Goering Quotes

Quotes tagged as "goering" Showing 1-4 of 4
“Hitler was – well, a bit of a Hitler, to put it bluntly. He got what he wanted. Nobody stood in his way. But there was one incident this reminds me of. I’m thinking of the Kröller-Müller Museum. Goering was very much taken by three paintings there that the museum’s benefactors had bought in Germany. A Portrait of a Lady by Bruyn the Elder, a Venus by Cranach and another Venus by Hans Baldung Grien. He reckoned the price had been set too low and they ought to go back to Germany – to his own private collection, natch. So he sent in Kajetan Mühlmann to deal with the museum’s director. Goering got his pictures but he had to let one of them go. Hans Posse, the Linz director, wrote to Martin Bormann saying the Baldung Grien Venus was one of the masterpieces of the German Renaissance. When Hitler got wind of this, he snapped up the painting for Linz. There was nothing Goering could do.”
Adrian Mathews, The Apothecary’s House

“Only in the hearts of those who knew him with all his qualities and all his faults and recognized that willingness to sacrifice himself for his country which no human weakness could entirely conceal, in the hearts of the soldiers and workers and peasants who still speak of “our Hermann” with a sense of personal loss, no order of the International Military Tribunal can cancel the belief that Hermann Göring has received from his Creator another justice and another mercy than those which he received at the hands of his fellow men.”
Charles Bewley, Hermann Goring and the Third Reich; A Biography Based on Family and Official Records

“The opinion of those who knew him cannot be completely ignored, though it obviously is not infallible. The Tribunal preferred the theory of the prosecution that Göring's professed desire for peace was merely a mask to disguise his share in the conspiracy to wage aggressive war. If so, it is worthy of remark that he not only set out to deceive the non-German world, but also to delude his own countrymen. Not only was his anti-war attitude known to Hassell and the group of conspirators against Hitler, but he went out of his way to proclaim it in public.”
Charles Bewley, Hermann Goring and the Third Reich; A Biography Based on Family and Official Records

Klaus Mann
“[describing 'the prime minister' i.e Goering] He loved war as a child loves Christmas”
Klaus Mann, Mephisto