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  1. The Prussian hero of Fluchtlinge (Refugees, Gustav Ucicky, 1933) says that "to die for some- thing is best of all." A hero's death is fetishized in Nazi literature, film, and music as a privilege of the Aryan Ubermenschen.

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    But where was he going? He began to come out of his trance of delight andliberty. Deep within him he felt the steady burning of shame in the flesh. Asyet he could not bear to think of it. But there it was, submerged beneath hisattention, the raw, steady-burning shame. It behoved him to be intelligent. As yet he dared not remember what he haddone. H...

    She was uneasy, perturbed to her last fibre. She wanted to remain clear, withno touch on her. A wild instinct made her shrink away from any hands whichmight be laid on her. She was a foundling, probably of some gipsy race, brought up in a RomanCatholic Rescue Home. A naïve, paganly religious being, she was attached to theBaroness, with whom she had...

    At six o’clock came the inquiry of the soldiers: Had anything been seenof Bachmann? Fräulein Hesse answered, pleased to be playing a rôle: “No, I’ve not seen him since Sunday—have you, Emilie?” “No, I haven’t seen him,” said Emilie, and her awkwardnesswas construed as bashfulness. Ida Hesse, stimulated, asked questions, andplayed her part. “But it ...

    In the morning, when the bugle sounded from the barracks they rose and lookedout of the window. She loved his body that was proud and blond and able to takecommand. And he loved her body that was soft and eternal. They looked at thefaint grey vapour of summer steaming off from the greenness and ripeness of thefields. There was no town anywhere, the...

  2. 1 de jun. de 2008 · By Christopher Clark. June 2008. Central European History 41 (02) DOI: 10.1017/S0008938908000356. Authors: William Hagen. University of California, Davis. References (2) Abstract. Iron Kingdom:...

    • William Hagen
  3. of him. And this irritated the Prussian. He did not choose to be touched into life by his servant. He might easily have changed his man, but he did not. He now very rarely looked direct at his orderly, but kept his face averted, as if to avoid seeing him. And yet as the young soldier

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  4. Summary. This study guide for D.H. Lawrence's The Prussian Officer offers summary and analysis on themes, symbols, and other literary devices found in the text. Explore Course Hero's library of literature materials, including documents and Q&A pairs.

  5. 31 de ago. de 2007 · The Prussian Officer by D. H. Lawrence | Project Gutenberg. Project Gutenberg. 73,541 free eBooks. 41 by D. H. Lawrence. The Prussian Officer by D. H. Lawrence. Read now or download (free!) Similar Books. Readers also downloaded… About this eBook. Free kindle book and epub digitized and proofread by volunteers.

  6. A Prussian Monarch—an American Hero: Early Republican Royalism and Parallels between the Cult of Frederick the Great and Celebrations of the First American President. Stephanie Kermes. Chapter. 92 Accesses. Abstract.