"Time is only an empty space, first acquiring meaning from the events, thoughts, and feelings with which we fill it. But as we know that this meaning has come fraught with joy and sorrow to many sensitive natures, our own hearts cannot but be affected by it. Its quiet, secret power, too, has a magical charm. The day on which a great misfortune has befallen us is, after a long course of years, passed unnoticed, and then, too, unknown to us is the approach of one on which a calamity inevitably awaits us. If we reflect deeply on the consequences of time, we lose ourselves as in an abyss. There is neither beginning nor end. A great comfort lies, however, in contemplating the course of life, as it ever reminds us of a sublime law — an eternal controlling power — an immutable order. There is something very tranquillising in the knowledge of this order in all the affairs of the world, in the frailty of human nature, and in the apparently uncontrolled destructive power of the elements."
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Academics from GermanyAmbassadorsPhilosophers from GermanyDiplomats of GermanyLinguists from Germany
Original Language: English
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Sources
. Letter II. 42 (pp. 223-224)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wilhelm_von_Humboldt
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Wilhelm von Humboldt
1767 – 1835
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