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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: WAT-WIL |
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WIELAND, CHRISTOPH MARTIN (1733-1813) , German poet and man of letters, was born at Oberholzheim, a village
change had come over Wieland's tastes; the writings of his early Swiss yearsDer gepriifle Abraham (1753), Sympathien (1756), Empfindungen eines Christen (1757)were still in the manner of his earlier writings, but with the tragedies, Lady Johanna Gray (1758), and Clementina von Porretta (1760)the latter based on Richardson's Sir Charles Grandisonthe epic fragment Cyrus (1759), and the " moral story in dialogues," Araspes and Panthea (1760), Wieland, as Lessing said, " forsook the ethereal spheres to wander again among the sons of men."Wieland's conversion was completed at Biberach, whither he had returned in 1760, as director of the chancery. The dullness and monotony of his life here was relieved by the friendship of a Count Stadion, whose library in the castle of Warthausen, not far from Biberach, was well stocked with French and English literature. Here, too, Wieland met again his early love Sophie Gutermann, who had meanwhile become the wife of Hofrat La Roche, then manager of Count Stadion's estates. The former poet of an austere pietism now became the advocate of a light-hearted philosophy, from which frivolity and sensuality were not excluded. In Don Sylvio von Rosalva (1764), a romance in imitation of Don Quixote, he held up to ridicule his earlier faith and in the Komische Erzdhlungen (1765) he gave his extravagant imagination only too free a rein. More important is the novel Geschichte des Agathon (1766-1767), in which, under the guise of a Greek fiction, Wieland described his own spiritual and intellectual growth. This work, which Lessing recommended as " a novel of classic taste," marks an epoch in the development of the modern psychological novel. Of equal importance was Wieland's translation of twenty-two of Shakespeare's plays into prose (8 vols., 1762-1766); it was the first attempt to present the English poet to the German people in something approaching entirety. With the poems Musarion oder die Philosophic der Grazien (1768), idris (1768), Combabus (1770), Der neue Amadis (1771), Wieland opened the series of light and graceful romances in verse which appealed so irresistibly to his contemporaries and acted as an antidote to the sentimental excesses of the subsequent Sturm and Drang movement
Weimar
Weimar
series culminating with Wieland's poetic masterpiece, the romantic epic of Oberon (1780). Although belonging to a class of poetry in which modern readers take but little interest
interest
Horace 's Satires (1786), Lucian's Works (1788-1789), Cicero's Letters (18o8 ff.), and from 1?96 to 1803 he edited the Attisches Museum which did valuable service in popularizing Greek studies.Without creating a school in the strict sense of the term, Wieland influenced very considerably the German literature of his time. The verse-romance and the novelmore especially in Austriabenefited by his example, and even the Romanticists of a later date borrowed many a hint from him in their excursions into the literatures of the south of Europe. The qualities which distinguish his work, his fluent style and light touch , his careless frivolity rather than poetic depth, show him to have been in literary temperament more akin to Ariosto and Voltaire than to the more spiritual and serious leaders of German poetry; but these very qualities in Wieland's poetry introduced a balancing element
Editions of Wieland's Samtliche Werke appeared in (1794-1802, 45 vols.), (1818-1828, 53 vols.), (1839-1840, 36 vols.), and (1853-1858, r 6 vols.). The latest edition (4o vols.) was edited by H. Diintzer 1879-1882) ; a new critical edition is at present in preparation by the Prussian Academy. There are numerous editions of selected works, notably by H Prohle in Kurschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur (vols. 51-56, 1883-1887); by F. Muncker (6 vols., 1889); by W. Bolsche 4 vols., 1902). Collections of Wieland's letters were edited by his son Ludwig (1815) and by H. Gessner (1815-1816); his Letters to Sophie Laroche by F. Horn (182o). See J. G. Gruber, C. M. Wielands Leben (4 vols., 1827-1828) ; H. Doring, C. M. Wieland (1853) ; J. W. Loebell, C. M. Wieland (1858) ; H. Prohle, Lessing, Wieland, Heinse (1876); L. F. Ofterdinger, Wielands Leben and Wirken in Schwaben and in der Schweiz (1877) ; R. Keil, Wieland and Reinhold (1885) ; F. Thalmeyr, Ober Wielands Klassizitdt, Sprache and Stil (1894) ; M. Doll, Wieland and die Antike (1896) ; C. A. Behmer, Sterne and Wieland (1899); W. Lenz, Wielands Verhdltnis zu Spenser, Pope and Swift (19o3) ; L. Hirzel, Wielands Beziehungen zu den deutschen Romantikern (1904). See also M. Koch's article in the Allgemeine deutsche Biographie (1897). (J. G. R.)End of Article: WIELAND, CHRISTOPH MARTIN (1733-1813) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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