In the very first chapter of Little Women Jo wishes for a copy of Undine and Sintram as a Christmas present. Undine and Sintram is a collection of Scandinavian and Germanic fables written by French-German author Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué. This book appears again in the last Little Women book, Jo¿s boys. Marches help the poor Hummel family who has immigrated from Germany. Beth and Marmee are especially close to them. Beth catches terrible scarlet fever, but the Marches never blame the Hummels. Epidemic diseases were rather common back then and Louisa always writes about the Hummels with great sympathy. In the chapter "Camp Lawrence" John Brooke translates a German song for Meg and reads her parts from "Mary Stuart", a play that was written by German poet and philosopher Friedrich Schiller. At Meg¿s and John¿s wedding, Laurie suggests that they dance as the Germans do.
When Jo stays in New York, her hostess in the boarding house is Mrs Kirk. "Kirk" is an anglicized last name from the German word Kirche, meaning church. What it comes to 19th-century German culture and the influences of German immigration into American culture March trilogy is consistently favourable towards it. One of Louisäs favourite authors was the German poet Goethe and Goethe was one of the models for Friedrich¿s character. In Little Women, on her grand tour in Europe with aunt March, Amy visits Goethe¿s house, writes home and tells about it. On her first trip to Europe, Louisa herself made a pilgrimage to Goethe¿s House.
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