Annette von Droste-Hülshoff
|
Annette von Droste-Hülshoff on the Twenty Deutsche Mark banknote |
|
House of Annette von Droste-Hülshoff in Meersburg (Germany). |
Annette von Droste (
January 10,
1797 –
May 25,
1848) was a
19th century German author, and one of the most important German women poets.
She was born at the family seat of
Hülshoff near
Münster into an
aristocratic,
Catholic family in
Westphalia, educated by private tutors, and began to write as a child, though she published no work until she was forty years old. Among her best-known works are the cycle of poems
Das geistliche Jahr (The Spiritual Year) and the novella
Die Judenbuche (The Jew's Beech).
Her early mental training was largely influenced by her cousin,
Clemens August Freiherr von Droste zu Vischering, who, as
archbishop of Cologne, became notorious for his extreme
ultramontane views (see below); and she received a more liberal education than in those days ordinarily fell to a woman's lot.
Despite her withdrawn and restricted life she corresponded with intellectual contemporaries such as the
Brothers Grimm. As her health continually worsened, earning a living through her writing was never an option. Despite this, she took her literary work very seriously.
Her break from her circumstances came with her trip to
Lake Constance, originally only to visit relations. From 1841 she stayed with her brother-in-law,
Joseph von Laßberg at Schloss Meersburg. In 1837 she became friends with the author
Levin Schücking, who through her agency became the librarian at Schloss Meersburg.
Annette von Droste-Hülshoff is (according to the article in
Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911) beyond doubt the most gifted and original of German women poets. Her verse is strong and vigorous, but often unmusical even to harshness; one looks in vain for a touch of sentimentality or melting sweetness in it. As a lyric poet, she is at her best when she is able to attune her thoughts to the sober landscape of the Westphalian moorlands of her home. Her narrative poetry, and especially
Das Hospiz auf dem Grossen St. Bernard and
Die Schlacht im Loener Bruch (both 1838), belongs to the best German poetry of its kind. She was a strict
Roman Catholic, and her religious poems, published in 1852, after her death, under the title
Das geistliche Jahr, nebst einem Anhang religioser Gedichte, enjoyed great popularity.
Annette von Droste-Hülshoff died in May 1848 at Schloss Meersburg, probably from
pneumonia.
*
Gedichte, 1838
*
Die Judenbuche (novella), 1842
*
Gedichte (Poems), 1844
*
Westfälische Schilderungen (Westphalian Illustrations), 1845
*
Das geistliche Jahr (The Spiritual Year, cycle of poems), 1851
*
Der Knabe im Moor (The Lad on the Moor, ballad)
*
Letzte Gaben (Last Gifts, poems), 1860
*
Briefe von Annette von Droste-Hülshoff und Levin Schücking (Letters from Annette von Droste-Hülshoff and Levin Schücking)
*Some of the material for this article comes from
the equivalent German-language Wikipedia article. It cites:
* P. Berglar:
Annette von Droste-Hülshoff. Rowohlt Verlag, Reinbek 1967
* Levin Schücking:
Annette von Droste. Stuttgart 1964
* E. Staiger:
Annette von Droste-Hülshoff. Frauenfeld 1967
*
Biedermeier