[735]. Once more the sordid “business” view which we noticed in regard to Flemming seems to have crept over him. He did, of course, admire the Nibelugen, and the Ballads, and some other things. But his general belittlement remains.
[736]. Vols. xii.-xv. of the Cotta ed.
[737]. V. sup., p. [368], and inf., p. [389].
[739]. All these are in vol. xii. ed. cit.
[740]. “On the Ground of Pleasure in Tragic Objects,” and “On the Tragic Art.” Vol. xiii.
[741]. “Über Anmuth und Würde,” “Über das Pathetische,” “Zerstreute Betrachtungen,” and “Über die aesthetische Erziehung der Menschen.” All these fall under our exclusion of pure æsthetic, after the earliest examples in each country.
[742]. The adjectives do not give the force of their originals. Schiller meant the poets who are not self-conscious and those who are.
[744]. In a note subjoined when the review was republished, eleven years after its first appearance, after Bürger’s death, and after Schlegel’s counter-blow.