ranslated by E.A. Bowring
Found.
Translated by E.A. Bowring
Hatem.
Translated by A.I. du P. Coleman
Reunion.
Translated by A.I. du P. Coleman
Procemion.
Translated by E.A. Bowring
The One and The All.
Translated by A.I. du P. Coleman
Lines on Seeing Schiller's Skull.
Translated by E.A. Bowring
A Legacy.
Translated by A.I. du P. Coleman
* * * * *
Introduction to Hermann and Dorothea.
By Arthur H. Palmer
Harmann and Dorothea.
Translated by Ellen Frothingham
DRAMAS
Introduction to Iphigenia in Tauris.
By Arthur H. Palmer
Iphigenia in Tauris.
Translated by Anna Swanwick
* * * * *
The Faust Legend from Marlowe to Goethe.
By Kuno Francke
Introduction to Faust.
Calvin Thomas
Faust (Part I).
Translated by Anna Swanwick
Faust (Part II).
Translated by Anna Swanwick
ILLUSTRATIONS-VOLUME I
On the Way Toward the Grail. By Hans
Thoma _Frontispiece_
Goethe. By J. Jaeger
Goethe. By J. Stieler
Goethe's Houses in Weimar
Goethe in the Campagua. By J.H.W. Tischbein
Monument to Goethe in Berlin. By Fritz Schaper
Monument to Goethe in Rome. By Eberlein
The Death of Goethe. By Fritz Fleischer
The Heathrose. By K. Kogler
Prometheus. By Titian
The Fisherman and the Mermaid. By Georg Papperitz
Hermann's Parents in the Doorway of the Tavern.
By Ludwig Richter
Hermann hands to Dorothea the Linen for the Emigrants.
By Ludwig Richter
The Mother defending Hermann. By Ludwig Richter
Mother and Son. By Ludwig Richter
The Emigrants in the Village. By Ludwig Richter
The Parson and the Apothecary watch Dorothea. By Ludwig Richter
Hermann and Dorothea meet at the Fountain. By Ludwig Richter
Hermann and Dorothea under the Pear tree. By Ludwig Richter
The Betrothal. By Ludwig Richter
Iphigenia. By Ansehn Feuerbach
The Meeting of Orestes, Iphigenia, and Pylades.
By Angelica, Kauffmann
Iphigenia. By Max Nonnenbruch
Faust and Mephistopheles. By Liezen-Mayer
Margaret. By Wilhelm von Kaulbach
Faust and Margaret. By Carl Becker
Faust and Margaret in the Garden. By Liezen-Mayer
The Death of Valentine. By Franz Simm
Margaret's Downfall. By Wilhelm von Kaulbach
EDITOR'S PREFACE
It is surprising how little the English-speaking world knows of German
literature of the nineteenth century. Goethe and Schiller found their
herald in Carlyle
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