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Poets and Poetry, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Italian Journey

-:- Goethe Reading List by Katharena -:-

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Main Page | an Impressive Goethe Poetry Sampler | Thought Provoking Quotes by Goethe | Goethe : One of the Giants of World Literature | Goethe's Extremely Happy Childhood | Literary and Social Duties -- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe | Goethe Takes Refuge in Nature | Goethe's Relation to the Romantics | Mr. Goethe's Epistolary Style, Social Conduct | Goethe's Introspection and Religious Mysticism | Johann Wolfgang von Goethe : Books and Reviews | Katharena's Essential Goethe, Ground Zero!

Featured Book
Italian Journey 1786-1788

A collection of the poetry of Johann Wolfgang Goethe, the pre-eminent figure of German literature, as well as Germany's greatest lyric poet. Everyman's Poetry offers a brief chronological overview of his work, illustrating the wide range of his themes and variety of metrical forms of his poetry.


This was billed as a good introduction to Goethe. I don't know, since this is the first Goethe I've read--but I'm delighted. It starts as a sojourn south, with detailed notations of rocks, geologic information and topography. Don't let that deter you! His description of eating just bread and red wine on his sea voyage to Sicily (because of his rolling seasickness) had me running for a bottle Italian Barbera! As my late great aunt would have said: "A nice, nice book." --Reviewer: Peter C Myers Jr from Dallas, Texas United States


A Journey worth taking
This is a great intro to Goethe, who here seems human, approachable, and caught up in an encounter with Italy that changed pretty much his whole worldview. Written with congenial grace, wit, and observant appreciation. --Reviewer: matrullo from FL USA


The Original Beautiful Mind Goes South
In preparation for a trip to Italy, I began reading the accounts of famous travellers to that land: D.H. Lawrence, Charles Dickens, Tobias Smollett, and now Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. I had no great expectations but was knocked for a loop from page one.

Never before had I encountered a questing mind quite like Goethe's. Almost from the moment to left Carlsbad in September 1786, he was noticing the geological structures underlying the land and the flora and fauna above it. He sits down and talks with ordinary people without an attitude -- and this after he had turned the heads of half of Europe with his SORROWS OF YOUNG WERTHER. Here he was journeying incognito, apparently knowing the language well enough to communicate with peasants, prelates, and nobility.

One who abhors marking books I intend to keep, I found myself underlining frequently. "In this place," he writes from Rome, "whoever looks seriously about him and has eyes to see is bound to become a stronger character." In fact, Goethe spent over a year in Rome learning art, music, science, and even sufferings the pangs of love with a young woman from Milan.

Bracketing his stay in Rome is a longish journey to Naples and Sicily, where he becomes acquainted with Sir Warren Hamilton and his consort Emma, the fascinating Princess Ravaschieri di Satriano, and other German travelers. One of them, Wilhelm Tischbein, painted a wonderful portrait of Goethe the traveller shown on the cover of the Penguin edition.

The translation of W.H. Auden and Elizabeth Mayer is truly wonderful. My only negative comments are toward the Penguin editors who, out of some pennywise foolishness, have omitted translating the frequent Latin, Greek, and French quotes. I am particularly upset about the lack of a translation of the final quote from Ovid's "Tristia." In every other respect, this book is a marvel and does not at all read like a work written some 215 years ago. It is every bit as fresh and relevant as today's headlines, only ever so much more articulate! --Reviewer: Jim Paris from Los Angeles, CA USA

but, I can't write Poetry, Katharena! | -:- Poetic Styles -:- | Get Your Poetry Published!

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