PART  I
Arrival
Now  at  last  we’ve  overcome  all  the  obstacles  in  our  path,  and left them behind us too, on rails as smooth as the ones you’ve been on for so long. And alongside yours, too. I’m unspeakably happy  . .   .  and  this  valley  is  already  a  dear  friend.
Caroline  Schlegel  to  Luise  Gotter,  11  July  1796
 1
‘A  happy  event’ 
Summer  1794:  Goethe  and  Schillers
On 20 July 1794 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe heaved himself into the saddle and rode from his house in the centre of Weimar to Jena, where he planned to attend a botanical meeting of the recently founded  Natural  History  Society.  It  was  a  hot  summer  that  would soon  turn  into  a  glorious  autumn  –  long  sunbaked  months  during which  pears,  apples,  sweet  melons  and  apricots  ripened  four  weeks early and the vineyards produced one of the century’s greatest vintages. 
On  the  fifteen-mile  ride  from  Weimar  to  Jena,  Goethe  passed farmers scything wheat in golden fields and great haystacks awaiting storage  as  winter  fodder  in  the  barns.  After  a  couple  of  hours  of riding through flat farmland, the countryside began to change. Little villages  and  hamlets  snuggled  into  gentle  dips,  and  then  the  forest closed  in  and  the  fields  disappeared.  The  land  became  more  hilly. Shellbearing limestone cliffs rose to the left, exposing the geological memory  of  the  region  when  this  part  of  Germany  had  been  a landlocked  sea  some  240  million  years  ago.  Just  before  he  reached Jena,  Goethe  crossed  the  so called  Snail,  the  steep  hill  named  after the  serpentine  road  that  wound  up  to  its  top. 
Then,  finally,  he  saw  Jena  beneath  him,  nestled  in  a  wide  valley and held in the elbow of the Saale River with the jagged outline of the forested mountains behind. These were more hills than mountains, perhaps, but the views were spectacular – and the reason why Swiss students in Jena lovingly called the surrounding area ‘little Switzerland’.
Goethe was the Zeus of Germany’s literary circles. Born in Frankfurt in  1749  to  a  wealthy  family,  he  had  grown  up  amidst  comfort  and privilege. His maternal grandfather had been the mayor of Frankfurt and his paternal grandfather had made his wealth as a merchant and tailor. Goethe’s father didn’t have to work and had instead managed his  fortunes,  collected  books  and  art,  and  educated  his  children. Though a lively and bright child, Goethe had not shown any excep-tional  talents.  He  loved  to  draw,  was  proud  of  his  immaculate handwriting and enjoyed the theatre. When the French had occupied Frankfurt in 1759 during the Seven Years War and their commander had  been  billeted  at  the  Goethes’  house,  young  Goethe  had  made the  best  of  it  by  learning  French  from  the  occupying  forces. 
He  had  studied  law  in  Leipzig  and  worked  as  a  lawyer,  but  also began to write. In the mid-1770s he had been thrust into the public eye  with  the  publication  of  his  novel
 The  Sorrows  of  Young Werther – the story of a forlorn lover who commits suicide. Goethe’s protagonist  is  irrational,  emotional  and  free.  ‘I  withdraw  into  myself  and find  a  world  there,’  Werther  declares.  The  novel  captured  the  sentimentality of the time and became the book of a generation. A huge international bestseller, it was so popular that countless men, including Carl  August,  the  ruler  of  the  small  Duchy  of  Saxe-Weimar,  had dressed like Werther – wearing a yellow waistcoat and breeches, blue tailcoat  with  brass  buttons,  brown  boots  and  a  round  grey  felt  hat. Chinese  manufacturers  even  produced Werther porcelain  for  the European  market. 
It  was  said  that Werther had  caused  a  wave  of  suicides,  and  forty years  after  its  publication  the  British  poet  Lord  Byron  joked  with Goethe  that  his  protagonist  ‘has  put  more  individuals  out  of  this world than Napoleon himself ’. The Sorrows of Young Werther had been Goethe’s  most  vivid  contribution  to  the  so-called Sturm  und  Drang –  the  Storm  and  Stress  movement  –  which  had  elevated  feelings above  the  rationalism  of  the  Enlightenment.  In  this  period,  which had  celebrated  emotion  in  all  its  extremes,  from  passionate  love  to dark melancholy, from suicidal longings to frenzied delight, Goethe had  become  a  literary  superstar.
The eighteen-year-old Duke Carl August had been so enraptured by  the  novel  that  he  had  invited  Goethe  to  live  and  work  in  the duchy  in  1775.  Goethe  was  twenty-six  when  he  moved  to  Weimar; and he knew how to make an entry, arriving dressed in his Werther uniform. During those early years the poet and the young duke had roistered through the streets and taverns of the town. They had played pranks on unsuspecting locals and flirted with peasant girls. The duke loved  to  gallop  across  the  fields  and  to  sleep  in  hay  barns  or  camp in the forest. There had been drunken brawls, theatrical declarations of love, naked swimming and nightly tree climbing – but those wild years were long gone and Goethe had turned his back on his Sturm und  Drang phase. 
In  time,  both  poet  and  ruler  calmed  down,  and  Goethe  had become  part  of  the  duchy’s  government.  The  small  state  had  just over  a  hundred  thousand  inhabitants  –  tiny  in  comparison  to  the five million people of nearby Prussia, or other powerful states such as Saxony, Bavaria or Württemberg. With a mostly agrarian economy –  grain,  fruit,  wine,  vegetable  gardens  as  well  as  sheep  and  cattle  – the  Duchy  of  Saxe-Weimar  had  little  trade  and  manufacturing,  yet it  maintained  a  bloated  court  of  two  thousand  courtiers,  officials and soldiers, all of whom had to be paid. The town of Weimar itself had a provincial feel. Most of the seven hundred and fifty houses had only one storey and such small windows that they felt gloomy and cramped inside. The streets were dirty, and there were only two busi-nesses in the market square that sold goods which could be classed as luxury items – a perfumery and a textile shop. There wasn’t even a  stagecoach  station.
Goethe  became  Carl  August’s  confidant  and  his  privy  councillor – so trusted that it was rumoured that the duke didn’t decide anything without the poet’s advice. In time, Goethe took charge of the royal theatre  and  of  rebuilding  the  burned down  castle  in  Weimar,  in addition to several other well-paid administrative positions, including the  control  of  the  duchy’s  mines.  He  also  worked  closely  with  his colleague  in  the  Weimar  administration,  minister  Christian  Gottlob Voigt.  A  diligent  worker,  Goethe  was  never  idle  –  ‘I  never  smoked tobacco, never played chess, in short, I never did anything that would have  wasted  my  time.’
In 1794, Goethe was forty-four and no longer the dashing Apollo of his youth. He had put on so much weight that his once beautiful eyes  had  disappeared  into  the  flesh  of  his  cheeks  and  one  visitor compared him to ‘a woman in the last stages of pregnancy’. His nose was aquiline, and like so many contemporaries, his teeth were yellowed and crooked. He had a penchant for stripy and flowery long waist-coats,  which  he  buttoned  tightly  over  his  round  belly.  Unlike  the younger  generation,  who  often  wore  fashionable  loose fitting  trousers,  Goethe  preferred  breeches.  He  wore  boots  with  turned-down tops and always his tricorne. He kept his hair coiffed and powdered, with  two  carefully  pomaded  curls  over  his  ears  and  a  long,  stiff ponytail. Knowing that everybody was watching him, he always made sure to be properly dressed and groomed when he went out. Ennobled by the duke in 1782, he was now Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and lived in a large house in Weimar, where he often tried and failed to work  amid  a  constant  stream  of  strangers  knocking  on  his  door to gawp at the famous poet. He loathed these disruptions almost as much as he hated noise, in particular the rattling of his neighbour’s loom  and  the  skittle  alley  in  a  nearby  tavern.
Goethe  might  have  turned  his  back  on  the Sturm  und  Drang era, but  it  seemed  as  if  his  creativity  had  done  the  same  to  him.  For years  he  had  failed  to  produce  anything  remarkable  and  his  plays were no longer widely staged. He fussed over his writings for years. More than two decades earlier, he had begun to work on his drama Faust but  only  a  few  scenes  had  been  published.  He  had  rewritten and  changed  his  tragedy Iphigenia  in Tauris so  many  times  –  from prose  to  blank  verse,  back  to  prose,  to  its  final  version  in  classical iambic  verse  –  that  he  called  it  his  ‘problem  child’.  And  though  he was the director of the Weimar theatre, he preferred to stage popular plays  by  his  contemporaries  rather  than  his  own.
Botany  was  now  Goethe’s  favourite  subject,  and  the  reason  he often  came  to  Jena.  He  was  overseeing  the  construction  of  a  new botanical garden and institute in Jena. Originally founded in 1548 as a medicinal garden, the university’s existing botanical garden had been used to train physicians, but Duke Carl August had asked Goethe to extend  and  move  it  to  a  new  location,  just  north  of  the  old  town walls.  Goethe  enjoyed  every  aspect  of  the  project  because  it  united his  deep  love  of  nature  and  beauty  with  scientific  rigour.  He  was looking  forward  to  the  meeting  of  the  Natural  History  Society.								
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