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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tieck's Essay on the Boydell Shakspere
+Gallery, by George Henry Danton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Tieck's Essay on the Boydell Shakspere Gallery
+
+Author: George Henry Danton
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2011 [EBook #34937]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOYDELL SHAKSPERE GALLERY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Margo Romberg, Karl Eichwalder and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ New York University
+
+ OTTENDORFER MEMORIAL SERIES OF
+ GERMANIC MONOGRAPHS
+
+ No. 3
+
+ TIECK'S ESSAY
+
+ ON THE
+
+ BOYDELL SHAKSPERE GALLERY
+
+
+ BY
+
+ GEORGE HENRY DANTON
+
+
+ INDIANAPOLIS
+
+ EDWARD J. HECKER, PRINTER
+
+ 1912
+
+
+
+
+ This Paper Is Dedicated
+ To the Memory
+ of
+ Oswald Ottendorfer
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+The material which was originally pland for my monograf in the
+Ottendorfer series has since been independently publisht by Steinert in
+his dissertation and book on Tieck's color sense and by O. Fischer in an
+article, "Ueber Verbindung von Farbe und Klang" in the _Zeitschrift fuer
+AEsthetik_. These three works renderd the publication of my material
+superfluous, made a change of plan necessary and the result is that my
+monograf has been very much delayd in appearing.
+
+As far as I know, there is no other study of Tieck's first critical
+paper. I found it worth while to do this monograf because the comparison
+with the original engraving brought out so many interesting facts, threw
+light on Tieck's erly critical method, explaind his taste, showd his use
+of sources and above all, contradicted the positiv assertion of Haym
+that Lessing's influence is nowhere discernible. The meny interesting
+facts about the gallery itself that came to light in the course of the
+paper, the meny questions about it which I was unable to solv, may
+perhaps become the matter of another article.
+
+The "Gallery" is for us now a revenant of a past and somewhat impossible
+generation. A certain air of English commercial roastbeefism clings to
+it. It is an England, the art of which knows nothing of Constable and
+still less of Turner, an England which loves Shakspere without reading
+him--as Tieck suspected--and whose gallofobia does not recognize the det
+to France and the French elements in this very series. As an
+interpretation of Shakspere, it is no more than on a plane with Colly
+Cibber. Tieck saw this and felt it, but could not make clear to himself
+what was wrong with it. The plates belong in parlors of the haircloth
+age, where indeed, they may still often be found. It is before the day
+of the painted snowshovel and the crayon portrait, but the delicacy of
+the Adams' decorations has gone out and the new strength of Romanticism
+has not come in. There is surely no tuch of the Elizabethan or Jacobean
+spirit.
+
+I wish to take this opportunity to thank the various members of the
+staffs of the Stanford University and the Columbia University Libraries,
+of the Congressional and New York Public Libraries for their aid;
+especially to thank Mr. Weitenkampf for his very great help on technical
+matters. Mr. L. L. Mackall also furnisht me with very valuable
+information. The paper underwent a most searching criticism at the hands
+of Professor Wilkens, of New York University and I wish to express my
+especial indetedness to him for his assistance in the matter. To
+Professor McLouth my thanks are due for a constant kindly interest in me
+as Ottendorfer fellow. Finally, it is a plesant duty to express my
+appreciation of the benefits derived from that Fellowship and to thank
+the Committee for having made me its third incumbent.
+
+ G. H. D.
+ Indianapolis, Ind., September, 1911.
+
+
+
+
+
+TIECK'S ESSAY ON THE BOYDELL SHAKSPERE GALLERY
+
+
+Tieck's attack[1] on the Boydell Shakspere Gallery[2] was his first
+publisht critical production. It is significant to note that this first
+essay in criticism delt both with Shakspere and with art, that is, with
+the ruling passion of Tieck's life and with one of the strongest of his
+secondary interests. The passion for Shakspere with the concomitant
+sense of close personal relationship with him, came to be a major part
+of Tieck's being and is clearly indicated even before this article.[3]
+Tieck's decided aversion to the English national standpoint toward
+Shakspere is strongly exprest in the essay. The man who later vainly
+tried to convert Coleridge to a point of view with respect to the
+dramatist that was opposed to all that was national and English, does
+not, as a mere lad, hesitate to venture his douts as to whether the
+English nation is equal to the task of illustrating its greatest
+poet.[4]
+
+These illustrations are known as the Boydell Shakspere Gallery. They
+were the idea of the engraver, Alderman John Boydell,[5] who wisht to
+set up a great national monument to the genius of Shakspere and, at the
+same time, to foster a school of historical painting in a land where
+heretofore the portrait alone had attaind to any degree of
+excellence.[6] The "Gallery" was begun in 1789 and was completed in
+1803. At no sparing of expense to himself--the entire cost was upward of
+L100,000--Boydell commissiond some of the best artists and engravers of
+the time to portray scenes from all of Shakspere's plays. The oil
+paintings, about 100 in number, were to be permanently housd in a
+gallery bilt for the purpose in London and were to be bestowd on the
+nation as a perpetual memorial to the great playwright's genius. The
+Napoleonic wars, "that Gothic and Vandalic revolution," and the deth in
+poverty of Boydell, renderd necessary the disposal of the collection by
+lottery (1804). The lucky ticket was held by a London connoisseur named
+Tassie. At his deth the collection was scatterd, tho subsequently a few
+of the pictures were recollected and are now in the Shakspere Memorial
+in Stratford.[7]
+
+The plates from these pictures are, all in all, no better and no worse
+than engravings of the day are likely to be. It is illustration work in
+which the story interest is the predominant feature. Interpretation of
+Shakspere takes precedence over art, and even Boydell places the painter
+below the poet and speaks disparagingly of the ability of the former to
+understand and to portray. The purposes of the "Gallery" harmonize with
+Tieck's point of view and his predilection for the interpretativ in
+criticism minimizes the esthetic aspects of his discussion.
+
+Tieck's essay is in the form of four letters, and was written while he
+was a student at the University of Goettingen. It had the approval of his
+teacher, Johann Dominik Fiorillo, (himself afterward well-known as the
+author of an extensiv history of art,) tho it was not especially written
+under Fiorillo's gidance.[8] It was intended, on the surface at least,
+as an open and emfatic protest agenst the too lavish praise of the
+plates in the journals. The general tone, then, is polemic tho directed
+agenst no particular person or article.
+
+In the preface to his critical works[9] Tieck asserts that the article
+is a product of the year 1793 and that it was published in 1794. It
+appeared in the _Neue Bibliothek der schoenen Wissenschaften und
+freyen Kuenste_, 55ten Bandes zweytes Stueck, pages 187-226, which bears
+the date 1795,[10] and according to the Messkatalog, did not appear till
+Michaelmas of that year.[11] Tieck's memory, therefore, faild him as to
+the date of publication and he has also fallen into a slite error, or
+rather inaccuracy, in regard to the time of origin. The article could
+not have been completed within the calendar year 1793, because a number
+of the plates that Tieck discusses are dated December 24, 1793, and
+could hardly hav got to the continent in the same year. While it may be
+possible that the plates were postdated, there is no evidence of such
+fact at hand. Moreover, the "Gallery" was reviewd in the _Goettinger
+Gelehrte Anzeigen_ under dates about six months after the appearance of
+the individual plates in England and these reviews, as will be shown
+hereafter, were extensivly used by Tieck. In these reviews, the plates
+are always spoken of as recently arrived. The prints were issued
+regularly to the subscribers, of whom the University, according to the
+Ms. catalog in the Boston Public Library, was one.[12] It is hardly to
+be supposd that the young student would have erlier access to the
+pictures than the reviewer for the semi-official university publication.
+This reviewer was Heyne[13] who afterward mediated the publication of
+Tieck's article. The article was no dout written before Tieck settled in
+Berlin in the Fall of 1794 but its writing went out over the confines of
+1793. The next series of plates appeard in June, 1794, and is not
+included in Tieck's article, tho this is no proof that the article was
+completed before June, since the plates probably did not arrive in
+Germany till well in the Summer.
+
+Tieck's essay has been almost entirely neglected by Tieck scholars. It
+is not a great piece of constructiv criticism, nor can it be said to
+contain the ripe judgments of a mature mind. It is, however, a fresh
+and, on the whole, convincing analysis of the plates and as such
+deserves a careful examination. It will be seen that the article has a
+very definit foundation in preceding criticism but that Tieck, tho
+borrowing freely from one source at least, namely the _Goettinger
+Gelehrte Anzeigen_, has not slavishly plagiarized nor has he been servil
+in his adoption of the ideas of others. And it is also worth noting that
+Tieck's criticism was regarded as sufficiently authorativ by Fiorillo to
+have been used as a partial source for the latter's critique of the
+Boydell plates.
+
+Tieck claims that the praise of the "Gallery" in the contemporary
+magazines is excessiv. This claim is exaggerated. Meny important
+magazines do not discuss the plates even where there was an excellent
+opportunity. So, for example, Wieland's _Mercur_ and Nicolai's
+_Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek_ do not mention them, tho from time to
+time engravings from other contemporary paintings are discust. For
+instance, Nicolai's journal has one long discussion of the state of
+contemporary art, especially of engraving (No. 110, 1792) but omits all
+reference to the Boydell series. The criticism in Meusel's _Museum fuer
+Kuenstler_ is on the whole, destructiv. One discussion, for example,
+(No. IV, page 99) is a violent attack on engraving in general and calls
+the "Gallery," "Diese die Malerei zu grunde richtende Gelegenheit," and
+condems the "Kraemergeist" at the bottom of the enterprize. The value of
+line in engraving is, however, pointed out, and Bartolozzi and Ryland,
+who had but little to do with the series are faintly praisd. Other
+mention in Meusel's magazines is either entirely unoriginal summary
+(_Museum_, VI, 352) or mere cursory comment (_Miscellaneen_, Stueck 30.)
+The articles on caricature (Neue _Miscellaneen_ X., 154 and Archiv I,
+66) are so late that they cannot be taken into consideration in
+connection with Tieck's paper.
+
+With the _Goettinger Gelehrte Anzeigen_ the case is different.[14]
+Tieck saw and used its articles as a basis for his work, tho the credit
+of having written the first connected essay from a single viewpoint
+belongs to him. The not over laudatory criticisms of the _Anzeigen_ are
+often paralel, even down to the wording of details with Tieck's
+judgments, but it would be a mistake to suppose that Tieck used the
+articles without having seen the engravings and without having given the
+pictures careful consideration. The fact that Tieck follows the errors
+of the _Anzeigen_ is significant, but it is equally significant that he
+corrects the errors of the magazine from his stock of observd judgments.
+Generally, where Tieck follows the _Anzeigen_ most closely he is at his
+worst. The somewhat superficial and scanty remarks of the journal were
+no surrogate for the clear vision and power of adaptibility of the young
+man. Tieck's personal regard for Shakspere, which amounted to a real
+passion, was entirely wanting.
+
+The use of the articles in the _Anzeigen_ must be shown in detail, and
+Tieck's indetedness must be definitly brought out. Paralels will
+sometimes show convergence and sometimes divergence of ideas, but in
+general it will be seen that Tieck practically never used his material
+without some personal addition.
+
+There is one set of cases which is peculiar and which deservs special
+attention. The plates in question are: "Much Ado," III, 1, ditto IV, 2,
+and "As You Like It," last scene.
+
+A word of explanation in regard to the Boydell plates is necessary. From
+the original paintings there were two sets of plates engraved, known as
+the large plates (L) and the small plates (S). The small plates were in
+all but a few cases done from different pictures than were the large
+ones. These large plates are those usually known as the Boydell Gallery.
+Both sets were issued serially; the large set was also bound and issued
+as a separate volume in 1803, and the small plates were used as
+illustrations for the Steevens Shakspere edition of 1802, the letter
+press of which also seems to have been issued in parts before the bound
+volumes were finally put on the market. The bulk of Tieck's criticisms
+applies to the large plates tho he has a few remarks on the small ones
+as well. When he discusses the small plates, he always mentions the
+fact, except in the three cases just cited. These are three of the cases
+where L and S coincide in subject matter and where additional S plates
+were afterwards printed as a gratuitous gift to the subscribers.[15]
+These plates are among the first discust by the _Anzeigen_ (1791, page
+1794) which mention the fact of the plates being for the Shakspere
+edition, and that the extra plates are to be furnisht to make up for the
+duplication of subject matter in these cases of L and S. This is what is
+meant by the sentence, "Es wird sogar die Austauschung des einen Kupfers
+kuenftig versprochen," a statement that corresponds perfectly with the
+remark in the later Boydell catalog that this promis has been fulfild.
+Tieck does not notis this statement of the _Anzeigen_ but treats these S
+plates as if they were L, yet gives the names of the engravers of S.
+This would look like a clear case of careless copying from the
+_Anzeigen_ if it were not clear from the additions that Tieck makes to
+the latter's criticism that he saw the plates too. The explanation of
+the discrepancy may be that Tieck when he was writing his article
+consulted the _Anzeigen_ for the facts in regard to the engravers, did
+not notis that the S plates were referd to and carelessly copied down
+what he saw.
+
+I shall now examin in detail some of the paralel criticisms.
+
+Much Ado, II; 4, G. G. A. 1791, page 1794: ... "wo in der Trauung statt
+des Jaworts Pedro die Hero fuer keine reine Jungfer erklaert, und Hero in
+Ohnmacht faellt; ... Das beste Stueck von allen in Ruecksicht der
+Composition, Ausdrucks und Auswahl des Lichtes nur ist die Stellung der
+Hauptperson ein wenig zu theatralisch; sonst aber alles gut geordnet;
+schoene Contraste von Licht und Ruhe fuer das Auge."
+
+Tieck, page 19: "Das zweite Blatt enthaelt die Vertossung der Hero ...
+und dies ist offenbar eines der vorzueglichsten. Das Licht ist sehr gut
+geordnet, das Auge findet sogleich unter den Gruppen einen Ruhepunkt;
+nur hat Hamilton dem Claudio eine zu theatralische Stellung und dem
+Leonato zu wenig Ausdruck gegeben."
+
+Tieck carries the praise of the _Anzeigen_, the "Das beste Stueck" of
+which refers only to the group under immediate discussion, to the whole
+series. He takes his main critical vocabulary from the prototype and
+adds the original differentiation of Claudio and Leonato to which
+reference must be made later.
+
+"Much Ado," IV, 2; G. G. A., 1791, page 1794: ... "ein Gemisch von
+verkrueppelten, unedeln Caricaturen ohne alle Grazie ... Zu bedauren ist
+die Kunst, die an den Stich verwendet ist; denn der Stich ist einer der
+besten." Tieck's criticism of this plate is paralel in so far as he
+praises the mechanical perfection of the engraver, who is Heath of S,
+and not Simon of L. So far we have the blind following of the model. But
+Tieck also makes the picture a basis for a long discussion of caricature
+and of thoro condemnation of Smirke, who is also no favorit of the
+_Anzeigen_. As Tieck's letters show a profuse use of the word
+caricature, he need not be especially indeted to the _Anzeigen_ for it.
+
+"Richard III," I, 1, G. G. A., 1791, page 1795. Here Tieck's borrowing
+is direct. G. G. A.: "Eine schlechte Composition, ohne Ausdruck." Tieck,
+page 27: "Die Composition ist schlecht, alle Figuren sind ohne
+Ausdruck." G. G. A.: "Eine Menge Reflexe, Wiederscheine s. w. aber alles
+dieses macht keine Wirkung, und das Auge findet keinen Ruhepunkt."
+Tieck, page 28: "und sucht durch unendlich viele Wiederscheine ... dass
+das Auge bei den vielen Lichtmassen gar keine Ruhe findet." But again,
+besides these verbal and associational paralels, Tieck has added a free
+treatment of the composition, an examination of the drawing of the
+figures, of which there is no hint in the model and, all in all, makes
+the criticism his own. The impulse certainly came from the _Anzeigen_,
+but the whole critique is a product of Tieck's self.
+
+"Richard III," IV, 3, G. G. A., 1791, page 1795: "Stellung gezwungen."
+Tieck, page 28: "Der Moerder unnatuerlich." Here Tieck borrowed the idea
+and after an examination of the plate changed the wording.
+
+"As You Like It," II, 1, G. G. A., 1793, page 561: "Ein treffliches
+Landschaftsgemaelde." Tieck, page 18: "die reizende Landschaft." An
+examination of the whole of Tieck's criticism shows that he has added a
+characterization of Jacques, has discust the choice of this particular
+subject, and in this connection shows especially that the plate under
+discussion is only a vignette to the plays and not a part of the real
+play itself.
+
+"As You Like It," last scene, G. G. A., 1793, pages 561-2: "Orlando, der
+mit zeimleich ausgespreizeten Beinen." Tieck, page 18: "Seine
+augespreizten Beine machen ihn widrig." Here Tieck has taken an
+externality of the description and has given it a point. The use of the
+word "widrig" gives a new tuch.
+
+"Romeo and Juliet," I, 5, G. G. A.: "die Hauptfiguren muss man suchen."
+Tieck, page 29: "Die Hauptfiguren findet man nur mit einiger Muehe."
+Notis, however, how Tieck then goes on independently to giv his own
+point: "den Vater der Julie kann man nur errathen; Julie selbst hat
+wenig Character. Tybald ist die ausdruckvollste Figur auf diesem
+Blatte." Tieck also quotes in full the passage beginning, "If I profane
+with my unworthy hand" which the _Anzeigen_ only indicates. This might
+be laid to yuthful pedantry, were the whole not made far clearer for the
+entire citation.
+
+"Romeo and Juliet," IV, 5, G. G. A., 562: "Julia nach genommenem
+Schlaftrunk fuer todt gehalten, mit den Worten des Moenchs: Peace ho for
+shame! ff. Dieser troestend, die Mutter die Haende ringend, Paris Julien
+umfassend, ein Stueck mit vielem Affect" ... Tieck, page 30: "Julie hat
+den Schlaftrunk genommen und scheint gestorben, ihre Aeltern sowie ihr
+Braeutigam Paris sind in Verzweifelung, der Pater sucht Alle zu troesten."
+In the discussion of the small plate which follows, the _Anzeigen_
+points out the changes which have been made on it, this being one of the
+supplementary small plates for the 1802 text edition. Tieck also notises
+the fact of the change but that he took his information not only from
+the _Anzeigen_ but from an examination of the original is proved by his
+additions to the information of the _Anzeigen_. Tieck's comment is,
+"Mehrere unnuetze Personen weggelassen." This reason goes at least one
+step farther than the _Anzeigen_ comment. In the magazine, the effect of
+the double light in L is adversly criticized. Tieck adds to this, "Der
+alte Capulet hat auf beiden Blaettern wenig Ausdruck." That both Tieck
+and the magazine use the fraze "tut ... Wirkung" in this place seems of
+secondary importance. A mere linguistic reminiscence, where it is not
+connected with an idea, is not influence. This must be sought in basic
+ideas, in hints which point the way for new lines of thought, in an
+adoption of facts. An author like Tieck shows independence when he adds,
+eliminates and remolds what he receives, even tho the form of the
+thought clings often to him.
+
+So, then, when the _Anzeigen_ (1793, page 562) has the fraze "Julie in
+dem Grabgewoelbe erwachend," the fact that Tieck (page 30) introduces his
+criticism with the words, "Julie erwacht, als der Moench eben in das
+Gewoelbe tritt," is of slite consequence. This is a simple description of
+fact. Of much more importance is the fact that the magazine goes on to
+point out that not nature but the stage should be the model for the
+painter in this case, a doctrin which Tieck not only does not mention,
+but in fact, utterly rejects when the time comes to discuss it in the
+course of the treatment.
+
+In the criticism of Schiavonetti's plate after Angelica Kaufmann (G. G.
+A., 1793, page 903; Tieck, pages 16-17) Tieck agrees with the _Anzeigen_
+but is thoroly independent in his resoning and adds constantly to what
+the magazine asserts. That both find the disguisd Julia beautiful is not
+unresonable, and as the disguise is a part of the play it is not strange
+that Tieck mentions it. In the same section of the magazine is a passage
+which finds a later echo in Tieck. "Koenig Lear reisst sich die Kleider
+vom Leibe" (903). Tieck (32): "und reisst sich endlich die Kleider ab."
+The verbal paralelism has significance here only because there are other
+hints at this time which may hav aided Tieck: e. g., the fact that the
+artist has departed from the scene as Shakspere portrayd it. Tieck is
+definit in stating just who is added, which proves that he knew his
+Shakspere and saw the plate. Tieck also points out the spiritual
+difference between Shakspere and the "famous West," a distinct addition
+to the matter in the _Anzeigen_. "Winter's Tale," II, 3, G. G. A., 1794,
+page 9: "Der eifersuechtige Leontes laesst den Antigonous bey seinem ihm
+vorgehalten Schwerte schwoeren, dass er das Kind, das ihm seine Gemahlin
+geboren hatte, in eine Einoede aussetzen will. Sind gemeine Figuren."
+Notis how in Tieck, while the general terms of the description are the
+same, because following the line of least resistance in externalities,
+the whole discussion takes on an individual character, and is expanded
+into a critique of Opie's drawing which was always unsatisfactory to
+Tieck. Tieck (page 21): "Der eifersuechtige Leontes laesst den Antigonus
+schwoeren, das Kind auszusetzen.... An den Darstellungen aus diesem
+Stuecke ist viel zu tadeln, vorzueglich an dieser ersten Scene. Leontes,
+die Hauptperson, ist steif und ohne allen Ausdruck, alle uebrigen
+Personen sind dick und plump gezeichnet und ganz ohne alle Bedeutung.
+Leontes laesst den Antigonus, so wie Hamlet seine Gefaehrten, bei seinem
+Schwerte schwoeren. Schauspieler und Zeichner aber fehlen, wenn sie es so
+vorstellen, wie Opie es hier gethan hat. Die alten Schwerter bilden oben
+am Griffe ein Kreuz und auf dieses legte man die Hand, in Ermangelung
+eines eigentlichen Crucifixes.... In diesem Blatte entdecken sich auch
+bald viele Fehler in der Zeichnung. Das Auge wird von der Hauptperson
+auf die Lichtmasse, folglich, auf das Kind hingezogen; die Hauptfigur
+tritt gar nicht genug hervor, sondern haengt mit den hinter ihr stehenden
+zusammen; die Koepfe im Hintergrunde sind eben so gross, wie die der
+vorderen Personen. Alles verraeth den ungeuebten Kuenstler." As an example
+of Tieck's rejection of the opinion of the G. G. A., the discussion of
+"Winter's Tale," V, 3, will suffice. This is the statue scene which
+Tieck absolutely condems on account of poor engraving, expression and
+posing. Where the magazine says "Die Statue, der man es doch sehr gut
+ansieht, das es eine lebende Figur ist, macht grosse Wirkung." Tieck
+(22) contradicts thus: "Die Statue ist sehr unnatuerlich, sie sieht mehr
+einem Geiste, als einem Menschen aehnlich."
+
+There are, finally, three further cases in which Tieck takes a hint from
+the _Anzeigen_ and develops it. "2 Henry VI," III, 3, (1794, page 10):
+"Kardinal Beauford ... ein scheuslicher Anblick, in mehr als einem
+Verstande." Tieck (page 25): "Dieses abscheuliche Blatt." But Tieck, in
+a passage too long to quote, goes on to giv cogent reasons for not
+liking the picture, not one of which is derived from the _Anzeigen_. The
+other passages from the "Merry Wives" (I, 1 and II, 1, G. G. A., 1794,
+page 970; Tieck, 11-12) take the hint that Smirke drew caricatures and
+not human beings and borrow the adjectiv "widrig." With this slender
+borrowing Tieck develops a full discussion of Smirke and of these
+plates with no further assistance from the _Anzeigen_ than a hint on the
+engraving of textiles.
+
+These passages on "Henry VI" and on the "Merry Wives" are doubly
+interesting, however, because they show that Tieck's judgment of Smirke
+and Northcote offers a very close paralel to that of the magazine.
+Tieck's reasons are fuller, but they show no more ability in Tieck than
+in the reviewer of the _Anzeigen_ to understand some of the most
+characteristic features of English humor as exemplified in Smirke, while
+the pupil and biografer of Sir Joshua fares badly because of his alleged
+bad composition and poor light effects. It will be shown later that on
+both of these latter questions Tieck held views quite independent of the
+_Anzeigen_.
+
+Of Kirk's plate from "Titus Adronicus" the G. G. A., 1794, page 970,
+says, "Den Ausdruck an der Lavinia abgerechnet ein gut Stueck." Tieck
+(28) begins with a weak, "an dem Blatte ... ist vielleicht viel zu loben
+und wenig zu tadeln" but "rights himself like a soldier" thus, "Man
+sieht, dass der Kuenstler eine sehr richtige Idee von der Composition
+hat, und dass er seinem Gegenstand mit Geschmack und Delicatesse zu
+behandeln weiss. Er laesst uns die abgeschnittenen Arme der Lavinia nur
+vermuthen; der geschickt geworfene Schleier entzieht unserm Auge den
+unangenehmen Anblick," etc.
+
+The examples and paralels alredy given cover practically all of the
+points of similarity between Tieck and his model. They show that Tieck
+used the _Anzeigen_ constantly and minutely but they can not fail to
+impress the reader with the fact that Tieck invariably rises above the
+plane of the jottings in the magazine in form and in substance. The
+content of Tieck's criticisms is very much greater than that of his
+prototype and the form is far more polisht. These apercus of Heyne did
+not prevent Tieck's independent thinking; they never fettered him. He
+followd them in a number of places in his paper and once or twice falls
+into their error thru youthful carelessness or misapprehension. They did
+not often confuse his judgment or hamper his vision. He never ruthlessly
+plagiarizd them. That they were a source can not be denied, but that
+they form the real basis of Tieck's critique is not for a moment
+tenable. This came unquestionably from himself, and he must be given
+credit or blame for the good or bad in it.
+
+Tieck set about the task of criticising the "Boydell Gallery" with no
+diffidence, but with many misgivings, amounting almost to prejudises, as
+to the valu of the set of plates. He was aware that this work was
+intrinsically in a class which is, all in all, artistically inferior.
+His judgments are objectiv, but they promis no prescience of a higher, a
+more spiritual attitude toward art. Art in this case servs
+interpretation and the struggle away from what the plates represent has
+hardly commenced. Tieck feels that the whole group does not do Shakspere
+justis, but he nowhere says that the subjectiv interpretation of the
+poet must remain the lasting one for the individual; indeed he asserts
+quite the contrary on the very first page of his paper. It is to be
+expected that Tieck's common sense and fancy should rebel at the
+platitudinarianism of the pictures; that at times he is no more than on
+the plane of the sentimental "Enlightenment" is also to be expected. The
+valu of the study is in such harsh negativ criticism as it exercises
+where emfasis is false or where bad taste prevails in the performance of
+the artists' task.
+
+Tieck came to the work with a good first-hand knowledge of Shakspere and
+this lessens the juvenile and jejune qualities of his work. He is weaker
+on the comedies than on the trajedies, for the former require a keener
+sensing of English life than it was possible for Tieck to hav obtaind at
+the time of writing. But even for the comedies, some of his observations
+are very just and show that he could interpret Shakspere with sense and
+precision. The present discussion will attempt to find out by a careful
+examination of the plates just what Tieck saw in these pictures and how
+far his interpretation was right. The results should show, in a general
+way, something of the powers of interpretation possest by the youthful
+Tieck, and how this power of interpretation conditiond his judgments.
+
+The general theoretical standpoint upon which the essay was written is
+that of Lessing, and a careful perusal will show that Haym was wrong
+when he postulated no Lessing influence on the article.[16] Tieck's
+letters to Wackenroder show that he was reading the Laokoon at this
+time, but even if a preoccupation with Lessing were not easily
+postulable, the matter of the paper itself will show a distinct
+recrudescence of Lessing's ideas. And not only Lessing, but the school
+of critics out of which Lessing arose, e. g., Winkelmann and DuBos,
+were also a part of Tieck's reading.[17]
+
+The article has a total lack of coloristic reflexes; it emfasizes form,
+if not line; its thoro reasonableness takes into consideration all that
+Lessing has stood for in the domain of art. It has the same standpoint
+as that of a Goethe returnd from Italy and of a Karl Philipp Moritz from
+whom, to be sure, Tieck was turning away in disgust.[18]
+
+The article fails to solv the problem in Tieck's mind of reconciling his
+natural desire away from the regulated and calm with the current and
+traditional in British art. The conflict is between a desire in theory
+for moderated effects, for the toning down of emotion, and a desire, in
+practis, for strong contrast and superlativ effects. Lessing, in art the
+enemy of all realism, finds in Tieck a condemer of Hogarth, a
+condemnation that persists in Tieck as late as the essay on the erly
+English Theater (1828),[19] and persists on grounds similar to the
+fundamental principle of beauty laid down by Lessing.
+
+It would be a mistake to argu from the foregoing that in this article
+Tieck was not a realist, or at least strongly inclined toward realism in
+his practis. His realism was that of the yung enthusiast for whom each
+variation from the sense of his idol was a blasfemy, and he points out
+(page 24) that there can be none of that deception of the senses which
+is a part of the pictorial arts where "ich irgend eine auffallende
+Unnatuerlichkeit entdecke; denn die Nachahmung der Natur ist der Zweck
+des Kuenstlers." Such strict imitation of nature is more to be expected,
+to be sure, in the work of the lesser lights, such as are the men who
+did the pictures for the "Gallery," than in the work of a real genius,
+and one is glad to overlook, in the works of the latter, those minor
+faults which almost entirely disappear in the face of a thousand
+beauties. So, says Tieck (page 14) "who would pass by the divine
+masterpieces of a Rafael and yet with weighty mien find fault with the
+bad coloring of a single garment?" There are clearly two kinds of
+artist. The one is the genius who may be carried too far by his
+enthusiasm, the other is the colder painter, who by his choice of
+subject, composition, correctness of drawing, and grace must make up for
+his lack of genius, and who can not hope to attain the emotional effects
+of his rival, but who must be content to arouse a cooler feeling, that
+is, the satisfaction of the spectator. In this series, where genius is
+excluded from the outset, Tieck expects a strict adherence to fact, to
+verisimilitude, and the correct interpretation of Shakspere must be
+insisted on.
+
+In order that the soul may get an immediate enjoyment of the work of
+art, Tieck recommends (page 4) that the painter choose well-known
+subjects. He says: "The soul passes immediately to the enjoyment of the
+work of art and curiosity does not stand in the way of his enjoyment as
+in the case of obscure or unknown subjects. I am alredy prepared for the
+sentiment that the work of art is to arouse in me, and surrender myself
+all the more willingly to the illusion. If the subject of the picture is
+in itself beautiful and sublime, or if a great poet has furnisht the
+painter with the invention, the composition and the emotions, our
+enthusiasm is arousd, we giv our wonder and our delight to the painter."
+
+The painter, then, is only an interpreter of the poet, whose purpose it
+is to seize the spirit of the poet, to portray those fine and spiritual
+ideas which only a related genius can grasp and make concrete by an
+appeal to the senses thru color-magic[20] the intangible creations of
+the poet's brain. He makes lasting what the reader gets but a fleeting
+glimpse of, and what even the actor can giv but little permanence (page
+3).[21]
+
+Whether or not Tieck was influenced by the prospectus to the set,
+indeed, whether he saw it or not, there is no way of knowing, but his
+statement that these pictures in their entirety will form a national
+gallery of historical paintings which will drive the scenes from Greek
+mythology out of England, is much like Boydell's own statement of
+purpose mentiond above. It is also an erly paralel to the Romantic
+insistence on a new mythology, a nativ mythology, rather than one drawn
+from foren sources which was a part of Friedrich Schlegel's canon.
+
+The engravings as such are treated by Tieck under five different heds.
+These are: the mechanical technique, drawing with perspectiv and line,
+composition (which Tieck does not clearly differentiate from design),
+expression and choice of subject. These five heds comprize all the
+points in which the pictures are treated, but not each picture is
+treated from all five. The five giv, however, the full range of Tieck's
+ideas on the engravings. They show the things that attracted his
+attention, and where the influence of the _Anzeigen_ is felt, they serv
+to show how different, after all, his own ideas were. Often the magazine
+does not tuch one or more points of the five.
+
+Tieck's discussion of the technique of the engravings is, as may be
+expected, rather thin, and the frazes that he uses are stereotyped.
+Several of the plates praisd by him are quite without merit and such
+generalities as, "schoen gestochen," "vorzueglich," "vortrefflich gut,"
+are not very significant. Negativ praise like "nichts zu tadeln" or "die
+Ausfuehrung verdient alles Lob" show that on technical points Tieck was
+judging very superficially and that his attention to the "Gallery" had
+been attracted by something else than the perfection of the plates.
+
+These engravings are in the now old-fashiond stipple, tho parts of them
+are in line. At the time of writing, Tieck may not hav known the
+difference between line and stipple, tho in "Zerbino" a reference to the
+"pointed manner," used in a punning way, shows that by that time Tieck
+had become acquainted with it.[22] Nor does Tieck indicate in any way
+the "Gallery's" sparing use of the increasingly popular mezzotint. He
+makes no mention of the line manner of Flaxman, if he knew him. He does
+not see that the line engravings in the set are poorer all thru than the
+stipple prints, and that in some of the line plates the cutting is so
+deep and the execution so clumsy that the resulting plates are muddy and
+crude and are lacking in tone, grace, and even in exactness of
+execution.
+
+In one or two places where satin is excellently reproduced, Tieck
+praises the texture of the fabrics. The large plate by Simon from the
+"Merry Wives" has a wonderful lace apron which a recent writer on
+engraving has cald one of the best examples of the stipple manner.[23]
+As Tieck refers to the other fabrics on the plate, which is one of those
+with duplicated subject and which in the _Anzeigen_ seems only to hav
+been discust in the S form, it seems clear that Tieck also saw L here,
+as S is by no means so fine a plate; in fact L has the best fabrics in
+the series.
+
+Of the twenty-four large plates discust by Tieck, there are only
+thirteen which receive technical criticisms and of these thirteen, three
+are lumpt together under one comment so that in all there are only ten
+separate technical criticisms. Of these, six occur in the first six
+plates and with the eighteenth plate, Kirk's scene from "Titus
+Andronicus," the criticism of the mechanical side ends with a weak,
+"sehr gut gestochen," showing that Tieck did not progress in his
+technical criticisms. His interest in the engravings as engravings waned
+as the essay proceeded: it never rose above an attention to textiles
+and, even there, Tieck did not see all the finer differentiations of
+velvet, chiffon and lace, tho the fine satins distinctly appeald to him.
+Perhaps as fair an example as any of his inexactness, is his praise of
+the plate from "As You Like It" in which Jacques lies watching the
+wounded deer (II, 1). This is one of the poorest of the plates and yet
+Tieck says, "Die Ausfuehrung verdient alles Lob." Fittler's plate from
+"Winter's Tale" (IV, 2), while weak and without character, is not as bad
+either in actual cutting or in general managment, and yet Tieck condems
+it unmercifully. So, too, the bad plates by Middiman come in for no
+special condemnation from Tieck, tho Middiman is by far the worst
+engraver in the series, and is particularly bad after Hodges, the plates
+after whom Tieck saw.[24]
+
+Drawing, as such, fares rather better than engraving, tho less than half
+the pictures are criticized from this standpoint. Colorless expressions
+like "Keine Fehler" and "Viele Fehler" are not wanting and in many cases
+where whole bodies are out of drawing or where individual parts are bad
+Tieck has nothing to say.
+
+It is especially interesting to note that Tieck finds the drawing of
+Angelika Kaufmann without error. ("Two Gent. Verona," last scene). Here
+he declares that no clumsy clothing conceals the figures, but the lines
+are well brought out under the garments. The disguised Julia is at once
+recognizable in spite of her masculin attire, and the manner of the
+artist is "grazioes." An examination of the figure shows that Julia's
+figure has something of the immature in it and that the face is rather
+boyish. One thinks at once of the somewhat malicious words of Friedrich
+Schlegel to his brother, "Wie Angelika Kaufmann, der die Busen und
+Hueften, auch immer wie von selbst aus den Fingern quellen." Both Tieck
+and Schlegel felt the sensuous charm of the painter whose best known
+self-portrait is in the garb of a Vestal Virgin, tho the Schlegels,
+like Georg Forster, had no illusions as to the qualities of her art.[25]
+
+Engravings in stipple emfasize less than line engravings mere questions
+of drawing. It is perhaps with some instinctiv feeling for this that
+Tieck suggests that one of Hamilton's pictures has been hurt by the bad
+engraving, just as certain other plates have gaind thru the engraver
+(page 22). The hint for this point came originally from the _Anzeigen_
+but Tieck has developt it. While it is now no longer possible to check
+up each plate with its corresponding picture, it is true that the
+engravers were relatively better craftsmen, as a rule, than the
+painters. In hardly any one case is the painting a sample of the best
+work of the artist. Often, as in the case of Sir Joshua Reynolds, the
+painting redounds but little to his credit.[26] Where, as in the case of
+Barry, Sir Joshua's great rival, the picture is reckond with his
+superior work, the only conclusion is that Barry was a very bad artist
+and so Tieck considers him. The engravers, on the other hand, had had no
+better chance in years to exhibit their art than in this imposing
+series, and most of the best names in stipple appear in it. The best
+that Tieck does to recognize this fact is in the occasional lament for
+the waste of good labor on a bad subject or painting (e. g., page 20).
+
+Besides having the good feeling for the human form under the garment, as
+in the case of the figure of Julia and of those of Mrs. Ford and Mrs.
+Page by Smirke, Tieck also criticizes several cases of misdrawing. So,
+the clumsy legs of one of Opie's figures are scored and in blaming this
+failing of Opie, Tieck hits one of the most pronounced weaknesses of
+that artist both in the "Gallery" and in Bell's British Theater. But
+Opie, the "Comedy Wonder," is hardly the "ungeuebter Kuenstler" that Tieck
+makes him out to be. Here Tieck, following the criticism of the
+_Anzeigen_, from which he may have got the hint on Opie's drawing,
+develops the criticism too far and goes astray. There is a constant
+suspicion that Tieck is trying to master a jargon.
+
+Often it is a mere chance whether Tieck will see or not see a
+peculiarity. Some of the sentimental, foolish, and misdrawn hands escape
+his notis, whereas in other cases he criticizes them.
+
+Perhaps the best example of Tieck's criticism of drawing is that of
+Northcote's plate to "Richard III." (III, 1, page 27). He says, "Der
+alte Cardinal scheint ganz verzeichnet zu sein, man ist ungewiss, ob er
+steht oder kniet: in beiden Faellen ist die Zeichnung fehlerhaft."
+Tieck's strictures are correct. The space from the waist down is found
+upon examination to be abnormally long for a kneeling person, and
+groteskly short for one standing. Tieck's critique is good, for it
+points out the error and the reason, and shows that in any case the
+alternativ is a bad one.
+
+Tho Tieck may hav been over-kind to Angelika Kaufmann, he quite agrees
+with his contemporaries in the condemnation of another German Swiss
+living in England, namely Fueessli, whom he calls one of the worst of the
+admirers of Michaelangelo. The michaelangelesk school of the day faild
+in its expression of great muscular effort, in that it put for strength
+distortion and violence. Fueessli was one of the most important
+adherents, or rather, was the greatest representativ of the fad perhaps
+anywhere and seems therby to hav largely incurd the displesure of his
+German critics. That Tieck really understood Michaelangelo is shown by
+his later article in the "Phantasien ueber die Kunst." He defends him
+from the charge of having drawn to show his knowledge of anatomy and
+among other things, exclaims on his "greatness, his wild grace, his
+fearful beauty."[27] But Tieck had no use for those of his imitators who
+caught only the extravagance of his figures and debased his Titanic
+creations into bizarre contortions by over-emfasis on mere muscle.
+
+That Tieck was not unconscious of the effect of mere line is shown by
+his pointing out the unplesantness of the line made by Leontes' figure
+in Hamilton's picture of the statu scene from "Winter's Tale."
+Awkwardness and violence, anything that savord of "affectation and
+bombast," where in Shakspere "power and energy" are found, met Tieck's
+disapproval. So this figure of Leontes, so Orlando standing with his
+legs far apart, so the faces drawn by Fueessli. Wherever there were
+violent angles, sharp points and corners, Tieck felt himself ill at
+ease. When he saw in some of Fueessli's plates faces which giv the
+impression of the plaster blocks of the art schools that are used to
+draw from the cast, the square chins, the noses, either very pointed or
+cut off square, imprest him as repulsivly inhuman. "Widrig, unnatuerlich,
+abgeschmackt, manierirt," are the terms applied to Fueessli's cursing
+scene from Lear.
+
+It would hav been interesting had Tieck seen Fueessli's later scenes in
+the "Gallery." The Bottom scenes from the "Midsummer Night's Dream" show
+that fantastic imagination which was the artist's strong point. All the
+forms from the fairy world were there, Moth, Peascod and a welth of
+other spirits. There is a distinct appeal to the imagination which
+justifies the painter of "Die Nachtmahr," tho the faces of Titania and
+Oberon are here too hard and sullen. But the imagination shown has a
+curious similarity with the work of Tieck in his later stories such as
+"Die Elfen," and which has so warm an afterglow in "Die Vogelscheuche."
+
+Composition means for Tieck especially order. He has not yet lernd the
+principle of triangulation of arrangement enunciated by Caroline in the
+"Gemaelde" essay in the _Athenaeum_. He expects no more than that the
+principle character shall be in an important place in the picture and
+insists that the lighting devices serv to throw such personages into
+relief. So when the perspectiv is bad it is because of the wrong emfasis
+on the principal figures rather than that the harmony of the whole is
+disturbed by a wrong arrangement.
+
+What irritates Tieck especially is an arrangement of figures in the
+picture in the regular semi-circle borrowd directly from the theater.
+The evil of unnaturalness which such attitudinizing brings with it, is
+enhanced by light effects drawn from the same source. So, for example,
+where the light is that of a lamp, only so much light as a lamp would
+giv, or the effect of natural lamp-light is allowable. If, on the other
+hand, the sunlight streams into the room, the source of the sunlight
+should be evident as outside the room. Tieck might hav mentiond as an
+example of this some of the fine interiors of Pieter De Hoogh. The light
+effects should not be harsh but graded down so that no violent light
+contrasts occur within the same room. The light, too, should be broken
+up, not kept in a mass as if it were a separate entity to be treated
+apart from all other objects.
+
+All this is perfectly resonable and not especially technical. It is
+conveyd in stray hints rather than in any set discussion of light
+effects in any one place. Often, too, Tieck's dislike for some other
+aspect of a painter's work leads him astray on this point. This is tru
+in the case of Northcote, whose really good treatment of the high
+lights Tieck has in one or two cases entirely overlookt. There seems to
+hav been a distinct appeal made, too, by the sheen and glitter of
+certain textiles and the scintillating, flickering light of the later
+periods of Tieck's work is presaged as erly as this. On the whole,
+however, it is not the glitter of the world of out-of-doors, but of the
+world of the shut-in, of the world of little things which appeals so
+strongly to Tieck and which he treated with such banality in the story
+"Ulrich der Empfindsame."
+
+Thus, Tieck's landscape criticism is very bad and even tho, as has been
+pointed out, the basis for his adjectivs lies in the _Anzeigen_
+articles, his expansion beyond them brings no real betterment. In the
+plate from "Love's Labor Lost" (IV, 1, page 9), when Tieck was feeling
+his way into his subject, his general impression was one of plesure, and
+so the landscape is "reizend." In the whole essay, "reizend" is the only
+constructiv epithet applied to landscape and it occurs only twice.
+Hamilton's landscape is purely conventional and, except for a vista, of
+which Tieck was all his life fond, offers nothing to commend it. The
+failure of Tieck to judge rightly must be laid at the door of too great
+reliance on the _Anzeigen_.
+
+Tieck criticizes only one other landscape as such, tho in a third case a
+landscape background is discust adversly. For the scene from "As You
+Like It" in which Jacques watches the wounded deer the term "reizend"
+seems quite impossible. Engraved by Middiman after Hodges, a combination
+which augurs ill, the scene is without dout the worst in every way that
+Tieck saw. The composition is bad: Jacques, a figure without grace of
+expression, sprawls in a comedy landscape and the features of the
+wounded deer hav a strong Hebraic cast. Here, if ever, the scene is
+drawn from the stage and not from nature and stage properties are models
+for tree and foliage. When Tieck says that the scene is one to arouse
+cheerfulness in the beholder, he is correct but not in the sense that he
+ment. The reliance on his source is not enuf to account for his
+aberration; the failure to judge aright must be laid at Tieck's door.
+
+After pointing out the value of the whole, and the effect made by the
+light of the torch held by Gloster ("Lear," III, 4), Tieck shows that
+this effect, striking as it is, detracts from the unity of the
+composition, since it shifts the emfasis from Lear and his pain. Lear,
+morover, is not the Lear of Shakspere but a giant, and the effect of
+this Herculean form is made further improbable by the exaggeration of
+the wind blowing from all directions in the picture and driving the
+garments of Lear with it, winding them impossibly about him. The effect
+of these draperies, says Tieck, is baroque and there is no thought of
+quiet strength or noble simplicity.[28]
+
+In the composition of this picture Tieck also notises that the figure of
+Edgar is practically the same as that of a figure in West's Deth of
+General Wolf. A comparison with the latter picture at once reveals the
+justness of Tieck's observation. The figure of the Indian seated in the
+foreground is strikingly like that of Edgar, both in form and in general
+expression, and it is evident that West has repeated himself. In
+general, Tieck does not make comparisons of this kind. He confines his
+remarks to the picture itself, and probably was not well acquainted with
+the run of contemporary British art.[29]
+
+Tieck's judgment of composition did not go far beyond this emfasis on
+the principal figure. A general series of colorless frases like "gut
+geordnet" occurs, but expresses only a mild acquiescence in the
+arrangement. Tieck was fond of the posing sentimentalities of groups
+like the landscape plate from "Love's Labor Lost," but he tries hard to
+get away from them toward a realism which drew upon actual perception
+for its postulates and which was not based upon premises--inadequate for
+art--of Shakspere illustration. On the other hand, and here he departs
+constantly from the canon of Lessing, there is no striving for abstract
+beauty. Charm and grace, beauty in motion as it is exprest by the female
+figure in Anne Page and a few other cases, are Tieck's nearest approach
+to it.[30]
+
+The general reason for Tieck's failure is that in actuality these
+pictures were not ugly or inartistic to him. Where he criticizes it is
+oftenest the idea; the execution and the relation to an abstract
+standard are of less consequence, and his theory once more limps behind
+his practis. He may berate Hogarth as an artist without beauty but it is
+clear that his extoling of Rafael is a mere matter of fashion; he is in
+the same category with Domenichino, whom Tieck's generation and the next
+succeeding one considerably overestimated. In Michaelangelo, Tieck
+knows the strength of the drawing and not the wistfulness that pervades
+even the most Titanic of the master's creations. In general, affectation
+of pose, mannerism and preciosity are Tieck's bane only where the
+sentimental is not concernd.
+
+An interesting commendation of the composition of a plate is that of
+Kirk's picture from "Titus Adronicus" (IV, 1). Tieck likes the plate
+because of its taste and delicacy in only suggesting the mutilated arms
+of Lavinia. Kirk has avoided the frank naturalism of the original by the
+use of draperies, and this appeals to Tieck as a toning down and is in
+line with what had been suggested before in regard to Tieck's attitude.
+
+This plate has an accessory which Tieck objects to, namely the over
+large colum in the background. Usually, but not in this case, Tieck
+criticises the accessories from the standpoint of the stickler for
+historical accuracy, rather than for any artistic merit or demerit. So
+the tomb of the Capulets in "Romeo and Juliet" is not Italian of the
+period, and the dresses of the women in "Merry Wives" are in violation
+of the sumptuary laws of the time.[31] In the deth of Mortimer (1 "Henry
+VI.," V, 2) the family tree lying on the ground adds a tuch of symbolism
+which Tieck approves, tho in the same scene he criticizes the mean
+character of the prison, saying that for such a noble prisoner a better
+place of incarceration would hav been found.
+
+Tieck makes no clear distinction between passing expression (Ausdruck)
+and permanency of feature (Miene). His discussion of expression goes
+hand in hand with composition, since, as was mentiond above, composition
+has so close a relation to the placing of the principal character. There
+is a definit point of view, however, in Tieck's discussions of
+composition; in his strictures and encomiums on expression of face and
+figure it is practically impossible to find a consistent _pou sto_. In
+places, his powers of observation seem to hav deserted him and his
+lapses are not attributable to a too great leaning on the articles in
+the _Anzeigen_. Tieck's theoretical discussion of the common-sense
+element in these illustrations may be ever so clear and his demands on
+the artist may be ever so high, but his practical application of these
+principles is by no means as strict as might be expected. Indeed, in
+theory Tieck demands one thing and in practis another.
+
+It is Tieck's desire that the artist should catch the individual note in
+these figures and raise it to an ideal, that he should choose the
+expression with care and never sacrifice it to coloring or drapery and
+that he should avoid all necessity of using symbols to designate his
+characters. But when Tieck actually examins the pictures, he stresses
+theatrical pose or mien and pays no attention to those obvious tricks
+whereby expression is obtainable: the skilful use of light and shade on
+the face, the treatment of the lines of the mouth, and the placing of
+the eyes. Occasionally, as in the ball scene in "Romeo and Juliet," it
+seems as if the treatment of the eyes of a figure--in this case that of
+Tybalt--attracted his attention, but there are so many other plates in
+which the eyes are quite as good and are nevertheless past over, that
+the instance of Tybalt seems fortuitous.
+
+Tieck uses the expressions "ohne Ausdruck," "wenig Ausdruck" and "ohne
+Charakter," "wenig Charakter" almost exclusively in his negativ
+criticism of the plates and his positiv criticism substitutes "viel" for
+"wenig." Such frases are not very definit and Tieck misapplies them
+constantly. In four out of the five cases of Tieck's largest caption,
+"ohne Ausdruck," he is certainly incorrect and the postulation of "wenig
+Ausdruck" is wrong in at least two out of the three cases. It is not a
+matter of personal opinion nor can it be a difference in point of view
+between the twentieth century and the end of the eighteenth. It is
+largely bad judgment on Tieck's part. In the three cases where Tieck
+sees "vielen Ausdruck" not one is in reality especially distinguisht for
+vividness. Two even vie with the most expressionless in feature and hav
+no special pretentions to significance of posture. In the five plates
+where Tieck uses "ohne Charakter" or "wenig Charakter," the epithets are
+in general tru.
+
+Tieck got the hint for an advers criticism of the faces of Mrs. Ford and
+Mrs. Page from the _Anzeigen_. He exclaims, expanding his model, "Welch'
+widrige Gesichter! welch' uninteresante Figuren!" There is in the pose
+of Mrs. Page a most awkward droop of the neck, but in Mrs. Ford's face
+there is a rollicking Irish drollery, a freshness of complexion and a
+witchery of the eyes that are quite charming. The painting was by
+Peters, whose "sprightly humor" was so much admired by his
+contemporaries.
+
+One of the two pictures of Leontes in the "Winter's Tale" shows his
+giving the oath to Antigonous to destroy the child. In Leontes' frowning
+face Tieck sees no expression, altho it is unquestionably one of the
+most lively of the series. The stiffness of pose that Tieck objects to
+in the picture may well be accounted for by the full suit of armor that
+Leontes wears. The face is far more expressiv than that of the other
+Leontes picture and yet Tieck's judgment on them is the same.
+
+One of the most striking failures on Tieck's part to see character
+interpretation of real subtlety is in Northcote's portrayal of "Richard
+III." There can be no dout that Tieck's general dislike of the artist,
+which was based on the adverse criticisms of the _Anzeigen_, led his
+judgment astray. The face of Richard is all in all the most
+characteristic of the series in so far as Tieck saw the series.
+Richard's "subtle, false and trecherous" look with the smile of his grim
+humor is well caught; the eyes and mouth are excellent and giv a very
+adequate idea of the deviltry of the man, of his lewd cunning and his
+scheming. What Tieck might well hav objected to is the sentimentalizing
+of the two princes whom the artist has transmogrified into fat little
+babies, just as in the next picture the two hav become well-fed little
+beef-eaters.
+
+As Tieck fails to see sentimentality in this picture, so he misses
+extravagance in the church scene from "Much Ado." Tieck borrowd much in
+this discussion from the _Anzeigen_ but his remarks on expression are
+his own. He says that Leonato has too little expression. There can be no
+dout as to the figure intended for Leonato. Claudio is identified by a
+very theatrical gesture and by a Mefistofelian Don Juan behind him. The
+fainting Hero, over whom Beatrice is bending, falls into Benedix' arms.
+The only other figure, that of an older man, and who therefore cannot be
+Benedix, is standing in a most theatrical posture with clencht fists,
+eyes upturnd, rigid and ridiculous. If Tieck ment that this figure
+should represent Leonato, he has shot wide of the mark in his criticism
+and displays a most unrefined love of the melodramatic. Figures like
+this are not often found in the "Gallery." Ordinarily excess of
+sentiment and a cheap display of emotion giv way to stiffness and
+awkwardness.
+
+Tieck was dissatisfied with all the reproductions of Lear. They hav all
+too much of the gigantic, too little of the childish old man. He points
+out that the face as drawn by Fueessli expresses nothing but rage; the
+same exaggeration is found in the drawing of West who sacrifices truth,
+nature and emotion to a striking first impression. Barry's Lear only
+excites laughter and the lack of expression in the face is made up by
+the storm-wind in the hair. Again, however, issu must be taken with
+Tieck's attitude, for it is impossible to regard these faces as
+expressionless. It is not that they hav too little, but too much, and of
+a wrong kind. Tieck nowhere draws the clear distinction and nowhere
+makes it evident that he regards "Ausdruck" as a term to be interpreted
+in any but a common sense way.
+
+It seems apparent that those plates which had a certain sentimentality,
+a certain saccharin quality appeald to Tieck. He likes the prettiness of
+Anne Page and cleverly notes the touch of scorn in her face. If he had
+recalled Reynolds' Mrs. Siddons he would hav recognized the same trait
+of hardness around the mouth, a line that is often found in the pictures
+of English women. Perhaps Tieck's interest went hand in hand with his
+enthusiasm for Rafael, and lack of discrimination lets him take all as
+of equal value. The face of young Lucius in "Titus Adronicus" and the
+face of Juliet in the tomb are examples of this. Tieck argues that the
+boy has a good deal of expression, but a cool observer can see only
+melodrama in the pose and blankness in the face. The most interesting
+thing about the plate has escaped Tieck's attention, namely that both of
+Titus' hands are represented. It seems an especially noteworthy omission
+in a picture which Tieck praises for not showing the stumps of
+Lavinia.[32]
+
+Tieck several times criticizes a picture for making a good first
+impression and then not being able to stand the test of close
+observation. An example of this is Northcote's portrayal of Mortimer and
+York (1 "Henry VI.," II, 5) which is really spoild according to Tieck by
+the strong light masses which at first sight seem very striking. These
+light masses throw the main figure into relief, but Tieck objects to the
+unnatural posture of the dying man. Close examination of the figure
+reveals the fact that Mortimer is really well drawn; the lines of the
+drapery distort the general impression, but that part of the drawing
+comprising the actual sitting figure is that of a broken old man, fallen
+in a heap and dying. Any one who has seen Irving's masterly
+representation of the dying Louis cannot but be imprest by the
+verisimilitude of Northcote's presentation. What Tieck says of the minor
+characters on the plate is true; they are expressionless in the extreme.
+
+Tieck is fully justified in calling Reynolds' scene from "Henry VI."
+"dieses abscheuliche Blatt," where the word "abscheulich" is reminiscent
+of the _Anzeigen_. He asks further, "Ist dies der Kuenstler der Familie
+des Ugolino?"[33] With much better right he might hav askt, "Is this the
+painter of the 'Age of Innocence' and the man who loved to paint
+children?" Both the Shakspere plate and the stiff Ugolino picture
+attempt to portray the horrible, and the only other plate that Sir
+Joshua did for the "Gallery," namely, the Hecate plate from "Macbeth,"
+the same selection of a grewsome subject is made. Neither of these
+pictures can be sed to conform with Reynolds' well-known doctrin that
+the function of art is to arouse the imagination, for in these pictures
+there is nothing left for the imagination but exhaustion. They show a
+vein of the bizarre without the great fancy of Fueessli and are realistic
+to a degree that stopt at nothing. It is not to be wonderd at that Tieck
+exhausts himself in condemnation of the plate that he saw.
+
+It is plain that Tieck saw in the plate a caricature and an evasion. The
+caricature was the dying man and the evasion was the veild face of the
+young king. Tieck felt that the artist had veild the face of his
+character to conceal his want of skill in the portrayal of a supreme
+moment of emotion. Here Tieck certainly breaks with the doctrin of
+Lessing who praised the expedient of Timanthes in veiling the face of
+Agamemnon at the sacrifice. Tieck tacitly accuses Reynolds of shirking
+an obvious task. He wisht something superlativ, whether in fleeting
+expression or in that permanency which is caused by iterativ emotion.
+Such a desire, the emfasizing of Shakspere's "Kraft" and "Energie"
+leaves him on the plane of the Storm and Stress in his attitude toward
+the British poet.[34] If the words of Sir Joshua himself are to be taken
+as a criterion, his theory is different from his practis in this case,
+and Tieck has condemd him out of his own mouth.
+
+Beauford, whom Tieck calls a caricature, certainly leaves nothing to
+the imagination, as Reynolds wisht for art.[35] Tieck's description of
+the figure is apt, "Beauford liegt da, mit den Zaehnen grinsend, das Bett
+in Verzuckungen kneifend, eine ekelhafte, verzerrte Caricatur, ueber die
+man lachen koennte, wenn sie etwas weniger abscheulich waere. Genie and
+Enthusiasmus koennen hier die Hand und Kritik unmoeglich irre gefuehrt
+haben; denn weder das eine, noch der andere gehoert dazu, um diese Zuege,
+diese Umrisse hervorzubringen."
+
+The word caricature is, even before he found it in the _Anzeigen_, a
+term of deepest reproach with Tieck. In his essays to Wackenroder he
+says, speaking of a certain actor, "Ich gestehe dass er vielleicht viele
+Scenen natuerlich und einige komish darstellt, aber nach meinem Urtheil
+spielt er in keiner einzigen schoen, mit einem Worte, er macht
+Carrikatur, und die kann nie schoen sein, wenn sie auch noch so vielen
+Ausdruck hat. Das Komische und das Schreckhafte graenzen ueberhaupt
+vielleicht naeher aneinander, als man glaubt ... Vielleicht ist das wahre
+komische Spiel so wie Unzelmann est giebt, alles so leicht, so
+uebergehend, keine Periode, keine Idee, keine Stellung moeglichst
+festgehalten, keine Grimasse in Stein verwandelt."
+
+After pointing out the value of the unspoild taste of childhood in
+matters of esthetic judgment, Tieck continues: "Du kannst leicht die
+Erfahrung machen, dass Carrikaturen den Kindern nie gefallen, denn sie
+erkennen in ihnen nur mit Muehe den Menschen wieder, sie fuerchten sie
+wirklich; sie koennen ungleich laenger eine andre Figur ohne Ausdruck und
+bestimmten Charakter betrachten, ja tagelang darueber brueten, und
+Ausdruck und Charakter hineintragen, hundert Traeume spinnen sich in
+ihrer Seele aus, ... Carrikaturen gefallen ueberhaupt vielleicht nur
+einem kalten noerdlichen Volke, dessen Gefuehl fuer den feinen Stachel der
+stillen Schoenheit zu grob ist, oder die schon die Schule der Schoenheit
+durchgegangen sind, und deren uebersatten Magen nur noch die gewuerztesten
+Speisen reizen koennen, die es daher gern sehen, wenn die Schoenheit dem
+Ausdruck aufgeopfert wird, weil sie in der Schoenheit keinen lebenden
+Ausdruck mehr finden. Du wirst sehen, dass ich hier nicht bloss von der
+komischen Carrikatur spreche, sondern von jedem Ausdruck irgend einer
+Leidenschaft, der die Schoenheit ausschliesst." He then goes on to
+indicate the relation of what he had sed to Lessing and confesses his
+indetedness to him in the matter. The highest effects when used in
+sculpture and painting are also caricature.[36]
+
+Paralel to this statement in the letters is the discussion in the essay
+of the valu of the comedies of Shakspere over his tragedies as material
+for illustration. Tieck says (page 15), "Im Trauerspiele ersteigen
+meistentheils gerade die schoensten Scenen eine Hoehe des Effects, die der
+Maler schwerlich ausdruecken kann, ohne widrig zu werden. Der
+Schauspieler verliert schon oft jene Grazie, die jedem Kunstwerke noethig
+ist, wenn er manche Scenen der tragischen Kraft so wiedergeben will, wie
+er sie im Dichter findet, doch kann die Mimik hier noch das Unangenehme
+vermeiden; der Malerei ist es aber meist unmoeglich, denn jene
+Verzerrungen, die auf der Buehne nur voruebergehend sind, werden hier
+bleibend gemacht; dort erschrecken sie durch ihr ploetzliches Entstehen
+und Verschwinden, hier werden sie ekelhaft, weil durch das Feststehende
+und Bleibende des Widrigen der dargestellte Mensch zum Thier herabsinkt.
+Jemehr der Maler den Affekt hinauftreibt, desto mehr nimmt er zugleich
+Interesse und Tadel von seinem Helden. Die hoechsten Grade des Zorns, der
+Wuth oder der Verzweifelung bleiben im Gemaelde stets unedel; selbst der
+Wahnsinn muss hier mit einer gewissen Schuechternheit auftreten, und im
+hoechsten Entzuecken muss ein sanfter Wiederschein der Melancholie
+leuchten." The relation of this to Lessing, both in the "Laokoon" and in
+the "Dramaturgie" is at once apparent.
+
+The dislike for caricature centers around the comic efforts of Smirke
+for whom Tieck has hardly a good word to say. In the discussion of
+Reynolds' picture, Tieck remarks, half in jest, that he regrets his
+strictures on Smirke in the face of this greater caricature by Reynolds.
+The sum total of his criticisms of Smirke is unjust: thruout the series
+and especially in some of the plates that Tieck saw, this painter has
+caught the comic spirit well, and tho overpraisd by his contemporaries,
+has done some very clever work both in the "Gallery" and in Bell's
+"British Theater."[37]
+
+Tieck's principal censures are directed against the figure of Simple in
+the "Merry Wives" and that of Dogberry in the comic trial in "Much Ado."
+Simple is for Tieck neither the character as Shakspere conceived him,
+nor is he funny. It is again, says Tieck, a mere exaggeration,
+tantamount to a confession of inability. That the spectator cannot laugh
+at the character is the artist's greatest punishment; in overstepping
+the just limits of the comic and the natural, he has made the figure
+insignificant. Unlike Hogarth, says Tieck, Smirke has not the power of
+expressing character by means of the distortions of the exterior. To put
+an artist below Hogarth is with Tieck to put him very low; in this
+respect he stands on the plane of August von Schlegel in the _Athenaeum_
+and has not risen to the level of admiration for the Englishman
+displayed by Novalis in the "Fragments."
+
+The best that Tieck can say for the Dogberry scene as a whole is, that
+in spite of its exaggerations, it has much comic power. But, he goes on
+to explain, it is a far different thing for Smirke to exaggerate than
+for Shakspere, for the latter always draws human beings, while the
+figures of the former are at times hardly to be distinguisht from apes.
+
+To a certain extent the figure of Dogberry and more especially the face,
+justify Tieck's repugnance. In its way, the face is fully as bad as that
+of Reynolds' Beauford. Tieck says, "Selbst ein vertrauter Leser des
+Shakspeare findet sich nicht in den hier dargestellen Caricaturen, von
+denen die Hauptperson in einer Wuth, die laecherlich sein soll, so
+ekelhaft verzerrt wird, dass man nur ungern mit dem Blick auf dieser
+Zeichnung verweilt." This is in every respect tru. Smirke has here mist
+all the comic elements of the character, and has produced not the
+ridiculous malapropian Dogberry but a demoniac grinning mask of a face
+and a twisted, distorted and frenzied figure. Tieck proceeds, "Ein
+Kuenstler, der die komischen Scenen des Shakspeare darstellen will,
+sollte doch von seinem Dichter so viel gelernt haben, dass dieser seine
+Caricaturen nie ohne eine gewisse Portion von phlegmatischer Laune
+laesst, die so oft unser Lachen erregt, und aus der blossen Erfahrung
+sollte er wissen, dass selbst der laecherlichste Zwerg, wenn er schaeumt,
+in eben dem Augenblicke aufhoert laecherlich zu sein. Jedes Subject hoert
+auf, komisch zu sein, sobald ich es in einen hohen Grad von Leidenschaft
+versetze. Denn das Laecherliche in den Charakteren entsteht gewoehnlich
+nur durch die seltsam widersprechende Mischung des Affects und des
+inneren Phlegma; wenigstens so hat Shakspeare seine wirklich komischen
+Personen gezeichnet. Der Mangel an Genie zeigt sich gewoehnlich in
+Uebertreibung und gesuchten Verzerrungen des Koerpers."[38]
+
+The scene from the "Merry Wives" in which Dr. Cajus catechizes William
+on his Latin, represents very well the type of scene the choice of which
+Tieck condems as unsuited for representation. It is not because there
+was something in the humor of them that Tieck did not grasp, but because
+he rejects on principle all that is secondary and episodical. Such
+scenes as are told and not acted, that is, the epic portions of the
+plays, as well as the reflectiv and filosofical portions would hav to be
+excluded. It is the fate of the principal characters which is of prime
+importance, and the moment must be chosen with their activities in view.
+This emfasis on the principal character is also strongly reminiscent of
+the doctrin of Lessing's "Dramaturgie." It has been shown how it affects
+what Tieck has to say about composition and it is the prime factor in
+his feeling for what is the proper moment and subject of representation.
+
+Some of the scenes which Tieck rejects are Hodges' picture of the
+melancholy Jacques, and the murder of the princes in "Richard III."
+Neither of these is acted out on the stage. From the "Merry Wives" he
+proposes Falstaff's three adventures: the basket scene, the Witch of
+Brentford scene and the final torturing of Falstaff by the practical
+jokers. These giv a chance for variety of grouping and a gradation of
+expression in all the chief characters of the play. The scene in which
+the two women read identical letters from Falstaff, Tieck regards as the
+worst possible, for reasons that he says he need not recall but which
+are obviously those of lack of stress on the main character.
+
+The scenes that Tieck recommends were actually chosen by the artists
+whose work appears later in the series and so Tieck's judgment is, in a
+way, confirmd. These scenes are the skeleton of the farce element and
+bring out the structure of the Falstaff plot which Tieck evidently
+regards as the main theme. It is interesting to note, however, how
+little the choice of subject has to do with the artistic merit or
+demerit of the plates. The subsequent plates, which would hav fully
+satisfied Tieck's requirements as to the moment of presentation are
+artistically among the worst in the series.
+
+The two scenes from "As You Like It" suggested by Tieck, the one where
+Adam admonishes Orlando (II, 3) and the scene in the forest where
+Orlando enters bearing Adam on his shoulders (II, 7) hav not the same
+structural relation to the whole as hav those from the "Merry Wives."
+These moments lend themselves very well to representation but are chosen
+on another basis of judgment. They show that for Tieck Orlando was of
+more importance than Rosalind, for he suggests no scene with her in it
+as especially representativ of the play. In the first of these two
+scenes, the action has already begun; the scene is the culmination of
+the episode containing the first relation of the brothers. It is in
+itself not a vital part of the action. The scene in the forest, on the
+other hand, has more of the qualities demanded by Tieck: a variety of
+characters and an important moment. This is a moment--tho not the
+initial one--when Orlando's fortunes mend and he comes to his frends.
+The scene in which he first meets the Duke's party is of more
+significance. It seems as if the governing principle is contrast rather
+than a desire for elucidation of structure in serial arrangment. Orlando
+and Adam, ill-fortune and good luck, are juxtaposed.
+
+Tieck conjectures that the eavesdropping scene from "Much Ado" (III, 1)
+is included in the collection because it was played by popular actresses
+of the contemporary English stage. Tieck misses the structural
+importance of the scene. It is apart of the intrigue; it has a direct
+effect on Beatrice who comes from it a changed woman. To Tieck, however,
+it ment as little as the similar eavesdropping scene from "Love's Labor
+Lost" (IV, 3), in which play he claims there is no suitable scene for
+representation.
+
+The scene from "Winter's Tale" in which Perdita welcomes the disguised
+Duke (IV, 3), offering him flowers the while, is condemd in favor of the
+one immediately following in which the Duke discloses himself. Here
+again Tieck stresses the contrast and wishes a climax, a dramatic
+moment. So he praises such scenes as the putting away of Hero at the
+altar and the deth of Beauford, however much he derides the execution of
+the latter, by Reynolds.
+
+For the sake of bringing out the wretchedness of this execution, Tieck
+points out that tho he has often before bewaild the choice of moment,
+he cannot do so in this case for no better could hav been selected. He
+details the good points in the scene: "Man denke sich einen Boesewicht
+auf dem Todtenbette, den die Verzweifelung wahnsinnig gemacht hat, der
+keine Seligkeit hofft; diesen besucht in seiner Todesstunde Heinrich,
+der junge gefuehlvolle Koenig, ein Schwarmer in der Religion, der von
+diesem Anblick auf das tiefste geruehrt wird; Warwick und Salisbury, zwei
+maennliche Krieger, begleiten ihn hierher. Beauford ist die Hauptperson,
+alle Zuschauer haben ihre gauze Aufmerksamkeit auf ihn gerichtet. Der
+Kuenstler haette hier ruehren und erschuettern koennen; ich sehe in Gedanken
+den weichen Heinrich Thraenen vergiessen, im schoensten Contrast mit dem
+Cardinal, der ihn, in der Abwesenheit seines Geistes, kalt und ohne
+Bewusstsein anstarrt. Warwick und Salisbury, weniger geruehrt, aber doch
+interessante Physiognomien, die durch leichtere Nuancen von einander
+unterschieden sind. So sehe ich in der Phantasie das schoenste tragische
+Gemaelde ..."
+
+In "Romeo and Juliet" the choice of the ball scene meets with Tieck's
+disapproval. The scene is "Ohne Wirkung." Tieck's main reason why the
+scene is not good is that the painter has interpreted literally the
+metafor, "My lips two blushing pilgrims stand" and has represented Romeo
+in the garb of a pilgrim to correspond to Juliet's anser, "Good
+pilgrim." As Tieck rightly points out, there is no need for such a gise.
+The choice of the more highly keyd situation at the supposed deth of
+Juliet meets with Tieck's approval and shows that where there is a
+choice, the emfasis of his selection is apt to be on the superlativ
+moment.[39]
+
+One other idea seems to be in Tieck's mind and it is hard to believe
+that he was not unconsciously influenced by the stage presentation of
+the plays when formulating it. That is the desire to hav a number of
+people in the picture. Nearly all the plates that he condems hav but few
+characters and his dictum of variety demands a reasonable number to
+choose from. This dramatic point of view is in accord with his attitude
+in all other fases of the discussion. It has been pointed out how rarely
+the artistic makes the prime appeal to him.
+
+Tieck's second point in regard to choice of subject is that the comedies
+offer a wider field and a better opportunity than the tragedies. The
+general basis for this notion is allied to his theory of the
+worthlessness of caricature, that is, that there is an exaggeration, an
+overacting of the part possible in tragedy that is less likely to occur
+in comedy.
+
+The statement of the evils of exaggeration is very sweeping and includes
+in some of its details both comedy and tragedy: "Der dramatische Dichter
+hat Momente in seinen Schauspielen, die kein Pinsel oder Griffel jemals
+darstellen kann; ich meine jene Spruenge und ueberraschenden Wendungen des
+Affectes, jene fuerchterlichen Blitze des Genies, bei denen der Zuschauer
+zusammenfaehrt, wo der Dichter unerwartet durch eine neue verdraengt:
+diese Momente sind oft die glaenzendsten des Schauspiels, und bei keinem
+Dichter finden sie sich so haeufig als bei Shakspeare in seinen
+Tragoedien." Tieck's illustration for this is the passage from Lear
+beginning, "No, I will weep no more," etc. He continues, "welcher Maler
+wird es wagen, wenn er den Sinn ganz durchdringt, ... diese Stelle auf
+die Leinwand zu werfen? So innig diese Verse beim Lesen oder bei der
+Darstellung ruehren, so frostig wuerden sie vielleicht als ein Gemaelde
+dargestellt erscheinen: oder wenn sie auch hier ruehrten, so wuerde das
+Gemaelde doch nie jene Erschuetterung in uns erregen, jenes Anschlagen von
+hundert Gefuehlen. Man wuerde immer nur den weinenden Lear sehen oder den
+erzuernten Vater, der sich zur Kaelte zwingt; das Ineinanderschmelzen
+dieser beiden Empfindungen, verbunden mit der Verstandesschwaeche, die
+dem Schmerz endlich ganz erliegt und Wahnsinn wird, waere selbst ein
+Rafael unmoeglich: hier steht ein grosser Grenzstein zwischen dem Gebiet
+des Malers und des Dichters."
+
+The result of overstepping these bounds is that the painter is likely to
+enter into rivalry with the poet, to feel his lack of ability in the
+struggle and to produce empty declamation insted of a work of the
+creativ imagination and to offer to the spectator nothing for either
+imagination or reason.
+
+But in the comedies there are many moments which almost force themselves
+on the painter. These are scenes in which he can portray the poet just
+as he finds him and in which his rivalry is legitimate and, indeed, may
+tend to make him surpass the poet. If he can do this it will be by
+bringing out more plainly the light shades of the poet's meaning and he
+will become a commentator, so to speak, of these. Under such
+circumstances, the painter must be very careful to choose just the most
+beautiful and most interesting passages.
+
+The relation to Lessing is again at once clear. The culminating moment
+of passion as it appears in the tragedies is not suitable from the
+artistic point of view for reproduction but the comedies, from their
+admixture of the flegmatic, the almost imperativ concomitant of
+Shaksperean humor, tone down this superlativ expression and are
+therefore within the pale. How Tieck carries out his theory in practis,
+has been sufficiently shown: his love for the sentimental and
+melodramatic, for the climatic and striking lead him to neglect his
+delimiting theoretical remarks.
+
+Before leaving the discussion of Tieck's article, it may be well to
+compare it with another contemporary treatment of the Boydell Gallery.
+This is by the famous traveler and publicist, George Forster. It was
+Forster's account which furnisht Fiorillo with much of his data for the
+treatment of the "Gallery" in his history of British art, but it is
+hardly likely that the account is a source for Tieck. I hav no external
+evidence and the internal evidence is entirely negativ.
+
+If Friedrich Schlegel's estimate of Forster's artistic capabilities be
+accepted, it is just such pictures as these, where the social interest
+is great and the artistic valu is secondary, that should bring out
+Forster's strength of judgment. Forster was also a finely discriminating
+amateur, with a decided sense of tactile form based on a sincere love of
+Greek art and confirmd by a study of Winkelmann and Lessing, beyond whom
+he past in his appreciation of the portrait and the landscape and of the
+coloring of the great masters.
+
+Forster's essay, "Die Kunst und das Zeitalter" (1791), was written about
+the time that he saw the Boydell pictures. It shows his attitude toward
+Greek art and givs more than a hint of his standards which point so
+clearly toward Schiller. His "Ansichten vom Niederrhein," especially the
+discussions of the galleries and collections at Duesseldorf, Brussels and
+Antwerp fully express his ideas on Dutch and Flemish art, especially
+emfasizing the characteristics of Rubens for whose fleshy types Forster
+had little use.
+
+In the discussion of British art which comes as an appendix to the
+"Ansichten," Forster includes a rather detaild description of the
+Boydell paintings. He did not see the engravings, or rather, his
+description is based on the paintings as they hung in the gallery in
+Pall Mall and so the material of this sketch in two parts, is in one way
+fundamentally different from that of Tieck. All the discussion of
+technique in which Tieck was so weak, is entirely lacking in Forster.
+His point of view, too, is different. He is the traveld, experienced man
+from whose traind eye and broad judgment more may be expected than from
+the student Tieck. There is, as Friedrich Schlegel says, an
+out-of-doorness in Forster's work that Tieck could never hav had; the
+over-emfasis on Shakspere on the part of the latter is only one product
+of his inexperience.
+
+In spite of all this, it is surprizing to find what correspondences
+there are between the student Tieck and the more traind Forster. The
+latter who knew vastly more of English life than Tieck, fails to
+understand it in just those vital points where Tieck went farthest
+astray. Smirke and Peters fare badly at his hands, perhaps because of a
+certain puritanism in his atitude, or to quote Schlegel, because "Keine
+Vollkommenheit der Darstellung konnte ihn mit einem Stoff aussoehnen, der
+sein Zartgefuehl verletzte, seine Sittlichkeit beleidigte oder seinen
+Geist unbefriedigt liess." For this reason he can call one of the Peters
+paintings from the "Merry Wives" a brothel (ein Speelhuis) or refer to
+the women of that artist as "lockere Nymphen."
+
+Besides the same general dislike for the caricatures of Smirke that was
+noted in all previous instances, there is the usual praise of Hodges,
+the usual condemnation of Opie's bad drawing. Fueessli, too, comes in for
+his share of the blame: "Der Beifall, welchen Fueesslis Gemaelde in
+England erhalten, bezeichnet mehr als alles die Ueberspannung des
+dortigen Kunstgeschmacks. Dieser junge Schweizer ... brachte nebst der
+Kenntniss akademischer Modelle sein malerisches Kraftgenie mit sich ueber
+das Meer; seiner Phantasie ward es wohl unter wilden Traumgestalten und
+Bildern des Ungewoehnlichen. Diese Stimmung ... verfuehrte ihn nur gar zu
+bald zu allen Ausschweifungen der Manier. Es ist zwar leicht das
+Alltaegliche zu vermeiden, indem man Kontorsionen darstellt ..." (page
+466). Again: "Es sind nicht Menschen, die dieser Kuenstler phantasiert,
+sondern Ungeheuer in halb menschlicher Gestalt, mit einzeln sehr gross
+gezeichneten und sehr verzerrten, verunstalteten Theilen und
+Proportionen: ausgerenkte Handgelenke, aus dem Kopfe springende Augen,
+Bocksphysiognomien u. s. f...." (page 503). Northcote is damned with the
+faint praise "Nicht ohne Verdienst," a frase that clings to the
+characterizations of his work from the _Anzeigen_ to Fiorillo. Barry is
+shown to lack grace, noble greatness and beauty. His distorted figures
+border on caricature and his forms are of giants, colossi. His coloring
+is bad in spite of his theoretical knowlege and good drawing.
+
+Forster sees thru Angelika Kaufmann and Hamilton better than Tieck did.
+Hamilton's paintings are "Machwerk" and his figures move in
+"Tanzschritt," while Angelika's are hermafroditic (page 501). "Die
+deutsche Muse Angelika verbarg die Inkorrektheit und das Einerlei ihrer
+allzuschlanken Figuren unter dem Schleier der Grazie und Unschuld" (page
+459).
+
+For Forster, Shakspere is the most logical portrayer of nature that ever
+existed; he meets the painter halfway in his work by his excellent
+characterization of the salient features of a personage and so givs the
+painter sharply defined subjects for his fantasy. For the artists of the
+British school this is especially valuable because effect is their
+highest aim and beauty only secondary. Extremes of passion,
+astonishment, surprize are strivn for. "Sie hascht nach der Wahrheit der
+Natur in ihren graesslichen Augenblicken und erlaubt ihrer Phantasie den
+verwegenen Flug, nicht in das schoene Feenland des Ideals sondern in die
+verbotene Region der Geister und Gespenster."
+
+But while the general condemnation of British artists shows far more
+perspectiv than is found in Tieck, the acquaintance with the details of
+Shakspere's plays is never drawn on to point out any defects in choice
+of subject matter. Forster can refer to the acted plays from an
+experience that was at this time still denied Tieck, but this experience
+does not result in any well-defined theory of Shakspere-illustration as
+a whole and as we found Tieck to hav. The melancholy Jacques in the
+forest is a good scene for Forster, whereas Tieck rejected it as having
+no structural relation to the rest of the play. Forster finds it worthy
+of portrayal as one of the moments arising from Shakspere's variety of
+scene, character and condition of life, to say nothing of the chance to
+show the lonesome melancholy stag by the famous animal painter, Gilpin!
+
+On Reynolds' famous Beauford picture, Tieck and Forster are entirely at
+odds. For Tieck the execution is terrible, the choice of subject
+satisfactory. For Forster, the choice is inexcusable, the execution in
+part masterly; a dying criminal in his last throes seems to Forster an
+utterly impossible subject for representation. So with Kirk's picture
+from "Titus Adronicus": in spite of the attempt to meliorate the
+impression of the butcherd Lavinia, the whole picture remains for
+Forster a disgusting sight. The conclusion is obvious: Forster's sense
+of delicacy rebeld at the crass and brutal; wildness and terror shockt
+him.
+
+But if Tieck's article compares favorably with Forster's in all points
+respecting the "Gallery" itself, it must be confest that the political,
+patriotic note, the application to Germany of the principles of national
+betterment in art which arose in the mind of Boydell, escape him. He was
+not, of course, like Forster, a political writer, and revolutionary
+conditions had no immediate interest for him as for the older man. And
+so his art criticism does not look forward to Germany as does Forster's
+or as does that of a propagandist like Kleist in his _Abendblaetter_
+article. Tieck does not rise above the milieu; the "Gallery" offers no
+hold with which to test contemporary art in his own land. It is only a
+beginning, clearsighted in part and in general sustaind, an ernest of
+what the matured criticism of the Romantic school was later on to do.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+[1] Die Kupferstiche nach der Shakspeare-Gallerie in London. Briefe an
+ einen Freund. 1793. "Kritische Schriften," vol. I, pages 3-34. [Kr.
+ Sch.]
+
+[2] For full title, see bibliografy.
+
+[3] E. g. in the letters.
+
+[4] Krit. Sch. I, 4. Jean Paul, Titan, I, 42. [Berlin, 1827.]
+
+[5] 1719-1804.
+
+[6] Preface to the Prospectus and quoted in the preface to the
+ "Gallery."
+
+[7] The facts on the "Gallery" are pretty well scatterd. The
+ statements in Allibone are not all correct. See Graves, "New
+ Light on Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery," _Magazine of Art_, vol.
+ XXI, page 143 ff. For some details as to the disposition of the
+ pictures, see "Notes and Queries," series 2, vol. VIII, vol. IX,
+ 313, vol. X, 52. Also Pye, "Patronage of British Art," London,
+ 1848.
+
+[8] Preface to critical works.
+
+[9] Page 7.
+
+[10] Copy in the Columbia University Library.
+
+[11] Mr. L. L. Mackall kindly furnisht me with this information.
+
+[12] This Ms. (79 pp., vellum, quarto) contains the signatures
+ of all the subscribers or their agents. Romney, Warren Hastings,
+ Wedgewood, the King, the Queen and the Prince Regent besides a
+ number of English "persons of quality" are represented. The
+ poets are conspicuously wanting. The King of England gave the
+ copy to the University Library. Cp. _Goettinger Gelehrte
+ Anzeigen_ (G. G. A.) 1791, page 1793; 1793, page 561.
+
+[13] At least until after the time concerned here. This from
+ Wuestenfeld on the contributor to the _Anzeigen_ furnisht by
+ Professor Wilkens.
+
+[14] The plates which come into consideration and the order in which
+ they occur in Tieck are as follow:
+
+ "Love's Labor Lost," Tieck, page 9, (1) IV, 1 (G. G. A., 1794, page
+ 10); (2) IV, 2, small plates; (3) V, 2.
+
+ "Merry Wives of Windsor," Tieck, page 10, I, 1 (G. G. A., 1794,
+ page 969); page 12, II, 1 (G. G. A., 1794, page 969); page 13
+ (G. G. A., page 959); page 13, I, 4; IV, 1, small plates (G. G.
+ A., 1794, page 970); V, 5.
+
+ "Twelfth Night," II, 3 (G. G. A., 1794, page 970); Tieck, page 15. A
+ small plate.
+
+ "Two Gent. Verona," Tieck, page 16, Last Scene (G. G. A., 1793, page
+ 903); 17, IV, 3. Small plate.
+
+ "As You Like It," Tieck, page 17, II, 1 (G. G. A., 1793, page
+ 561); page 17, last scene (G. G. A., 1793, page 561).
+
+ "Much Ado About Nothing," Tieck, page 19, III, 1 (G. G. A.,
+ 1791, page 1794); IV, 1; IV, 2.
+
+ "Winter's Tale," Tieck, page 21, II, 3 (G. G. A., 1794, page 9);
+ IV, 3; V, 3; page 22, two small plates (G. G. A., 1794, page
+ 10).
+
+ I "Henry VI.," Tieck, page 24, II, 5 (G. G. A., 1794, page 970).
+
+ II "Henry VI.," Tieck page 25, III, 3 (G. G. A., 1794, page 10).
+
+ "Richard III.," Tieck, page 27, III, 1 (G. G. A., 1791, page
+ 1794).
+
+ "Titus Andronicus," Tieck, page 28, IV, 1 (G. G. A., 1794, page
+ 970); page 29 (G. G. A. 1794, page 970).
+
+ "Romeo and Juliet," Tieck, page 30, I, 5 (G. G. A., 1793, page 561);
+ IV, 5 (G. G. A. page 561); V, 3 (G. G. A., 1793, page 562).
+
+ "King Lear," Tieck, page 31, I, 1 (G. G. A., 1793, page 903-4);
+ page 32, III, 4 (G. G. A. 1793, page 904); page 33, last scene
+ (G. G. A., 1793, page 904); page 34 (G. G. A., 1793, Page 904).
+
+Tieck mentions in all 39 plates; of these 24 are large plates
+ and the rest small ones. In only 6 instances does Tieck enter
+ into even a slite criticism of the small plates. In some cases,
+ his remarks are so meager that it is only by a comparison with
+ the original that we can tell what plate he means.
+
+[15] Boydell's Catalog, page 28 ff. It may be worth while to
+ mention in this connection that the Catalog has a number of
+ errors in the list of these supplementary plates. The proof was
+ red carelessly and the results are jumbled. Only by a careful
+ comparison with the originals in the 1802 edition, for the
+ results of which there is no room here, can this be straightend
+ out.
+
+[16] "Romantische Schule," page 57-8.
+
+[17] For possible influence of Du Bos, cf. Tieck's doctrin of
+ poetry as an imitativ art. Kr. Sch., page 24. See Howard,
+ _Publications of the Mod. Lang. Assn._, vol. XXII, page 4. The
+ letters to Wackenroder in Holtei, 300 Briefe, etc.
+
+[18] Volbehr, Dessoir, Stoecker. D. L. D.
+
+[19] Kr. Sch. I, 321. It is doutful if Tieck knew any of the
+ Hogarth Shakspere plates. The dates of issu (Dobson, pp. 310,
+ 340 ff.) are all later than the writing of the Boydell article.
+ For Tieck and Hogarth, Koepke, I, page 148.
+
+[20] Of course the emfasis on color is entirely wanting in the
+ body of the work. Tieck nowhere in the essay points out how
+ engraving can suggest color.
+
+[21] Literary paralels are at once apparent. So, Schiller's
+ Prolog to "Wallenstein."
+
+[22] Schriften, vol. X, pages 302-3.
+
+[23] Weitenkampf, 155.
+
+[24] One or two actual errors of fact hav crept into the paper.
+ Kyder for Ryder and Northcate for Northcote. The latter error
+ and Tieck's Slatbard may hav arisn, as Professor Wilkens
+ suggested to me, from Tieck's notoriously bad handwriting which
+ was misinterpreted by the compositor. At any rate, Tieck made no
+ later effort to correct. The "Rev." before Peters' name misled
+ both Tieck and Forster into laying too much emfasis on his
+ sacerdotal function. The G. G. A. calls him a dilettante.
+
+[25] Walzel, 279; Sulger-Gebing, 41, 154. Engel ("Angelika
+ Kaufmann," 36, 37, 43) while not denying her preference for this
+ dress, is of the opinion that it was not suited to her. "Im
+ Schaeferkleide, den Hirtenstab in der Hand, Atlaspantoeffelchen an
+ den Fuessen, ein bebaendertes Huetchen auf der gepuderten Coiffure,
+ umgeben von einem Hofstaat schoengeistiger Verehrer und
+ Verehrerinnen, so hatte sie unzweifelhaft eine weit natuerlichere
+ und tuechtigere Figur gemacht als in der Vestalinnentracht die
+ sie--das Bregenzerwaldnymphlein--in der Folgezeit zu bevorzugen
+ pflegte."
+
+[26] Biografers of Sir Joshua generally agree that his pictures
+ in this series, with the possible exception of "Puck," are
+ failures. Boydell paid 400 and 1500 guineas for the two largest
+ and this was considerd by some an exorbitant price.
+
+[27] Minor's edition, pages 27, 30.
+
+[28] There is the possibility of a crude symbolism having been
+ intended for Shakspere's "Blow, winds," etc.
+
+[29] The West picture was very popular. Cf. _Teutsche Mercur_,
+ 1791, pages 445-6, for a criticism of Berger's engraving from
+ it.
+
+[30] See, 300 Bfe. page 79.
+
+[31] This is a difficult point to decide. The citizen class was
+ limited by such sumptuary laws as is shown by the records, but
+ most writers agree that the violations were open and common.
+
+[32] The figure with the helmet is unquestionably that of
+ Marius, the tribune. He enters from the street and is drest in
+ street costume. Titus, who has been in the house, wears only a
+ fillet around his hed. In the play, Marius commands the boy to
+ stand near him for refuge, but in the picture the moment just
+ previous is chosen, when the boy is still near his grandfather.
+ Forster wrongly holds that the helmeted figure is Titus.
+
+[33] Cf. A. W. v. Schlegel in _Athenaeum_, 2, 212, "Man kennt
+ Reynolds Ugolino aus dem Kupferstiche: es ist ein alter Mann,
+ der hungert, aber es ist nicht Ugolino." For his criticism of
+ Boydell, 2, 198.
+
+[34] Marie Joachimi-Dege has given a very careful account of the
+ erly Romantic and Storm and Stress attitude toward Shakspere.
+ Her book needs supplementation thru a study of the Romantic
+ Shakspere criticism, written from the English point of view.
+
+[35] In his Academy discourses. Bohn ed., vol. I, page 460 ff.
+ Reynolds points out that those who praise the "invention" of
+ Timanthes in the Agamemnon picture hav not been painters but
+ literary men. They use it as an illustration of their own art.
+ He says, "I fear that we have but very scanty means of exciting
+ those powers over the imagination which make so very
+ considerable and refined a part of poetry. (Cf. Boydell's
+ preface.) It is a doubt with me if we should even make the
+ attempt. The chief, if not the only occasion which the painter
+ has for this artifice, is when the subject is improper to be
+ more fully represented, either for the sake of decency, or to
+ avoid what would be disagreeable to be seen; and this is not to
+ raise or increase the passions, which is the reason given for
+ this practice, but on the contrary to diminish their effect....
+ We cannot ... recommend an undeterminate manner or vague ideas
+ of any kind, in a complete or finished picture. This notion,
+ therefore, of leaving anything to the imagination opposes a very
+ fixed and indispensible rule in our art,--that everything shall
+ be carefully and distinctly expresst, as if the painter knew,
+ with correctness and precision, the exact form and character of
+ whatever is introduced into the picture. This ... must not be
+ sacrificed ... for uncertain and doubtful beauty which, not
+ naturally belonging to our art, will probably be sought for
+ without success." After praising the artifis of Timanthes,
+ Reynolds goes on to say, "Suppose this method of leaving the
+ expression of grief to the imagination, to be ... the invention
+ of the painter and that it deserves all the praise that has been
+ given to it, it is still a trick that will serve only once;
+ whoever does it a second time, will not only want novelty, but
+ will be justly suspected of using artifice to evade
+ difficulties. If difficulties overcome make a great part of the
+ merit of Art, difficulties evaded can deserve but little
+ commendation." Among the names of those who discuss the "trick"
+ Lessing's is, of course, wanting. Gilray's satirical plate on
+ Boydell should be compared for this and other points. Copy in N.
+ Y. Public Library.
+
+[36] In this connection, the letters mention Engel's
+ "Mimik"(1785).
+
+[37] Some of the latter pictures by Smirke are very fine; e. g.,
+ the face of Jessica which justifies the statement of the Dict.
+ Nat. Biog. that Smirke had "good drawing, refinement, quiet
+ humor." Bryan has a cooler comment: "Smirke was well spoken of
+ in the comedy vein." Tieck likes him better in tragedy (page
+ 34). Fiorillo's comment is "Seit Hogarths Zeiten hat kein
+ Kuenstler so viel Charakter oder so viel Ausdruck in seine
+ Figuren gebracht, noch eine Scene mit so viel echter Laune
+ bearbeitet."
+
+[38] To me the Tieck-Schlegel translation of this scene misses
+ all the best points of the original. To be sure, Tieck had
+ nothing to do with its translation. (Friesen, I, 136; Sybel,
+ III, 463 ff). It was not that Tieck was not interested in puns,
+ altho the Dr. Cajus scene seems uninteresting to him on that
+ account. Tieck himself made a good many puns. Cf.
+ "Viehsiognomie," the first lines of his sonnet on the sonnet and
+ the "gemein" from the _Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek_ in
+ "Das juengste Gericht." His sensing of English puns seems not to
+ hav been so keen. So in a discussion of Mss. readings toward the
+ end of the essay on the erly English Theater (Kr. Sch. I, 320)
+ after calling one faulty reading "Unsinn" he continues, "In
+ derselben Rede:
+
+
+ If you can construe but your doctor's bill
+ Parse your wife's waiting woman, etc.
+
+
+ Parse? Was kann das bedeuten? Pierce ist dem aufmerksamen Auge
+ leserlich genug." Tieck seems to hav mist the play on the
+ grammatical idea. To be sure, I hav not seen the Ms., but Tieck
+ was no very careful reader or copyist.
+
+[39] This is a scene where Tieck saw both L. and S. There were
+ two different paintings of the same subject, one with fewer
+ figures, and Tieck rightly points out that the less crowded one
+ is the better. One of the engravings is by W. Blake and is not
+ given in any list of that artist's work. Mr. W. G. Robertson,
+ the most recent biografer of Blake informs me in a letter that
+ he does not know it.
+
+
+
+
+A PARTIAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+
+Athenaeum. Eine Zeitschrift von A. W. Schlegel und Friederich
+ Schlegel, Zweiter Band. Berlin, 1799.
+
+Boydell, John.
+ Catalogue of the ... Shakspeare Gallery, London, 1789. The first
+ edition of the catalog givs the painters' names only: subsequent
+ editions add the names of the engravers. There are copies of the
+ various editions in the Columbia, Harvard and New York Public
+ Libraries.
+ A Catalogue of Prints ... comprising the stock of J. and J.
+ Boydell, London, 1808.
+ Copy in N. Y. Public Library.
+ A Collection of prints from pictures painted for the purpose of
+ illustrating the dramatic works of Shakespeare, by the artists
+ of Great Britain. London ... 1803, 2 vols. in one, atlas folio.
+ There are many copies in the U. S. and there is also an American
+ reprint with letterpress explanatory of the plates.
+
+Dessoir, M. K. P. Moritz als Aesthetiker.
+
+Dobson, Austin. William Hogarth, New York and London, 1907.
+
+Engel, J. J. Ideen zu einer Mimik, 1848.
+
+Engel. Angelika Kaufmann, 1903.
+
+Fiorillo, J. D. Geschichte der zeichnenden Kuenste, etc. Bd. V.
+ Geschichte der Malerei in Grossbrittanien. Goettingen, 1808.
+
+Forster, Georg. Saemmtliche Schriften, III. Leipzig, 1843.
+
+Friessen, H. von. Ludwig Tieck. Erinnerungen eines alten
+ Freundes. Wien, 1872.
+
+Goettingen. Anzeigen fuer Gelehrte Sachen, etc. The volumes from
+ 1791 to 1803 were used.
+
+Haym, R. Die romantische Schule, 1870.
+
+Holtei, K. Drei hundert Briefe aus zwei Jahrhunderten,
+ Hannover, 1872.
+
+Joachimi-Dege, M. Deutsche Shakspeare-Probleme im XVIII.
+ Jahrhundert und im Zeitalter der Romantik. Leipzig, 1907.
+
+Koepke, R. Ludwig Tieck, Leipzig, 1855.
+
+Minor, J. Friedrich Schlegel. Seine prosaischen
+ Jugendschriften, Wien 1906.
+
+Tieck und Wackenroder. Kuerschners D. N. L. Bd. 145.
+
+Moritz, K. P. Ueber die nachahmende Bildung des Schoenen. In D.
+ L. D.
+
+Reynolds, J. Academy Discourses. Bohn Edition, London, 1846.
+
+Shakspere, W. The Dramatic Works of William Shakspeare, London,
+ 1802.
+ This is the Steevens edition in nine volumes. Copy in New
+ York Public Library.
+
+Spooner, Shearjashub. Prospectus for publishing an American
+ edition of Boydell's illustrations of Shakespeare, N. Y., 1848.
+
+Sulger-Gebing. Die Brueder A. W. und F. Schlegel und die
+ bildende Kunst, 1897.
+
+Sybel. Erinnerungen an F. von Uechtritz. Leipzig, 1884.
+
+Volbehr. Goethe und die bildende Kunst, 1897.
+
+Walzel, O. F. Friedrich Schlegel's Briefe an seinen Bruder
+ August Wilhelm. Berlin, 1890.
+
+Wietenkampf, F. How to appreciate prints. New York, 1908.
+
+Zelak. Tieck und Shakspere. Tarnopol, 1900.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+There is much idiosyncratic spelling in both English and German. This
+has been retained, apart from the following four typos:
+
+page 15 "sehn" amended to "sehr";
+
+page 30 "obobserver" amended to "observer";
+
+page 40 "int he" amended to "in the";
+
+page 54 "Grossbittanien" amended to "Grossbrittanien".
+
+On page 32, the typo "est giebt" has been left unchanged: it could be
+either "es giebt" or "erst giebt" (more likely).
+
+Also on p. 32 "zu grob ist" should probably be "zu gross ist", but has
+been left unchanged, as the letter ss does not appear elsewhere in the
+text.
+
+Three obvious errors in punctuation have also been amended, as follows:
+
+page 12 "page 28." amended to "page 28:";
+
+page 34 "darstellen will." amended to "darstellen will,";
+
+page 41 Tanzschritt," amended to "Tanzschritt";
+
+page 44 "G. G. A.." amended to "G. G. A.,".
+
+page 48 "in in Das" amended to "in Das".
+
+Anchors for footnootes 31 and 36 are missing. They have been inserted in
+the most likely locations.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tieck's Essay on the Boydell Shakspere
+Gallery, by George Henry Danton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOYDELL SHAKSPERE GALLERY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 34937.txt or 34937.zip *****
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+
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+
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