Cruwwelpeter: Difference between revisions

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{{a|otto|{{image|Scissorman|png|Poor, stupid Samuel.}}}}Obscure German children’s author, {{Otto}}, wrote this book of cautionary tales about what happens to children who misbehave with [[charge]]s (''Geschäftsanteilsverpfändung''). It has thrown a long, nervous shadow over the practice of banking law ever since, though contemporary [[thought-leader]]s tend to regard it as needlessly violent, prejudiced and unkind to poor legal eagles who suffer from all kinds of mental frailties, burnout and whingery and simply don’t deserve everyone to be so mean to them.
{{a|otto|{{image|Scissorman|png|Poor, stupid Samuel.}}}}Obscure German librettist {{Otto}} wrote this book of cautionary tales about what happens to children who misbehave with [[charge]]s (''Geschäftsanteilsverpfändung''). The single remaining volume — it may be the only one printed in the first place, as a matter of fact — was discovered whilst clearing out a Schuldscheine warehouse in Hannover.
 
Cruwwelpeter and similar burlesques have thrown a long, nervous shadow over the practice of banking law, though contemporary [[thought-leader]]s tend to regard them as needlessly violent, prejudiced and unkind to poor legal eagles who we all recognise now suffer from all kinds of mental frailties, burnout and whingery and simply don’t deserve everyone to be so mean to them.


{{Buchstein}}, widely regarded as a talentless hack, has also been accused of ripping the whole concept off from Heinrich Hoffman’s better known ''[[Struwwelpeter]]'', to which it certainly bears a striking resemblance.
{{Buchstein}}, widely regarded as a talentless hack, has also been accused of ripping the whole concept off from Heinrich Hoffman’s better known ''[[Struwwelpeter]]'', to which it certainly bears a striking resemblance.