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Ernst Lissauer

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Name
  
Ernst Lissauer

Role
  
Poet

Ernst Lissauer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Died
  
December 10, 1937, Vienna, Austria

Ha gesang gegen england ernst lissauer


Ernst Lissauer (16 December 1882, Berlin – 10 December 1937, Vienna) was a German-Jewish poet and dramatist remembered for the phrase Gott strafe England. He also created the Hassgesang gegen England, or "Song of Hate against England".

Lissauer was "a round little man, a jolly face above a double double-chin, bubbling over with self-importance and exuberance" according to his friend Stefan Zweig He was a committed nationalist and a devotee of the Prussian tradition as well as an ambitious poet. Zweig said of him "the more German a thing was, the greater was his enthusiasm for it." His devotion to German history, poetry, art and music was, in his own words, a monomania, and it only increased with the outbreak of World War I when he penned his hate song. Wilhelm II decorated him with the Order of the Red Eagle. Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria ordered it printed on leaflets and distributed to every soldier in the army.

Despite the obvious zeal, Lissauer ended by pleasing no one. He came to be criticised by the vigorous anti-Semitic movement of the day for expressing such "fanatical hatred", which they considered "unreasonable", "utterly un-German", and "characteristic of nothing so much as the Jewish race". Houston Stewart Chamberlain declared that the Teutonic German did not "wallow in Old Testament hate." Over in England, Arthur Conan Doyle said in his book, 'The German War', "This sort of thing is, it must be admitted, very painful and odious. It fills us with a mixture of pity and disgust, and we feel as if - instead of a man - we were really fighting with a furious, screaming woman."

Lissauer himself came to regret writing the Hassgesang, refusing to allow it to be printed in school text books. After the war he said that his poem was born out of the mood of the times, and that he did not really mean it to be taken seriously. In 1926 he said that rather than writing a hymn of hate against England it would have been better if he written a hymn of love for Germany.

In every sense an unfortunate man, Lissauer spared no pains to balance two traditions, one Jewish and the other German, at a time when history was forcing them apart. In 1936, now living in Vienna, he was to write "To the Germans I am a Jew masked as a German; to the Jew a German faithless to Israel."

References

Ernst Lissauer Wikipedia