Piazza San Marco
Bart Brands in album of Standard: "In St. Mark's Square in Venice have been recently removed all benches. Who wants to sit down here today, it must pay dearly in the form of a cappuccino, "[2.X.2010, p. A4]
Nietzsche in The Genealogy of Morals (1887):". An arbitrary obscurity perhaps , a from-the-way-Gehn from themselves, a fear of noise, worship, Newspapers, influence, a small office, a day, something is hidden, the more than ' s light is, recovered a deal with occasional harmless cheery Gethier and poultry, the sight; a mountain to society, but not dead, one with A ugen (ie, lakes), in some circumstances even a room in a crowded all the world-inn, where we will surely mistaken to be, and with impunity to talk to everyone can - that is " desert " believes oh she's lonely enough to me! If Heraclitus in the open courtyards and colonnades the vast temple of Artemis retired, so this was " desert " worthy, I admit it: we lack such temples why? (- They are missing perhaps not: I just remember my best Studirzimmers, Piazza di San Marco, provided the spring, insgleichen morning, the time between 10 and 12) "[Critical study edition, Volume 5, Munich: DTV , 1999, p. 353]
Johann Caspar Goethe in his Italian travel book, "The St. Mark's Square is bordered by the church of S. Geminiano and two palaces, which the Old and the New Procurators hot. Under the arcades are shops, where coffee and other beverages are served, so that this place is a haven where you can meet many needs, "
[Travel through Italy in 1740, Munich. DTV, 1999, p. 26 ]
Thus we read in Goethe's father (rather than informative Grodzka) Travel Journal that the excessive consumption anno 1740 prettily on the edge of the square "contained" was. We know from the experience of life that is now occupied a substantial area of the open space of privately held coffee tables. We are angry that coffee consumption is not freely chosen gratification more one examines the like, but a rip-off pushed up. We give Bart Brands quite long and we whistle for the old times *
* And to Professor Friedrich Schiller: He says in his inaugural lecture, "The Universal History heal their serious students" of the childish longing for times past.
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