Resultados de búsqueda (2)
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1
Texto
- Título:
-
Critical and miscellaneous essays. Volume IV / Thomas Carlyle - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
-
Carlyle, Thomas, 1795-1881
- Portales:
-
Russell P. Sebold
Visitar sitio web
| Fondo Antiguo de Universidades y Colecciones Singulares
Visitar sitio web
| Biblioteca Universitaria. BUA
Visitar sitio web
- Pub. orig.:
- New York : Charles Scribner's Sons, 1900
- Materia:
-
Literatura -- Crítica e interpretación
- Fragmentos
'germán vega' en la obra
: (20
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
Lope de Vega, whom all the world swore by, and
made a proverb of ; who could make an acceptable five-act
-
either case ; dabbling
a little the while, under guidance of Monk Lewis, in trans
lations from the German
-
It seems to us
that such of our readers as take interest in things German,
ought to be apprised of this
-
Mannheim, 1837-38.
88
89
as readers of German have increased a hundredfold, some
partial intelligence
-
of Germany, some interest in things
German, may have increased in a proportionably higher
ratio.
-
At all events, Memoirs of men, German or other,
will find listeners among men.
-
Our Nine printed Volumes we called German Memoirs.
-
Of these five volumes of German Letters we will say,
for the present, that they seem to be calculated
-
He said, German
writers ought to hold by the people, not by the upper classes, among
whom all was already
-
Fichte, of whose
Addresses to the German Nation, held in Berlin under the sound of French
drums, I had
-
What
he said was deep, considerate, hearty, valiant, German to the marrow of
the bone.
-
exclaims
a sardonic German writer, ‘ What is this universal cry for
Laissez-faire ?
-
‘ True, thou Gold-Hofrath,’ exclaims an eloquent satirical
202
203
MISCELLANIES
204
German of our
-
“English readers are so deeply ignorant of foreign history,
especially of German history !
-
He had
also been in the Hussite wars, this Kunz, fighting up and
down : a German condottiere, I find,
-
The rest of his merit
in History,—we conclude, it was work that had mainly a
Saxon, or at most a German
-
However, sure enough it all lies safely
funded in Saxon and German Life to this hour, Saxony reap
ing
-
of men, especially congregated in masses, extreme: Lope
485
487
MISCELLANIES
S U M M A It Y
de Vega
-
German history, especially,
quite wild soil, very rough to the ploughshare (p. 414).
-
Kunz
von Kaufungen, a German condottiere, employed by Frederick.
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:2
Texto
- Título:
-
Life of Friedrich Schiller (1825) ; Life of John Sterling (1851). Two biographies / by Thomas Carlyle - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
-
Carlyle, Thomas, 1795-1881
- Portales:
-
Russell P. Sebold
Visitar sitio web
| Fondo Antiguo de Universidades y Colecciones Singulares
Visitar sitio web
| Biblioteca Universitaria. BUA
Visitar sitio web
- Pub. orig.:
- London, Chapman and Hall, 1893
- Mat. aut.:
-
Schiller, Friedrich, 1759-1805 -- Biografía
| Sterling, John -- Biografía
- Fragmentos
'germán vega' en la obra
: (20
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
I he German nobleman of the fairest gifts and prospects
uins out, on investigation, to have been a German
-
He was not long afterwards elected a member of the German So
ciety established for literary objects
-
Nor, as in Paris,
is the stage in German towns considered merely as a mental recre
ation, an elegant
-
But the zeal of the German Society was more according to know
ledge than that of their new associate
-
It is not a German but a European subject; it forms the conclud
ing poition of the Reformation, and
-
The air of mysticism connected with these doctrines, was
attractive to the German mind, with which the
-
What would a Spanish reader give, had Lope de Vega composed a
hundred times as little, and that little
-
It was farther intended to treat, in the same manner,
t ie whole series of leading German plays, and
-
Schiller gives a fine example of the German character: he has
all its good qualities in a high degree
-
A warm friend and patron of the arts
‘ and sciences ; while the German Society flourished, at Manheim
-
(Translated from the German.)
218
JOHN STERPINO.
A PROFESSION.
-
He was thought to hold, he alone in England, the key of German
and other Transcendentalisms; knew the
-
So they parted.
‘ A year or two’ of serious reflection ‘ in some good German
264
JOHN STERLING.
-
The adventurous hunter
spirit which had started such a bemired Auerochs, or Urns of the
German woods,
-
His knowledge of German Literature, very slight at this time,
limited itself altogether to writers oil
-
But he was getting into German, into va
rious inquiries and sources of knowledge new to him, and his
-
A learned young German, tutor in some family ot
the neighbourhood, was admitted frequently to see him
-
Of ‘ Strauss,’ in English or in German, we.
now hear nothing more; of Church matters, and that only to
-
Theatre, German estimation of the,
38.
Wallenstein.
-
Xenien, the, a German Dnnciad by
Goethe and Schiller, 96.
Gustavus, death of, 185.
- Formatos:
-
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1 Texto
- Título:
- Critical and miscellaneous essays. Volume IV / Thomas Carlyle - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
- Carlyle, Thomas, 1795-1881
- Portales:
- Russell P. Sebold Visitar sitio web | Fondo Antiguo de Universidades y Colecciones Singulares Visitar sitio web | Biblioteca Universitaria. BUA Visitar sitio web
- Pub. orig.:
- New York : Charles Scribner's Sons, 1900
- Materia:
- Literatura -- Crítica e interpretación
- Fragmentos 'germán vega' en la obra : (20 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- Lope de Vega, whom all the world swore by, and made a proverb of ; who could make an acceptable five-act
- either case ; dabbling a little the while, under guidance of Monk Lewis, in trans lations from the German
- It seems to us that such of our readers as take interest in things German, ought to be apprised of this
- Mannheim, 1837-38. 88 89 as readers of German have increased a hundredfold, some partial intelligence
- of Germany, some interest in things German, may have increased in a proportionably higher ratio.
- At all events, Memoirs of men, German or other, will find listeners among men.
- Our Nine printed Volumes we called German Memoirs.
- Of these five volumes of German Letters we will say, for the present, that they seem to be calculated
- He said, German writers ought to hold by the people, not by the upper classes, among whom all was already
- Fichte, of whose Addresses to the German Nation, held in Berlin under the sound of French drums, I had
- What he said was deep, considerate, hearty, valiant, German to the marrow of the bone.
- exclaims a sardonic German writer, ‘ What is this universal cry for Laissez-faire ?
- ‘ True, thou Gold-Hofrath,’ exclaims an eloquent satirical 202 203 MISCELLANIES 204 German of our
- “English readers are so deeply ignorant of foreign history, especially of German history !
- He had also been in the Hussite wars, this Kunz, fighting up and down : a German condottiere, I find,
- The rest of his merit in History,—we conclude, it was work that had mainly a Saxon, or at most a German
- However, sure enough it all lies safely funded in Saxon and German Life to this hour, Saxony reap ing
- of men, especially congregated in masses, extreme: Lope 485 487 MISCELLANIES S U M M A It Y de Vega
- German history, especially, quite wild soil, very rough to the ploughshare (p. 414).
- Kunz von Kaufungen, a German condottiere, employed by Frederick.
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:2 Texto
- Título:
- Life of Friedrich Schiller (1825) ; Life of John Sterling (1851). Two biographies / by Thomas Carlyle - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
- Carlyle, Thomas, 1795-1881
- Portales:
- Russell P. Sebold Visitar sitio web | Fondo Antiguo de Universidades y Colecciones Singulares Visitar sitio web | Biblioteca Universitaria. BUA Visitar sitio web
- Pub. orig.:
- London, Chapman and Hall, 1893
- Mat. aut.:
- Schiller, Friedrich, 1759-1805 -- Biografía | Sterling, John -- Biografía
- Fragmentos 'germán vega' en la obra : (20 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- I he German nobleman of the fairest gifts and prospects uins out, on investigation, to have been a German
- He was not long afterwards elected a member of the German So ciety established for literary objects
- Nor, as in Paris, is the stage in German towns considered merely as a mental recre ation, an elegant
- But the zeal of the German Society was more according to know ledge than that of their new associate
- It is not a German but a European subject; it forms the conclud ing poition of the Reformation, and
- The air of mysticism connected with these doctrines, was attractive to the German mind, with which the
- What would a Spanish reader give, had Lope de Vega composed a hundred times as little, and that little
- It was farther intended to treat, in the same manner, t ie whole series of leading German plays, and
- Schiller gives a fine example of the German character: he has all its good qualities in a high degree
- A warm friend and patron of the arts ‘ and sciences ; while the German Society flourished, at Manheim
- (Translated from the German.) 218 JOHN STERPINO. A PROFESSION.
- He was thought to hold, he alone in England, the key of German and other Transcendentalisms; knew the
- So they parted. ‘ A year or two’ of serious reflection ‘ in some good German 264 JOHN STERLING.
- The adventurous hunter spirit which had started such a bemired Auerochs, or Urns of the German woods,
- His knowledge of German Literature, very slight at this time, limited itself altogether to writers oil
- But he was getting into German, into va rious inquiries and sources of knowledge new to him, and his
- A learned young German, tutor in some family ot the neighbourhood, was admitted frequently to see him
- Of ‘ Strauss,’ in English or in German, we. now hear nothing more; of Church matters, and that only to
- Theatre, German estimation of the, 38. Wallenstein.
- Xenien, the, a German Dnnciad by Goethe and Schiller, 96. Gustavus, death of, 185.
- Formatos: