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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 February 2021
In the first chapter of L'Influence Allemande en France, M. Reynaud states that Germany, in the early eighteenth century, being dissatisfied with the indifference with which France viewed her literature, determined to send out propagandists to take up the campaign. In his opinion the instigator of this battle for recognition was Gottsched.
1 Reynaud, L'influence Allemande en France au XVIIIe et XIXe Siécle, Paris, 1922, p. 16,
2 Anne C. Jones, Frederick Melchior Grimm, as a Critic of Eighteenth-Century French Drama, Bryn Mawr, 1926.
3 Frederick Melchior Grimm, Part II, Chapter I.
4 L'influence Allemande, p. 16.
5 Rousseau, Oeuvres (ed. Auguis), Paris, 1824, Les Confessions, II, 139.
6 Marmontel, Mémoires (ed. Tourneux), Paris, 1891, I, p. 253.
7 Epinay, Mémoires (ed. Boiteau), Paris. 1878, p. 192.
8 Perey et Maugras, Madame d'Epinay à Genéve, Bibliothéue Universelle et Revue Suisse, XXII, 128.
9 Epinay, Mémoires, p. 192.
10 Correspondance Littéraire (ed. Tourneux) XVI, 269.
11 Correspondance, XVI, 275.
12 L'influence Allemande, p. 18.
13 Danzel, Gottsched und seine Zeit, Leipzig, 1885, p. 349.
14 Gottsched und seine Zeit, p. 351.
15 Ibid.
16 Ibid., p. 350.
17 Correspondance Littérain, II, 437.
18 Ibid., II, 144.
19 L'influence Allemande, p. 17.
20 Correspondance Littéraire, VI, 140, 247; XIII, 74. 190.
21 Gager, Beilage sur Allgemeiren Zeitung, Die Correspondance und die deutsche Literatur, 1882, April 16.