Romantics).[2] The brothers frequently attended the theatre of Lauchstädt, 13 km where the Weimar court theatrical company performed plays by Goethe.[16][17] In October 1806 Napoleon's troops took Halle and teaching at the university ceased. To complete their studies, Wilhelm and Joseph went to the University of Heidelberg in 1807, another important centre of Romanticism. Here Eichendorff befriended romantic poet Otto Heinrich von Loeben (1786–1825), met Achim von Arnim (1781–1831) and possibly Clemens Brentano (1778–1842).[18][19] In Heidelberg, Eichendorff heard lectures by Joseph Görres, a leading member of the Heidelberg Romantic group, a "hermitic magician" and "formative impression",[20] as Eichendorff later explained.[21] In 1808 the brothers finished their degrees, after which they undertook an educational journey to Paris, Vienna, and Berlin. In Berlin they came into closer contact with Romantic writers such as Clemens Brentano, Adam Müller, and Heinrich von Kleist.[19] To further their professional prospects, they travelled to Vienna in 1810, where they concluded their studies with a state examination diploma. Wilhelm procured employment in the Austrian civil service, while Joseph went back home to help his father with managing the estate.[22][23]

Love affairs Edit

From Eichendorff's diaries we know about his love for a girl, Amalie Schaffner,[24] and another love affair in 1807–08 during his student days in Heidelberg with one Käthchen Förster.[25] His deep sorrow about the unrequitted love for the nineteen-year-old daughter of a cellarman inspired Eichendorff to one of his most famous poems, Das zerbrochene Ringlein (The Broken Ring).

Military service Edit

 
Lützow Free Corps by Richard Knötel, 1890

In his deep desperation over this unhappy infatuation, Eichendorff craved death in military exploits as mentioned in his poem Das zerbrochene Ringlein:

Although Chase's translation weakens the second line from blut’ge Schlacht (bloody battle) to "in fight" this, actually, happens to be much closer to the historical truth, since Eichendorff's participation in the Lützow Free Corps seems to be a myth – in spite of some authorities asserting the contrary.[27] In 1813, when conflict flared up again, Eichendorff tried to join the struggle against Napoleon,[28] however he lacked the funds to purchase a uniform, gun, or horse, and, when he finally managed to get the money necessary, the war was all but over.[29]

Betrothal, marriage and family life Edit

 
Family arms of von Larisch
 
Cave in the Harz Mountains, Caspar David Friedrich, sepia, ca. 1811

His parents, to save the indebted family estate, hoped that Eichendorff would marry a wealthy heiress, however he fell in love with Aloysia von Larisch (1792–1855),[30] called 'Luise', the seventeen-year-old daughter of a prominent, yet impoverished Catholic family of nobles. The betrothal took place in 1809, the same year Eichendorff went to Berlin to take up a profession there. In 1815, the couple was married in Breslau's St. Vinzenz church[30] and that same year Eichendorff's son Hermann was born, followed in 1819 by their daughter Therese. In 1818, Eichendorff's father died and in 1822 his mother. The death of his mother resulted in the final loss of all the family's estates in Silesia.[31][32]

Child mortality Edit

During the period, infant mortality was very high.[33] Both Eichendorff's brother Gustav (born 1800) and his sister Louise Antonie (born 1799) died in 1803 at a very young age, as did two of Eichendorff's daughters between 1822 and 1832.[34] The poet expressed the parental sorrow after this loss in the famous cycle "Auf meines Kindes Tod".[35] One of the poems in this series conveys an especially powerful sense of loss in this era:

Travels of a transferee Edit

With his literary figure of the Good-for-Nothing Eichendorff created the paradigm of the wanderer. The motif itself had been central to romanticism since Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder and Ludwig Tieck undertook their famous Pfingstwanderung (Whitsun excursion) in the Fichtel Mountains in 1793, an event that began the Romantic movement.[37]T ravels through Germany, Austria, and France rounded off Eichendorff's education, however, he himself was not much of a hiker. Apart from some extensive marches on foot during his school and college days (for example from Halle to Leipzig, to see popular actor Iffland),[38] he only undertook one lengthy tour, traversing for seventeen days the Harz mountains with his brother in 1805, a trip partly undertaken using the stagecoach, as witnessed by his diary.[39] Eichendorff was less of a romantic wanderer, but rather displaced again and again by changes of location necessitated by his official activities. The following trips, mainly undertaken by coach or boat, are documented:

Eichendorff as civil servant Edit

Eichendorff worked in various capacities as Prussian government administrator. His career began in 1816 as unpaid clerk in Breslau. In November 1819, he was appointed assessor and in 1820 consistorial councilor for West and East Prussia in Danzig, with an initial annual salary of 1200 thalers. In April 1824, Eichendorff was relocated to Königsberg as "Oberpräsidialrat" (chief administrator) with an annual salary of 1600 thalers. In 1821, Eichendorff was appointed school inspector and, in 1824, "Oberpräsidialrat" in Königsberg.[42] In 1831, he moved his family to Berlin, where he worked as Privy Councilor for the Foreign Ministry until his retirement in 1844.[30]

Death and burial Edit

 
Eichendorff residence in Köthen, where he lived from April to October 1855
 
Grave of Joseph von Eichendorff in Nysa (Neiße), Poland

Eichendorff's brother Wilhelm died in 1849 in Innsbruck. That same year, there was a Republican uprising and the Eichendorffs fled to Meißen and Köthen, where a little house was purchased for his daughter Therese (now a von Besserer-Dahlfingen) in 1854. In 1855, he was much affected by the death of his wife. In September he traveled to Sedlnitz for the christening of his grandchild. Shortly after he made his very last trip, dying of pneumonia on 26 November 1857 in Neiße. He was buried the next day with his wife.[43]

Growth of a Romanticist Edit

Artistic influences Edit

 
Friedrich Schlegel, painting by Franz Gareis, 1801
 
Josef Görres by August Strixner, lithograph (after a painting by Peter von Cornelius)
 
Title page of Des Knaben Wunderhorn, 1806, a major influence on Eichendorff's poetry

The two writers who had the greatest early influence on Eichendorff's artistic development were Friedrich Schlegel, who established the term romantisch (romantic) in German literature,[44] and Joseph Görres. While the writers who gathered around Schlegel inclined more to philosophy and aesthetic theory, the adherents of Görres became mainly known as writers of poetry and stories.[45] Both movements, however, greatly influenced intellectual life in Germany by emphasising the individual, the subjective, the irrational, the imaginative, the personal, the spontaneous, the emotional, the visionary, and the transcendental over classical precepts.[46] One of their fundamental ideas was the "unity of poetry and life".[47]

Eichendorff shared Schlegel's view that the world was a naturally and eternally "self-forming artwork",[48] Eichendorff himself used the metaphor that "nature [was] a great picture book, which the good Lord has pitched for us outside."[49] Arnim's and Brentano's studies and interpretations of the Volkslied (folk song) deeply influenced Eichendorff's own poetry and poetology.[50]

 
Title page of third edition of Des Knaben Wunderhorn, 1808

Arnim's and Brentano's anthology Des Knaben Wunderhorn: Alte deutsche Lieder, a collection of songs about love, soldiers, wandering, as well as children's songs, was an important source for the Romantic movement. Similar to other early 19th-century anthologists such as Thomas Percy, Arnim and Brentano edited and rewrote the poems in they collected. "Everything in the world happens because of poetry, to live life with an increased sense and history is the expression of this general poetry of the human race, the fate performs this great spectacle," is what Arnim said in a letter to Brentano (9 July 1802).[51]

Eichendorff's poetical style Edit

Range Edit

Although Eichendorffs poetry includes many metric forms ranging from very simple elegiac couplets and stanzas to sonnets, his main artistic focus was on poems imitating folk songs.[52] A comparison of forms shows that Eichendorff's lyricism is "directly influenced by Brentano and Arnim".[53][54]

Naturalness and artificiality Edit

Following the model of Des Knaben Wunderhorn, Eichendorff uses simple words ('naturalness'), adding more meaning ('artificiality') than dictionary definitions would indicate. In this sense, "His words are rich in connotative power, in imaginative appeal and in sound."[55]

Emblematic imagery Edit

Certain expressions and formulas used by Eichendorff, which are sometimes characterised by critics as pure cliché,[56] actually represent a conscious reduction in favour of emblematics. In Görres' poetology "nature is speaking"[57] us. But before it can happen, the wonderful song sleeping in each thing must be woken up by the poet's word:[58] One notable example used by Eichendorff is the Zauberwort (magic word) – and one of Eichendorff's most celebrated poems, the four-line stanza Wünschelrute (divining rod), is about finding such a Zauberwort:

 
Title page of Eichendorff's Gedichte (Poems), Halle, about 1907

Main motifs Edit

 
Wanderschaft by Ludwig Richter, illustration for Eichendorff's poem The Happy Wanderer, woodcut 1858–61

The titles of Eichendorff's poems show that, besides the motif of wandering, the two other main motifs of his poetry were the passing of time (transience) and nostalgia. Time, for Eichendorff, is not just a natural phenomenon but, as Marcin Worbs elaborated: "Each day and each of our nights has a metaphysical dimension."[59] The morning, on the other hand, evokes the impression that "all nature had been created just in this very moment,"[60][61] while the evening often acts as a mysterium mortis with the persona pondering transience and death. Eichendorff's other main motif, nostalgia, is described by some critic as a phenomenon of infinity.[62] However, there is a number of different interpretations. According to Helmut Illbruck: The "simple-minded Taugenichts (...) feels continually homesick and can never come to rest."[63] Katja Löhr distinguishes between nostalgia as an emotion consisting of two components — longing and melancholy: "The inner emotion of longing is to long for, the inner emotion of melancholy is to mourn. As an expression of deep reflection, longing corresponds with intuition (Ahnen), grieving with memory."[8] Theodor W. Adorno, who set out to rescue Eichendorff from his misled conservative admirers, attested: "He was not a poet of the homeland, but rather a poet of homesickness".[64] In sharp contrast, Natias Neutert saw in Eichendorff's nostalgia a dialectical unity of an "unstable equilibrium of homesickness and wanderlust at once".[65]

Religiosity Edit

For a long time it had been argued that Eichendorff's view of Romanticism had been subordinate to religious beliefs. More recently, however, Christoph Hollender has pointed that Eichendorff's late religious and political writings were commissioned works, while his poetry represents a highly personal perspective.[66]

Eichendorff's own résumé Edit

Eichendorff summed up the Romantic epoch stating that it "soared like a magnificent rocket sparkling up into the sky, and after shortly and wonderfully lighting up the night, it exploded overhead into a thousand colorful stars."[67]

Legacy Edit

"While other authors (such as Ludwig Tieck, Caroline de la Motte Fouqué, Clemens Brentano and Bettina von Arnim) adapted the themes and styles of their writing to the emerging realism, Eichendorff "stayed true to the emblematic universe of his literary Romanticism right through to the 1850s,"[68] Adorno stated: "Unconsciously Eichendorff's unleashed romanticism leads right up to the threshold of modernism".[69]

Works Edit

Volumes of poetry Edit

  • First publication of some Poems in Ast's Zeitschrift für Wissenschaft und Kunst, under the pseudonym «Florens»; Heidelberg, (1808),
  • Gedichte von Joseph Freiherrn von Eichendorff, Verlag Duncker & Humblot, Berlin, (1837)[70]
  • Julian, story in verses, (1853)
  • Robert und Guiscard, epic poem, (1855)
  • Lucius, epic poem, (1855)
 
Monument to Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Plaza de Santa Ana, Madrid
 
Frontpage of Robert Schumann's Liederkreis, op. 39, published 1842 in Vienna

Narrative texts Edit

Novels Edit

  • Ahnung und Gegenwart. Mit einem Vorwort von de la Motte Fouqué, novel, Nürnberg, bei Johann Leonhard Schrag (1815)
  • Dichter und ihre Gesellen, novel, Verlag Duncker & Humblot, Berlin (1834)

Novellas Edit

  • Die Zauberei im Herbste, (1808/09), published posthumously in 1906,
  • Das Marmorbild (The Marble Statue), ed. by De la Motte-Fouqué, published in «Frauentaschenbuch für das Jahr 1819» (1819),
  • Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts (Memoirs of a Good-for-Nothing) together with Das Marmorbild (The Marble Statue), (1826),
  • Viel Lärmen um Nichts (1833)
  • Eine Meerfahrt, (1836); published posthumously (1864)
  • Das Schloß Dürande, (1837)
  • Die Entführung, in: Urania. Taschenbuch für das Jahr 1839 (1839)
  • Die Glücksritter, in: Rheinisches Jahrbuch (1841)
  • Libertas und ihre Freier (1848), published posthumously (1858)

Play texts Edit

  • Krieg den Philistern! Dramatisches Märchen in Fünf Abenteuern, (1823)
  • Meierbeth's Glück und Ende, (1827)
  • Ezelin von Romano, (1828)
  • Der letzte Held von Marienburg, (1830)
  • Die Freier, (1833)[71]

Translations Edit

Literary critic Edit

  • Über die ethische und religiöse Bedeutung der neuen romantischen Poesie in Deutschland (On the ethical and religious significance of the new romantic poetry in Germany), (1847)
  • Der deutsche Roman des 18. Jahrhunderts in seinem Verhältniss zum Christenthum (The German novel of the 18th century in its relationship to Christianity), (1851)
  • Geschichte der poetischen Literatur Deutschlands, (1857)[72]

Anthologist Edit

Editor Edit

  • Lebrecht Blücher Dreves: Gedichte. Ed. and with a foreword by Joseph v. Eichendorff. Verlag Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1849.

Set to music Edit

 
Eichendorff monument in Prudnik, erected in 1911
 
Eichendorff monument in Ratibor by Johannes Boese. Erected in 1909, it was removed in 1945 when the Soviets occupied Silesia and disappeared shortly thereafter. A replacement was put up in 1994.
 
Monument in front of Silesia House

With approximately 5000 musical settings, Eichendorff is the most popular German poet set into music. "The magical, enchanting lyricism of his poetry almost seems to be music itself," as it is praised.[74] His poems have been set to music by many composers, including Schumann, Mendelssohn, Max Bruch, Johannes Brahms, Hugo Wolf, Didia Saint Georges, Richard Strauss, Hans Pfitzner, Pauline Volkstein, [75]Hermann Zilcher, Alexander Zemlinsky, Max Reger, and even Friedrich Nietzsche.[76]

His poems also inspired orchestral music, such as Reger's Eine romantische Suite as well as electronic arrangements by Qntal.

 
The poet as a German 10-penny stamp, 1957

Literature Edit

Primary Literature Edit

  • Sämtliche Werke des Freiherrn Joseph von Eichendorff. Historisch-kritische Ausgabe : (shortened form: HKA). Begründet von Wilhelm Kosch und August Sauer, fortgeführt und herausgegeben von Hermann Kunisch (†) und Helmut Koopmann, Max Niemeyer Verlag, Tübingen.
  • HKA I/1: Gedichte. Erster Teil. Text. Ed. by Harry Fröhlich/Ursula Regener (1993).
  • HKA I/2: Gedichte. Erster Teil. Kommentar. Aufgrund von Vorarbeiten von Wolfgang Kron. Ed. by Harry Fröhlich (1994).
  • HKA I/3: Gedichte. Zweiter Teil. Verstreute und nachgelassene Gedichte. Text. Ed. by Ursula Regener (1997).
  • HKA I/4: Gedichte. Zweiter Teil. Verstreute und nachgelassene Gedichte. Kommentar. Ed. by Ursula Regener (1997).
  • HKA III: Ahnung und Gegenwart. Ed. by Christiane Briegleb/Clemens Rauschenberg (1984).
  • HKA IV: Dichter und ihre Gesellen. Ed. by Volkmar Stein (2001).
  • HKA V/1: Erzählungen. Erster Teil. Text. Ed. by Karl Konrad Polheim (1998).
  • HKA V/2: Erzählungen. Erster Teil. Kommentar. Ed. by Karl Konrad Polheim (2000).
  • HKA V/3: Erzählungen. Zweiter Teil. Fragmente und Nachgelassenes. Ed. by Heinz-Peter Niewerth (2006).
  • HKA V/4: Erzählungen. Dritter Teil. Autobiographische Fragmente. Ed. by Dietmar Kunisch (1998).
  • HKA VI/1: Historische Dramen und Dramenfragmente. Text und Varianten. Ed. by Harry Fröhlich (1996).
  • HKA VI/2: Historische Dramen und Dramenfragmente. Kommentar. Ed. by Klaus Köhnke (1997).
  • HKA VIII/1: Literarhistorische Schriften I. Aufsätze zur Literatur. Aufgrund der Vorarbeiten von Franz Ranegger. Ed. by Wolfram Mauser (1962).
  • HKA VIII/2: Literarhistorische Schriften II. Abhandlungen zur Literatur. Aufgrund der Vorarbeiten von Franz Ranegger. Ed. by Wolfram Mauser (1965).
  • HKA IX: Literarhistorische Schriften III. Geschichte der poetischen Literatur Deutschlands. Ed. by Wolfram Mauser (1970).
  • HKA XI: Tagebücher. Ed. by Franz Heiduk/Ursula Regener (2006)
  • HKA XII: Briefe 1794–1857. Text. Ed. by Sibylle von Steinsdorff (1993).
  • HKA XV/1: Übersetzungen I. Erster Teil. Graf Lucanor von Don Juan Manuel. Geistliche Schauspiele von Don Pedro Calderón la Barca I. Ed. by Harry Fröhlich (2003).
  • HKA XV/2: Übersetzungen I. Zweiter Teil. Geistliche Schauspiele von Don Pedro Calderón la Barca II. Ed. by Harry Fröhlich (2002).
  • HKA XVI: Übersetzungen II. Unvollendete Übersetzungen aus dem Spanischen. Ed. by Klaus Dahme (1966).
  • HKA XVIII/1: Eichendorff im Urteil seiner Zeit I. Dokumente 1788–1843. Günter and Irmgard Niggl (1975).
  • HKA XVIII/2: Eichendorff im Urteil seiner Zeit II. Dokumente 1843–1860. Ed. by Günter and Irmgard Niggl (1976).
  • HKA XVIII/3: Eichendorff im Urteil seiner Zeit III. Kommentar und Register. Ed. by Günter and Irmgard Niggl (1986).
  • HKA II: Epische Gedichte.
  • HKA VII: Dramen II. Satirische Dramen und Dramenfragmente. Ed. by Harry Fröhlich.
  • HKA X: Historische und politische Schriften. Ed. by Antonie Magen
  • HKA XIII: Briefe an Eichendorff. Ed. by Sibylle von Steinsdorff.
  • HKA XIV: Kommentar zu den Briefen (Bd. XII und Bd. XIII). Ed. by Sibylle von Steinsdorff.
  • HKA XVII: Amtliche Schriften. Ed. by Hans Pörnbacher.
  • Joseph von Eichendorff, Werke, 6 Bde. (Bibliothek deutscher Klassiker) Hrsg. von Wolfgang Frühwald. Deutscher Klassiker-Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1985–93
  • Joseph von Eichendorff: Ausgewählte Werke. Ed. by Hans A. Neunzig. Nymphenburger, Berlin 1987. ISBN 3-485-00554-1
  • Wolfdietrich Rasch (Ed.): Joseph von Eichendorff. Sämtliche Gedichte. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, Munich, 1975. ISBN 3-446-11427-0

Secondary literature Edit

  • Theodor W. Adorno: "Zum Gedächtnis Eichendorffs". In: Noten zur Literatur I. Bibliothek Suhrkamp 47, Frankfurt am Main 1963. pp. 105–143.
  • Hans Brandenburg: Joseph von Eichendorff. Sein Leben und sein Werk. Beck, Munich 1922.
  • Dirk Göttsche / Nicholas Saul (eds.): Realism and Romanticism in German Literature / Realismus und Romantik in der deutschsprachigen Literatur. Aisthesis, Bielefeld 2013. ISBN 978-3-89528-995-8
  • Klaus Günzel: Die deutschen Romantiker. 125 Lebensläufe. Ein Personenlexikon. Artemis & Winkler, Düsseldorf / Zürich 1995. ISBN 3-7608-1229-5
  • Rufus Hallmark: German Lieder in the Nineteenth Century. Schirmer, New York 1996. ISBN 0-02-870845-8.
  • Helmut Illbruck: Nostalgia. Origins and Ends of an Unenlightened Disease. Northwestern University Press, Evanston Illinois, 2012. ISBN 9780810128378.
  • Hans Jürg Lüthi: Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff. Francke Verlag, Bern 1966.
  • Sybille Anneliese Margot Reichert: Unendliche Sehnsucht. The Concept of Longing in German Romantic Narrative and Song. Dissertation, Yale University 1995.
  • Günther Schiwy: Eichendorff. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Eine Biographie. C.H. Beck, Munich 2000. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  • Oskar Seidlin: Versuche über Eichendorff. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1965.
  • Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff in Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien 84, Reinbek bei Hamburg 1963. ISBN B0094MO2DQ
  • Jürgen Thym: 100 Years Of Eichendorff Songs. Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries, vol. 5. A-R Editions, Madison 1983. ISBN 0-89579-173-0

Museum, archives and organisations Edit

 
Eichendorff Museum Wangen im Allgäu,
  • Deutsches Eichendorff-Museum, Eselsberg 1, D-7988 Wangen im Allgäu, Germany, c/o Sybille Heimann, 07522 / 3840 or 3704.[77]
  • Frankfurter Goethe-Haus. Freies Deutsches Hochstift. Großer Hirschgraben 23–25, 60311 Frankfurt am Main.
  • Eichendorff-Forum. Prof. Dr. Ursula Regener Universität Regensburg

Institut für Germanistik, D-93040 Regensburg

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c "Joseph, baron von Eichendorff – German writer".
  2. ^ a b Cf. J. A. Cuddon: The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory, revised by C. E. Preston. London 1999, p. 770.
  3. ^ Cf. Peter Horst Neumann: Eichendorff im technischen Zeitalter. Zu seinem 200. Geburtstag. In: Die Zeit/Zeitmagazin 11. März 1988 http://www.zeit.de/1988/11/eichendorff-im-technischen-zeitalter
  4. ^ Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff: Memoirs of a Good-for-Nothing. Ungar, New York 1955. ISBN 0804461341
  5. ^ Cf. Jürgen Thym: 100 Years Of Eichendorff Songs. Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries, vol. V; A-R Editions, Inc. Madison 1983, p. viii. ISBN 0-89579-173-0
  6. ^ Cf. Ernst Alker: Die deutsche Literatur im 19. Jahrhundert (1832–1914), 2nd ed., Kröners Taschenbuch vol. 339, Stuttgart 1962, p. 27.
  7. ^ Hanjo Kesting: Eichendorff und seine Gesellen. Die Wiederkehr der Romantik. http://www.frankfurter-hefte.de/upload/Archiv/2008/Heft_01-02/PDF/080102_86_89.pdf
  8. ^ a b Cf. Katja Löhr: Sehnsucht als poetologisches Prinzip bei Joseph von Eichendorff. Epistemata, Würzburger Wissenschaftliche Schriften, Reihe Literaturwissenschaft vol.248, Würzburg 2003, p.12-13. ISBN 3-8260-2536-9
  9. ^ Cf. Wolfdietrich Rasch (Ed.): Joseph von Eichendorff. Sämtliche Gedichte. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag München, 1975, p.502/503. ISBN 3-446-11427-0
  10. ^ Joseph von Eichendorff http://www.britannica.com/biography/Joseph-Freiherr-von-Eichendorff
  11. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Eine Biographie. Verlag C.H. Beck, München 2000, p.30 f. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  12. ^ Cf. Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff. In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien. Ed. by Kurt Kusenberg, Rowohlt Verlag, Reinbek 1974, pp.47, 163. ISBN 3-499-50084-1
  13. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Eine Biographie. Verlag C.H. Beck, München 2000, pp. 32–33, 97. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  14. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Eine Biographie. Verlag C.H. Beck, München 2000, pp.96–97. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  15. ^ Cf. Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff. In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien. Ed. by Kurt Kusenberg, Rowohlt Verlag, Reinbek 1974, pp.33, 47, 49, 163. ISBN 3-499-50084-1
  16. ^ Cf. Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff. In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien. Ed. by Kurt Kusenberg, Reinbek 1974, p.62. ISBN 3-499-50084-1
  17. ^ Further reading: F. Maak: Das Goethetheater in Lauchstädt. D. Häcker, Lauchstädt 1905.
  18. ^ Cf. Wolfdietrich Rasch (Ed.): "Joseph von Eichendorff". Sämtliche Gedichte. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag München, 1975, p. 502-503. ISBN 3-446-11427-0
  19. ^ a b Cf. Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff. In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien. Ed. by Kurt Kusenberg, Reinbek 1974, pp. 163–164. ISBN 3-499-50084-1
  20. ^ Deeper insights cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Eine Biographie. Verlag C.H. Beck, München 2000, pp. 214–221. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  21. ^ Cf. Hans Jürg Lüthi: Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff. Francke Verlag, Bern 1966, pp. 68–71, 155 f.
  22. ^ Cf. Wolfdietrich Rasch(Ed.): Joseph von Eichendorff. Sämtliche Gedichte. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag München, 1975, p. 502. ISBN 3-446-11427-0
  23. ^ Cf. Biographical data. http://www.koethen-anhalt.de/de/eichendorff-lebensdaten.html
  24. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Verlag C.H. Beck, Munich 2000, p.97. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  25. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Verlag C.H. Beck, Munich 2000, pp.240–247. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  26. ^ In: German Poetry from 1750 to 1900. Ed. by Robert M. Browning. The German Library, vol.39. The Continuum Publishing Company, New York 1984, p.146-147.
  27. ^ Cf. Fritz Martini: Deutsche Literaturgeschichte. Von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart. Alfred Kröner Verlag, Stuttgart 1984, p.346. ISBN 3-520-19618-2
  28. ^ Cf. Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff. In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien. Ed. by Kurt Kusenberg. Rowohlt Verlag, Reinbek 1974, p.164. ISBN 3-499-50084-1
  29. ^ Cf. Wolf Lepenies: Eichendorff, der ewig späte Taugenichts. In: Die Welt, 26 November 2007 https://www.welt.de/kultur/article1400183/Eichendorff-der-ewig-spaete-Taugenichts.html
  30. ^ a b c de:Aloysia von Eichendorff
  31. ^ Cf. Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff. In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien. Ed. by Kurt Kusenberg., Reinbek 1974, pp. 164–165. ISBN 3-499-50084-1
  32. ^ Biographical data: http://www.koethen-anhalt.de/de/eichendorff-lebensdaten.html
  33. ^ Cf. Arthur E. Imhof: Lebenserwartungen in Deutschland vom 17. bis 19. Jahrhundert.. VCH Acta Humaniora. Weinheim 1990.
  34. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Eine Biographie. Verlag C.H. Beck, Munich 2000, pp. 670–680. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  35. ^ Germany, SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg. "von – Text im Projekt Gutenberg". gutenberg.spiegel.de.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  36. ^ Margarete Münsterberg (Ed., trans.): A Harvest of German Verse. Berlin 1916.
  37. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. München 2000, p. 172. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  38. ^ Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Munich 2000, p.145. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  39. ^ After Günther Schiwy: Eichendorff. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Munich 2000, pp.174–185. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  40. ^ Domino, Marcin (24 February 2019). "Śladami Josepha Eichendorffa na ziemi prudnickiej". Prudnik24 (in Polish). Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  41. ^ Cf. Paul Stöcklein: Joseph von Eichendorff. In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Rowohlts Monographien. Ed. by Kurt Kusenberg. Reinbek 1974, pp.164–167. ISBN 3-499-50084-1
  42. ^ Cf. Klaus Günzel: Romantikerschicksale. Eine Porträtgalerie. Berlin 1988, p.219. ISBN 3-373-00157-9
  43. ^ Cf. Günther Schiwy: Eichendorf. Der Dichter in seiner Zeit. Eine Biographie. Verlag C.H. Beck, München 2000, pp. 686–688. ISBN 3-406-46673-7
  44. ^ J. A. Cuddon: The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms & Literary Theory, revised by C. E. Preston. England 1999, p.768.
  45. ^ J. A. Cuddon: The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms & Literary Theory, revised by C. E. Preston. England 1999, p.770.
  46. ^ "Romanticism". 25 April 2023.
  47. ^ Cf. Robert König: Deutsche Literaturgeschichte. Bielefeld/Leipzig 1886, p.521.
  48. ^ Quoting after Natias Neutert: Foolnotes. Smith Gallery Booklet, Soho New York 1980, p.7, see Friedrich Schlegel: Gespräch über die Poesie. In: Paul Kluckhohn (Ed.): Kunstanschauung der Frühromantik. Deutsche Literatur, Reihe Romantik. Vol.III, Philipp Reclam jun., Leipzig, 1937, p.191.
  49. ^ "Joseph von Eichendorff Zitate". zitate.woxikon.de.
  50. ^ Cf. Hartwig Schulz: Eichendorffs satirische Dramen. In: Michael Kessler/Helmut Koopmann: Eichendorffs Modernität. Akten des internationalen, interdisziplinären Eichendorff-Symposions 6.-8. October 1988, Akademie der Diözese Rottenburg-Stuttgart. Stauffenburg Colloquium, Vol.9., Tübingen 1989, p.146. ISBN 978-3-8260-3951-5
  51. ^ Cf. Ludwig Achim von Arnim: Briefwechsel 1802–1804. Vol.31, Max Niemeyer Verlag, Tübingen 2004. p.57
  52. ^ Cf. R.G. Bogner: Joseph Eichendorff Gedichte, in: Ralf Georg Bogner (Ed.): Deutsche Literatur auf einen Blick. 400 Werke aus 1200 Jahren. Ein Kanon. Darmstadt 2009, p.205. ISBN 978-3-89678-663-0
  53. ^ Cf. Horst Joachim Frank: Handbuch der deutschen Strophenformen. 2nd, revised ed., Tübingen/Basel 1993, p.107.
  54. ^ Also Cf. Jacob Haxold Heinzelmann: The influence of the German Volkslied on Eichendorff's lyric. https://archive.org/stream/influenceofgerma00hein/influenceofgerma00hein_djvu.txt
  55. ^ Cf. Edward A. Bloom/Charles H. Philbrick/Elmer M. Blistein: The Order of Poetry. Brown University, New York 1961, p.2.
  56. ^ Cf. Reinhard H. Thum: Cliché and Stereotype. An Examination of the Lyric Landscape in Eichendorff's Poetry. In: Philological Quarterly no. 62, University of Iowa 1983, pp. 435–457.
  57. ^ Cf. Joseph Görres: Gesammelte Schriften, ed. by Wilhelm Schellberg on behalf of the Görres-Gesellschaft, Köln 1926, vol.IV, p.2 and V, p.274. – Cf. also Gerhard Möbus: Eichendorff in Heidelberg. Wirkungen einer Begegnung. Diederichs Verlag, Düsseldorf 1954.
  58. ^ Joseph von Eichendorff, cited in Hans Jürg Lüthi: Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff, Bern 1966, p.69
  59. ^ Cf. Marcin Worbs: Zur religiösen Aussage der Poesie Joseph von Eichendorffs. In: Grazyna Barabara Szewczyk/Renata Dampc-Jarosz (Ed.): Eichendorff heute lesen, Bielefeld 2009, p.69. ISBN 978-3-89528-744-2
  60. ^ Cf. Peter Paul Schwarz: Aurora. Zur romantischen Zeitstruktur bei Eichendorff. Ars poetica. Texte zur Dichtungslehre und Dichtkunst. Vol. 12, ed. by August Buck et al., Bad Homburg 1970, p.60.
  61. ^ Cf. Marshall Brown: Eichendorff's Time of day. In: «The German Quarterly», No.50, 1977, pp.485–503.
  62. ^ Cf. Sybille Anneliese Margot Reichert: Unendliche Sehnsucht . The concept of Longing in German romantic Narrative and Song. Dissertation Yale University, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1994.
  63. ^ Cf. Helmut Illbruck: Nostalgia. Origins and Ends of an Unenlightened Disease, Evanston Illinois, p.153. ISBN 9780810128378.
  64. ^ Cf. Theodor. W. Adorno: Zum Gedächtnis Eichendorffs. In: Noten zur Literatur I, Frankfurt am Main, 1963, p.112.
  65. ^ Cf. Natias Neutert: Foolnotes, Soho, New York 1980, p.7.
  66. ^ Cf. Christoph Hollender: Der Diskurs von Poesie und Religion in der Eichendorff-Literatur. In: Wilhelm Gössmann (Ed.): Joseph von Eichendorff. Seine literarische und kulturelle Bedeutung. Paderborn/Munich/Wien/Zurich 1995, p.163-232.
  67. ^ Quoted after Robert König: Deutsche Literaturgeschichte. 18th edition. Verlag Velhagen & Klasing, Bielefeld/Leipzig 1886, p.521.
  68. ^ Cf. Dirk Göttsche/Nicholas Saul (Ed.): Realism and Romanticism in German Literature/Realismus und Romantik in der deutschsprachigen Literatur, Bielefeld 2013, p.19; ISBN 978-3-89528-995-8
  69. ^ Cf. Theodor W. Adorno: Zum Gedächtnis Eichendorffs. In: Noten zur Literatur I, No.47, Frankfurt am Main, 1963, p.119.
  70. ^ This collection was supported by Adolf Schöll, a classic philologist and literary historian, whom the poet had met in 1832 in Berlin.- Cf. Harry Fröhlich (Ed.): Zur Edition. In: Joseph von Eichendorff: Sämtliche Werke des Freiherrn Joseph von Eichendorff. Historisch-kritische Ausgabe, begründet von Wilhelm Kosch/August Sauer. Fortgeführt von Herrmann Kunisch/Helmut Koopmann. Bd. I. Stuttgart/Berlin/Köln 1994, p. 11.
  71. ^ Cf. Hans Jürg Lüthi: Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff. Francke Verlag, B.ern 1966, 307–308.
  72. ^ a b Cf. Hans Jürg Lüthi: Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff. Francke Verlag, Bern 1966, p. 307-308.
  73. ^ Zarych, Elżbieta. "Ludowe, Literackie I Romantyczne W Górnośląskich Baśniach I Podaniach (Oberschlesiche Märchen Und Sagen) Josepha von Eichendorffa" [Folk, literary and romantic character of Upper Silesian fairy tales (Oberschlesiche Märchen und Sagen) by Joseph von Eichendorff]. In: Joseph von Eichendorff (1788–1857) a Česko-Polská kulturnÍ a Umělecká pohraničÍ: kolektivnÍ Monografie. Edited by Libor Martinek and Małgorzata Gamrat. KLP – Koniasch Latin Press, 2018. pp. 75–94. http://bohemistika.fpf.slu.cz/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/eichendorff-komplet.pdf
  74. ^ Experiencing Lieder http://www.dersnah-fee.com/Essays%20and%20Educational%20Material/Lieder-Resources.pdf
  75. ^ "Pauline Volkstein und ihre Volkslieder. Von Dr. Armin Knab. - Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek". www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de (in German). Retrieved 4 March 2023.
  76. ^ Cf. Jürgen Thym: 100 Years Of Eichendorff Songs. Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries, vol. V., A-R Editions, Inc. Madison ISBN 0-89579-173-0
  77. ^ Schöllhorn, Bruno. "Deutsches Eichendorff-Museum". amv-wangen.org.

External links Edit

joseph, freiherr, eichendorff, march, 1788, november, 1857, german, poet, novelist, playwright, literary, critic, translator, anthologist, eichendorff, major, writers, critics, romanticism, ever, since, their, publication, present, some, works, have, been, ver. Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff 10 March 1788 26 November 1857 was a German poet novelist playwright literary critic translator and anthologist 1 Eichendorff was one of the major writers and critics of Romanticism 2 Ever since their publication and up to the present day some of his works have been very popular in Germany 3 Joseph Freiherr von EichendorffBornJoseph Karl Benedikt Freiherr Baron von Eichendorff 1788 03 10 10 March 1788Schloss Lubowitz Polish Palac Eichendorffow near Ratibor Prussian Silesia Kingdom of PrussiaDied26 November 1857 1857 11 26 aged 69 Neisse Polish Nysa Prussian Silesia Kingdom of PrussiaOccupationNovelist poet essayistEducationHeidelberg UniversityPeriod19th centuryGenreNovellas Fairy tales poetryLiterary movementRomanticismNotable worksMemoirs of a Good for Nothing The Marble StatueSignatureJoseph von Eichendorff as a young manEichendorff etching by Franz Kugler 1832Eichendorff s birthplace Lubowitz Castle Ratibor photo from 1939 It was destroyed in March 1945 during the Upper Silesian Offensive The territory was awarded to Poland after World War II The remains of Lubowitz Castle Raciborz Poland 2008 Note Eichendorff s portrait on the wall The German inscription Keinen Dichter noch liess seine Heimat los translates to No poet s homeland has ever relinquished its hold on him a quote from his novel Dichter und ihre Gesellen Matthias Claudius works vol 1Heidelberg Castle by Carl Blechen 1829Eichendorff first became famous for his 1826 novella Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts freely translated Memoirs of a Good for Nothing 4 and his poems 5 The Memoirs of a Good for Nothing is a typical Romantic novella whose main themes are wanderlust and love The protagonist the son of a miller rejects his father s trade and becomes a gardener at a Viennese palace where he subsequently falls in love with the local duke s daughter As with his lowly status she is unattainable for him he escapes to Italy only to return and learn that she is the duke s adopted daughter and thus within his social reach 1 With its combination of dream world and realism Memoirs of a Good for Nothing is considered to be a high point of Romantic fiction One critic stated that Eichendorff s Good for Nothing is the personification of love of nature and an obsession with hiking 6 Thomas Mann called Eichendorff s Good for Nothing a combination of the purity of the folk song and the fairy tale 7 Many of Eichendorff s poems were first published as integral parts of his novellas and stories where they are often performed in song by one of the protagonists 8 The novella Good for Nothing alone contains 54 poems 9 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Origin and early youth 1 2 College days 1 3 Love affairs 1 4 Military service 1 5 Betrothal marriage and family life 1 6 Child mortality 1 7 Travels of a transferee 1 8 Eichendorff as civil servant 1 9 Death and burial 2 Growth of a Romanticist 2 1 Artistic influences 3 Eichendorff s poetical style 3 1 Range 3 2 Naturalness and artificiality 3 3 Emblematic imagery 3 4 Main motifs 4 Religiosity 5 Eichendorff s own resume 6 Legacy 7 Works 7 1 Volumes of poetry 7 2 Narrative texts 7 2 1 Novels 7 2 2 Novellas 7 3 Play texts 7 4 Translations 7 5 Literary critic 7 6 Anthologist 7 7 Editor 8 Set to music 9 Literature 9 1 Primary Literature 10 Secondary literature 11 Museum archives and organisations 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksBiography EditOrigin and early youth Edit Eichendorff a descendant of an old noble family was born in 1788 at Schloss Lubowitz near Ratibor now Raciborz Poland in Upper Silesia at that time part of the Kingdom of Prussia His parents were the Prussian officer Adolf Freiherr von Eichendorff 1756 1818 and his wife Karoline nee Freiin von Kloche 1766 1822 who came from an aristocratic Roman Catholic family 10 Eichendorff sold the family estates in Deutsch Krawarn Kauthen and Wrbkau and acquired Lubowitz Castle from his mother in law The castle s Rococo reconstruction which was begun by her was very expensive and almost bankrupted the family 11 Young Joseph was close to his older brother Wilhelm 1786 1849 From 1793 to 1801 they were home schooled by tutor Bernhard Heinke Joseph began writing diaries as early as 1798 witnesses to his budding literary career 12 The diaries present many insights into the development of the young writer ranging from simple statements about the weather to notes about finances to early poems At a young age Eichendorff was already well aware of his parents financial straits On 19 June 1801 the thirteen year old noted in his diary Father travelled to Breslau on the run from his creditors adding on 24 June mom become terribly faint 13 With his brother Wilhelm Joseph attended the Catholic Matthias Gymnasium in Breslau 1801 1804 While previously preferring chapbooks he was now introduced to the poetry of Matthias Claudius and Voltaire s La Henriade an epic poem about the last part of the wars of religion and Henry IV of France in ten songs In 1804 his sister Luise Antonie Nepomucene Johanna was born died 1883 who was to become a friend of Austrian writer Adalbert Stifter After their final exams both brothers attended lectures at the University of Breslau and the Protestant Maria Magdalena Gymnasium Eichendorff s diary from this time shows that he valued formal education much less than the theatre recording 126 plays and concerts visited His love for Mozart also goes back to these days 14 Joseph himself seems to have been a talented actor and his brother Wilhelm a good singer and guitar player 15 College days Edit Together with his brother Wilhelm Joseph studied law and the humanities in Halle an der Saale 1805 1806 a city near Jena which was a focal point of the Fruhromantik Early Romantics 2 The brothers frequently attended the theatre of Lauchstadt 13 km where the Weimar court theatrical company performed plays by Goethe 16 17 In October 1806 Napoleon s troops took Halle and teaching at the university ceased To complete their studies Wilhelm and Joseph went to the University of Heidelberg in 1807 another important centre of Romanticism Here Eichendorff befriended romantic poet Otto Heinrich von Loeben 1786 1825 met Achim von Arnim 1781 1831 and possibly Clemens Brentano 1778 1842 18 19 In Heidelberg Eichendorff heard lectures by Joseph Gorres a leading member of the Heidelberg Romantic group a hermitic magician and formative impression 20 as Eichendorff later explained 21 In 1808 the brothers finished their degrees after which they undertook an educational journey to Paris Vienna and Berlin In Berlin they came into closer contact with Romantic writers such as Clemens Brentano Adam Muller and Heinrich von Kleist 19 To further their professional prospects they travelled to Vienna in 1810 where they concluded their studies with a state examination diploma Wilhelm procured employment in the Austrian civil service while Joseph went back home to help his father with managing the estate 22 23 Love affairs Edit From Eichendorff s diaries we know about his love for a girl Amalie Schaffner 24 and another love affair in 1807 08 during his student days in Heidelberg with one Kathchen Forster 25 His deep sorrow about the unrequitted love for the nineteen year old daughter of a cellarman inspired Eichendorff to one of his most famous poems Das zerbrochene Ringlein The Broken Ring Military service Edit nbsp Lutzow Free Corps by Richard Knotel 1890In his deep desperation over this unhappy infatuation Eichendorff craved death in military exploits as mentioned in his poem Das zerbrochene Ringlein Ich mochte als Reiter fliegen Wohl in die blut ge Schlacht Um stille Feuer liegen Im Feld bei dunkler Nacht I fain would mount a charger And glory seek in fight By silent camp fires lying When falls the dark of night Translated by Geoffrey Herbert Chase 26 Although Chase s translation weakens the second line from blut ge Schlacht bloody battle to in fight this actually happens to be much closer to the historical truth since Eichendorff s participation in the Lutzow Free Corps seems to be a myth in spite of some authorities asserting the contrary 27 In 1813 when conflict flared up again Eichendorff tried to join the struggle against Napoleon 28 however he lacked the funds to purchase a uniform gun or horse and when he finally managed to get the money necessary the war was all but over 29 Betrothal marriage and family life Edit nbsp Family arms of von Larisch nbsp Cave in the Harz Mountains Caspar David Friedrich sepia ca 1811His parents to save the indebted family estate hoped that Eichendorff would marry a wealthy heiress however he fell in love with Aloysia von Larisch 1792 1855 30 called Luise the seventeen year old daughter of a prominent yet impoverished Catholic family of nobles The betrothal took place in 1809 the same year Eichendorff went to Berlin to take up a profession there In 1815 the couple was married in Breslau s St Vinzenz church 30 and that same year Eichendorff s son Hermann was born followed in 1819 by their daughter Therese In 1818 Eichendorff s father died and in 1822 his mother The death of his mother resulted in the final loss of all the family s estates in Silesia 31 32 Child mortality Edit During the period infant mortality was very high 33 Both Eichendorff s brother Gustav born 1800 and his sister Louise Antonie born 1799 died in 1803 at a very young age as did two of Eichendorff s daughters between 1822 and 1832 34 The poet expressed the parental sorrow after this loss in the famous cycle Auf meines Kindes Tod 35 One of the poems in this series conveys an especially powerful sense of loss in this era Die Winde nur noch gehen Wehklagend um das Haus Wir sitzen einsam drinnen Und lauschen oft hinaus Only the winds are wandering Around the house and moan And by the window harking We sit inside alone Translated by Margarete Munsterberg 36 Travels of a transferee Edit With his literary figure of the Good for Nothing Eichendorff created the paradigm of the wanderer The motif itself had been central to romanticism since Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder and Ludwig Tieck undertook their famous Pfingstwanderung Whitsun excursion in the Fichtel Mountains in 1793 an event that began the Romantic movement 37 T ravels through Germany Austria and France rounded off Eichendorff s education however he himself was not much of a hiker Apart from some extensive marches on foot during his school and college days for example from Halle to Leipzig to see popular actor Iffland 38 he only undertook one lengthy tour traversing for seventeen days the Harz mountains with his brother in 1805 a trip partly undertaken using the stagecoach as witnessed by his diary 39 Eichendorff was less of a romantic wanderer but rather displaced again and again by changes of location necessitated by his official activities The following trips mainly undertaken by coach or boat are documented 1794 Prague 1799 Karlsbad and Prague 1805 1806 Harz Hamburg Lubeck 1807 Linz Regensburg Nurnberg 1808 1809 via Strasbourg Burgundy Lothringen and the Champagne to Paris a month later from Heidelberg to Frankfurt and from there on a mailboat via Aschaffenburg Wurzburg Nurnberg Regensburg to Vienna 1809 1810 Berlin 1813 Neustadt O S Prudnik 40 1814 Berlin 1816 Breslau 1819 Berlin 1820 Vienna 1821 Danzig 1823 Berlin 1824 Konigsberg 1831 Berlin 1838 Munich and Vienna 1843 Danzig 1846 1847 Vienna 1847 Danzig and Berlin 1848 Kothen and Dresden 1849 Berlin 1855 Neisse Nysa 41 Eichendorff as civil servant Edit Eichendorff worked in various capacities as Prussian government administrator His career began in 1816 as unpaid clerk in Breslau In November 1819 he was appointed assessor and in 1820 consistorial councilor for West and East Prussia in Danzig with an initial annual salary of 1200 thalers In April 1824 Eichendorff was relocated to Konigsberg as Oberprasidialrat chief administrator with an annual salary of 1600 thalers In 1821 Eichendorff was appointed school inspector and in 1824 Oberprasidialrat in Konigsberg 42 In 1831 he moved his family to Berlin where he worked as Privy Councilor for the Foreign Ministry until his retirement in 1844 30 Death and burial Edit nbsp Eichendorff residence in Kothen where he lived from April to October 1855 nbsp Grave of Joseph von Eichendorff in Nysa Neisse PolandEichendorff s brother Wilhelm died in 1849 in Innsbruck That same year there was a Republican uprising and the Eichendorffs fled to Meissen and Kothen where a little house was purchased for his daughter Therese now a von Besserer Dahlfingen in 1854 In 1855 he was much affected by the death of his wife In September he traveled to Sedlnitz for the christening of his grandchild Shortly after he made his very last trip dying of pneumonia on 26 November 1857 in Neisse He was buried the next day with his wife 43 Growth of a Romanticist EditArtistic influences Edit nbsp Friedrich Schlegel painting by Franz Gareis 1801 nbsp Josef Gorres by August Strixner lithograph after a painting by Peter von Cornelius nbsp Title page of Des Knaben Wunderhorn 1806 a major influence on Eichendorff s poetryThe two writers who had the greatest early influence on Eichendorff s artistic development were Friedrich Schlegel who established the term romantisch romantic in German literature 44 and Joseph Gorres While the writers who gathered around Schlegel inclined more to philosophy and aesthetic theory the adherents of Gorres became mainly known as writers of poetry and stories 45 Both movements however greatly influenced intellectual life in Germany by emphasising the individual the subjective the irrational the imaginative the personal the spontaneous the emotional the visionary and the transcendental over classical precepts 46 One of their fundamental ideas was the unity of poetry and life 47 Eichendorff shared Schlegel s view that the world was a naturally and eternally self forming artwork 48 Eichendorff himself used the metaphor that nature was a great picture book which the good Lord has pitched for us outside 49 Arnim s and Brentano s studies and interpretations of the Volkslied folk song deeply influenced Eichendorff s own poetry and poetology 50 nbsp Title page of third edition of Des Knaben Wunderhorn 1808Arnim s and Brentano s anthology Des Knaben Wunderhorn Alte deutsche Lieder a collection of songs about love soldiers wandering as well as children s songs was an important source for the Romantic movement Similar to other early 19th century anthologists such as Thomas Percy Arnim and Brentano edited and rewrote the poems in they collected Everything in the world happens because of poetry to live life with an increased sense and history is the expression of this general poetry of the human race the fate performs this great spectacle is what Arnim said in a letter to Brentano 9 July 1802 51 Eichendorff s poetical style EditRange Edit Although Eichendorffs poetry includes many metric forms ranging from very simple elegiac couplets and stanzas to sonnets his main artistic focus was on poems imitating folk songs 52 A comparison of forms shows that Eichendorff s lyricism is directly influenced by Brentano and Arnim 53 54 Naturalness and artificiality Edit Following the model of Des Knaben Wunderhorn Eichendorff uses simple words naturalness adding more meaning artificiality than dictionary definitions would indicate In this sense His words are rich in connotative power in imaginative appeal and in sound 55 Emblematic imagery Edit Certain expressions and formulas used by Eichendorff which are sometimes characterised by critics as pure cliche 56 actually represent a conscious reduction in favour of emblematics In Gorres poetology nature is speaking 57 us But before it can happen the wonderful song sleeping in each thing must be woken up by the poet s word 58 One notable example used by Eichendorff is the Zauberwort magic word and one of Eichendorff s most celebrated poems the four line stanza Wunschelrute divining rod is about finding such a Zauberwort nbsp Title page of Eichendorff s Gedichte Poems Halle about 1907WunschelruteSchlaft ein Lied in allen Dingen die da traumen fort und fort und die Welt hebt an zu singen triffst du nur das Zauberwort Wishing Wand There sleeps a Song in all things That dream on and on And the world begins to sing If you just find the magic word Main motifs Edit nbsp Wanderschaft by Ludwig Richter illustration for Eichendorff s poem The Happy Wanderer woodcut 1858 61The titles of Eichendorff s poems show that besides the motif of wandering the two other main motifs of his poetry were the passing of time transience and nostalgia Time for Eichendorff is not just a natural phenomenon but as Marcin Worbs elaborated Each day and each of our nights has a metaphysical dimension 59 The morning on the other hand evokes the impression that all nature had been created just in this very moment 60 61 while the evening often acts as a mysterium mortis with the persona pondering transience and death Eichendorff s other main motif nostalgia is described by some critic as a phenomenon of infinity 62 However there is a number of different interpretations According to Helmut Illbruck The simple minded Taugenichts feels continually homesick and can never come to rest 63 Katja Lohr distinguishes between nostalgia as an emotion consisting of two components longing and melancholy The inner emotion of longing is to long for the inner emotion of melancholy is to mourn As an expression of deep reflection longing corresponds with intuition Ahnen grieving with memory 8 Theodor W Adorno who set out to rescue Eichendorff from his misled conservative admirers attested He was not a poet of the homeland but rather a poet of homesickness 64 In sharp contrast Natias Neutert saw in Eichendorff s nostalgia a dialectical unity of an unstable equilibrium of homesickness and wanderlust at once 65 Religiosity EditFor a long time it had been argued that Eichendorff s view of Romanticism had been subordinate to religious beliefs More recently however Christoph Hollender has pointed that Eichendorff s late religious and political writings were commissioned works while his poetry represents a highly personal perspective 66 Eichendorff s own resume EditEichendorff summed up the Romantic epoch stating that it soared like a magnificent rocket sparkling up into the sky and after shortly and wonderfully lighting up the night it exploded overhead into a thousand colorful stars 67 Legacy Edit While other authors such as Ludwig Tieck Caroline de la Motte Fouque Clemens Brentano and Bettina von Arnim adapted the themes and styles of their writing to the emerging realism Eichendorff stayed true to the emblematic universe of his literary Romanticism right through to the 1850s 68 Adorno stated Unconsciously Eichendorff s unleashed romanticism leads right up to the threshold of modernism 69 Works EditVolumes of poetry Edit First publication of some Poems in Ast s Zeitschrift fur Wissenschaft und Kunst under the pseudonym Florens Heidelberg 1808 Gedichte von Joseph Freiherrn von Eichendorff Verlag Duncker amp Humblot Berlin 1837 70 Julian story in verses 1853 Robert und Guiscard epic poem 1855 Lucius epic poem 1855 nbsp Monument to Pedro Calderon de la Barca Plaza de Santa Ana Madrid nbsp Frontpage of Robert Schumann s Liederkreis op 39 published 1842 in ViennaNarrative texts Edit Novels Edit Ahnung und Gegenwart Mit einem Vorwort von de la Motte Fouque novel Nurnberg bei Johann Leonhard Schrag 1815 Dichter und ihre Gesellen novel Verlag Duncker amp Humblot Berlin 1834 Novellas Edit Die Zauberei im Herbste 1808 09 published posthumously in 1906 Das Marmorbild The Marble Statue ed by De la Motte Fouque published in Frauentaschenbuch fur das Jahr 1819 1819 Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts Memoirs of a Good for Nothing together with Das Marmorbild The Marble Statue 1826 Viel Larmen um Nichts 1833 Eine Meerfahrt 1836 published posthumously 1864 Das Schloss Durande 1837 Die Entfuhrung in Urania Taschenbuch fur das Jahr 1839 1839 Die Glucksritter in Rheinisches Jahrbuch 1841 Libertas und ihre Freier 1848 published posthumously 1858 Play texts Edit Krieg den Philistern Dramatisches Marchen in Funf Abenteuern 1823 Meierbeth s Gluck und Ende 1827 Ezelin von Romano 1828 Der letzte Held von Marienburg 1830 Die Freier 1833 71 Translations Edit Pedro Calderon de la Barca Der Graf Lucanor 1845 Die geistlichen Schauspiele Calderons 2 vol 1846 53 1 Literary critic Edit Uber die ethische und religiose Bedeutung der neuen romantischen Poesie in Deutschland On the ethical and religious significance of the new romantic poetry in Germany 1847 Der deutsche Roman des 18 Jahrhunderts in seinem Verhaltniss zum Christenthum The German novel of the 18th century in its relationship to Christianity 1851 Geschichte der poetischen Literatur Deutschlands 1857 72 Anthologist Edit Oberschlesische Marchen und Sagen Upper Silesian fairytales and sagas 1808 1810 72 including five fairy tales with their respective classification in the Aarne Thompson Uther Index 73 Die schone Crassna und das Ungeheuer variant of Beauty and the Beast tale type ATU 425C Die Prinzessin als Kuchenmagd variant of Allerleirauh mostly tale type ATU 510B Der Faulpelz und der Fisch variant of Peruonto and Emelian the Fool tale type ATU 675 Die schone Sophie variant of Snow White tale type ATU 709 Der Vogel Venus variant of The Golden Bird mostly tale type ATU 550 combined with ATU 551 and ATU 506 Editor Edit Lebrecht Blucher Dreves Gedichte Ed and with a foreword by Joseph v Eichendorff Verlag Duncker amp Humblot Berlin 1849 Set to music Edit nbsp Eichendorff monument in Prudnik erected in 1911 nbsp Eichendorff monument in Ratibor by Johannes Boese Erected in 1909 it was removed in 1945 when the Soviets occupied Silesia and disappeared shortly thereafter A replacement was put up in 1994 nbsp Monument in front of Silesia HouseWith approximately 5000 musical settings Eichendorff is the most popular German poet set into music The magical enchanting lyricism of his poetry almost seems to be music itself as it is praised 74 His poems have been set to music by many composers including Schumann Mendelssohn Max Bruch Johannes Brahms Hugo Wolf Didia Saint Georges Richard Strauss Hans Pfitzner Pauline Volkstein 75 Hermann Zilcher Alexander Zemlinsky Max Reger and even Friedrich Nietzsche 76 His poems also inspired orchestral music such as Reger s Eine romantische Suite as well as electronic arrangements by Qntal nbsp The poet as a German 10 penny stamp 1957Literature EditPrimary Literature Edit Samtliche Werke des Freiherrn Joseph von Eichendorff Historisch kritische Ausgabe shortened form HKA Begrundet von Wilhelm Kosch und August Sauer fortgefuhrt und herausgegeben von Hermann Kunisch und Helmut Koopmann Max Niemeyer Verlag Tubingen HKA I 1 Gedichte Erster Teil Text Ed by Harry Frohlich Ursula Regener 1993 HKA I 2 Gedichte Erster Teil Kommentar Aufgrund von Vorarbeiten von Wolfgang Kron Ed by Harry Frohlich 1994 HKA I 3 Gedichte Zweiter Teil Verstreute und nachgelassene Gedichte Text Ed by Ursula Regener 1997 HKA I 4 Gedichte Zweiter Teil Verstreute und nachgelassene Gedichte Kommentar Ed by Ursula Regener 1997 HKA III Ahnung und Gegenwart Ed by Christiane Briegleb Clemens Rauschenberg 1984 HKA IV Dichter und ihre Gesellen Ed by Volkmar Stein 2001 HKA V 1 Erzahlungen Erster Teil Text Ed by Karl Konrad Polheim 1998 HKA V 2 Erzahlungen Erster Teil Kommentar Ed by Karl Konrad Polheim 2000 HKA V 3 Erzahlungen Zweiter Teil Fragmente und Nachgelassenes Ed by Heinz Peter Niewerth 2006 HKA V 4 Erzahlungen Dritter Teil Autobiographische Fragmente Ed by Dietmar Kunisch 1998 HKA VI 1 Historische Dramen und Dramenfragmente Text und Varianten Ed by Harry Frohlich 1996 HKA VI 2 Historische Dramen und Dramenfragmente Kommentar Ed by Klaus Kohnke 1997 HKA VIII 1 Literarhistorische Schriften I Aufsatze zur Literatur Aufgrund der Vorarbeiten von Franz Ranegger Ed by Wolfram Mauser 1962 HKA VIII 2 Literarhistorische Schriften II Abhandlungen zur Literatur Aufgrund der Vorarbeiten von Franz Ranegger Ed by Wolfram Mauser 1965 HKA IX Literarhistorische Schriften III Geschichte der poetischen Literatur Deutschlands Ed by Wolfram Mauser 1970 HKA XI Tagebucher Ed by Franz Heiduk Ursula Regener 2006 HKA XII Briefe 1794 1857 Text Ed by Sibylle von Steinsdorff 1993 HKA XV 1 Ubersetzungen I Erster Teil Graf Lucanor von Don Juan Manuel Geistliche Schauspiele von Don Pedro Calderon la Barca I Ed by Harry Frohlich 2003 HKA XV 2 Ubersetzungen I Zweiter Teil Geistliche Schauspiele von Don Pedro Calderon la Barca II Ed by Harry Frohlich 2002 HKA XVI Ubersetzungen II Unvollendete Ubersetzungen aus dem Spanischen Ed by Klaus Dahme 1966 HKA XVIII 1 Eichendorff im Urteil seiner Zeit I Dokumente 1788 1843 Gunter and Irmgard Niggl 1975 HKA XVIII 2 Eichendorff im Urteil seiner Zeit II Dokumente 1843 1860 Ed by Gunter and Irmgard Niggl 1976 HKA XVIII 3 Eichendorff im Urteil seiner Zeit III Kommentar und Register Ed by Gunter and Irmgard Niggl 1986 HKA II Epische Gedichte HKA VII Dramen II Satirische Dramen und Dramenfragmente Ed by Harry Frohlich HKA X Historische und politische Schriften Ed by Antonie Magen HKA XIII Briefe an Eichendorff Ed by Sibylle von Steinsdorff HKA XIV Kommentar zu den Briefen Bd XII und Bd XIII Ed by Sibylle von Steinsdorff HKA XVII Amtliche Schriften Ed by Hans Pornbacher Joseph von Eichendorff Werke 6 Bde Bibliothek deutscher Klassiker Hrsg von Wolfgang Fruhwald Deutscher Klassiker Verlag Frankfurt am Main 1985 93 Joseph von Eichendorff Ausgewahlte Werke Ed by Hans A Neunzig Nymphenburger Berlin 1987 ISBN 3 485 00554 1 Wolfdietrich Rasch Ed Joseph von Eichendorff Samtliche Gedichte Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag Munich 1975 ISBN 3 446 11427 0Secondary literature EditTheodor W Adorno Zum Gedachtnis Eichendorffs In Noten zur Literatur I Bibliothek Suhrkamp 47 Frankfurt am Main 1963 pp 105 143 Hans Brandenburg Joseph von Eichendorff Sein Leben und sein Werk Beck Munich 1922 Dirk Gottsche Nicholas Saul eds Realism and Romanticism in German Literature Realismus und Romantik in der deutschsprachigen Literatur Aisthesis Bielefeld 2013 ISBN 978 3 89528 995 8 Klaus Gunzel Die deutschen Romantiker 125 Lebenslaufe Ein Personenlexikon Artemis amp Winkler Dusseldorf Zurich 1995 ISBN 3 7608 1229 5 Rufus Hallmark German Lieder in the Nineteenth Century Schirmer New York 1996 ISBN 0 02 870845 8 Helmut Illbruck Nostalgia Origins and Ends of an Unenlightened Disease Northwestern University Press Evanston Illinois 2012 ISBN 9780810128378 Hans Jurg Luthi Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff Francke Verlag Bern 1966 Sybille Anneliese Margot Reichert Unendliche Sehnsucht The Concept of Longing in German Romantic Narrative and Song Dissertation Yale University 1995 Gunther Schiwy Eichendorff Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Eine Biographie C H Beck Munich 2000 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Oskar Seidlin Versuche uber Eichendorff Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen 1965 Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff in Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien 84 Reinbek bei Hamburg 1963 ISBN B0094MO2DQ Jurgen Thym 100 Years Of Eichendorff Songs Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries vol 5 A R Editions Madison 1983 ISBN 0 89579 173 0Museum archives and organisations Edit nbsp Eichendorff Museum Wangen im Allgau Deutsches Eichendorff Museum Eselsberg 1 D 7988 Wangen im Allgau Germany c o Sybille Heimann 07522 3840 or 3704 77 Frankfurter Goethe Haus Freies Deutsches Hochstift Grosser Hirschgraben 23 25 60311 Frankfurt am Main Eichendorff Forum Prof Dr Ursula Regener Universitat RegensburgInstitut fur Germanistik D 93040 RegensburgSee also Edit nbsp Joseph von Eichendorff memorial monument in Ratibor Poland todayEichendorff Literaturpreis German RomanticismReferences Edit a b c Joseph baron von Eichendorff German writer a b Cf J A Cuddon The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory revised by C E Preston London 1999 p 770 Cf Peter Horst Neumann Eichendorff im technischen Zeitalter Zu seinem 200 Geburtstag In Die Zeit Zeitmagazin 11 Marz 1988 http www zeit de 1988 11 eichendorff im technischen zeitalter Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff Memoirs of a Good for Nothing Ungar New York 1955 ISBN 0804461341 Cf Jurgen Thym 100 Years Of Eichendorff Songs Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries vol V A R Editions Inc Madison 1983 p viii ISBN 0 89579 173 0 Cf Ernst Alker Die deutsche Literatur im 19 Jahrhundert 1832 1914 2nd ed Kroners Taschenbuch vol 339 Stuttgart 1962 p 27 Hanjo Kesting Eichendorff und seine Gesellen Die Wiederkehr der Romantik http www frankfurter hefte de upload Archiv 2008 Heft 01 02 PDF 080102 86 89 pdf a b Cf Katja Lohr Sehnsucht als poetologisches Prinzip bei Joseph von Eichendorff Epistemata Wurzburger Wissenschaftliche Schriften Reihe Literaturwissenschaft vol 248 Wurzburg 2003 p 12 13 ISBN 3 8260 2536 9 Cf Wolfdietrich Rasch Ed Joseph von Eichendorff Samtliche Gedichte Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag Munchen 1975 p 502 503 ISBN 3 446 11427 0 Joseph von Eichendorff http www britannica com biography Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Eine Biographie Verlag C H Beck Munchen 2000 p 30 f ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Cf Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien Ed by Kurt Kusenberg Rowohlt Verlag Reinbek 1974 pp 47 163 ISBN 3 499 50084 1 Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Eine Biographie Verlag C H Beck Munchen 2000 pp 32 33 97 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Eine Biographie Verlag C H Beck Munchen 2000 pp 96 97 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Cf Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien Ed by Kurt Kusenberg Rowohlt Verlag Reinbek 1974 pp 33 47 49 163 ISBN 3 499 50084 1 Cf Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien Ed by Kurt Kusenberg Reinbek 1974 p 62 ISBN 3 499 50084 1 Further reading F Maak Das Goethetheater in Lauchstadt D Hacker Lauchstadt 1905 Cf Wolfdietrich Rasch Ed Joseph von Eichendorff Samtliche Gedichte Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag Munchen 1975 p 502 503 ISBN 3 446 11427 0 a b Cf Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien Ed by Kurt Kusenberg Reinbek 1974 pp 163 164 ISBN 3 499 50084 1 Deeper insights cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Eine Biographie Verlag C H Beck Munchen 2000 pp 214 221 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Cf Hans Jurg Luthi Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff Francke Verlag Bern 1966 pp 68 71 155 f Cf Wolfdietrich Rasch Ed Joseph von Eichendorff Samtliche Gedichte Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag Munchen 1975 p 502 ISBN 3 446 11427 0 Cf Biographical data http www koethen anhalt de de eichendorff lebensdaten html Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Verlag C H Beck Munich 2000 p 97 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Verlag C H Beck Munich 2000 pp 240 247 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 In German Poetry from 1750 to 1900 Ed by Robert M Browning The German Library vol 39 The Continuum Publishing Company New York 1984 p 146 147 Cf Fritz Martini Deutsche Literaturgeschichte Von den Anfangen bis zur Gegenwart Alfred Kroner Verlag Stuttgart 1984 p 346 ISBN 3 520 19618 2 Cf Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien Ed by Kurt Kusenberg Rowohlt Verlag Reinbek 1974 p 164 ISBN 3 499 50084 1 Cf Wolf Lepenies Eichendorff der ewig spate Taugenichts In Die Welt 26 November 2007 https www welt de kultur article1400183 Eichendorff der ewig spaete Taugenichts html a b c de Aloysia von Eichendorff Cf Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien Ed by Kurt Kusenberg Reinbek 1974 pp 164 165 ISBN 3 499 50084 1 Biographical data http www koethen anhalt de de eichendorff lebensdaten html Cf Arthur E Imhof Lebenserwartungen in Deutschland vom 17 bis 19 Jahrhundert VCH Acta Humaniora Weinheim 1990 Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Eine Biographie Verlag C H Beck Munich 2000 pp 670 680 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Germany SPIEGEL ONLINE Hamburg von Text im Projekt Gutenberg gutenberg spiegel de a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Margarete Munsterberg Ed trans A Harvest of German Verse Berlin 1916 Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Munchen 2000 p 172 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Munich 2000 p 145 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 After Gunther Schiwy Eichendorff Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Munich 2000 pp 174 185 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 Domino Marcin 24 February 2019 Sladami Josepha Eichendorffa na ziemi prudnickiej Prudnik24 in Polish Retrieved 25 April 2021 Cf Paul Stocklein Joseph von Eichendorff In Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Rowohlts Monographien Ed by Kurt Kusenberg Reinbek 1974 pp 164 167 ISBN 3 499 50084 1 Cf Klaus Gunzel Romantikerschicksale Eine Portratgalerie Berlin 1988 p 219 ISBN 3 373 00157 9 Cf Gunther Schiwy Eichendorf Der Dichter in seiner Zeit Eine Biographie Verlag C H Beck Munchen 2000 pp 686 688 ISBN 3 406 46673 7 J A Cuddon The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms amp Literary Theory revised by C E Preston England 1999 p 768 J A Cuddon The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms amp Literary Theory revised by C E Preston England 1999 p 770 Romanticism 25 April 2023 Cf Robert Konig Deutsche Literaturgeschichte Bielefeld Leipzig 1886 p 521 Quoting after Natias Neutert Foolnotes Smith Gallery Booklet Soho New York 1980 p 7 see Friedrich Schlegel Gesprach uber die Poesie In Paul Kluckhohn Ed Kunstanschauung der Fruhromantik Deutsche Literatur Reihe Romantik Vol III Philipp Reclam jun Leipzig 1937 p 191 Joseph von Eichendorff Zitate zitate woxikon de Cf Hartwig Schulz Eichendorffs satirische Dramen In Michael Kessler Helmut Koopmann Eichendorffs Modernitat Akten des internationalen interdisziplinaren Eichendorff Symposions 6 8 October 1988 Akademie der Diozese Rottenburg Stuttgart Stauffenburg Colloquium Vol 9 Tubingen 1989 p 146 ISBN 978 3 8260 3951 5 Cf Ludwig Achim von Arnim Briefwechsel 1802 1804 Vol 31 Max Niemeyer Verlag Tubingen 2004 p 57 Cf R G Bogner Joseph Eichendorff Gedichte in Ralf Georg Bogner Ed Deutsche Literatur auf einen Blick 400 Werke aus 1200 Jahren Ein Kanon Darmstadt 2009 p 205 ISBN 978 3 89678 663 0 Cf Horst Joachim Frank Handbuch der deutschen Strophenformen 2nd revised ed Tubingen Basel 1993 p 107 Also Cf Jacob Haxold Heinzelmann The influence of the German Volkslied on Eichendorff s lyric https archive org stream influenceofgerma00hein influenceofgerma00hein djvu txt Cf Edward A Bloom Charles H Philbrick Elmer M Blistein The Order of Poetry Brown University New York 1961 p 2 Cf Reinhard H Thum Cliche and Stereotype An Examination of the Lyric Landscape in Eichendorff s Poetry In Philological Quarterly no 62 University of Iowa 1983 pp 435 457 Cf Joseph Gorres Gesammelte Schriften ed by Wilhelm Schellberg on behalf of the Gorres Gesellschaft Koln 1926 vol IV p 2 and V p 274 Cf also Gerhard Mobus Eichendorff in Heidelberg Wirkungen einer Begegnung Diederichs Verlag Dusseldorf 1954 Joseph von Eichendorff cited in Hans Jurg Luthi Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff Bern 1966 p 69 Cf Marcin Worbs Zur religiosen Aussage der Poesie Joseph von Eichendorffs In Grazyna Barabara Szewczyk Renata Dampc Jarosz Ed Eichendorff heute lesen Bielefeld 2009 p 69 ISBN 978 3 89528 744 2 Cf Peter Paul Schwarz Aurora Zur romantischen Zeitstruktur bei Eichendorff Ars poetica Texte zur Dichtungslehre und Dichtkunst Vol 12 ed by August Buck et al Bad Homburg 1970 p 60 Cf Marshall Brown Eichendorff s Time of day In The German Quarterly No 50 1977 pp 485 503 Cf Sybille Anneliese Margot Reichert Unendliche Sehnsucht The concept of Longing in German romantic Narrative and Song Dissertation Yale University Ann Arbor Michigan 1994 Cf Helmut Illbruck Nostalgia Origins and Ends of an Unenlightened Disease Evanston Illinois p 153 ISBN 9780810128378 Cf Theodor W Adorno Zum Gedachtnis Eichendorffs In Noten zur Literatur I Frankfurt am Main 1963 p 112 Cf Natias Neutert Foolnotes Soho New York 1980 p 7 Cf Christoph Hollender Der Diskurs von Poesie und Religion in der Eichendorff Literatur In Wilhelm Gossmann Ed Joseph von Eichendorff Seine literarische und kulturelle Bedeutung Paderborn Munich Wien Zurich 1995 p 163 232 Quoted after Robert Konig Deutsche Literaturgeschichte 18th edition Verlag Velhagen amp Klasing Bielefeld Leipzig 1886 p 521 Cf Dirk Gottsche Nicholas Saul Ed Realism and Romanticism in German Literature Realismus und Romantik in der deutschsprachigen Literatur Bielefeld 2013 p 19 ISBN 978 3 89528 995 8 Cf Theodor W Adorno Zum Gedachtnis Eichendorffs In Noten zur Literatur I No 47 Frankfurt am Main 1963 p 119 This collection was supported by Adolf Scholl a classic philologist and literary historian whom the poet had met in 1832 in Berlin Cf Harry Frohlich Ed Zur Edition In Joseph von Eichendorff Samtliche Werke des Freiherrn Joseph von Eichendorff Historisch kritische Ausgabe begrundet von Wilhelm Kosch August Sauer Fortgefuhrt von Herrmann Kunisch Helmut Koopmann Bd I Stuttgart Berlin Koln 1994 p 11 Cf Hans Jurg Luthi Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff Francke Verlag B ern 1966 307 308 a b Cf Hans Jurg Luthi Dichtung und Dichter bei Joseph von Eichendorff Francke Verlag Bern 1966 p 307 308 Zarych Elzbieta Ludowe Literackie I Romantyczne W Gornoslaskich Basniach I Podaniach Oberschlesiche Marchen Und Sagen Josepha von Eichendorffa Folk literary and romantic character of Upper Silesian fairy tales Oberschlesiche Marchen und Sagen by Joseph von Eichendorff In Joseph von Eichendorff 1788 1857 a Cesko Polska kulturnI a Umelecka pohranicI kolektivnI Monografie Edited by Libor Martinek and Malgorzata Gamrat KLP Koniasch Latin Press 2018 pp 75 94 http bohemistika fpf slu cz wp content uploads 2014 11 eichendorff komplet pdf Experiencing Lieder http www dersnah fee com Essays 20and 20Educational 20Material Lieder Resources pdf Pauline Volkstein und ihre Volkslieder Von Dr Armin Knab Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek www deutsche digitale bibliothek de in German Retrieved 4 March 2023 Cf Jurgen Thym 100 Years Of Eichendorff Songs Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries vol V A R Editions Inc Madison ISBN 0 89579 173 0 Schollhorn Bruno Deutsches Eichendorff Museum amv wangen org External links Edit nbsp Poetry portal nbsp Media related to Joseph von Eichendorff at Wikimedia Commons nbsp German Wikisource has original text related to this article Joseph von Eichendorff nbsp German Wikiquote has quotations related to Joseph von Eichendorff Works by Joseph von Eichendorff at Project Gutenberg http www koethen anhalt de de eichendorff lebensdaten html Eichendorff texts online at German Project Gutenberg in German Works by or about Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff at Internet Archive Works by Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff at Open Library nbsp Freiherr von Eichendorff Catholic Encyclopedia article Joseph von Eichendorff Chronology Published by the Goethe Institut Translations of Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts and Das Marmorbild Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff amp oldid 1177387380, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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