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The Life of Friedrich Schiller


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       Thomas Carlyle

      The Life of Friedrich Schiller

      Comprehending an Examination of His Works

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066240646

       PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION. [1845.]

       PART I.

       SCHILLER'S YOUTH (1759-1784) .

       PART FIRST. [1759-1784.]

       PART II.

       FROM SCHILLER'S SETTLEMENT AT MANNHEIM TO HIS SETTLEMENT AT JENA. (1783-1790.)

       PART SECOND. [1783-1790.]

       Act III. Scene X. The King and Marquis de Posa.

       PART III.

       FROM HIS SETTLEMENT AT JENA TO HIS DEATH. (1790-1805.)

       PART THIRD. [1790-1805.]

       Act I. Scene IV. Max Piccolomini, Octavio Piccolomini, Questenberg.

       Act IV. Scene X. Thekla; the Swedish Captain; Fräulein Neubrunn.

       Scene XI. Neubrunn; Thekla.

       Scene XII. Thekla.

       Act III. Scene IV.

       Scene V. A Knight [ in haste ].

       Scene VI.

       Scene VII.

       Scene IX.

       Scene X. Lionel, Joanna.

       Act IV. Scene III.

       SUPPLEMENT OF 1872.

       HERR SAUPE'S BOOK. [NOTE IN PEOPLE'S EDITION.]

       SAUPE'S "SCHILLER AND HIS FATHER'S HOUSEHOLD."

       APPENDIX I.

       APPENDIX II.

       APPENDIX II.

       Thomas Carlyle Leben Schillers, aus dem Englischen; eingeleitet durch Goethe.

       Schillers Leben.

       SUMMARY AND INDEX.

       SUMMARY.

       PART I. SCHILLER'S YOUTH. (1759-1784.)

       PART II. FROM HIS SETTLEMENT AT MANNHEIM TO HIS SETTLEMENT AT JENA. (1784-1790:)

       PART III. FROM HIS SETTLEMENT AT JENA TO HIS DEATH. (1790-1805.)

       SUPPLEMENT OF 1872.

       APPENDIX I.

       APPENDIX II.

       [1845.]

       Table of Contents

      The excuse for reprinting this somewhat insignificant Book is, that certain parties, of the pirate species, were preparing to reprint it for me. There are books, as there are horses, which a judicious owner, on fair survey of them, might prefer to adjust by at once shooting through the head: but in the case of books, owing to the pirate species, that is not possible. Remains therefore that at least dirty paper and errors of the press be guarded against; that a poor Book, which has still to walk this world, do walk in clean linen, so to speak, and pass its few and evil days with no blotches but its own adhering to it.

      There have been various new Lives of Schiller since this one first saw the light;—great changes in our notions, informations, in our relations to the Life of Schiller, and to other things connected therewith, during that long time! Into which I could not in the least enter on the present occasion. Such errors, one or two, as lay corrigible on the surface, I have pointed out by here and there a Note as I read; but of errors that lay deeper there could no charge be taken: to break the surface, to tear-up the old substance, and model it anew, was a task that lay far from me—that would have been frightful to me. What was written remains written; and the Reader, by way of constant commentary, when needed, has to say to himself, "It was written Twenty years ago." For newer instruction on Schiller's Biography he can consult the Schillers Leben of Madame von Wolzogen, which Goethe once called a Schiller Redivivus; the Briefwechsel zwischen Schiller und Goethe;—or, as a summary of the whole, and the readiest inlet to the general subject for an English reader, Sir Edward Bulwer's Sketch of Schiller's Life, a vigorous and lively piece of writing,