
Maxims and Reflections
About this book
Goethe was probably the last true ‘Renaissance Man’. Although employed as a Privy Councillor at the Duke of Weimar’s court, where he helped oversee major mining, road-building and irrigation projects, he also painted, directed plays, carried out research in anatomy, botany and optics — and still found time to produce masterpieces in every literary genre. His 1,413 maxims and reflections reveal not only some of his deepest thought on art, ethics, literature and natural science, but also his immediate reactions to books, chance encounters or his administrative work. With a freshness and immediacy which vividly conjure up Goethe the man, they make an ideal introduction to one of the greatest of European writers.
Where to buy
No purchase options available at this time.
More by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

100 Eternal Masterpieces of Literature #1
Fyodor Dostoevsky, Aldous Huxley, Charles Dickens, Lewis Carroll, George Eliot, Gustave Flaubert, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Louisa May Alcott, Anne Brontë, Arthur Conan Doyle, Jane Austen, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Joseph Conrad, Victor Hugo, Emily Brontë, Homer, Alexandre Dumas, E.M. Forster, Honoré de Balzac, Charlotte Brontë, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Theodore Dreiser, Henri Barbusse, Big Cheese Books

A Very German Christmas: The Greatest Austrian, Swiss and German Holiday Stories of All Time
Hermann Hesse, Arthur Schnitzler, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Martin Suter, Thomas Mann, Joseph Roth, Rainer Maria Rilke, Heinrich Heine, Erich Kästner

Elective Affinities
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Erotica Romana
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe