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Introductory Note
Introductory Note
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing was born at Kamenz, Germany, January 22, 1729,
the son of a Lutheran minister. He was educated at Meissen and Leipzic, and
began writing for the stage before he was twenty. In 1748 he went to Berlin,
where he met Voltaire and for a time was powerfully influenced by him. The
most important product of this period was his tragedy of "Miss Sara Samson," a
modern version of the story of Medea, which began the vogue of the sentimental
middle-class play in Germany. After a second sojourn in Leipzic (1755-1758),
during which he wrote criticism, lyrics, and fables, Lessing returned to
Berlin and began to publish his "Literary Letters," making himself by the
vigor and candor of his criticism a real force in contemporary literature.
From Berlin he went to Breslau, where he made the first sketches of two of his
greatest works, "Laocoon" and "Minna von Barnhelm," both of which were issued
after his return to the Prussian capital. Failing in his effort to be
appointed Director of the Royal Library by Frederick the Great, Lessing went
to Hamburg in 1767 as critic of a new national theatre, and in connection with
this enterprise he issued twice a week the "Hamburgische Dramaturgie," the two
volumes of which are a rich mine of dramatic criticism and theory.
His next residence was at Wolfenbuttel, where he had charge of the ducal
library from 1770 till his death in 1781. Here he wrote his tragedy of "Emilia
Galotti," founded on the story of Virginia, and engaged for a time in violent
religious controversies, one important outcome of which was his "Education of
the Human Race." On being ordered by the Brunswick authorities to give up
controversial writing, he found expression for his views in his play "Nathan
the Wise," his last great production.
The importance of Lessing`s masterpiece in comedy, "Minna von Barnhelm,"
it is difficult to exaggerate. It was the beginning of German national drama;
and by the patriotic interest of its historical background, by its sympathetic
treatment of the German soldier and the German woman, and by its happy
blending of the amusing and the pathetic, it won a place in the national heart
from which no succeeding comedy has been able to dislodge it.
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