{{Short description|German writer and polymath (1749–1832)}} {{Redirect-several|Goethe|Gote}} {{Use British English|date=March 2026}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2024}} {{Infobox writer | honorific_prefix = Geheimrat | name = Johann Wolfgang von Goethe | honorific_suffix = | image = Goethe (Stieler 1828).jpg | caption = Portrait by Joseph Karl Stieler, 1828 | birth_name = Johann Wolfgang Goethe | birth_date = {{birth date|1749|8|28|df=y}} | birth_place = Free City of Frankfurt | death_date = {{death date and age|1832|3|22|1749|8|28|df=y}} | death_place = Weimar, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach | education = {{plainlist| * Leipzig University * University of Strasbourg (Lic., 1771)}} | period = | genres = {{ubl|{{hlist|Fiction (poetry|novel|romance|drama)}}|{{hlist|Non-fiction (treatise|aesthetic criticism|autobiography|oration)}}}} | movement = {{plainlist| * ''Sturm und Drang'' * Weimar Classicism}} | subject = | spouse = {{marriage|Christiane Vulpius|1806|1816|end=died}} | children = 5, including August | parents = {{ubl | Johann Caspar Goethe | Catharina Elisabeth Textor }} | signature = Goethe Signature.svg | module = {{Collapsed infobox section begin|Other positions|titlestyle=border: 1px dashed lightgrey;}}{{Infobox officeholder |embed=yes | office = Chancellor of the Exchequer of the Duchy of Saxe-Weimar | term_start = 1782 | term_end = 1784 | office2 = Superintendent of the ducal library and Chief Adviser of Saxe-Weimar <small>(from 1775)</small> | office3 = Commissioner of the War, Mines and Highways Commissions of Saxe-Weimar <small>(from 1779)</small> }} {{Collapsed infobox section end}} | notable_works = See Johann Wolfgang von Goethe bibliography }}
'''Johann Wolfgang von Goethe'''{{efn|1={{IPA|de|ˈjoːhan ˈvɔlfɡaŋ fɔn ˈɡøːtə|audio=GT JWvG.ogg}};<ref name="Longman"/> English pronunciations include {{IPAc-en|ˈ|ɡ|ɜːr|t|ə}} {{respell|GUR|tə|}}, {{IPAc-en|alsous|ˈ|ɡ|ʌ|t|ə|,_|ˈ|ɡ|eɪ|t|ə|,_|-|t|i}} {{respell|GUT|ə|,_|GAY|tə|,_-|ee}}.<!-- Please note that Wikipedia follows a different convention (see Help:IPA for English) than the "Oxford Dictionary"; Wikipedia has stressed /ɜːr/ instead of stressed /ər/; this means that "Oxford Dictionary"'s /ˈɡə(r)tə/ becomes /ˈɡɜːrtə/ here. --><ref>{{Cite Merriam-Webster|Goethe}}</ref><ref name="Longman">{{Cite book |last=Wells |first=John |author-link=John C. Wells |title=Longman Pronunciation Dictionary |publisher=Pearson Longman |edition=3rd |year=2008 |isbn=978-1-4058-8118-0}}</ref>}} (28 August 1749 – 22 March 1832) was a German polymath who is widely regarded as the most influential writer in the German language. His work has had a wide-ranging influence on literary, political, Christian views, and philosophical thought in the Western world from the late 18th century to the present.<ref name="Britannica">{{Britannica |id=237027 |title=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |author=Nicholas Boyle}}.</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe — Biography |url=http://knarf.english.upenn.edu/Goethe/bio.html |access-date=3 January 2023 |website=knarf.english.upenn.edu}}</ref> A poet, playwright, novelist, scientist, statesman, theatre-director, and critic,<ref name="Britannica" /> Goethe wrote a wide range of works, including plays, poetry and aesthetic criticism, as well as treatises on botany, anatomy, and colour.
Goethe took up residence in Weimar in 1775 following the success of his first novel, ''The Sorrows of Young Werther'' (1774), and joined a thriving intellectual and cultural environment under the patronage of Duchess Anna Amalia that formed the basis of Weimar Classicism. He was ennobled by Karl August, Duke of Saxe-Weimar, in 1782. Goethe was an early participant in the ''Sturm und Drang'' literary movement. During his first ten years in Weimar, Goethe became a member of the Duke's privy council (1776–1785), sat on the war and highway commissions, oversaw the reopening of silver mines in nearby Ilmenau, and implemented a series of administrative reforms at the University of Jena. He also contributed to the planning of Weimar's botanical park and the rebuilding of its Ducal Palace.<ref name="Weimar"/>{{efn|In 1998, both of these sites, together with nine others, were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name Classical Weimar.<ref name="Weimar">{{cite web |title=Classical Weimar UNESCO Justification |url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/846 |work=Justification for UNESCO Heritage Cites |publisher=UNESCO |access-date=7 June 2012 |archive-date=29 July 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220729182249/https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/846 |url-status=live}}</ref>}}
Goethe's first major scientific work, the ''Metamorphosis of Plants'', was published after he returned from a 1788 tour of Italy. In 1791 he was made managing director of the theatre at Weimar, and in 1794 he began a friendship with the dramatist, historian, and philosopher Friedrich Schiller, whose plays he premiered until Schiller's death in 1805. During this period, Goethe published his second novel, ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship''; the verse epic ''Hermann and Dorothea'', and, in 1808, the first part of his most celebrated drama, ''Faust''. His conversations and various shared undertakings throughout the 1790s with Schiller, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Johann Gottfried Herder, Alexander von Humboldt,<ref name="Daum">{{Cite journal |last=Daum |first=Andreas W. |author-link=Andreas Daum |date=March 2019 |title=Social Relations, Shared Practices, and Emotions: Alexander von Humboldt's Excursion into Literary Classicism and the Challenges to Science around 1800 |url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/701757 |journal=The Journal of Modern History |publisher=University of Chicago |volume=91 |issue=1 |pages=1–37 |doi=10.1086/701757 |s2cid=151051482 |access-date=19 February 2021 |archive-date=17 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210417173811/https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/701757 |url-status=live |url-access=subscription}}</ref> Wilhelm von Humboldt, and August and Friedrich Schlegel have come to be collectively termed Weimar Classicism.
The German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer named ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship'' one of the four greatest novels ever written,{{efn|The others Schopenhauer named were ''Tristram Shandy'', ''La Nouvelle Héloïse'', and ''Don Quixote''}}<ref name="schopenhauer_art">{{Cite book |last=Schopenhauer |first=Arthur |chapter=The Art of Literature |title=The Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/10714/pg10714.html |access-date=22 March 2015 |date=January 2004}}</ref> while the American philosopher and essayist Ralph Waldo Emerson selected Goethe as one of six "representative men" in his work of the same name (along with Plato, Emanuel Swedenborg, Michel de Montaigne, Napoleon, and William Shakespeare). Goethe's comments and observations form the basis of several biographical works, notably Johann Peter Eckermann's ''Conversations with Goethe'' (1836). His poems were set to music by many composers, including Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Schubert, Hector Berlioz, Franz Liszt, Richard Wagner, and Gustav Mahler.
== Life == === Early life === [[File:Goethehaus-ffm011.jpg|thumb|upright|Goethe's birthplace in Frankfurt (Großer Hirschgraben)|alt=Exterior of the Goethe House on Großer Hirschgraben in Frankfurt am Main, showing its multi-storey yellow facade with gray trim and rows of rectangular windows.]]
Goethe's grandfather, {{ill|Friedrich Georg Goethe|de|Friedrich Georg Göthe}}, moved from Thuringia in 1687 and changed the spelling of his surname from Göthe to Goethe. In Frankfurt, he first worked as a tailor, then opened a tavern. His son and grandchildren subsequently lived on the fortune he earned. Friedrich Georg Goethe was married twice; his first marriage was to Anna Elisabeth Lutz, the daughter of a burgher, Sebastian Lutz, with whom he had five children, including Hermann Jakob Goethe. After the death of his first wife in 1705, he married Cornelia Schellhorn, née Walther, widow of the innkeeper Johannes Schellhorn (died 1704), with whom he had four more children, including Johann Caspar Goethe, father of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Goethe's father, Johann Caspar Goethe, lived with his family in a large house (today the Goethe House) in Frankfurt, then a free imperial city of the Holy Roman Empire. Though he had studied law in Leipzig and had been appointed Imperial Councillor, Johann Caspar Goethe was not involved in the city's official affairs.<ref name="Grimm36">Herman Grimm: ''Goethe. Vorlesungen gehalten an der Königlichen Universität zu Berlin.'' Vol. 1. J.G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung Nachfolger, Stuttgart / Berlin 1923, p. 36</ref> Johann Caspar married Goethe's mother, Catharina Elisabeth Textor, in Frankfurt on 20 August 1748, when he was 38 and she was 17.<ref>Catharina was the daughter of {{ill|Johann Wolfgang Textor|de}} (1693–1771), sheriff (''Schultheiß'') of Frankfurt, and of Anna Margaretha Lindheimer (1711–1783).</ref> All their children, with the exception of Johann Wolfgang and his sister Cornelia Friederica Christiana, died at an early age.
The young Goethe received from his father and private tutors lessons in subjects common at the time, especially languages (Latin, Greek, Biblical Hebrew (briefly),<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kruse |first=Joseph A. |chapter=Poetisch-religiöse Vorratskammer – Die Hebräische Bibel bei Goethe und Heine |page=71 |title=Goethe und die Juden – die Juden und Goethe |language=de |editor1=Anna-Dorothea Ludewig |editor2=Steffen Höhne |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |year=2018 |isbn=9783110530421}}</ref> French, Italian, and English). Goethe also received lessons in dancing, riding, and fencing. Johann Caspar, feeling frustrated in his own ambitions, was determined that his children should have every advantage he had missed.<ref name="Grimm36" />
Although Goethe's great passion was drawing, he quickly became interested in literature; Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock and Homer were among his early favourites.<ref>Oehler, R 1932, "Buch und Bibliotheken unter der Perspektive Goethe – Goethe's attitude toward books and libraries", ''The Library Quarterly'', 2, pp. 232–249</ref> He also had a devotion to the theater, and was greatly fascinated by the puppet shows that were annually arranged by occupying French soldiers at his home and which later became a recurrent theme in his literary work ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship''.
He also took great pleasure in reading works on history and religion. Of this period, he wrote: {{Blockquote|I had from childhood the singular habit of always learning by heart the beginnings of books, and the divisions of a work, first of the five books of Moses, and then of the ''Aeneid'' and Ovid's ''Metamorphoses'' [...] If an ever active imagination, of which that tale may bear witness, led me hither and thither, if the medley of fable and history, mythology and religion, threatened to bewilder me, I readily fled to those oriental regions, and plunged into the first books of Moses, and there, amid the scattered shepherd tribes, found myself at once in the greatest solitude and the greatest society.<ref>Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von. ''The Autobiography of Goethe: Truth and Poetry, From My Own Life'', Volume 1 (1897), translated by John Oxenford, pp. 114, 129</ref>}}
Goethe also became acquainted with Frankfurt actors. Valerian Tornius wrote: ''Goethe – Leben, Wirken und Schaffen''.<ref>Ludwig-Röhrscheid-Verlag, Bonn 1949, p. 26</ref> In early literary attempts, Goethe showed an infatuation with ''Gretchen'', who would later reappear in his ''Faust'', and the adventures with whom he would describe concisely in ''Dichtung und Wahrheit''.<ref>Emil Ludwig: ''Goethe – Geschichte eines Menschen.'' Vol. 1. Ernst-Rowohlt-Verlag, Berlin 1926, pp. 17–18</ref> He adored Caritas Meixner, a wealthy Worms merchant's daughter and friend of his sister, who later married the merchant G. F. Schuler.<ref>Karl Goedeke: ''Goethes Leben.'' Cotta / Kröner, Stuttgart around 1883, pp. 16–17.</ref>
=== Legal career === [[File:Annakatharinaschoenkopf.png|thumb|upright|Anna Katharina (''Käthchen'') Schönkopf|alt=Black-and-white portrait of Anna Katharina Schönkopf]]
Goethe studied law at Leipzig University from 1765 to 1768. He detested learning judicial rules by heart, preferring instead to attend the lessons of the university professor and poet Christian Fürchtegott Gellert. In Leipzig, Goethe fell in love with Anna Katharina Schönkopf, the daughter of a craftsman and innkeeper, writing cheerful verses about her in the Rococo genre. In 1770, he released anonymously his first collection of poems, ''Annette''. His uncritical admiration for many contemporary poets evaporated as he developed an interest in Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Christoph Martin Wieland. By this time, Goethe had already written a great deal, but he discarded nearly all of these works except for the comedy ''Die Mitschuldigen''. The inn Auerbachs Keller and its legend of Johann Georg Faust's 1525 barrel ride impressed him so much that Auerbachs Keller became the only real place in his closet drama ''Faust Part One''. Given that he was making little progress in his formal studies, Goethe was forced to return to Frankfurt at the end of August 1768.
Back in Frankfurt, Goethe became severely ill. During the year and a half that followed, marked by several relapses, relations with his father worsened. During convalescence, Goethe was nursed by his mother and sister. In April 1770, Goethe left Frankfurt to finish his studies, this time at the University of Strasbourg.
In Alsace, Goethe blossomed. No other landscape was to be described by him as affectionately as the warm, wide Rhineland. In Strasbourg, Goethe met Johann Gottfried Herder. The two became close friends, and crucially to Goethe's intellectual development, Herder kindled his interest in William Shakespeare, Ossian and in the notion of ''Volkspoesie'' (folk poetry). On 14 October 1772, Goethe hosted a gathering in his parents' home in honour of the first German "Shakespeare Day". His first acquaintance with Shakespeare's works is described as his personal awakening in the field of literature.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.uni-duisburg-essen.de/einladung/Vorlesungen/dramatik/goetheshak.htm |title=Johann Wolfgang Goethe: Shakespeare's Day (1771) |access-date=17 July 2014}}</ref>
On a trip to the village of Sessenheim in October 1770, Goethe fell in love with Friederike Brion,<ref>Herman Grimm: ''Goethe. Vorlesungen gehalten an der Königlichen Universität zu Berlin.'' Vol. 1. J. G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung Nachfolger, Stuttgart / Berlin 1923, p. 81</ref><ref>Karl Robert Mandelkow, Bodo Morawe: Goethes Briefe. 2. edition. Vol. 1: Briefe der Jahre 1764–1786. ''Christian Wegner'', Hamburg 1968, p. 571</ref> but the tryst ended in August 1771.<ref>Valerian Tornius: ''Goethe – Leben, Wirken und Schaffen''. Ludwig-Röhrscheid-Verlag, Bonn 1949, p. 60</ref> Several of Goethe's poems, like "{{lang|de|Willkommen und Abschied|italic=unset}}", "{{lang|de|Sesenheimer Lieder|italic=unset}}" and "{{lang|de|Heidenröslein|italic=unset}}", date to this period.
At the end of August 1771, Goethe acquired the academic degree of the Licentiate in Law from Strasbourg and was able to establish a small legal practice in Frankfurt. Although in his academic work he had given voice to an ambition to make jurisprudence progressively more humane, his inexperience led him to proceed too vigorously in his first cases, for which he was reprimanded and lost further clientele. Within a few months, this put an early end to his law career. Around this time, Goethe became acquainted with the court of Darmstadt, where his inventiveness was praised. It was from that world that there came Johann Georg Schlosser (who later became Goethe's brother-in-law) and Johann Heinrich Merck. Goethe also pursued literary plans again; this time, his father did not object and even helped. Goethe obtained a copy of the biography of a noble highwayman from the German Peasants' War. In a couple of weeks, the biography was reworked into a colourful drama titled ''Götz von Berlichingen'', and the work struck a chord among Goethe's contemporaries.
Since Goethe could not subsist on his income as one of the editors of a literary periodical (published by Schlosser and Merck), in May 1772, he once more took up the practice of law, this time at Wetzlar. In 1774, he wrote the book which would bring him worldwide fame, ''The Sorrows of Young Werther''. The broad shape of the work's plot is largely based on what Goethe experienced during his time at Wetzlar with Charlotte Buff<ref name="KestnerAndLotte">Mandelkow, Karl Robert (1962). ''Goethes Briefe''. Vol. 1: ''Briefe der Jahre 1764–1786''. Christian Wegner Verlag. p. 589</ref> and her fiancé, Johann Christian Kestner,<ref name="KestnerAndLotte" /> as well as the suicide of the Goethes' friend Karl Wilhelm Jerusalem. In the latter case, Goethe made a desperate passion of what was in reality a hearty and relaxed friendship.<ref>Mandelkow, Karl Robert (1962). ''Goethes Briefe''. Vol. 1: ''Briefe der Jahre 1764–1786''. Christian Wegner Verlag. pp. 590–592</ref> Despite the immense success of ''Werther'', it did not bring Goethe much financial gain since the protection later afforded by copyright laws at that time virtually did not exist. In later years, Goethe would counter this problem by periodically authorizing "new, revised" editions of his ''Complete Works''.<ref>See ''Goethe and his Publishers''.</ref>
=== Early years in Weimar === thumb|upright|Goethe {{circa|1775}}|alt=Engraved portrait of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, shown in profile with one hand in his jacket.
In 1775, on the strength of his fame as the author of ''The Sorrows of Young Werther'', Goethe was invited to the court of Karl August, Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, who later became Grand Duke in 1815. The Duke's mother, Duchess Anna Amalia, had been the long-time regent on behalf of her son until 1775 and was one of the most important patrons of the arts in her day, making her court into a centre of the arts. Her court had hosted the renowned theatre company of Abel Seyler until a 1774 fire had destroyed Schloss Weimar. Karl August came of age when he turned eighteen in 1775, although his mother continued to be a major presence at the court. So it was that Goethe took up residence in Weimar, where he remained for the rest of his life<ref>{{Cite EB1911 |wstitle=Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von |volume=12 |page=183 |first=John George |last=Robertson}}</ref> and where, over the course of many years, he held a succession of offices, including superintendent of the ducal library.<ref>Gosnell, Charles F., and Géza Schütz. 1932. "Goethe the Librarian." ''Library Quarterly'' 2 (January): 367–374.</ref> He was, moreover, the Duke's friend and chief adviser.<ref>{{Cite book |first=Peter |last=Hume Brown |author-link=Peter Hume Brown |title=Life of Goethe |year=1920 |pages=224–225}}</ref><ref>[https://www.klassik-stiftung.de/uploads/tx_lombkswdigitaldocs/Jahrbuch_2007_Mueller.pdf "Goethe und Carl August – Freundschaft und Politik"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170109021229/https://www.klassik-stiftung.de/uploads/tx_lombkswdigitaldocs/Jahrbuch_2007_Mueller.pdf |date=9 January 2017}} by Gerhard Müller, in Th. Seemann (ed.): ''Anna Amalia, Carl August und das Ereignis Weimar''. Jahrbuch der Klassik Stiftung Weimar 2007. Göttingen: Wallstein Verlag, pp. 132–164 {{in lang|de}}</ref>
In 1776, Goethe formed a close relationship with Charlotte von Stein, a married woman seven years older than him. The intimate bond with her lasted for ten years, after which Goethe abruptly left for Italy without giving his companion any notice. She was emotionally distraught at the time, but they were eventually reconciled.<ref>{{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Stein, Charlotte von|volume=25|page=871}}</ref>
Aside from his official duties, Goethe was also a friend and confidant to Duke Karl August and participated in the activities of the court. For Goethe, his first ten years at Weimar could well be described as a garnering of a degree and range of experiences which perhaps could have been achieved in no other way. In 1779, Goethe took on the War Commission of the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar, in addition to the Mines and Highways commissions. In 1782, when the Duchy's chancellor of the Exchequer left his office, Goethe agreed to act in his place and did so for two and a half years; this post virtually made him prime minister and the principal representative of the Duchy.<ref name=Britannica /> Goethe was ennobled in 1782 (hence the particle "von" in his name). In that same year, Goethe moved into what would be his primary residence in Weimar for the next 50 years.<ref name="klassik">{{Cite web |url=https://www.klassik-stiftung.de/en/goethe-national-museum/the-goethe-residence/ |title=The Goethe Residence |website=Klassik Stiftung Weimar |access-date=29 July 2022 |archive-date=29 July 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220729235533/https://www.klassik-stiftung.de/en/goethe-national-museum/the-goethe-residence/ |url-status=live}}</ref>
As head of the Saxe-Weimar War Commission, Goethe participated in the recruitment of mercenaries into the Prussian and British military during the American Revolution. The author Daniel Wilson claims that Goethe engaged in negotiating the forced sale of vagabonds, criminals, and political dissidents as part of these activities.<ref>{{Cite news |last1=Craig |first1=Gordon A. |last2=Wilson |first2=W. Daniel |title=The Goethe Case {{!}} W. Daniel Wilson |journal=The New York Review of Books 2022 |language=en |url=https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2000/06/29/the-goethe-case/ |access-date=22 July 2022 |issn=0028-7504 |archive-date=22 July 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220722121104/https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2000/06/29/the-goethe-case/ |url-status=live}}</ref>
=== Italy === [[File:Der junge Goethe, gemalt von Angelica Kauffmann 1787.JPG|thumb|upright|Goethe, age 38, painted by Angelica Kauffman, 1787|alt=Oval portrait of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe at age 38, painted in 1787 by Angelica Kauffman, showing him facing slightly left in a brown coat and white cravat.]] [[File:Louise Seidler - J. W. Goethe 1811.jpg|thumb|upright=0.6|Goethe, by Luise Seidler (Weimar 1811)|alt=Pastel portrait of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe painted in 1811 by Louise Seidler, showing him facing forward in dark clothing and a white neckcloth.]] [[File:Goethe National-Museum am Frauenplan.jpg|thumb|Goethe's residence and museum|alt=Exterior view of the Goethe National Museum and Goethe's former residence in Weimar.]]
Goethe's journey to the Italian peninsula and Sicily from 1786 to 1788 was of great significance in his aesthetic and philosophical development. His father had made a similar journey, and his example was a major motivating factor for Goethe to make the trip. More importantly, however, the work of Johann Joachim Winckelmann had provoked a general renewed interest in the classical art of ancient Greece and Rome. Thus, Goethe's journey had something of the nature of a pilgrimage to it. During the course of his trip, Goethe met and befriended the artists Angelica Kauffman and Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein, as well as encountering such notable characters as Lady Hamilton and Alessandro Cagliostro.
He also journeyed to Sicily during this time, and wrote that "To have seen Italy without having seen Sicily is to not have seen Italy at all, for Sicily is the clue to everything."<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Desmond |first1=Will D. |title=Hegel's Antiquity |date=2020 |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=10 |isbn=978-0-19-257574-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4bryDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA10}}</ref> While in Southern Italy and Sicily, Goethe encountered, for the first time genuine Greek (as opposed to Roman) architecture, and was quite startled by its relative simplicity. Winckelmann had not recognized the distinctness of the two styles.
Goethe's diaries of this period form the basis of the non-fiction ''Italian Journey''. ''Italian Journey'' only covers the first year of Goethe's visit. The remaining year is largely undocumented, aside from the fact that he spent much of it in Venice. This "gap in the record" has been the source of much speculation over the years.
In the decades which immediately followed its publication in 1816, ''Italian Journey'' inspired countless German youths to follow Goethe's example. This is pictured, somewhat satirically, in George Eliot's ''Middlemarch''.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}}
=== Weimar === [[File:Freiheitsbaum.jpg|thumb|A Goethe watercolour depicting a liberty pole at the border to the short-lived Republic of Mainz, created under influence of the French Revolution and destroyed in the Siege of Mainz in which Goethe participated.|alt=Watercolour depicting a liberty pole with ribbons beside a river landscape, with small figures and hills in the background.]] thumb|upright|Ulrike von Levetzow|alt=Pastel portrait of a young woman with brown curled hair, wearing a white lace-trimmed dress and a thin necklace.
In late 1792, Goethe took part in the Battle of Valmy against revolutionary France, assisting Duke Karl August of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach during the failed invasion of France. Again, during the Siege of Mainz, he assisted Karl August as a military observer. His written account of these events can be found within his ''Complete Works''.
In 1794, Friedrich Schiller wrote to Goethe offering friendship; they had previously had only a mutually wary relationship ever since first becoming acquainted in 1788. This collaborative friendship lasted until Schiller's death in 1805.
In 1806, Goethe was living in Weimar with his mistress Christiane Vulpius, the sister of Christian A. Vulpius and daughter of archivist Johann Friedrich Vulpius, and their son August von Goethe. On 13 October, Napoleon's army invaded the town. The French "spoon guards", the least disciplined soldiers, occupied Goethe's house: {{blockquote|The "spoon guards" had broken in, they had drunk wine, made a great uproar and called for the master of the house. Goethe's secretary Riemer reports: "Although already undressed and wearing only his wide nightgown [...] he descended the stairs towards them and inquired what they wanted from him [...] His dignified figure, commanding respect, and his spiritual mien seemed to impress even them". But it was not to last long. Late at night, they burst into his bedroom with drawn bayonets. Goethe was petrified, Christiane raised a lot of noise and even tangled with them, other people who had taken refuge in Goethe's house rushed in, and so the marauders eventually withdrew again. It was Christiane who commanded and organized the defence of the house on the Frauenplan. The barricading of the kitchen and the cellar against the wild pillaging soldiery was her work. Goethe noted in his diary: "Fires, rapine, a frightful night [...] Preservation of the house through steadfastness and luck." The luck was Goethe's, the steadfastness was displayed by Christiane.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Safranski |first=Rüdiger |title=Schopenhauer and the Wild Years of Philosophy |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1990 |isbn=978-0-674-79275-3}}</ref>}}
Days afterward, on 19 October 1806, Goethe legitimized their 18-year relationship by marrying Christiane in a quiet marriage service at the Jakobskirche in Weimar. They had already had several children together by this time, including their son, Julius August Walter von Goethe (1789–1830), whose wife, Ottilie von Pogwisch, cared for the elder Goethe until his death in 1832. August and Ottilie had three children: Walther Wolfgang Freiherr von Goethe (1818–1885), Wolfgang Maximilian von Goethe (1820–1883) and Alma Sedina Henriette Cornelia von Goethe (1827–1844). Christiane von Goethe died in 1816. Johann reflected, "There is nothing more charming to see than a mother with her child in her arms, and there is nothing more venerable than a mother among a number of her children."<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fcYZlz0ezQUC&pg=PA385 |title=The Child and Childhood in Folk Thought: The Child in Primitive Culture |page=385 |last=Chamberlain |first=Alexander |date=1896 |publisher=MacMillan |language=en}}</ref>
=== Later life === thumb|upright=.65|Goethe and Ulrike, sculpture by Heinrich Drake in Marienbad|alt=Bronze statue titled Goethe and Ulrike by Heinrich Drake, showing Johann Wolfgang von Goethe standing beside a young woman, displayed outdoors in Marienbad.
After 1793, Goethe devoted his endeavours primarily to literature. In 1812, he travelled to Teplice and Vienna, both times meeting his admirer Ludwig van Beethoven, who had set music to Egmont two years prior in 1810. By 1820, Goethe was on amiable terms with Kaspar Maria von Sternberg.
In 1821, having recovered from a near fatal heart illness, the 72-year-old Goethe fell in love with Ulrike von Levetzow, 17 at the time.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Goethes späte Liebe |last=Gersdorff |first=Dagmar von |year=2005 |author-link=:de:Dagmar von Gersdorff |publisher=Insel Verlag |isbn=978-3-458-19265-7 |language=de}}</ref> In 1823, he wanted to marry her, but because of the opposition of her mother, he never proposed. Their last meeting in Carlsbad on 5 September 1823 inspired his poem "Marienbad Elegy" which he considered one of his finest works.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.hamelika.cz/?cz_ulrika-von-levetzowova-(1804-1899),154 |title=Ulrika von Levetzowová |language=cs |website=hamelika.cz |access-date=22 March 2022 |archive-date=18 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221018130055/https://www.hamelika.cz/?cz_ulrika-von-levetzowova-(1804-1899),154 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>The encounter is described in Stefan Zweig's 1927 book, ''Decisive Moments in History''</ref> During that time he also developed a deep emotional bond with the Polish pianist Maria Szymanowska, 33 at the time, and she separated from her husband.<ref>Briscoe, J. R. (Ed.). (2004). ''New Historical Anthology of Music by Women'' (Vol. 1). Indiana University Press. pp. 126–127.</ref>
In 1821, Goethe's friend Carl Friedrich Zelter introduced him to the 12-year-old Felix Mendelssohn. Goethe, now in his seventies, was greatly impressed by the child, leading to perhaps the earliest confirmed comparison to Mozart in the following conversation between Goethe and Zelter:
{{blockquote|"Musical prodigies [...] are probably no longer so rare; but what this little man can do in extemporizing and playing at sight borders the miraculous, and I could not have believed it possible at so early an age." "And yet you heard Mozart in his seventh year at Frankfurt?" said Zelter. "Yes", answered Goethe, "[...] but what your pupil already accomplishes, bears the same relation to the Mozart of that time that the cultivated talk of a grown-up person bears to the prattle of a child."{{sfn|Todd|2003|p=89}}}}
Mendelssohn was invited to meet Goethe on several later occasions,{{sfn|Mercer-Taylor|2000|pp=41–42, 93}} and set a number of Goethe's poems to music. His other compositions inspired by Goethe include the overture ''Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage'' (Op. 27, 1828), and the cantata ''Die erste Walpurgisnacht'' (''The First Walpurgis Night'', Op. 60, 1832).{{sfn|Todd|2003|pp=188–190, 269–270}}
Heinrich Heine, on his hiking tour through Germany (the trip immortalised in his work ''Die Harzreise'') was granted an audience with Goethe in 1824 in Weimar.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Spencer |first1=Hanna |title=Heinrich Heine |date=1982 |publisher=Twayne Publishers |location=MA: Boston |page=34 |url=https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX1895600010/GVRL?u=ed_itw&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=8038f37b. |access-date=3 June 2024}}</ref> Heine had been a great admirer of Goethe's in his early youth, sending him some of his earlier works with praising cover notes.<ref>''Ibid.''</ref> The meeting is said to be of a strikingly unsuccessful nature, with Heine completely omitting the meeting in the ''Harzreise'', and speaking flippantly of it in much later life.<ref>''Ibid.''</ref>
==== Greek War of Independence and its influence on ''Faust Part Two'' ==== Goethe was a conservative supporter of Klemens von Metternich who did not support revolutions.<ref name=":0">{{Citation |last=McGrath |first=William J. |title=Freedom and Authority: Goethe’s Faust and the Greek War of Independence |date=2013 |work=German Freedom and the Greek Ideal |pages=13–41 |editor-last=Applegate |editor-first=Celia |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1057/9781137369482_2 |access-date=2026-05-06 |place=New York |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan US |language=en |doi=10.1057/9781137369482_2 |isbn=978-1-349-47497-4 |editor2-last=Frontz |editor2-first=Stephanie |editor3-last=Marchand |editor3-first=Suzanne|url-access=subscription }}</ref> For example, he supported the suppression of the ''Trienio Liberal.<ref name=":0" />'' Goethe admired the Greeks; by 1818 he had collected over 100 Greek folk songs, translating seven of them.<ref>Droulia, Loukia (2007). ''"''[https://www.messolonghibyronsociety.gr/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/L.Droulia-Philhellenism-Poland-ed.pdf The Revival of the Greek Ideal and Philhellenism. A perambulation]”, in: Borowskiej, M. Kalinowskiej, Lawskiego, J. (eds.), ''[https://www.messolonghibyronsociety.gr/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Kalinowska_2007.pdf Filhellenizm w Polsce: Rekonesans]'', Warszawa 2007, 25-38</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Karagiorgos |first=Panos |url=https://antallagi.nlg.gr/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=61269&shelfbrowse_itemnumber=62504 |title=Greek Folk Songs |publisher=Fagotto Books |isbn=9789606562006}}</ref> However, he was initially a skeptic of the Greek War of Independence, fearing that its success would increase the power of the Russian Empire, while simultaneously contributing to the destruction of Christians within the Ottoman Empire.<ref name=":0" />
Goethe later departed from this view, sympathizing with the Greeks; he saw the Revolution as an analogue for the Crusades and as highly beneficial to the weakening of the power of the Ottoman Empire.''<ref name=":0" />'' In fact, the Greek War of Independence influenced Goethe so deeply that the death of Lord Byron after the Siege of Messolonghi caused him to resume writing ''Faust Part Two,'' which was greatly influenced by the ongoing struggles of the Greeks.<ref name=":0" /> Goethe also "reincarnated" Byron, symbolically, in the character of ''Euphorion''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Trueblood |first=Paul Graham |url=https://books.google.com.tr/books?id=CdiuCwAAQBAJ |title=Byron’s Political and Cultural Influence in Nineteenth-Century Europe: A Symposium |date=1981 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-349-05588-3 |pages=64 |language=en}}</ref>
== Death == [[File:Särge Goethe und Schiller.jpg|thumb|upright=.75|Coffins of Goethe and Schiller, Weimar vault|alt=Two dark wooden coffins with metal ring handles, belonging to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich Schiller, displayed on stone supports in the Ducal Vault, Weimar.]]
In 1832, Goethe died in Weimar of apparent heart failure. He is buried in the Ducal Vault at Weimar's Historical Cemetery.
=== Last words === The last words of Goethe are usually abridged as {{Lang|de|Mehr Licht!}}, that is, "more light!", although the original quote was longer.
The earliest known account was of Karl Wilhelm Müller's, which gives all of his last words:<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Müller |first1=Karl Wilhelm |title=Goethe's letzte literarische Thätigkeit, Verhältniss zum Ausland und Scheiden nach den Mittheilungen seiner Freunde |date=1832 |publisher=Friedrich Frommann |location=Jena |page=29 |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_vVY6AAAAcAAJ/ |access-date=12 July 2024}}</ref> {{lang|de|"Macht doch den zweiten Fensterladen in der Stube auch auf, damit mehr Licht hereinkomme."}} ("Open the second shutter in the living room so that more light comes in.")
According to his doctor {{ill|Carl Vogel (physician)|de|Carl Vogel (Mediziner)|lt=Carl Vogel}}, his last words were, ''{{lang|de|Mehr Licht!}}'' (More light!), but this is disputed as Vogel was not in the room at the moment Goethe died, something he himself says in his account:<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Vogel |first1=Carl |title=Die letzte Krankheit Goethe's beschrieben und nebst einigen andern Bemerkungen über denselben |journal=Journal der Practischen Heilkunde |date=1833 |volume=LXXVI |issue=II |page=17 |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015011939454&seq=161 |quote={{lang|de|[...] "Mehr Licht" sollen, während ich das Sterbezimmer auf einen Moment verlassen hatte, die letzten Worte des Mannes gewesen seyn, dem Finsterniss in jeder Beziehung stets verhasst war [...]}}}}<br>Christoph Wilhelm Hufeland in his postscript commented: "He ended with the words: "More light" — He has now received it. — We want to be told this as an obituary, to encourage and revive us." {{Cite journal |last1=Hufeland |first1=C. W. |title=Nachschrift |journal=Journal der Praktischen Heilkunde |date=1833 |volume=LXXVI |issue=II |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015011939454&seq=174 |page=32 |quote={{Lang|de|Er endete mit den Worten: "Mehr Licht" — Ihm ist es nun geworden — Wir wollen es uns gesagt seyn lassen, als Nachruf, zur Ermunterung und Belebung.}}}}</ref> "[...] "More light" is said to have been the last words of the man, who always hated darkness in every respect, as I had left the dying room for a moment [...]"
Thomas Carlyle, in his letter to John Carlyle (2 July 1832) records that he had learned the version {{lang|de|Macht die Fensterladen auf, damit ich mehr Licht bekomme!}} ("Open the shutters so I can get more light!") from Sarah Austin:<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Froude |first1=James Anthony |author1-link=James Anthony Froude |title=Thomas Carlyle: a History of the First Forty Years of His Life, 1795-1835 — In Two Volumes (Vol. II) |date=1882 |publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons |location=New York |page=241 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NZvKVy3i4AkC&pg=PA241}}</ref> "[...] Mrs. Austin wrote lately that Goethe's last words were, {{lang|de|Macht die Fensterladen auf, damit ich mehr Licht bekomme!}} Glorious man! Happy man! I never think of him but with reverence and pride [...]" John Ruskin, in his ''Præterita'', narrates a memory of him from his diary record of 25 October 1874 that Carlyle "[...] had been quoting the last words of Goethe, "Open the window, let us have more light" (this about an hour before painless death, his eyes failing him)."<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Ruskin |first1=John |author1-link=John Ruskin |title=Præterita: Outlines of Scenes and Thoughts, Perhaps Worth of Memory, in My Past Life (Vol. II) |date=1888 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |location=New York |page=428 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=emtnAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA428 |access-date=12 July 2024}}</ref>
Even though the context was different, these words, especially the abridged version, which turned into a dictum, are usually used as a means to illustrate the pro-Enlightenment worldview of Goethe.
=== Aftermath === The first production of Richard Wagner's opera ''Lohengrin'' took place in Weimar in 1850. The conductor was Franz Liszt, who chose the date 28 August in honour of Goethe, who was born on 28 August 1749.<ref>''Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians'', 5th ed., 1954{{page needed|date=January 2021}}</ref>
=== Descendants === Goethe had five children with Christiane Vulpius. Only their eldest son, August, survived into adulthood. One child was stillborn, while the others died early. Through his son August and daughter-in-law Ottilie, Johann had three grandchildren: Walther, Wolfgang and Alma. Alma died of typhoid fever during the outbreak in Vienna, at age 16. Walther and Wolfgang neither married nor had any children. Walther's gravestone states: "With him ends Goethe's dynasty, the name will last forever," marking the end of Goethe's personal bloodline. While he has no direct descendants, his siblings do.
== Literary work == thumb|First edition of ''The Sorrows of Young Werther''|alt=Open book showing the title page of the 1774 first edition of Die Leiden des jungen Werthers, with decorative vignette and publisher information from Leipzig. [[File:1876 'Faust' by Goethe, decorated by Rudolf Seib, large German edition 51x38cm, from Tamoikin Art Fund.jpg|thumb|1876 "Faust" by Goethe, decorated by Rudolf Seitz, large German edition 51x38cm|alt=Decorative leather-bound cover and printed title page of an 1876 illustrated edition of Faust, Part I by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.]] [[File:GoetheAndSchillerMonumentAtWeimar.jpg|thumb|Goethe–Schiller Monument, Weimar (1857)|alt=Photograph of a large bronze statue of two men standing side by side and facing forward. The statue is on a stone pedestal, which has a plaque that reads "Dem Dichterpaar/Goethe und Schiller/das Vaterland".]]
The most important of Goethe's works produced before he went to Weimar were ''Götz von Berlichingen'' (1773), a tragedy that was the first work to bring him recognition, and the novel ''The Sorrows of Young Werther'' (German: {{lang|de|Die Leiden des jungen Werthers}}) (1774), which gained him enormous fame as a writer in the ''Sturm und Drang'' period which marked the early phase of Romanticism. Indeed, ''Werther'' is often considered to be the "spark" which ignited the movement, and can arguably be called the world's first "best-seller". During the years at Weimar before he met Schiller in 1794, he began ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship''<ref>Ludwig, Emil (1928) ''Goethe: The History of a Man 1749–1833, Schiller and Wilhelm Meister'' Translated by Ethel Colburn Mayne, New York: G.P. Putnum's Sons.</ref> and wrote the dramas ''Iphigenie auf Tauris'' (''Iphigenia in Tauris''),<ref>{{Cite book |author=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |title=Iphigenia in Tauris |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kOznAAAAIAAJ&pg=PR15 |year=1966 |publisher=Manchester University Press |page=15}}</ref> ''Egmont'',<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Sharpe |first1=Lesley |title=Schiller and Goethe's "Egmont" |journal=The Modern Language Review |date=July 1982 |volume=77 |issue=3 |pages=629–645 |doi=10.2307/3728071 |jstor=3728071 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3728071 |access-date=18 July 2021 |archive-date=18 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210718014110/https://www.jstor.org/stable/3728071 |url-status=live |url-access=subscription}}</ref> and ''Torquato Tasso''<ref>Lamport, Francis John. 1990. ''German Classical Drama: Theatre, Humanity and Nation, 1750–1870''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|0-521-36270-9}}. p. 90.</ref> and the fable ''Reineke Fuchs''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Return to Weimar and the French Revolution (1788–1794) |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Johann-Wolfgang-von-Goethe/Return-to-Weimar-and-the-French-Revolution-1788-94#ref924364 |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=18 July 2021 |archive-date=18 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210718020037/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Johann-Wolfgang-von-Goethe/Return-to-Weimar-and-the-French-Revolution-1788-94#ref924364 |url-status=live}}</ref>
To the period of his friendship with Schiller belong the conception of ''Wilhelm Meister's Journeyman Years'' (the continuation of ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship''), the idyll of ''Hermann and Dorothea'', the ''Roman Elegies'' and the verse drama ''The Natural Daughter''.<ref name="generally">See, generally Schiller, F. (1877). ''Correspondence between Schiller and Goethe, from 1794 to 1805'' (Vol. 1). G. Bell.</ref> In the last period, between Schiller's death, in 1805, and his own, appeared ''Faust Part One'' (1808), ''Elective Affinities'' (1809), the ''West-Eastern Diwan'' (an 1819 collection of poems in the Persian style, influenced by the work of Hafez), his autobiographical ''Aus meinem Leben: Dichtung und Wahrheit'' (''From My Life: Poetry and Truth'', published between 1811 and 1833) which covers his early life and ends with his departure for Weimar, his ''Italian Journey'' (1816–1817), and a series of treatises on art. ''Faust, Part Two'' was completed before his 1832 death and published posthumously later that year. His writings were immediately influential in literary and artistic circles.<ref name="generally"/>
Goethe was fascinated by Kalidasa's ''Abhijñānaśākuntalam'', which was one of the first works of Sanskrit literature that became known in Europe, after being translated from English to German.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ix-RShGgZUAC&pg=PA9 |title=Sanskrit Drama in Performance |first1=Rachel Van M. |last1=Baumer |first2=James R. |last2=Brandon |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |year=1993 |orig-year=1981 |isbn=978-81-208-0772-3 |page=9}}</ref>
=== Details of selected works === [[File:Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein - Goethe in the Roman Campagna - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|''Goethe in the Roman Campagna'' (1786) by Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein]]
The short epistolary novel ''Die Leiden des jungen Werthers'', or ''The Sorrows of Young Werther'', published in 1774, recounts an unhappy romantic infatuation that ends in suicide. Goethe admitted that he "shot his hero to save himself", a reference to Goethe's near-suicidal obsession for a young woman, a passion he quelled through writing. The novel remains in print in dozens of languages and its influence is undeniable; its central hero, an obsessive figure driven to despair and destruction by his unrequited love for the young Lotte, has become a pervasive literary archetype. The fact that ''Werther'' ends with the protagonist's suicide and funeral — a funeral which "no clergyman attended" — made the book deeply controversial upon its (anonymous) publication, for it appeared to condone and glorify suicide. Suicide is considered sinful by Christian doctrine, and suicides were denied Christian burial, with the bodies often mutilated. The suicide's property was often confiscated by the Church.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://pipsproject.com/Understanding%20Suicide.html |publisher=Pips Project |title=The Stigma of Suicide – A history |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071006120251/http://pipsproject.com/Understanding%20Suicide.html |archive-date=6 October 2007}}</ref>
Goethe explained his use of ''Werther'' in his autobiography. He said he "turned reality into poetry, but his friends thought poetry should be turned into reality and the poem imitated". He was against this reading of poetry.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://archive.org/details/autobiographyofg00goet |title=The Auto-Biography of Goethe. Truth and Poetry: From My Own Life |first=Johann Wolfgang von |last=Goethe |translator=John Oxenford |date=1848 |location=London |publisher=Henry G. Bohn |via=Internet Archive |page={{page needed|date=May 2021}}}}</ref> Epistolary novels were common during this time, letter-writing being a primary mode of communication. What set Goethe's book apart from other such novels was its expression of unbridled longing for a joy beyond possibility, its sense of defiant rebellion against authority, and of principal importance, its total subjectivity: qualities that trailblazed the Romantic movement.
The next work, his epic closet drama ''Faust'', was completed in stages. The first part was published in 1808 and created a sensation. Goethe finished ''Faust Part Two'' in the year of his death, and the work was published posthumously. Goethe's original draft of a Faust play, which probably dates from 1773 to 1774, and is now known as the ''Urfaust'', was also published after his death.<ref>''Goethe's Plays, by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe'', translated into English with introductions by Charles E. Passage, Publisher Benn Limited, 1980, ISBN 978-0-510-00087-5</ref>
The first operatic version of Goethe's ''Faust'', by Louis Spohr, appeared in 1814. The work subsequently inspired operas and oratorios by Schumann, Berlioz, Gounod, Boito, Busoni and Schnittke, as well as symphonic works by Liszt, Wagner and Mahler. Faust became the ur-myth of many figures in the 19th century. Later, a facet of its plot, i.e., of selling one's soul to the devil for power over the physical world, took on increasing literary importance and became a view of the victory of technology and of industrialism, along with its dubious human expenses. In 1919, the world premiere complete production of ''Faust'' was staged at the Goetheanum.
Goethe's poetic work served as a model for an entire movement in German poetry termed ''Innerlichkeit'' ("introversion") and represented by, for example, Heine. Goethe's words inspired a number of compositions by, among others, Mozart, Beethoven (who idolised Goethe),<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wigmore |first=Richard |title=A meeting of genius: Beethoven and Goethe, July 1812 |url=http://www.gramophone.co.uk/features/focus/a-meeting-of-genius-beethoven-and-goethe-july-1812 |work=Gramophone |publisher=Haymarket |access-date=6 July 2012 |date=2 July 2012 |archive-date=21 December 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191221200610/https://www.gramophone.co.uk/features/focus/a-meeting-of-genius-beethoven-and-goethe-july-1812 |url-status=live}}</ref> Schubert, Berlioz and Wolf. Perhaps the single most influential piece is "Mignon's Song", which opens with one of the most famous lines in German poetry, an allusion to Italy: "''{{lang|de|Kennst du das Land, wo die Zitronen blühn}}?''" ("Do you know the land where the lemon trees bloom?").
He is also widely quoted. Epigrams such as "Against criticism a man can neither protest nor defend himself; he must act in spite of it, and then it will gradually yield to him", "Divide and rule, a sound motto; unite and lead, a better one", and "Enjoy when you can, and endure when you must", are still in usage or are often paraphrased. Lines from ''Faust'', such as "{{lang|de|Das also war des Pudels Kern}}", "{{lang|de|Das ist der Weisheit letzter Schluss}}", or "{{lang|de|Grau ist alle Theorie}}" have entered everyday German usage.
Some well-known quotations are often incorrectly attributed to Goethe. These include Hippocrates' "Art is long, life is short", which is echoed in Goethe's ''Faust'' and ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship''.
== Scientific work == {{Main|Goethean science}} [[File:Goethe, Kügelgen, 1810.jpg|thumb|Goethe in 1810. Gerhard von Kügelgen]] [[File:Goethe-LightSpectrum.svg|thumb|Light spectrum, from ''Theory of Colours''. Goethe observed that with a prism, colour arises at light-dark edges, and the spectrum occurs where these coloured edges overlap.]]
{{Blockquote|As to what I have done as a poet [...] I take no pride in it [...] But that in my century I am the only person who knows the truth in the difficult science of colours — of that, I say, I am not a little proud, and here I have a consciousness of a superiority to many.|Johann Eckermann, ''Conversations with Goethe''}}
Although his literary work has attracted the most interest, Goethe was also keenly involved in studies of natural science.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.natureinstitute.org/about/who/goethe.htm |publisher=The Nature Institute |title=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |access-date=28 August 2008 |archive-date=8 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201008200414/https://www.natureinstitute.org/about/who/goethe.htm |url-status=live}}</ref> He wrote several works on morphology and colour theory. In the 1790s, he undertook Galvanic experiments and studied anatomical issues together with Alexander von Humboldt.<ref name="Daum" /> He also had the largest private collection of minerals in all of Europe. By the time of his death, to gain a comprehensive view of geology, he had collected 17,800 rock samples.
His focus on morphology and what was later called homology influenced 19th-century naturalists, although his ideas of transformation were about the continuous metamorphosis of living things and did not relate to contemporary ideas of "transformisme" or transmutation of species. Homology, or as Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire called it "analogie", was used by Charles Darwin as strong evidence of common descent and of laws of variation.<ref name="darwin1">{{cite book |last=Darwin |first=C. R. |year=1859 |title=On the origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life |publisher=John Murray |edition=1st |url=http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=F373&viewtype=text&pageseq=165&keywords=goethe |access-date=9 February 2007 |archive-date=7 April 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220407174703/http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=F373&viewtype=text&pageseq=165&keywords=goethe |url-status=live}}</ref> Goethe's studies (notably with an elephant's skull lent to him by Samuel Thomas von Soemmerring) led him to independently discover the human intermaxillary bone, also known as "Goethe's bone", in 1784, which Broussonet (1779) and Vicq d'Azyr (1780) had (using different methods) identified several years earlier.<ref>{{Cite journal |author1=K. Barteczko |author2=M. Jacob |title=A re-evaluation of the premaxillary bone in humans |journal=Anatomy and Embryology |year=1999 |volume=207 |issue=6 |pages=417–437 |doi=10.1007/s00429-003-0366-x |pmid=14760532 |s2cid=13069026}}</ref> While not the only one in his time to question the prevailing view that this bone did not exist in humans, Goethe, who believed ancient anatomists had known about this bone, was the first to prove its existence in all mammals. The elephant's skull that led Goethe to this discovery, and was subsequently named the Goethean Elephant, is displayed in the Ottoneum in Kassel, Germany.
During his Italian journey, Goethe formulated a theory of plant metamorphosis in which the archetypal form of the plant is to be found in the ''leaf'' – he writes, "from top to bottom a plant is all leaf, united so inseparably with the future bud that one cannot be imagined without the other".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Goethe |first=J. W. |title=Italian Journey |publisher=Suhrkamp ed., vol. 6 |others=Robert R Heitner}}</ref> In 1790, he published his ''Metamorphosis of Plants''.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://www.loc.gov/item/agr08000317/ |title=Versuch die Metamorphose der Pflanzen zu Erklären |publisher=Library of Congress |access-date=2 January 2018 |archive-date=3 January 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180103072705/https://www.loc.gov/item/agr08000317/ |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Fjuaog1_E0C&q=intermaxillary+bone+prove&pg=PA86 |title=Metamorphosis of Plants |access-date=28 August 2008 |isbn=978-1-4179-4984-7 |author1=Magnus, Rudolf |author2=Schmid, Gunther |year=2004 |publisher=Kessinger}}</ref> As one of the many precursors in the history of evolutionary thought, Goethe wrote in ''Story of My Botanical Studies'' (1831): {{blockquote|The ever-changing display of plant forms, which I have followed for so many years, awakens increasingly within me the notion: The plant forms which surround us were not all created at some given point in time and then locked into the given form, they have been given [...] a felicitous mobility and plasticity that allows them to grow and adapt themselves to many different conditions in many different places.<ref>Frank Teichmann (tr. Jon McAlice) [http://www.waldorfresearchinstitute.org/pdf/BAIdeaEvolTeich.pdf "The Emergence of the Idea of Evolution in the Time of Goethe"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130423180129/http://www.waldorfresearchinstitute.org/pdf/BAIdeaEvolTeich.pdf |date=23 April 2013}} first published in ''Interdisciplinary Aspects of Evolution'', Urachhaus (1989)</ref>}}
Goethe's botanical theories were partly based on his gardening in Weimar.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Balzer |first=Georg |date=1966 |title=Goethe als Gartenfreund |location=München |publisher=F. Bruckmann KG}}</ref>
Goethe also popularized the Goethe barometer using a principle established by Torricelli. According to Hegel, "Goethe has occupied himself a good deal with meteorology; barometer readings interested him particularly [...] What he says is important: the main thing is that he gives a comparative table of barometric readings during the whole month of December 1822, at Weimar, Jena, London, Boston, Vienna, Töpel [...] He claims to deduce from it that the barometric level varies in the same proportion not only in each zone but that it has the same variation, too, at different altitudes above sea-level".<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Hegel |first1=Georg Wilhelm Friedrich |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pQnOQlowPKMC&dq=goethe+meteorological&pg=PA128 |title=Hegel's Philosophy of Nature: Being Part Two of the Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences (1830), Translated from Nicolin and Pöggeler's Edition (1959), and from the Zusätze in Michelet's Text (1847) |last2=Miller |first2=Arnold V. |date=2004 |publisher=Clarendon Press |isbn=978-0-19-927267-9 |language=en |access-date=8 January 2023 |archive-date=4 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230404111142/https://books.google.com/books?id=pQnOQlowPKMC&dq=goethe+meteorological&pg=PA128 |url-status=live}}</ref>
In 1810, Goethe published his ''Theory of Colours'', which he considered his most important work. In it, he contentiously characterized colour as arising from the dynamic interplay of light and darkness through the mediation of a turbid medium.<ref>Aristotle wrote that colour is a mixture of light and dark, since white light is always seen as somewhat darkened when it is seen as a colour. (Aristotle, ''On Sense and its Objects'', III, 439b, 20 ff.: "White and black may be juxtaposed in such a way that by the minuteness of the division of its parts each is invisible while their product is visible, and thus colour may be produced.") See {{Cite book |last1=Aristotle |url=http://archive.org/details/aristotledesensu00arisuoft |title=Aristotle De sensu and De memoria; text and translation, with introduction and commentary |last2=Ross |first2=George Robert Thomson |date=1906 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |others=Robarts – University of Toronto}}</ref> In 1816, Schopenhauer went on to develop his own theory in ''On Vision and Colours'' based on the observations supplied in Goethe's book. After being translated into English by Charles Eastlake in 1840, his theory became widely adopted by the art world, most notably J. M. W. Turner.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bockemuhl |first=M. |title=Turner |publisher=Taschen, Koln |year=1991 |isbn=978-3-8228-6325-1}}</ref> Goethe's work also inspired the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, to write his ''Remarks on Colour''. Goethe was vehemently opposed to Newton's analytic treatment of colour, engaging instead in compiling a comprehensive ''rational description'' of a wide variety of colour phenomena. Although Goethe's empirical observations were largely accurate, his aesthetic approach failed to meet the standards of analytic and mathematical analysis used ubiquitously in modern Science. Goethe was, however, the first to systematically study the physiological effects of colour, and his observations on the effect of opposed colours led him to a symmetric arrangement of his colour wheel, "for the colours diametrically opposed to each other [...] are those which reciprocally evoke each other in the eye."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Goethe |first=Johann |url=http://theoryofcolor.org/Physiological+Colours#par50 |title=Theory of Colours, paragraph No. 50 |year=1810 |access-date=16 November 2014 |archive-date=16 December 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211216232435/https://theoryofcolor.org/Physiological+Colours#par50 |url-status=dead}}</ref> In this, he anticipated Ewald Hering's opponent colour theory (1872).<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://webexhibits.org/colorart/ch.html |title=Goethe's Color Theory |access-date=28 August 2008 |archive-date=16 September 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080916130507/http://www.webexhibits.org/colorart/ch.html |url-status=live}}</ref>
Goethe outlines his method in the essay ''The experiment as mediator between subject and object'' (1772).<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Experiment as Mediator between Subject and Object |access-date=26 June 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111110082845/http://pages.slc.edu/~eraymond/bestfoot.html |url=http://pages.slc.edu/~eraymond/bestfoot.html |archive-date=10 November 2011}}</ref> In the Kurschner edition of Goethe's works, the science editor, Rudolf Steiner, presents Goethe's approach to science as phenomenological. Steiner elaborated on that in the books ''The Theory of Knowledge Implicit in Goethe's World-Conception''<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://wn.rsarchive.org/Books/GA002/English/AP1985/GA002_index.html |title=The Theory of Knowledge Implicit in Goethe's World Conception |access-date=28 August 2008 |year=1979}}</ref> and ''Goethe's World View'',<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://wn.rsarchive.org/Books/GA006/English/MP1985/GA006_index.html |title=Goethe's World View |access-date=28 August 2008}}</ref> in which he characterizes intuition as the instrument by which one grasps Goethe's biological archetype — ''The Typus''.
Novalis, himself a geologist and mining engineer, expressed the opinion that Goethe was the first physicist of his time and "epoch-making in the history of physics", writing that Goethe's studies of light, of the metamorphosis of plants and of insects were indications and proofs "that the perfect educational lecture belongs in the artist's sphere of work"; and that Goethe would be surpassed "but only in the way in which the ancients can be surpassed, in inner content and force, in variety and depth — as an artist actually not, or only very little, for his rightness and intensity are perhaps already more exemplary than it would seem".<ref>'Goethe's Message of Beauty in Our Twentieth Century World', (Friedrich) Frederick Hiebel, RSCP California. {{ISBN|978-0-916786-37-3}}</ref>
== Eroticism == thumb|upright=0.6|Goethe on a 1999 German stamp
Many of Goethe's works, especially ''Faust'', the ''Roman Elegies'', and the ''Venetian Epigrams'', depict erotic passions and acts. For instance, in ''Faust'', the first use of Faust's power after signing a contract with the Devil is to seduce a teenage girl. Some of the ''Venetian Epigrams'' were held back from publication due to their sexual content. Goethe clearly saw human sexuality as a topic worthy of poetic and artistic depiction, an idea that was uncommon in a time when the private nature of sexuality was rigorously normative.<ref>''Outing Goethe and His Age''; edited by Alice A. Kuzniar.{{page needed|date=July 2017}}</ref>
In a conversation on 7 April 1830, Goethe stated that pederasty is an "aberration" that easily leads to "animal, roughly material" behaviour. He continued, "Pederasty is as old as humanity itself, and one can therefore say that it resides in nature, even if it proceeds against nature [...] What culture has won from nature will not be surrendered or given up at any price."<ref name="Gedenkausgabe der Werke, Briefe und Gespräche">{{Cite book |last1=Goethe |first1=Johann Wolfgang |title=Gedenkausgabe der Werke, Briefe und Gespräche |date=1976 |publisher=Artemis Verlag |page=686 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hX_fAAAAMAAJ |access-date=27 April 2016}}</ref> In one of his epigrams, which are often facetious and satirical, he wrote: "I love boys as well, but girls are even dearer to me. If I tire of her as a girl, she'll serve as a boy for me as well".<ref name="GoetheNotizbuch1790">{{Cite web |last=Goethe |first=Johann Wolfgang von |title=Goethe's Notizbuch von der schlesischen Reise im Jahre 1790 zur Begrüssing der deutsch-romanischen Section der XXXVII Versammlung deutscher Philologen und Schulmänner in Dessau am 1. Oktober 1884, hrsg. von Friedrich Zarncke |trans-title=Goethe's Notebook from the Silesian Journey in 1790, for the greeting of the German-Romance Section of the 37th Assembly of German Philologists and Schoolmasters in Dessau on 1 October 1884, edited by Friedrich Zarncke |publisher=Breitkopf & Härtel |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.$c187297&seq=19 |access-date=22 September 2023 |archive-date=13 October 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231013023937/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.$c187297&seq=19 |url-status=live}}</ref>
== Religion and politics == [[File:Weimar Anna Amalia Bibliothek@Jagemann JW Goethe.JPG|thumb|Portrait of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe by Ferdinand Jagemann, 1806]]
Goethe was a freethinker who believed that one could be inwardly Christian without following any of the Christian churches, many of whose central teachings he firmly opposed, sharply distinguishing between Jesus and the tenets of Christian theology and criticizing its history as a "hodgepodge of mistakes and violence".<ref>The phrase Goethe uses is "Mischmasch von Irrtum und Gewalt", in his "Zahme Xenien" IX, ''Goethes Gedichte in Zeitlicher Folge'', Insel Verlag 1982 {{ISBN|978-3-458-14013-9}}, p. 1121</ref><ref>Arnold Bergsträsser, "Goethe's View of Christ", ''Modern Philology'', vol. 46, no. 3 (February 1949), pp. 172–202; Martin Tetz, "Mischmasch von Irrtum und Gewalt. Zu Goethes Vers auf die Kirchengeschichte", Zeitschrift für Theologie und Kirche, 88 (1991) pp. 339–363</ref> His own descriptions of his relationship to the Christian faith and even to the Church varied widely and have been interpreted even more widely, so that while Goethe's secretary Eckermann portrayed him as enthusiastic about Christianity, Jesus, Martin Luther, and the Protestant Reformation, even calling Christianity the "ultimate religion",<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZuAIAAAAQAAJ&q=Jesus&pg=PA424 |title=Conversations of Goethe with Eckermann and Soret, Vol. II, pp. 423–424 |access-date=17 July 2014|last1=Goethe |first1=Johann Wolfgang von |last2=Eckermann |first2=Johann Peter |last3=Soret |first3=Frédéric Jacob |year=1850}}</ref> on one occasion Goethe described himself as "not anti-Christian, nor un-Christian, but most decidedly non-Christian,"<ref>Boyle 1992, 353{{incomplete short citation|date=May 2020}}</ref> and in his Venetian Epigram 66, Goethe listed the symbol of the cross among the four things that he most disliked.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T2ImAAAAMAAJ&q=goethe+%2B+cross+%2B+garlic&pg=PA299 |title=Venetian Epigrams |access-date=17 July 2014|last1=Thompson |first1=James |year=1895}} ''Venetian Epigrams'', 66, ["Wenige sind mir jedoch wie Gift und Schlange zuwider; Viere: Rauch des Tabacks, Wanzen und Knoblauch und †."]. The cross symbol he drew has been variously understood as meaning Christianity, Christ, or death.</ref> According to Nietzsche, Goethe had "a kind of almost ''joyous'' and ''trusting fatalism''" that has "faith that only in the totality everything redeems itself and appears good and justified."<ref>Friedrich Nietzsche, ''The Will to Power'', § 95</ref>
Born into a Lutheran family, Goethe's early faith was shaken by news of such events as the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and the Seven Years' War. A year before his death, in a letter to Sulpiz Boisserée, Goethe wrote that he had the feeling that all his life he had been aspiring to qualify as one of the Hypsistarians, an ancient sect of the Black Sea region who, in his understanding, sought to reverence, as being close to the Godhead, what came to their knowledge of the best and most perfect.<ref>Letter to Boisserée dated 22 March 1831 quoted in Peter Boerner, ''Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 1832/1982: A Biographical Essay''. Bonn: Inter Nationes, 1981, p. 82</ref> Goethe's unorthodox religious beliefs led him to be called "the great heathen" and provoked distrust among the authorities of his time, who opposed the creation of a Goethe monument on account of his offensive religious creed.<ref name="Krimmer">{{Cite book |last1=Krimmer |first1=Elisabeth |author1-link=Elisabeth Krimmer |last2=Simpson |first2=Patricia Anne |title=Religion, Reason, and Culture in the Age of Goethe |date=2013 |publisher=Boydell & Brewer |page=99}}</ref> August Wilhelm Schlegel considered Goethe "a heathen who converted to Islam."<ref name="Krimmer" />
Goethe showed interest in other religions, including Islam, although Karic suggests that attempts to claim Goethe for any religion "is a pointless, Sisyphean task".<ref>Karic, Enes, "Goethe, His Era, and Islam". p. 100. Retrieved 14 December 2022.</ref> At age 23, Goethe wrote a poem about a river, originally part of a dramatic dialogue, which he published as a separate work called ''Mahomets Gesang'' ("Muhammad's Song").<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mahomets Gesang |url=https://www.lieder.net/lieder/get_text.html?TextId=6507 |website=The LiederNet Archive |access-date=15 November 2022 |archive-date=24 September 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220924184608/https://www.lieder.net/lieder/get_text.html?TextId=6507 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>Jolle, Jonas (2004). ''The River and its Metaphors: Goethe's "Mahoments Gesang"''.</ref> The poem's depiction of nature and forces within it is consonant with his Sturm und Drang years.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jolle |first=Jonas |date=2004 |title=The River and its Metaphors: Goethe's "Mahomets Gesang" |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/169101 |journal=MLN |volume=119 |issue=3 |pages=431–450 |doi=10.1353/mln.2004.0111 |s2cid=161893614 |issn=1080-6598 |url-access=subscription}}</ref> In 1819, he published his ''West–östlicher Divan'' to ignite a poetic dialogue between East and West.<ref>Dallmayr, F. (2002). ''Dialogue Among Civilizations''. NY: Macmillan Palgrave. p. 152.</ref>
Politically, Goethe described himself as a "moderate liberal".<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Eckermann |first1=Johann Peter |title=Conversations with Goethe |date=1901 |publisher=M.W. Dunne |page=320 |quote="Dumont", returned Goethe, "is a moderate liberal, just as all rational people are and ought to be, and as I myself am".}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Selth |first1=Jefferson P. |title=Firm Heart and Capacious Mind: The Life and Friends of Etienne Dumont |date=1997 |publisher=University Press of America |pages=132–133}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Mommsen |first1=Katharina |title=Goethe and the Poets of Arabia |date=2014 |publisher=Boydell & Brewer |page=70}}</ref> He was critical of the radicalism of Jeremy Bentham and expressed sympathy for the liberalism of François Guizot.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Peter Eckermann |first=Johann |title=Conversations with Goethe |date=1901 |publisher=M.W. Dunne |pages=317–319}}</ref> At the time of the French Revolution, he thought the enthusiasm of the students and professors to be a perversion of their energy and remained skeptical of the ability of the masses to govern.<ref name="McCabe, Joseph pp. 343">McCabe, Joseph. "Goethe: The Man and His Character". p. 343</ref> Goethe sympathized with the American Revolution and later wrote a poem in which he declared, "America, you're better off than our continent, the old."{{sfn|Unseld|1996|pp=[https://archive.org/details/goethehispublish0000unse/page/36 36–37]}}<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Gemünden |first1=Gerd |title=Framed Visions: Popular Culture, Americanization, and the Contemporary German and Austrian Imagination |date=1998 |publisher=University of Michigan Press |pages=18–19}}</ref> He did not join in the anti-Napoleonic mood of 1812, and he distrusted the strident nationalism which started to be expressed.{{sfn|Unseld|1996|page=[https://archive.org/details/goethehispublish0000unse/page/212 212]}} The medievalism of the Heidelberg Romantics was also repellent to Goethe's eighteenth-century ideal of a supra-national culture.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Richards |first1=David B. |title=Goethe's Search for the Muse: Translation and Creativity |date=1979 |publisher=John Benjamins Publishing Company |page=83}}</ref>
Goethe was a Freemason, joining the lodge Amalia in Weimar in 1780, and frequently alluded to Masonic themes of universal brotherhood in his work.<ref name="Recasting Cosmopolitanism 2000">{{Cite journal |last1=Beachy |first1=Robert |title=Recasting Cosmopolitanism: German Freemasonry and Regional Identity in the Early Nineteenth Century |journal=Eighteenth-Century Studies |date=2000 |volume=33 |issue=2 |pages=266–274 |jstor=30053687 |doi=10.1353/ecs.2000.0002 |s2cid=162003813}}</ref> He was also attracted to the Illuminati, a Bavarian secret society founded on 1 May 1776.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Die Mitglieder des Illuminatenordens, 1776–1787/1793 |last=Schüttler |first=Hermann |year=1991 |publisher=Ars Una |location=Munich |isbn=978-3-89391-018-2 |pages=48–49, 62–63, 71, 82}}</ref><ref name="Recasting Cosmopolitanism 2000"/>
Although often requested to write poems arousing nationalist passions, Goethe would always decline. In old age, he explained why this was so to Eckermann:{{Blockquote|How could I write songs of hatred when I felt no hate? And, between ourselves, I never hated the French, although I thanked God when we were rid of them. How could I, to whom the only significant things are civilization [''Kultur''] and barbarism, hate a nation which is among the most cultivated in the world, and to which I owe a great part of my own culture? In any case, this business of hatred between nations is a curious thing. You will always find it more powerful and barbarous on the lowest levels of civilization. But there exists a level at which it wholly disappears, and where one stands, so to speak, above the nations, and feels the weal or woe of a neighbouring people as though it were one's own.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Story of Civilization Volume 10: Rousseau and Revolution |author=Will Durant |publisher=Simon & Schuster |page=607 |year=1967}}</ref>}}
== Influence == [[File:2016-05-07 4904x7356 chicago goethe.jpg|thumb|upright|Statue dedicated "To Goethe the Mastermind of the German People" in Chicago's Lincoln Park (1913)]] [[File:Fidus Bruno Wille Wacholderbaum Lorbeerkranz.jpg|thumb|Illustration of Goethe as a classical poet by Fidus (1901)|alt=Black-and-white illustration of a large stone-like male head, with two nude female figures standing on either side, one crowning it with a laurel wreath.]] [[File:Goetheanum Dornach.jpg|thumb|Second Goetheanum]] [[File:Mendelssohn plays to Goethe, 1830.jpg|thumb|Mendelssohn plays to Goethe, 1830: painting by Moritz Oppenheim, 1864]] [[File:Goeothe Denkmal Leipzig.JPG|thumb|upright|Goethe memorial in front of the Alte Handelsbörse, Leipzig]] [[File:Weimarer Klassik.jpg|thumb|Schiller, Alexander and Wilhelm von Humboldt, and Goethe in Jena, {{circa|1797}}]]
In a letter written to Leopold Casper in 1932, Einstein wrote that he admired Goethe as "a poet without peer, and as one of the smartest and wisest men of all time". He goes on to say, "even his scholarly ideas deserve to be held in high esteem, and his faults are those of any great man".
Goethe had a breadth of influence on the nineteenth century, which in many respects has woven itself into the fabric of ideas which have now become widespread. He produced volumes of poetry, essays, criticism, a theory of colours and early work on evolution and linguistics. He was fascinated by mineralogy, and the mineral goethite (iron oxide) is named after him.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Goethite Mineral Data |url=http://webmineral.com/data/Goethite.shtml |access-date=3 January 2023 |website=webmineral.com |archive-date=15 August 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180815131600/http://webmineral.com/data/Goethite.shtml |url-status=live}}</ref> His non-fiction writings, most of which are philosophic and aphoristic in nature, spurred the development of many thinkers, including Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dahlin |first=Bo |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kXYpDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA45 |title=Rudolf Steiner: The Relevance of Waldorf Education |date=22 June 2017 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-3-319-58907-7 |page=45 |language=en |quote=It is known — but seldom paid much attention to — that Goethe's natural studies had some influence on Hegel's philosophy.}}</ref> Arthur Schopenhauer,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rockmore |first=Tom |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zkr8CwAAQBAJ&pg=PA131 |title=German Idealism as Constructivism |date=3 May 2016 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0-226-34990-9 |page=131 |language=en |quote=Goethe's view attracted interest at the time; someone else influenced by Goethe is Schopenhauer.}}</ref> Søren Kierkegaard,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Assiter |first=Alison |author-link=Alison Assiter |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=euHaDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA126 |title=Kierkegaard, Eve and Metaphors of Birth |date=29 April 2015 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1-78348-326-6 |pages=126 |language=en |quote=Carl Linnaeus, the botanist, physician, and zoologist, who laid the foundation for modern biological naming, was a major influence on Goethe. The latter, a well-known influence on Kierkegaard, writes of Linnaeus, [...]}}</ref> Friedrich Nietzsche,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Murphy |first=Tim |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2HiJxDScYSsC&pg=PA53 |title=Nietzsche, Metaphor, Religion |date=18 October 2001 |publisher=SUNY Press |isbn=978-0-7914-5087-1 |page=53 |language=en |quote=No one would deny that Goethe influenced Nietzsche, but it is important to understand that relationship in very specific terms.}}</ref> Ernst Cassirer,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Luft |first=Sebastian |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zH-ECgAAQBAJ&pg=PT134 |title=The Space of Culture: Towards a Neo-Kantian Philosophy of Culture (Cohen, Natorp, and Cassirer) |date=2015 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-873884-8 |page=124 |language=en |quote=Goethe influenced Cassirer in a crucial aspect of his philosophy of the symbolic.}}</ref> and Carl Jung.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bishop |first=Paul |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lxH0DwAAQBAJ&pg=PT198 |title=Reading Goethe at Midlife: Ancient Wisdom, German Classicism, and Jung |date=13 July 2020 |publisher=Chiron Publications |isbn=978-1-63051-860-8 |page=198 |language=en |quote=Goethe's influence on Jung was profound and far-reaching.}}</ref> Along with Schiller, he was one of the leading figures of Weimar Classicism. Schopenhauer cited Goethe's novel ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship'' as one of the four greatest novels ever written, along with ''Tristram Shandy'', ''La Nouvelle Héloïse'' and ''Don Quixote''.<ref name="schopenhauer_art" /> Nietzsche wrote, "Four pairs it was that did not deny themselves to my sacrifice: Epicurus and Montaigne, Goethe and Spinoza, Plato and Rousseau, Pascal and Schopenhauer. With these I must come to terms when I have long wandered alone; they may call me right and wrong; to them will I listen when in the process they call each other right and wrong."<ref>Nietzsche, Friedrich: ''The Portable Nietzsche''. (New York: Viking Press, 1954)</ref>
Goethe embodied many of the contending strands in art over the next century: his work could be lushly emotional, and rigorously formal, brief and epigrammatic, and epic. He would argue that Classicism was the means of controlling art, and that Romanticism was a sickness, even as he penned poetry rich in memorable images, and rewrote the formal rules of German poetry. His poetry was set to music by almost every major Austrian and German composer from Mozart to Mahler, and his influence would spread to French drama and opera as well. Beethoven declared that a "Faust" Symphony would be the greatest thing for art. Liszt and Mahler both created symphonies in whole or in large part inspired by this seminal work, which would give the 19th century one of its most paradigmatic figures: Doctor Faustus.
The ''Faust'' tragedy/drama, often called ''{{lang|de|'''Das''' Drama der Deutschen}}'' ('''the''' drama of the Germans), written in two parts and published decades apart, would stand as his most characteristic and famous artistic creation. Followers of the twentieth century esotericist Rudolf Steiner built a theatre named the Goetheanum after him — where festival performances of ''Faust'' are still performed.
Goethe was also a cultural force. During his first meeting with Napoleon in 1808, the latter greeted him with a famous remark, variously reported as "{{lang|fr|Vous êtes un homme|italic=no}}!" ("You are a man!")<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Friedenthal |first1=Richard |title=Goethe: His Life & Times |date=2010 |publisher=Transaction Publishers |page=389}}</ref> or "Voilà, un homme!" ("Now there's a man!")<ref>{{Cite web |last=Valéry |first=Paul |date=27 August 1949 |title=Goethe et Napoléon |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/archives/article/1949/08/27/g-the-et-napoleon_1935845_1819218.html |website=Le Monde}}</ref>. The two discussed politics, the writings of Voltaire, and Goethe's ''Sorrows of Young Werther'', which Napoleon had read seven times and ranked among his favorites.<ref name="Broers">{{Cite book |last1=Broers |first1=Michael |title=Europe Under Napoleon |date=2014 |publisher=I.B. Tauris |page=4}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Swales |first1=Martin |title=Goethe: The Sorrows of Young Werther |date=1987 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=100}}</ref> Goethe came away from the meeting deeply impressed with Napoleon's enlightened intellect and his efforts to build an alternative to the corrupt old regime.<ref name="Broers" /><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Merseburger |first1=Peter |title=Mythos Weimar: Zwischen Geist und Macht |date=2013 |publisher=Pantheon Books |pages=132–133}}</ref> Goethe always spoke of Napoleon with the greatest respect, confessing that "nothing higher and more pleasing could have happened to me in all my life" than to have met Napoleon in person.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Ferber |first1=Michael |title=A Companion to European Romanticism |date=2008 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |page=450}}</ref> Goethe would receive the ''Légion d'honneur'' from Napoleon himself on 14th October 1808. He was also awarded the Order of Saint Anna by emperor Alexander.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Forsgård |first=Nils Erik |title=September 1808 |date=2009 |publisher=Atlantis |isbn=978-91-7353-321-8 |edition=2. uppl |location=Stockholm |pages=68 |language=sv}}</ref>
The epithet "Olympian," referring to loftiness, serenity and objectivity, is often applied to Goethe. Sainte-Beuve took this "Olympian" quality to be the essential characteristic of the German poetic type, contrasting Goethe on this point with Voltaire.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Strigh |first=Fritz |title=Goethe and World Literature |publisher=Routledge |location=London |publication-date=1932}}</ref>
Germaine de Staël, in ''De l'Allemagne'' (1813), presented German Classicism and Romanticism as a potential source of spiritual authority for Europe, and identified Goethe as a living classic.<ref name="RPF">{{Cite book |last1=Gillespie |first1=Gerald Ernest Paul |last2=Engel |first2=Manfred |title=Romantic Prose Fiction |date=2008 |publisher=John Benjamins Publishing |page=44}}</ref> She praised Goethe as possessing "the chief characteristics of the German genius" and uniting "all that distinguishes the German mind."<ref name="RPF" /> Staël's portrayal helped elevate Goethe over his more famous German contemporaries and transformed him into a European cultural hero.<ref name="RPF" /> Goethe met with her and her partner Benjamin Constant, with whom he shared a mutual admiration.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Wood |first1=Dennis |title=Benjamin Constant: A Biography |date=2002 |publisher=Routledge |page=185}}</ref>
In Victorian England, Goethe's great disciple was Thomas Carlyle, who wrote the essays "Faustus" (1822), "Goethe's Helena" (1828), "Goethe" (1828), "Goethe's Works" (1832), "Goethe's Portrait" (1832), and "Death of Goethe" (1832) which introduced Goethe to English readers; translated ''Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship'' (1824) and ''Travels'' (1826), "Faust's Curse" (1830), "The Tale" (1832), "Novelle" (1832) and "Symbolum" at a time when few read German; and with whom Goethe corresponded.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Sorensen |first=David R. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8Nvdx-4-CzoC |title=The Carlyle Encyclopedia |publisher=Fairleigh Dickinson University Press |year=2004 |editor-last=Cumming |editor-first=Mark |location=Madison and Teaneck, NJ |page=200 |chapter=Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von |isbn=9780838637920 |url-access=limited}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Tennyson |first=G. B. |url=https://archive.org/details/victorianprose00davi/mode/2up |title=Victorian Prose: A Guide to Research |publisher=The Modern Language Association of America |year=1973 |editor-last=Clubbe |editor-first=John |editor-link=John Clubbe (academic) |location=New York |page=65 |chapter=The Carlyles |isbn=9780873522502 |url-access=registration}}</ref> Goethe exerted a profound influence on George Eliot, whose partner George Henry Lewes wrote a ''Life of Goethe'' (dedicated to Carlyle).<ref name="Gerlinde">{{Cite book |last1=Röder-Bolton |first1=Gerlinde |title=George Eliot and Goethe: An Elective Affinity |date=1998 |publisher=Rodopi |pages=3–8}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Wagner |first=Albert Malte |date=1939 |title=Goethe, Carlyle, Nietzsche and the German Middle Class |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/30169550 |journal=Monatshefte für Deutschen Unterricht |volume=31 |issue=4 |page=162 |jstor=30169550 |url-access=registration |access-date=18 June 2022 |archive-date=18 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220618112238/https://www.jstor.org/stable/30169550 |url-status=live}}</ref> Eliot presented Goethe as "eminently the man who helps us to rise to a lofty point of observation" and praised his "large tolerance", which "quietly follows the stream of fact and of life" without passing moral judgments.<ref name="Gerlinde" /> Matthew Arnold found in Goethe the "Physician of the Iron Age" and "the clearest, the largest, the most helpful thinker of modern times" with a "large, liberal view of life".<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Connell |first1=W.F. |title=The Educational Thought and Influence of Matthew Arnold |date=2002 |publisher=Routledge |page=34}}</ref>
It was to a considerable degree due to Goethe's reputation that the city of Weimar was chosen in 1919 as the venue for the national assembly, convened to draft a new constitution for what would become known as Germany's Weimar Republic. Goethe became a key reference for Thomas Mann in his speeches and essays defending the republic.<ref name="Mundt">{{Cite book |last1=Mundt |first1=Hannelore |title=Understanding Thomas Mann |date=2004 |publisher=University of South Carolina Press |pages=110–111}}</ref> He emphasized Goethe's "cultural and self-developing individualism", humanism, and cosmopolitanism.<ref name="Mundt" />
The Federal Republic of Germany's cultural institution, the Goethe-Institut, is named after him, and promotes the study of German abroad and fosters knowledge about Germany by providing information on its culture, society and politics.
The literary estate of Goethe in the Goethe and Schiller Archives was inscribed on UNESCO's Memory of the World international register in 2001 in recognition of its historical significance.<ref name="mow">{{Cite web |title=The literary estate of Goethe in the Goethe and Schiller Archives |url=https://www.unesco.org/en/memory-world/literary-estate-goethe-goethe-and-schiller-archives |publisher=UNESCO Memory of the World Programme |access-date=2025-04-04}}</ref>
Goethe's influence was dramatic because he understood that there was a transition in European sensibilities, an increasing focus on sense, the indescribable, and the emotional. This is not to say that he was emotionalistic or excessive; on the contrary, he lauded personal restraint and felt that excess was a disease: "There is nothing worse than imagination without taste". Goethe praised Francis Bacon for his advocacy of science based on experiment and his forceful revolution in thought as one of the greatest strides forward in modern science.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Richter |first1=Simon J. |title=Goethe Yearbook 14 |date=2007 |publisher=Harvard University Press |pages=113–114}}</ref> However, he was critical of Bacon's inductive method and approach based on pure classification.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Amrine |first1=F. R. |last2=Zucker |first2=Francis J. |title=Goethe and the Sciences: A Reappraisal |date=2012 |publisher=Springer Science & Business Media |page=232}}</ref> He said in ''Scientific Studies'': {{blockquote|We conceive of the individual animal as a small world, existing for its own sake, by its own means. Every creature is its own reason to be. All its parts have a direct effect on one another, a relationship to one another, thereby constantly renewing the circle of life; thus, we are justified in considering every animal physiologically perfect. Viewed from within, no part of the animal is a useless or arbitrary product of the formative impulse (as so often thought). Externally, some parts may seem useless because the inner coherence of the animal nature has given them this form without regard to outer circumstance. Thus...[not] the question, What are they for? But rather, where do they come from?<ref>Scientific Studies, Suhrkamp ed., vol. 12, p. 121; trans. Douglas Miller</ref>}}
Goethe's scientific and aesthetic ideas have much in common with Denis Diderot, whose work he translated and studied.<ref name="Roach">{{Cite book |last1=Roach |first1=Joseph R. |title=The Player's Passion: Studies in the Science of Acting |date=1993 |publisher=University of Michigan Press |pages=165–166}}</ref><ref name="Fellows">{{Cite book |last1=Fellows |first1=Otis Edward |title=Diderot Studies |date=1981 |publisher=Librairie Droz |pages=392–394}}</ref> Both Diderot and Goethe exhibited a repugnance towards the mathematical interpretation of nature; both perceived the universe as dynamic and in constant flux; both saw "art and science as compatible disciplines linked by common imaginative processes"; and both grasped "the unconscious impulses underlying mental creation in all forms."<ref name="Roach" /><ref name="Fellows" /> Goethe's ''Naturanschauer'' is in many ways a sequel to Diderot's ''interprète de la nature''.<ref name="Fellows" />
His views make him, along with Adam Smith, Thomas Jefferson, and Ludwig van Beethoven, a figure in two worlds: on the one hand, devoted to the sense of taste, order, and finely crafted detail, which is the hallmark of the artistic sense of the Age of Reason and the neo-classical period of architecture; on the other, seeking a personal, intuitive, and personalized form of expression and society, firmly supporting the idea of self-regulating and organic systems. George Henry Lewes celebrated Goethe's revolutionary understanding of the organism.<ref name="Roach" />
Thinkers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson would take up many similar ideas in the 1800s. Goethe's ideas on evolution would frame the question that Darwin and Wallace would approach within the scientific paradigm. The Serbian inventor and electrical engineer Nikola Tesla was heavily influenced by Goethe's ''Faust'', his favourite poem, and had actually memorized the entire text. It was while reciting a certain verse that he was struck with the epiphany that would lead to the idea of the rotating magnetic field and ultimately, alternating current.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Seifer |first=Marc J. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h2DTNDFcC14C&q=wizard+tesla |title=Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla: Biography of a Genius |date=1998 |publisher=Citadel Press |isbn=978-0-8065-1960-9 |language=en |pages=22, 308 |access-date=8 January 2023 |archive-date=4 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230404111138/https://books.google.com/books?id=h2DTNDFcC14C&q=wizard+tesla |url-status=live}}</ref>
The public university in the city of Frankfurt am Main was named after Goethe, the Goethe University.
== Books related to Goethe == * Biermann, Berthold (ed.).''Goethe's World: As Seen in Letters and Memoirs''; * Boyle, Nicholas. ''Goethe: The Poet and the Age'' (2 vols.); * Brandes, Georg. ''Wolfgang Goethe''. New York: Crown Publishers, 1936; * Eckermann, Johann Peter. ''Conversations with Goethe''; * Eissler, Kurt R.. ''Goethe: A Psychoanalytic Study''; * Friedenthal, Richard. ''Goethe: His Life and Times''; * ''Goethe-Wörterbuch'' (Goethe Dictionary, abbreviated GWb). Stuttgart. Kohlhammer Verlag. {{ISBN|978-3-17-019121-1}}; * Hammer, Carl Jr. ''Goethe and Rousseau: Resonances of their Mind''. * Holm-Hadulla, Rainer Matthias. ''Goethe's Path to Creativity: A Psycho-Biography of the Eminent Politician, Scientist and Poet'', New York: Routledge, 2019. {{ISBN|9780429459535}}; * Lewes, George Henry. ''The Life of Goethe''; * Ludwig, Emil. ''Goethe: The History of a Man''; * Mann, Thomas. ''Lotte in Weimar: The Beloved Returns''; * Nicholls, Angus. ''Goethe's Concept of the Daemonic: After the Ancients''; * Pagel, Louis. ''Doctor Faustus of the Popular Legend: Marlowe, the Puppet-Play, Goethe, and Lenau: Treated Historically and Critically: a Parallel between Goethe and Schiller: an Historic Outline of German Literature''. 1883; * Reed, T. J.. ''Goethe''; * Schweitzer, Albert. ''Goethe: Four Studies''; * Unseld, Siegfried. ''Goethe and his Publishers''; * Wilkinson, E. M. and L. A. Willoughby. ''Goethe, Poet and Thinker''; * Williams, John. ''The Life of Goethe. A Critical Biography''.
== Works == {{Main|Johann Wolfgang von Goethe bibliography}}
== See also == {{Portal|Poetry|Philosophy|Biography}} * ''Young Goethe in Love'' (2010) * Dora Stock – her encounters with the 16-year-old Goethe. * Goethe Basin, a large crater on the planet Mercury * Johann-Wolfgang-von-Goethe-Gymnasium * W. H. Murray – author of misattributed quotation "Until one is committed ..." * "Nature", essay often misattributed to Goethe * Goethe University
'''Awards named after him''' * Goethe Awards * Goethe Prize * Goethe Medal * Hanseatic Goethe Prize
== Notes == {{Notelist}}
== References == {{Reflist}}
== Bibliography == * {{Cite book |last=Mercer-Taylor |first=Peter |title=The Life of Mendelssohn |location=Cambridge, England |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-521-63972-9 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/lifeofmendelssoh0000merc}} * {{Cite book |last=Todd |first=R. Larry |title=Mendelssohn – A Life in Music |location=Oxford |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2003 |isbn=978-0-19-511043-2}} * {{Cite book |last=Unseld |first=Siegfried |title=Goethe and His Publishers |url=https://archive.org/details/goethehispublish0000unse |url-access=registration |date=1996 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=9780226841908}}
== Further reading == * Bell Matthew. 1994. ''Goethe's Naturalistic Anthropology: Man and Other Plants''. Clarendon Press * {{Cite EB9 |wstitle=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |volume=X |last=Browning |first=Oscar |author-link=Oscar Browning |short=1}} * Calder, Angus (1983), '"Scott & Goethe: Romanticism and Classicism", in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), ''Cencrastus'' No. 13, Summer 1983, pp. 25–28, {{issn|0264-0856}} * Von Gronicka, André. 1968. ''The Russian Image of Goethe. Volume 1 Goethe in Russian Literature of the First Half of the Nineteenth Century.'' Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press * Von Gronicka, Andrè. 1985 ''The Russian Image of Goethe. Volume 2: Goethe in Russian Literature of the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century.'' Philadelphia, Pa: University of Pennsylvania Press * Hatfield Henry Caraway. 1963. ''Goethe: A Critical Introduction.'' Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press * Jane K. n.d. ''Goethe's Allegories of Identity.'' Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press * Maertz Gregory. 2017. ''Literature and the Cult of Personality: Essays on Goethe and His Influence.'' New York: Columbia University Press * {{Cite EB1911 |wstitle=Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von |volume=12 |last1=Robertson |first1=John George |author1-link=John George Robertson |last2=Phillips |first2=Walter Alison |author-link2=Walter Alison Phillips |pages=182–189 |short=1}} * Robertson, Ritchie. 2016. ''Goethe: A Very Short Introduction.'' Oxford: Oxford University Press * {{Cite book |last1=Santayana |first1=George |title=Harvard Studies in Comparative Literature, Volume 1: Three Philosophical Poets: Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe, Critical Edition |date=1910 |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge, MA |pages=139–202 |chapter=Goethe's Faust |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3efjWVdcfeoC |access-date=22 September 2022}} * Viëtor, Karl 1950. Bayard Quincy Morgan, trans. ''Goethe the Thinker''. Harvard University Press
== External links == {{Sister project links|d=Q5879|c=Category:Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|s=Author:Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|n=no|voy=no|m=no|mw=no|species=no|f=no|wikt=Goethesque|b=no|v=no}} * {{In Our Time|Goethe|p003c1c8|Goethe}} * [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00546n1 "Goethe and the Science of the Enlightenment"] ''In Our Time'', BBC Radio 4 discussion with Nicholas Boyle and Simon Schaffer (10 February 2000) * {{Zeno-Autor|Literatur/M/Goethe,+Johann+Wolfgang}} * At the Linda Hall Library, Goethe's: ** (1810) [http://lhldigital.lindahall.org/cdm/ref/collection/color/id/9882 ''Zur Farbenlehre'' (Atlas)] ** (1840) [http://lhldigital.lindahall.org/cdm/ref/collection/color/id/10057 ''Goethe's Theory of Colours; translated from the German: with notes by Charles Lock Eastlake''] * [http://sammlungen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/judaica/search/quick?query=goethe Works by and about Johann Wolfgang von Goethe in University Library JCS Frankfurt am Main: Digital Collections Judaica] * [http://poemsintranslation.blogspot.com/search/label/Goethe Goethe in English] at ''Poems Found in Translation'' * [http://goetheglobal.com Goethe Quotes: New English translations and German originals] * {{IBDB name|77177}} * {{IMDb name|0324473}}
=== Electronic editions === * {{Gutenberg author|id=586|name=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe}} * {{FadedPage|id=Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von|name=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|author=yes}} * {{ChoralWiki|prep=of|comp='s texts}} * {{Internet Archive author|sname=Goethe}} * {{Librivox author|id=63}} * {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/j-w-von-goethe}}
{{Goethe|state=expanded}} {{Romanticism}} {{Age of Enlightenment}} {{German literature}}
{{Navboxes | title = Associated subjects | list1 = {{Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship}} {{The Sorrows of Young Werther}} {{Elective Affinities}} {{Illuminati}} }}
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