Karl Friedrich Henckell (17 April 1864, Hanover – 30 July 1929, Lindau) was a German author, poet, and publisher.
Henckell studied at the universities of Berlin, Heidelberg, Munich, and Zurich. He lived abroad, in Switzerland, in Zurich and much later Muri (Bern), in Italy (Milan), and in Belgium (Brussels), and was well acquainted with the modern literatures of Europe, on which he frequently lectured, besides giving readings from his own poems. From 1896 until 1905 he was his own publisher, as well as the publisher of other literature,[1] in Zurich and Leipzig. He settled in Munich in 1908. His poetry is revolutionary and socialistic in its tendency.
The composer Richard Strauss set nine of Henckell's poems to music, the first one in 1894, "Ruhe, meine Seele!" (Rest, my soul).[2]
Works
edit- Skizzenbuch (1884)
- Strophen (1887)
- Diorama (1889); a collected edition in 1898
- Gipfel und Gründe (1904)
- Mein Lied (1906)
- Schwingungen (1907)
- Im Weitergehn (1911)
References
edit- ^ Karl Henckell as Publisher[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Richard Strauss: a chronicle of the early years, 1864–1898, p. 450 by Willi Schuh, translated by Mary Whittall. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982. ISBN 978-0-521-24104-5
External links
edit- Media related to Karl Henckell at Wikimedia Commons
- German Wikisource has original text related to this article: Karl Henckell
- Karl Henckell website[permanent dead link ] maintained in German by Monsalvat Verlags, Zurich
- Works by Karl Friedrich Henckell at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)