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10 - “An den Grafen von Platen”

from IV - Poems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

George C. Schoolfield
Affiliation:
Yale
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Summary

Poems about August von Platen-Hallermünde, the master of classical metrics, sonnets, and the Persian ghasel, were not uncommon after his sudden passing, at thirty-nine, in Syracuse, on 5 December 1835. Franz von Dingelstedt (1814–81) criticizes those who call Platen a cold and pedantic prosodist, as Karl Immermann (1796–1840) did in his lampoon-essay with verse appendix (mostly sonnets), Der im Irrgarten der Metrik umhertaumelnde Kavalier (The Cavalier Tumbling About in the Maze of Metrics, 1829). Platen's reputation had been further damaged by his homosexuality, hinted at by Heine in chapters 10–11 of Die Bäder von Lucca (The Baths of Lucca, 1829), mocking not only Platen's erotic preferences but the “dancing on eggs” of his metrics — “he is no poet.” Dingelstedt's poem, of course, is a sonnet:

Unter Platens Büste

Leicht fehlt ein Wandrer seines Wegs, noch eher

Ein Dichter seiner Zeit und seiner Stätte;

Was wäre Der, wenn er gesungen hätte

Zu Florenz, an dem Hof der Mediceer!

Uns hieß er nur ein kalter Formendreher,

Der Marmormensch mit seiner edlen Glätte,

Und schwand im Dunstkreis unsrer kleinen Städte,

Ein trunkener auf zehn betrunkne Seher.

Die einz'ge Heimath, die er je besessen,

Ist jenes frühe Grab, das weit entfernte,

In den geliebten Lorbeern und Cypressen.

Und kaum erblühet ihm als späte Ernte

Im trägen Deutschland, rasch nur im Vergessen,

Der Jugend Dank, die Dichten von ihm lernte!

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2008

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