The National Review, Volume 2Richard Holt Hutton, Walter Bagehot Robert Theobald, 1856 |
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Page 242
... Weimar , had this magnetic influence to such a degree that nobody could resist him , and no work of art ever failed in the poet's hands which the duke had suggested or approved . " He would have been enviable indeed if he could have ...
... Weimar , had this magnetic influence to such a degree that nobody could resist him , and no work of art ever failed in the poet's hands which the duke had suggested or approved . " He would have been enviable indeed if he could have ...
Page 244
... Weimar's influence over him , as well as wielded it in no slight degree , tells Eckermann ( himself a captive ) , " The higher a man stands , the more he is liable to this dæmonic influence ; and he must take constant care that his ...
... Weimar's influence over him , as well as wielded it in no slight degree , tells Eckermann ( himself a captive ) , " The higher a man stands , the more he is liable to this dæmonic influence ; and he must take constant care that his ...
Page 248
... Weimar , in 1805 , no one ventured to speak to her of it till it was past , though she affirmed that she had been conscious all the time of his danger without the heart to mention it . This peculiarity Goethe inherited . Courageous to ...
... Weimar , in 1805 , no one ventured to speak to her of it till it was past , though she affirmed that she had been conscious all the time of his danger without the heart to mention it . This peculiarity Goethe inherited . Courageous to ...
Page 250
... Weimar court , because he dreaded lest some ducal caprice should bring mortification to his family pride . The poet was born , as he himself records , with that sedate kind of humour in which alone he excelled , with a " propitious ...
... Weimar court , because he dreaded lest some ducal caprice should bring mortification to his family pride . The poet was born , as he himself records , with that sedate kind of humour in which alone he excelled , with a " propitious ...
Page 258
... Weimar , he visited his mother only at very long intervals , and never seems to have hastened to her side in any time of special trouble , though he always rejoiced to see her and wished to have her with him . In the last eleven years ...
... Weimar , he visited his mother only at very long intervals , and never seems to have hastened to her side in any time of special trouble , though he always rejoiced to see her and wished to have her with him . In the last eleven years ...
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actors affection amusing Atheism Austria beauty become believe character characteristic Christian civilisation course divine doubt Elective Affinities elements emperor English Europe existence fact faith father Faust feel France Frankfort French friends genius German Gibbon give Goethe Goethe's Götz von Berlichingen Greek hand heart honour human idea imagination infinite influence interest Jesuit less letters Lewes living look Lord Matteo Ricci means ment mind Minna Herzlieb moral narrative nation nature ness never noble object once Orleanist passion perhaps Phoenician picture poems poet Poland political present principle question racter readers relations remarkable Richard Hakluyt Russia scarcely seems sentiment Sigismund von Herberstein social society speak spirit Spitzbergen sympathy Thackeray Thackeray's theatre thing thought tion true truth University Vanity Fair Voyage Weimar Werther whole writings young