Prose and PoetryDent, 1961 - 364 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 59
Page 217
... German people . Poor imprisoned people ! be not cast down in your need . Oh , that I could speak catapults ! Oh , that I could shoot falaricae from my heart ! The distinguished ice - rind of reserve melts from my heart , a strange ...
... German people . Poor imprisoned people ! be not cast down in your need . Oh , that I could speak catapults ! Oh , that I could shoot falaricae from my heart ! The distinguished ice - rind of reserve melts from my heart , a strange ...
Page 328
... German philosophers were ecstatic seers , filled with piety and the fear of God . It is not my fault that German philosophy is just the reverse of that which until now we have called piety and fear of God , and that our latest ...
... German philosophers were ecstatic seers , filled with piety and the fear of God . It is not my fault that German philosophy is just the reverse of that which until now we have called piety and fear of God , and that our latest ...
Page 350
... German , for fear of any innovation whose results cannot be clearly ascertained , avoids every important question of politics as long as possible , or endeavours to find in detours a proper adjust- ment of difficulties , the questions ...
... German , for fear of any innovation whose results cannot be clearly ascertained , avoids every important question of politics as long as possible , or endeavours to find in detours a proper adjust- ment of difficulties , the questions ...
Contents
BOOK OF SONGS | 3 |
Where? Ruth Duffin | 9 |
A Mountain Idyll John Todhunter | 42 |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
A. D. Lindsay ancient Atta Troll beautiful beloved billows bloom Bohain Cauterets Christian cold dance dead dear death dream drum Düsseldorf earth Emperor Ernest Rhys eyes face fair fisherman flowers French gaze German ghost gleaming Goethe golden Goslar Göttingen grave hand head heard heart heaven holy honour Introduction by Prof J. G. Lockhart Jan Steen Jews King kiss lady laughed lips little Samson live looked Madame Madame de Staël Mademoiselle Laurence maiden marble Maximilian merry mother never night noble o'er once Paganini pale Paris Philistines play poems poet poetry poor Prince Elector Protestantism Roman roses Samson Saul Ascher seemed sigh singing smile song sorrow soul sound spirit stood story strange sweet Tannhäuser tears tell thee thou thought Translated trembling weep wild women wonder words young