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BARON See also: German writer of the romantic See also: movement, was See also: born on the 12th of See also: February 1777 at See also: Brandenburg
.
His grandfather had been one of See also: Frederick the See also: Great's generals and his See also: father was a Prussian officer
.
Although not originally intended for a military career, See also: Friedrich de la Motte See also: Fouque ultimately gave up his university studies at See also: Halle to join the army, and he took See also: part in the Rhine See also: campaign of 1794
.
The rest of his See also: life was devoted mainly to See also: literary pursuits
.
Like so many of the younger romanticists, Fouque owed his introduction to
literature to A
.
W
.
See also: Schlegel, who published his first See also: book, Dramaiische Spiele von Pellegrin in 1804
.
His next See also: work, Romanzen vom Tal Ronceval (18o5), showed more plainly his allegiance to the romantic leaders, and in the Historie vom edlen Ritter Galmy (1806) he versified a 16th-century See also: romance of See also: medieval chivalry
.
See also: Sigurd der Schlangentoter, ein Heldenspiel (18o8), the first See also: modern German dramatization of the Nibelungen saga, attracted See also: attention to him, and influenced considerably subsequent versions of the See also: story, such as Hebbel's Nibelungen and Wagner's Ring See also: des Nibelungen
.
These early writings indicate the lines which Fouque's subsequent literary activity followed; his interests were divided between medieval chivalry on the one See also: hand and See also: northern See also: mythology on the other
.
In 1813, the See also: year of the rising against See also: Napoleon, he again fought with the Prussian army, and the new patriotism awakened in the German See also: people See also: left its mark upon his writings
.
Between 1810 and 1815 Fouque's popularity was at its height; the many romances and novels, plays and epics, which he turned out with extraordinary rapidity, appealed exactly to the See also: mood of the See also: hour
.
The earliest of these are the best—Undine, which appeared in 1811, being, indeed, one of the most charming of all German Marc/ten and the only work by which Fouque's memory still lives to- See also: day
.
A more comprehensive idea of his See also: powers may, however, be obtained from the two romances Der Zauberring (1813) and Die Fahrten Thiodulfs des Islanders (1815)
.
From 1820 onwards the quality of Fouque's work rapidly degenerated, partly owing to the fatal ease with which he wrote, partly to his inability to keep See also: pace with the changes in German taste
.
He remained the belated romanticist, who, as the See also: reading See also: world turned to new interests, clung the more tenaciously to the See also: paraphernalia of romanticism; but in the cold, sober See also: light of the See also: post-romantic age, these appeared merely flimsy and theatrical
.
The vitalizing imaginative power of his early years deserted him, and the See also: sobriquet of a " See also: Don Quixote of Romanticism " which his enemies applied to him was not unjustified
.
Fouque's first See also: marriage had been unhappy and soon ended in See also: divorce
.
His second wife, Karoline von Briest (1773–1831) enjoyed some reputation as a novelist in her day
.
After her See also: death Fouque married a third See also: time
.
Some See also: consolation for the ebbing See also: tide of popular favour was afforded him by the munificence of Frederick See also: William IV. of Prussia, who granted him a pension which allowed him to spend his later years in comfort
.
He died in Berlin on the 23rd of
See also: January 1843
.
Fouque's Ausgewahlte Werke, edited by himself, appeared in 12 vols
.
(Berlin, 1841); a selection, edited by M
.
See also: Koch, will be found in Kiirschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur, vol
.
146, part ii
.
(See also: Stuttgart, 1893) ; Undine, Sintram, &c., in innumerable reprints
.
Bibliography in Goedeke's Grundriss zur Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung (2nd ed., vi. pp
.
115 if., See also: Dresden, 1898)
.
Most of Fouque's See also: works have been translated, and the See also: English versions of Aslauga's Knight (by Carlyle), Sintram and his Companions and Undine, have been frequently republished
.
For Fouque's life cp
.
Lebensgeschichte des Baron Friedrich de la Matte Fouque
.
Aufgezeichnet dutch ihn selbst (Halle, 1840), (only to the year 1813), and also the introduction to Koch's selections in the Deutsche Nationalliteratur
.
(J
.
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