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ANDREAS See also: German lyric poet and dramatist, was See also: born on the r rth of See also: October 1616, at Grossglogau in See also: Silesia, where his See also: father was a clergyman
.
The See also: family name was Greif, latinized, according to the prevailing fashion, as See also: Gryphius
.
See also: Left early an See also: orphan and driven from his native See also: town by the troubles of the See also: Thirty Years' War, he received his schooling in various places, but notably at See also: Fraustadt, where he enjoyed an excellent classical See also: education
.
In 1634 he became tutor to the sons of the eminent jurist Georg von Schonborn (1579–1637), a See also: man of wide culture and considerable See also: wealth, who, after filling various administrative posts and writing many erudite volumes on See also: law, had been rewarded by the emperor See also: Ferdinand II. with the title and office of imperial count-palatine (Pfalzgraf)
.
Schonborn, who recognized Gryphius's
See also: genius, crowned him poeta laureatus, gave him the diploma of master of philosophy, and bestowed on him a patent of See also: nobility, though Gryphius never used the title
.
A See also: month later, on the 23rd of See also: December 1637, Schonborn died; and next See also: year Gryphius went to continue his studies at See also: Leiden, where he remained six years, both hearing and delivering lectures
.
Here he See also: fell under the influence of the See also: great Dutch dramatists, Pieter Cornelissen Hooft (1581–1647) and Joost See also: van den See also: Vondel (1587–1679), who largely determined the character of his later dramatic See also: works
.
After travelling in See also: France, See also: Italy and See also: South See also: Germany, Gryphius settled in 1647 at Fraustadt, where he began his dramatic See also: work, and in 165o was appointed syndic of See also: Glogau, a See also: post he held until his See also: death on the 16th of See also: July 1664
.
A See also: short See also: time previously he had been admitted under the title of " The Immortal " into the Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft, a See also: literary society, founded in 1617 by Ludwig, See also: prince of See also: Anhalt-Kothen on the See also: model of the See also: Italian See also: academies
.
Gryphius was a man of morbid disposition, and his melancholy temperament, fostered by the misfortunes of his childhood, is largely reflected in his lyrics, of which the most famous are the
Kirchhofsgedanken (1656)
.
His best works are his comedies, one of which, Absurda Comica, See also: oder Herr See also: Peter Squentz (1663), is evidently based on the comic See also: episode of Pyramus and Thisbe in The Midsummer See also: Night's Dream
.
Die geliebte Dornrose (1660), which is written in a Silesian dialect, contains many touches of natural simplicity and See also: grace, and ranks high among the comparatively small number of German dramas of the 17th century
.
Horribilicribrifax (1663), founded on the See also: Miles gloriosus of Plautus, is a rather laboured attack on pedantry
.
Besides these three comedies, Gryphius wrote five tragedies
.
In all of them his tendency is to become See also: wild and bombastic, but he had the merit of at least attempting to work out artistically conceived plans, and there are occasional flashes both of passion and of See also: imagination
.
His See also: models seem to have been See also: Seneca and Vondel
.
He had the courage, in Carolus Stuardus (1649) to See also: deal with events of his own See also: day; his other tragedies are See also: Leo Armenius (1646); Katharine von Georgien (1657), Cardenio and Celinde (16J7) and Papinianus (1663)
.
No German dramatic writer before him had risen to so high a level, nor had he worthy successors until about the See also: middle of the 18th century
.
A See also: complete edition of Gryphius's dramas and lyric See also: poetry has been published by H
.
Palm in the series of the See also: Stuttgart Literarische Verein (3 vols., 1878, 1882, 1884)
.
Volumes of selected works will be found in W
.
See also: Muller's Bibliothek der deutschen Dichter
See also: des 17ten Jahrhunderts (1822) and in J
.
Tittmann's Deutsche Dichter des 17ten Jahrhunderts (187o)
.
There is also a See also: good selection by H
.
Palm in Kurschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur . See 0, See also: Klopp, Andreas Gryphius als Dramatiker (1851); J
.
Hermann, Uber Andreas Gryphius (1851); T
.
Wissowa, Beitrage zur Kenntnis von Andreas Gryphius' Leben and Schriften (1876) ; J
.
Wysocki, Andreas Gryphius et la tragedie allemande au XVIIa siecle; and V
.
Mannheimer, Die Lyrik des Andreas Gryphius (1904)
.
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