George was thought of by his contemporaries as a
prophet and a
priest, while he thought of himself as a
messiah of a new kingdom that would be led by intellectual or artistic
elites, bonded by their faithfulness to a strong leader. His poetry emphasized self-sacrifice, heroism and power, and he thus gained popularity in National Socialist circles. The group of writers and admirers that formed around him were known as the
Georgekreis. Although many National Socialists claimed George as an important influence, George himself was aloof from such associations and did not get involved in politics. Shortly after the Nazi seizure of power, George left Germany for
Switzerland where he died the same year.
Some critics considered his work to be proto-
fascist, though many of the leading members of the German Resistance to the Nazis were drawn from among his followers, notably the Stauffenberg brothers who were introduced to George by the poet and classical scholar Albrecht
von Blumenthal. Also, although some members of the circle were explicitly anti-semitic (e.g. Klages), it also included Jewish writers such as Gundolf and the Zionist,
Karl Wolfskehl. George was fond enough of his Jewish disciples, but he expressed reservations about their ever becoming a majority in the Circle.
Perhaps the most eminent poet who collaborated with George, but who ultimately refused membership in the Circle, was
Hugo von Hofmannsthal, one of Austria's outstanding literary modernists. Later in life, Hofmannsthal wrote that no one had influenced him more deeply than George. Those closest to the "Master," as George had his disciples call him, included several members of the
July 20 Plot to assassinate Hitler, including
Claus von Stauffenberg himself. Outside the Circle, George's poetry was a major influence on the music of the
Second Viennese School of composers, particularly during their
Expressionist period.
Arnold Schönberg set George's poetry in such works as his
String Quartet No. 2 Op. 10 of 1908 and
The Book of the Hanging Gardens Op. 15 of 1909, while his student
Anton Webern made use of George's verse in his early choral work
Entflieht auf leichten Kähnen Op. 2 as well as in two sets of songs, Opp. 3 and 4 of 1909, and in several posthumously published vocal works from the same period.