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Johann Heinrich Voss

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Johann Heinrich Voss ( German : Johann Heinrich Voß , pronounced [fɔs] ; 20 February 1751 – 29 March 1826) was a German classicist and poet, known mostly for his translation of Homer 's Odyssey (1781) and Iliad (1793) into German .

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18-610: Voss was born at Sommersdorf in Mecklenburg-Strelitz as the son of a farmer. After attending the Gymnasium at Neubrandenburg from 1766 to 1769, he was obliged to accept a private tutorship in order to earn money to enable him to study at a university. At the invitation of Heinrich Christian Boie , whose attention he had attracted by poems contributed to the Göttinger Musenalmanach , he went to

36-484: A German broadside printed before 1790. Another version of the song, published in Die deutschen Volkslieder mit ihren Singweisen (1843) was recorded from an oral source near Cottbus . One knight plays with his maiden and makes her pregnant. He offers her some hundreds thalers and to give her in marriage to his servant, but she refuses and returns to Augsburg , to her mother. The latter one suggests to her daughter: after

54-489: A short autobiography, Abriß meines Lebens (1818). See also Wilhelm Herbst , Johann Heinrich Voß (3 volumes, Leipzig, 1872–1876); Friedrich Heussner , Johann Heinrich Voß als Schulmann in Eutin. Festschrift zum hundertjährigen Gedenktage seiner Ankunft daselbst (1882); and another life by Paulus (Heidelberg, 1826); also Prutz, Der Göttinger Dichterbund (Leipzig, 1841). According to Bartlett's Familiar Quotations , Voss

72-531: A translator that Voss chiefly owes his place in German literature. His translations indicate not only sound scholarship but a thorough mastery of the laws of German diction and rhythm. The most famous of his translations are those of Homer. The translation of the Odyssey , as originally issued in 1781, is singled out as the most successful. He also translated Hesiod (1806), Theocritus , Bion and Moschus (1808),

90-705: Is the most likely source for the phrase Wein, Weib und Gesang , or, in English, wine, women and song . Voss's full phrase is Wer nicht liebt Wein, Weib und Gesang / Der bleibt ein Narr sein Lebelang ("He who loves not wine, woman and song / Remains a fool his whole life long"). Sommersdorf Sommersdorf is a municipality in the Börde district in Saxony-Anhalt , Germany . On 1 January 2010 it absorbed

108-519: The Musenalmanach . Based on his correspondence with Schulz, he favored a folklike style of Lied composition. Voss's Mythologische Briefe , his Antisymbolik , and other writings made important contributions to the study of mythology . He was also prominent as an advocate of the right of free judgment in religion, and at the time when some members of the Romantic school were being converted to

126-461: The Odyssey in a new form. He also produced two volumes of controversial letters addressed to Christian Gottlob Heine ( Mythologische Briefe , 1794). He retired from Eutin in 1802 with a pension of 600 thalers , and settled at Jena . In 1805, although Johann Wolfgang von Goethe used his utmost endeavours to persuade him to stay, Voss accepted a call to a professorship of classical literature at

144-670: The Roman Catholic Church , he produced a strong impression by a powerful article, in Sophronizon , on his friend Friedrich von Stolberg 's repudiation of Protestantism (1819). According to the Metzler Lexikon , the heroines of the Voss's ballad Der Freier and a German traditional song share not only the black colour of hair (eyes), but also some primitive — or even erotic — ″sensuality". It is, however, as

162-530: The University of Göttingen in 1772. Here he studied philology , his studies encompassing both classical and modern languages , and became one of the leading spirits in the famous Hain or Dichterbund . In 1775 Boie made over to him the editorship of the Musenalmanach , which he continued to issue for several years. He married Boie's sister Ernestine in 1777. In 1778 Voss was appointed rector of

180-419: The University of Heidelberg . Here, in the enjoyment of a considerable salary, he devoted himself entirely to his literary labours, translations and antiquarian research until his death. Voss was a man of a remarkably independent and vigorous character. From 1785 to 1795 he published in two volumes a collection of original poems, to which he afterwards made many additions. An edition of his poems in four volumes

198-457: The birth of the child, to throw him into the river. The young woman, however, decides to leave the baby, feeling her coming death. The knight sees in a sleep that his maiden is on her deathbed. He wakes up and orders his servant to saddle two horses. Near Augsburg they meet four men bearing a dead woman, and the knight recognizes in her his love . He pierces himself with his sword and asks his servant to bury him with her. J. W. von Goethe described

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216-565: The former municipality Marienborn . This Börde location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Der Ritter und die Magd "Der Ritter und die Magd" ( transl.  "The Knight and the Maiden" ) is a traditional German folk song . With a few (or even one) changes, it was included by Clemens Brentano and Achim von Arnim in their collection of German folk songs and poems, Des Knaben Wunderhorn (1806, I ). As its possible source, both editors used

234-427: The latter written in opposition to Georg Friedrich Creuzer , have been characterized as painstaking and dignified, but dreary. His poems were often set by contemporary composers such as C.P.E. Bach , Johann Friedrich Reichardt , and Johann Abraham Peter Schulz , and also later composers such as Felix Mendelssohn , Carl Maria von Weber , and Johannes Brahms . Many of his poems and settings of them were published in

252-400: The result has been characterized as less successful than Schlegel 's work. Voss's Sämtliche poetische Werke were published by his son Abraham in 1835; new ed. 1850. A selection is in A. Sauer, Der Göttinger Dichterbund , volume i. ( Joseph Kürschner 's Deutsche National-literatur , vol. 49, 1887). His Letters were published by his son in 3 or 4 volumes (Halberstadt, 1829–1833). Voss left

270-499: The school at Otterndorf . In 1781, after the publication of several treatises, he produced a German-language text for Homer 's Odyssey . This work made the poem national with the Germans (new ed. by Bernays, 1881). In 1782, Voss accepted the rectorship of the gymnasium at Eutin . There, in 1789, he published translations of Virgil 's Eclogues and Georgics . In 1793, his translation of Homer's Iliad appeared, along with

288-515: The song as "forced verses" and " dark romance ". One source points out that the author of Clavigo ends his play by the same way: the "repentant hero" appears after his love's death. According to Ferdinand Rieser, the song was published in Des Knaben Wunderhorn (1806) with only one change: the editors replaced 'mit einer Dam' ( transl.  'with a dame' ) by 'mit seiner Magd' ( transl.  'with his maiden' ) in

306-417: The whole of Virgil (1799, rev. ed. 1821), Horace (1806), Tibullus (1810), Propertius (1830) and selections from Ovid (1798). He prepared a critical edition of Tibullus. From 1818 to 1829, a translation of William Shakespeare 's plays in 9 volumes was published. This work Voss completed with the help of his sons Heinrich and Abraham, both of whom were scholars and writers of considerable ability, though

324-478: Was issued in 1825. Of these original works, the idyllic poem Luise , is uniformly singled out as his most successful. It was first printed in 1783, and reissued with changes in 1795. In this work, he sought to apply the style and methods of classical poetry to the expression of modern German thought and sentiment. The later works Wie ward Fritz Stolberg ein Unfreier (1819) and Antisymbolik (2 volumes, 1824–1826),

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