[The Book of the Epic by Helene A. Guerber]@TWC D-Link book
The Book of the Epic

BOOK I
49/222

The fourteenth century saw the rise of the free cities, literary guilds, and five universities.
It also marks the cultivation of political satire in such works as Reinecke Fuchs, and of narrative prose chronicles like the Lueneburger, Alsatian, and Thuringian Chronicles, which are sometimes termed prose epics.

The Volksbuecher also date from this time, and have preserved for us many tales which would otherwise have been lost, such as the legends of the Wandering Jew and Dr.Faustus.
The age of Reformation proved too serious for poets to indulge in any epics save new versions of Reinecke Fuchs and Der Froschmeuseler, and after the Thirty Years' War the first poem of this class really worthy of mention is Klopstock's Messias, or epic in twenty books on the life and mission of Christ and the fulfilment of the task for which he was foreordained.
Contemporary with Klopstock are many noted writers, who distinguished themselves in what is known as the classic period of German literature.

This begins with Goethe's return from Italy, when he, with Schiller's aid, formed a classical school of literature in Germany.
While Schiller has given us the immortal epic drama "William Tell," Goethe produced the idyllic epic "Hermann und Dorothea," the dramatical epic "Faust," and an inimitable version of the animal epic "Reinecke Fuchs." Wieland also was a prolific writer in many fields; inspired by the Arabian Nights, Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream, and Huon de Bordeaux, [27] he composed an allegorical epic entitled "Oberon," wherein "picture after picture is unfolded to his readers," and which has since served as a theme for musicians and painters.
Since Goethe's day Wagner has made the greatest and most picturesque use of the old German epic material, for the themes of nearly all his operas are drawn from this source.[28] FOOTNOTES: [Footnote 24: See the author's "Legends of the Rhine."] [Footnote 25: See the author's "Legends of the Middle Ages."] [Footnote 26: Detailed accounts of "Gudrun" and several other of these subordinate epics can be found in the author's "Legends of the Middle Ages."] [Footnote 27: See the author's "Legends of the Middle Ages."] [Footnote 28: See the author's "Stories of the Wagner Operas."] THE NIBELUNGENLIED[29] The Nibelungenlied, or Song of the Nibelungs, was written about the beginning of the thirteenth century although it relates events dating back to the sixth or seventh.

Some authorities claim it consists of twenty songs of various dates and origin, others that it is the work of a single author.

The latter ascribe the poem to Conrad von Kuerenberg, Wolfram von Eschenbach, Heinrich von Ofterdingen, or Walther von der Vogelweide.


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