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Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Plot Summary

Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1795

Plot Summary

Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship is a 1795 novel by German writer and statesperson Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe. It follows a young man named Wilhelm who tries desperately to disassociate himself from the bourgeois socioeconomic class into which he was born. Wilhelm leaves his job in business, tries to start a career in theatre, and later becomes an initiate of a mysterious organization known as the Tower Society. The narrative frequently alludes to the works of William Shakespeare as Wilhelm is introduced to them by his friend, Jarno. Wilhelm aspires to put on a production of Hamlet and perform the starring role; through his attempt to embody a centuries-old Shakespearean character, the plot highlights the unique attitudes and beliefs of Germans during the eighteenth century.

The novel begins during a period of crisis in Wilhelm Meister’s life. While he hails from a wealthy family and enjoys its many privileges, he fears that he will find little meaning in life if he succumbs to class pressures to enter the business world. He resolves to pursue an acting and playwriting career. In his early attempts, he falls in love with an actor named Marianne. Marianne reciprocates his attraction but is simultaneously in love with an older, wealthier man. Wilhelm and his closest friend, Werner, decide to go on a business trip to learn about themselves while working for Wilhelm’s father. Just before he leaves, Wilhelm has a mental breakdown over his lack of artistic ability and hurls his poetry manuscripts into a fire.

The business trip fails to convince Wilhelm that he is meant to be a businessperson. While traveling through a small village, he connects with an amateur theatre troupe and stops its director from beating up a young actor, Mignon. Supplanting the director, he adopts Mignon as his daughter. They then travel the country putting on plays for the rich. One afternoon, while on a picnic with two actors, Philine and Laertes, Mignon and Wilhelm are waylaid by bandits. Wilhelm shoots one, but is badly wounded. Mignon saves him from dying from blood loss by compressing his chest wound with her hair. Wilhelm makes it to a nobleman’s house and recovers. The downtime encourages him to think and debate over poetry and art, particularly Shakespeare. The nobles help the delusional Wilhelm to see that his troupe took financial advantage of him, then left him to die.

Wilhelm resolves to reenter the business world, taking the advice of the noblemen Lothario. One day, Mignon suffers a heart attack and dies. Wilhelm also learns of the death of his old lover, Marianne, and that she professed her love for him on her deathbed. Wilhelm reconnects with Werner, and the two old friends recognize that they have both dramatically changed: Werner is now rich, but ugly and sick, while Wilhelm is poor but healthy, happy, and attractive. Wilhelm continues on without Werner. He learns that Marianne bore their son without telling him. He connects with the boy, Felix, who helps him see his situation more clearly. He finally accepts that he is not a naturally good actor and quits acting to make better use of his life. His friends set him up with a woman named Natalie. Wilhelm proposes to her, but she doesn’t answer. Before he can process the event, Felix accidentally drinks an opium solution. Wilhelm calls a doctor, and Nathalie promises that if Felix survives, she will marry Wilhelm. Felix survives, and Wilhelm and Natalie rejoice and marry. He submits himself to an ordinary but happy domestic life with his family, as his friend Jarno had suggested. Jarno sets off on a ship to the New World to join the American colonists.

Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship presents an unusually pragmatic message for a time in which artistic, independent, and aspirational characters dominated much of European literature. The novel extols the endeavor to live one’s best life while acknowledging, even celebrating, its brevity.

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