A History of Bohemian Literature. hrabe Francis Lützow

A History of Bohemian Literature - hrabe Francis Lützow


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       hrabe Francis Lützow

      A History of Bohemian Literature

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066202651

       FOREWORD TO NEW IMPRESSION

       PREFACE

       INTRODUCTION

       CHAPTER I THE EARLIEST BOHEMIAN POETRY

       CHAPTER II EARLY PROSE WRITERS—THE PRECURSORS OF HUS

       CHAPTER III HUS

       CHAPTER IV THE PERIOD OF THE HUSSITE WARS

       CHAPTER V HUMANISTS AND THEOLOGIANS

       CHAPTER VI BOHEMIAN HISTORIANS OF THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

       CHAPTER VII THE REVIVAL OF BOHEMIAN LITERATURE

       BIBLIOGRAPHY

       INDEX

       Literatures of the World

       A History of Japanese Literature.

       A History of Spanish Literature.

       A History of Italian Literature.

       A History of Modern English Literature.

       A History of French Literature.

       A History of Ancient Greek Literature.

       Table of Contents

      It has given me great pleasure that a new impression of my History of Bohemian Literature should have been required. I am, I think, justified in believing that the British public now takes a certain though still limited interest in the literature and language of my country. I am also perhaps not wrong in thinking that the origin of the struggles in the Austro-Hungarian empire—almost entirely attributable as it is to racial and linguistic discord—has become better understood in England. As I show in my book, the revival of Bohemian literature was largely responsible for the movement in favour of Bohemian autonomy; and the early leaders of the Bohemian movement in the nineteenth century were mostly literary men. I am justified, therefore, in claiming a certain political importance for this book. The new impression on the whole differs little from the former one, and in revising the book I noticed with pleasure how few printer's errors required correction—a somewhat astonishing fact if we consider how difficult the spelling of Slavic words is. I have added considerably to the last pages of the book, which deal mainly with writers who are now alive. This part of the subject had been previously somewhat neglected, as I originally intended to omit all mention of living authors.

      LÜTZOW.

      Žampach,

       October 26, 1906.

      [Pg vi]

       [Pg vii]

       Table of Contents

      With the approval of Mr. Gosse, I have written this short History of Bohemian Literature according to a plan that differs considerably from that of certain earlier volumes in this Series. The works of Modern English, French, Italian, and even of Ancient Greek and Spanish writers, will be known to many readers of the volumes that deal with them. Bohemian literature, on the other hand, is absolutely unknown in Western Europe, and a large amount of space has therefore been devoted to translated quotations from Bohemian writers. Many of these unknown works have great interest and value.

      Bohemian literature, as we possess it, is to a certain extent disappointing and unsatisfactory. In consequence of the wholesale destruction of everything written in Bohemian that continued during more than a century, countless Bohemian books, many of which are known to have been valuable, have disappeared.

      Many forms of literature are scarcely represented in Bohemian. No dramatic works worthy of notice exist before the present century. Poetry also is valuable only in the earliest period and in the present century.

      Bohemian literature is so closely connected with Bohemian history, that without some knowledge of the latter it is often difficult to understand the references to historical events which must necessarily be found in a history of Bohemian literature. Though I have sometimes explained such references by notes, I could not do this to any great extent without trespassing on the domain of history. Those who wish to turn their attention to the dramatic history of Bohemia will find their best guide up to the year 1526 in Palacký, whose monumental History of Bohemia was published in German as well as in Bohemian. Though no continuous narrative on the same plan brings Bohemian history down to the year 1620, Gindely, Tieftrunk, and Rezek have written extensively, in German as well as in Bohemian, on the last years of Bohemian independence. Professor Tomek has in his short Geschichte Böhmens given an outline of the history of the country from the earliest ages up to the present day. I have in my Bohemia: an Historical Sketch, endeavoured to give a brief account of the history of Bohemia from an early period to the year 1620, written in accordance with the requirements of non-Bohemian readers.

      Bohemian writers have divided the literature of their country into three periods. The first extends from the earliest time to the days of Hus; the second from Hus to the battle of the White Mountain; the third from that battle to the present day. Chaps. I. and II. of this book deal with the first; Chaps. III., IV., V., and VI. with the second; and Chap. VII. with the third period.

      Like the history, the literature also of Bohemia is, particularly in the most interesting periods, a record of incessant religious struggles. I am thoroughly conscious of the fact that an account of these struggles is a most difficult task, that the writer

      "Incedit per ignes

       Suppositos cineri doloso."

      I can only


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