Fragments from German Prose WritersJ. Murray, 1841 - 353 sider |
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Resultater 1-5 af 33
Side 2
... beautiful , and in the fine arts second to none , yet still more successful in the investigation of the true and in the accomplishment of the great ; remarkable for good sense and for unwearied perse- verance ; obedient even to the most ...
... beautiful , and in the fine arts second to none , yet still more successful in the investigation of the true and in the accomplishment of the great ; remarkable for good sense and for unwearied perse- verance ; obedient even to the most ...
Side 18
... beautiful monu- ment to the memory of a man , must ever be a like- ness of him . This gives a more perfect idea of what he was than anything else can ; it is the best text to few notes , or to many ; only it ought to be taken in his ...
... beautiful monu- ment to the memory of a man , must ever be a like- ness of him . This gives a more perfect idea of what he was than anything else can ; it is the best text to few notes , or to many ; only it ought to be taken in his ...
Side 43
... beautiful , the great , the noble ; middling , or even bad books , actors , pictures , and the like , delight them . Novalis . ...... THIS Ranz des Vaches at once awaked his blooming 43 This motley company was so gay and joyous that ...
... beautiful , the great , the noble ; middling , or even bad books , actors , pictures , and the like , delight them . Novalis . ...... THIS Ranz des Vaches at once awaked his blooming 43 This motley company was so gay and joyous that ...
Side 44
... beautiful I am ! We used to play together . I for- merly gave thee many things - great riches , gay meadows , and bright gold , and a fair long paradise behind the mountains ; but now thou hast nothing of all this left - and how pale ...
... beautiful I am ! We used to play together . I for- merly gave thee many things - great riches , gay meadows , and bright gold , and a fair long paradise behind the mountains ; but now thou hast nothing of all this left - and how pale ...
Side 69
... beautiful forms on brass or stone ; built up from the rock more stately piles for dwell- ings ; brought to light hidden treasures from the clefts of the earth ; tamed the wayward and lawless streams ; peopled the inhospitable sea ...
... beautiful forms on brass or stone ; built up from the rock more stately piles for dwell- ings ; brought to light hidden treasures from the clefts of the earth ; tamed the wayward and lawless streams ; peopled the inhospitable sea ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
admirable appear Aristotle artist Batavi Battle of Sempach beautiful Berlin breath Briefwechsel called character child Clara Clemens Brentano dear death earth Egmont English enlightened eyes faith father feeling Fichte flowers Frau Frederic French gay meadows genius German German language German literature give Goethe Goethe's hand happy heart heaven highest honour human Jean Paul Jena Justus Möser Kant king knowledge Königsberg labour language Lenette less letters light literature living look Lothair means ment mind moral Müller nations nature ness never noble Novalis opinions Osnabrück Otfried Müller philosophical poet poetry prince Prussia published racter regard religion remarkable rendered Roman Roman law Schlegel singular society soul spirit style taste thee thing thou thought Tieck tion tranquil translation true truth Vienna whole wish women words writer
Populære passager
Side 227 - Enlightenment is man's emergence from his selfincurred immaturity. Immaturity is the inability to use one's own understanding without the guidance of another.
Side 40 - ... flattery ; forego the gracious pressure of the hand, for which others cringe and crawl. Wrap yourself in your own virtue, and seek a friend, and your daily bread. If you have, in such a course, grown gray with unblenched honour, bless God, and die.
Side 40 - The most agreeable of all companions is a simple, frank man, without any high pretensions to an oppressive greatness ; one who loves life, and understands the use of it ; obliging alike at all hours; above all, of a golden temper and steadfast as an anchor. For such an one we gladly exchange the greatest genius, the most brilliant wit, the profoundest thinker.— LESSING.
Side 146 - To have freedom, is only to have that which is absolutely necessary to enable us to be what we ought to be, and to possess what we ought to possess.
Side 233 - ... with respect to it, as a priest, he is not free, nor can he be free, because he carries out the orders of another. But as a scholar, whose writings speak to his public, the world, the clergyman in the public use of his reason enjoys an unlimited freedom to use his own reason and to speak in his own person.
Side 26 - All his efforts are directed to the perfecting of his knowledge; his noble impatience cannot be tranquillized till all his conceptions have arranged themselves into one harmonious whole ; till he stands at the central, point of arts and sciences, and thence overlooks the whole extent of their dominion with satisfied glance. New discoveries in the field of his activity, which depress the trader in science, enrapture the philosopher.
Side 80 - The year is dying away,' says Goethe, ' like the sound of bells. The wind passes over the stubble, and finds nothing to move. Only the red berries of that slender tree seem as if they would fain remind us of something cheerful ; and the measured beat of the thresher's flail calls up the thought that in the dry and fallen ear lies so much of nourishment and life.
Side 91 - Therefore do her entrails yearn over his wailings ; her heart beats quicker at his joy ; her blood flows more softly through her veins, when the breast at which he drinks knits him to her. In every uncorrupted nation of the earth, this feeling is the same. Climate, which changes every thing else, changes not that.
Side 72 - A certain degree of solitude seems necessary to the full growth and spread of the highest mind ; and therefore must a very extensive intercourse with men stifle many a holy germ, and scare away the gods, who shun the restless tumult of noisy companies and the discussion of petty interests.
Side 4 - The Last, Best Fruit of Life. —The last, best fruit which comes to late perfection, even in the kindliest soul, is tenderness toward the hard, forbearance toward the unforbearing, warmth of heart toward the cold, philanthropy toward the misanthropic.