As a poet Schiller is in many respects the exact counterpart of Goethe. The latter's lyric verse is the direct result of his everyday experience; his real domain is the simple lyric, das Lied. Schiller, however, confessed that lyric poetry in the narrower sense was not his province, but his exile. Hardly ever did an everyday experience move him to song, and he is at his best in the realm of philosophic poetry, where he has no equal. This philosophic tendency predominates even in his ballads, which are often the embodiment of a philosophical or ethical idea. While they lack the subtle lyrical atmosphere of Goethe's, they are distinguished by rhetorical vigor and dramatic life. Their very structure is dramatic, as an analysis of 18 and 19 will show.
18. Ibykus, a Greek lyric poet of the sixth century B.C., bom in Rhegium, a city in Southern Italy.
1. The Isthmian Games were celebrated every two years on the Isthmus
of Corinth in honor of Poseidon (Neptune), god of the sea.
6. Apollo, the god of song, archery and the sun (hence also called
Helios, 71).
10. AKRORINTH, the citadel of Corinth, situated on a mountain above
the city.
11. The pine was sacred to Poseidon. A wreath of pine was the award
of victory in the games (54).
23. DER GASTLICHE. Zeus, to whom hospitality was sacred.
61. PRYTANE, m.—en, prytanis, the chief magistrate.
82. BÜHNE, here used for the tiers of seats for the spectators.
Compare Schaugerüste, 95.
91. KEKROPS' STADT==Athens. Kekrops, the legendary founder of the state of Athens. AULIS, a harbor in Boeotia.