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Updated: May 28, 2025
Even if Heine had known it he could have borrowed nothing from it except the name of his heroine. As to Loeben's saga, there can be but little doubt that he derived his initial inspiration from Schreiber, with whom he became intimately acquainted at Heidelberg during the winter of 1807-8. This, of course, is not to say that Heine borrowed from Loeben.
But this was written in 1843, and proves nothing as to 1823. His contention, however, that Heine borrowed from Schreiber has everything in its favor, from the point of view of both external and internal evidence and deserves, therefore, detailed elaboration.
In the doorway to Zalnitch's private office stood Schreiber, a heavy-jowled, unsmiling mastiff of a man. "What do you want that you should be keeping my stenographer from working?" Zalnitch's voice rose in a shrill crescendo. "Get out of here! You have no business here. Get out!" "Zalnitch, I came here to speak to you." "Get out!" he screamed. "I won't talk with you.
The sergeants' horses were held by a third soldier a few yards back behind the spur, for Winsor was "side scouting" up the heights. The snowfall had ceased for a time. The light was growing broader every moment, and presently a soft whistle sounded somewhere up the steep, and Schreiber answered.
Exertions of the aged survivors. Schreiber, superintendant, arrives. Anxiety of the native Christians to attend the ordinances of religion. Advantages of the Bible as a school-book. Four missionaries unexpectedly carried to England. Baptized Esquimaux seduced by traders. Perilous voyage of the returning missionaries. striking accident.
No one can read Schreiber's Handbuch and Heine's Rabbi without being convinced that the former stood sponsor for the latter. And lastly, Heine wrote before 1821 his poem entitled "Die zwei Brüder." It is the tenth of the seventeen Volkssagen by Schreiber, the same theme as the one treated by W. Usener already referrred to.
The chief schreiber turned to the Ober-Amtmann, as if to consult his will.
"There used to be a hotel of that name, close to the old town the Kasbah; quite a little place, for commercants, and people like that. Why, yes, to be sure! But the name has been changed, five or six years ago it must be. I think it is the Hotel-Pension Schreiber now." "Oh, and what became of Delatour?"
But he again started back with a cry of despair it was not the Ober-Amtmann. He had been obliged, by indisposition, to give up the office of superintending the execution, and the chief schreiber had been deputed to take his place. "Where is the Ober-Amtmann?" cried Claus in agony. "I must see him I must speak with him! She is innocent I swear she is!
"That's my notion, too. Now some people like to take a book and sit down and read, and read, and read, or moon around yawping at the lake or these mountains and things, but that ain't my way; no, sir, if they like it, let 'em do it, I don't object; but as for me, talking's what I like. You been up the Rigi?" "Yes." "What hotel did you stop at?" "Schreiber." "That's the place! I stopped there too.
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