Ernst Stadler
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with the founder of Stadler Rail.
Ernst Stadler (11 August 1883 — 30 October 1914) was a German Expressionist poet. He was born in Colmar, Alsace-Lorraine and educated in Strasbourg and Oxford. His early verse was influenced by Stefan George but after 1911, Stadler began moving in a different direction and his most important volume of poetry, Der Aufbruch, which appeared in 1914, is regarded as a key work of early Expressionism. The poems of Der Aufbruch are a celebration of the poet's joy in life and are written in long, free verse lines inspired by the example of Walt Whitman. Stadler was killed in battle at Zandvoorde near Ypres in the early months of World War One.
[edit] Sources
- Ernst Stadler Der Aufbruch (ed. Heinze Rölleke, Reclam, 1967)
- Gedichte des Expressionismus (ed. Dietrich Bode, Reclam, 1966)