
In this German tragic drama, the scene opens on a windswept coastal shrine of Aphrodite, where a stone altar and a rose‑laden garden frame the entrance to Sappho’s modest home. The town’s people gather, their voices swelling in song as the celebrated poet‑singer returns on a white‑drawn chariot, a laurel wreath crowning her head and a golden lyre in hand. Amid the jubilant crowd, servants, a slave named Rhamnes, and the humble farmer watch the spectacle, hinting at the social layers that surround the heroine’s fame.
The play quickly introduces a cast of contrasting figures—Sappho’s loyal attendants, the shy Phaon, and the eager villagers—each drawn into the festivities while subtle tensions begin to surface. As the chorus praises the poet’s artistic triumph, questions of duty, desire, and the price of admiration start to stir beneath the celebratory surface, setting the stage for the emotional conflicts that will drive the story forward.
Language
de
Duration
~1 hours (102K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-10-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1791–1872
A major voice in Austrian literature, he brought classical form, emotional intensity, and a sharp sense of tragedy to the stage. His plays helped define nineteenth-century Viennese drama and are still remembered for their psychological depth.
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