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“The fog is clearing; life is a matter of taste.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“I didn't ask to be born, and I don't owe God anything.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“We see God and the devil blaming each other, and cherish the unspeakable belief that both of them are drunk.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“In my opinion it is unwise to judge a young man by his school record. We have too many examples of bad students becoming distinguished men, and, on the other hand, of brilliant students not being at all remarkable in life.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“I was a baby when I came into the world--otherwise I might have been smart enough to become a different person.”
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“If I ever have children I will let them grow up like the weeds in our flower garden. Nobody worries about them and they grow so high and thick-while the roses in the beds grow poorer and poorer every summer.”
― Spring Awakening: A Tragedy of Childhood
― Spring Awakening: A Tragedy of Childhood
“Monuments are for the living, not for the dead.”
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood
“We see God and the devil making fools of each other, and we nurture in ourselves the absolutely unshakable conviction that both of them are drunk.”
― Spring Awakening
― Spring Awakening
“I do not believe in pathos. Our elders show us long faces in order to hide their stupidity.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“Search fearlessly for every sin, for out of sin comes joy.”
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“And, therefore, hold your head high, Herr Stiefel!——Such a crisis as this comes to all of us and will soon be surmounted. If all of us had recourse to dagger or poison in such cases, there would soon be no men left in the world.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“Wer mir den Glauben an die Menschen zurückgibt, gibt mir mein Leben zurück.”
― The Lulu Plays and Other Sex Tragedies
― The Lulu Plays and Other Sex Tragedies
“Virtue is not a bad garment, but it requires an imposing figure.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“To be frank with you, Melchior, I have almost the same feeling since I read your explanation.——It fell at my feet during the first vacation days. I was startled. I fastened the door and flew through the flaming lines as a frightened owl flies through a burning wood——I believe I read most of it with my eyes shut.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“If our esteemed colleague, Zungenschlag, does not find our room ventilated sufficiently, I should like to suggest that our esteemed colleague, Zungenschlag, have a ventilator set into his forehead.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“Melchior. What good does that do? Moritz. What good does it have to do?——We are fit for nothing more, neither good nor evil.”
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood
“I only want to warn you that even the best can do one harm when one isn’t ripe enough in years to receive it properly.”
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“Der vermummte Herr Warum prahlen Sie denn dann mit Erhabenheit?! – Sie wissen doch, daß das Humbug ist – saure Trauben! Warum lügen Sie geflissentlich, Sie – Hirngespinst! – – Wenn Ihnen eine so schätzenswerte Wohltat damit geschieht, so bleiben Sie meinetwegen. Aber hüten Sie sich vor Windbeuteleien, lieber Freund – und lassen Sie mir bitte Ihre Leichenhand aus dem Spiel.”
― Spring's Awakening
― Spring's Awakening
“MORITZ: Melchior, do you agree that a human being's sense of shame is just a product of his education?
MELCHIOR: It seems to me it must be deeply rooted in human nature. Imagine you had to undress completely in front of your best friend. You'd only do it if he did it at the same time.”
― Spring Awakening
MELCHIOR: It seems to me it must be deeply rooted in human nature. Imagine you had to undress completely in front of your best friend. You'd only do it if he did it at the same time.”
― Spring Awakening
“Ernest. Oh, I can't eat any more. Hans. Just this shining muscatelle! Ernest. My elasticity has its limit.”
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood
“Half happy. We wander among Mayflowers, among the lonely paths in the woods. We hover over gatherings of people, over the scene of accidents, gardens, festivals. We cower in chimneys of dwelling places and behind the bed curtains. Give me your hand. We don’t associate with each other, but we see and hear everything that is going on in the world. We know that everything is stupidity, everything that men do and contend for, and we laugh at it.”
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“Before I struck a light one could see the grass and a streak on the horizon. Now it is dark. Now I shall never return home again.”
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“Melchior, don't you also think that man's sense of shame is just a product of his education?”
― The Awakening Of Spring: A Tragedy Of Childhood Translated From The German By Francis J. Ziegler
― The Awakening Of Spring: A Tragedy Of Childhood Translated From The German By Francis J. Ziegler
“Work is like Brussels lace: The essential is what surrounds the pattern: air, perforation, unjustified absence.”
― Mine-Haha, or On the Bodily Education of Young Girls
― Mine-Haha, or On the Bodily Education of Young Girls
“MELCHIOR- Je te dirai tout.-Je le tiens des livres, je le tiens d'illustrations, et aussi d'observations faites sur nature.
(L'éveil du printemps)”
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(L'éveil du printemps)”
―
“Wie einst als Kinder durch Hain und Flur,
So stapfen wir heut durchs Leben;
Der ganze Schlamm der modernen Kultur
Bleibt uns an den Beinen kleben.”
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So stapfen wir heut durchs Leben;
Der ganze Schlamm der modernen Kultur
Bleibt uns an den Beinen kleben.”
―
“Your explanation brought up a host of dim recollections, which affected me as a song of his childhood affects a man on his deathbed when hear from the lips of another.”
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“even the best can do one harm when one isn’t ripe enough in years to receive it properly.”
― Spring Awakening: A Tragedy of Childhood
― Spring Awakening: A Tragedy of Childhood
“I read your explanation.——It fell at my feet during the first vacation days. I was startled. I fastened the door and flew through the flaming lines as a frightened owl flies through a burning wood——I believe I read most of it with my eyes shut.”
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood
― The Awakening of Spring A Tragedy of Childhood




