The Works of Heinrich Heine, Volumen5

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A M S Press, Incorporated, 1892
Each volume has also an individual title page.
 

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Página 207 - Fichtean dares all dangers because for him diey do not exist in reality, and the philosopher of Nature will be terrible because he will appear in alliance with the primitive powers of Nature, able to evoke the demoniac energies of old Germanic Pantheism...
Página 335 - Paris fashion; perfectly perfumed with good society and eau de mille fleurs ; he was neatness and refinement itself, and when he spoke of the Lord Chancellor of England, he added 'my friend...
Página 209 - German, and not in a hurry, and it comes rolling slowly onward ; but come it will, and when ye hear it crash as naught ever crashed before in the whole history of the world, then know that der deutsche Downer, our German thunder, has at last hit the mark.
Página 206 - These doctrines," wrote Heine in 1834, " have developed revolutionary forces which only await the day to break forth and fill the world with terror and astonishment.
Página 254 - Gothic cathedral, we hardly suspect the esoteric sense of its stone symbolism ; only a general impression pierces our soul ; we realise an elevation of feeling and mortification of the flesh. The interior is a hollow cross, and we wander among the instruments of martyrdom itself; the variegated windows cast on us red and green light, like blood and corruption ; funeral songs wail around ; under our feet are mortuary tablets and decay, and the soul soars with the colossal columns to a giddy height,...
Página 262 - ... doctrine spread. I say doctrine, for this school began with judgments of the art works of the past and giving recipes for art works of the future, and in both directions the Schlegel school rendered great service to aesthetic criticism. By judging of such works of art as already existed, either their faults and failures were indicated, or their merits and beauties brought to light. In controversy and in thus indicating artistic shortcomings, the Messrs. Schlegel were entirely imitators of old...
Página 250 - Trinity, God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, which are three in one, as shell, fibre, and kernel make one nut. When Homer describes the armour of a hero, it is a good piece of work, worth so or so many oxen; but when a monk of the Middle Age describes in his poems the garments of the Mother of God, one may be sure that by this garb he means as many virtues, and a peculiar meaning lies hidden under this holy covering of the immaculate virginity of Maria, who, as her son is the almondkernel,...
Página 208 - The old stone gods will rise from long-forgotten ruin and rub the dust of a thousand years from their eyes, and Thor, leaping to life with his giant hammer, will crush the Gothic cathedrals!
Página 137 - Then we find in them the same talent for mistrust, which the one showed as regarded thoughts and called it criticism, while the other applied it to men, and entitled it republican virtue. But there was manifested in both, to the very highest degree, the type of bourgeoisie, of the common citizen. Nature meant them to weigh out coffee and sugar, but destiny determined that they should weigh other things ; so one placed a king, and the other a god in the scales.

Acerca del autor (1892)

Charles Godfrey Leland was born in Philadelphia on August 15, 1824, the eldest child of commission merchant Charles Leland and his wife Charlotte. Leland loved reading and language. When he moved to Europe to study law, he became intrigued with German culture, gypsy lore, the language of Romany, and Shelta, an ancient dialect spoken by Irish and Welsh gypsies. After his law studies were completed, Leland became a journalist, working for such periodicals as P.T. Barnum's Illustrated News, Vanity Fair, and Graham's Magazine. The mid-to-late 1850s were very eventful for Leland; he published his first book, Meister Karl's Sketch-Book in 1855 and married Eliza Bella Fisher in 1856. What probably clinched his fame was "Hans Breitmann's Party" a German dialect poem that he wrote under the pen name Hans Breitmann and that captured the Pennsylvania Dutch dialect and humor. While he was best known for his essays, poetry, and humor, Leland also firmly believed that the industrial arts were the keys to a good education, and he wrote many textbooks on the subject. Leland spent most of the latter part of his life in Europe, writing a wealth of books. He died in Florence, Italy, on March 20, 1903.

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