[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/leonore_vernet_5335.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300: [- Horace Vernet: "Ballad of Leonore" -] ]]

->''"Art frighted, love? the moon rides high:\\
What, ho! the dead can nimbly fly!\\
Dost fear the dead, dear maid?"''
-->-- '''William''', from ''Leonora'' (translated by Benjamin Beresford)

"Lenore" (also translated into English as "Ellenore", "Leonora", "Leonore" and "William and Helen") is a German [[GothicHorror Gothic]] ballad by Gottfried August Bürger (31 December 1747 - 8 June 1794), published in 1774.

The UsefulNotes/SevenYearsWar is over, and the soldiers return to their loved ones. Lenore waits impatiently for Wilhelm, her fiancé. But Wilhelm is not among the homecomers, and it dawns on Lenore that Wilhelm might be dead.

Her parents' clumsy attempts to console her only make Lenore freak out more and more, culminating in her [[RageAgainstTheHeavens accusing God of cruelty and injustice]]. Her mother warns her earnestly against the sin of blasphemy, but to no effect: Lenore declares that without Wilhelm, [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor neither her life nor her salvation have any meaning to her]].

Lenore is crying the night away in despair when, at midnight, a knock comes at the door: it is Wilhelm! Instantly, he declares to the overjoyed Lenore that he wants to marry her this very night, if only she will ride with him to his present place of residence. Though, if you know a thing or two about {{ghost stor|y}}ies, you probably know that Lenore is making a mistake when she mounts that black steed behind Wilhelm.

A straightforward ghost story based on an ancient plot (No. 365: "The Specter Bridegroom" in the Aarne-Thompson tale type index), "Lenore" struck a chord with readers, who seem to have developed an appetite for supernatural horror around the time. Its popularity also spread to Britain by way of numerous translations (there are at least ten, including one—as "William and Helen"—by Creator/WalterScott) and made it a seminal work of GothicHorror.

"Lenore" is also considered a seminal work for its form. In the second half of the 18th century the literary world started to get interested in folk traditions, including the songs of ''Bänkelsänger'' (who related various events and misdeeds at fairs) and the "Reliques of Ancient English Poetry". A lot of these were in monotonous, rather lame-footed verse, so Bürger as a poet decided to pay intense attention to the rhythm and used onomatopoeic words in crafting his ballad. It became a smash hit from the salons of the aristocracy to open-air recitals on fairgrounds and began a fashion for ballads among German poets, leading among other things to Creator/JohannWolfgangVonGoethe writing "The Sorcerer's Apprenctice" and "Literature/TheErlKing". So Bürger could justly be proud of his achievement and once called himself the [[BadassBoast Genghis Khan of ballads]]. As he wrote to his fellow poet Heinrich Christian Boie: "Is it possible that human senses something so delightful? All those who make ballads after me will indubitably be my vassals and will take their tone from me as their fief." To Boie, who lived in the same university town as he did, Bürger also wrote a "how-to" on 6 May, 1773:
-->"When you read it to our friends in Göttingen for the first time, then borrow a skull from someone at the medical faculty, place it next to a dim lamp, and then read. Then the hairs of everybody shall stand on end as at ''Theatre/{{Macbeth}}''."

Although it is not obvious, "Lenore" is considered a spiritual precursor of the [[VampireFiction Vampire Genre]]: In folk belief, the undead were especially prone to come for their beloved ones, as they supposedly wanted them to join them in death.

[[http://de.wikisource.org/wiki/Lenore Original text]] and translations by [[http://allpoetry.com/poem/8479465-William-and-Helen-by-Sir_Walter_Scott Walter Scott]], [[http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Lenore_(1900) Dante Gabriel Rossetti]], and [[https://archive.org/details/specimensofgerma00bereiala/page/12/mode/2up Benjamin Beresford]].
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!! Tropes:

* AnAesop: Delivered by the dancing ghosts in the end: Don't quarrel with God! He's vindictive; you might end up dead.
-->''"Forbear! forbear! nor e'er contend,\\
Though God's decrees thy heart do rend!\\
Now soul and body sever\\
Be mercy thine forever!"''
* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Lenore says her life is not worth living without Wilhelm ... so God lets Wilhelm return to take her with him--to the grave.
* ForeignRemake: The basic plot of "Lenore" is found in many ghost stories from over the world, but Bürger seems to have taken at least some of his inspiration from the English "Sweet William's Ghost" ([[Literature/ChildBallads Child #77]]). The translations by William Taylor and Walter Scott in turn move the setting to England during the [[UsefulNotes/TheCrusades Crusades]].
** And then Vasily Zhukovsky worked with "Lenore" three times: first translating it, then translating it more loosely and renaming the character Lyudmila, and then remaking it completely with the heroine being called Svetlana [[spoiler:and with a happy ending, the fiancé's death turning out to be just a dream]]. The final version is the best known one in Russia.
* TheGrimReaper: Upon reaching his destination, Wilhelm transforms into a skeleton holding an hourglass and a scythe--or maybe it was Death himself posing as Wilhelm the whole time.
* TheLostLenore: Wilhelm is Lenore's Lost Lenore (ironically).
* RageAgainstTheHeavens: Mad with grief, Lenore sacrilegiously accuses God (which has dire consequences).
* ReligiousHorror: Wilhelm's return as an undead who drags Lenore to death is God's punishment for her blasphemy.
* ResurrectedRomance
* TogetherInDeath: PlayedForHorror. Lenore is overcome with despair when she realizes that her lover Wilhelm may not come back from the war, and says that she does not want to live without Wilhelm. At midnight, much to Lenore's joy, Wilhelm appears on a horse to take Lenore away with him. However, Wilhelm is, in fact, dead, and their ride ends on the graveyard where Wilhelm is buried. Lenore dies of terror on Wilhelm's grave, and thus is ultimately reunited with her lover.
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