Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb
Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb
(frē`drĭkh gôt`lēp klôp`shtôk), 1724–1803, German poet, important for his influence upon Goethe, the GöttingenGöttingen, city (1994 pop. 128,420), Lower Saxony, central Germany, on the Leine River. It is noted for its university, founded in 1734 (opened 1737) by Elector George Augustus (George II of England).
..... Click the link for more information. poets, and the Sturm und DrangSturm und Drang
or Storm and Stress,
movement in German literature that flourished from c.1770 to c.1784. It takes its name from a play by F. M. von Klinger, Wirrwarr; oder, Sturm und Drang (1776).
..... Click the link for more information. movement. His epic Messias (4 vol., 1748–73, tr. The Messiah) created a literary storm when it first appeared in the Bremen Beiträge. The poem has the merit of being the first major modern work by a distinctively German poet, but the poem as a whole is weak, for Klopstock's genius was lyrical rather than epic. His rhapsodic, musical Odes (1747–80) strongly influenced German song composition. Gluck, C. P. E. Bach, Beethoven, Schubert, Mahler, and many others set them to music. Klopstock also wrote a trilogy of dramas on the Germanic hero Hermann (1769, 1784, 1787).
Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb
Born July 2, 1724, in Quedlinburg; died Mar. 14, 1803, in Hamburg. German poet; author of The Messiah (vols. 1–4, 1751–73), a religious epic in hexameters.
A forerunner of the Sturm und Drang movement, Klopstock attempted to make his lyric works express freedom of emotion and poetic imagination. His dramas include Adam’s Death (1757), Solomon (1764), and David (1772), tragedies based on biblical subjects and emphasizing the necessity for humility. His dramatic trilogy, consisting of Hermann’s Battle (1769), Hermann and the Princes (1784), and Hermann’s Death (1787), deals with Germany’s heroic past.
Klopstock hailed the Great French Revolution, and he was made an honorary citizen of the French Republic. However, his abstractly ethical point of view prevented him from properly appreciating the Jacobin phase of the revolution.
WORKS
Werke, vols. 1–4. Edited by R. Hamel. Stuttgart, 1884. (Deutsche Nationalliteratur, vols. 46–48.)In Russian translation:
In N. V. Gerbel’, Nemetskie poety v biografiiakh i obraztsakh. St. Petersburg, 1877.
In Khrestomatiia po zapadno-evropeiskoi literature: Literatura XVIII veka. Moscow, 1938.
REFERENCES
Mering, F. “F. Klopshtok, v ego kn.” Literaturnokriticheskie stat’i vol. 1. Moscow-Leningrad, 1934.Wiegand, J. Zur lyrischen Kunst Walthers, Klopstocks und Goethes. Tübingen, 1956.
IU. M. KAGAN