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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01
The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01

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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01

Язык: Английский
Год издания: 2018
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In contrast herewith Goethe's purpose was in his own words, "in an epic crucible to free from its dross the purely human existence of a small German town, and at the same time mirror in a small glass the great movements and changes of the world's stage." This purpose he achieved in the writing of Hermann and Dorothea at intervals from September, 1796, through the summer of 1797, in the autumn of which year the poem was published.

The main sources from which the poet drew his material are four. In the first place the theme was invented by him out of an anecdote of the flight of Protestant refugees from the Archbishopric of Salzburg in 1731-1732. On the basis of this anecdote he drew the original outlines of the meeting and union of the lovers. Secondly, as a consequence of the French Revolution, Germans were forced to flee from German territory west of the Rhine. Goethe was present with Prussian troops in France in 1792, and observed the siege of Mainz in 1793. Hence his knowledge of war and exile, with their attendant cruelties and sufferings. Thirdly, the personal experiences of his own life could not but contribute to his description of the then German present. Features of Frankfurt and Ilmenau reappear. The characters show traits of Goethe's parents, and possibly something of his wife is in Dorothea. Hermann's mother bears the name of the poet's and reveals many of her qualities. But some of these are given to the landlord-father, while the elder Goethe's pedantry and petty weaknesses are shown in the apothecary. The poet's experiences in the field are realistically reproduced in many particulars of character and incident, as are doubtless also his mother's vivid reports of events in Frankfurt during July and August, 1796. We may feel sure too that it was the occurrences of this summer that led Goethe to transform the short, pure idyl of his first intention into a longer epic of his own present. The fourth source is literary tradition, which we may trace back through the verse idyl of Voss to the prose idyl of Gessner, thence through the unnatural Arcadian pastorals of the seventeenth and earlier centuries to the great Greek creators,—Theocritus, of the idyl, and Homer, of the epic.

From whatever source derived, the materials were transmuted and combined by Goethe's genius into a broad, full picture of German life, with characters typical of the truly human and of profound ethical importance, interpreting to the attentive reader the significance of life for the individual, the family, the nation.

HERMANN AND DOROTHEA (1797)31

TRANSLATED BY ELLEN FROTHINGHAM

CALLIOPE

FATE AND SYMPATHYTruly, I never have seen the market and street so deserted!How as if it were swept looks the town, or had perished! Not fiftyAre there, methinks, of all our inhabitants in it remaining.What will not curiosity do! here is every one running,Hurrying to gaze on the sad procession of pitiful exiles.Fully a league it must be to the causeway they have to pass over,Yet all are hurrying down in the dusty heat of the noonday.I, in good sooth, would not stir from my place to witness the sorrowsBorne by good, fugitive people, who now, with their rescued possessions,Driven, alas! from beyond the Rhine, their beautiful country,Over to us are coming, and through the prosperous cornerRoam of this our luxuriant valley, and traverse its windings."Well hast thou done, good wife, our son in thus kindly dispatching,Laden with something to eat and to drink, and with store of old linen,'Mongst the poor folk to distribute; for giving belongs to the wealthy.How the youth drives, to be sure! What control he has over the horses!Makes not our carriage a handsome appearance,—the new one? With comfort,Four could be seated within, with a place on the box for the coachman.This time, he drove by himself. How lightly it rolled round the corner!"Thus, as he sat at his ease in the porch of his house on the market,Unto his wife was speaking mine host of the Golden Lion.Thereupon answered and said the prudent, intelligent housewife:"Father, I am not inclined to be giving away my old linen:Since it serves many a purpose; and cannot be purchased for money,When we may want it. To-day, however, I gave, and with pleasure,Many a piece that was better, indeed, in shirts and in bed-clothes;For I was told of the aged and children who had to go naked.But wilt thou pardon me, father? thy wardrobe has also been plundered.And, in especial, the wrapper that has the East-Indian flowers,Made of the finest of chintz, and lined with delicate flannel,Gave I away: it was thin and old, and quite out of the fashion."Thereupon answered and said, with a smile, the excellent landlord:"Faith! I am sorry to lose it, my good old calico wrapper,Real East-Indian stuff: I never shall get such another.Well, I had given up wearing it: nowadays, custom compels usAlways to go in surtout, and never appear but in jacket;Always to have on our boots; forbidden are night-cap and slippers.""See!" interrupted the wife; "even now some are yonder returning,Who have beheld the procession: it must, then, already be over.Look at the dust on their shoes! and see how their faces are glowing!Every one carries his kerchief, and with it is wiping the sweat off.Not for a sight like that would I run so far and so suffer,Through such a heat; in sooth, enough shall I have in the telling."Thereupon answered and said, with emphasis, thus, the good father:"Rarely does weather like this attend such a harvest as this is.We shall be bringing our grain in dry, as the hay was before it.Not the least cloud to be seen, so perfectly clear is the heaven;And, with delicious coolness, the wind blows in from the eastward.That is the weather to last! over-ripe are the cornfields already;We shall begin on the morrow to gather our copious harvest."Constantly, while he thus spoke, the crowds of men and of womenGrew, who their homeward way were over the market-place wending;And, with the rest, there also returned, his daughters beside him,Back to his modernized house on the opposite side of the market,Foremost merchant of all the town, their opulent neighbor,Rapidly driving his open barouche,—it was builded in Landau.Lively now grew the streets, for the city was handsomely peopled.Many a trade was therein carried on, and large manufactures.Under their doorway thus the affectionate couple were sitting,Pleasing themselves with many remarks on the wandering people.Finally broke in, however, the worthy housewife, exclaiming:"Yonder our pastor, see! is hitherward coming, and with himComes our neighbor the doctor, so they shall every thing tell us;All they have witnessed abroad, and which 'tis a sorrow to look on."Cordially then the two men drew nigh, and saluted the couple;Sat themselves down on the benches of wood that were placed in the doorway,Shaking the dust from their feet, and fanning themselves withtheir kerchiefs.Then was the doctor, as soon as exchanged were the mutual greetings,First to begin, and said, almost in a tone of vexation:"Such is mankind, forsooth! and one man is just like another,Liking to gape and to stare when ill-luck has befallen his neighbor.Every one hurries to look at the flames, as they soar in destruction;Runs to behold the poor culprit, to execution conducted:Now all are sallying forth to gaze on the need of these exiles,Nor is there one who considers that he, by a similar fortune,May, in the future, if not indeed next, be likewise o'ertaken.Levity not to be pardoned, I deem; yet it lies in man's nature."Thereupon answered and said the noble, intelligent pastor;Ornament he of the town, still young, in the prime of his manhood.He was acquainted with life,—with the needs of his hearers acquainted;Deeply imbued he was with the Holy Scriptures' importance,As they reveal man's destiny to us, and man's disposition;Thoroughly versed, besides, in best of secular writings."I should be loath," he replied, "to censure an innocent instinct,Which to mankind by good mother Nature has always been given.What understanding and reason may sometimes fail to accomplish,Oft will such fortunate impulse, that bears us resistlessly with it.Did curiosity draw not man with its potent attraction,Say, would he ever have learned how harmoniously fitted togetherWorldly experiences are? For first what is novel he covets;Then with unwearying industry follows he after the useful;Finally longs for the good by which he is raised and ennobled.While he is young, such lightness of mind is a joyous companion,Traces of pain-giving evil effacing as soon as 'tis over.He is indeed to be praised, who, out of this gladness of temper,Has in his ripening years a sound understanding developed;Who, in good fortune or ill, with zeal and activity labors:Such an one bringeth to pass what is good, and repaireth the evil."Then broke familiarly in the housewife impatient, exclaiming:"Tell us of what ye have seen; for that I am longing to hear of!""Hardly," with emphasis then the village doctor made answer,"Can I find spirits so soon after all the scenes I have witnessed.Oh, the manifold miseries! who shall be able to tell them?E'en before crossing the meadows, and while we were yet at a distance,Saw we the dust; but still from hill to hill the processionPassed away out of our sight, and we could distinguish but little.But when at last we were come to the street that crosses the valley,Great was the crowd and confusion of persons on foot and of wagons.There, alas! saw we enough of these poor unfortunates passing,And could from some of them learn how bitter the sorrowful flight was,Yet how joyful the feeling of life thus hastily rescued.Mournful it was to behold the most miscellaneous chattels,—All those things which are housed in every well-furnished dwelling,All by the house-keeper's care set up in their suitable places,Always ready for use; for useful is each and important.—Now these things to behold, piled up on all manner of wagons,One on the top of another, as hurriedly they had been rescued.Over the chest of drawers were the sieve and wool coverlet lying;Thrown in the kneading-trough lay the bed, and the sheets on the mirror.Danger, alas! as we learned ourselves in our great conflagrationTwenty years since, will take from a man all power of reflection,So that he grasps things worthless and leaves what is precious behind him.Here, too, with unconsidering care they were carrying with themPitiful trash, that only encumbered the horses and oxen;Such as old barrels and boards, the pen for the goose, and the bird-cage.Women and children, too, went toiling along with their bundles,Panting 'neath baskets and tubs, full of things of no manner of value:So unwilling is man to relinquish his meanest possession.Thus on the dusty road the crowded procession moved forward,All confused and disordered. The one whose beasts were the weaker,Wanted more slowly to drive, while faster would hurry another.Presently went up a scream from the closely squeezed women and children,And with the yelping of dogs was mingled the lowing of cattle,Cries of distress from the aged and sick, who aloft on the wagon,Heavy and thus overpacked, upon beds were sitting and swaying.Pressed at last from the rut and out to the edge of the highway,Slipped the creaking wheel; the cart lost its balance, and overFell in the ditch. In the swing the people were flung to a distance,Far off into the field, with horrible screams; by good fortuneLater the boxes were thrown and fell more near to the wagon.Verily all who had witnessed the fall, expected to see themCrushed into pieces beneath the weight of trunks and of presses.So lay the cart all broken to fragments, and helpless the people.Keeping their onward way, the others drove hastily by them,Each thinking only of self, and carried away by the current.Then we ran to the spot, and found the sick and the aged,—Those who at home and in bed could before their lingering ailmentsScarcely endure,—lying bruised on the ground, complaining and groaning,Choked by the billowing dust and scorched by the heat of the noonday."Thereupon answered and said the kind-hearted landlord, with feeling:"Would that our Hermann might meet them and give them refreshmentand clothing!Loath should I be to behold them: the looking on suffering pains me.Touched by the earliest tidings of their so cruel afflictions,Hastily sent we a mite from out of our super-abundance,Only that some might be strengthened, and we might ourselves be made easy.But let us now no longer renew these sorrowful picturesKnowing how readily fear steals into the heart of us mortals,And anxiety, worse to me than the actual evil.Come with me into the room behind, our cool little parlor,Where no sunbeam e'er shines, and no sultry breath ever entersThrough its thickness of wall. There mother will bring us a flagonOf our old eighty-three, with which we may banish our fancies.Here 'tis not cosey to drink: the flies so buzz round the glasses."Thither adjourned they then, and all rejoiced in the coolness.Carefully brought forth the mother the clear and glorious vintage,Cased in a well-polished flask, on a waiter of glittering pewter,Set round with large green glasses, the drinking cups meet for theRhine wine.So sat the three together about the highly waxed table,Gleaming and round and brown, that on mighty feet was supported.Joyously rang at once the glasses of landlord and pastor,But his motionless held the third, and sat lost in reflection,Until with words of good-humor the landlord challenged him, saying,—"Come, sir neighbor, empty your glass, for God in His mercyThus far has kept us from evil, and so in the future will keep us.For who acknowledges not, that since our dread conflagration,When He so hardly chastised us, He now is continually blessing,Constantly shielding, as man the apple of His eye watches over,Holding it precious and dear above all the rest of His members?Shall He in time to come not defend us and furnish us succor?Only when danger is nigh do we see how great is His power.Shall He this blooming town which He once by industrious burghersBuilt up afresh from its ashes, and afterward blessed with abundance,Now demolish again, and bring all the labor to nothing?"Cheerfully said in reply the excellent pastor, and kindly:"Keep thyself firm in the faith, and firm abide in this temper;For it makes steadfast and wise when fortune is fair, and when evil,Furnishes sweet consolation and animates hopes the sublimest."Then made answer the landlord, with thoughts judicious and manly:"Often the Rhine's broad stream have I with astonishment greeted,As I have neared it again, after travelling abroad upon business.Always majestic it seemed, and my mind and spirit exalted.But I could never imagine its beautiful banks would so shortlyBe to a rampart transformed, to keep from our borders the Frenchman,And its wide-spreading bed be a moat all passage to hinder.See! thus nature protects, the stout-hearted Germans protect us,And thus protects us the Lord, who then will be weakly despondent?Weary already the combatants, all indications are peaceful.Would it might be that when that festival, ardently longed for,Shall in our church be observed, when the sacred Te Deum is rising,Swelled by the pealing of organ and bells, and the blaring of trumpets,—Would it might be that that day should behold my Hermann, sir pastor,Standing, his choice now made, with his bride before thee at the altar,Making that festal day, that through every land shall be honored,My anniversary, too, henceforth of domestic rejoicing!But I observe with regret, that the youth so efficient and activeEver in household affairs, when abroad is timid and backward.Little enjoyment he finds in going about among others;Nay, he will even avoid young ladies' society wholly;Shuns the enlivening dance which all young persons delight in."Thus he spoke and listened; for now was heard in the distanceClattering of horses' hoofs drawing near, and the roll of the wagon,Which, with furious haste, came thundering under the gateway.

TERPSICHORE

HERMANNNow when of comely mien the son came into the chamber,Turned with a searching look the eyes of the preacher upon him,And, with the gaze of the student, who easily fathoms expression,Scrutinized well his face and form and his general bearing.Then with a smile he spoke, and said in words of affection:"Truly a different being thou comest! I never have seen theeCheerful as now, nor ever beheld I thy glances so beaming.Joyous thou comest, and happy: 'tis plain that among the poor peopleThou hast been sharing thy gifts, and receiving their blessingsupon thee."Quietly then, and with serious words, the son made him answer:"If I have acted as ye will commend, I know not; but I followedThat which my heart bade me do, as I shall exactly relate you.Thou wert, mother, so long in rummaging 'mong thy old pieces,Picking and choosing, that not until late was thy bundle together;Then, too, the wine and the beer took care and time in the packing.When I came forth through the gateway at last, and out on the high-road,Backward the crowd of citizens streamed with women and children,Coming to meet me; for far was already the band of the exiles.Quicker I kept on my way, and drove with speed to the village,Where they were meaning to rest, as I heard, and tarry till morning.Thitherward up the new street as I hasted, a stout-timbered wagon,Drawn by two oxen, I saw, of that region the largest and strongest;While, with vigorous steps, a maiden was walking beside them,And, a long staff in her hand, the two powerful creatures was guiding,Urging them now, now holding them back; with skill did she drive them.Soon as the maiden perceived me, she calmly drew near to the horses,And in these words she addressed me: 'Not thus deplorable alwaysHas our condition been, as to-day on this journey thou seest.I am not yet grown used to asking gifts of a stranger,Which he will often unwillingly give, to be rid of the beggar.But necessity drives me to speak; for here, on the straw, liesNewly delivered of child, a rich land-owner's wife, whom I scarcelyHave in her pregnancy, safe brought off with the oxen and wagon.Naked, now in her arms the new-born infant is lying,And but little the help our friends will be able to furnish,If in the neighboring village, indeed, where to-day we would rest us,Still we shall find them; though much do I fear they already havepassed it.Shouldst thou have linen to spare of any description, providedThou of this neighborhood art, to the poor in charity give it.'"Thus she spoke, and the pale-faced mother raised herself feeblyUp from the straw, and toward me looked. Then said I in answer'Surely unto the good, a spirit from heaven oft speaketh,Making them feel the distress that threatens a suffering brother.For thou must know that my mother, already presaging thy sorrows,Gave me a bundle to use it straightway for the need of the naked.'Then I untied the knots of the string, and the wrapper of father'sUnto her gave, and gave her as well the shirts and the linen.And she thanked me with joy, and cried: 'The happy believe notMiracles yet can be wrought: for only in need we acknowledgeGod's own hand and finger, that leads the good to show goodness.What unto us He has done through thee, may He do to thee also!'And I beheld with what pleasure the sick woman handled the linens,But with especial delight the dressing-gown's delicate flannel.'Let us make haste,' the maid to her said, 'and come to the village,Where our people will halt for the night and already are resting.There these clothes for the children I, one and all, straightwaywill portion.'Then she saluted again, her thanks most warmly expressing,Started the oxen; the wagon went on; but there I still lingered,Still held the horses in check; for now my heart was dividedWhether to drive with speed to the village, and there the provisionsShare 'mong the rest of the people, or whether I here to the maidenAll should deliver at once, for her discreetly to portion.And in an instant my heart had decided, and quietly drivingAfter the maiden, I soon overtook her, and said to her quickly:'Hearken, good maiden;—my mother packed up not linen-stuffs onlyInto the carriage, that I should have clothes to furnish the naked;Wine and beer she added besides, and supply of provisions:Plenty of all these things I have in the box of the carriage.But now I feel myself moved to deliver these offerings alsoInto thy hand; for so shall I best fulfil my commission.Thou wilt divide them with judgment, while I must by chance be directed.'Thereupon answered the maiden: 'I will with faithfulness portionThese thy gifts, that all shall bring comfort to those who are needy.'Thus she spoke, and quickly the bog of the carriage I opened,Brought forth thence the substantial hams, and brought out thebreadstuffs,Bottles of wine and beer, and one and all gave to the maiden.Willingly would I have given her more, but the carriage was empty.All she packed at the sick woman's feet, and went on her journey.I, with my horses and carriage, drove rapidly back to the city."Instantly now, when Hermann had ceased, the talkative neighborTook up the word, and cried: "Oh happy, in days like the present,Days of flight and confusion, who lives by himself in his dwelling,Having no wife nor child to be clinging about him in terror!Happy I feel myself now, and would not for much be called father;Would not have wife and children to-day, for whom to be anxious.Oft have I thought of this flight before; and have packed up togetherAll my best things already, the chains and old pieces of moneyThat were my sainted mother's, of which not one has been sold yet.Much would be left behind, it is true, not easily gotten.Even the roots and the herbs, that were with such industry gathered,I should be sorry to lose, though the worth of the goods is but trifling.If my purveyor remained, I could go from my dwelling contented.When my cash I have brought away safe, and have rescued my person,All is safe: none find it so easy to fly as the single.""Neighbor," unto his words young Hermann with emphasis answered:"I can in no wise agree with thee here, and censure thy language.Is he indeed a man to be prized, who, in good and in evil,Takes no thought but for self, and gladness and sorrow with othersKnows not how to divide, nor feels his heart so impel him?Rather than ever to-day would I make up my mind to be married:Many a worthy maiden is needing a husband's protection,And the man needs an inspiriting wife when ill is impending."Thereupon smiling the father replied: "Thus love I to hear thee!That is a sensible word such as rarely I've known thee to utter."Straightway, however, the mother broke in with quickness, exclaiming:"Son, to be sure, thou art right! we parents have set the example;Seeing that not in our season of joy did we choose one another;Rather the saddest of hours it was that bound us together.Monday morning—I mind it well; for the day that precededCame that terrible fire by which our city was ravaged—Twenty years will have gone. The day was a Sunday as this is;Hot and dry was the season; the water was almost exhausted.All the people were strolling abroad in their holiday dresses,'Mong the villages partly, and part in the mills and the taverns.And at the end of the city the flames began, and went coursingQuickly along the streets, creating a draught in their passage.Burned were the barns where the copious harvest already was garnered;Burned were the streets as far as the market; the house of my father,Neighbor to this, was destroyed, and this one also fell with it.Little we managed to save. I sat, that sorrowful night through,Outside the town on the common, to guard the beds and the boxes.Sleep overtook me at last, and when I again was awakened,Feeling the chill of the morning that always descends before sunrise,There were the smoke and the glare, and the walls and chimneys in ruins.Then fell a weight on my heart; but more majestic than everCame up the sun again, inspiring my bosom with courage.Then I rose hastily up, with a yearning the place to revisitWhereon our dwelling had stood, and to see if the hens had been rescued,Which I especially loved, for I still was a child in my feelings.Thus as I over the still-smoking timbers of house and of court-yardPicked my way, and beheld the dwelling so ruined and wasted,Thou camest up to examine the place, from the other direction.Under the ruins thy horse in his stall had been buried; the rubbishLay on the spot and the glimmering beams; of the horse we saw nothing.Thoughtful and grieving we stood there thus, each facing the other,Now that the wall was fallen that once had divided our court-yards.Thereupon thou by the hand didst take me, and speak to me, saying,—'Lisa, how camest thou hither? Go back! thy soles must be burning;Hot the rubbish is here: it scorches my boots, which are stronger.'And thou didst lift me up, and carry me out through thy court-yard.There was the door of the house left standing yet with its archway,Just as 'tis standing now, the one thing only remaining.Then thou didst set me down and kiss me; to that I objected;But thou didst answer and say with kindly significant language:'See! my house lies in ruins: remain here and help me rebuild it;So shall my help in return be given to building thy father's.'Yet did I not comprehend thee until thou sentest thy motherUnto my father, and quick were the happy espousals accomplished.E'en to this day I remember with joy those half-consumed timbers,And I can see once more the sun coming up in such splendor;For 'twas the day that gave me my husband; and, ere the first seasonPassed of that wild desolation, a son to my youth had been given.Therefore I praise thee, Hermann, that thou, with an honest assurance,Shouldst, in these sorrowful days, be thinking thyself of a maiden,And amid ruins and war shouldst thus have the courage to woo her."Straightway, then, and with warmth, the father replied to her, saying:"Worthy of praise is the feeling, and truthful also the story,Mother, that thou hast related; for so indeed every thing happened.Better, however, is better. It is not the business of all menThus their life and estate to begin from the very foundation:Every one needs not to worry himself as we and the rest did.Oh, how happy is he whose father and mother shall give him,Furnished and ready, a house which he can adorn with his increase.Every beginning is hard; but most the beginning a household.Many are human wants, and every thing daily grows dearer,So that a man must consider the means of increasing his earnings.This I hope therefore of thee, my Hermann, that into our dwelling
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