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...famed dead men of whom present-day Germany is least proud are Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Though in Naziland their names are a byword and a hissing, they are revered by radicals the world over. Marx, the Holy Ghost of the Soviet Trinity, author of Capital and the Communist Manifesto, is now a familiar spook even to men-in-the-street, but few newspaper readers have ever encountered the shade of Engels. Until Gustav Mayer's German life of Engels was last week translated into English, there was no biography of him available to U. S. readers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Marx's Engels | 5/11/1936 | See Source »

...fact that his harem did finally bring his ruin. Solomon lives in the literature of the Bible as one of the most human, the wisest, and a God-fearing man. This son of David, son of Bath-sheba, even as his wise words, has become "a proverb and a byword among the people...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Vagabond | 11/5/1935 | See Source »

...draft a verdict of acquittal which would not be too dead a give-away of the New Justice. They could not say that Roiderer's jotted charges of homosexuality, sadism and camouflaged aggressiveness by some of the highest leaders of Germany were untrue, for their truth is a byword in Germany even to simpletons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Holy Stupidity | 4/22/1935 | See Source »

Today Major Covell is stationed in the Canal Zone but his plan has suddenly become a Wall Street byword. Having announced his admiration for the Washington Plan, Mr. Carlisle last week mailed an open letter to Mayor LaGuardia offering to arbitrate the disputed New York City power contracts as a necessary preliminary to a meeting of minds on rates, valuations and required legislation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Peace from Potomac? | 1/21/1935 | See Source »

Jonas Lauretz, mountaineer sawmiller, was a hard man and not a good one. A notable blasphemer, drunkard, cuckolder and seducer, he was a byword in the district, but his neighbors did not know the half of it. He beat his wife, crippled his son, tried to rape his daughter, kept them all in terrified submission. Only his daughter Sylvelie, a flower-on-the-dunghill type, regarded him without loathing. She escaped some of the family horror by working as house-servant and model to a famed old painter, who in gratitude left her a small fortune when he died. Because...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Alpine Stock | 1/14/1935 | See Source »

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