

The author Spielhagen In Germany ranks very much as Thackeray does with us, and many of his English reviewers place him at the head and front of German novelists."- Troy Daily Times. The portraitures of characteristic foibles and peculiarities remind one much of the masterhand of the great Thackeray. "The work is one of immense vigor the characters are extraordinary, yet not unnatural the plot is the sequence of an admirably-sustained web of incident and action. One sees, moreover, in his pages, how powerful is the impression which America has of late been making upon the mind of Europe."- Boston Commonwealth. Terse, pointed, brilliant, rapid, and no dreamer, he has the best traits of the French manner, while in earnestness and fulness of matter he is thoroughly German. "He strikes with a blow like a blacksmith, making the sparks fly and the anvil ring. Has no superior in German romance for its enthusiastic and lively descriptions, and for the dignity and the tenderness with which its leading characters are invested."- New York Evening Post.

In other words, these characters live, they are men and women, and the whole mystery of humanity is upon each of them. "The reader lives among them (the characters) as he does among his acquaintances, and may plead each one's case as plausibly to his own judgment as he can those of the men whose mixed motives and actions he sees around him. … At any rate, they are vastly superior to the bulk of English novels which are annually poured out upon us-as much above Trollope's as Steinberger Cabinet is better than London porter.- Springfield Republican. There is more depth of passion and of thought in Spielhagen, together with a French liveliness by no means common in German novelists. He has none of the tiresome detail of Auerbach, while he lacks somewhat that excellent man's profound devotion to the moral sentiment. With these he deals in a poetic, ideal fashion, yet also with humor, and, what is less to be expected in a German, with sparkling, flashing wit, and a cynical vein that reminds one of Heine.
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Spielhagen means to illustrate what Goethe speaks of-natures not in full possession of themselves, 'who are not equal to any situation in life, and whom no situation satisfies'-the Hamlet of our latest civilization. "The name is suggested by a passage nn Goethe, which serves as a motto to the book. If it has not produced a Thackeray, or a Dickens, it has produced, we venture to think, two writers who are equal to them in genius, and superior to them in the depth and spirituality of their art-Auerbach and Spielhagen."- Putnam's Magazine. … If Germany is poorer than England, as regards the number of its novelists, it is richer when we consider the intellectual value of their works. What separates it from the multitude of American and English novels is the perfection of its plot, and its author's insight into the souls of his characters. "Such a novel as no English author with whom we are acquainted could have written, and no American author except Hawthorne. Published by Good Press, 4064066173319 Table of Contents
