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Franziska Mann - Die Stufe - Fragment einer Liebe
Im Mosaik Verlag zu Berlin - 1922
Mosaik-Bücher * Band 3
Vom verkannten Tode.
A voice awakens in the listener, a contemplative letter addressed to a man named Roland that drifts between confession and philosophy. The narrator, a self‑described seeker of souls, reflects on the restless nature of love, the danger of attachment, and the fragile balance between freedom and longing. Through lyrical prose she invites Roland—and the audience—to consider whether love is a disease, a fleeting chance, or a path to deeper self‑knowledge.
Set against a backdrop of early‑twentieth‑century Berlin, the text weaves poetic fragments, subtle humor, and a haunting sense of impermanence, hinting at the narrator’s role as both observer and catalyst in others’ lives. She speaks of leaving traces in strangers’ souls, of guiding them toward hidden resonances, while remaining wary of permanence herself. Listeners are drawn into an intimate, almost hypnotic meditation on the possibilities and perils of fleeting connections, promising a reflective journey that stays with you long after the final sentence.
Full title
Die Stufe Fragment einer Liebe Fragment einer Liebe
Language
de
Duration
~1 hours (109K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Louise Hope, Norbert H. Langkau and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-04-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1859–1927
A novelist, essayist, and activist, she wrote with a strong social conscience and a clear interest in the lives of women. Her work sits at the meeting point of literature, pacifism, and early feminist thought in Germany.
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