ào zuòzhělièbiǎo
'ěr Rainer Maria Rilke 'ěr Georg Trakl lán Paul Celan
sài · 'ěr xiào Race Mi Mo Erxiaolǎo yuē hàn · shī láo Johann Straussxiǎo yuē hàn · shī láo Johann Strauss
méng · luò Sigmund Freud Franz Kafka fēn · wēi Stefan Zweig
'ěr Johannes Mario Simmelhàn - · dīng Hans-Peter Martinyuē · xióng Joseph Schumpeter
tuō · Thomas Brezina dào · tíng Rudolf Hilferding · Markus Zusak
ēn · yáng 'ěr Ernst Jandlxuē dìng 'ě Erwin Rudolf Josef Alexander Schrödinger 'ěr Walther von der Vogelweide
'ěr · luò Karl Krauslāi nǎo Nikolaus Lenau màn Ingeborg Bachmann
wéi gēn tǎn Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgensteināi gòng · Egon Schiele lāi mén · méi niè Klemens Wenzel von Metternich
lāi nǎo Nikolaus Lenau
ào   (1802niánbāyuè13rì1850niánbāyuè22rì)
Nikolaus Franz Niembsch Edler von Strehlenau
· lāi nǎo
chūshēngdì: shí


莱瑙(1802-1850)奥地利大诗人。1832年出版了《诗集》,获得成功。他的作品中虽流露出“人世痛苦”的情绪,被称为“德国的拜伦”,但他也是具有革命民主主义思想的诗人。
尼古拉斯·雷瑙(Nikolaus Lenau,1802年8月25日-1850年8月20日)是出生于蒂米什瓦拉奥地利德语诗人作家,笔名为Nikolaus Franz Niembsch, Edler (nobleman) von Strehlenau,以其反映时代悲哀及个人绝望的忧郁抒情诗闻名,最终病逝于疗养院。 


Nikolaus Lenau was the nom de plume of Nikolaus Franz Niembsch Edler von Strehlenau (13 August 1802 – 22 August 1850), a German-language Austrian poet.

Biography

Lenau's Grave in Weidling, Austria

He was born at Csatád, (Schadat), Kingdom of Hungary, now LenauheimBanat, then part of the Habsburg Monarchy, now in Romania. His father, a Habsburg government official, died in 1807 in Budapest, leaving his children in the care of their mother, who remarried in 1811. In 1819 Nikolaus went to the University of Vienna; he subsequently studied Hungarian law at Pozsony (Bratislava) and then spent the next four years qualifying himself in medicine. Unable to settle down to any profession, he began writing verse. The disposition to sentimental melancholy inherited from his mother, stimulated by disappointments in love and by the prevailing fashion of the romantic school of poetry, descended into gloom after his mother's death in 1829.

Soon afterwards, however, a legacy from his grandmother enabled him to devote himself wholly to poetry. His first published poems appeared in 1827, in Johann Gabriel Seidl's Aurora. In 1831 he moved to Stuttgart, where he published a volume of Gedichte (1832) dedicated to the Swabian poet, Gustav Schwab. He also made the acquaintance of Ludwig UhlandJustinus KernerKarl Mayer and others. His restless spirit longed for change, and he determined to seek peace and freedom in America.

In October 1832 he landed at Baltimore and settled on a homestead in Ohio. He also lived six months in New Harmony, Indiana, with a group called the Harmony Society. Life in the primeval forest fell lamentably short of the ideal he had pictured. He disliked Americans with their eternal English lisping of dollars (englisches Talergelispel), and in 1833 returned to Germany. The appreciation of his first volume of poems revived his spirits.

From then on he lived partly in Stuttgart and partly in Vienna. In 1836 his Faust appeared, in which he laid bare his own soul to the world; in 1837, Savonarola, an epic in which freedom from political and intellectual tyranny as an essential component of Christianity was stated. In 1838 his Neuere Gedichte proved that Savonarola had been the result of a passing exaltation. Of these new poems, some of the finest were inspired by his hopeless passion for Sophie von Löwenthal, the wife of a friend. In 1842 appeared Die Albigenser, and in 1844 he began writing his Don Juan, a fragment of which was published after his death.

Soon afterwards he developed signs of mental ill-health. In October 1844, he jumped from a window one morning and ran down a street shouting "Revolt! Freedom! Help! Fire!". He was placed in an asylum, under restraint, for the remainder of his life. He died in the asylum at Oberdöbling near Vienna and was buried in the cemetery of Weidling, near Klosterneuburg. On his grave is the replica of an open book with an extract from one of his poems (An Frau Kleyle) inscribed on the left-hand page, while on the right-hand page there is the final stanza from his poem Vergangenheit. The city of Stockerau in Lower Austria has proclaimed itself "Lenau City", because Nikolaus Lenau went on extensive walks in the alluvial forests next to Stockerau and the Danube and was inspired to write one of his most famous lyric poems, "Schilflieder", during this time. He has various streets and squares in Vienna and the surrounding area named after him.

His political poems, such as "By the Grave of a Minister," reveal Lenau's liberal sympathies with their attacks on the despotism of Metternich's reactionary system and the alleged corruption of the Catholic Church. Lenau's fame rests mainly upon his shorter poems; even his epics are essentially lyric in quality. His excellent poem, "Herbst", expresses the sadness and melancholy he felt after his sojourn in the United States and his strenuous travels across the Atlantic to return to Europe. In it, he mourns the loss of youth, the passing of time and his own sense of futility. The poem is archetypal of Lenau's style and culminates with the speaker dreaming of death as a final escape from emptiness. He is the greatest modern lyric poet of Austria, and the typical representative in German literature of that pessimistic Weltschmerz which, beginning with Lord Byron, reached its culmination in the poetry of Giacomo Leopardi.

Lenau's Sämtliche Werke were first published in 4 vols. by Anastasius Grün in 1855, but there are several more modern editions, as those by Max Koch in Joseph Kürschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur of 1888 (vols. 154 and 155), and E. Castle (2 vols., 1900).

See also

References

  1. Jump up to:a b c d e f g h  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lenau, Nikolaus". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  2. ^ Janů, Jaroslav. Lenau. p. 116.
  3. ^ Murray, Christopher John (2004). Encyclopedia of the Romantic Era, 1760-1850, Volume 2. Taylor & Francis. pp. 663–664.
 
    

pínglún (0)