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BERND HEINRICH WILHELM VON KLEIST (17...

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 846 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BERND HEINRICH WILHELM VON

KLEIST (1777-1811)  , German poet, dramatist and novelist, was born at
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Frankfort-on-Oder on the 18th of
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October 1777 . After a scanty
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education, he entered the Prussian army in 1792, served in the Rhine
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campaign of 1796 and retired from the service in 1799 with the rank of
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lieutenant . He next studied law and philosophy at the university of Frankfort-on-Oder, and in 180o received a subordinate
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post in the
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ministry of
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finance at Berlin . In the following
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year his roving, restless spirit got the better of him, and procuring a lengthened leave of absence he visited Paris and then settled in
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Switzerland . Here he found congenial friends in Heinrich Zschokke (q.v.) and Ludwig Friedrich August Wieland (1777–1819), son of the poet; and to them he read his first drama, a gloomy tragedy, Die Familie Schrofenstein (1803), originally entitled Die Familie Ghonorez . In the autumn of 1802 Kleist returned to Germany; he visited Goethe, Schiller and Wieland in
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Weimar, stayed for a while in
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Leipzig and
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Dresden, again proceeded to Paris, and returning in 1804 to his post in Berlin was transferred to the Domdnenkammer (department for the administration of
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crown lands) at Konigsberg . On a journey to Dresden in 1807 Kleist was arrested by the French as a spy, and being sent to France was kept for six months a close prisoner at Chalonssur-
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Marne . On regaining his liberty he proceeded to Dresden, where in conjunction with Adam Heinrich Miller (1779–1829) he published in 1808 the journal PhSbus . In 1809 he went to Prague, and ultimately settled in Berlin, where he edited (1810–1811) the Berliner Abendbldtter . Captivated by the intellectual and musical accomplishments of a certain Frau Henriette Vogel, Kleist,who was himself more disheartened and embittered than ever, agreed to do her bidding and die with her, carrying out this
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resolution by first
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shooting the lady and then himself on the
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shore of the Wannsee near
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Potsdam, on the 21st of November 1811 . Kleist's whole
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life was filled by a restless striving after ideal and illusory happiness, and this is largely reflected in his
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work . He was by far the most important North German dramatist of the Romantic
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movement, and no other of the Romanticists approaches him in the energy with which he expresses patriotic indignation .

15 His first tragedy, Die Familie Schroffenstein, has been already referred to; the material for the second, Penthesilea (1808),

queen of the
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Amazons, is taken from a Greek source and presents a picture of wild passion . More successful than either of these was his romantic
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play, Das Kathchen von
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Heilbronn,oder Die Feuer probe (18o8), apoetic drama full of
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medieval bustle and mystery, which has retained its popularity, In
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comedy, Kleist made a name with Der zerbrochene Krug (1811), while
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Amphitryon (1808), an adaptation of Moliere's comedy, is of less importance . Of Kleist's other dramas, Die Hermannschlacht (1809) is a dramatic treatment of an
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historical subject and is full of references to the
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political conditions of his own times . In it he gives vent to his hatred of his country's oppressors . This, together with the drama Prinz Friedrich von Homburg, the latter accounted Kleist's best work, was first published by Ludwig Tieck in Kleists hinterlassene Schriften (1821) . Robert Guiskard, a drama conceived on a
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grand plan, was
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left a fragment . Kleist was also a master in the
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art of narrative, and of his Gesammelte Erzdhlungen (1810–1811), Michael Kohlhaas, in which the famous
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Brandenburg horse dealer in Luther's day (see KOHLHASE) is immortalized, is one of the best German stories of its time . He also wrote some patriotic lyrics . 4-Iis Gesammelte Schriften were published by Ludwig Tieck (3 vols . 1826) and by Julian Schmidt (new ed . 1874); also by F . Muncker (4 vols .

1882); by T . Zolling (4 vols . 1885) ; by K .

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Siegen, (4 vols . 1895) ; and in a critical edition by E . Schmidt (5 vols . 1904-1905) . His Ausgewahlte Dramen were published by K . Siegen (Leipzig, 1877) ; and his letters were first published by E. von Billow, Heinrich von Kleists Leben and Briefe (1848) . See further A . Wilbrandt, Heinrich von Kleist (1863); O . Brahm, Heinrich von Kleist (1884); R .

Bonafous,

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Henri de Kleist, sa
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vie et ses oeuvres (1894); H . Conrad, Heinrich von Kleist als Mensch and Dichter (1896); G . Minde-Pouet, Heinrich von Kleist, seine Sprache and sein Stil (1897); R . Steig, Heinrich von Kleists Berliner Kampfe (1901); F . Servaes, Heinrich von Kleist (1902); S . Wukadinowic, Kleist-Studien (1904); S . Rahmer, H. von Kleist als Mensch and Dichter (1909) .

End of Article: BERND HEINRICH WILHELM VON KLEIST (1777-1811)
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