Briefe an Ludwig Tieck (4/4)

audiobook

Briefe an Ludwig Tieck (4/4)

by Ludwig Tieck

DE·~10 hours·42 chapters

Chapters

42 total
1

Briefe an Ludwig Tieck.

0:13
2

Inhalt des vierten Bandes.

1:04
3

Schopenhauer, Johanna.

19:38
4

Schütz, Wilhelm von.

8:06
5

Schütze, Stephan.

4:43
6

Schulze, Friedrich August.

7:43
7

Schwab, Gustav Benjamin.

12:58
8

Seckendorf, Gustav Freiherr von.

4:26
9

Seidel, Max Johann.

8:08
10

Skepsgardh, Otto von.

12:55

Description

A lively compilation of personal letters brings listeners into the bustling literary salons of early‑19th‑century Germany. Curated from the correspondence of poets, scholars, and dramatists, the volume captures the informal networks that shaped the era’s cultural life. Each missive offers a snapshot of friendships, artistic ambitions, and the everyday concerns of the period’s most curious minds.

Among the letters, a standout is the candid appeal from a well‑known hostess in Weimar, who reaches out to a fellow writer for recommendations of English comedies that could refresh the German stage. Her request reveals both a keen eye for foreign drama and a modest desire to experiment without drawing public attention. The exchange hints at the vibrant exchange of ideas across borders, while also showcasing the intimate, sometimes humorous, negotiations that kept the literary scene alive. Listeners will feel the warmth of these conversations and gain a fresh perspective on the collaborative spirit that fueled the age’s creativity.

Details

Full title

Briefe an Ludwig Tieck (4/4) Vierter Band

Language

de

Duration

~10 hours (628K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Jana Srna, Karl Eichwalder, Reiner Ruf, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)

Release date

2015-06-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ludwig Tieck

Ludwig Tieck

1773–1853

A key voice of early German Romanticism, this writer blended fairy-tale wonder, satire, and literary criticism in ways that helped shape the movement. His stories often feel playful and eerie at once, mixing imagination with sharp insight into art and human feeling.

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