The year 1906 was marked by two central encounters for him: on the one hand, he found access to Stefan George through Saladin Schmitt.[2][3][4] On the other hand, he met his partner Ernst Glöckner at the beginning of the summer semester. Both understood their love as a "great mystery"[5] and celebrated their Du-Tag with Beethoven's music and Thomas Mann reading.[6] George's courtship of Glöckner led to a love triangle because Glöckner clung to Bertram.[7]
In 1918, Bertram's book Nietzsche - Versuch einer Mythologie was published, with which he quickly became known in literary circles. Mann's preserved letters to Bertram (256 documents in the Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach) as well as Mann's Betrachtungen eines Unpolitischen (Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man), which appeared almost at the same time, bear witness to his influence on Thomas Mann during that time. The writing of these letters was accompanied by an intensive exchange of ideas. In 1919 Bertram was appointed lecturer at the University of Bonn, and in 1922 he received a professorship at the University of Cologne. In his poems in the Nornenbuch, he emphasised the inequality of peoples.
After the seizure of power by the Nazis, Bertram greeted the Nazi book burnings on 10 May 1933 with consecration verses: "Verwerft, was euch verwirrt, / Verfemt, was euch verführt! / Was reinen Willens nicht wuchs, / In die Flammen mit was euch bedroht“." (Reject what confuses you, / Condemn what seduces you! / What pure will did not grow, / Into the flames with what threatens you".)[8] The extent to which Bertram distanced himself inwardly and outwardly from National Socialism over the next twelve years cannot be conclusively assessed.
In September 1945, an internal denazification commission at the university concluded that Bertram was "proven to be a man who belongs to the nourishers of National Socialism".[8] In 1946, Bertram was removed from his teaching post, and in 1950, a review of the denazification process resulted in his rehabilitation and emeritus status. He was no longer active as a university lecturer.
Bertram also appeared as a poet throughout his life. Most of his volumes of poetry (including The Rhine, Strasbourg, Patenkinderbuch, Griecheneiland) were published by Insel Verlag. In addition, he wrote various so-called Spruchdichtungen, i.e. aphorisms that follow one another and stand in a certain context (Der Wanderer von Milet, Sprüche aus dem Buch Arja, Deichgrafensprüche), which in this form have a unique position in the German literature of the 20th century.
Bertram died in Cologne at the age of 72.
Honours
1939: Treuedienst-Ehrenzeichen in Silber, 2. Stufe[9]
Zur sprachlichen Technik der Novellen Adalbert Stifters. Ruhfus, Dortmund 1907
Gedichte. Insel, Leipzig 1913
Nietzsche. Versuch einer Mythologie. Bondi, Berlin 1918
Straßburg. Ein Gedichtkreis. Insel, Leipzig 1920
Zwei Gedichte aus dem unveröffentlichten Buch der Rhein. Privatdruck (?), Weilburg 1921
Rheingenius und Génie du Rhin. F. Cohen, Bonn 1922
Das Nornenbuch. Leipzig, Insel 1925
Beethovens Bild. Rede zur Beethoven-Gedächtnisfeier.[11] Oskar Müller, Cologne 1927
Von deutschem Schicksal, Gedichte. Insel Leipzig 1933
Wartburg. Spruchgedichte. Leipzig, Insel 1933
Deutsche Gestalten. Fest- und Gedenkreden. Insel, Leipzig 1934
Griecheneiland. Insel, Leipzig 1934
Michaelsberg. Insel, Leipzig 1935
Das weiße Pferd. Insel, Leipzig 1936
Von der Freiheit des Wortes. Leipzig, Insel 1936 (Insel-Bücherei [de] 485/1)
Sprüche aus dem Buch Arja. Leipzig, Insel 1938
Persische Spruchgedichte. Leipzig, Insel 1944 (Insel-Bücherei 87/3)
Hrabanus. Aus der Michaelsberger Handschrift. Leipzig, Insel 1939
Konradstein. Erzählung. Insel, Wiesbaden 1951
Moselvilla. Flavus an Veranius. Bachem (commission), Cologne 1951
Prosperos Heimkehr. Eine Gedenkmusik zur Wiederkehr von William Shakespeares Todestag . Auer, Donauwörth 1951
Der Wanderer von Milet. Insel, Wiesbaden 1956
Möglichkeiten. Ein Vermächtnis, edited by Hartmut Buchner. Neske, Pfullingen 1958 (mit Bibliographie Ernst Bertram S. 273–282)
References
^Cf. Ernst Bertram, Zur sprachlichen Technik der Novellen Adalbert Stifters. Ruhfus, Dortmund 1907 (partial print), p. 67 (curriculum vitae).
^Robert Boehringer: Mein Bild von Stefan George - Teil 1, second, supplemented edition, Helmut Küpper vormals Georg Bondi, Düsseldorf/Munich 1967, p. 154
^Robert Boehringer (ed. ) & Georg Landmann (ed.): Stefan George - Friedrich Gundolf, Briefwechsel, Helmut Küpper vormals Georg Bondi, Munich/Düsseldorf 1962, p. 231
^Hajo Jappe: Ernst Bertram. Gelehrter, Lehrer und Dichter., Bouvier, Bonn 1969, p. 311, note 1.-2.
^Hajo Jappe: Ernst Bertram. Gelehrter, Lehrer und Dichter., Bouvier, Bonn 1969, p. 30
^Hajo Jappe: Ernst Bertram. Gelehrter, Lehrer und Dichter., Bouvier, Bonn 1969, p. 35
^Thomas Karlauf, Stefan George. The Discovery of Charisma, Munich 2007, p. 382
^ abQuote by Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Who was what before and after 1945. Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, Second updated edition, Frankfurt 2005, p. 44.
^Stadtbibliothek Wuppertal: Teilnachlass Ernst Bertram: B – 6: Treudienst-Urkunde: Anerkennung für 25-jährige Treue Dienste durch den Staatsminister und der Präsidialkanzlei des Führers Theissner, 13 November 1939
Erika Gerlach: Ernst Bertram. In Wuppertaler Biographien 1. Folge. Beiträge zur Geschichte und Heimatkunde des Wuppertals Band 4, Born-Verlag, Wuppertal 1958, S. 11–18.
Friedemann Spicker: 3.5 Ernst Bertram. In ders.: Studien zum deutschen Aphorismus im 20. Jahrhundert (Studien und Texte zur Sozialgeschichte der Literatur, vol. 79). Max Niemeyer Verlag, Tübingen 2000, Ernst Bertram, p. 80, at Google Books.
Jan Steinhaußen: "Aristokraten aus Not" und ihre "Philosophie der zu hoch hängenden Trauben". Nietzsche-Rezeption und literarische Produktion von Homosexuellen in den ersten Jahrzehnten des 20. Jahrhunderts: Thomas Mann, Stefan George, Ernst Bertram, Hugo von Hofmannsthal among others Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg 2001 (Epistemata; Reihe Literaturwissenschaft, 326) ISBN3-8260-1977-6