“
The most heterogeneous temporal elements thus coexist in the city. If we step
from an eighteenth-century house into one from the sixteenth century, we tumble
down the slope of time. Right next door stands a Gothic church, and we sink to the
depths. A few steps farther, we are in a street from out of the early years of
Bismarck's rule ... , and once again climbing the mountain of time. Whoever sets
foot in a city feels caught up as in a web of dreams, where the most remote past is
linked to the events of today. One house allies with another, no matter what period
they come from, and a street is horn. And then insofar as this street, which may go
back to the age of Goethe, runs into another, which may date from the Wilhelmine
years, the district emerges .... The climactic points of the city are its squares:
here, from every direction, converge not only numerous streets but all the streams
of their history. No sooner have they flowed in than they are contained; the edges
of the square serve as quays, so that already the outward form of' the square
provides information about the history that was played upon it. ... Things which
find no expression in political events, or find only minimal expression, unfold in
the cities: they are a superfine instrument, responsive as an Aeolian harp-despite
their specific gravity-to the living historic vibrations of the air.
”
”