| Friedrich Max Müller - 1867 - 394 pągines
...the same, When the captivity of sleep had ceased. There is much suffering in nature to those who have eyes for silent grief, and it is this tragedy —...young hero, whether he is called Baldr, or Sigurd, or SJfrit, or Achilles, or Meleager, or Kephalos, dying in the fulness of youth, a story so frequently... | |
| Friedrich Max Müller - 1867 - 398 pągines
...nature to those who have eyes for silent grief, and it is this tragedy—the tragedy of nature—which is the lifespring of all the tragedies of the ancient...or Achilles, or Meleager, or Kephalos, dying in the fulness of youth, a story so frequently told, localized, and individualized, was first suggested by... | |
| Friedrich Max Müller - 1869 - 432 pągines
...same, When the captivity of sleep had ceased." There is much suffering in nature to those who have eyes for silent grief, and it is this tragedy —...the fullness of youth, a story so frequently told, localized, and individualized, was first suggested by the Sun, dying in all his youthful vigor, either... | |
| Friedrich Max Müller - 1869 - 418 pągines
...same, When the captivity of sleep had ceased." There is much suffering in nature to those who have eyes for silent grief, and it is this tragedy —...Meleager," or " Kephalos," dying in the fullness of yoiith, a story so frequently told, localized, and individualized, was first suggested by the Sun,... | |
| John Francis Arundell Baron Arundell of Wardour - 1872 - 476 pągines
...an " a priori " probability. Take, again, the following passage from Mr Max Miiller (p. 107) — " The idea of a young hero, whether he is called Baldr, or Sigurd, or Sigrit, or Achilles, or Meleager, or Kephalos, dying in the fulness of youth — a story so frequently... | |
| Natural History Society of Glasgow - 1887 - 560 pągines
...Muller, in Chips from a German Workshop, says : " There is much suffering in nature to those who have eyes for silent grief; and it is this tragedy —...world. The idea of a young hero, whether he is called Balder, or Sigurd, or Sifrit, or Achilles, or Meleager, or Kephalos, dying in the fulness of youth,... | |
| James Clerk Maxwell - 1990 - 1068 pągines
...seemed to look for her . . . the Sun seemed to die away in the far West... the tragedy of nature... is the lifespring of all the tragedies of the ancient world .... The Sun freshens the Dawn, and dies at the end of the day, according to an inexorable fate, and bewailed... | |
| Turner B S Staff - 2004 - 372 pągines
...the same. When the captivity of sleep had ceased. There is much suffering in nature to those who have eyes for silent grief, and it is this tragedy —...idea of a young hero, whether he is called Baldr, or Sigurdr, or Sīfrit, or Achilles, or Meleager, or Kephalos, dying in the fulness of youth, a story... | |
| Richard Mercer Dorson - 1999 - 416 pągines
...fieagraphie unt/ Well!:-tn,l. , Hannover, 1830, p. 31. There is mueh suffering in nature to those who have eyes for silent grief, and it is this tragedy — the tragedy of nature — whieh is the life-spring of sill the tragedies of the aneient world. The idea of a young hero,... | |
| Roger Pearson - 2004 - 296 pągines
...comments on the spectacle of the setting sun: 'There is much suffering in nature to those who have eyes for silent grief, and it is this tragedy — the tragedy of nature — which is the lifespnng of all the tragedies of the ancient world' (quored in La Religion de Mallarmé, 153lof life'... | |
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