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org Wilhelm Frederich Hegel. By Schlesinger Royal Old Museum in Berlin. By Schinkel Bettina von Arnim The Goethe Monument. By Bettina von Arnim Karl Lebrecht Immermann. By C.T. Lessing The Master of the Oberhof. By Benjamin Vautier The Oberhof. By Benjamin Vautier The Freemen's Tribunal. By Benjamin Vautier Lisbeth. By Benjamin Vautier Oswald, the Hunter. By Benjamin Vautier Karl Ferdinand Gutzkow The Potsdam Guard. By Adolph von Menzel King Frederick William I of Prussia. By R. Siemering King Frederick William I and His "Tobacco Collegium". By Adolph von Menzel Anastasius Gruen Nikolaus Lenau Evening on the Shore. By Hans am Ende Eduard Moerike. By Weiss Annette von Droste-Huelshoff The Farm House. By Hans am Ende Ferdinand Freiligrath. By J Hasenclever Dusk on the Dead Sea. By Eugen Bracht Death on the Barricade. By Alfred Rethel George Herwegh Emanuel Geibel. By Hader Journeying. By Ludwig Richter THE LIFE OF GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH HEGEL BY J. LOEWENBERG, PH.D. Assistant in Philosophy, Harvard University Among students of philosophy the mention of Hegel's name arouses at once a definite emotion. Few thinkers indeed have ever so completely fascinated the minds of their sympathetic readers, or have so violently repulsed their unwilling listeners, as Hegel has. To his followers Hegel is the true prophet of the only true philosophic creed, to his opponents, he has, in Professor James's words, "like Byron's corsair, left a name 'to other times, linked with one virtue and a thousand crimes.'" The feelings of attraction to Hegel or repulsion from him do not emanate from his personality. Unlike Spinoza's, his life offers nothing to stir the imagination. Briefly, some of his biographical data are as follows: He was born at Stuttgart, the capital of Wuertemberg, August 27, 1770. His father was a government official, and the family belonged to the upper middle class. Hegel received his early education at the Latin School and the Gymnasium of his native town. At both these institutions, as well as at the University of Tuebingen which he entered in 1788 to study theology, he distinguished himself as an eminently industrious, but not as a rarely gifted student. The certificate which he received upon leaving the University in 1793 speaks of his good character, his meritorious acquaintance with theology and languages, and his meagre knowledge of philo
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