By Ellen Key
By Ellen Key
By Ellen Key
By Ellen Key
The Century of the ChildThe Education of the ChildLove and MarriageThe Woman Movement
The Century of the ChildThe Education of the ChildLove and MarriageThe Woman Movement
The Century of the ChildThe Education of the ChildLove and MarriageThe Woman Movement
The Century of the Child
The Education of the Child
Love and Marriage
The Woman Movement
The Woman MovementByEllen KeyAuthor of“The Century of the Child,” “Love and Marriage,” etc.Translated byMamah Bouton Borthwick, A.M.With an Introduction byHavelock EllisG. P. Putnam’s SonsNew York and LondonThe Knickerbocker Press1912
The Woman Movement
ByEllen KeyAuthor of“The Century of the Child,” “Love and Marriage,” etc.Translated byMamah Bouton Borthwick, A.M.With an Introduction byHavelock EllisG. P. Putnam’s SonsNew York and LondonThe Knickerbocker Press1912
ByEllen KeyAuthor of“The Century of the Child,” “Love and Marriage,” etc.Translated byMamah Bouton Borthwick, A.M.With an Introduction byHavelock EllisG. P. Putnam’s SonsNew York and LondonThe Knickerbocker Press1912
By
Ellen Key
Author of
“The Century of the Child,” “Love and Marriage,” etc.
Translated by
Mamah Bouton Borthwick, A.M.
With an Introduction by
Havelock Ellis
G. P. Putnam’s Sons
New York and London
The Knickerbocker Press
1912
Copyright, 1912BYG. P. PUTNAM’S SONSThe Knickerbocker Press, New York
Copyright, 1912BYG. P. PUTNAM’S SONSThe Knickerbocker Press, New York
Copyright, 1912
BY
G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS
The Knickerbocker Press, New York
Es gibt kein Vergangenes das man zurücksehnen dürfte; es gibt nur ein ewig Neues, das sich aus den erweiterten Elementen des Vergangenen gestaltet, und die echte Sehnsucht muss stets productiv sein, ein neues, besseres Erschaffen.—Goethe.
Es gibt kein Vergangenes das man zurücksehnen dürfte; es gibt nur ein ewig Neues, das sich aus den erweiterten Elementen des Vergangenen gestaltet, und die echte Sehnsucht muss stets productiv sein, ein neues, besseres Erschaffen.—Goethe.
“There is no past that we need long to return to, there is only the eternally new which is formed out of enlarged elements of the past; and our genuine longing must always be productive, for a new and better creation.”