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A CENTURY OF SEALSFIELD SCHOLARSHIP
By ADOLF E. SCHROEDER
In 1939, writing " Ein Gedenkblatt zu Charles Sealsfields 75. Todestag:
Der literarische Kolumbus der 'Neuen Welt,',"¹ the University of Vienna's
distinguished Germanist, Professor Eduard Castle, predicted the imminent
rediscovery of the writer characterized by Heinrich Laube in 1835 as "Der
neue Unbekannte,"² and subsequently as "Der Grosse Unbekannte der
deutschen Literatur,"³ by those critics and reviewers who considered his
ethnographical novels of America comparable to Scott's historical novels:
in conception and vision, at least, and in their grasp of the American char-
acter and experience, if not always in actual realization.
Castle's optimism was no doubt founded upon the plans then underway
for the celebration, in 1943, of Sealsfield's one hundred and fiftieth birthday.
The first World War had resulted in the suspension of arrangements to
publish a definitive edition of Sealsfield's works in the Bibliothek deutscher
Schriftsteller aus Böhmen under the general editorship of Otto Heller. Com-
missioned in 1907 to prepare a "historisch-kritische Ausgabe," Heller re-
ported that two of a projected eighteen volumes were ready for the printer
when the war broke out, and the subsidies pledged by the Bohemian
parliament to support the undertaking were annulled. In 1939 he expressed
the hope that the "frustrated design of 1907"
4
would still materialize under
American auspices, but he died two years later without seeing his hope
realized. Castle, with the dedicated assistance of a private Sealsfield
scholar and collector, Albert Kresse of Stuttgart, acquired much of the
material accumulated for the Heller edition, and with the aid of a former
student, Dr. Eduard Frank, persuaded the "Sudetendeutsche Anstalt fur
Landes- und Volkskunde" in Reichenberg, with the Deutsche Akademie der
Wissenschaften in Prague, to sponsor a new critical edition of Sealsfield's
writings. An undated flyer of the publisher, Franz Kraus, announced pub-
lication of a proposed twelve volumes of Gesammelte Werke in the Biblio-
thek Deutscher Schriftsteller aus Böhmen, Mähren und Schlesien.
5
A thir-
1
Eduard Castle, "Der literarische Kolumbus der 'Neuen Welt.' Ein Gedenkblatt zu Charles
Sealsfields 75. Todestag." Solothurner Zeitung, No. 119 (23. Mai 1939). Born Karl Postl at Poppitz in
Moravia on March 3, 1793, Sealsfield attended schools in Znaim and in Prague, where he was admitted
to the monastic order of the Knights of the Cross, ordained a priest, and soon rose to the rank of
Secretary of the Order. He left Prague in April, 1823, and disappeared. Efforts of police to locate
him were futile, and he arrived in New Orleans in August, 1823, remaining in Louisiana about five
months before journeying up the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys to Pittsburgh and on to Kittaning, Penn-
sylvania. In October and November, 1825, he explored parts of Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois,
Tennessee, and Mississippi. From late 1825 until July, 1826, he lived in Louisiana and acquired a
passport as " Charles Sealsfield, Clergyman." Returning to Europe late in the summer of 1826, he made
arrangements with the publisher Cotta to have his first account of his journey from Pennsylvania to
New Orleans printed under the pseudonym " C. Sidons." The same work was published in London
in 1827 as The United States of North America, and in 1828 Austria as it is appeared. For the next
three years Sealsfield lived in the United States, traveled through the American Southwest, and served
as editor of the French language newspaper Courrier des Etats Unis in New York. His first novel,
Tokeah, or the White Rose, was published in Philadelphia in 1829. In December, 1880, he returned
to Europe, established residence in Switzerland, and published a number of books having their
setting in America, establishing his reputation as the founder of the German exotic novel. He made
two brief visits to the United States, in 1837 and 1853, to look after his business interests. After his
death in Switzerland, on May 26, 1864, his will identified Charles Sealsfield, " Citizen of North America,"
as the Austrian priest, Karl Postl who had disappeared forty years before.
2
Heinrich Laube, Moderne Charakteristiken, vol. II (Mannheim, 1886), 344-354.
3
Alfred Meissner, "Der grosse Unbekannte der deutschen Literatur," Neue Freie Presse, No. 127
(1865).
4
Otto Heller and Theodore H. Leon, Charles Sealsfield, Bibliography of his Writings together with
a classified and annotated Catalogue of Literature relating to his works and his life. Washington
University Studies, New Series, Language and Literature, No. 8 (St. Louis, 1939), p. 2.
5
" Die neue kritische Postl-Ausgabe." Anzeige mit Bestellzettel vom Sudetendeutschen Verlag
Franz Kraus, Reichenberg [1942].
[13]
teenth volume comprising letters, documents, and sources, and a biography,
a projected fourteenth volume, were announced at the same time.
In 1941 the Vienna Bibliophile Society announced as its annual gift to
its members Professor Eduard Castle's Das Geheimnis des Grossen Un-
bekannten: Die Quellenschriften . . . , evidently the work listed as Volume
13 in the planned definitive edition. It was not until 1943 that the book
finally appeared, published by the Bibliophile Society itself in a limited edi-
tion of 180 copies. At that time Castle was nearing seventy and had spent
almost a quarter of a century in research into the life and works of his fellow
Austrian. It was in a mood different from the optimism he had shown
four years earlier that he wrote of the circumstances that seemed to him
to have conspired to maintain the mystery surrounding Sealsfield:
Seltsamerweise entschlüpft . . . , wo man anfasst, alles den Händen. Die Spuren
verwischen sich, schon Aufgefundenes verliert sich, Vorhandenes verschwindet: es
hat den Anschein, als ob das Geheimnis des Grossen Unbekannten nie ganz enthüllt
werden soll.
6
Nevertheless, Die Quellenschriften is a substantial contribution to Seals-
field scholarship, an extremely valuable source book, bringing together
letters, documents, articles, and, in some cases, complete books and pam-
phlets from libraries, archives, and private collections, making available
many works known previously only from annotations in bibliographies,
unreliable summaries, or brief, and sometimes misleading, quotations. Un-
fortunately, of the 180 printed, there appear to be only two copies of
Die Quellenschriften in American libraries at present.
In 1943 Professor Auguste Ravizé of Paris generously presented to
Castle the correspondence and documents in his Sealsfield collection,
7
gathered during many years of search in English and European libraries,
and, according to the American scholar who was ultimately responsible for
its publication, Castle was able to continue work on his monumental
biography of Sealsfield during the difficult year that followed. Der grosse
Unbekannte: Das Leben
8
was completed in 1944.
9
In the composing room
when the printing house was destroyed, it was eventually released by the
publisher who took over the house after the war and finally saw print in
1952, almost a decade after its completion, through the efforts of Dr. Karl J.
Arndt and with the support of the United States and Austrian governments.
In Der grosse Unbekannte, Castle reported on the Gesammelte Werke
announced by Kraus:
Der Satz der "Deutsch-amerikanischen Wahlverwandtschaften" war fertiggestellt
und wurde bei der Einnahme Brünns zerstört. Wilhelm Frick-Verlag, Wien, beauf-
tragte mit der Herausgabe der "Gesammelten Werke" Eduard Castle. "Das
Kajütenbuch" zur Matrizierung nach Prag gesandt, ging dort verloren; "Süden und
Norden" ist in zwei Teilen 1947 erschienen. Die Hoffnung auf die Reichenberger
wie auf die Wiener Ausgabe muss derzeit aufgegeben werden.
10
Although hope for an edition of the works was once more given up,
the important companion volume to the biography, Briefe und Akten-
stücke, was published in 1955, the year of Castle's eightieth birthday,
bringing to full fruition in three volumes of some two thousand pages, the
6
Eduart Castle, Das Geheimnis des Grossen Unbekannten. Die Quellenschriften mit Einleitung,
Bildnis, Handschriftenproben und ausführlichem Personen- und Sachregister (Wien, 1943), p, xxxvii.
Subsequently cited as Quellenschriften.
7
E. Castle, Quellenschriften, p. xii.
8
Eduard Castle, Der grosse Unbekannte. Das Leben von Charles Sealsfield (Karl Postl) (Wien &
München, 1952). 727 pp.
9
Karl J. Arndt, Review of: Eduard Castle, Der grosse Unbekannte, Monatschefte, XLV (1953),
p. 163.
10
Castle, Der grosse Unbekannte, p. 692.
[14]
result of a life-time interest in unraveling the mystery of Sealsfield, of whom
he had first heard during his gymnasium days.
Although there is considerable justification for Castle's 1943 observation
regarding the frustrations that have faced Sealsfield scholars attempting
to bring the life and writings of this most important of German-American
writers into proper focus, in reviewing Castle's own work and the important
studies toward a new biography by Karl Arndt which have appeared in
the past two decades, what emerges as the incredible factor in Sealsfield
scholarship is how much has been discovered and recovered to throw light
on his problematic life and how many of his casual statements it has been
possible to verify. When Sealsfield died, in May of 1864, the secret of his
identity had been kept for more than forty years, often at serious cost to
the reputation which his works had gained for him in America, as well as
in Germany, in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. As early as
1837, in the letter to Joel Poinsett, discovered in the archives of the His-
torical Society of Pennsylvania by Harold Jantz, Sealsfield spoke of this
reputation: ". . . my literary works . . . however undeservedly, have gained
me the surname of the Second Great Unknown."
11
That his American
fame was not in his imagination but had in actuality provided him with,
as he said, " baskets " of newspapers and periodicals with notices and re-
views of his works and speculations about his identity, discounted by
Friedrich Kapp in 1880 as "moonshine" calculated to impress his German
readers,
12
has been proven in recent years by the fruitful search through
American journals and newspapers undertaken by Arndt in preparation for
his biography.
13
There can be little doubt that Sealsfield's refusal to discuss
the possibility of an American edition of his work with Appleton on the
occasion of his last trip to the United States in 1853
14
was at least partially
inspired by a need to recover the anonymity in which the secret of his
origin, becoming more oppressive to him as he grew older, would be safe,
although as Arndt and Jantz have pointed out there were other important
reasons for his silence: Outrage at American publishers who had pirated
his works, a realization that the America he had tried to portray no longer
really existed,
15
or, in Jantz's view, the possibility that he was acting as an
agent for the United States or France and did not want to draw attention
to himself.
16
Certainly the lack of available American editions of his work
has resulted in his neglect by American literary historians or in a limited
recognition of his significance and contribution, such as that of Edwin
Gaston, who concluded that because no other writer attempted an ethno-
graphical novel of the Southwest, this emphasis in Sealsfield's work is
insignificant and the concept unimportant.
17
Gaston includes The Cabin
Book as one of the forty novels considered in The Early Novel of the
Southwest,
18
possibly because it is listed in J. Frank Dobie's bibliography
of Southwestern literature,
19
and contends that Sealsfield's attitude toward
Texas and its inhabitants was prejudiced because he pointed out that in
Texas " we are in a country, like all countries without a government," and
11
Harold Jantz, "Charles Sealsfield's Letter to Joel R. Poinsett," Germanic Review, XXVII
(1952), p. 164.
12
Friedrich Kapp, "Deutsch-amerikanische Wechselbeziehungen," Deutsche Rundschau, XXV
(1880), p. 104.
13
Karl J. Arndt and Henry Groen, "Sealsfield The 'Greatest American Author,'" The American-
German Review, VII (June, 1941), 12-15. See also Arndt, "Charles Sealsfield, 'The Greatest American
Author," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, October, 1964, p. 249-259.
14
Charles Sealsfield, Letter of 25 April 1854 from New York to Erhard, in: Castle, Briefe und
Aktenstücke (Wien, 1955), p. 286.
15
Arndt & Groen, op. cit., p. 15.
16
Jantz, op. cit., p. 164.
17
Edwin W. Gaston, Jr., The Early Novel of the Southwest (Albuquerque, New Mexico: The
University of New Mexico Press, 1961), p. 68.
18
Ibid., p. 37.
19
J. Frank Dobie, Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest. Rev. ed. (Dallas: Southern
Methodist University Press, 1952).
[15]
had to "receive whatever came, even the dregs and outcasts of other coun-
tries."
20
That Sealsfield was making in this instance an objective observa-
tion is borne out by Philip Paxton, an admirer of The Cabin Book, who
wrote in 1859 of the widespread use of "G. T. T." for "Gone to Texas" in
the 1838's and '39's,
21
and, more recently by Alien Walker Read,
22
who
documents the prevalence of "G. T. T." from Maine to Louisiana to indi-
cate that the free state became a haven for those who for one reason or
another found it expedient not to stay where they were.
Indeed, although Sealsfield was capable of seeing some of the inhabi-
tants of the Southwest as what Gene Baro has called "resistant stereo-
types" of the South,
23
among them, the Negro slave, and his general view
of America coincided with that formulated by David Biron Davis in an
excellent study of Homicide in American Fiction, 1798-1860, as "the gen-
eralized image of America in the eyes of foreign peoples from the 18th,
century to the present ... a phantasmagoria of violence ... a country of
innocence and promise ... of easy going friendliness . . . which has glorified
personal whim and impulse . . . and has ranked hardened killers with the
greatest of folk heroes,"
24
he was, as Jantz points out, also a first rate
practitioner of the "new journalism";
25
a realistic writer fully a generation
before the development of realism. As a point in fact, Sealsfield had his
Alcalde in The Cabin Book speak of the Texan as a special American, larger
than life-size, with the capacity to become what the journalist of the 1960's,
John Bainbridge, was to call "the Super American."
25b
If today's journalist
sometimes sees "the Texan" as more akin to Mike Fink than Davy
Crockett, the Alcalde recognized this as a definite possibility, although he
hoped for an ideal and heroic westerner. Whatever Sealsfield's faults of
organization, his work did not, to use a term of Dobie's "betray rather
than reveal life,"
26
as did that of many of his contemporaries, and it is
unfortunate that he did not prepare the new American edition of his work
that would have made him more generally known in the United States.
Sealsfield's identity did not come to light, in spite of periods of his early
life in America when he was careless to conceal it, until his will was opened
in June of 1864, and he was found to have left his estate to the Postl family
of Poppitz. This led to his eventual connection with Karl Postl, Secretary
of the Order of the Cross, whose disappearance while on leave from the
monastery at Prague set off an intensive search for him throughout Austria
and gave rise to the rumors regarding an alleged embezzlement of funds
from the order, first heard by his brother, Joseph Postl, on a street in
Prague on May 29, 1823,
27
revived after his death,
28
and finally disproved
by the records of the order, although it was the Provost of the order,
Josef Pannosch, who advanced the curious theory that Sealsfield had killed
" the Great Unknown," and appropriated his works.
29
Amid general specu-
lation in the English and European papers regarding his true name, vari-
ously claimed to be Seefeld, Siegelfeld, Seatsfield, and Sealsfeald, hasty re-
20
Charles Sealsfield, The Cabin Book; or, Sketches of Life in Texas. Translated from the German
by Professor Ch. Fr. Mersch (New York: J. Winchester, 1844), p. 55.
21
Philip Paxton (pseud.), A Stray Yankee in Texas (New York: Redfield, 1859), p. ix.
22
Allen Walker Read, "'G. T. T.'Gone To Texas," Southern Folklore Quarterly, XXVII
(1968), 228-228.
23
Gene Baro, After Appomatox. The Image of the South in its Fiction, 1865-1900 (New York:
Corinth Books, Inc., 1963), p. 10.
24
David B. Davis, Homicide in American Fiction, 1798-1880 (Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University
Press, 1957), vii-viii.
25
Jantz, op. cit., p. 163.
25b
John Bainbridge, The Super-Americans (New York: Doubleday and Co., 1961). Also:
(New York: Signet Book, T2243, 1963).
26
Dobie, op. cit., p. 178.
27
Josef Postl, "Was ich über meinen Bruder Karl Postl Charles Sealsfield weiss," Salzburg,
23. 3. 1875, in: Castle, Quellenschriften, p. 266.
28
W., "Der grosse Unbekannte." Die Glocke (5. Juli 1864), in: Castle, Quellenschriften, p. 87.
29
Johannes Scherr, "Sealsfield-Postl," Blätter im Winde (1875), in: Castle, Quellenschriften, p. 297.
[16]
views of his works, and an uncritical serving up together of the few known
facts and the many widespread rumors concerning his personal life, his
identity gradually became known, leading to a renewed effort on the part
of those who had associated with him, however casually, to get into print
their remembrances of him and analyzations of his enigmatic life and char-
acter. Some, such as the novelist, Alfred Hartmann,
30
the pastor, Friedrich
Hemmann,
31
and Sealsfield's neighbor, retired teacher Müller-Gassmann,
provided later biographers with generally reliable information concerning
the last years in Switzerland, his financial affairs, and his statements re-
garding his earlier activities, which they had accepted with varying degrees
of credulity. As early as 1865, a little book by Bernhard Wyss, Aus Schule
und Leben,
32
portrayed in one of its essays Sealsfield as he had been known
to Müller-Gassmann and his family. The contributions of others who had
known him, such as the Hungarian refugee, Karl Maria Kertbeny.
33
who
claimed to have knowledge of Sealsfield's unpublished work, "a thick, yel-
lowish manuscript of a diary," containing his reminiscences of Queen Hor-
tense and Prince Louis Napoleon at Arenenberg, presumably written around
1832, and the sequel to Süden und Norden, to be titled Osten und Westen,
were long considered to be wholly unreliable, probably because Kertbeny
pretended a more intimate association with Sealsfield than other of his
acquaintances, such as Elisabeth Meyer, believed to have been the fact.
The assertions about the unpublished works were particularly suspect, al-
though their existence was substantiated by Elisabeth Meyer,
34
for there
was considerable contradiction in the statements of Hartmann, Hemmann,
and others regarding the manuscripts. Hemmann bluntly denied
35
that
Sealsfield would have burned them, as was reported by Hartmann and
Kertbeny, and his evidence carried much weight with later scholars. As
late as 1939, Heller stated that "Kertbeny's story about an agreement for
the publication of "Ost und West" in three volumes, signed at Brügg in
. . . 1844 . . . ," is doubtful,
36
but the actual existence of the contract with
J. B. Metzlerssche Buchhandlung, in the Goethe-Schiller Archiv at Weimar,
was brought to light by Arndt in 1942.
37
It was perhaps natural, in view of the confusion concerning his life,
that Sealsfield research would for some time after his death have a bio-
graphical and bibliographical emphasis. In 1873 Albert Meissner published
a biographical study, appending the short story "Die Grabesschuld" and
aphorisms which he had found in a copy book obtained from Joseph Postl.
38
These are the only unpublished writings to have been located to this day.
An enterprising young lawyer, Victor Hamburger, obtained from Seals-
field's publishers twenty-nine letters, including the important biographical
letter of 1854 to Heinrich Brockhaus, a correspondence covering the period
1826 to 1854 and representing the first substantiation of the claims regarding
his writing and publishing activities, which his Swiss acquaintances had
30
Alfred Hartmann published a number of articles on Sealsfield, the most important of which
appeared in Morgenblatt für gebildete Leser, LVII (Stuttgart, 16. September 1864); see Castle, Quellen-
schriften, 106-118.
31
Friedrich Hemmann wrote from personal observations and after extensive inquiries in: Gegenwart,
Nr. 36 (7. September 1878); Nord und Süd, X (September 1879); Bohemia (November 1887); Nord
und Süd, L (Sept. 1889).
32
Bernhard Wyss, "Aus den letzten Tagen Charles Sealsfields," Aus Schule und Leben (Solo-
thurn, 1865), in: Castle, Quellenschriften, 192-205.
33
Karl Maria Kertbeny, Erinnerungen an Charles Sealsfield (Brüssel und Leipzig, 1864); also
"Etwas über Uhland und Etwas über Sealsfield," Die Gegenwart, XIII (25. Mai 1878), in: Castle,
Quellenschriften, 309-316.
34
U[Elisabeth Meyer], " Der Dichter beider Hemisphären," Daheim, I (1864/65).
35
F. Hemmann, "Etwas über Charles Sealsfield," Die Gegenwart, Nr. 36 (7. September 1878), in:
Castle, Quellenschriften, p. 324.
36
Heller & Leon, Charles Sealsfield, Bibliography, p. 44.
37
Karl J. Arndt, "New Light on Sealsfield's Cajütenbuch and Gesammelte Werke," JEGP, XLI
(April, 1942), p. 210.
38
Alfred Meissner, Die Grabesschuld. Nachgelassene Erzählung von Charles Sealsfield (Leipzig,
1873), pp. 94-135.
[17]
viewed with some doubt. Hamburger also carefully checked the records of
the monastery in Prague, to try to uncover the causes that motivated Postl
to leave the order and showed the official attempts that were made to
apprehend him.
39
Some attention was given to Sealsfield's literary signifi-
cance, notably by Rudolf Gottschall,
40
who compared him to Stifter and
lauded his nature descriptions and the originality and breadth of his cul-
tural perspectives, and by Julian Schmidt who placed his work between that
of the late Romantic and the "jungdeutsche" literature and perceived a
resemblance to Balzac and Leopold Schefer.
41
In general, however, evalu-
ations of his work ranged from what Heller described as " inane adulation "
to attacks for not doing, as Harold Jantz noted, what he had never intended
to do.
It can be said that Sealsfield scholarship in America began with a brief
dissertation submitted in 1892 to Johns Hopkins University by a twenty-
two year old Ph.D. candidate, Albert B. Faust. Charles Sealsfield: Ma-
terials for a Biography
42
was, to be sure, a sketchy preliminary study, but
it pointed out the three general directions which subsequent Sealsfield
scholarship was to take: Bibliographical and biographical, in the attempt
to locate anonymously published works and to document statements Seals-
field made about his activities; linguistic, in the examination of the stylistic
peculiarities resulting from Sealsfield's experiments with language, in which
he believed that by avoiding Latin or French influences and "writing Ger-
man according to English syntactical laws" he achieved a style that was
more German "than the Latinized scholarly German,"
43
and his attempts
to reveal by language ethnic, social, or regional characteristics; and his-
torical and critical in the investigation of the influences affecting Sealfield's
writings as well as his impact on other writers.
Faust secured the important letters to Elisabeth Meyer, in abstracted
form, the originals having been destroyed, as well as letters to Marie Meyer,
both of which Hamburger had tried unsuccessfully to obtain.
44
First pub-
lished in 1894, these and additional letters were appended to the first com-
prehensive biography of Sealsfield: Charles Sealsfield .. . . Der Dichter
beider Hemisphären,
45
published by Faust in Weimar in 1897. For over
fifty-five years this work remained the standard biography, stimulating
scholars in Germany, Austria, France, and the United States to further
efforts to investigate in more depth and detail the territory mapped out.
During the next half-century a few German universities, notably Prag,
München, Münster, and Wien
46
contributed dissertations offering detailed
studies of Sealsfield's language, his nature descriptions, or the concept of
39
Victor Hamburger, Sealsfield-Postl. Bisher unveröffentlichte Briefe und Mittheilungen zu seiner
Biographie (Wien, 1879), pp. 3-15.
40
Rudolf Gottschall, "Charles Sealsfield, ein literarisches Porträt," Unsere Zeit, I (April, 1865),
241-261.
41
Julian Schmidt, Geschichte der deutschen Literatur (Leipzig, 1896), V, 271-275.
42
Albert B. Faust, Charles Sealsfield (Carl Postl). Materials for a Biography; a study of his
Style; his Influence upon American Literature (Baltimore, 1892), 53 pp.
43
Kertbeny, op. cit., p. 77.
44
A. B. Faust, "Unpublished Letters of Charles Sealsfield," PMLA, IX (1894), 343-402.
45
A. B. Faust, Charles Sealsfield, (Carl Postl). Der Dichter beider Hemisphären. Sein Leben
und seine Werke (Weimar, 1897), 295 pp.
46
Dissertations accepted at European universities in chronological order:
Paul Schultz, Die Schilderung exotischer Natur im deutschen Roman mit besonderer Berücksichtigung
von Charles Sealsfield (Münster i. W., 1913).
Fritz Paul Knöller, "Charles Sealsfields Werke," Typewritten (München, 1923), 267 pp.
Milosch Djordjewitsch, Charles Sealsfields Auffassung des Amerikanertums und seine literarhistorische
Stellung (Disa., Universität München), Forschungen zur neueren Literaturgeschichte, LXIV (Weimar:
Verlag von Alexander Dunker, 1931), 135 pp.
Max L. Schmidt, Amerikanismen bei Sealsfield (Würzburg, 1937), 82 pp.
Elfriede Aufderheide, Das Amerika-Erlebnis von den Romanen von Charles Sealsfield (Göttingen,
1946).
Liselotte Bauernfeind, Karl PostlCharles Sealsfield, Die Demokratie im Lichte seines literarischen
Schaffens und seiner Persönlichkeit (Wien, 1948).
Gertrude Hübner, Charles Sealsfield and Sir Walter Scott (Wien, 1949).
Alfons Kozeluk, Charles Sealsfield und J. F. Cooper (Wien, 1951).
E. Arns (geb. Lüty), Charles Sealsfield. Besonderheit und Grenzen eines Schriftstellers (Bonn, 1955).
[18]
America in his work; valuable and thoroughly documented as these studies
were, they were to some extent limited by an imperfect understanding of
the American people of whom Sealsfield wrote and the time in American
history he tried to reveal.
Most of the significant research, before the Castle publications, was
produced at American universities. A center for Sealsfield study developed
at Washington University, where Heller published between 1907 and 1912
eight articles, seven dealing with bibliographical problems: Publication
dates of Sealsfield's first book, Die Vereinigten Staaten van Nordamerika,
in Germany, England, and the United States were established, as well as
those of Tokeah, Morton, and The Cabin Book.
47
Contributions made to
Cotta's Morgenblatt für gebildete Stände and Das Ausland were identified.
48
Heller began to a limited extent the search through early American news-
papers that was later to prove so rewarding to Arndt and his students and
discovered source material used by Sealsfield in the Illinois Intelligencer
of 1827, Timothy Flint's Western Monthly Review, several other Western
papers
49
and the New York Mirror.
50
He searched through the Courrier
des Etats-Unis
51
to establish the validity of Sealsfield's statement, ques-
tioned by Kertbeny
52
but accepted by Faust, that he had served as editor
of that journal, or perhaps, more accurately, to disprove the statement.
Believing to begin with that Sealsfield's claim was not true, he concluded
that indeed it was not, publishing the results of his investigation in 1907.
He had not modified his view thirty years later, in his 1937 lecture before
the Missouri Historical Society,
53
and Norman L. Willey of Michigan
strongly supported his contention that Sealsfield's claim, made in his auto-
biographical letter to Brockhaus, was false.
54
It was not until almost half
a. century later, in 1953, that Karl Arndt established, most persuasively, by
a detailed examination of a complete run of the paper and its prospectus,
the likelihood that Sealsfield had, as he stated, served as editor of the
French language political weekly in 1828.
55
This was further verified by
Castle,
56
working independently to refute Willey's "Charles Sealsfield in
Amerika," published in the Zeitschrift für deutsche Philologie in 1941, in
which he referred to the statement about the Courrier as "eine leicht
erwiesene Unwahrheit" and used this to support his view that all Seals-
field's statements regarding his travel and experience in the American South
and Southwest were inventions.
57
The important discovery in 1952 of the
lost Sealsfield letter to Poinsett by Jantz further supports the evidence
found by Arndt in the weekly itself.
58
Some years after the period of Heller's initial activity in Sealsfield
research, a second series of studies, inspired by Heller and supported by a
Rockefeller foundation grant, was produced at Washington University.
The most important contribution of this period was the Heller-Leon Seals-
field bibliography and catalog, still the most complete compilation of Seals-
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