The Life and Works of Goethe: With Sketches of His Age and Contemporaries, from Published and Unpublished Sources, 1. köideTicknor and Fields, 1856 |
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Page 4
... present him as the exemplar of all greatness . No man can be such an exemplar . Hu- manity reveals itself in fragments . One man is the car- rier of one kind of excellence , another of another . Achilles wins the victory , and Homer ...
... present him as the exemplar of all greatness . No man can be such an exemplar . Hu- manity reveals itself in fragments . One man is the car- rier of one kind of excellence , another of another . Achilles wins the victory , and Homer ...
Page 5
... race . The whole question of hereditary transmission is at present beyond the scope of science . We know that form , fea- * 1 * Carlyle . ture , temperament , idiosyncrasy , acquired habit , diseases 1749. ] 5 PARENTAGE .
... race . The whole question of hereditary transmission is at present beyond the scope of science . We know that form , fea- * 1 * Carlyle . ture , temperament , idiosyncrasy , acquired habit , diseases 1749. ] 5 PARENTAGE .
Page 19
... present . The travellers brought there by the Rhine - stream , and by the great northern roads , made it a representative of Europe , and an Emporium of Commerce . It was thus a centre for that distinctively modern idea - Industrialism ...
... present . The travellers brought there by the Rhine - stream , and by the great northern roads , made it a representative of Europe , and an Emporium of Commerce . It was thus a centre for that distinctively modern idea - Industrialism ...
Page 38
... present let it be noted that he was a frequenter of the green - room , and admitted into the dressing - room , where the actors and actresses dressed and undressed with philosophic disregard to appearances , which , from repeated visits ...
... present let it be noted that he was a frequenter of the green - room , and admitted into the dressing - room , where the actors and actresses dressed and undressed with philosophic disregard to appearances , which , from repeated visits ...
Page 42
... present him with such a volume . A very different sort of female influence has now to be touched on . His heart began to flutter with the emotions of love . He was not quite fifteen , when Gretchen , the sister of one of his ...
... present him with such a volume . A very different sort of female influence has now to be touched on . His heart began to flutter with the emotions of love . He was not quite fifteen , when Gretchen , the sister of one of his ...
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acquaintance admiration Autobiography Beaumarchais beauty called character charming Christian Clavigo Corona Schröter court criticism dear delight drama Drusenheim Duchess Duke Emilia eyes father feel felt Frankfurt Frau Fräulein Frederika French friendship genius German give Goethe Goethe's Götz von Berlichingen Greek hand happy heart Herder hope imagination imitation influence Jena Jerusalem Julius Cæsar Karl August Käthchen Kestner Klettenberg Klopstock Leipsic less letter literature live look Lotte lover Lucinda Merck mind mother nature never night noble once Otto Jahn passion picture play poem poet poetic poetry prince reader scene Schiller seems sentimental Sesenheim Shakespeare sister song soul speak Spinoza spirit Strasburg Sturm und Drang table d'hôte tendency thee things thou thought tion translation truth Viehoff Weimar Weislingen Werther Wetzlar Weyland Wieland wife Wolfgang woman word write wrote young youth
Popular passages
Page 192 - Within its own creation, or in thine, Maternal Nature ! for who teems like thee, Thus on the banks of thy majestic Rhine? There Harold gazes on a work divine, A blending of all beauties; streams and dells, Fruit, foliage, crag, wood, cornfield, mountain, vine, And chiefless castles breathing stern farewells From gray but leafy walls, where Ruin greenly dwells.
Page 294 - Ahazuerus sees depicted the features of our Lord, not in their present agony, but radiant with celestial life. Astounded at the sight, he turns away his eyes, and hears the words, ' Over the earth shalt thou wander till thou shalt once more see me in this form.' Overwhelmed by the sentence, he is some time before he recovers himself ; he then finds that every one has gone to the place of execution, and that the streets of Jerusalem are empty. Unrest and yearnings drive him forth, and his wanderings...
Page 128 - For Hamlet, and the trifling of his favor, Hold it a fashion, and a toy in blood, A violet in the youth of primy nature, Forward, not permanent, sweet, not lasting, The perfume and suppliance of a minute ; No more.
Page 30 - Circumstance, it would be nearer the mark to say that Man is the architect of Circumstance.
Page 56 - Willst du genau erfahren was sich ziemt, So frage nur bei edlen Frauen an.
Page 139 - They say, best men are moulded out of faults; And, for the most, become much more the better For being a little bad: so may my husband.
Page 206 - Goethe has narrated in full the conception of this piece, which is very grand ; he tells us the idea arose within him of illustrating the sad fact, noticeable in the biographies of genius, that every man who attempts to realize a great idea comes in contact with the lower world, and must place himself on its level in order to influence it, and thus compromises his higher aims and finally forfeits them.
Page 13 - I never bemoralise any one — always seek out the good that is in them, and leave what is bad to him who made mankind, and knows how to round off the angles. In this way I make myself happy and comfortable.
Page 235 - O that I could spring on thy neck, throw myself at Lotte's feet, one, one minute, and all, all that should be done away with, explained, which I could not make clear with quires of paper ! O ye unbelieving ones, I could exclaim ! Ye of little faith ! Could you feel the thousandth part of what Werther is to a thousand hearts, you would not reckon the sacrifice you have made towards it! Here is a letter, read it, and send me word quickly what thou thinkest of it, what impression it makes on thee. Thou...
Page 169 - This it is to write autobiography when one has outlived almost the memories of youth, and lost sympathy with many of its agitations. At the time he was in Wetzlar he would have looked strangely on any one who ventured to tell him that the history of the Imperial...