The Story of My Life: Memoir. Georg Ebers
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Georg Ebers
The Story of My Life: Memoir
Published by
Books
- Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -
2021 OK Publishing
EAN 4064066381103
Table of Contents
Chapter II. My Earliest Childhood
Chapter IV. The Journey to Holland to Attend the Golden Wedding.
Chapter V. Lennestrasse.—Lenne.—Early Impressions.
Chapter VI. My Introduction to Art, and Acquaintances Great and Small in the Lennestrasse.
Chapter VII. What a Berlin Child Enjoyed on the Spree and at His Grandmother’s in Dresden.
Chapter VIII. The Revolutionary Period Before the Revolution
Chapter IX. The Eighteenth of March.
Chapter X. After the Night of Revolution.
Chapter XII. Friedrich Froebel’s Ideal of Education.
Chapter XIII. The Founders of the Keilhau Institute, and a Glimpse at the History of the School.
Chapter XV. Summer Pleasures and Rambles
Chapter XVI. Autumn, Winter, Easter and Departure
Chapter XVII. The Gymnasium and the First Period of University Life.
Chapter XVIII. The Time of Effervescence, and My School Mates.
Chapter XIX. A Romance Which Really Happened.
Chapter XX. At the Quedlinburg Gymnasium
Chapter XXI. At the University.
Chapter XXIII. The Hardest Time in the School of Life.
Chapter XXIV. The Apprenticeship.
Chapter XXV. The Summers of My Convalescence.
Chapter XXVI. Continuance of Convalescence and the First Novel.
TO MY SONS.
When I began the incidents of yore,
Still in my soul’s depths treasured, to record,
A voice within said: Soon, life’s journey o’er,
Thy portrait sole remembrance will afford.
And, ere the last hour also strikes for thee,
Search thou the harvest of the vanished years.
Not futile was thy toil, if thou canst see
That for thy sons fruit from one seed appears.
Upon the course of thine own life look back,
Follow thy struggles upwards to the light;
Methinks thy errors will not seem so black,
If they thy loved ones serve to guide aright.
And should they see the star which ‘mid the dark
Illumed thy pathway to thy distant goal,
Thither they’ll turn the prow of their life bark;
Its radiance their course also will control.
Ay, when the ivy on my grave doth grow,
When my dead hand the helm no more obeys,
This book to them the twofold light will show,
To which I ne’er forget to turn my gaze.
One heavenward draws, with rays so mild and clear,
Eyes dim with tears, when the world darkness veils,
Showing ‘mid desert wastes the spring anear,
If, spent with wandering, your courage fails.