A Memoir of Charles Louis Sand: Including a Narrative of the Circumstances Attending the Death of Augustus Von Kotzebue ; Also, A Defence of the German Universities |
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Page xxv
... remain concealed long enough to make his death certain , Lohning had contrived to swallow several pieces of glass , when the guard on seeing the blood flow from the delinquent's bed , gave the alarm , and called for help ; Lohning lay ...
... remain concealed long enough to make his death certain , Lohning had contrived to swallow several pieces of glass , when the guard on seeing the blood flow from the delinquent's bed , gave the alarm , and called for help ; Lohning lay ...
Page xxxix
... a manner a physical consequence ; but is it not worth our while to inquire , whether the Tiers etat of Germany do not feel the many remains of feudal aristocracy existing in that country , as keenly , " as the same xxxix.
... a manner a physical consequence ; but is it not worth our while to inquire , whether the Tiers etat of Germany do not feel the many remains of feudal aristocracy existing in that country , as keenly , " as the same xxxix.
Page 25
... remain honest and faithful to each other . An early death does not destroy the victory for which we all strive as heroes . Therefore let our doctrine be religiously to believe in God , humbly to cherish him in our hearts , to adhere ...
... remain honest and faithful to each other . An early death does not destroy the victory for which we all strive as heroes . Therefore let our doctrine be religiously to believe in God , humbly to cherish him in our hearts , to adhere ...
Page 31
... remains , followed by four mourning coaches , were interred on the morning of the 25th , two days after the catastrophe . Augustus Von Kotzebue was born at Weimar , March the 3d , 1761 , where his father , whom he lost at the early age ...
... remains , followed by four mourning coaches , were interred on the morning of the 25th , two days after the catastrophe . Augustus Von Kotzebue was born at Weimar , March the 3d , 1761 , where his father , whom he lost at the early age ...
Page 36
... remains unaccomplished by our inertness . Surely our greatest reproach is , that all those principles of honour and justice which thousands sacrificed themselves to establish , are suffered to sleep like the shapeless phantom of an idle ...
... remains unaccomplished by our inertness . Surely our greatest reproach is , that all those principles of honour and justice which thousands sacrificed themselves to establish , are suffered to sleep like the shapeless phantom of an idle ...
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A Memoir of Charles Louis Sand: Including A Narrative of the Circumstances ... Karl Ludwig Sand No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
abuses academical freedom academical liberty advocates amongst assassination attendance Augustus Von Kotzebue become calculated called calumny cause celebrated character CHARLES LOUIS SAND circumstances conduct consequence coun Counsellor crime death deed deny despotism editor Emperor enlightened Erlangen Europe event evil excite fact father favour France Frankfort freedom genius German universities German youth Germany Gottingen HARVARD COLLEGE heart HOLY ALLIANCE honour human Ibel imperial interests ject Jena justice justly Kotzebue's laws learning Leipsic less Literary Journal lived MADAME DE STAEL Manheim manners means measures MEMOIR ment mind nation observed occasion opinion paper patriotism poignard political present principles professors provost public liberty pupils reader reform remarks Rhine Russian Sand's sities sovereign spirit Stourdza suffer TACITUS talents teachers tend tion traitor treaty of Paris truth utmost Vienna virtue Weimar wish wretched writer young zebue
Popular passages
Page xxii - Between the acting of a dreadful thing And the first motion, all the interim is Like a phantasma, or a hideous dream : The genius, and the mortal instruments, Are then in council; and the state of man, Like to a little kingdom, suffers then The nature of an insurrection.
Page xl - ... power in such hands, it is doubly bound in common sense, and for common safety, so to conduct itself that the people may not find an interest in public confusions. They will always suffer much and long before they are effectually roused ; nothing, therefore, can kindle the flame but such oppressions of some classes or order in the society as give able men the opportunity...
Page 7 - Konigsberg; and afterwards, in 1816, by connecting him with the department of foreign affairs, as counsellor of state. In 1817, he received a commission to go to Germany, in order to send reports directly to the Emperor Alexander on the state of literature and public opinion in Germany. He settled for this purpose at Weimar, where he published, at the same time, a Literary Journal, in which he constituted himself judge of all...
Page xxvii - ... to require some discretion in its application to actual conduct. A Timoleon, a Scaevola, a Brutus, if they teach any thing, teach that an invasion of public liberty is a private wrong, which every individual is called upon by the noblest principles of his nature to redress by his own right hand ; and, lest the example of the patriot should be thought too weak for the encouragement of such virtue, the precepts of the sage and of the lawgiver add fresh incitement to the aspiring student.
Page 48 - Un gouvernement ne saurait prétendre à dérober à une grande nation la connaissance de l'esprit qui règne dans son siècle; cet esprit renferme des éléments de force et de grandeur , dont on peut user avec succès quand on ne craint pas d'aborder hardiment toutes les questions : on trouve alors dans les vérités éternelles des ressources contre les erreurs passagères, et dans la liberté même le maintien de l'ordre et l'accroissement de la puissance.
Page xl - They will always suffer much and long, before they are effectually roused ; nothing, therefore, can kindle the flame, but such oppressions of some classes or order in the society, as give able men the opportunity of seconding the general mass ; discontent will soon diffuse itself around ; and if the government take not warning in time, it is alone answerable for all the burnings, and plunderings, and devastation, and blood that follow.
Page vii - has observed the extraordinary sen sation created by the fate of M. Kotzebue, and has been very forcibly struck by the great degree of involuntary sympathy every where so eagerly manifested in favour of the perpetrator Sand, whose portrait he frequently saw exhibited in frames containing those of the most distinguished German patriots.
Page 3 - Such was the modesty of his demeanour, and mildness of his disposition, from his earliest years, that the friends of the family, and the teachers under whom he was placed, almost equalled his parents in the warmth of their affection for him. His person was engaging, his manners agreeable, and the uniform propriety of his conduct in the highest degree examplary. His remarkable docility, and the eager thirst for knowledge with which he was inspired, produced in him a frame of mind, most happily adapted...
Page xi - To this passage there is subjoined the note which follows. " For an account of the circumstances attending the return of Napoleon, see the Last Reign by Mr. Hobhouse, the only work that has any pretensions to historical accuracy, relative to that extraordinary period, which posterity will doubtless regard as one of the most important epochs in modern history ; so that the able and enlightened author has conferred a favour on future times, and acquired no inconsiderable degree of literary celebrity...
Page 13 - This extraordinary young man was thus led on from one reflection to another, until his enthusiastic imagination led him to suppose, that the sacrifice of a mercenary journalist would contribute to the liberation of the whole German people from oppression. To such a pitch of impetuous energy was he carried on some occasions, that Sand would often conclude a long comment on the dangerous...