The Germans: Double History Of A Nation
353 pages
English

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353 pages
English

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Description

This is Emil Ludwig’s 1941 book, “The Germans: Double History of A Nation”. A history of the German people rather than of Germany itself, this fascinating volume offers a unique insight into the spirit and personality of the Germans, and is highly recommended for those with an interest in European history. Contents include: “The Dreams of World Domination, from Charlemange to Gutenberg (800–1500)”, “Struggle for the Creed, from Luther to Kepler (1500–1650)”, “Schism of State and Spirit, from the Great Elector to Goethe (1650–1800)”, “World-Citizens and Nationalists, from Beethoven to Bismarck”, etc. Emil Ludwig (1881–1948) was a German writer famous for his biographies of great historical figures. Many classic books such as this are becoming increasingly rare and expensive. It is with this in mind that we are republishing this volume now in an affordable, modern, high-quality edition complete with a specially commissioned new biography of the author.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 17 septembre 2020
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781528760096
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

THE GERMANS:
Double History of a Nation
BY EMIL LUDWIG

Translated from the German by HEINZ and RUTH NORDEN
Germany is nothing, but every individual German is much, and yet the Germans imagine the reverse to be true.
-G OETHE
LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY BOSTON 1941
LANDSCAPE ON THE RHINE
COPYRIGHT 1941, BY EMIL LUDWIG
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCE THIS BOOK OR PORTIONS THEREOF IN ANY FORM
FIRST EDITION
Published November 1941
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TO S ENATOR R OBERT F. W AGNER model German-American
Foreword
T HIS BOOK offers a history, not of Germany, but of the Germans. Here as in all his writings, the author s scope is psychological. Even so, a complete story cannot be encompassed within the range of a single volume-here too the artist s skill lies in his selection. There are indifferent German emperors, whose names will not be found in the pages that follow; for the purpose is not to tire the reader s mind with as many names as possible, but to stimulate it with a smaller number of fully rounded characters. Battles and other external events resemble the zenith of a trajectory, whereas the real points of interest are where the projectile is fired and where it strikes-cause and effect. On every one of the four hundred ninety-five pages that follow, it is the author s purpose to explain causes and effects of deeds and events-explain them through the German character. The German way of feeling, the cruel schism within the German soul which has remained unchanged throughout the ages-these are here to be developed, through two thousand years.
There is no objective writing of history outside the encyclopedia. The present version, too, is conditioned by personal factors. Only the admission of this fact distinguishes it from others. In all lands certain professors strike rigid poses like the Supreme Judge on a Byzantine mosaic, and they often deceive their readers and themselves about the extent to which their own subjective destinies, fortunes and reverses influence their writings. An author who conceals his own situation and that of the age in which he lives leads the reader astray and grows tedious in the bargain. This is true especially in times such as our own when violent partisanship sets men against each other. No historian, not even the great Plutarch, would have written exactly as he did, had he written a century earlier or later. Carlyle was deeply influenced by the French Revolution, Burckhardt by the age of Bismarck; both were similarly influenced by deep-felt personal experiences, even when they wrote of distant times. The way in which one epoch mirrors itself in another is precisely what lends wings to author and reader.
Since my twentieth year I have depicted the German character in a dozen dramas and biographies, from Ulrich von Hutten and Gr newald to Goethe, Beethoven, Weber and Wagner; and from Emperor Frederic II and King Frederic the Great to Bismarck, William and Hindenburg-always with reverence for the German spirit, but with censure for the German State. This discrepancy between State and spirit distinguishes German history from that of all other nations. It always obscures the spirit precisely when the State flourishes and vice versa. That is the subject of this new book, which seeks to go beyond the destiny of individual Germans to explain the character of the nation. It is a tragic and ironic spectacle, repeated throughout the centuries from Arminius to Hitler. It offers an answer to the question which all the world poses today: How is it possible for the people of Goethe, Beethoven and Kant to be relapsing forever into barbarism? German culture was hardly ever represented by the governing classes; it was created by the governed.
The reasons why, in this dual history, one part of the people remained almost without influence on the other, lie in the complex and nervous character of the Germans, whose development we shall here outline, from the primeval forests of Caesar to the forest of Compi gne. This history, in which intellectual and political life pursue separate courses, resembles a two-story omnibus. The passengers on the upper level enjoy a broader view but remain without influence on the direction of the vehicle, because the driver below fails to take notice of them.
Apart from this peculiarity, it will be shown how the forms of power which have made the name of Germany so hated and feared throughout the world come from the North (later Prussia), while the forms of the spirit and of art which constitute the everlasting glory of Germany come from the South and the West. It will be shown, furthermore, why the treasures that German culture has given to the world derive wholly from commoners, while the princes and nobles have brought forth only violence. The few exceptions to this rule, so deeply rooted in the German character, are the subject of special emphasis.
Yet all the German emperors and chancellors taken together do not mean as much to the outside world as Mozart and Schubert, as D rer and Cologne Cathedral. No German victory has impressed itself so deeply upon mankind as the invention of the art of printing. It seemed more important to the author to give a picture of the mental state of this warrior people than to describe its battles. The causes and consequences of its passion for war seemed to him more significant than the wars themselves.
And finally it will be shown that Hitler is not an adventurer cast up in Germany by the merest chance, but a truly German phenomenon; and that all well-intentioned efforts to make a distinction between him and the German character miss their point. His spirit enters upon the stage in the very first scene of this book, and if he himself is allotted but two out of eighty-two chapters, it is only today that this seems scant; a German history of the year 2000 is likely to concede him even less. Since this book is to be published in languages other than German, the chapters dealing with the Middle Ages have been severely cut. The author has tried a new method towards which he has been moving for some time. You will find celebrated historical facts simply recorded in this book, whilst inner evolutions are elaborately developed. Parliamentary resolutions, battles and redistribution of territory are of little importance to posterity as succeeding wars and events again change the newly established order.
Three things, however, are of great importance: the spiritual reasons and results of events; the character of the persons who bring them about; and comparisons with our present time. History is not made principally by economic forces but by the emotions of men. And, as these always remain the same, every epoch will be reflected in the persons emerging from the background of this historical picture.
Born a German, the author owes his education to a civilization represented by the genius of Beethoven and Goethe. But the German State was alien to him even in his youth, so he left it at the age of twenty-five and went to live in free Switzerland, of which he has been a citizen for many years. This book was written in California, in one of the loveliest places in the world, whilst the author lived in an atmosphere of German music and philosophy.
The Library of Congress, the Santa Barbara Public Library, and the co-operation of Dr. Harry Girvetz of the State College at Santa Barbara, and Dr. Albrecht Joseph, Hollywood, have generously facilitated this work.
Santa Barbara, California March , 1941.
E MIL L UDWIG
Contents
Foreword
Prelude before Dawn
BOOK I: The Dream of World Dominion
From Charlemagne to Gutenberg (800-1500)
BOOK II: Struggle for the Creed
From Luther to Kepler (1500-1650)
BOOK III: Schism of State and Spirit
From the Great Elector to Goethe (1650-1800)
BOOK IV: World-Citizens and Nationalists
From Beethoven to Bismarck (1800-1890)
BOOK V: Decline
From William II to Hitler (1890-1940)
Index
Illustrations
Landscape on the Rhine
Two Medieval Statues on the Cathedral of Strasbourg
Town Hall in Breslau
Gothic Cathedral in Ulm
Erasmus, Painted by Holbein
Charles V at the Time of the Reichstag in Worms
Luther at the Time of the Reichstag in Worms
Self-Portrait of D rer
Architecture in Vienna, Seventeenth Century
Frederic the Great
Empress Maria Theresa
Goethe at Forty
Kloster Melk in Austria
Beethoven
Bismarck at Eighty, from a Photograph by Karl Hahn, Munich
Court of the Castle in Heidelberg
PRELUDE BEFORE DAWN
The German runs no greater risk than to lift himself up with and at the expense of his neighbor; wherefore it is a good thing for his nation that the outside world took notice of it so belatedly.
-G OETHE


I
F ROM the wide plains a hill rises in the morning sun. Two mounted squadrons approach it from opposite sides at the same time. Their aspect is very different, one from the other.
Military cloaks, fastened by clasps over leather armor and armless tunics, flutter from the shoulders of one group of horsemen. Strands of long dark hair stray from beneath the bronze helmets fitted with rigid sidepieces. Broad swords of fair length hang from the men s sides and small bucklers are fastened on their backs but they grip their lances in their right hands, together with the reins. The horsemen of the other group have animal pelts fastened about their bodies, with stag or bison skins drawn over their heads. But beneath these skins long golden-yellow hair, often curly, escapes, seeming to take the place of helmets. The swords of these men are longer and narrower, and many carry a curved dagger

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