Conrad Ferdinand Meyer (11 October 1825 – 28 November 1898) was a Swiss poet and historical novelist,

Meyer found his calling only late in life; for many years, being practically bilingual, he wavered between French and German. The Franco-Prussian War brought the final decision. In Meyer's novels, a great crisis often releases latent energies and precipitates a catastrophe. In the same manner, his own life which before the war had been one of dreaming and experimenting, was stirred to the very depths by the events of 1870. Meyer identified himself with the German cause, and as a manifesto of his sympathies published the little epic Hutten's Last Days in 1871. through the conflict between Spain-Austria and France. The hero is a Protestant minister and fanatic patriot who, in his determination to preserve the independence of his little country, does not shrink from murder and treason and in whom noble and base motives are strangely blended.

Lyrics

  • 1867 Balladen
  • 1870 Romanzen und Bilder (Romances and pictures)
  • 1872 Huttens letzte Tage (Hutten's Last Days) – a short epic poem
  • 1873 Engelberg
  • 1882 Gedichte (Poems)

Legacy

It is as a master of narrative ballads, often on historical themes, that Meyer is mostly remembered. His fiction also typically focuses on key historical moments from the Middle Ages, the Reformation and Counter-Reformation.

Meyer's lyric verse is almost entirely the product of his later years. He frequently celebrated human handiwork, especially works of art. Rome and the monumental work of Michelangelo were among decisive experiences in his life.

See also

  • Family romance

Notes

Further reading

  • D'Harcourt, R., C. F. Meyer: Sa vie son œuvre (Paris, 1913)
  • Langmesser, A. Conrad Ferdinand Meyer: Sein Leben, seine Werke und sein Nachlass (Berlin, 1905)
  • Frey, A. Conrad Ferdinand Meyer: Sein Leben und seine Werke (Stuttgart, 1909)
  • Taylor, M. L., A Study of the Technique of C. F. Meyer's Novellen (Chicago, 1909)
  • Blaser, O., C. F. Meyer's Renaissance Novellen (Berne, 1905)
  • Korrodi, E., C. F. Meyer: Studien (Leipzig, 1912)
  • English translation of Meyer's Roman Fountain