 | James Main Dixon - 1906 - 178 pagina’s
...turmoil of expiring life — He said: The end is everywhere, Art still has truth, take refuge there! And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness! In these lines Arnold ascribes to Goethe the preeminent quality of lucidity: Felix qui potuit rerum... | |
 | Richard Holt Hutton - 1906 - 444 pagina’s
...turmoil of expiring life — He said : The end is everywhere, Art still has truth, take refuge there .' And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, A.nd headlong fate, be happiness. Or perhaps one might compare Dr. Newman's lines still more aptly to the picture of a physician of sick... | |
 | 1884 - 646 pagina’s
...Diintzer's ' Life of Goethe,' translated by Thomas W. Lyster, vol. i. pp. 146-7. < MacmiUan : 1883. " And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness." * He put miles out of sight behind him the tumultuous, extravagant, sentimental Goethe of the old Strasburg... | |
 | Otto Luitpold Jiriczek - 1907 - 518 pagina’s
...turmoil of expiring life — He said: Tlie end is everywhere, Art still has truth, take refuge there! And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness. And Wordsworth! — Ah, pale ghosts, rejoice! For never has such soothing voice Been to your shadowy... | |
 | 1884 - 896 pagina’s
...nor woman must intervene. As far as it is possible for human endeavor to succeed Goethe succeeded. " And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness." * He put miles out of sight behind him the tumultuous, extravagant, sentimental Goethe of the old Strasbúrg... | |
 | Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve, Charles William Emil Miller, Benjamin Dean Meritt, Tenney Frank, Harold Fredrik Cherniss, Henry Thompson Rowell - 1908 - 604 pagina’s
...ii. 437, " undantem buxo spectare Cytorum." In Matthew Arnold's ' Memorial Verses. April, 1850', " And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness", we have an echo of Geor. ii. 490, " felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas, atque metus omnes et... | |
 | Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve, Charles William Emil Miller, Benjamin Dean Meritt, Tenney Frank, Harold Fredrik Cherniss, Henry Thompson Rowell - 1908 - 552 pagina’s
...ii. 437, " undantem buxo spectare Cytorum." In Matthew Arnold's ' Memorial Verses. April, 1850', " And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness", we have an echo of Geor. ii. 490, " felix, qui potuit re rum cognoscere causas, atque metus omnes et... | |
 | Rev. S. Pollock Linn - 1881 - 472 pagina’s
...turmoil of expiring life — He said: The end is everywhere; Art still has truth, take refuge there ! And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness. 290 GOLDEN GLEAMS. not, nor scheme, but calmly wait; His choice is best, While blind and erring is... | |
 | 1910 - 532 pagina’s
...turmoil of expiring life — He said : The end is everywhere, Art still has truth, take refuge there! And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...insane distress, And headlong fate, be happiness. And Wordsworth ! — Ah, pale ghosts, rejoice ! For never has such soothing voice Been to your shadowy... | |
 | Jeannette Leonard Gilder - 1910 - 330 pagina’s
...turmoil of expiring life — He said, The end is everywhere, Art still has truth, take refuge there! And he was happy, if to know Causes of things, and...terror, and insane distress, And headlong fate, be happinesss. And Wordsworth! — Ah, pale ghosts, rejoice! For never has such soothing voice Been to... | |
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