52
A HISTORY OF BOHEMIAN
LITERATURE
answers of the personified Misfortune to whom he addresses his complaint. Of the author of this very interesting work little is
f
/known.
His Christian name was Ludvik, and he repre-
sents himself as being himself the discarded lover who He adopted the addresses his complaint to Misfortune. " a weaver of name of the Weaver, being, as he writes,
'
•learned lines."
He was, according to recent research,
not a nobleman of the Bohemian court, as had been formerly supposed, but a literary man who was in the service of the Dowager-Queen Elizabeth at Koniggratz, " writer " in some not clearly defined employed as a position. While it thus appears that the Weaver was a man of comparatively humble position, a more thorough study of the book has also proved that the fair Adlicka, who had forsaken him to marry another, was not, as has been written, " one of the beauties of the Bohemian court," but that she was (as her lover indeed himself " tells us) employed at that court as a " topicka (literally, lighter of fires), a word that we must reluctantly translate therefore, yet another inby " housemaid." Ludvik stance of the facility with which a literary man idealises has been proved in recent years that his mistress. the Weaver in many respects resembles somewhat earlier German book entitled Der Ackermann aus Beheim, which dates from the year 1399. Without entering into the controversy that has arisen on this subject, will be sufficient to state that the Weaver not an adaptation, far less translation of the German work, though there are certainly many resemblances between the two books. may be interesting to quote part of one of the laments which the Weaver addresses
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a
is
it
a
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is,
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