Periods of European Literature, Volume 12W. Blackwood, 1923 |
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Página 242
... Übermensch , a being with no virtues in the present sense of that word except an infinitely strong will , endurance , and determina- tion to enjoy . Cæsar Borgia and a " fallow wild beast " are the moderate examples tendered ; but they ...
... Übermensch , a being with no virtues in the present sense of that word except an infinitely strong will , endurance , and determina- tion to enjoy . Cæsar Borgia and a " fallow wild beast " are the moderate examples tendered ; but they ...
Página 243
... Übermensch ; and winds up in the fourth part by a wonderful series of rencontres with persons easily identified as Schopenhauer and Wagner , less easily as some other realities , culminating in an assembly of them which is a sort of ...
... Übermensch ; and winds up in the fourth part by a wonderful series of rencontres with persons easily identified as Schopenhauer and Wagner , less easily as some other realities , culminating in an assembly of them which is a sort of ...
Página 244
... Übermensch . more . To say that a great deal of this is indisputable madness would be merely banal ; and to say that it is only this madness which saves a great deal more from being intolerably offensive , is , though perhaps necessary ...
... Übermensch . more . To say that a great deal of this is indisputable madness would be merely banal ; and to say that it is only this madness which saves a great deal more from being intolerably offensive , is , though perhaps necessary ...
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actual admirable appeared Arnold attempt better Catulle Mendès certainly character characteristic classical criticism curious deal decade Dickens doubt drama earlier early eighteenth England English especially Europe extent fact fashion Flaubert France French French poetry Gautier genius George Eliot German Goethe Goncourts greater greatest Heine Hugo Ibsen influence interesting Italian Italy kind language last volume later least less litera literary history lyric Madame de Staël manner matter Matthew Arnold mediæval ment mentioned merely modern nature never Nietzsche nineteenth century notice novel novelist older Oxford Movement Parnassien Peer Gynt perhaps period persons philosophical poems poet poetic poetry political popular position present writer probably produced prose readers remarkable Renaissance Romantic Romanticism Sainte-Beuve satire Schopenhauer sense Shakespeare sometimes story style tendency Tennyson Thackeray things thought tion Tolstoi translated Übermensch verse whole wholly younger Zola