Quote from Hodler's speech: 'Über die Kunst', in Freibourg, 1897; as cited in Nationalism and the Nordic Imagination: Swedish Art of the 1890's, Michelle Facos; University of California Press, 1998, p.
“When we read Spinoza, we are seized with a feeling like that of seeing nature at its grandest in most vigorous repose: a forest of thoughts, tall as the sky, whose blooming tree-tops sway back and forth, while imperturbable trunks stand rooted in the eternal soil. There is a certain soft breeze in the writings of Spinoza which is inexplicable. It stirs the reader with the winds of the future. The spirit of the Hebrew prophets still rested perhaps on their late descendant. At the same time, there is a seriousness to him, a self-confident pride, a grandeur of thought which also seems to be an inheritance, since Spinoza belonged to one of those families of martyrs which had been expelled from Spain by those most Catholic kings.”
Heinrich Heine, On the History of Philosophy and Religion and Other Writings [original in German]
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Baruch Spinoza 210
Dutch philosopher 1632–1677Related quotes
Source: The Art of the Dance (1928), p. 54.
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“Spirit is like the wind, in that we can't see it but can see its effects, which are profound.”
July 1890, pages 315-316
John of the Mountains, 1938
Source: We Have Always Lived in the Castle