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The Sorrows of Young Werther

The Sorrows of Young Werther ([ˈveːɐ̯tɐ]; German: Die Leiden des jungen Werthers), or simply Werther, is a 1774 epistolary novel by Johann Wolfgang Goethe, which appeared as a revised edition in 1787. It was one of the main novels in the Sturm und Drang period in German literature, and influenced the later Romantic movement. Goethe, aged 24 at the time, finished Werther in five and a half weeks of intensive writing in January to March 1774.[2] It instantly placed him among the foremost international literary celebrities and was among the best known of his works.[1][2] The novel is made up of biographical and auto-biographical facts in relation to two triangular relationships and one individual: Goethe, Christian Kestner, and Charlotte Buff (who married Kestner); Goethe, Peter Anton Brentano, Maximiliane von La Roche (who married Brentano), and Karl Wilhelm Jerusalem, who died by suicide on the night of Oct 29 or 30, 1772. He shot himself in the head with a pistol borrowed from Kestner.[3] The novel was adapted as the opera Werther by Jules Massenet in 1892.

This article is about the novel. For the opera adaptation, see Werther. For the film adaptation, see Young Werther.

Author

Die Leiden des jungen Werther

German

Weygand'sche Buchhandlung, Leipzig

29 September 1774, revised ed. 1787[1]

1779[1]

PT2027.W3

Cultural impact[edit]

The Sorrows of Young Werther turned Goethe, previously an unknown author, into a literary celebrity almost overnight. Napoleon Bonaparte considered it one of the great works of European literature, having written a Goethe-inspired soliloquy in his youth and carried Werther with him on his campaigning to Egypt. It also started the phenomenon known as "Werther Fever," which caused young men throughout Europe to dress in the clothing style described for Werther in the novel.[8][9] Items of merchandising such as prints, decorated Meissen porcelain and even a perfume were produced.[10] Thomas Carlyle coined an epithet, "Wertherism",[11] to describe the self-indulgency of the age that the phenomenon represented.[12] When Goethe completed Werther, he likened his mood to one experienced “after a general confession, joyous and free and entitled to a new life”. For Goethe the Werther effect was a cathartic one, freeing himself from the despair in his life.[3]


The book reputedly also led to some of the first known examples of copycat suicide. The men were often dressed in the same clothing "as Goethe's description of Werther and using similar pistols." Often the book was found at the scene of the suicide.[13] Rüdiger Safranski, a modern biographer of Goethe, dismisses the Werther Effect "as only a persistent rumor."[14] Nonetheless, this aspect of "Werther Fever" was watched with concern by the authorities – both the novel and the Werther clothing style were banned in Leipzig in 1775; the novel was also banned in Denmark and Italy.[10] It was also watched with fascination by fellow authors. One of these, Friedrich Nicolai, decided to create a satirical piece with a happy ending, entitled Die Freuden des jungen Werthers ("The Joys of Young Werther"), in which Albert, having realized what Werther is up to, loaded chicken's blood into the pistol, thereby foiling Werther's suicide, and happily concedes Charlotte to him. After some initial difficulties, Werther sheds his passionate youthful side and reintegrates himself into society as a respectable citizen.[15]


The Hebrew translation יסורי ורתר הצעיר was popular among youths in the Zionist communities in British Mandate of Palestine in the 1930s and 1940s and was blamed for the suicide of several young men considered to have emulated Werther.


Goethe, however, was not pleased with the "Freuden" and started a literary war with Nicolai that lasted all his life, writing a poem titled "Nicolai auf Werthers Grabe" ("Nicolai on Werther's grave"), in which Nicolai (here a passing nameless pedestrian) defecates on Werther's grave,[16] so desecrating the memory of a Werther from which Goethe had distanced himself in the meantime, as he had from the Sturm und Drang. This argument was continued in his collection of short and critical poems the Xenien and his play Faust.

Goethe's work was the basis for the 1892 opera by Jules Massenet.[17]

Werther

In 's Frankenstein, Frankenstein's monster finds the book in a leather portmanteau, along with two others – Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans, and Milton's Paradise Lost.[18] He sees Werther's case as similar to his own, of one rejected by those he loved.

Mary Shelley

The book influenced 's The Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis, which tells of a young man who commits suicide, out of desperation caused not only by love, but by the political situation of Italy before Italian unification. This is taken to be the first Italian epistolary novel.

Ugo Foscolo

who incidentally translated Goethe's novel Wilhelm Meister into English, frequently refers to and parodies Werther's relationship in his 1836 novel Sartor Resartus.[19]

Thomas Carlyle

The statistician 's first book was The New Werther.

Karl Pearson

wrote a poem satirizing Goethe's story entitled "Sorrows of Werther".[20]

William Makepeace Thackeray

's 1939 novel Lotte in Weimar recounts a fictional reunion between Goethe and his youthful passion, Charlotte Buff, as elderlies.

Thomas Mann

A 2002 episode of the Canadian television series titled "Love & Death" is about the cultural impact of Werther, with Bob Bainborough satirically portraying Goethe in 1780 as a guest on a talk show spoofing The Rosie O'Donnell Show. Goethe wants to discuss his newest work, an adaptation of Iphigenia in Tauris, but is annoyed by having to deal with obsessive fans of Werther.

History Bites

a GDR poet, wrote a satirical novel (and play) called Die neuen Leiden des jungen W. ("The New Sorrows of Young W."), transposing the events into an East German setting, with the protagonist as an ineffectual teenager rebelling against the system.[21]

Ulrich Plenzdorf

In 's The Power of Sympathy, the novel appears next to Harrington's unsealed suicide note.

William Hill Brown

The 2010 German film is a fictional account of the relations between the young Goethe, Charlotte Buff and her fiancé Kestner, which at times draws on that of Werther, Charlotte and Albert.

Goethe!

The 2014 novel The Sorrows of Young Mike by John Zelazny is a loosely autobiographical parody of Goethe's novel.

[22]

In the 2015 game, 's Blood and Wine expansion pack, there is a treasure hunt called "The Suffering of Young Francois", where a man named François seeks help from a witch to make a woman named Charlotte, who is engaged with Albert, fall in love with him. The witch tricked François, making a Spriggan appear in the state and murder everyone. When François learns of this, he hangs himself.

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

The story is read in the first episode of the 2019 series .

Rookie Historian Goo Hae-ryung

The story is read to the dragon by Captain William Laurence in Naomi Novik’s novel Black Powder War, the third book in the Temeraire series.

Temeraire

The Sorrows of Werter, trans. Daniel Malthus (1779)

Werter and Charlotte, trans. unknown (1786)

The Sorrows of Werter, trans. M. Aubry (1789)

The Letters of Werter, trans. unknown (1799)

The Sorrows of Werter, trans. William Render (1801)

The Sorrows of Werter, trans. Frederick Gotzberg (1802)

The Sorrows of Werter, trans. Dr. Pratt (1809)

The Sorrows of Werter, trans. R. Dillon Boylan (1854)

William Render

(1971). Foreword. Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Random House, Inc..

Auden, Wystan Hugh

Herold, J. Christopher (1963). The Age of Napoleon. American Heritage Inc.

Phillips, Mary Elizabeth (1895). A Handbook of German Literature. George Bell and Sons.

Wilkinson, William Cleaver (1887). . Chautauqua Press.

Classic German Course in English

at Standard Ebooks

The Sorrows of Young Werther

at Project Gutenberg

The Sorrows of Young Werther

from LibriVox (in German)

Free Audiobook

Free Audio in English

The Sorrows of Young Werther

(21st-century update, published in "real-time" online and via personalised emails)

What Werther Went Through

William Makepeace Thackeray's poem "Sorrows of Werther"