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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 03.11.1907
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1907-11-03
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Vorlage
- SLUB Dresden
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190711034
- PURL
- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19071103
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19071103
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1907
- Monat1907-11
- Tag1907-11-03
- Monat1907-11
- Jahr1907
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tipt min Her mb and THE DRESDEN DAILY. 10 PFENNIGS. s 532. DRESDEN AND BERLIN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1907. □ panDotiDO aaaooaoDD BERLIN DDODDDDDO DDDDDDODD HANS GOLDBERGS Exhibition of Fine Arts. Paintings.WaterCotours.Etchings.Lithography. Admittance free. Daily opentfl-2,4-7 (Sunday 12—2) W.Motz Str.83. i 1 MODERN HISTORY. The Cambridge University Press has issued a circular in which it proposes to offer special facilities for the easy purchase of the Cambridge Modern History, facilities of which, there can be little doubt, most professed students and many laymen will readily avail themselves; but the cir cumstance raises the question as to whether the work is a success and, further, though this is a little unkind, as to whether it deserves to succeed at all. We venture to think that its success, apart form the publishers’ ledgers, is only partial, and if considered in relation to its original intention and the warmth of the support accorded to it, scarcely appreciable. As is well known, the work—and it was intended that it should be the magnum opus of modern research—was planned by Lord Acton, and is being edited by three such distinguished scholars as Professor Ward, Dr. Prothero and Mr. Stanley Leathes; it is intended to cover the period usually classified as “modern”—that is from the Renaissance to the present day; it is intended to be universal in its application; it is to be—this is the principal point—the work of specialists in particular departments, though the superyision or construction rests with the editors. The intentions of the experiment were, it will be seen, entirely admirable. The inaccuracies of former historians were to corrected, yet the continuity of the work was not to be sacrificed; the vast resources which have been made accessible by the opening of State archives were to be utilized; and the task which would have been too much for a single man was to be overcome by the united energies of a number of scholars under the expert guidance of distinguished leaders. Had Lord Acton himself lived to direct the labours he inspired the result might have been otherwise; on the other hand, it is quite conceivable that the same faults would have been made, for although Lord Acton was a great historian he had never written a great history, and indeed scarcely any history at all; it cannot be established ex hypothesi that his creative power would have been equal to the organization of his material. The three eminent scholars to whom his work has fallen have done all that can be expected from much learning and discretion, but they have failed to create a history. The Cambridge Modern History is an excellent historical dictionary, an excellent collection of historical essays, an excellent form of amplified bibliography, but it is not a work of genius and it is not a living history. The conclusion one is reluctantly driven to adopt is that historical research is killing the historical instinct, and that in the two ideals of history, the first, that it should be scientifically accurate, the second that it should be artistically perfect, the modern historian has fallen on a fatal dilemma. The whole problem is bound up with the concep tion of a science of history. In every case, the work of the* historian is to determine cause and effect; that is admitted by the scientific historians and by the literary historians; but the citizen claims merely that history is to teach him his duty towards the State and towards himself, and since this claim involves a knowledge of principles rather than of the details of events, and of the cause only in so far as it is also the moral, the citizen prefers Hotel NewYorfe 52 Prager Str. near Main R. R. Station Dresden’s Fnr-Store, where Ann fur-bayers are best suited in Germany. at Central R. R. Station, 47, Prager Strasse. Next door Th. Cook & Son. Dresden. „ „ N. German Lloyd. Dresden. Opposite Hamburg America Line. Apartments and single rooms with bath and toilet. Central Heating. Telephone in every room. Lift. Hi. e Prager Str. Furnishers to the Queen of Saxony. First class establishment for ladies’ costumes, mantles, hats &c. <8S> Special- department for furs and Paris models. H. BOCK By appointment to the Saxon Court. Music and Art establishment Ronisch pianos 9 Prager Strasse 9. Prager Strasse 35 MGLLER & C.W. THIEL Linen Store Saxon Damask Under-clothing. OTTO MAYER Photographer 38 Prager Strasse 38 Tel. 446. By appointment to T. M. the King of Saxony and the Emperor of Austria. Superb artistic work. Moderate terms. Kayserzinn, Silver plated goods, Hammered copper and brass ware, Real bronces, Writing sets in bronce and marble, Chandeliers and lamps for gas and electric light E. Kreinsen Nachf. Purveyor to the Royal court Mr Prager Strasse 29. tm ffin lestumt M Ml Central Theatre Passage Excellent cooking. Splendid wines. Artistically furnished rooms. Light and airy. Private Dining; Rooms. Dinners and suppers at any hour. Moderate prices. A* AS AS AS AS AS AS AS AS AS AS X Dinne: E. W. STARKE only Prager Strasse 6 Table Linen. Bed Linen. Hand-embroidered goods. Shirts to measure* Dental Atelier JULIUS DANELIUS Dentist Walpurgis Strasse 1, II. floor. Corner Ferdinand Platz. At home from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.; in practice since 1881. Painless dental operations. Gold or porcelain Fillings. Artificial teeth in gold and caoutchouc, crowning and Bridge-work (irremovable), regulation of crooked teeth. Obturators (artificial palates). Best work at moderate prices. My long experience under the dental surgeons to the Court: v. Gunther, Dr. Thomas, and Dr. Pfab, as also from time to time during 15 years with Hofrat Dr. Jenkins at Vienna, guarantees the best possible work. )« unskimmed milk. 1st quality ® only Pasteurised and purified, there- Pfnnd fore free from bacilli of any kind. mmm-m—mmmmmmm.— Delivered free. Depots in all parts of the city. Pfund’s Dairy, Dresden, St'S. Finest handpainted Dresden China A. E. Stephan 4, Reichs Str. 4 A m.Mi.iftn 'UT**ntkntifillAl cU Succ.to HelenaWolfsohn Nchf. Manufacturer & Exporter to the American & English trade. 2 minutes from Hauptbahnhof. Highest recommendations. Most reasonable prices. ART STUDY AND TRAVEL Gutzkow Strasse 33, H? Illustrated Lectures on Art History, Study-visHs to the Art Galleries, Preparation for Intelligent Travel. Spring Tours to Egypt, Greece, Constantinople, Sicily and Italy. Outlines on application. Hie Finest Habana Cigars, English cigarettes and tobacco. C.Wolf, Prager Str. 48. Reichs Strasse 2. Liittichau Strasse 15. Paul Marliseli Strehlener Strasse 15. Dyeing and chemical cleaning, Dresden. First class establishment. @ Branches in nil parts of the town.
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