Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on the Translations
- Introduction: Schiller and the German Novella
- The Translations
- 1 A Magnanimous Act from Most Recent History (1782)
- 2 A Remarkable Example of Female Revenge (Taken from a Manuscript by the late Denis Diderot) (1785)
- 3 The Criminal of Lost Honor. A True Story (1786)
- 4 The Duke of Alba's Breakfast at Rudolstadt Castle in the Year 1547 (1788)
- 5 Game of Fate. A Fragment of a True Story (1789)
- 6 The Spiritualist. From the Memoirs of Count von O** (1789)
- 7 The Philosophical Dialog from The Spiritualist (1789)
- 8 Haoh-Kiöh-Tschuen (The Tale of a Perfect Match) (1800–1801)
- The Critical Essays
- Chronological List of Schiller's Literary Prose Works in English Translation
- Works Cited
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
3 - The Criminal of Lost Honor. A True Story (1786)
from The Translations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on the Translations
- Introduction: Schiller and the German Novella
- The Translations
- 1 A Magnanimous Act from Most Recent History (1782)
- 2 A Remarkable Example of Female Revenge (Taken from a Manuscript by the late Denis Diderot) (1785)
- 3 The Criminal of Lost Honor. A True Story (1786)
- 4 The Duke of Alba's Breakfast at Rudolstadt Castle in the Year 1547 (1788)
- 5 Game of Fate. A Fragment of a True Story (1789)
- 6 The Spiritualist. From the Memoirs of Count von O** (1789)
- 7 The Philosophical Dialog from The Spiritualist (1789)
- 8 Haoh-Kiöh-Tschuen (The Tale of a Perfect Match) (1800–1801)
- The Critical Essays
- Chronological List of Schiller's Literary Prose Works in English Translation
- Works Cited
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
IN THE ENTIRE HISTORY OF HUMANKIND, there is no chapter more instructive for the heart and the mind than the annals of human aberrations. For every great crime committed, an equally great force was at work. If the mysterious play of desire is hidden in the faint light of normal emotion, how much more striking, colossal, and transparent it becomes in the state of over-whelming passion. The more sophisticated student of human nature, who knows just how predictable the mechanism of normal free will is, and to what extent it is possible to deduce through analogy, will transfer many an observation from this field into personal knowledge of psychology, and apply this insight in the realm of moral activity.
The human heart is something so simple, and yet so multifaceted. One and the same capacity or desire can play out in thousands of shapes and directions, can cause thousands of contradictory phenomena, can appear in different combinations in thousands of characters, and thousands of dissimilar characters and events can be spun from the one and the same impulse, even if the individual in question never recognizes the relationship of his actions to those of the rest. If a new Linnaeus were to appear and classify humankind into genus and species according to drives and inclinations, how astonished we would be to find those whose vice must now suffocate in a constricted bourgeois sphere and the narrow confines of the law, together in one and the same species with a monster like Cesare Borgia.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Schiller's Literary Prose WorksNew Translations and Critical Essays, pp. 39 - 55Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2008