The German Classics of The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume I.
The German Classics of The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume I.
Masterpieces of German Literature Translated into English.
Book Excerpt
essed in the
Young Guard which applauded Hernani. Another method of enforcing his
mastery is the organization of a systematic reign of terror,
consisting of bitter satires, such as Schiller and Goethe (after the
model of Pope) founded in the Xenien, and the Romanticists
established in many different forms--satires much more personal and
much better aimed than was the general sort of mockery which the
Romance or Romanized imitators of Horace flung at Bavius and Mævius.
In saying all this, however, we have at the same time made it clear
that the power and influence of the individual of genius receives much
more positive expression in German literature than in those which
produced men like Corneille, Calderon, yes, even Dante and
Shakespeare. German literary history is, more than any other, occupied
with the Individual.
If we now try rapidly to comprehend to what extent each one of the already enumerated literary forces has participated in the development of modern German literature
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