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The Sorcerer's Apprentice
Illustration of Der Zauberlehrling. From: German book, "Goethe's Werke", 1882, drawing by Ferdinand Barth (Künstler)
"The Sorcerer's Apprentice" (German: "Der Zauberlehrling") is a poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe written in 1797. The poem is a ballad in 14 stanzas.
Story
The poem begins as an old sorcerer departs his workshop, leaving his apprentice with chores to perform. Tired of fetching water by pail, the apprentice enchants a broom to do the work for him, using magic in which he is not fully trained. The floor is soon awash with water, and the apprentice realizes that he cannot stop the broom because he does not know the magic required to do so.
The apprentice splits the broom in two with an axe, but each piece becomes a whole broom that takes up a pail and continues fetching water, now at twice the speed. At this increased pace, the entire room quickly begins to flood. When all seems lost, the old sorcerer returns and quickly breaks the spell. The poem concludes with the old sorcerer's statement that only a master should invoke powerful spirits.
Der Zauberlehrling
Hat der alte Hexenmeister Sich doch einmal wegbegeben! Und nun sollen seine Geister Auch nach meinem Willen leben. Seine Wort und Werke Merkt ich und den Brauch, Und mit Geistesstärke Tu ich Wunder auch. Walle! walle Manche Strecke, Daß, zum Zwecke, Wasser fließe Und mit reichem, vollem Schwalle Zu dem Bade sich ergieße. Und nun komm, du alter Besen, Nimm die schlechten Lumpenhüllen! Bist schon lange Knecht gewesen: Nun erfülle meinen Willen! Auf zwei Beinen stehe, Oben sei ein Kopf, Eile nun und gehe Mit dem Wassertopf! Walle! walle Manche Strecke, Daß, zum Zwecke, Wasser fließe Und mit reichem, vollem Schwalle Zu dem Bade sich ergieße. Seht, er läuft zum Ufer nieder! Wahrlich! ist schon an dem Flusse, Und mit Blitzesschnelle wieder Ist er hier mit raschem Gusse. Schon zum zweiten Male! Wie das Becken schwillt! Wie sich jede Schale Voll mit Wasser füllt! Stehe! stehe! Denn wir haben Deiner Gaben Vollgemessen! - Ach, ich merk es! Wehe! wehe! Hab ich doch das Wort vergessen! Ach, das Wort, worauf am Ende Er das wird, was er gewesen! Ach, er läuft und bringt behende! Wärst du doch der alte Besen! Immer neue Güsse Bringt er schnell herein, Ach, und hundert Flüsse Stürzen auf mich ein! Nein, nicht länger Kann ichs lassen: Will ihn fassen! Das ist Tücke! Ach, nun wird mir immer bänger! Welche Miene! welche Blicke! O, du Ausgeburt der Hölle! Soll das ganze Haus ersaufen? Seh ich über jede Schwelle Doch schon Wasserströme laufen. Ein verruchter Besen, Der nicht hören will! Stock, der du gewesen, Steh doch wieder still! Willst am Ende Gar nicht lassen? Will dich fassen, Will dich halten Und das alte Holz behende Mit dem scharfen Beile spalten! Seht, da kommt er schleppend wieder! Wie ich mich nur auf dich werfe, Gleich, o Kobold, liegst du nieder; Krachend trifft die glatte Schärfe. Wahrlich! brav getroffen! Seht, er ist entzwei! Und nun kann ich hoffen, Und ich atme frei! Wehe! wehe! Beide Teile Stehn in Eile Schon als Knechte Völlig fertig in die Höhe! Helft mir, ach! ihr hohen Mächte! Und sie laufen! Naß und nässer Wirds im Saal und auf den Stufen: Welch entsetzliches Gewässer! Herr und Meister, hör mich rufen! - Ach, da kommt der Meister! Herr, die Not ist groß! Die ich rief, die Geister, Werd ich nun nicht los. “In die Ecke, Besen! Besen! Seids gewesen! Denn als Geister Ruft euch nur, zu seinem Zwecke, Erst hervor der alte Meister.”
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
ruben getting himself into unspeakable debt in order to support niall financially and provide for him like a husband would is absolutely batshit insane
insane production design choice to put a 1984 poster on niall’s bedroom door, because the immediate shorthand of the novel is obviously ‘big brother is always watching’—this idea of an omnipresent authority that continues governing your behavior even in moments of physical absence—which feels inextricable from the way ruben operates within the show. but what makes 1984 so genuinely horrifying is the psychological consequence of prolonged domination: the erosion of a private self, the way fear and control become so thoroughly internalized that the watcher no longer needs to stand in the room because he has already taken up residence inside you, rewriting how you understand love, loyalty, safety—and what you believe you deserve from all three.
that is exactly what ruben’s violence has done. even in his absence, everyone continues organizing themselves around him—anticipating him, contracting around wounds he opened years earlier, the past remaining not behind them but invasively, insistently present. he’s a specter lingering over everything.
which makes the placement on niall’s door so devastating, because this episode is about niall reaching—toward autonomy, toward a life expansive enough to finally contain honesty and desire. just away—far enough to exhale, far enough to start anew. and yet gadd frames his most private space with a novel about what total surveillance does to a person’s interiority and selfhood.
niall is trying to become someone. the poster is gadd telling you, in the most precise way possible, that big brother already got there first.
because in the end, winston smith—the protagonist of 1984—doesn’t just submit to big brother. he loves him.

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Half Man // Fyodor Dostoevsky
Yaoyao Ma Van As - http://yaoyaoartblog.tumblr.com - https://twitter.com/yaoyaomva?lang=es - https://www.facebook.com/yaoyaomva - https://www.instagram.com/yaoyaomva/?hl=es - https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/yaoyaomva
Half Man (2026), Episode 6 | Jamie Bell as Niall Kennedy & Richard Gadd as Ruben Pallister
NIALL'S LIBRARY SEXCAPADES ↳ HALF MAN "EPISODE FOUR"

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is he auditioning to be their 3rd
Oil pastels on paper
Watching Half Man ending made me cry for days over the fact that Ruben and Niall loved each other and it was their downfall
Because love was there, man, love was part of the reason of everything going to hell, and love wouldn't save anyone, because love made everything worse
Widow's Bay 1.05 What To Expect On Your Trip
Short of giving up on my dreams, and I am not willing to do that./ Oh, come on, Ruben. That'll be compromising my artistic integrity.

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things might have been okay!!!!!!!!!!!!
Half Man | Episode 4