The Erl-King

work by Goethe
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Also known as: “Der Erlkönig”, “The Elf-King”
Also called:
The Elf-King

The Erl-King, dramatic ballad by J.W. von Goethe, written in 1782 and published as Der Erlkönig. The poem is based on the Germanic legend of a malevolent elf who haunts the Black Forest, luring children to destruction. It was translated into English by Sir Walter Scott and set to music in a famous song by Franz Schubert.

In the ballad a father and son are journeying homeward on horseback at night. The son is ill with a fever and believes he sees and hears the erl-king. The father tells him that the form he sees is only the fog and the sound he hears is only the rustling leaves. Nonetheless, the erl-king wheedles, trying to tempt the boy to come with him. But when the boy again expresses his fear, the erl-king says that if the boy does not come of his own accord, he will be taken forcibly. The father, feeling his son’s fear, spurs his horse on, but when they arrive home, the boy is dead.

Goethe masterfully re-creates in the poem’s cadence the galloping of the horse’s hooves. The poem is one of several of Goethe’s early works expressing the poet’s conviction that the powers of nature are filled with unconscious elements capable of overwhelming humans.

Illustration of "The Lamb" from "Songs of Innocence" by William Blake, 1879. poem; poetry
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This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.