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・ Walter George Brown
・ Walter George Headlam
・ Walter George Kent
・ Walter George Mitchell
・ Walter George Muelder
・ Walter George Robinson
・ Walter George Smith School
・ Walter George Tarrant
・ Walter George Whittlestone
・ Walter George Woolnough
・ Walter Geraghty
・ Walter Gericke
・ Walter Fleming
・ Walter Fletcher
・ Walter Fletcher (politician)
Walter Flex
・ Walter Flight
・ Walter Flinsch
・ Walter Flores
・ Walter Flores (musician)
・ Walter Flowers
・ Walter Folger Brown
・ Walter Folger, Jr.
・ Walter Fondren
・ Walter Fondren, Sr.
・ Walter Fonseca
・ Walter Forbes
・ Walter Forbes (disambiguation)
・ Walter Forbes, 18th Lord Forbes
・ Walter Forde


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Walter Flex : ウィキペディア英語版
Walter Flex

Walter Flex (6 July 1887 – 16 October 1917) was a German author responsible for ''Der Wanderer zwischen beiden Welten'' ('), a war novel dealing with themes of humanity, friendship, and suffering during World War I.
==Biography==
Born in Eisenach to a secondary school teacher, he went to the University of Erlangen where he studied German, thanks to the award of a bursary. In his brief life prior to the outbreak of war he worked as a teacher, publishing, amongst other works, ''Das Volk in Eisen'' and ''Sonne und Schild'', a series of well received nationalist works. As a song, his poem ''Wildgänse rauschen durch die Nacht'' gained popularity with the Wandervogel youth and was well known and sung in Germany until the 1970s.
He enlisted as a volunteer at the outbreak of war in 1914. He was injured in action and died on October 16, 1917 at Oti Manor, Saaremaa, Estonia. He was originally buried at the village cemetery of Peude (now Pöide), Saaremaa island (formerly Ösel Island), Estonia. His epitaph was a quote from one of his works ''Preußischer Fahneneid'' ("Prussian Military Oath" written in 1915): "Wer je auf Preußens Fahne schwört, hat nichts mehr, was ihm selbst gehört." (Translation: "He who swears on Prussia's flag has nothing left that belongs to himself.")〔Walter Flex. ''Gesammelte Werke'' (Title Translation: ''Collected Works''), Vol. 1, pp. 73–74, quote in p. 74.
Lars Koch. ''Der Erste Weltkrieg als Medium der Gegenmoderne: Zu den Werken von Walter Flex und Ernst Jünger.'' (Title Translation: "The First World War as a Means of Counter-Modernity: To the Works of Walter Flex and Ernst Jünger.") Königshausen & Neumann, 2006, p. 117 and p. 117 n. 544. ISBN 3-8260-3168-7〕 His body was later, in 1940, moved to a new military cemetery in front of the Sackenheimer Tor at Königsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia). Walter Flex's grave, along with much of the city, was destroyed either in air raids or during the three-month siege prior to that city's April 9, 1945 surrender to the Russian Army.〔Fritz Gause. ''Königsberg in Preußen''. (Gräfe und Unzer, 1968), p. 226.〕
His ''Wanderer zwischen beiden Welten'' was published in 1916, by Verlag C. H. Beck, and was well received. By 1917, over 700,000 copies had been printed in Germany—a testament to his extreme popularity with the wartime public. His reputation grew in the post-war years and his romantic idealism was exploited by the Nazi party, which found his evocative and romantic lyricism especially appealing and considered it an expression of Aryan ideals.
During the time of (and partly due to his influence on) the German student movement, his reputation faded almost entirely.

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