[78]: Of course, German miles.--(Tr.)
[79]: So much the finer is it, that they keep the sentiment of love pure, thereby omnipotent; other feelings float therein, but dissolved and opaque; with men the latter merely stand beside it and independent of it.
[80]:
"O youth adown time's winding brook,
Toward life's vast ocean-grave I look."
The beginning runs originally:
"A wanderer sate by the rivulet's side,
And sadly the fleeting waters eyed."
--Volk-songs.
[81]: "Das Abendroth im ernsten Sinne glühn." (Faust.)--(Tr.)
[82]: According to the older theologians (e. g., Gerhard, Loc. Theol., T. VIII. p. 116, r.--) we rise without hair, stomach, lacteal vessels, etc. According to Origen we rise without finger-nails also, and what he himself had lost even in this life. According to Connor, Med. Mystic, Art. 13, we come out of the grave with no more flesh than we had at birth or conception.
[83]: Zückert in his Dietetics proposes a cork cuirass, which keeps one erect above water, and which, as fast as the ability to float on the top increases, may be cut off.