Angelus Silesius
ANGELUS SILESIUS (1624-1677), German religious poet, was born
in 1624 at Breslau. His family name was Johann Scheffler, but he is
generally known by the pseudonym Angelus Silesius, under which he
published his poems and which marks the country of his birth. Brought up
a Lutheran, and at first physician to the duke of Wurzberg-Oels, he
joined in 1652 the Roman Catholic Church, in 1661 took orders as a
priest, and became coadjutor to the prince bishop of Breslau. He died at
Breslau on the 9th of July 1677. In 1657 Silesius published
under the title Heilige Seelenlust, oder geistliche Hirtenlieder der in
ihren Jesum verliebten Psyche (1657), a collection of 205 hymns, the
most beautiful of which, such as, Liebe, die du mich zum Bilde deiner
Gottheit hast gemacht and Mir nach, spricht Christus, unser Held,
have been adopted in the German Protestant hymnal. More remarkable,
however, is his Geistreiche Sinn-und Schluss-reime (1657),
afterwards called Cherubinischer Wandersmann (1674). This is a
collection of rhymed distichs embodying a strange mystical pantheism
drawn mainly from the writings of Jakob Boehme and his followers.
Silesius delighted specially in the subtle paradoxes of mysticism. The
essence of God, for instance, he held to be love; God, he said, can love
nothing inferior to himself; but he cannot be an object of love to
himself without going out, so to speak, of himself, without manifesting
his infinity in a finite form; in other words, by becoming man. God and
man are therefore essentially one.
A complete edition of Scheffler’s works was published by D.A.
Rosenthal, 2 vols. (Regensburg, 1862). Both the Cherubinischer
Wandersmann and Heilige Seelenlust have been republished by
G. Ellinger (1895 and 1901); a selection from the former work by O.E.
Hartleben (1896). For further notices of Silesius’ life and work, see
Hoffmann von Fallersleben in Weimarisches Jahrbuch I. (Hanover, 1854);
A. Kahlert, Angelus Silesius (1853); C. Seltmann, Angelus
Silesius und seine Mystik (1896), and a biog. by H. Mahn (Dresden,
1896). |
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