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Home  »  library  »  BIOS  »  Gustav Gans zu Putlitz (1821–1890)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Gustav Gans zu Putlitz (1821–1890)

Putlitz, Gustav Heinrich Gans, Edler Herr von und zu (pöt’lits). A German poet and novelist; born at Retzien, Prussia, March 20, 1821; died there, Sept. 9, 1890. He began his literary career by writing a number of little comedies dealing with high social life, all in a vein of lively humor; among them are: ‘The Heart Forgotten’; ‘Watering-Places’; ‘Family Quarrels.’ He wrote also some exquisite short tales,—‘What the Forest Tells,’ ‘Forget-me-not,’ ‘Arabesques’; ‘Don John of Austria,’ a tragedy (1863); and numerous other plays; also a series of novels,—‘The Alpine Bride’ (1870); ‘Sparks ’Neath the Ashes’ (1871); ‘The Nightingale’ (1872); and ‘My Home: Recollections of Childhood and Youth’ (1885).