... Zicklein . Frz. Schweiz. : Tô te mè fâ, tô té fari dejec la tschivra vu tsevri. ... ... 347. Engl. : Every bony's work ig nobody's work. ( Schles. Zeitung , 1872, ... ... 354. Wer nicks to dohn hat, de maket sick wat to dohn. ( Lippe ...
... rent from the proceeds of its work. In order to be able to dothis, and to be able to continue our work for the opening up of the ... ... the zeno.orgoffers. Nobody would go to a library to copy complete shelves of books,just " ...
... MeFaSteDo,MeFuTö,MeGaAlKi,MeIchior,MeanJim,Meanbean,Meandermind,MeandtheFarmer,Meansallow,Meant to live,Meantares,Meanttobe,Measure for measure,Meatball Machine, ... ... Tmv23,Tnatrix,Tnc,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,ToJoTi,ToKaGin,ToKaLeJu ...
... fond of music. Instead of attending to them, she sat down to the taro table, played Nelson ... ... or none of the persons whom I mean to stimulate to do themselves the honour of subscribing to your work. I wish it were possible ...
... , wenn er sagt: »The work comes to be regarded as equivalent to Dharmaçāstra«, nur ist die ... ... : That stony law I stamp to dust and scatter religion abroad To the four winds as ... ... 's the use you learning to do right when it's troublesome to do right and ain't ...
... to preside, To Sounds he'd allow, what to Wit was deny'd. ... ... furious and desperate. He resolved to make one last effort to establish his power and fortune by force ... ... fancies He sees ten thousand Opera Devils coming to tear Him to pieces; then He breaks out into ...
... 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 ...
... certain verbal disputes in Pol. Econ., particularly relating to Value, and to Demand and Supply«, London 1821, p. 54 ... ... »Prudential habits with regard to marriage, carried to a considerable extent among the labouring class of ... ... angewandt werden, sind jetzt mehr Männer arbeitslos (more men are out of work) als früher.« (l.c. ...
... is the life of man? Is it not to shift from side to side? – from sorrow ... ... London 1913, als ungewollte Karikaturen veröffentlicht, to hang Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail ... ... to taste, his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to report, what my dream was.« ...
... with Mr. Chamberlain, in which I endeavoured to induce him to accede to the repeated request which the Transvaal Government ... ... of socialism which I formerly believed to be inimical to freedom and progress, but I am considerably ... ... some form of collective action is a necessity to put an end to its baneful influence. ...
... then very naturally, Jovis omnia plena. The whole work may reasonably hope to be filled with a divine Spirit, when it begins with a prayer to be so. The Grecians built this Portal with ... ... Men, their Princes: as Lucan adresses it to Nero , and Statius to Domitian ; both imitating therein (but ...
... . The Ainos, in their humble way, are addicted to moralising and to speculating on the origin of things. The Aino ... ... . Nogavarma's Kanarese Prosody. Edited with an introduction to the work, and an essay on Kanarese literature. By the Rev. ...
13. Die Eroberung der Burg Zion, das ursprüngliche Cerrain Jerusalems ... ... by Walter and E. H. Palmer 1871. und die dritte Our work in Palestine, being an account of the different expeditions sent out to the holy Land by the Comittee of Palestine-Exploration-Fund since 1865, London ...
... 'd, in hope by that to purchase Your leave to sigh unscorn'd: but ... ... ? – I saw you, and to see, is to admire: I often sigh'd ... ... ' his fondness, in disguise, Less to expose me to th' ambicious foe. Ha! ...
... the house for this Season: The Academy agree to give out Tickets to such as shall subscribe on the conditions following ... ... by a parrot, which was used to be set out at the window, and had been taught ... ... d by Mr. Handel. As to render the work more acceptable to gentlemen and ladies, every song ...
... man verloren ist, wie im wilden Wald, vgl. engl. to be out of the woods; nicht aber: »in the wilderness«). ... ... tulyakarmaṇā »on giving a substitute whose capacity for work is equal to theirs«. Da müßte man also wörtlich wohl so ...
... clock in the morning, return'd by water to Whitehall, and thence to St. James's palace. « The ... ... Those Gentlemen who are Subscribers are desired to send for their books to the Author, or J. ... ... Note, The Author has been obliged to publish these Pieces to prevent the Publick being imposed upon by some ...
Buchempfehlung
Als Hoffmanns Verleger Reimer ihn 1818 zu einem dritten Erzählzyklus - nach den Fantasie- und den Nachtstücken - animiert, entscheidet sich der Autor, die Sammlung in eine Rahmenhandlung zu kleiden, die seiner Lebenswelt entlehnt ist. In den Jahren von 1814 bis 1818 traf sich E.T.A. Hoffmann regelmäßig mit literarischen Freunden, zu denen u.a. Fouqué und Chamisso gehörten, zu sogenannten Seraphinen-Abenden. Daraus entwickelt er die Serapionsbrüder, die sich gegenseitig als vermeintliche Autoren ihre Erzählungen vortragen und dabei dem serapiontischen Prinzip folgen, jede Form von Nachahmungspoetik und jeden sogenannten Realismus zu unterlassen, sondern allein das im Inneren des Künstlers geschaute Bild durch die Kunst der Poesie der Außenwelt zu zeigen. Der Zyklus enthält unter anderen diese Erzählungen: Rat Krespel, Die Fermate, Der Dichter und der Komponist, Ein Fragment aus dem Leben dreier Freunde, Der Artushof, Die Bergwerke zu Falun, Nußknacker und Mausekönig, Der Kampf der Sänger, Die Automate, Doge und Dogaresse, Meister Martin der Küfner und seine Gesellen, Das fremde Kind, Der unheimliche Gast, Das Fräulein von Scuderi, Spieler-Glück, Der Baron von B., Signor Formica
746 Seiten, 24.80 Euro
Buchempfehlung
Romantik! Das ist auch – aber eben nicht nur – eine Epoche. Wenn wir heute etwas romantisch finden oder nennen, schwingt darin die Sehnsucht und die Leidenschaft der jungen Autoren, die seit dem Ausklang des 18. Jahrhundert ihre Gefühlswelt gegen die von der Aufklärung geforderte Vernunft verteidigt haben. So sind vor 200 Jahren wundervolle Erzählungen entstanden. Sie handeln von der Suche nach einer verlorengegangenen Welt des Wunderbaren, sind melancholisch oder mythisch oder märchenhaft, jedenfalls aber romantisch - damals wie heute. Michael Holzinger hat für den zweiten Band eine weitere Sammlung von zehn romantischen Meistererzählungen zusammengestellt.
428 Seiten, 16.80 Euro