Quote:
Now we want to sail across the sea in ships, to found a young Germany over here and over there, to fertilise it with the results of our struggle and striving, to father and educate the noblest, most godlike children: we want to do it better than the Spaniards did, to whom the new world a sanctimonious slaughterhouse, unlike the English, for whom she became a grocer’s box. We want to do it the glorious, German way […]
Source:
Carl Friedrich Glasenapp (1905): Das Leben Richard Wagners in sechs Bänden. 2. Bd. 1843-1853. Leipzig: Breitkopf und Härtel, p. 460.
Author Bio:
Richard Wagner (1813-1883) was a German composer, poet and writer. The quote comes from a speech before the Dresden Fatherland Association on the 15th of June, 1848. Amongst other things, he wrote the anti-Semitic book “Judaism and Music”.
Context:

Further Reading:
*Farish Ahmad-Noor (2019): Why is Colonialism (Still) Romanticised? Ted Talk.
*David Spurr (1993): The Rhetoric of Empire. Colonial Discourse in Journalism, Travel Writing and Imperial Administration. Durham & London: Duke University Press.
Year:
1853