“intensely hazardous”: Mann.
“who durst defy”: John Milton, Collected Works (Oxford, 1969).
“transcendent glory”: Ibid.
“the soldiery”: Peter Limm, The Thirty Years War (London, 1984).
“a man of restless”: Mitchell.
“such a captain-general”: Mann.
“a change”: Ibid.
“persuade him”: Watson.
“Gladder tidings”: Mann.
“though it grieves”: Watson.
“snatched up his”: Glapthorne.
“That I am hated”: Watson.
“displays excessive”: Mann.
“for I perceive”: Ibid.
“send you out”: Mitchell.
“The tale passes”: Mann.
“in the Swedes”: Watson.
“Your Princely Grace”: Mann.
“shaking belly”: Elmer A. Beller, Propaganda in Germany During the Thirty Years War (Oxford, 1940).
“hunger-wolves”: Schiller, Dramatic Works.
“It was his maxim”: Schiller, History of the Thirty Years’ War.
“What is ‘neutrality’”: Elmer A. Beller, “The Thirty Years’ War,” in The New Cambridge Modern History, vol. 4 (Cambridge, 1970).
“wholly perplexed”: Parker.
only one man: Schiller, History of the Thirty Years’ War.
“I did it”: Schiller, Dramatic Works.
The Duke of Brunswick: Hans Speier, introduction, in Hans Jacob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen, Courage the Adventuress, edited by Hans Speier (Princeton, N. J., 1964).
“enchained Victory”: Menzel.
“an outrage”: Mann.
a clear prelude: Schiller, History of the Thirty Years’ War.
“all the wild”: Thomas Carlyle, Life of Friedrich Schiller (Columbia University Press, 1992).
“a venal Italian”: Mann.
disgraceful murder: Hollaender.
“Peasants do not”: Langer.
“the object”: Carlyle.
“Leaving a hundred”: Menzel.
“crept with a stick”: Mann.
“scorch and ravage”: Ibid.
“that in accordance”: Ibid.
“All eyes”: Ibid.
“His Electoral Highness”: Ibid.
“The combat started”: Ibid.
“’Twas all to no”: Ibid.
“plough up the wars”: Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida, 2.1.110.
“We expect”: Mann.
“with such a fury”: Ibid.
“Beloved Son”: Ibid.
“It is well”: Mitchell.
“The blood-bath”: Mann.
“cruel, and famous”: Khevenhüller.
“His Princely Grace”: Mann.
“contempt and disregard”: Ibid.
“One of the maxims”: Watson.
“concealed under”: Schiller, History of the Thirty Years’ War.
“Wallenstein fell”: Ibid.
“in mounting to the”: Watson.
“The Duke of Friedland’s”: Mann.
“those to whom we entrust”: Mitchell.
“All the court”: Watson.
“The train announced”: Mitchell.
“a pretty train”: Mann.
“The wars of mankind”: Parker.
“Would it be better”: Mann.
“fixed mind”: Milton.
“Certain it is”: Mitchell.
“Since he is”: Mann.
“a waste of time”: Ibid.
apothecary’s bills: Benecke.
“Are we not arch-fools”: Mann.
“request”: Watson.
“that his Imperial”: Mann.
“was much honoured”: Hollaender.
“I shall know”: Mann.
“The Bavarian started”: Ibid.
“publicly and without”: Watson.
“the most pernicious”: Mann.
“This is my definite”: Ibid.
“the mighty when”: Ibid.
“We must regard”: Ibid.
“He is now so far”: Ibid.
“blinded by”: Menzel.
“I see well”: Mann.
“this business”: Mitchell.
“Salvation lies”: Mann.
“Oh, peace!”: Watson.
“were he not”: Mann.
“Why this delay?”: Menzel.
“swiftly strangled”: Mann.
“First he is”: Ibid.
“I would sooner”: Ibid.
“we had flooded”: Ibid.
“extreme remedies”: Ibid.
“with every day”: Ibid.
“the Emperor furnished”: Ibid.
“whether obedience”: Mousnier.
“letting it be heard”: Mann.
“one thousand”: Parker.
“Do you know”: Mann.
“how it really”: Watson.
“to live and die”: Mann.
“like a corpse”: Ibid.
“in the greatest”: Ibid.
“I hope, and”: Ibid.
“so heinous”: Ibid.
down the stairs: Wedgwood.
“marvellous deed”: Parker.
haloes: Hans Schultz, Wallenstein (Leipzig, 1912).
“As he lay stretched”: Mann.
“so fearful”: Hollaender.
“Presumably it was”: Mann.
“That’s what happens”: Langer.
“Admiral of ships”: Mann.
“Who but Wallenstein”: Ibid.
“perjured, godless”: Ibid.
“the prompt and noble”: Mitchell.
“whether it be”: Mann.
“I have been”: Glapthorne.
“at which I marvel”: Hollaender.
“this great Monarch-spirit”: Schiller, Dramatic Works.
“I had peace”: Wedgwood.
“the very disgrace”: Sir Thomas Browne, Urn-burial.
“after his death”: Mann.
“wasted and depressed”: Richard Holmes, Coleridge: Early Visions (London, 1989).
“When the play ends”: Hegel, Über Wallenstein.
GARIBALDI
“The Uncrowned king”: Adam Zamoyski, Holy Madness: Romantics, Patriots, and Revolutionaries, 1776–1871 (London, 1999).
“It seemed to me”: Augusto Vecchi, Garibaldi at Caprera, with an introduction by Mrs. Gaskell (London, 1862).
“his fortune never”: George Macaulay Trevelyan, Garibaldi’s Defence of the Roman Republic (London, 1907).
“He who cares”: Morris.
“denies the existence”: Carlyle.
“deep, rude, earnest”: Ibid.
“Have you ever”: Trevelyan, Garibaldi’s Defence.
“the heart”: Hibbert.
“Sincerity”: Carlyle.
“rugged honesty”: Ibid.
“huge granite masses”: Ibid.
“the Wrath of God”: Fray Pedro Simón, The Expedition of Pedro de Ursua & Lope de Aguirre, translated by William Bollaert (London, 1861).
“The man who defends”: Alexandre Dumas (ed.), Garibaldi: An Autobiography, translated by William Robson (London, 1860).
“My God, I am”: John Parris, The Lion of Caprera (London, 1962).
“They sacked and destroyed”: Ridley.
“which proves”: Ibid.
“When a woman”: Giuseppe Garibaldi, Autobiography, translated by A. Werner, three volumes with a supplement by Jessie White Mario (London, 1889), vol. 3.
“In the immense”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“We both remained”: Ridley.
“She looked upon”: Ibid.
“if I had had no other”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“the boundless confidence”: Ibid.
“These men are coarse”: Ridley.
“He knows how”: Ibid.
“I blow his brains”: Ibid.
“I have today”: Hibbert.
“low and veiled”: Trevelyan, Garibaldi’s Defence.r />
“a true hero”: Ridley.
“sons of heroism”: Ibid.
“He cannot be won”: Ibid.
“a disinterested”: Ibid.
“The enemy are numerous”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“Virgil would have”: Ridley.
“The age of chivalry”: Keen.
“The great and only”: Ridley.
“There you can ply”: Parris.
“The King”: Ibid.
“with a crew”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“as if they wished”: Ridley.
“The body keeps pace”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“used to visit”: Graham Robb, Victor Hugo (London, 1997).
“Organising troops”: Garibaldi, Autobiography, vol. 2.
“Three or four”: Hibbert.
“the very scourge”: Ibid.
“Rome to me”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“Are the descendants”: Ridley.
“It was then”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“I went after him”: Zamoyski.
“This mysterious conqueror”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“Oh isn’t he”: Parris.
“There is no religion”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“The foes are”: Parris.
“erect on horseback”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“Come to me”: Parris.
“He laid his hand”: Hibbert.
“go, with twenty”: Ibid.
“Those hurrying past”: Ibid.
“Even with the certainty”: Ridley.
“he was utterly”: Ibid.
“opened his eyes”: Hibbert.
“Here they live”: Ibid.
“Garibaldi was greater”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“At every moment”: Hibbert.
“Within those walls”: Ibid.
“Women stormed him”: Ibid.
“They wrong man”: Carlyle.
“as sad as death”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“I have decided to act”: Ridley.
“I ask will you take”: Ibid.
“It is not possible”: Ibid.
“propitous”: Hibbert.
“as sometimes in my life …”: Garibaldi, Autobiography, vol. 2.
“throw myself in the midst”: Ibid.
“a tour de force”: Hibbert.
“Soldiers, I release”: Ibid.
“could be made”: Garibaldi, Autobiography, vol. 2.
“I was ashamed”: Ibid.
“the only hope”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“We love to associate”: Emerson.
“Great natures”: Aristotle, Problems, 30.1.
“A great heart”: Dumas, Garibaldi.
“I have led”: Hibbert.
“present no points”: Garibaldi, Autobiography, vol. 2.
“There is around the name”: Ridley.
“They use men”: Ibid.
“His face was radiant”: Ibid.
“The adherence”: Hibbert.
“I was kept as a flag”: Ibid.
“We intend”: Ridley.
“Sono nella poesia”: George Macaulay Trevelyan, Garibaldi and the Thousand (London, 1949).
“the head of a new”: Ibid.
“Come! He who stays”: Hibbert.
“Red Devil”: Trevelyan, Garibaldi and the Thousand.
“like a lovely”: Garibaldi.
“Oh that I might”: Hibbert.
“Now that Nice”: Ibid.
“at the outset”: Ridley.
“The Great Man”: Carlyle.
“The insurrection suppressed”: Ridley.
“Those who remember”: Trevelyan, Garibaldi and the Thousand.
“Poor Garibaldi”: Hibbert.
“What shall we do”: Ibid.
“Man is heaven-born”: Carlyle.
“Viva l’Italia,” “Talia”: Trevelyan, Garibaldi and the Thousand.
“A miserable sight”: Ridley.
“ministers of falsehood”: Hibbert, Garibaldi, Autobiography, vol. 2.
“One must know”: Hibbert.
“tomorrow will be”: Ibid.
“If he were to say”: Hibbert.
“This man, almost alone”: Alexandre Dumas, Memoires de Garibaldi (Brussels, 1860–1862).
“liberate Italy”: Ridley.
“Garibaldi is a demi-god”: Ibid.
“at all costs”: Hibbert.
“but I am also”: Ibid.
“THE THE THE”: Ridley.
“To thee Giuseppe”: Hibbert.
“heroic action is paralysed”: Carlyle.
“We cannot struggle”: Hibbert.
“apostolic legateship”: Denis Mack Smith, Modern Italy (London, 1997).
“Garibaldi is here”: Ridley.
“Finance, taxation, police”: Hibbert.
“He will become”: Ibid.
“Your Majesty knows”: Ibid.
“The population was frantic”: Ibid.
“The Great Man”: Carlyle.
“the power of the State”: Hibbert.
“demonstrations of welcome”: Ibid.
“What is fear?”: Dumas, Autobiography.
“If he were not”: Hibbert.
“Not only was all”: Ibid.
“Here and there”: Ibid.
“The town was running”: Ibid.
“The stories told in Naples”: Ibid.
“The weakness of the man”: Ibid.
“He was like thunder”: Ibid.
“insolent ultimatum”: Ridley.
“all were alike averse”: Hibbert.
“This is your king!”: Ibid.
“countenance was full”: Ibid.
“and perhaps something”: Ibid.
“His whole manner”: Ibid.
“Mankind have”: Emerson.
“who believed”: Ibid.
“a prophet …”: Ibid.
“Politics were not”: Ibid.
“The effect was”: Ibid.
“voice from the”: Carlyle.
“Arrogant toward”: Hibbert.
“like a bear”: Ridley.
“superhuman being”: Vecchi.
“the shoemaker”: Hibbert.
“In the name”: Zamoyski.
“A nation like France”: Ridley.
“Death if they like”: Ibid.
“individual, however”: Hibbert.
“But what of”: Unpublished letter from Ivan Turgenev to Alexander Herzen, Baden-Baden, August 1862.
“None of you”: Thucydides, 6.92.
“It is Garibaldi’s”: Dumas, Memories.
“gloomy, hoarse”: Ridley.
“What remains of me”: Ibid.
“Prologue: Flourish of”: Alexander Herzen, My Past and Thoughts, translated by Constance Garnett (Oxford, 1968).
Heroes_Saviors, Traitors, and Supermen_A History of Hero Worship Page 64