Beyond Good and Evil
Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future
Preface
I On The Prejudices Of Philosophers
II The Free Spirit
III The Religious Nature
IV Maxims & Interludes
V On the Natural History of Morals
VI We Scholars
VII Our Virtues
VIII Peoples and Fatherlands
IX What is Noble
X Epode
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Part Nine : What Is Noble?
257.
Every elevation of the type "man," has hitherto been the work of an aristocratic
society and so it will always be--a society believing in a long scale of gradations
of rank and differences of worth among human beings, and requiring slavery in
some form or other. Without the pathos of distance, such as grows out
of the incarnated difference of classes, out of the constant out-looking and
down-looking of the ruling caste on subordinates and instruments, and out of
their equally constant practice of obeying and commanding, of keeping down and
keeping at a distance--that other more mysterious pathos could never have arisen,
the longing for an ever new widening of distance within the soul itself, the
formation of ever higher, rarer, further, more extended, more comprehensive
states, in short, just the elevation of the type "man," the continued "self-surmounting
of man," to use a moral formula in a supermoral sense. To be sure, one must
not resign oneself to any humanitarian illusions about the history of the origin
of an aristocratic society (that is to say, of the preliminary condition for
the elevation of the type "man"): the truth is hard. Let us acknowledge unprejudicedly
how every higher civilisation hitherto has originated! Men with a still
natural nature, barbarians in every terrible sense of the word, men of prey,
still in possession of unbroken strength of will and desire for power, threw
themselves upon weaker, more moral, more peaceful races (perhaps trading or
cattle-rearing communities), or upon old mellow civilisations in which the final
vital force was flickering out in brilliant fireworks of wit and depravity.
At the commencement, the noble caste was always the barbarian caste: their superiority
did not consist first of all in their physical, but in their psychical power--they
were more complete men (which at every point also implies the same as
"more complete beasts").
258.
Corruption--as the indication that anarchy threatens to break out among the
instincts, and that the foundation of the emotions, called "life," is convulsed--is
something radically different according to the organisation in which it manifests
itself. When, for instance, an aristocracy like that of France at the beginning
of the Revolution, flung away its privileges with sublime disgust and sacrificed
itself to an excess of its moral sentiments, it was corruption:-- it was really
only the closing act of the corruption which had existed for centuries, by virtue
of which that aristocracy had abdicated step by step its lordly prerogatives
and lowered itself to a function of royalty (in the end even to its decoration
and parade-dress). The essential thing, however, in a good and healthy aristocracy
is that it should not regard itself as a function either of the kingship
or the commonwealth, but as the significance and highest justification
thereof--that it should therefore accept with a good conscience the sacrifice
of a legion of individuals, who, for its sake, must be suppressed and
reduced to imperfect men, to slaves and instruments. Its fundamental belief
must be precisely that society is not allowed to exist for its own sake,
but only as a foundation and scaffolding, by means of which a select class of
beings may be able to elevate themselves to their higher duties, and in general
to a higher existence: like those sun-seeking climbing plants in Java--they
are called Sipo Matador, --which encircle an oak so long and so often
with their arms, until at last, high above it, but supported by it, they can
unfold their tops in the open light, and exhibit their happiness.
259.
To refrain mutually from injury, from violence, from exploitation, and put
one's will on a par with that of others: this may result in a certain rough
sense in good conduct among individuals when the necessary conditions are given
(namely, the actual similarity of the individuals in amount of force and degree
of worth, and their co-relation within one organisation). As soon, however,
as one wished to take this principle more generally, and if possible even as
the fundamental principle of society, it would immediately disclose what
it really is--namely, a Will to the denial of life, a principle of dissolution
and decay. Here one must think profoundly to the very basis and resist all sentimental
weakness: life itself is essentially appropriation, injury, conquest
of the strange and weak, suppression, severity, obtrusion of peculiar forms,
incorporation, and at the least, putting it mildest, exploitation;--but why
should one for ever use precisely these words on which for ages a disparaging
purpose has been stamped? Even the organisation within which, as was previously
supposed, the individuals treat each other as equal--it takes place in every
healthy aristocracy--must itself, if it be a living and not a dying organisation,
do all that towards other bodies, which the individuals within it refrain from
doing to each other: it will have to be the incarnated Will to Power, it will
endeavour to grow, to gain ground, attract to itself and acquire ascendency--not
owing to any morality or immorality, but because it lives, and because
life is precisely Will to Power. On no point, however, is the ordinary
consciousness of Europeans more unwilling to be corrected than on this matter;
people now rave everywhere, even under the guise of science, about coming conditions
of society in which "the exploiting character" is to be absent:-- that sounds
to my ears as if they promised to invent a mode of life which should refrain
from all organic functions. "Exploitation" does not belong to a depraved, or
imperfect and primitive society: it belongs to the nature of the living
being as a primary organic function; it is a consequence of the intrinsic Will
to Power, which is precisely the Will to Life.--Granting that as a theory this
is a novelty--as a reality it is the fundamental fact of all history:
let us be so far honest towards ourselves!
260.
In a tour through the many finer and coarser moralities which have hitherto
prevailed or still prevail on the earth, I found certain traits recurring regularly
together, and connected with one another, until finally two primary types revealed
themselves to me, and a radical distinction was brought to light. There is master-morality
and slave-morality; --I would at once add, however, that in all higher
and mixed civilisations, there are also attempts at the reconciliation of the
two moralities; but one finds still oftener the confusion and mutual misunderstanding
of them, indeed sometimes their close juxtaposition--even in the same man, within
one soul. The distinctions of moral values have either originated in a ruling
caste, pleasantly conscious of being different from the ruled--or among the
ruled class, the slaves and dependents of all sorts. In the first case, when
it is the rulers who determine the conception "good," it is the exalted, proud
disposition which is regarded as the distinguishing feature, and that which
determines the order of rank The noble type of man separates from himself the
beings in whom the opposite of this exalted, proud disposition displays itself:
he despises them. Let it at once be noted that in this first kind of morality
the antithesis "good" and "bad" means practically the same as "noble" and "despicable";--the
antithesis "good" and "evil" is of a different origin. The cowardly,
the timid, the insignificant, and those thinking merely of narrow utility are
despised; moreover, also, the distrustful, with their constrained glances, the
self-abasing, the dog-like kind of men who let themselves be abused, the mendicant
flatterers, and above all the liars:--it is a fundamental belief of all aristocrats
that the common people are untruthful. "We truthful ones"--the nobility in ancient
Greece called themselves. It is obvious that everywhere the designations of
moral value were at first applied to men; and were only derivatively
and at a later period applied to actions; it is a gross mistake, therefore,
when historians of morals start with questions like, "Why have sympathetic actions
been praised?" The noble type of man regards himself as a determiner
of values; he does not require to be approved of; he passes the judgment: "What
is injurious to me is injurious in itself"; he knows that it is he himself only
who confers honour on things; he is a creator of values. He honours whatever
he recognises in himself: such morality equals self-glorification. In the foreground
there is the feeling of plenitude, of power, which seeks to overflow, the happiness
of high tension, the consciousness of a wealth which would fain give and bestow:--the
noble man also helps the unfortunate, but not--or scarcely--out of pity, but
rather from an impulse generated by the super-abundance of power. The noble
man honours in himself the powerful one, him also who has power over himself,
who knows how to speak and how to keep silence, who takes pleasure in subjecting
himself to severity and hardness, and has reverence for all that is severe and
hard. "Wotan placed a hard heart in my breast," says an old Scandinavian Saga:
it is thus rightly expressed from the soul of a proud Viking. Such a type of
man is even proud of not being made for sympathy; the hero of the Saga
therefore adds warningly: "He who has not a hard heart when young, will never
have one." The noble and brave who think thus are the furthest removed from
the morality which sees, precisely in sympathy, or in acting for the good of
others, or in desinteressement, the characteristic of the moral; faith
in oneself, pride in oneself, a radical enmity and irony towards "selflessness,"
belong as definitely to noble morality, as do a careless scorn and precaution
in presence of sympathy and the "warm heart."--It is the powerful who know
how to honour, it is their art, their domain for invention. The profound
reverence for age and for tradition--all law rests on this double reverence,--the
belief and prejudice in favour of ancestors and unfavourable to newcomers, is
typical in the morality of the powerful; and if, reversely, men of "modern ideas"
believe almost instinctively in progress and the "future," and are more and
more lacking in respect for old age, the ignoble origin of these "ideas" has
complacently betrayed itself thereby. A morality of the ruling class, however,
is more especially foreign and irritating to present-day taste in the sternness
of its principle that one has duties only to one's equals; that one may act
towards beings of a lower rank, towards all that is foreign, just as seems good
to one, or "as the heart desires," and in any case "beyond good and evil": it
is here that sympathy and similar sentiments can have a place. The ability and
obligation to exercise prolonged gratitude and prolonged revenge both only within
the circle of equals,--artfulness in retaliation, raffinement of the
idea in friendship, a certain necessity to have enemies (as outlets for the
emotions of envy, quarrelsomeness, arrogance--in fact, in order to be a good
friend)a: all these are typical characteristics of the noble morality,
which, as has been pointed out, is not the morality of "modern ideas," and is
therefore at present difficult to realise, and also to unearth and disclose.--It
is otherwise with the second type of morality, slave-morality. Supposing
that the abused, the oppressed, the suffering, the unemancipated, the weary,
and those uncertain of themselves should moralise, what will be the common element
in their moral estimates? Probably a pessimistic suspicion with regard to the
entire situation of man will find expression, perhaps a condemnation of man,
together with his situation. The slave has an unfavourable eye for the virtues
of the powerful; he has a scepticism and distrust, a refinement of distrust
of everything "good" that is there honoured--he would fain persuade himself
that the very happiness there is not genuine. On the other hand, those qualities
which serve to alleviate the existence of sufferers are brought into prominence
and flooded with light; it is here that sympathy, the kind, helping hand, the
warm heart, patience, diligence, humility, and friendliness attain to honour;
for here these are the most useful qualities, and almost the only means of supporting
the burden of existence. Slave-morality is essentially the morality of utility.
Here is the seat of the origin of the famous antithesis "good" and "evil": --power
and dangerousness are assumed to reside in the evil, a certain dreadfulness,
subtlety, and strength, which do not admit of being despised. According to slave-morality,
therefore, the "evil" man arouses fear; according to master-morality, it is
precisely the "good" man who arouses fear and seeks to arouse it, while the
bad man is regarded as the despicable being. The contrast attains its maximum
when, in accordance with the logical consequences of slave- morality, a shade
of depreciation--it may be slight and well-intentioned--at last attaches itself
to the "good" man of this morality; because, according to the servile mode of
thought, the good man must in any case be the safe man: he is good-natured,
easily deceived, perhaps a little stupid, un bonhomme. Everywhere that
slave-morality gains the ascendency, language shows a tendency to approximate
the significations of the words "good" and "stupid."--A last fundamental difference:
the desire for freedom, the instinct for happiness and the refinements
of the feeling of liberty belong as necessarily to slave-morals and morality,
as artifice and enthusiasm in reverence and devotion are the regular symptoms
of an aristocratic mode of thinking and estimating.--Hence we can understand
without further detail why love as a passion--it is our European specialty--must
absolutely be of noble origin; as is well known, its invention is due to the
Provencal poet-cavaliers, those brilliant, ingenious men of the "gai saber,"
to whom Europe owes so much, and almost owes itself.
261.
Vanity is one of the things which are perhaps most difficult for a noble man
to understand: he will be tempted to deny it, where another kind of man thinks
he sees it self-evidently. The problem for him is to represent to his mind beings
who seek to arouse a good opinion of themselves which they themselves do not
possess--and consequently also do not "deserve,"--and who yet believe in
this good opinion afterwards. This seems to him on the one hand such bad taste
and so self-disrespectful, and on the other hand so grotesquely unreasonable,
that he would like to consider vanity an exception, and is doubtful about it
in most cases when it is spoken of. He will say, for instance: "I may be mistaken
about my value, and on the other hand may nevertheless demand that my value
should be acknowledged by others precisely as I rate it:--that, however, is
not vanity (but self-conceit, or, in most cases, that which is called 'humility,'
and also 'modesty')." Or he will even say: "For many reasons I can delight in
the good opinion of others, perhaps because I love and honour them, and rejoice
in all their joys, perhaps also because their good opinion endorses and strengthens
my belief in my own good opinion, perhaps because the good opinion of others,
even in cases where I do not share it, is useful to me, or gives promise of
usefulness:--all this, however, is not vanity." The man of noble character must
first bring it home forcibly to his mind, especially with the aid of history,
that, from time immemorial, in all social strata in any way dependent, the ordinary
man was only that which he passed for:--not being at all accustomed
to fix values, he did not assign even to himself any other value than that which
his master assigned to him (it is the peculiar right of masters to create
values). It may be looked upon as the result of an extraordinary atavism, that
the ordinary man, even at present, is still always waiting for an opinion
about himself and then instinctively submitting himself to it; yet by no means
only to a "good" opinion, but also to a bad and unjust one (think, for instance,
of the greater part of the self-appreciations and self-depreciations which believing
women learn from their confessors, and which in general the believing Christian
learns from his Church). In fact, conformably to the slow rise of the democratic
social order (and its cause, the blending of the blood of masters and slaves),
the originally noble and rare impulse of the masters to assign a value to themselves
and to "think well" of themselves, will now be more and more encouraged and
extended; but it has at all times an older, ampler, and more radically ingrained
propensity opposed to it--and in the phenomenon of 'vanity" this older propensity
overmasters the younger. The vain person rejoices over every good opinion
which he hears about himself (quite apart from the point of view of its usefulness,
and equally regardless of its truth or falsehood), just as he suffers from every
bad opinion: for he subjects himself to both, he feels himself subjected
to both, by that oldest instinct of subjection which breaks forth in him.--It
is "the slave" in the vain man's blood, the remains of the slave's craftiness--and
how much of the "slave" is still left in woman, for instance!--which seeks to
seduce to good opinions of itself; it is the slave, too, who immediately
afterwards falls prostrate himself before these opinions, as though he had not
called them forth.--And to repeat it again: vanity is an atavism.
262.
A species originates, and a type becomes established and strong in the
long struggle with essentially constant unfavourable conditions. On the
other hand, it is known by the experience of breeders that species which receive
super-abundant nourishment, and in general a surplus of protection and care,
immediately tend in the most marked way to develop variations, and are fertile
in prodigies and monstrosities (also in monstrous vices). Now look at an aristocratic
commonwealth, say an ancient Greek polis, or Venice, as a voluntary or
involuntary contrivance for the purpose of rearing human beings; there
are there men beside one another, thrown upon their own resources, who want
to make their species prevail, chiefly because they must prevail, or
else run the terrible danger of being exterminated. The favour, the super-abundance,
the protection are there lacking under which variations are fostered; the species
needs itself as species, as something which, precisely by virtue of its hardness,
its uniformity, and simplicity of structure, can in general prevail and make
itself permanent in constant struggle with its neighbours, or with rebellious
or rebellion-threatening vassals. The most varied experience teaches it what
are the qualities to which it principally owes the fact that it still exists,
in spite of all Gods and men, and has hitherto been victorious: these qualities
it calls virtues, and these virtues alone it develops to maturity. It does so
with severity, indeed it desires severity; every aristocratic morality is intolerant
in the education of youth, in the control of women, in the marriage customs,
in the relations of old and young, in the penal laws (which have an eye only
for the degenerating): it counts intolerance itself among the virtues, under
the name of "justice." A type with few, but very marked features, a species
of severe, warlike, wisely silent, reserved, and reticent men (and as such,
with the most delicate sensibility for the charm and nuances of society)
is thus established, unaffected by the vicissitudes of generations; the constant
struggle with uniform unfavourable conditions is, as already remarked,
the cause of a type becoming stable and hard. Finally, however, a happy state
of things results, the enormous tension is relaxed; there are perhaps no more
enemies among the neighbouring peoples, and the means of life, even of the enjoyment
of life, are present in super abundance. With one stroke the bond and constraint
of the old discipline severs: it is no longer regarded as necessary, as a condition
of existence--if it would continue, it can only do so as a form of luxury,
as an archaising taste. Variations, whether they be deviations (into
the higher, finer, and rarer), or deteriorations and monstrosities, appear suddenly
on the scene in the greatest exuberance and splendour; the individual dares
to be individual and detach himself. At this turning-point of history there
manifest themselves, side by side, and often mixed and entangled together, a
magnificent, manifold, virgin-forest-like up-growth and up-striving, a kind
of tropical tempo in the rivalry of growth, and an extraordinary decay
and self-destruction, owing to the savagely opposing and seemingly exploding
egoisms, which strive with one an other "for sun and light," and can no longer
assign any limit, restraint, or forbearance for themselves by means of the hitherto
existing morality. It was this morality itself which piled up the strength so
enormously, which bent the bow in so threatening a manner:--it is now "out of
date," it is getting "out of date." The dangerous and disquieting point has
been reached when the greater, more manifold, more comprehensive life is
lived beyond the old morality; the "individual" stands out, and is obliged
to have recourse to his own law-giving, his own arts and artifices for self-preservation,
self-elevation, and self-deliverance. Nothing but new "Whys," nothing but new
"Hows," no common formulas any longer, misunderstanding and disregard in league
with each other, decay, deterioration, and the loftiest desires frightfully
entangled, the genius of the race overflowing from all the cornucopias of good
and bad, a portentous simultaneousness of Spring and Autumn, full of new charms
and mysteries peculiar to the fresh, still inexhausted, still unwearied corruption.
Danger is again present, the mother of morality, great danger; this time shifted
into the individual, into the neighbour and friend, into the street, into their
own child, into their own heart, into all the most personal and secret recesses
of their desires and volitions. What will the moral philosophers who appear
at this time have to preach? They discover, these sharp onlookers and loafers,
that the end is quickly approaching, that everything around them decays and
produces decay, that nothing will endure until the day after to-morrow, except
one species of man, the incurably mediocre. The mediocre alone have a
prospect of continuing and propagating themselves--they will be the men of the
future, the sole survivors; "be like them! become mediocre!" is now the only
morality which has still a significance, which still obtains a hearing.--But
it is difficult to preach this morality of mediocrity! it can never avow what
it is and what it desires! it has to talk of moderation and dignity and duty
and brotherly love--it will have difficulty in concealing its irony!
263.
There is an instinct for rank, which more than anything else is already
the sign of a high rank; there is a delight in the nuances
of reverence which leads one to infer noble origin and habits. The refinement,
goodness, and loftiness of a soul are put to a perilous test when something
passes by that is of the highest rank, but is not yet protected by the awe of
authority from obtrusive touches and incivilities: something that goes its way
like a living touchstone, undistinguished, undiscovered, and tentative, perhaps
voluntarily veiled and disguised. He whose task and practice it is to investigate
souls, will avail himself of many varieties of this very art to determine the
ultimate value of a soul, the unalterable, innate order of rank to which it
belongs: he will test it by its instinct for reverence. Différence engendre
haine: the vulgarity of many a nature spurts up suddenly like dirty water,
when any holy vessel, any jewel from closed shrines, any book bearing the marks
of great destiny, is brought before it; while on the other hand, there is an
involuntary silence, a hesitation of the eye, a cessation of all gestures, by
which it is indicated that a soul feels the nearness of what is worthiest
of respect. The way in which, on the whole, the reverence for the Bible has
hitherto been maintained in Europe, is perhaps the best example of discipline
and refinement of manners which Europe owes to Christianity: books of such profoundness
and supreme significance require for their protection an external tyranny of
authority, in order to acquire the period of thousands of years which
is necessary to exhaust and unriddle them. Much has been achieved when the sentiment
has been at last instilled into the masses (the shallow-pates and the boobies
of every kind) that they are not allowed to touch everything, that there are
holy experiences before which they must take off their shoes and keep away the
unclean hand--it is almost their highest advance towards humanity. On the contrary,
in the so-called cultured classes, the believers in "modern ideas," nothing
is perhaps so repulsive as their lack of shame, the easy insolence of eye and
hand with which they touch, taste, and finger everything; and it is possible
that even yet there is more relative nobility of taste, and more tact
for reverence among the people, among the lower classes of the people, especially
among peasants, than among the newspaper-reading demimonde of intellect,
the cultured class.
264.
It cannot be effaced from a man's soul what his ancestors have preferably and
most constantly done: whether they were perhaps diligent economisers attached
to a desk and a cash-box, modest and citizen-like in their desires, modest also
in their virtues; or whether they were accustomed to commanding from morning
till night, fond of rude pleasures and probably of still ruder duties and responsibilities;
or whether, finally, at one time or another, they have sacrificed old privileges
of birth and possession, in order to live wholly for their faith--for their
"God,"--as men of an inexorable and sensitive conscience, which blushes at every
compromise. It is quite impossible for a man not to have the qualities
and predilections of his parents and ancestors in his constitution, whatever
appearances. may suggest to the contrary. This is the problem of race. Granted
that one knows something of the parents, it is admissible to draw a conclusion
about the child: any kind of offensive incontinence, any kind of sordid envy;
or of clumsy self-vaunting--the three things which together have constituted
the genuine plebeian type in all times--such must pass over to the child, as
surely as bad blood; and with the help of the best education and culture one
will only succeed in deceiving with regard to such heredity.--And what
else does education and culture try to do nowadays! In our very democratic,
or rather, very plebeian age, "education" and "culture" must be essentially
the art of deceiving--deceiving with regard to origin, with regard to the inherited
plebeianism in body and soul. An educator who nowadays preached truthfulness
above everything else, and called out constantly to his pupils: "Be true! Be
natural! Show yourselves as you are!"--even such a virtuous and sincere ass
would learn in a short time to have recourse to the furca of Horace,
naturam expellere: with what results? "Plebeianism" usque recurret.
265.
At the risk of displeasing innocent ears, I submit that egoism belongs to the
essence of a noble soul, I mean the unalterable belief that to a being such
as "we," other beings must naturally be in subjection, and have to sacrifice
themselves. The noble soul accepts the fact of his egoism without question,
and also without consciousness of harshness, constraint, or arbitrariness therein,
but rather as something that may have its basis in the primary law of things:--if
he sought a designation for it he would say: "It is justice itself." He acknowledges
under certain circumstances, which made him hesitate at first, that there are
other equally privileged ones; as soon as he has settled this question of rank,
he moves among those equals and equally privileged ones with the same assurance,
as regards modesty and delicate respect, which he enjoys in intercourse with
himself--in accordance with an innate heavenly mechanism which all the stars
understand. It is an additional instance of his egoism, this artfulness
and self-limitation in intercourse with his equals--every star is a similar
egoist, he honours himself in them, and in the rights which he concedes
to them, he has no doubt that the exchange of honours and rights, as the essence
of all intercourse, belongs also to the natural condition of things. The
noble soul gives as he takes, prompted by the passionate and sensitive instinct
of requital, which is at the root of his nature. The notion of "favour" has,
inter pares, neither significance nor good repute; there may be a sublime
way of letting gifts as it were light upon one from above, and of drinking them
thirstily like dew-drops; but for those arts and displays the noble soul has
no aptitude. His egoism hinders him here: in general, he looks "aloft" unwillingly--he
looks either forward, horizontally and deliberately, or downwards--he
knows that he is on a height.
266.
"One can only truly esteem him who does not look out for himself"--Goethe
to Rath Schlosser.
267.
The Chinese have a proverb which mothers even teach their children: "Siao-sin"
("make thy heart small"). This is the essentially fundamental tendency in
latter-day civilisations. I have no doubt that an ancient Greek, also, would
first of all remark the self-dwarfing in us Europeans of to-day--in this respect
alone we should immediately be "distasteful" to him.
268.
What, after all, is ignobleness?--Words are vocal symbols for ideas; ideas,
however, are more or less definite mental symbols for frequently returning and
concurring sensations, for groups of sensations. It is not sufficient to use
the same words in order to understand one another: we must also employ the same
words for the same kind of internal experiences, we must in the end have experiences
in common. On this account the people of one nation understand one another
better than those belonging to different nations, even when they use the same
language; or rather, when people have lived long together under similar conditions
(of climate, soil, danger, requirement, toil) there originates therefrom
an entity that "understands itself"--namely, a nation. In all souls a like number
of frequently recurring experiences have gained the upper hand over those occurring
more rarely: about these matters people understand one another rapidly and always
more rapidly--the history of language is the history of a process of abbreviation;
on the basis of this quick comprehension people always unite closer and closer.
The greater the danger, the greater is the need of agreeing quickly and readily
about what is necessary; not to misunderstand one another in danger--that is
what cannot at all be dispensed with in intercourse. Also in all loves and friendships
one has the experience that nothing of the kind continues when the discovery
has been made that in using the same words, one of the two parties has feelings,
thoughts, intuitions, wishes, or fears different from those of the other. (The
fear of the "eternal misunderstanding": that is the good genius which so often
keeps persons of different sexes from too hasty attachments, to which sense
and heart prompt them--and not some Schopenhauerian "genius of the species"!)
Whichever groups of sensations within a soul awaken most readily, begin to speak,
and give the word of command--these decide as to the general order of rank of
its values, and determine ultimately its list of desirable things. A man's estimates
of value betray something of the structure of his soul, and wherein it
sees its conditions of life, its intrinsic needs. Supposing now that necessity
has from all time drawn together only such men as could express similar requirements
and similar experiences by similar symbols, it results on the whole that the
easy communicability of need, which implies ultimately the undergoing
only of average and common experiences, must have been the most potent
of all the forces which have hitherto operated upon mankind. The more similar,
the more ordinary people, have always had and are still having the advantage;
the more select, more refined, more unique, and difficult to comprehend, are
liable to stand alone; they succumb to accidents in their isolation, and seldom
propagate themselves. One must appeal to immense opposing forces, in order to
thwart this natural, all-too-natural progressus in simile, the evolution
of man to the similar, the ordinary, the average, the gregarious--to the ignoble!-
269.
The more a psychologist--a born, an unavoidable psychologist and soul-diviner--turns
his attention to the more select cases and individuals, the greater is his danger
of being suffocated by sympathy: he needs sternness and cheerfulness
more than any other man. For the corruption, the ruination of higher men, of
the more unusually constituted souls, is in fact, the rule: it is dreadful to
have such a rule always before one's eyes. The manifold torment of the psychologist
who has discovered this ruination, who discovers once, and then discovers almost
repeatedly throughout all history, this universal inner "desperateness"
of higher men, this eternal "too late!" in every sense--may perhaps one day
be the cause of his turning with bitterness against his own lot, and of his
making an attempt at self-destruction--of his "going to ruin" himself. One may
perceive in almost every psychologist a tell-tale inclination for delightful
intercourse with commonplace and well-ordered men; the fact is thereby disclosed
that he always requires healing, that he needs a sort of flight and forgetfulness,
away from what his insight and incisiveness--from what his "business"--has laid
upon his conscience. The fear of his memory is peculiar to him. He is easily
silenced by the judgment of others; he hears with unmoved countenance how people
honour, admire, love, and glorify, where he has perceived--or he even
conceals his silence by expressly assenting to some plausible opinion. Perhaps
the paradox of his situation becomes so dreadful that, precisely where he has
learnt great sympathy, together with great contempt, the multitude,
the educated, and the visionaries, have on their part learnt great reverence--reverence
for "great men" and marvellous animals, for the sake of whom one blesses and
honours the fatherland, the earth, the dignity of mankind, and one's own self,
to whom one points the young, and in view of whom one educates them. And who
knows but in all great instances hitherto just the same happened: that the multitude
worshipped a God, and that the "God" was only a poor sacrificial animal! Success
has always been the greatest liar--and the "work" itself is a success; the
great statesman, the conqueror, the discoverer, are disguised in their creations
until they are unrecognisable; the "work" of the artist, of the philosopher,
only invents him who has created it, is reputed to have created it; the
"great men, as they are reverenced, are poor little fictions composed afterwards;
in the world of historical values spurious coinage prevails. Those great
poets, for example, such as Byron, Musset, Poe, Leopardi, Kleist, Gogol (I do
not venture to mention much greater names, but I have them in my mind), as they
now appear, and were perhaps obliged to be: men of the moment, enthusiastic,
sensuous, and childish, light-minded and impulsive in their trust and distrust;
with souls in which usually some flaw has to be concealed; often taking revenge
with their works for an internal defilement, often seeking forgetfulness in
their soaring from a too true memory, often lost in the mud and almost in love
with it, until they become like the Will-o'-the-Wisps around the swamps, and
pretend to be stars--the people then call them idealists,--often struggling
with protracted disgust, with an ever-reappearing phantom of disbelief, which
makes them cold, and obliges them to languish for gloria and devour "faith
as it is" out of the hands of intoxicated adulators:--what a torment these
great artists are and the so-called higher men in general, to him who has once
found them out! It is thus conceivable that it is just from woman--who is clairvoyant
in the world of suffering, and also unfortunately eager to help and save to
an extent far beyond her powers--that they have learnt so readily those
outbreaks of boundless devoted sympathy, which the multitude, above all
the reverent multitude, do not understand, and overwhelm with prying and self-gratifying
interpretations. This sympathising invariably deceives itself as to its power;
woman would like to believe that love can do everything--it is the superstition
peculiar to her. Alas, he who knows the heart finds out how poor, helpless,
pretentious, and blundering even the best and deepest love is--he finds that
it rather destroys than saves!--It is possible that under the holy fable
and travesty of the life of Jesus there is hidden one of the most painful cases
of the martyrdom of knowledge about love: the martyrdom of the most innocent
and most craving heart, that never had enough of any human love, that demanded
love, that demanded inexorably and frantically to be loved and nothing else,
with terrible outbursts against those who refused him their love; the story
of a poor soul insatiated and insatiable in love, that had to invent hell to
send thither those who would not love him--and that at last, enlightened
about human love, had to invent a God who is entire love, entire capacity
for love--who takes pity on human love, because it is so paltry, so ignorant!
He who has such sentiments, he who has such knowledge about love--seeks
for death!--But why should one deal with such painful matters? Provided,
of course, that one is not obliged to do so.
270.
The intellectual haughtiness and loathing of every man who has suffered deeply--it
almost determines the order of rank how deeply men can suffer--the chilling
certainty, with which he is thoroughly imbued and coloured, that by virtue of
his suffering he knows more than the shrewdest and wisest can ever know,
that he has been familiar with, and "at home" in, many distant, dreadful worlds
of which "you know nothing"!--this silent intellectual haughtiness of
the sufferer, this pride of the elect of knowledge, of the "initiated," of the
almost sacrificed, finds all forms of disguise necessary to protect itself from
contact with officious and sympathising hands, and in general from all that
is not its equal in suffering. Profound suffering makes noble: it separates.--One
of the most refined forms of disguise is Epicurism, along with a certain ostentatious
boldness of taste, which takes suffering lightly, and puts itself on the defensive
against all that is sorrowful and profound. They are "gay men" who make use
of gaiety, because they are misunderstood on account of it--they wish to
be misunderstood. There are "scientific minds" who make use of science, because
it gives a gay appearance, and because scientificness leads to the conclusion
that a person is superficial--they wish to mislead to a false conclusion.
There are free insolent minds which would fain conceal and deny that they are
broken, proud, incurable hearts (the cynicism of Hamlet--the case of Galiani);
and occasionally folly itself is the mask of an unfortunate over-assured
knowledge.--From which it follows that it is the part of a more refined
humanity to have reverence "for the mask," and not to make use of psychology
and curiosity in the wrong place.
271.
That which separates two men most profoundly is a different sense and grade
of purity. What does it matter about all their honesty and reciprocal usefulness,
what does if matter about all their mutual good-will: the fact still remains--they
"cannot smell each other!" The highest instinct for purity places him who is
affected with it in the most extraordinary and dangerous isolation, as a saint:
for it is just holiness--the highest spiritualisation of the instinct in question.
Any kind of cognisance of an indescribable excess in the joy of the bath, any
kind of ardour or thirst which perpetually impels the soul out of night into
the morning, and out of gloom, out of "affliction" into clearness, brightness,
depth, and refinement:--just as much as such a tendency distinguishes--it
is a noble tendency--it also separates.--The pity of the saint is pity
for the filth of the human, all-to-human. And there are grades and heights
where pity itself is regarded by him as impurity, as Filth.
272.
Signs of nobility: never to think of lowering our duties to the rank of duties
for everybody; to be unwilling to renounce or to share our responsibilities;
to count our prerogatives, and the exercise of them, among our duties.
273.
A man who strives after great things, looks upon every one whom he encounters
on his way either as a means of advance, or a delay and hindrance--or as a temporary
resting-place. His peculiar lofty bounty to his fellow-men is only possible
when he attains his elevation and dominates. Impatience, and the consciousness
of being always condemned to comedy up to that time--for even strife is a comedy,
and conceals the end, as every means does--spoil all intercourse for him; this
kind of man is acquainted with solitude, and what is most poisonous in it.
274.
The Problem of Those Who Wait.--Happy chances are necessary, and many
incalculable elements, in order that a higher man in whom the solution of a
problem is dormant, may yet take action, or "break forth," as one might say--at
the right moment. On an average it does not happen; and in all corners
of the earth there are waiting ones sitting who hardly know to what extent they
are waiting, and still less that they wait in vain. Occasionally, too, the waking
call comes too late--the chance which gives "permission" to take action--when
their best youth, and strength for action have been used up in sitting still;
and how many a one, just as he "sprang up," has found with horror that his limbs
are benumbed and his spirits are now too heavy! "It is too late," he has said
to himself--and has become self-distrustful and henceforth for ever useless.--In
the domain of genius, may not the "Raphael without hands" (taking the expression
in its widest sense) perhaps not be the exception, but the rule?--Perhaps genius
is by no means so rare: but rather the five hundred hands which it requires
in order to tyrannise over the "the right time"--in order to take chance by
the forelock!
275.
He who does not wish to see the height of a man, looks all the more
sharply at what is low in him, and in the foreground--and thereby betrays himself.
276.
In all kinds of injury and loss the lower and coarser soul is better off than
the nobler soul: the dangers of the latter must be greater, the probability
that it will come to grief and perish is in fact immense, considering the multiplicity
of the conditions of its existence.--In a lizard a finger grows again which
has been lost; not so in man.--
277.
It is too bad! Always the old story! When a man has finished building his house,
he finds that he has learnt unawares something which he ought absolutely
to have known before he--began to build. The eternal, fatal "Too late!" The
melancholia of everything completed!--
278.
--Wanderer, who art thou? I see thee follow thy path without scorn, without
love, with unfathomable eyes, wet and sad as a plummet which has returned to
the light unsated out of every depth--what did it seek down there?--with a bosom
that never sighs, with lips that conceal their loathing, with a hand which only
slowly grasps: who art thou? what hast thou done? Rest thee here: this place
has hospitality for every one--refresh thyself! And whoever thou art, what is
it that now pleases thee? What will serve to refresh thee? Only name it, whatever
I have I offer thee! "To refresh me? To refresh me? Oh, thou prying one, what
sayest thou! But give me, I pray thee--" What? what? Speak out! "Another mask!
A second mask!"
279.
Men of profound sadness betray themselves when they are happy: they have a
mode of seizing upon happiness as though they would choke and strangle it, out
of jealousy--ah, they know only too well that it will flee from them!
280.
"Bad! Bad! What? Does he not--go back?" Yes! But you misunderstand him when
you complain about it. He goes back like every one who is about to make a great
spring.
281.
--"Will people believe it of me? But I insist that they believe it of me: I
have always thought very unsatisfactorily of myself and about myself, only in
very rare cases, only compulsorily, always without delight in 'the subject,'
ready to digress from 'myself,' and always without faith in the result, owing
to an unconquerable distrust of the possibility of self-knowledge, which
has led me so far as to feel a contradictio in adjecto even in the idea
of 'direct knowledge' which theorists allow themselves:--this matter of fact
is almost the most certain thing I know about myself. There must be a sort of
repugnance in me to believe anything definite about myself.--Is there
perhaps some enigma therein? Probably; but fortunately nothing for my own teeth.--Perhaps
it betrays the species to which I belong?--but not to myself as is sufficiently
agreeable to me."
282.
--"But what has happened to you?"--"I do not know," he said, hesitatingly;
"perhaps the Harpies have flown over my table."--It some times happens nowadays
that a gentle, sober, retiring man becomes suddenly mad, breaks the plates,
upsets the table, shrieks, raves, and shocks everybody--and finally withdraws,
ashamed, and raging at himself--hither? for what purpose? To famish apart? To
suffocate with his memories? To him who has the desires of a lofty and dainty
soul, and only seldom finds his table laid and his food prepared, the danger
will always be great--nowadays, however, it is extraordinarily so. Thrown into
the midst of a noisy and plebeian age, with which he does not like to eat out
of the same dish, he may readily perish of hunger and thirst--or, should he
nevertheless finally "fall to," of sudden nausea.--We have probably all sat
at tables to which we did not belong; and precisely the most spiritual of us,
who are most difficult to nourish, know the dangerous dyspepsia which
originates from a sudden insight and disillusionment about our food and our
messmates--the after-dinner nausea.
283.
If one wishes to praise at all, it is a delicate and at the same time a noble
self-control, to praise only where one does not agree--otherwise in fact
one would praise oneself, which is contrary to good taste:--a self-control,
to be sure, which offers excellent opportunity and provocation to constant misunderstanding.
To be able to allow oneself this veritable luxury of taste and morality,
one must not live among intellectual imbeciles, but rather among men whose misunderstandings
and mistakes amuse by their refinement--or one will have to pay dearly for it!--"He
praises me, therefore he acknowledges me to be right"--this asinine method
of inference spoils half of the life of us recluses, for it brings the asses
into our neighbourhood and friendship.
284.
To live in a vast and proud tranquillity; always beyond ... To have, or not
to have, one's emotions, one's For and Against, according to choice; to lower
oneself to them for hours; to seat oneself on them as upon horses, and
often as upon asses:--for one must know how to make use of their stupidity as
well as of their fire. To conserve one's three hundred foregrounds; also one's
black spectacles: for there are circumstances when nobody must look into our
eyes, still less into our "motives." And to choose for company that roguish
and cheerful vice, politeness. And to remain master of one's four virtues, courage,
insight, sympathy, and solitude. For solitude is a virtue with us, as a sublime
bent and bias to purity, which divines that in the contact of man and man--in
society"--it must be unavoidably impure. All society makes one somehow, somewhere,
or sometime--"commonplace."
285.
The greatest events and thoughts--the greatest thoughts, however, are the greatest
events--are longest in being comprehended: the generations which are contemporary
with them do not experience such events--they live past them. Something
happens there as in the realm of stars. The light of the furthest stars is longest
in reaching man; and before it has arrived man denies--that there are
stars there. "How many centuries does a mind require to be understood?"--that
is also a standard, one also makes a gradation of rank and an etiquette therewith,
such as is necessary for mind and for star.
286.
"Here is the prospect free, the mind exalted "--But there is a reverse kind
of man, who is also upon a height, and has also a free prospect--but looks downwards.
287.
--What is noble? What does the word "noble" still mean for us nowadays? How
does the noble man betray himself, how is he recognised under this heavy overcast
sky of the commencing plebeianism, by which everything is rendered opaque and
leaden?--It is not his actions which establish his claim--actions are always
ambiguous, always inscrutable; neither is it his "works." One finds nowadays
among artists and scholars plenty of those who betray by their works that a
profound longing for nobleness impels them; but this very need of nobleness
is radically different from the needs of the noble soul itself, and is in fact
the eloquent and dangerous sign of the lack thereof. It is not the works, but
the belief which is here decisive and determines the order of rank--to
employ once more an old religious formula with a new and deeper meaning--it
is some fundamental certainty which a noble soul has about itself, something
which is not to be sought, is not to be found, and perhaps, also, is not to
be lost.--The noble soul has reverence for itself.--
288.
There are men who are unavoidably intellectual, let them turn and twist themselves
as they will, and hold their hands before their treacherous eyes--as though
the hand were not a betrayer; it always comes out at last that they have something
which they hide--namely, intellect. One of the subtlest means of deceiving,
at least as long as possible, and of successfully representing oneself to be
stupider than one really is--which in everyday life is often as desirable as
an umbrella,--is called enthusiasm, including what belongs to it, for
instance, virtue. For as Galiani said, who was obliged to know it: vertu
est enthousiasme.
289.
In the writings of a recluse one always hears something of the echo of the
wilderness, something of the murmuring tones and timid vigilance of solitude;
in his strongest words, even in his cry itself, there sounds a new and more
dangerous kind of silence, of concealment. He who has sat day and night, from
year's end to year's end, alone with his soul in familiar discord and discourse,
he who has become a cave-bear, or a treasure-seeker, or a treasure-guardian
and dragon in his cave--it may be a labyrinth, but can also be a gold-mine--his
ideas themselves eventually acquire a twilight-colour of their own, and an odour,
as much of the depth as of the mould, something uncommunicative and repulsive,
which blows chilly upon every passerby. The recluse does not believe that a
philosopher--supposing that a philosopher has always in the first place been
a recluse--ever expressed his actual and ultimate opinions in books: are not
books written precisely to hide what is in us?--indeed, he will doubt whether
a philosopher can have "ultimate and actual" opinions at all; whether
behind every cave in him there is not, and must necessarily be, a still deeper
cave: an ampler, stranger, richer world beyond the surface, an abyss behind
every bottom, beneath every "foundation." Every philosophy is a foreground philosophy--this
is a recluse's verdict: "There is something arbitrary in the fact that the philosopher
came to a stand here, took a retrospect, and looked around; that he here
laid his spade aside and did not dig any deeper--there is also something
suspicious in it." Every philosophy also conceals a philosophy; every
opinion is also a lurking-place, every word is also a mask.
290.
Every deep thinker is more afraid of being understood than of being misunderstood.
The latter perhaps wounds his vanity, but the former wounds his heart, his sympathy,
which always says: "Ah, why would you also have as hard a time of it
as I have?"
291.
Man, a complex, mendacious, artful, and inscrutable animal, uncanny
to the other animals by his artifice and sagacity, rather than by his strength,
has invented the good conscience in order finally to enjoy his soul as something
simple; and the whole of morality is a long, audacious falsification,
by virtue of which generally enjoyment at the sight of the soul becomes possible.
From this point of view there is perhaps much more in the conception of "art"
than is generally believed.
292.
A philosopher: that is a man who constantly experiences, sees, hears, suspects,
hopes, and dreams extraordinary things; who is struck by his own thoughts as
if they came from the outside, from above and below, as a species of events
and lightning-flashes peculiar to him; who is perhaps himself a storm
pregnant with new lightnings; a portentous man, around whom there is always
rumbling and mumbling and gaping and something uncanny going on. A philosopher:
alas, a being who often runs away from himself, is often afraid of himself--but
whose curiosity always makes him "come to himself" again.
293.
A man who says: "I like that, I take it for my own, and mean to guard and protect
it from every one"; a man who can conduct a case, carry out a resolution, remain
true to an opinion, keep hold of a woman, punish and overthrow insolence; a
man who has his indignation and his sword, and to whom the weak, the suffering,
the oppressed, and even the animals willingly submit and naturally belong; in
short, a man who is a master by nature--when such a man has sympathy,
well! that sympathy has value! But of what account is the sympathy of
those who suffer! Or of those even who preach sympathy! There is nowadays, throughout
almost the whole of Europe, a sickly irritability and sensitiveness towards
pain, and also a repulsive irrestrainableness in complaining, an effeminising,
which, with the aid of religion and philosophical nonsense, seeks to deck itself
out as something superior--there is a regular cult of suffering. The unmanliness
of that which is called "sympathy" by such groups of visionaries, is always,
I believe, the first thing that strikes the eye.--One must resolutely and radically
taboo this latest form of bad taste; and finally I wish people to put the good
amulet, "gai saber" ("gay science," in ordinary language), on heart and
neck, as a protection against it.
294.
The Olympian Vice. --Despite the philosopher who, as a genuine Englishman,
tried to bring laughter into bad repute in all thinking minds--"Laughing is
a bad infirmity of human nature, which every thinking mind will strive to overcome"
(Hobbes),--I would even allow myself to rank philosophers according to the quality
of their laughing--up to those who are capable of golden laughter. And
supposing that Gods also philosophise, which I am strongly inclined to believe,
owing to many reasons--I have no doubt that they also know how to laugh thereby
in an overman-like and new fashion--and at the expense of all serious things!
Gods are fond of ridicule: it seems that they cannot refrain from laughter even
in holy matters.
295.
The genius of the heart, as that great mysterious one possesses it, the tempter-god
and born rat-catcher of consciences, whose voice can descend into the nether-world
of every soul, who neither speaks a word nor casts a glance in which there may
not be some motive or touch of allurement, to whose perfection it pertains that
he knows how to appear,--not as he is, but in a guise which acts as an additional
constraint on his followers to press ever closer to him, to follow him more
cordially and thoroughly;--the genius of the heart, which imposes silence and
attention on everything loud and self-conceited, which smooths rough souls and
makes them taste a new longing--to lie placid as a mirror, that the deep heavens
may be reflected in them;--the genius of the heart, which teaches the clumsy
and too hasty hand to hesitate, and to grasp more delicately; which scents the
hidden and forgotten treasure, the drop of goodness and sweet spirituality under
thick dark ice, and is a divining-rod for every grain of gold, long buried and
imprisoned in mud and sand; the genius of the heart, from contact with which
every one goes away richer; not favoured or surprised, not as though gratified
and oppressed by the good things of others; but richer in himself, newer than
before, broken up, blown upon, and sounded by a thawing wind; more uncertain,
perhaps, more delicate, more fragile, more bruised, but full of hopes which
as yet lack names, full of a new will and current, full of a new ill-will and
counter-current ... but what am I doing, my friends? Of whom am I talking to
you? Have I forgotten myself so far that I have not even told you his name?
Unless it be that you have already divined of your own accord who this questionable
God and spirit is, that wishes to be praised in such a manner? For, as
it happens to every one who from childhood onward has always been on his legs,
and in foreign lands, I have also encountered on my path many strange and dangerous
spirits; above all, however, and again and again, the one of whom I have just
spoken: in fact, no less a personage than the God Dionysus, the great
equivocator and tempter, to whom, as you know, I once offered in all secrecy
and reverence my first-fruits--the last, as it seems to me, who has offered
a sacrifice to him, for I have found no one who could understand what
I was then doing. In the meantime, however, I have learned much, far too much,
about the philosophy of this God, and, as I said, from mouth to mouth--I, the
last disciple and initiate of the God Dionysus: and perhaps I might at last
begin to give you, my friends, as far as I am allowed, a little taste of this
philosophy? In a hushed voice, as is but seemly: for it has to do with much
that is secret, new, strange, wonderful, and uncanny. The very fact that Dionysus
is a philosopher, and that therefore Gods also philosophise, seems to me a novelty
which is not unensnaring, and might perhaps arouse suspicion precisely among
philosophers;--among you, my friends, there is less to be said against it, except
that it comes too late and not at the right time; for, as it has been disclosed
to me, you are loth nowadays to believe in God and gods. It may happen, too,
that in the frankness of my story I must go further than is agreeable to the
strict usages of your ears? Certainly the God in question went further, very
much further, in such dialogues, and was always many paces ahead of me ... Indeed,
if it were allowed, I should have to give him, according to human usage, fine
ceremonious titles of lustre and merit, I should have to extol his courage as
investigator and discoverer, his fearless honesty, truthfulness, and love of
wisdom. But such a God does not know what to do with all that respectable trumpery
and pomp. "Keep that," he would say, "for thyself and those like thee, and whoever
else require it! I--have no reason to cover my nakedness!" One suspects that
this kind of divinity and philosopher perhaps lacks shame?-- He once said: "Under
certain circumstances I love mankind"--and referred thereby to Ariadne, who
was present; "in my opinion man is an agreeable, brave, inventive animal, that
has not his equal upon earth, he makes his way even through all labyrinths.
I like man, and often think how I can still further advance him, and make him
stronger, more evil, and more profound."--"Stronger, more evil, and more profound?"
I asked in horror. 'Yes," he said again, "stronger, more evil, and more profound;
also more beautiful"--and thereby the tempter-god smiled with his halcyon smile,
as though he had just paid some charming compliment. One here sees at once that
it is not only shame that this divinity lacks;--and in general there are good
grounds for supposing that in some things the Gods could all of them come to
us men for instruction. We men are--more human.--
296.
Alas! what are you, after all, my written and painted thoughts! Not long ago
you were so variegated, young and malicious, so full of thorns and secret spices,
that you made me sneeze and laugh--and now? You have already doffed your novelty,
and some of you, I fear, are ready to become truths, so immortal do they look,
so pathetically honest, so tedious! And was it ever otherwise? What then do
we write and paint, we mandarins with Chinese brush, we immortalisers of things
which lend themselves to writing, what are we alone capable of painting?
Alas, only that which is just about to fade and begins to lose its odour! Alas,
only exhausted and departing storms and belated yellow sentiments! Alas, only
birds strayed and fatigued by flight, which now let themselves be captured with
the hand--with our hand! We immortalise what cannot live and fly much
longer, things only which are exhausted and mellow! And it is only for your
afternoon, you, my written and painted thoughts, for which alone I have
colours, many colours, perhaps, many variegated softenings, and fifty yellows
and browns and greens and reds;--but nobody will divine thereby how ye looked
in your morning, you sudden sparks and marvels of my solitude, you, my old,
beloved--evil thoughts!
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