Yvan Goll

Yvan Goll’s Followers (17)

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Yvan Goll


Born
in Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, France
March 29, 1891

Died
February 27, 1950

Genre


Also known as Ivan Goll, pseudonym of Isaac Lang.

Yvan Goll was a French-German poet who was bilingual and wrote in both French and German. He had close ties to both German expressionism and to French surrealism.
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Average rating: 4.0 · 404 ratings · 46 reviews · 74 distinct worksSimilar authors
Sodom und Berlin

3.89 avg rating — 44 ratings — published 1929 — 9 editions
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Eurobacillen

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3.69 avg rating — 42 ratings — published 1927 — 3 editions
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Μαλαισιακά Τραγούδια

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4.58 avg rating — 24 ratings — published 1934
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Dreamweed: Posthumous Poems

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4.25 avg rating — 24 ratings — published 1951 — 5 editions
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Ned med Europa

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3.71 avg rating — 24 ratings4 editions
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Ποιήματα (1920-1950)

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4.10 avg rating — 10 ratings
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The Inner Trees: Selected P...

4.44 avg rating — 9 ratings
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10,000 Dawns: The Love Poem...

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3.36 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 1951
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Germaine Berton: Die rote J...

3.75 avg rating — 8 ratings5 editions
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Lackawanna Elegy

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3.57 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 1970 — 5 editions
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More books by Yvan Goll…
Quotes by Yvan Goll  (?)
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“Decline is also a form of voluptuousness, just like growth. Autumn is just as sensual as springtime. There is as much greatness in dying as in procreation.”
Iwan Goll

“Doing nothing is the hardest torture that a person can put himself through. For he is always brought face to face with his own self, which demands that he gives account for the sun which he uselessly squanders, for the springs of energy in his organism, the gold of wisdom in the mines of his brains. The masses work, slog, forget. They drink the alcohol of their sweat. Work is a flight from responsibility and God. Since the mystic beliefs have been banned from Europe, pillars of glory have been erected to rationality in order to put something in place of the cross: the French Revolution named its goddess reason, the Russians named their Moloch work. But the machine called Europe is running idle: it fills stomachs with fake bread, builds artificial houses with iron paper, the products are bad, the pay meager, and at the end of the six holy work days is the unholy Sunday which one sleeps through out of fear of the great boredom which is infecting Europe. Sunday, the day of idleness, is nowadays a punishment for Christianity, the cities collapse into soulless ruins, nature is just a backdrop for dusty sports. Doing nothing out of principle, my dear, is nowadays the most violent form of revolt.”
Iwan Goll

“The smile is civilization’s finest adornment. It signifies the willpower and duty to fashion mankind’s coexistence as quietly and agreeably as possible so that it will always appear friendly. For it is all a matter of appearance. The smile is culture’s diploma: it is the diplomat’s badge.”
Iwan Goll