THOSE WHO HAVE LIVED Those who have lived in dreams see when awake The spectre ... ... Of the blue region where with gentle pace The gold winged children wander to embrace The trembling weary souls free from their jail Who turn ...
... Sir, The Letter, which you have had the Kindness to address to me, has afforded me the greatest Pleasure ... ... Most gladly will I add my Name to the List of Subscribers to your very valuable Painting, and I shall give Direction to my Banker here to forward to you the Amount of my Ticket ...
... must, on the other hand, feel an equal degree of satisfaction to have had it in your power to bring your pupils acquainted with ... ... look forward with pleasure (tough we may not live to witness it), to the incalculable effect and influence, which will ...
... März?] The soft musik of the concert and his pomp should not have invited me to leave my hermitage, but the voice of my beautifull ladies is fit to awake deaths and to change all resolutions of solitude. I shall at your commands, as soon ...
... sister thou art a happy maiden, to have a brother who makes english verses. I pray thee be ... ... which are my God and my parents; I seek further to please to the uttermost part of men, wise ... ... found many faults, ye may pardon. The few you have marked, have been caused, by lack ...
... und sich gab zum Besten seiner Nachbarschaft. Have, pia anima! Sanft ruhe seine Asche: er hat's auch um ... ... der berühmte Komödiant, ist aus London inkognito hier. Willst du den Monolog ›To be, or not to be‹ von ihm hören? Der Herr wird ...
... τρυφερα, καλλος αντικρυς εμπνουν, Το προσωπον καταλευκον, έ παρεια ρόδοχρους, Το προσωπον επιχαρι, το βλεφαρον ώραιον, Καλλος ανεπιτηδευτον, αβαπτισον, αυτοχρουν, ... ... them; which quite determines these dances of theirs to have been of the religious kind. Er vergißt, daß bei dem ...
... between them. He permitted me to take these to my hotel, and to do with them ... ... Byron. It was a satisfaction to me to find that Goethe preferred to all the other serious poems ... ... instance of this that I was desired to go to one Schmeller to have my portrait taken – a head in crayons ...
... romance called Melmoth the Wanderer , which used to alarm us boys thirty years ago; eyes of an individual who had ... ... age retained the eyes in all their awful splendour. I fancied Goethe must have been still more handsome as an old man than even in ... ... who had books or magazines from England sent them to him, and he examined them eagerly. Frazer's ...
... touched on Shakespeare, whom he was too French to comprehend, and said to Goethe: »Je suis étonné qu'un ... ... 'aime pas les genres tranchés.« Goethe might have replied that grands esprits have almost universally been the ... ... , and how entirely it would have been opposed to the genre tranché so admired by Napoleon. ...
... pit. I had repeatedly taken a seat near enough to him to have an occasional glimpse of his countenance, but I ... ... of deep significance. He said to Schlegel: »I am glad to hear that your brother means ... ... fiery eyes upon Constant, and to have replied: »I know it, I know all that, I ...
... said in a quiet, simple manner, which would have surprised me much, if I had known him ... ... and it made me feel how bitter must have been Jean Paul's disappointment, who came to him expecting to find in his conversation the characteristics of »Werther« and ...
... Den tredje Studie »Et Drodsfald« giver to Brodres Nattevangen over en tredje Broder, som er bleven saaret i Duel ... ... hele Bogen er saa uskyldigt, at an an ker til Lands näppe vilde have gjort Ophävelser over det. Realisme er nemlig, i alt Fald i ...
... as to the actual position of the great question to which you have devoted your life. Here is my answer: At ... ... civilised States, whereby they shall bind themselves to defer their differences to the arbitrament of equity, pronounced ... ... to wholesale murder. Moreover, these representatives have pledged themselves to meet every year in some city of Europe, ...
... , wether is good for us, to have free institutions or not. Here can be little doubt, that ... ... in this field that the best women in all ages have been able to satisfy the loftiest ambition and to raise themselves together with ... ... sagt: » Nor is it any argument to say that there have been women whose political capacity has ...
... den nakeden Lyff aller wegen, Vnd wüste ere Junfer gantz süverlick to plegen. Se schrubde er vör, ... ... Matz Pump. Men dat is so myn Gebrueck, Wen my begünt to rummeln de Bueck, Plecht my wol eine gelikenisse to entkahmen, Als einem de Schaffönnie hefft ...
... congratulate you on the fact that you have been able to contribute to the bringing about of this great event ... ... by your writings and speeches. You have been able to speak and write with a special and ... ... services–with all my heart. I hoped to have said this to your viva voce at Berne a few weeks ...
... edder hincken, De Bockdrücker moet etwas hebben to drincken. Ja dat noch mehr is, ick ... ... Bax. Wen den dat Geldeken is verteret to hope, So moet de kale Mantel bliven im lope, Edder schölen ... ... sündt dar Meisterlick up uth gelehret. Nemt hen dissen Ricksmarck, und darmit to freden sydt, Ick werde juw doch sünst uth dem ...
... note of Dec. 14th awaiting me. I should have been pleased to have contributed a few words to the publication of the Austrian Society ... ... with realities. However all great causes have dark moments to traverse and there will again be a reaction ...
... with Mr. Chamberlain, in which I endeavoured to induce him to accede to the repeated request which the Transvaal Government had made ... ... of misrepresentation and calumny, which the Peace Party here have had to endure from the virulent and unscrupulous Jingo Press, can ... ... distant future that we may be able to appeal to the justice of this people, who will then ...
Buchempfehlung
Grabbe zeigt Hannibal nicht als großen Helden, der im sinnhaften Verlauf der Geschichte eine höhere Bestimmung erfüllt, sondern als einfachen Menschen, der Gegenstand der Geschehnisse ist und ihnen schließlich zum Opfer fällt. »Der Dichter ist vorzugsweise verpflichtet, den wahren Geist der Geschichte zu enträtseln. Solange er diesen nicht verletzt, kommt es bei ihm auf eine wörtliche historische Treue nicht an.« C.D.G.
68 Seiten, 4.80 Euro
Buchempfehlung
Biedermeier - das klingt in heutigen Ohren nach langweiligem Spießertum, nach geschmacklosen rosa Teetässchen in Wohnzimmern, die aussehen wie Puppenstuben und in denen es irgendwie nach »Omma« riecht. Zu Recht. Aber nicht nur. Biedermeier ist auch die Zeit einer zarten Literatur der Flucht ins Idyll, des Rückzuges ins private Glück und der Tugenden. Die Menschen im Europa nach Napoleon hatten die Nase voll von großen neuen Ideen, das aufstrebende Bürgertum forderte und entwickelte eine eigene Kunst und Kultur für sich, die unabhängig von feudaler Großmannssucht bestehen sollte. Für den dritten Band hat Michael Holzinger neun weitere Meistererzählungen aus dem Biedermeier zusammengefasst.
444 Seiten, 19.80 Euro