Eduard Friedrich Mörike
Mörike, Eduard Friedrich
Born Sept. 8, 1804, in Ludwigsburg; died June 4, 1875, in Stuttgart. German writer.
Mörike studied theology in Tübingen (1822–26) and was a pastor for many years. In his novel Painter Nolten (1832), a work influenced by Goethe’s Wilhelm Meister, Mörike muses about the fate of art in recounting the story of a painter’s wanderings and unhappy love. Another important prose work was the short story, “Mozart on His Journey to Prague” (1856; Russian translation, 1965); the story, filled with a radiant mood, describes one day in the composer’s life. Mörike’s lyric poetry—the most significant part of his literary legacy—deals with love, nature, and rural life; several of his poems express a profound sympathy for human suffering. A number of Morike’s poems have been set to music.
WORKS
Werke und Briefe, vols. 1–2. Leipzig, 1957.Sämtliche Werke. Munich, 1964.
REFERENCES
S-v, I. “Tvorchesto E. Merike v prelomlenii sovremennoi nemetskoi literatury.” In Sbornik robot studentov, aspirantov i nauchnykh rabotnikov. Leningrad, 1931. Pages 153–57.Meyer, H. Eduard Mörike: Leben und Werke, Stuttgart, 1961.
Slessarev, H. Eduard Mörike. New York, 1970. (With bibliography.)
E. IA. RUBINOVA