Essays on German Literature |
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... DAUGHTER OF THE PHILISTINES . cloth , $ 1.00 . THE LIGHT OF HER COUNTENANCE . Paper , 50 cents ; Paper , 50 cents ; cloth , 75 cents . VAGABOND TALES . $ 1.25 . THE MAMMON OF UNRIGHTEOUSNESS . Cloth , $ 1.25 . IDYLS OF NORWAY AND OTHER ...
... DAUGHTER OF THE PHILISTINES . cloth , $ 1.00 . THE LIGHT OF HER COUNTENANCE . Paper , 50 cents ; Paper , 50 cents ; cloth , 75 cents . VAGABOND TALES . $ 1.25 . THE MAMMON OF UNRIGHTEOUSNESS . Cloth , $ 1.25 . IDYLS OF NORWAY AND OTHER ...
Page 5
... daughter of the Magistrate Textor , and bought the title of Imperial Counsellor . There were no duties connected with this office , but it conferred a social rank which in those days was highly prized . The young wife whom the ...
... daughter of the Magistrate Textor , and bought the title of Imperial Counsellor . There were no duties connected with this office , but it conferred a social rank which in those days was highly prized . The young wife whom the ...
Page 6
... daughter , who would then take care to make Wolfgang's con- jectures come true , meting out the most gratifying justice to the villain , and to suffering virtue an am- ple reward . Frau Aja , as she was called , became in later years ...
... daughter , who would then take care to make Wolfgang's con- jectures come true , meting out the most gratifying justice to the villain , and to suffering virtue an am- ple reward . Frau Aja , as she was called , became in later years ...
Page 10
... daughter of the land- lord with whom he took his dinners , may have tended to distract his attention . Loving your land- lord's daughter is as a rule antagonistic both to law and logic . A serious illness further interfered with his ...
... daughter of the land- lord with whom he took his dinners , may have tended to distract his attention . Loving your land- lord's daughter is as a rule antagonistic both to law and logic . A serious illness further interfered with his ...
Page 13
... daughter of the par- son at Sesenheim . The parsonage was about six hours ' journey from the city , and Goethe was ... daughters , Salome and Frederika , were Swhat the daughters of country clergymen are apt to be - nice , domestic girls ...
... daughter of the par- son at Sesenheim . The parsonage was about six hours ' journey from the city , and Goethe was ... daughters , Salome and Frederika , were Swhat the daughters of country clergymen are apt to be - nice , domestic girls ...
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admiration appeared artistic Auerbach beautiful Berthold Auerbach Carlyle century character charm Christianity color criticism culture daughter death delight drama emotions English essay existence expression fact fancy Faust feel Frau von Stein Freytag Friedrich Schlegel friendship George Eliot German literature German novel Goethe Goethe's Götz Götz von Berlichingen Greek happiness heart Heinrich von Ofterdingen hero human ideal intellectual interest labor less letters literary live Lucinde lyrical mediæval ment Mephistopheles mind modern moral mother nature ness never noble Novalis novelist pagan passion philosophy poems poet poetic poetry prose reader regard relation religion Romantic Romanticism romanticists scarcely scene Schiller Schlegel seems sense sentiment social society song Sorrows of Werther soul spirit story sympathy taste tendency thing thought Tieck tion tragedy translation verse Weimar Werther Westöstlicher Divan wife Wilhelm Meister woman writings young youth
Popular passages
Page 137 - But delay was best, For their end was a crime." — Oh, a crime will do As well, I reply, to serve for a .test, As a virtue golden through and through, Sufficient to vindicate itself And prove its worth at a moment's view!
Page 78 - Undoubtedly we have,' replied the Eldest. ' Of this we make no secret ; but we draw a veil over those sufferings, even because we reverence them so highly. We hold it a damnable audacity to bring forth that torturing Cross, and the Holy One who suffers on it, or to expose them to the light of the Sun, which hid its face when a reckless world forced such a sight on it ; to take these mysterious secrets, in which the divine depth of Sorrow lies hid, and play with them, fondle them, trick them out,...
Page 51 - How could I take up arms without hatred, and how could I hate without youth? If such an emergency had befallen me when twenty years old, I should certainly not have been the last; but it found me as one who had already passed the first sixties.
Page 53 - I soon shall ready be To pierce the ether's high, unknown dominions, To reach new spheres of pure activity ! This godlike rapture, this supreme existence, Do I, but now a worm, deserve to track ? Yes, resolute to reach some brighter distance, On Earth's fair sun I turn my...
Page 78 - Permit me one question," said Wilhelm : " as you have set up the life of this divine Man for a pattern and example, have you likewise selected his sufferings, his death, as a model of exalted patience ?" " Undoubtedly we have,
Page 118 - PEACE breathes along the shade Of every hill, The tree-tops of the glade Are hushed and still ; All woodland murmurs cease, The birds to rest within the brake are gone.