Life of Jean Paul Frederic RichterTicknor and Fields, 1864 - 539 pages |
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Page vii
... romances , much of his personal experience . When , in the latter part of his life , he began his great comic romance ... romance and reality of one life . Hence re- sults the comic tone , and the apparent affectation of speaking in the ...
... romances , much of his personal experience . When , in the latter part of his life , he began his great comic romance ... romance and reality of one life . Hence re- sults the comic tone , and the apparent affectation of speaking in the ...
Page 2
... romance that belongs to no other country . In the Fichtelgebirge , gold , that object of intense de- sire in the Middle Ages , had been found , and the search for it led to many valuable mineral discoveries . Gold is no longer sought ...
... romance that belongs to no other country . In the Fichtelgebirge , gold , that object of intense de- sire in the Middle Ages , had been found , and the search for it led to many valuable mineral discoveries . Gold is no longer sought ...
Page 6
... . Plain and simple as are the inhabitants of this region , the charm of romance and the poetry of the ancient superstitions are thickly spread over it . The old people relate that good - natured dwarfs and 6 LIFE OF JEAN PAUL .
... . Plain and simple as are the inhabitants of this region , the charm of romance and the poetry of the ancient superstitions are thickly spread over it . The old people relate that good - natured dwarfs and 6 LIFE OF JEAN PAUL .
Page 7
... romance , without its having a powerful , but perhaps secret , influence upon the whole man , and upon the character of his genius and writings . It makes him the most personal of authors . The fact that he never could climb the heights ...
... romance , without its having a powerful , but perhaps secret , influence upon the whole man , and upon the character of his genius and writings . It makes him the most personal of authors . The fact that he never could climb the heights ...
Page 45
... romance in a lively man- ner , from a distance , as he sat in the pastor's pew in the church , and she in the seat appropriated to women , ap- parently near enough to look at each other without being satisfied . And yet this was only ...
... romance in a lively man- ner , from a distance , as he sat in the pastor's pew in the church , and she in the seat appropriated to women , ap- parently near enough to look at each other without being satisfied . And yet this was only ...
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Common terms and phrases
appear Bayreuth beautiful beloved brother Caroline character charm church cold court daughter dear death delight domestic elevated emotions Erlangen eternal excited extracts eyes fancy father feeling female Fichtelgebirge Flamin Flegeljahre flowers friendship gave genius German give Goethe hand happy heart heaven Herder hero Herr Herr Pastor Hesperus hypochondria imagination Jean Paul Joditz journey lady Leipzig letter literary live louis d'ors Madam von Kalb marriage Meiningen mind morning mother nature never Oerthel Otto pastor Paul's philosophy Poems poet poetic poor Portrait prince reader received Rehau rich Richter romance satire Schwarzenbach sorrow soul speak spirit tender thee thou thought tion Titan University of Leipzig village Vogel Volkel von Plotho Weimar whole wholly Wieland wife wish women write wrote Wunsiedel young youth
Popular passages
Page 299 - Who, if he rise to station of command, Rises by open means, and there will stand On honourable terms, or else retire And in himself possess his own desire; Who comprehends his trust and to the same Keeps faithful with a singleness of aim...
Page 171 - I have made as much out of myself as could be made of the stuff, and no man should require more...
Page 247 - The French are drawing towards Paris,' said Knebel. ' Hm ! ' said the god. His face is massive and animated, his eye a ball of light.
Page 493 - Plutus' heaps are worth less than his handfuls, the plum than the penny for a rainy day; and that not great, but little good-haps can make us happy. — Can I accomplish this, I shall, through means of my Book, bring up for Posterity, a race of men finding refreshment in all things ; in the warmth of their rooms and of their nightcaps ; in their pillows; in the three High Festivals; in mere Apostles...
Page 164 - ... friend Oerthel had smuggled out of Leipsic. It was winter, and from his window he looked out upon the cold, empty, frozen street of the little city of Hof, or he was obliged to be a prisoner, without, as he says, " the prisoner's fare of bread and water, for he had only the latter ; and if a gulden found its way into the house, the jubilee was such, that the windows were nearly broken with joy.
Page 162 - Nothing can embellish a beautiful face more than a narrow band, that indicates a small wound, drawn crosswise over the brow. I saw this on a beautiful girl on the way. One should try, from time to time, to give his wife a little wound on the forehead, that she might be obliged to bind her brow with this pretty ornament.