Wilhelm Waiblinger
Wilhelm Waiblinger (
November 21,
1804 -
January 17 or
30,
1830) was a German
romantic poet, mostly remembered today in connection with
Friedrich Hölderlin. He was a student at the seminary of
Tübingen in the
1820s, when Hölderlin, already mentally ill, lived there as a recluse in a carpenter's house. Waiblinger, who used to visit the older poet and take him out for walks, left an account of Hölderlin's life then,
Hölderlins Leben, Dichtung und Wahnsinn ("Hölderlin's life, poetry and madness"). In the late 1820s, Waiblinger left Tübingen for
Italy, dying in
Rome at the age of 25.
In his short story "Im Presselschen Gartenhaus" ("In Pressel’s Garden-house", 1913), Hermann Hesse gives a touching picture of a visit to Hölderlin by Waiblinger and the poet Eduard Mörike, both young theology students in Tübingen, like Hölderlin himself decades before.