Kaspar Hauser: The Foundling of NurembergChelsea, Tilling, printer, 1832 - 164 |
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Strona 52
... hereafter , emerged from his merely animal existence , and , after his liberation , was so much Manual of Criminal Jurisprudence , part 1 , § 179 , & c . developed , that he would , with certain limita- tions 52 KASPAR HAUSER .
... hereafter , emerged from his merely animal existence , and , after his liberation , was so much Manual of Criminal Jurisprudence , part 1 , § 179 , & c . developed , that he would , with certain limita- tions 52 KASPAR HAUSER .
Strona 53
... existence , he could not be said to live , but only to vegetate . That period , during which he might be com- pared to one who is dead , passed by him with- out his having enjoyed it , or without his being even aware of it . The chasm ...
... existence , he could not be said to live , but only to vegetate . That period , during which he might be com- pared to one who is dead , passed by him with- out his having enjoyed it , or without his being even aware of it . The chasm ...
Strona 54
... existence . The crime committed on Kaspar is , therefore , distin- guished from those offences through which an intellectual being is ultimately driven to idiocy or insanity , only through the different periods of existence in which ...
... existence . The crime committed on Kaspar is , therefore , distin- guished from those offences through which an intellectual being is ultimately driven to idiocy or insanity , only through the different periods of existence in which ...
Strona 55
... existence with a mind which is inferior to his age . Intellectual and corporeal existence , which in a natural course of development proceed simultaneously , might , in the case of Kaspar , be said to be torn violently asunder , and ...
... existence with a mind which is inferior to his age . Intellectual and corporeal existence , which in a natural course of development proceed simultaneously , might , in the case of Kaspar , be said to be torn violently asunder , and ...
Strona 105
... existence of God , or of any superior immaterial being . Fed like an animal , slumbering even when he was awake , and , in the contracted limits of his desolate dungeon , excited by nothing but the grossest wants of nature , occupied ...
... existence of God , or of any superior immaterial being . Fed like an animal , slumbering even when he was awake , and , in the contracted limits of his desolate dungeon , excited by nothing but the grossest wants of nature , occupied ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kaspar Hauser: The Foundling of Nuremberg - Primary Source Edition Paul Johann Anselm Feuerbach Podgląd niedostępny - 2014 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
acquired afterwards Altona amongst amused animal aniseed Ansbach appeared arrival at Nuremberg asked astonishment attempted attention aversion Bavaria became bread brought Burgomaster Captain Captain von cellar child childhood childish chimney sweeper circumstances colour conjectures crime cumins curiosity dark desire distance distinguished door Easter Monday employed endeavoured enquiries Erlangen excited exhibited expressed extreme eyes feeling felt frightful Fürth gate gave Germany ground hand Harvard College head ache horseman horses ideas immediately inclosure instructor intellectual Kaspar Hauser legs light Lübeck manner ment mind murder nature ness night objects observed occasion occupied pain Pegnitz perceived person playthings police present prison privy Professor Daumer quired recollection remained remarked repeated respect riding seemed seen shewed shewn sion sleep smell soon spect stairs stranger stupified thing Thor thought tion tower town walked window wish wooden horses words wound writing youth
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 76 - It is, I think, agreed by all that Distance, of itself and immediately, cannot be seen. For, distance being a line directed endwise to the eye, it projects only one point in the fund of the eye, which point remains invariably the same, whether the distance be longer or shorter.
Strona 76 - a judgment or conclusion, that the object I see " beyond them is at a great distance. Again, " when an object appears faint and small, which " at a near distance I have experienced to make " a vigorous and large appearance ; I instantly " conclude it to be far off. And this...
Strona 77 - ... experience than of sense. For example, when I perceive a great number of intermediate objects, such as houses, fields, rivers, and the like, which I have experienced to take up a considerable space, I thence form a judgment or conclusion that the object I see beyond them is at a great distance. Again, when an object appears faint and small, which at a near distance I have experienced to make a vigorous and large appearance, I instantly conclude it to be far off: And this, Tis evident, is the...
Strona 76 - I find it also acknowledged that the estimate we make of the distance of objects considerably remote is rather an act of judgment grounded on experience than of sense. For example, when I perceive a great number of intermediate objects, such as houses, fields, rivers, and the like, which I have experienced to take up a considerable space, I thence form a judgment or conclusion...
Strona 136 - I was just thinking, how many beautiful things there are in the world, and how hard it is for me to have lived so long, and to have seen nothing of them ; and how happy children are, who have been able to see all these things from their earliest infancy, and can still look at them. I am already so old, and am still obliged to learn what children knew long ago.
Strona 39 - Here he first learned, that, besides himself and ' the man with whom he had always been,' there existed other men and other creatures. As long as he can recollect, he had always lived in a hole, (a small, low apartment, which he sometimes calls a cage,) where he had always sat upon the ground, with bare feet, and clothed only with a shirt and a pair of breeches.
Strona 97 - ... been accustomed in his prison; — for his bread was seasoned with these condiments — all kinds of smells were more or less disagreeable to him. When he was once asked, which of all other smells was most agreeable to him? he answered, none at all.
Strona 5 - He was hence soon regarded as a kind of savage; and, in expectation of the captain's return, was conducted to the stable, where he immediately stretched himself on the straw, and fell into a profound sleep.
Strona 13 - If he had parents (which he has not) he would have been a scholar : only show him a thing and he can do it.