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Wilhelm Müller

 

Müller, Wilhelm (Dessau, 1794-1827, Dessau), son of a master tailor, began to study at Berlin University and then volunteered for the army in 1813, serving in a regular battalion (Garde-Jäger). He returned to his classical and Germanistic studies in 1814 and made many friends among the Romantic writers, including Arnim, Brentano, and Fouqué. In 1817 he visited Italy as companion to a nobleman and remained there until 1819. On his return to Dessau he became a schoolmaster and also held the post of ducal librarian. He married in 1821.

Müller is best known as a fluent and sensitive, but perhaps too facile, lyric poet. His early poems appeared in periodicals, and his first collection was Siebenundsiebzig Gedichte aus den hinterlassenen Papieren eines reisenden Waldhornisten (1821), which contains the cycle Die schöne Müllerin. His Lieder der Griechen (1821-4), prompted by the Greek rising against the Turks, earned him the nickname ‘Griechen-Müller’. The cycle of poems Die Winterreise first appeared in Urania in 1823 and was reprinted in Zweites Bändchen der Gedichte aus den hinterlassenen Papieren eines reisenden Waldhornisten (1824). Müller was also a scholar and a good linguist, translating Marlowe's Dr. Faustus in 1818 and modern Greek folk-songs (Neugriechische Volkslieder, 1825). The Homerische Vorschule (1824) is an introduction to the study of Homer. Müller, whose poetry has had little attention for its own sake, is chiefly known through Schubert's settings of Die schöne Müllerin (1824) and Die Winterreise (1827). Gedichte. Vollständige kritische Ausgabe, ed. J. T. Hatfield, appeared in 1906.

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Wilhelm Müller.

Wilhelm Müller (October 7, 1794September 30, 1827) was a German lyric poet.

Contents

Life

Müller was born at Dessau, the son of a shoemaker.

He was educated at the gymnasium of his native town and at the university of Berlin, where he devoted himself to philological and historical studies. In 1813-1814 he took part, as a volunteer, in the national rising against Napoleon. In 1817 he visited Italy, and in 1820 published his impressions in Rom, Römer und Römerinnen. In 1818 he was appointed teacher of classics in the Dessau school, and in 1820 librarian to the ducal library.

Müller's earliest lyrics are contained in a volume of poems, Bundesbluten, by several friends, which was published in 1816. His literary reputation was made by the Gedichte aus den hinterlassenen Papieren eines reisenden Waldhornisten (2vols., 1821-1824), and the Lieder der Griechen (1821-1824). The latter collection was Germany's chief tribute of sympathy to the Greeks in their struggle against the Turkish yoke, a theme which inspired many poets of the time. Two volumes of Neugriechische Volkslieder, and Lyrische Reisen und epigrammatische Spaziergänge, followed in 1825 and 1827. Müller also wrote a book on the Homerische Vorschule (1824; 2nd. ed., 1836), translated Marlowe's Faustus, and edited a Bibliothek der Dichtungen des 17 Jahrhunderts (1825-1827; 10 vols.).

Müller and Schubert

Rightly or wrongly, Müller is not considered a major figure of German literature, and his work would probably be even less well known if his contemporary, the composer Franz Schubert, had not set a substantial amount of his poetry to music. Schubert's two song cycles, Die schöne Müllerin and Die Winterreise, are based on collections by Müller.

Müller's son was the Orientalist scholar and founder of comparative religion Friedrich Max Müller and his grandson was Wilhelm Max Müller.

Andres Neuman wrote a novel inspired on the poems of Winter Journey (Die Winterreise), giving life to several of its characters. This novel, El viajero del siglo (Traveller of the Century, 2009) [1], has won the prestigious Alfaguara Award. Neuman himself had already translated Muller's Winter Journey poems to Spanish language[1].

References

  • Wilhelm Müller's Gedichte were first collected in 1837 (4th ed., 1858); edited by his son, Friedrich Max Müller (1868)
  • numerous other editions, notably one in Reclam's Universalbibliothek (1894)
  • critical edition by J. T. Hatfield (1906)
  • Müller's Vermischte Schriften edited with a biography by Gustav Schwab (3 vols., 1830).
  • F. Max Müller's article in the Allgemeine deutsche Biographie
  • O. Franck, Zur Biographie des Dichters W. Müller (Mittellungen des Vereins fur anhaltische Geschichte, 1887)
  • JT Hatfield, W. Müllers unveröffentlichtes Tagebuch und seine ungedruckten Briefe (Deutsche Rundschau, 1902).
  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

References

  1. ^ Müller, Wilhelm: Viaje de invierno. Translated by Andres Neuman. Barcelona: Acantilado, 2003.

External links


 
 
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German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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