... their relations, as these are known to us, and as they are believed to exist in our universe, Metempirics weeps out of this region in search of the otherness of things: seeking to behold things, not as they are in our universe – ... ... ideal constructions of imagination« (Probl. of Life and Mind I, p. 17 f.). »Metempirical« ...
... the Sincere wish of my heart to preserve to cultivate and to merit it more and more. ... ... me. I shall be happy to see you to dinner either to morrow or Tuesday whichever is ... ... me. I shall be very happy to see you to dinner to morrow an I ever am with ...
... is honest, her greatest delight is still to be doing from morning to night! ( Bohn II, 43. ... ... (wunde) Benen denen (nöthigen den Mann ) wol to Hûs to blîfen. – Kern , 259. ... ... ditch. – There is no trust to be given to a woman's word. ( Masson, ...
... . Engl. : Long absent, soon forgotten. – Out of sight, out of mind. Frz. : Hors de vue, hors de souvenir. ... ... : In the fore-head and the eye the Index of the mind doe lie. ( Gaal, 128 ...
... Zicklein . Frz. Schweiz. : Tô te mè fâ, tô té fari dejec la tschivra vu tsevri. ... ... Engl. : He who goes about a thing himself, has a mind to have it done; who sends another, cares not, ... ... He who does every thing, he has a mind to do, often does not, what he should ...
... existieren nur »respectively on the mind« , alle Existenz ist »inexistence in mind«. Die Außenwelt ist ... ... external object... I am led, by my nature, to conclude some quality to be in the rose, which is the cause ... ... qualities of things admitted on all hands to be qualities of the externe (or object) world – called ...
... Čelakovský, 267. ) Engl. : Face to face, the truth comes out. ( Bohn II, 91. ) ... ... the eye the index of the mind does lie. ( Čelakovský, 266. ) Frz. : Face ... ... 190. He heft en Gesicht, dat men woll kan »Du« to em seggen. Er hat kein Ansehen . Wenn hingegen der ...
... mên kai to pan apeiron esti. to gar peperasmenon akron echei. to d' akron par' heteron ti ... ... kai ou peperasmenon. kai mên kai tô plêthei tôn sômatôn apeiron esti to pan kai tô megethei tou kenou. eite gar ên to ...
... p. 111). »Sympathy is to enter into the feelings of another, and to act them out, as if they were our own« (Ment. and ... ... pleasure and pain, and a connexion in the mind between the outward signs or expression of the various ...
... Haut gehüllt, sich die Fähigkeit zutraut, einen Blankvers herauszutrompeten ( to bombast out a blancvers ) so gut wie einer von euch und, ... ... durch den Doppelband » Allusions to S . 15921693« (Lond. 1879 u. 1886) gründlich bewiesen ... ... 2 Bde.); Öchelhäuser , Einführung in Shakespeares Bühnendramen (3. Aufl., Mind . 1895); ten ...
... sct. 10). TH. BROWN erklärt: »Attention to objects of sense appears to be nothing more than the coexistence of desire ... ... , in clear and vivid form, of one out of what seem several simultaneously possible objects or trains of thought. Focalization, ... ... nicht (vgl. l.c. C. 11, 14). So auch BRADLEY ( Mind XI, 1886, p ...
... Timbox,Timcassomoda,Timcn,Timderstruppi,Timdietz,Timdohle,Time Q,Time-out-of-mind,Time11,TimeBoy,Timecube,Timedancer,Timekeeper,Timekop, ... ... Tnd,Tnde,Tneubner,Tneundorf,Tnfenster,Tniemueller,Tnixm,Tnotter,To Mega Therion,To late,To old,To-pse,To.ni,To.sch,To.tobi,ToAr,ToBo,ToF,ToFei,ToGi,ToGo,ToJe ...
... did not come, Mr. Hayward will endeavour to learn, in order to give every satisfaction imaginable to the company present that evening at the ... ... have honoured me, of July 15th as it has pointed out to me the means by which I may manifest ...
... thinks that it is quite inconsistent in an author to profess himself to be a follower of Dharma and ... ... : That stony law I stamp to dust and scatter religion abroad To the four winds as ... ... gather the leaves ... And to renew the fiery joy, and to burst the stony roof ... ...
... τρυφερα, καλλος αντικρυς εμπνουν, Το προσωπον καταλευκον, έ παρεια ρόδοχρους, Το προσωπον επιχαρι, το βλεφαρον ώραιον, Καλλος ανεπιτηδευτον, αβαπτισον, αυτοχρουν, ... ... Peace) Have no delight to pass away the time; Unless to spy my shadow in the ...
... them. He permitted me to take these to my hotel, and to do with them what ... ... 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 ...
... Than on the torture of the mind to lie In restless ecstasy. Duncan is in his ... ... als ungewollte Karikaturen veröffentlicht, to hang Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail ... ... able to taste, his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to report, what my dream was.« ...
... my lithographic print of Beethoven, I beg to state that it was issued out of love to the art, and in order to fulfil a promise I made to Beethoven. It was on last parting ... ... such a deep impression on my mind, I than would publish a better print.‹ To which ...
... storm Invades us to the skin; so 't is to thee; ... ... more – In such a night, To shut me out? – pour on, I will endure ... ... there I found 'em, there I smelt 'em out. – Go to, they are not men o' their words ...
... . I'll put it on: Send out more horses, skirre the country round ... ... Cure her of that! Canst thou not minister to minds diseas'd, Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow, Raze out the written troubles of the brain; And with ...
Buchempfehlung
1880 erzielt Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach mit »Lotti, die Uhrmacherin« ihren literarischen Durchbruch. Die Erzählung entsteht während die Autorin sich in Wien selbst zur Uhrmacherin ausbilden lässt.
84 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. Michael Holzinger hat für den zweiten Band sieben weitere Meistererzählungen ausgewählt.
432 Seiten, 19.80 Euro