“A political opportunist divides us into two classes: tools and enemies.”
Nietzche was
born on October 15, 1844; studied philology; became in 1869,
professor of philology at Basle; made the acquaintance of Richard Wagner and became warmly attached to him, and associated
also with the distinguished historian of the Renaissance, Jakob
Burkhardt. Nietzsche's admiration
and affection for Burkhardt were lasting. His feeling for Wagner,
on the other hand, underwent a complete revulsion in the course of
years. From having been Wagner's prophet he developed into his most
passionate opponent.
Nietzsche was
always heart and soul a musician ; he even tried his hand as a
composer in his Hymn to Life (for chorus and orchestra, 1888), and
his intercourse with Wagner left
deep traces in his earliest writings. But the opera of Parsifal, with
its tendency to Catholicism and its advancement of the ascetic ideals
which had previously been entirely foreign to Wagner,
caused Nietzsche to
see in the great composer a danger, an enemy, a morbid phenomenon,
since this last work showed him all the earlier operas in a new
light.
During
his residence in Switzerland Nietzsche came
to know a large circle of interesting people. He suffered, however,
from extremely severe headaches, so frequent that they incapacitated
him for about two hundred days in the year and brought him to the
verge of the grave. In 1879 he resigned his professorship. From 1882
to 1888 his state of health improved, though extremely slowly. His
eyes were still so weak that he was threatened with blindness. He was
compelled to be extremely careful in his mode of life and to choose
his place of residence in obedience to climatic and meteorological
conditions. He usually spent the winter at Nice and the summer at
Sils-Maria in the Upper Engadine. The years 1887 and 1888 were
astonishingly rich in production ; they saw the publication of the
most remarkable works of widely different nature and the preparation
of a whole series of new books. Then, at the close of the latter
year, perhaps as the result of overstrain, a violent attack of mental
disorder occurred, from which Nietzsche never
recovered.
As
a thinker his starting-point is Schopenhauer ; in his first books he
is actually his disciple. But, after several years of silence, during
which he passes through his first intellectual crisis, he reappears
emancipated from all ties of discipleship. He then undergoes so
powerful and rapid a development less in his thought itself than in
the courage to express his thoughts that each succeeding book marks a
fresh stage, until by degrees he concentrates himself upon a single
fundamental question, the question of moral values.
"So
I was right in speaking of my "wandering in a world of wishes"
when I dreamt of finding a true philosopher who could lift me from
the slough of insufficiency, and teach me again simply and
honestly—to be in my thoughts and life, in the deepest sense of the
word, "out of season"; simply and honestly for men have now
become such complicated machines that they must be dishonest, if they
speak at all, or wish to act on their words. With such needs and
desires within me did I come to know Schopenhauer."
- Nietzsche Quote, Schopenhauer as Educator
- Nietzsche Quote, Schopenhauer as Educator
Four
of Nietzsche's early
works bear the collective title, Thoughts out of Season
(Unzeitgemasse Betrachtungen), a title which is significant of his
early-formed determination to go against the stream.
One
of the fields in which he opposed the spirit of the age in Germany is
that of education, since he condemns in the most uncompromising
fashion the entire historical system of education of which Germany is
proud, and which as a rule is everywhere regarded as desirable.
His
view is that what keeps the race from
breathing freely and willing boldly is that it drags far too much of
its past about with it, like a round-shot chained to a convict's leg.
He thinks it is historical education that fetters the race both in
enjoyment and in action, since he who cannot concentrate himself on
the moment and live entirely in it, can neither feel happiness
himself nor do anything to make others happy. Without the power of
feeling unhistorically, there is no happiness. And in the same way,
forgetfulness, or, rather, non-knowledge of the past is essential to
all action. Forgetfulness, the unhistorical, is as it were the
enveloping air, the atmosphere, in which alone life can come into
being. In order to understand it, let us imagine a youth who is
seized with a passion for a woman, or a man who is swayed by a
passion for his work. In both cases what lies behind them has ceased
to exist and yet this state (the most unhistorical that can be
imagined) is that in which every action, every great deed is
conceived and accomplished. Now answering to this, says Nietzsche,
there exists a certain degree of historical knowledge which is
destructive of a man's energy and fatal to the productive powers of a
nation.
The
severe and painful illness, which began in his thirty-second year and
long made him a recluse, detached him from all romanticism and freed
his heart from all bonds of piety. It carried him far away from
pessimism, in virtue of his proud thought that "a
sufferer has no right to pessimism."
This illness made a philosopher of him in a strict sense. His
thoughts stole inquisitively along forbidden paths : This thing
passes for a value. Can we not turn it upside-down ? This is regarded
as good. Is it not rather evil ? Is not God refuted
? But can we say as much of the devil ? Are we not deceived ? and
deceived deceivers, all of us ? . . .
And
then out of this long sickliness arises a passionate desire for
health, the joy of the convalescent in life, in light, in warmth, in
freedom and ease of mind, in the range and horizon of thought, in
"visions
of new dawns,"
in creative capacity, in poetical strength. And he enters upon the
lofty self-confidence and ecstasy of a long uninterrupted production.
Among Nietzsche's works
there is a strange book which bears the title, Thus
Spake zarathustra.
It consists of four parts, written during the years 1883-85, each
part in about ten days, and conceived chapter by chapter on long
walks "with
a feeling of inspiration, as though each sentence had been shouted in
my ear,"
as Nietzsche wrote
in a private letter.
The
central figure and something of the form are borrowed from the
Persian Avesta. zarathustra is
the mystical founder of a religion whom we usually call Zoroaster.
His religion is the religion of purity ; his wisdom is cheerful and
dauntless, as that of one who laughed at his birth ; his nature is
light and flame. The eagle and the serpent, who share his mountain
cave, the proudest and the wisest of beasts, are ancient Persian
symbols.
This
work contains Nietzsche's doctrine
in the form, so to speak, of religion. It is the Koran, or rather the
Avesta, which he was impelled to leave obscure and profound,
high-soaring and remote from reality, prophetic and intoxicated with
the future, filled to the brim with the personality of its author,
who again is entirely filled with himself.
Zarathustra is a book for free, spirits. Nietzsche himself
gave this book the highest place among his writings. I do not share
this view. The imaginative power which sustains it is not
sufficiently inventive, and a certain monotony is inseparable from an
archaistic presentment by means of types.
"I
tell you: one must have chaos in one, to give birth to a dancing
star."
- Nietzsche quote, Thus Spoke Zarathustra
- Nietzsche quote, Thus Spoke Zarathustra
But
it is a good book for those to have recourse to who are unable to
master Nietzsche's purely
speculative works ; it contains all his fundamental ideas in the form
of poetic recital. Its merit is a style that from the first word to
the last is full-toned, sonorous and powerful ; now and then rather
unctuous in its combative judgments and condemnations ; always
expressive of self-joy, nay, self-intoxication, but rich in
subtleties as in audacities, sure, and at times great. Behind this
style lies a mood as of calm mountain air, so light, so ethereally
pure, that no infection, no bacteria can live in it no noise, no
stench, no dust assails it, nor does any path lead up.
Clear
sky above, open sea at the mountain's foot, and over all a heaven of
light, an abyss of light, an azure bell, a vaulted silence above
roaring waters and mighty mountain-chains. On the
heights zarathustra is
alone with himself, drawing in the pure air in full, deep breaths,
alone with the rising sun, alone with the heat of noon, which does
not impair the freshness, alone with the voices of the gleaming stars
at night.
A
good, deep book it is. A book that is bright in its joy of life, dark
in its riddles, a book for spiritual mountain- climbers and
dare-devils and for the few who are practised in the great contempt
of man that loathes the crowd, and in the great love of man that only
loathes so deeply because it has a vision of a higher, braver
humanity, which it seeks to rear and train.
zarathustra has
sought the refuge of his cave out of disgust with petty happiness and
petty virtues. He has seen that men's doctrine of virtue and
contentment makes them ever smaller : their goodness is in the main a
wish that no one may do them any harm ; therefore they forestall the
others by doing them a little good. This is cowardice and is called
virtue. True, they are at the same time quite ready to attack and
injure, but only those who are once for all at their mercy and with
whom it is safe to take liberties. This is called bravery and is a
still baser cowardice. But when zarathustra tries
to drive out the cowardly devils in men, the cry is raised against
him, "zarathustra is
godless."
He
is lonely, for all his former companions have become apostates ;
their young hearts have grown old, and not old even, only weary and
slothful, only commonplace and this they call becoming pious again.
"Around
light and liberty they once fluttered like gnats and young poets,
and already are they mystifiers, and mumblers and molly coddles."
They have understood their age. They chose their time well. "For
now do all night-birds again fly abroad. Now is the hour of all that
dread the light."
Zarathustra loathes
the great city as a hell for anchorites thoughts. "All
lusts and vices are here at home ; but here are also the virtuous,
much appointable and appointed virtue. Much appointable virtue with
scribe-fingers and hardy sitting-flesh and waiting-flesh, blessed
with little breast-stars and padded, haunchless daughters. Here is
also much piety and much devout spittle-licking and honey- slavering
before the God of hosts. For from on high drippeth the star and the
gracious spittle ; and upward longeth every starless bosom."
To
him the State is the coldest of all cold monsters.
Its
fundamental lie is that it is the people. No ; creative spirits were
they who created the people and gave it a faith and a love ; thus
they served life ; every people is peculiar to itself, but the State
is everywhere the same. The State is to Zarathustra that
"where
the slow suicide of all is called life."
The State is for the many too many. Only where the State leaves off
does the man who is not superfluous begin ; the man who is a bridge
to the Superman.
From
states Zar has
fled up to his mountain, into his cave.
"In
the mountains, the shortest way is from peak to peak: but for that,
you need long legs. Aphorisms should be peaks: and those to whom they
are spoken, big and tall."
- Nietzsche Quote, Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Part I, Chapter 7, "On Reading and Writing"
- Nietzsche Quote, Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Part I, Chapter 7, "On Reading and Writing"
In
forbearance and pity lay his greatest danger. Rich in the little lies
of pity he dwelt among men.
"Stung
from head to foot by poisonous flies and hollowed out like a stone by
many drops of malice, thus did I sit among them, saying to myself :
Innocent is everything petty of its pettiness. Especially they who
call themselves the good, they sting in all innocence, they lie in
all innocence ; how could they be just towards me ?"
"He
who dwelleth among the good, him teacheth pity to lie. Pity breedeth
bad air for all free souls. For the stupidity of the good is
unfathomable."
"Their
stiff wise men did I call wise, not stiff. Their grave-diggers did I
call searchers and testers thus did I learn to confound speech. The
grave-diggers dig for them selves diseases. From old refuse arise
evil exhalations. Upon the mountains one should live."
And
with blessed nostrils he breathes again the freedom of the mountains.
His nose is now released from the smell of all that is human. There
sits zarathustra with
old broken tables of the law around him and new half-written tables,
awaiting his hour ; the hour when the lion shall come with the flock
of doves, strength in company with gentleness, to do homage to him.
And he holds out to men a new table, upon which such maxims as
these are written --
Spare
not thy neighbour ! My great love for the remotest ones commands it.
Thy neighbour is something that must be surpassed.
Say
not : I will do unto others as I would they should do unto me. What
thou doest, that can no man do to thee again. There is no requital.
Do
not believe that thou mayst not rob. A right which thou canst seize
upon, shalt thou never allow to be given thee.No
doctrine revolts Zarathustra
"more
than that of the vanity and senselessness of life. This is in his
eyes ancient babbling, old wives babbling. And the pessimists who sum
up life with a balance of aversion, and assert the badness of
existence, are the objects of his positive loathing. He prefers pain
to annihilation.
At
his death Zarathustra will
say : Now I disappear and die ; in a moment I shall be nothing, for
the soul is mortal as the body; but the complex of causes in which I
am involved will return, and it will continually reproduce me."
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