Thomas De Quincey's Relation to German Literature and PhilosophyUniversitäts-buchdruckerei von J.H.E. Heitz, 1900 - 136 sider |
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Side 10
... questions in connection with De Quincey . He has been the subject of much indiscriminate praise and blame ; he has been called a great scholar ; he was in his time , among certain classes , somewhat famous in philosophy and metaphysics ...
... questions in connection with De Quincey . He has been the subject of much indiscriminate praise and blame ; he has been called a great scholar ; he was in his time , among certain classes , somewhat famous in philosophy and metaphysics ...
Side 12
... question , from Murder as a Fine Art to the Philosophy of History . Taken as a whole his work gives the impression ... questions , De Quincey is impatient of scepticism ; it is a necessity of his nature to believe . It is difficult for ...
... question , from Murder as a Fine Art to the Philosophy of History . Taken as a whole his work gives the impression ... questions , De Quincey is impatient of scepticism ; it is a necessity of his nature to believe . It is difficult for ...
Side 16
... questions , that has little feeling for the great natural causes beneath a literary movement , that is concerned , in ... question whether or not Wordsworth deals with the subjects of joy and grief ; the politics of the Wanderer in the ...
... questions , that has little feeling for the great natural causes beneath a literary movement , that is concerned , in ... question whether or not Wordsworth deals with the subjects of joy and grief ; the politics of the Wanderer in the ...
Side 17
... questions that he had striven with all his powers to solve ; what he writes of Goethe or of Novalis has thus the truth of actual experience . De Quincey's attitude is far more that of the professional student and man of letters . He ...
... questions that he had striven with all his powers to solve ; what he writes of Goethe or of Novalis has thus the truth of actual experience . De Quincey's attitude is far more that of the professional student and man of letters . He ...
Side 19
... question , for science and philosophy , so called , the wealthiest in the world " .1 The strength of the German mind is not to be sought in its poetry . " Poetry apart " , he writes , " the current literature of Germany appears to me by ...
... question , for science and philosophy , so called , the wealthiest in the world " .1 The strength of the German mind is not to be sought in its poetry . " Poetry apart " , he writes , " the current literature of Germany appears to me by ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
beauty Bertram Blackwood's Magazine Carlyle Carlyle's cey's character Coleridge describes drama dream edition England English essay example fancy Faust feeling Flegeljahre Friends genius German literature German mind German writers Goethe Goethe's Henry Crabb Robinson Herder Homer Homeric question human humor ideas imagination Immanuel Kant impression influence intellectual interest Jean Paul John Paul Kant Kant's Klopstock knowledge Laocoon Leben Leibnitz Lessing Lessing's literary London Magazine Masson Milton moral nature Nichols Novalis novel opinion original Page's paper Paul's perhaps Philoctetes philosophy poet poetry Posth praise prose pure Quin Quincey knew Quincey refers Quincey speaks Quincey's Quincey's criticism remark reprinted Review rhetorical Richter Schelling Schiller Schlegel sense style sympathies talent taste things Thomas Carlyle Thomas De Quincey translation VIII Voss Walladmor Werke Werther Wieland Wilhelm Meister word Wordsworth written
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Side 94 - ... built up triumphal gates, whose architraves, whose archways — horizontal, upright — rested, rose — at altitudes, by spans — that seemed ghostly from infinitude. Without measure were the architraves, past number were the archways, beyond memory the gates. Within were stairs that scaled the eternities...
Side 106 - Walladmor. Freely Translated into German from the English of Sir Walter Scott, and now freely Translated from the German into English. 2 vols.
Side 108 - This will be the more reasonable in him, as the critics will "feel it their duty" (oh ! of course, "their duty") to take the very opposite course. However, if he reads German, my German Walladmor is at his service, and he can judge for himself. Not reading German, let him take my word, when I apply to the English Walladmor the spirit of the old bull — " Had you seen but these roads before they were made, You would lift up your eyes, and bless Marshal "Wade.
Side 86 - ... might best be studied. From him might be derived the largest number of cases, illustrating boldly this absorption of the universal into the concrete — of the pure intellect into the human nature of the author. But nowhere could illustrations be found more interesting — shy, delicate, evanescent — shy as lightning, delicate and evanescent as the colored pencillings on a frosty night from the northern lights, than in the better parts of Lamb.
Side 90 - It was a wind that might have swept the fields of mortality for a thousand centuries. Many times since, upon summer days, when the sun is about the hottest, I have remarked the same wind arising and uttering the same hollow, solemn, Memnonian, but saintly swell : it is in this world the one great audible symbol of eternity.
Side 114 - Perhaps it was little De Quincey's reported admiration of Jean Paul — Goethe a mere corrupted pigmy to him — that first put me upon trying to be orthodox and admire. I dimly felt poor De Quincey, who passed for a mighty seer in such things, to have exaggerated, and to know, perhaps, but little of either Jean Paul or Goethe.
Side 43 - ... think) the same incapacity for dealing with simple and austere grandeur. I must add, however, that in fineness and compass of understanding, our English philosopher appears to me to have greatly the advantage.
Side 89 - ... of the Infinite. So sweet, so ghostly, in its soft, golden smiles, silent as a dream, and quiet as the dying trance of a saint, faded through all its stages this departing day, along the whole length of which I bade farewell for many a year to Wales, and farewell to summer.
Side 89 - I stood checked for a moment ; awe, not fear, fell upon me; and, whilst I stood, a solemn wind began to blow — the saddest that ear ever heard. It was a wind that might have swept the fields of mortality for a thousand centuries.
Side 45 - is a work of extraordinary merit, and displays the strongest intellect, it would be a want of candor to deny — but we neither envy nor admire the talents that produced it, at the expense of feeling, morality, and religion : for it not only aims at destroying all the comforts of the present life, by proving that man is destined to misery from...