In the history of the development of good literary taste in Germany, Christian Wernicke has long held an honorable position. The praise of Johann Ulrich König, of Bodmer, of Hagedorn, and Ramier; the commendation, the more impressive for being qualified with criticisms, of Lessing and Herder; and the tendency of historians of literature to maintain groups and relationships once established, have all contributed to secure to Wernicke the title of a redoubtable opponent of the so-called second Silesian school of poets. Until recently, however, little more has been known about his personal character and career than what he himself incidentally disclosed in his verses and in his unusually frank and circumstantial foot-notes. Koberstein, with accustomed succinctness, summarized Wernicke's critical opinions; Gervinus, in one of his famous parallels, contrasted Wernicke unfavorably as a man and as a poet with Logau; Scherer barely mentioned him; Francke did not mention him at all; Ludwig Fulda, without adding much to our knowledge, set forth in an excellent brief essay the proper bearing of the facts that were then known, and corrected thereby the somewhat distorted presentation of Gervinus; but not until the investigations and fortunate discoveries of Julius Elias and Leonhard Neubaur had brought a host of new facts to light was an adequate estimate of either the personal or the literary character of Wernicke possible. We now have such an estimate by Erich Schmidt. Looking eagerly forward to the reprint of Wernicke's epigrams promised by Elias, E. Schmidt says of the epigrammatist, “philosophisch reichgebildet, in alter und moderner Literatur ungemein belesen, huldigt er, mit Boileau vom Dichter vollständige Kenntnis der Welt, zumai des Hofes fordernd, einer vornehmen Poetik; ” and adds, “wir kennen vor Liscow, ja vor Lessing keinen klareren, gescheiteren Kopf.” The question, therefore, how far Wernicke is to be regarded as a predecessor of Lessing in the development of a critical theory of poetry appears to deserve serious attention.