Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
OF
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
Translation
The First Complete and Authorised English
EDITED BY
DR.
OSCAR LEVY
VOLUME EIGHTEEN
WORKS
Of the
First Edition
containing Fifteen
Hundred
this is
No.
Copies
INDEX
TO N ETZSCH
I
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&
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CONTENTS
PACK
1.
EDITOR
2.
3.
36 3
ERRATA
The
now
Human, All-too-Human,
Vol.
(IV.),
Evil (V.),
I.
(IX.),
Vol.
I. (I.),
Vol. II.
do.
to,
made on
I.
I.
now
(II.),
(VII.),
now
Vol. IV.
now
Vol. V.
Vol. XI.
now
Vol. XII.
now
Vol.
XIV.
WITH
this
the eighteenth and last volume of the
authorised translation of Nietzsche s works into Eng
lish
a task
is
it
has taken
It
by the
In the
IN
ENGLAND
and
The
success encouraged
to
In
fresh edi
May
1909 the
first
four
day made
all
the
Now thank
andstirringtunes of the Lutheran hymn
we all our God
Unfortunately (or fortunately) the
brave Nietzscheans are in the same position as the
"
"
knew
side of the
Power generally
Higher Will-Power
fights
on the
moment
it
not only
falls
short of the
ENGLAND
IN
i.p. viii):
"As
this
am ready to listen to
"
country of
my residence
is
now read
not
viction that
zsche in
if
all tongues
are there
not complete Russian, Polish, Spanish, Italian, and
French versions of his works, not to speak of the lan
guages of the smaller European nations ? Why, then,
;
who
IN
ENGLAND
his class,
even
now
where the
development has been quite different, and
has absolutely confused and even effaced any such
obvious distinction between fervent and less fervent
tion
is
historical
in,
"
socialistic
it is
precisely they
in the Christian
still
be heard
Christ
"
know
xv
ENGLAND
materialistic
doing homage
IN
to a
equality against
full
and Socialists
on the Continent reproach the upper classes with
hypocrisy, while in England the hypocrisy is much
more on the side of the Liberal and middle classes.
For, why do not these Liberals carry out their Chris
tian principles
Why not
establish equality
Why
But it is impossible to do
"
be understood
seems more
likely to
by the
xvi
its
Catholicism,
is
at all cost
!"
And,
as patriarchalism in domestic
business
whom
good
it
in other fields)
has created
idea of equal
has
it
into
thousands
of anarchical
ity
split humanity
atoms, with its idea of liberty it has thrown responsi
its
bility
Protestantism
attack,
and
b
as
is
Now, as
IN
ENGLAND
by drawing
lic
Church,
"
England.
This is a
"
difficult
difficult
country
country to move,
indeed,"
said the
xviii
my friend, a
mildly
of the
Anglo-Saxon world
something
terrible;
but
The
why put
stoical
to put
is
it
it
mildly?
That
in
almost ineffaceable bruises on the heads of my fellowworkers and myself will for ever demonstrate to any
unbeliever. In saying this I of course in no way de
on the
sire to utter any specially adverse criticism
contrary, I rather admire this characteristic in an
otherwise unprincipled world, in a world which only
too often pretends to be tolerant of all ideas, because
it has no original ideas of its own. Such open-minded
people are the last for whom Nietzsche wrote, and the
early active acceptance of Nietzsche by just such
people was and is still our greatest danger a much
greater danger than the passive resistance of that fatal
brick wall. No, if I am to have any choice in the
matter, let me deal with the British brick wall at
:
it is
this is
it is
in
IN
ENGLAND
in a similar
We
In front of us stood
a most powerful phalanx composed of everything
that directs the intellect of this country
a phalanxof
xx
rescue
Of the
sponsor
who stood
Thomas
any other
who has no
prise.
"
"Je
moral support
Napoleon used to say.
will not do, we must give immoral support to Greece,"
as Bismarck once remarked. And we have certainly
de
rose"
as
"If
xxi
IN
ENGLAND
doubt about
with pride.
:
know
is still
of a
its best, as
No one, I
fear, except
doctrine
is
not, as
it
opinion
appears
Nietzsche s attack
good
moral shades,
that one
legs to be
"good,"
"
made ?
The answer is a very simple one
ever
to get to
know
we cannot be
xxiii
ENGLAND
IN
"
and
errors
its
our religion
our religion,
is
We
We must
dismiss this
We can
We cannot
liars
intellectual purity at any price," says Nietzsche \i\mself in the/tfjj//"^/ Wisdom (^h.^. 357).
Are these
.
xxiv
This then
archist?
is
self-
and
its
If there ever
Nietzsche.
nival of
shame
will seize
"
"
dignified
to
XXV
IN
ENGLAND
"
"
here
wisdom, the
They must
what
was a hard
hard
life
life
that he
recommends
to his followers.
it is
And
proof of my statement, the case of Mr. Ernest HornMr. Horneffer, one of the foremost German
effer.
xxvi
monism
(in
Englandbestknown
as the naturalistic
and honest
French
pas
say, and
riest pas Nietzscheen non plus qui veut. Let unholy
hands keep aloof from inspired writings, let the laity
believe in their old religions and their new philoso
phies, and let Nietzsche be the philosopher for those
only who have to stand alone, but who for this very
reason need an example and perhaps a guide more
"
diable qui
riest
veut"
least right
as the
have
is,
left
plorers
sea, that
it is all
of them.
xxvii
"
ENGLAND
IN
that
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
is
there
"
who
is
this,
that without
and the
agnosticism,
much
is still
religion
how
was
"
"
"
"
val
in the
And when
xxix
IN
ENGLAND
any enlight
been rightly
objected to them that they wish to apply to human
beings the laws of the stud-farm rightly, I say, be
cause they have quite overlooked the fact that man
if I may say so without being suspected of religi
is above all a moral animal. It is values that
osity
;
create
is
matter,
generations upon generations that in the end brings
forward a healthy, happy, brave, and proud type of
man.
In other words: the successful
"breeding"
of men
lence,
XXX
charity,
the ideal of the beginning of Christianity, has taken
We
ecce
Christiani!
What
company
it is,
to be sure,
"
"
old faith
"
such
is
the
first
xxxi
question which
all
be-
ENGLAND
IN
it is
not
"
xxxii
to
do
"fittest,"
them a
class that
"
is
unfit,"
that
is
badly adapted to
the
"
worth
that is to say, fitness for the tame require
ments of a commercial and mechanical civilisation?
"
May not the same thing happen to them that has hap
pened to the Jews, might they not crucify a God be
tween two criminals,nay,maynoteven criminals,who
* The Mental
Deficiency Bill, dropped for the time being,
proposed sterilisation of the unfit under certain circumstances.
Sterilisation of abnormal persons is actually carried out to-day
in Switzerland and some American States.
See on the subject, Juristisch-psychiatrische Grenzfragen,\\\\.
Halle a. S. (Carl Marhold). 1911.
xxxiii
IN
ENGLAND
"
"
"
humanity and
men
its
future, to
them and
to their police
Is
it
ance
in state
and government
science
is
merely
is
likewise near
above
all
after
xxxiv
They should be
all
the
who know
But
as
am
again losing
my
"
dignity,"
let
me
XXXV
IN
ENGLAND
still
considered strangers to
all
loving
known, that it
let
my
friends console
them
will
OSCAR LEVY.
INDEX.
Absolute, the, an absurd concept, xv. 82.
Absolute music, comes last in line of development,
makes
itself felt
See also
ii.
30
144.
"
Chance."
of, vii.
44.
of Season,
Human,
ii.
ii.
NIETZSCHE
INDEX
xiv. 241.
action,"
Action, the
man
of,
v.
to,
16;
Polybius and, 1 7.
Actions, the everyday standard of, vi. 83 ; on evil actions,
97-9; man s actions always right, 101 ; good
of, ix.
132
the combat of
understood, 208
x,
of,
the
202
are given
the part played by consciousness in de
ciding actions, 260; as the sources of moral
judgments, 261 ; their impenetrable nature, 262;
on, 259
way judgments
of, ix.
274.
&/ Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ADDER
Adder>
the^
The
its
Admiration,
bite
of (Zarathustra
danger,
vii.
165
xi.
discourse),
ii.
lyrist,
alluded
"the
quoted,
x.
128;
last
ix.
171
162
of,
193.
what he
is,
years
68.
173.
the
34.
vi.
174, 241.
old woman hates,"
his attitude
1
75-80
to,
quoted,
xii.
40.
what
77-9.
again, 169.
286.
ix.
Admirers, on,
AFFIRMATION
maxim
xiii.
of
in, x.
334.
130-3.
"
nothing
is beautiful," xvi.
is
beautiful
man alone
75.
who have
curse,"
amen
hard
261
his vast
saying,"
"
199
and unbounded
The seven
"yea
and
"become
yea and
amen
lay), 280.
the ability to say yes
"
"
nay,"
Human,
156.
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
xiv.
Affirmation, the rediscovery of the road to a
yea,"
45-7 ; "yea," as the answer of everything that
"
lives, 242.
the principles of, xv. 30-3 ; our aesthetic yea," 287 ;
heroic spirits which in tragic cruelty say
yea
unto themselves, 287 ; the new road to an affirm
"
"
"
ative attitude,
life,"
118;
its
of, vii.
95.
high, x. 209.
Ajax, the dignity of his transgression instanced, x. 175.
a Kempis (Thomas), his Imitation of Christ,. 62.
xii.
xvi.
and
intellect, 52.
51 ;
spiritual natures advised to abstain from, xvii. 31.
Alcoholism alluded
The volumes
referred to under
of Season,
ii.
I,
Birth
Greek Philosophy.
Ill, Future of Educa
Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, all-too-
II, Early
of Tragedy.
IV,
tional Institutions.
AMIEL
ALCUIN
in,
ii.
51
in
122
123.
science and the
of the
symbol
Gordian knot,
ix.
378
instanced, 381.
a scorner of honour, xv. 205.
life
alluded
to,
x.
125.
his taste for the grand style, xiv. 82.
women,
x.
Zarathustra
children
of, ix.
157
162-3.
declaration
s
land,"
xi.
Thus do
"
145
I love only my
the desire of the type
of, xiii.
and egoism,
105.
xiv. 58.
vi.
84; as
educator, 378.
vii. 138.
vices of, infecting Europe,
characteristic
America,
Amelioration, social,
x.
254.
xiv. 223.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
xii.
127
at
social
128.
ists,
same womb
- of the
ii.
79;
alluded
to, xiv.
345.
ii.
alluded
his system of
to, vi.
240.
Ancestors, the criticism of our, ix. 179.
the relation between
existing
generations
their ancestors,
xiii.
106
the fear
of,
107
and
their
deification, 108.
the
Anchorite,"
Ancient world,
a
the,
I owe
The volumes
always
like a drop-well
79.
to,
Nietzsche
224;
is
"one
"
xvi.
(Chap,
x.) xvi.
112-20.
referred to under
II,
ANGER
Anger, on,
vii.
ANTIQUITY
37.
human
pity for,
v.
149
xiv. 77.
149.
maternal
of
instinct, x.
man may
value,
what
ix.
258.
their criticisms
be, 200.
Anonymity of authorship,
its
105
vii.
79.
ix.
331.
Anthropology, the purification of races,
crease of beauty, 355.
ix.
253
the in
ancestors,
106.
God and
tianity
160
everywhere
its
demand which
Chris
fitted, 160.
own,
xii.
69.
27
need
past, 30.
of, viii. 1
12
a great value
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
of, viii.
1 1
NIETZSCHE
120
for,
the
classic,
126
prejudices
through
logist in,
its
study, 139
139
life,
179; what
is
it
now? 180;
antiquity
of,
alluded
the main
its
import
to, x. 185.
compre
instanced, 213.
See also under
"
Antithesis, on,
Aphorism,
vi.
Jews."
179.
vii.
69
the success
of,
82
in
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
APOLLONIAN
APHORISM
ii.
118-9
the power
of,
and
its result,
119.
of Phoenician origin, viii. 160.
the Christian diabolisation of, and
art,
the Apollonian,
soothsaying god, 24
i.
21
also the
attitude,
function, 186.
his fight with
"
"
"
"
167
the antithesis,
"
"Dionysian,"
186.
36 et seq.
the twin states of
expressed by,
"Dionysian"
416;
in the
its
240
antagonism
Greek soul, 416.
what
with
ii.
is
the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
INDEX
Apollonian, the,
its
NIETZSCHE
presentment
in
xvii. 69.
the
(Zarathustra
iv.) xii.
85-101.
218
nightwatchmen, 221.
Appearance, and how it becomes actuality,
-
wrought by
41.
i.
Dionysian,"
effects
"
and
historical
the consciousness
the world
ix.
natural,
of, xv.
of, x.
set for
who become
vi.
70.
281.
88.
70.
x. 256.
as
the
Aquila,
opposite to Rome, xvii. 103.
xiii.
(et in
51.
Arcadia
Arcadia, idyllic
Architecture,
now understood
not
vi.
130;
197
and music,
198.
referred to under
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
10
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ARCHITECTURE
ARISTOCRACY
and places
for reflection,
217.
vii.
299
ix.
on
35.
Aristides,
ii.
25
as
religion,
an affirmative
56.
xi.
48
soul, 49.
"good"
in the sense of
"
"
and
"unclean,"
tocratic
man
26
fulfils
and exhausts
itself in
will, xiv.
an im
77.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
II
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Aristocracy,
its
to
the future
the, the bearing of, ix. 203
204; and the ideal of victorious wisdom,
;
204.
Aristocracy of intellect, xv. 353 ; the new aristocracy, 359.
Aristocratic societies, the preliminary condition for the
elevation of the type "Man," xii. 223; on cor
ruption in, 224 the exploiting character of, 226 ;
a Greek polls and Venice instanced as, 234 ;
have
in,
"
235.
on
all
the tracks in
45
aristocratic
on, 107.
symptoms
of degenerate
culture, 132.
his religious
-
unconcern,
vi.
128.
untranslatable into
his works
bed, 42.
The volumes referred, to under numbers are as follow
I, Birth
II, Early Greek Philosophy.
of Tragedy.
Ill, Future of Educa
tional Institutions.
IV, Thoughts out of Season, L V, Thoughts out
:
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
12
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too -
ARROGANCE
ARISTOTLE
Aristotle,
170.
in
56
ii.
on Homer,
Thales and Anaxa-
his attack
iii.
question,
alluded
quoted,
iv.
to,
the
Homeric
Homer
157.
41.
309
ject of small
his saying
women alluded
of Greek tragedy,
1 1
to,
106
on the sub
and the aim
xiv.
369.
emotions, 285.
of, quoted, xvi. i; the tragic feeling not under
stood by, 119; his attitude to pity, 132.
a saying
Armed peace
vii.
vii.
337.
336.
Army,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
13
INDEX
its
Arrogance,
NIETZSCHE
vii.
24.
of the nature
"
and
10
duplexity of the
Dionysian," 21 ; no true art
"
i.
Apollonian
without objectivity, 44 ; the Socratic opposition
to the tragic need of, 120 ; the attainment of the
great goal
and
in the
of,
union of the
"
"
Apollonian
167.
"Dionysian,"
12; metaphor
in,
iii.
ii.
188.
130.
Wagner
the evolution
188.
of,
and
in,
172
Wagner and
monumental
art, v.
22
history, 58.
its
rhythm, 157
art,
163
scientists,
needful to a work
of,
174
wnat
ls
unfinished works of
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
14
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ART
199 acknowledgments to certain
the afterglow
its teaching, 205
204
;
hypotheses,
soon to be a memory only, 206.
of, 205
Art, by what kind of philosophy corrupted, vii. 25 ; satis
"
beyond" in,
lured
to,
76;
how
art
makes
the poet
artist,
94
in,
93
art
and
restoration,
and
94
in this
recreation,
276-8.
the dangerous meaning of, viii. 186
model of religion, 187.
- and the
making of better men,
and
art,
ix.
intercession
and the
modem
artist,
realism, 315 ;
316; growing ex
works of monologic
art,
328; regarded as a
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
15
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
attitude to
sake,"
more
natural
art,
as the will to
92;
to
of,
247
its
The
Power
Will
239con
pessimism
in,
263
defined
"es
modern
bigotry
and philosophy, a
la little
Jack
vii.
83-5Articulation,
Wagner
his
as, iv.
ii.
5.
172.
need of nature,
177.
his sense of truth,
v.
154
nature
artist,
vi.
nullity,
171
"
age
knowing his treasures
189;
and the case of Achilles and Homer, 189.
safe,"
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
16
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ARTISTS
ARTIST
Artist, the,
his
what
of, 1 8 7 .
in dealing
his
example
228;
required
with weaknesses, 229.
seeks his reward in work, x. 79; his ambition and
of, ix.
is
work, 204.
- the finer intuition
possessed by, xii. 156.
- his
his work, xiii. 125 ; as separated
to
relationship
nothing more
beauty
to,
above
all
deter
mined by exceptional
states,
their irreligiousness,
Artists
vi.
of aphorisms),
153-
206.
of the age, vii. 97 ; savants nobler than, 106.
the need of an art only for artists, viii. 81.
- wherein we become, ix.
256 ; realism of modern, 315
regions
for,
316.
"We
Germans
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
17
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
as, 1 44
193
of,
33 1
men
worth anything,
is
no such thing
as a Christian
who
is
also
an
Arts, the
mother
Ascetic, the,
vi.
of, vii.
84
270.
the aids
of,
142.
philoso
148
ness,
triumph, 152
life
turned against
life,
ego as a
153; the
and
beliefs,
modern
191
latest manifestation,
rests
Thf volumes
on the same
192;
science viewed as
its anti-idealists,
its
193-4;
referred to under
I,
Birth
a/ Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
18
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ASCETICISM
sche
205
reverence
for, in so far
sepulchres, 205.
Asceticism, the Christian form
limits regarding,
Nietzsche
as
of, vi.
it is
honourable,
138
et seq.
ix.
278.
desire to naturalise, xv. 336
spoilt
by
Asianism,
vii.
142.
shown in
and works, x. 287-90.
- on inherited bad instincts, xii 239.
Atavist, the, and the forerunner, vi. 388.
their
murderer of God,
xi.
methods
man
the
320-6.
72.
xii.
of, xiii.
still
171.
retaining
dangerous
19.
i.
35.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
19
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
between
attitude,
and "Dionysian"art,i.22.
and regard virtue as a sort of
"Apollonian"
who
Attitudes, those
love,
in.
xi.
Auerbach (Berthold),
iii.
xvii. 53.
58.
Augustine, Saint,
x.
316.
God,
80; relationship
of,
to the public,
184; the
case of
Homer and
Achilles, 189.
vii.
249.
vii.
- sources of the
loquacity of,
265.
x.
xiii.
179
moral
what
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Hitman,
20
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
BAD
AVIATION
sensible
man nowadays
writes
vi.
248.
i.
festivals,
29.
Bach, the
rise
and influence
of,
i.
151.
development,
his luminous inner life,
vi.
vii.
ii.
41.
197.
143
an estimation of
Wagner not
his splendid
of a strong race,
Bacon
now
(Francis, Lord),
v.
44.
viii.
154.
as representing an attack
xii. 210.
quoted,
quoted,
is
spirit,
xiv. 206.
as methodologist, xv. 3
proviso, 282.
Bad,
on the philosophical
Shakespeare as Bacon
whom
x.
and the
"evil"
209.
"
bad
"
of aristocratic
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
21
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Bad
xiv. 35.
xiv.
s
289.
inaugural ad
dress on
Nietzsche
xvii.
10.
become master of
Balzac, quoted,
xii.
133
instanced
century, 219.
left
their tracks,
Barbarians, Goethe
quoted,
iv.
ix. 209.
the
aristocratic
races on all
by
xiii.
40.
and barbarians,
20.
their inability to keep within the bounds of moderaation, xv. 309 ; the new, which come from the
heights, 329.
Barbarism,
Batis,
why
detested,
Alexander
ix.
cruelty to,
Baudelaire, alluded
313.
ii.
51.
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Hitman,
22
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
BEAUTY
BAUER
Bayreuth,
Wagner
compared, 85
vii.
56
to will the
Kant
xi.
definition
our love
of,
name
of (immaculate per
145-8.
s, xiii.
131.
Beautifying,
what we
should learn
from
the
artists
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
23
INDEX
ix.
31
NIETZSCHE
significance of the
and the
age,
257;
its
of,
xi.
in,
and
in,
reality,
109
the
/ call
gracious and descendeth into the invisible
such condescension beauty 141 ; emasculated (im
,
hour
which
something
blissful
artist, xv.
245
above
is
and
ugliness, 245-7.
78 ;
not accidental, but attained with pains, 106 ;
the first rule of nobody must let himself go,"
"
is alone, 107
why the Greeks
remain the first event in culture, 107-8.
Becoming, the hidden force acting behind, in nature and
the cruelty which is its essence, 8
art, ii. 5
considered as a punishable emancipation from
;
eternal being, 93
of,
146
viewed
in the
presence of
art,
155.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
24
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
BECOMING
BEETHOVEN
v.
cess, 75
"
"
becoming every
8 the personality and the world pro
and Hartmann s philosophy, 77.
;
no great en
as a reality, 14.
xv.
81
177-9the philosopher
of, xvi.
symphony
of,
53
17.
i.
27-8
his rise
and
German
culture of
iii.
105.
the critique of David Strauss travestied, iv. 37 ; a re
mark of, as commented on by Strauss, 48 ; the
phony
as
he understood
182.
it,
music, 123.
his ninth
symphony,
vi.
com
posing, 159.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
25
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
268
alluded
to,
308.
92;
his
natural
a classic
first
is
why they
ought to be suppressed,
ix.
317.
184.
xi.
102-5.
from
ego,"
21
"
"
being
as
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
26
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
BEYOND
BELIEF
Belief,
sired
when
there
is
lack of
will,
286.
Nihilism and, xiv. 16; St. Paul and the means where
with men are seduced to belief, 142 ; the desire
for belief confounded with the will to truth, 372.
ii.
ix.
Bellini,
42.
355.
the instincts of appropriation and submission
Bentham,
xii.
viii.
127
in, x.
162.
174.
xiv. 40.
down-going,
x.
272.
See
Beyle (Henri).
Beyond,
Beyond,
the, in art,
the, the
"
Stendhal."
vi.
199.
52 ; invented
world that exists,
real, xvii.
142.
evil,
"
57.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
27
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
and ex
the stand
by the
recalled
the
xiii.
to,
74
31
;
al
vi.
347.
art of false
reading, 85.
the masterpiece of German prose, xii. 205 ; the re
verence for, an example of discipline and refine
ment, 238.
allows of no comparison, xvi. 188; the story of cre
ation it contains, 197 ; its beginning contains
the whole psychology of the priest, 199
its
vul
garity, 215.
the
demand
it
makes upon
Biographers, a mistake
made
by,
flection of biographers
174
a necessary re
295-
to
and
view
science
art moreover
ii.
VI,
Human,
28
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
BIRTH OF TRAGEDY
Zarathustrcts discourse
alluded
BLIND
xiii.
200.
289-92.
Hellen
68
title,
nomenon
on unconditional homage
his
- alluded
to, xiii.
x.
305.
and Protestantism,
xiv. 71.
the
twentieth hearing
of
Carmen,
viii.
its
xii.
-,
216.
vi.
127.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
29
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
(Zarathustra
193-8.
the voice
The Despisers of
discourse), 35-7
greater than
xi.
despisers criticised
verily not as
creators, as procreators^ or as jubilators do ye
love the earth, 146.
as a social structure composed of many souls, xii. 28.
g>
36
its
the belief
as
climate, 33
recuperating
to throw
its
strength, 36
reading a means of
concepts invented
Bonn,
of idealism, 35
Wesley,
ix.
275.
iii.
the resolve to
v.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
30
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
BOOKS
Books, which teach how to dance, vi. 187 ; the book grown
almost into a human being, 188.
a
vii.
remarkable in
better by
ponents, 79
whom
108;
on
The Genealogy of Morals, 50.
should carry us away
lights and shades in, x. 125
beyond all books, 205 first questions concern
ing the value of, 325 observations on learned
books, 325-7 ; the craftsman and the mere lit
terateur, 326; traits of the craftsman and the
;
expert, 327.
the value of, varies with the condition of the reader,
xii. 44 ; and the
populace, 44 ; on German books
library
favourites
small in number,
makes him
their
xvii. 37
a
misuse to the
:
37
detriment of thinking, 48; no one can draw
Human,
ill,
Wisdom.
31
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Books,
Why I write
Boredom,
such excellent,
xvii.
55-130.
vii.
225.
Borgia, Caesar, as a
man
of prey,
xii.
118.
alluded
Bourgeois,
to, xvi.
the,
the
seeking
which are
of conditions
xiv. 97.
emancipated from,
Bourget (Paul), as a representative of modern Paris, xvii. 38.
Brahmanism and the precepts of Christianity, ix. 65; its be
liefs and achievements compared with European
Christianity, 94 the story of King Vis vamitra, 114.
Brahmins, the, their use of religious organisation as a
;
means
- their
is
Epigone,
viii.
44-6
most
the
99.
xiv. 88.
Brandes, v. 190.
Bravery, and cowards, ix. 259; the last argument of the
brave man, 345 ; the brave soldiers of know
ledge, 392-3.
s opinion concerning Murat, x. 189.
Zarathustra speaks of bravery and passing by, xi. 256.
Napoleon
referred to under
I,
Birth
Tragedy.
II,
32
BROCHARD
Brochard (Victor),
BUDDHISM
Campagna Romana,
xiv. 87.
v.
200.
cept
"higher nature,"
con
xv. 313.
26
peared, 52.
and the triumph over resentment, xvii. 2 1.
Buddhism, the only way from orgasm fora people, i. 158.
his religion
most admirable
point,
xii.
81
x.
173;
and Nihilism
life
xiv.
as Epicurus, 173.
instances of Buddhistic valua
tions, 19
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
33
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
over-spiritual, 151.
Bulow (Hans
early criticisms
which appeared
Isolde, 43.
of Nietzsche alluded
viii.
v.
in, xvii.
56-7.
25.
170.
xvi.
his
Business men,
ix.
vii.
319.
184.
Byron, quoted
his criticism of
his
childhood, 308.
-
instanced,
viii.
instanced,
ix.
380
alluded
76
to, xii.
201, 245.
- his
40.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
34
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CARLYLE
CLESAR
ix.
Caesar,
381.
as a type,
x.
65.
among
205.
alluded
vi.
144.
on the German
stage,
vii.
87
alluded
to, 91.
Paul
alluded
to, ix.
alluded
Cambodia,
conception of predestination,
241.
115.
xiii.
145.
Campagna Romana,
his
as
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
35
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Carnot, alluded
Carriere, of
Casanova
to, ix.
Munich
ix.
(note),
172.
University, alluded to,
v.
135.
297.
a,
dilemma instanced,
ix.
vii.
53-62
Will
to
sense
of,
vi.
73.
216.
317.
law of
the notions of
to destroy
man s
200.
Cause and
effect,
the confusing
of, in
estimating principles,
vi.
384.
a question of conscience,
wherein we
ix.
223
alluded
to,
129.
old ideas
of,
157
origin, 170.
and
"
non-free
"
Caution,
vii.
of, xvi.
33.
128.
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
36
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CHAMFORT
CELEBRATED
Celebrated men, the
comedy
of, x. 71.
v.
109.
vi.
237.
Celtic races, the, provided the best soil for Christianity
in the north, xii. 68; their pious scepticism,
68.
Centuries^
the seventeenth
the Christian
eenth, 86
and
sixteenth, 97.
Century, the seventeenth, as aristocratic, xiv. 77 ; the eight
eenth, as spiritual, 78 ; the nineteenth, as more
95-6
teenth,
xv.
394
Ceremonies, disappearing,
ix. 382.
the
of
the
criterion
Certainty,
question
Chamberlain
(Houston),
his
of, xv.
"Nineteenth
vii.
96.
Century"
302.
x.
128
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
37
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
20 1
;/
at its feet,
me
,212.
Chandala, the, the priests becoming,
.
its
xiv.
94
the priest
when
Character,
its
63
12.
xi.
on strength
of, ix.
our, 388.
ultimate nobility
style to one
vii.
264
of, x.
s
89
and
xii.
one
free to
do with
202 ; on giving
the attainment of
spirit,
character, 223
satisfaction with
a sign of strong,
223.
what we are
s self,
224.
91.
ix.
279.
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
38
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CHILDREN
CHARITY
Charity
Igive no alms
thustra),
xi.
war and
1 1
6.
xiii. 144.
cultivated
the
Great
Charles
everything classic
x.
viii.
and com
134.
104.
xiv. 87.
in.
chemical philosophy in the world s economy, xvi.
244 chemical affinity and coherence believed
to be evolved, 246.
;
//fo
myth
of the child
J/zVn^Zarathustra
king
discourse),
xi.
95-8.
Child, Wife and, a series of aphorisms, vi. 295-316.
thus do I love
Children, Zarathustra s altruism
children s land
unto
my
children will I
my
make
land
new
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
39
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
laugh
tendency,
xii.
242.
\i\Barcarolle,
271.
possesses distinction of the nobler type, xiii. 220.
Nietzsche s predilection for would let all other music
go, xvii. 45.
Homer,
153-
Chorus, the Greek tragic, an analytical disquisition, i. 5562 its function, 67 ; the conception of, 69-70.
Chorus, the Greek satyric,
Christ.
See
63
et seq.
"Jesus."
plained,
the
i.
God
of, viii.
132
et seq.
165.
of, ix.
190.
- in
an examination into
206
alluded
his struggle
to, 1 14.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
40
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CHRISTIANITY
CHRISTIAN
xvi.
its
and
legislators
ideals, xiv.
166-70.
Christian ideals, (Part iii. Book ii.) xiv. 179-209.
Christian morality and master morality, the antithesis
between,
viii,
49.
Christianity,
vii.
to art
and
alluded
life,
i.
most beautiful
its rise,
its
130.
and
fruit,
ii.
7.
Christianity, 112-3
State, 161.
and the
self-interest of the
its
characteristic, 113;
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
41
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
and Bayreuth,
Christianity,
viii.
50
its
!73its
ix.
36
the
coming visible
61
it
by doing without it,
62 ; and the brokenhearted ones, 65 ; the precepts
of a Brahminism, 65 ; the Apostle Paulas the first
;
and inventor of
Christian
to
what
and the
Christianity 66-71
development may be attributed, 71
its
"
after
life
death,"
73
virtuous lives or
duced
sin,
ing
174
a criticism
man expressed
in,
of,
284
173
178
;
of,
xi.
314-
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
42
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CHRISTIANITY
and with
20;
its
Founder
326-32.
Christianity,
its
most admirable
point,
xii.
81
among
the
the self-immolation of
medan
says no
133
fined, a very
servile
and poor
life,
139;
its
transformation of
139
six instances,
commanded
has become
its
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
43
INDEX
Founder wished
NIETZSCHE
it
its fight
with
163
its
community, and
legislators
and
ideals,
not a form of
life,
belief, possible at
any moment,
177
the submission
its
cised, 201
204
in,
Roman
doubted
its
Aryan
values, xvi.
right to falsehood,
49
48
never
effect of
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
44
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CHRISTIANITY
both decadents, 85-7
has
made
of the
home
contempt
151
152
its
subtleties
161
new
not a
new
"glad
tidings,"
171
faith,
of souls,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
45
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
must be
sick
enough
for
its
203
it,
built
upon the
and
faith,
tian
of
as
to a
226;
its
destruction of
Christianity,
will
equalled in
history,
141;
"Dionysus
versus
power, v. 85.
the impotence of their love, xii. 91.
their chronic hobnobbing with God,
xiii.
189.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
46
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CICERO
CHRISTIANS
Christians, the early, xiv. 156;
Jesus
commanded them
xvi.
222.
290 as a city of
demolished by
reformation, 3 3-4 ; in
life
to live, 157.
x.
the conception
of,
1
Luther, 312; Luther s
contrast to the State, 314.
the creation of those sweet scented caves by the
quaeritur, a topic
on which there
is
much
to
keep
33
138.
xv.
336-8.
-
its
method
27 ; as
improver"
of man, 45 ; built up out of contradiction to
the gospels, 174 ; the idea
the
Church," 175
as hostile to
"
life, xvi.
"
the
"sin,"
first
to enrich
mankind
230; parasitism
its
only
method, 231.
Churches, as meeting places most worthy for instruction
251.
one of the greatest of humanity
vii.
249
the
of,
benefactors, viii.
85.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
47
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Civilisation,
man
337.
custom as the
first
84
anity
and
Class distinction.
See
"
Rank."
Classical Philology,
145
its
at
Bale
University),
iii.
Wolf s
no one would
talk seriously of
German
classics, vii.
vii.
140.
the
Climate,
its
man
one
ance, 52.
Clothes, their indispensability,
x.
293.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
48
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
COMMUNITY
CO-ECHOING
Co-echoing, vi. 27.
Coffee makes one gloomy,
xvii. 32.
vii.
of, vi.
Commander,
xvi.
the, his
264; must
burden,
first
of,
378.
171.
seq.
173.
261; characterised,
first
principle, xvi.
266-7.
Commerce, the basis of a culture of traders, ix. 178-9.
conditions of society under which nobility would be
acquired by,
-
x. 72.
having
its
of,
xiii.
79
on everything
price, 80.
s souls,
people
ii.
vi.
7.
207-9.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
49
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
177.
- its
relationship
81
morality,
of, vii.
Comte and
the
Roman
instincts of,
ix.
xii.
126.
139
his psychological
68.
tion
upon
Concubinage,
xii.
93.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
50
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CONFUCIUS
CONSCIOUSNESS
Congo,
the, a
eye dreaded by
and
artists,
xv. 342.
poets,
and
writers,
the
ix.
sum
231
rascality, 297.
its
sting teaches
effects of training
seen in
its
68
et seq.
ix.
234.
ment
communication, 297
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
51
INDEX
its utility,
298
NIETZSCHE
the genius of the species, 299
as a danger
to the
xiv. 64.
contradiction of the so-called facts at the startingpoint of epistemology, xv. 5 ; and the pheno
far as
it is
life,
the process
useful,
then words,
1 j as
belonging to
24; extends only so
7-1
of,
finally concepts, 25
human
by the
the awful re
species, 88.
covery of,
the altered standpoint regarding, xvi. 141.
Conscription, every man of the higher class should be an
officer, xv.
238.
xvi. 101.
chondriacs, 388.
two means
of, vii.
tested advice,
ix.
187.
321.
self-imposed by Greek
in
spirit,
Constraints,
artists,
poets,
and
vii.
264.
writers,
Contarini, his deep, gentle spirit, vii. 122.
Contemplation, the sceptical type of, viii. 112; impres
sions led to,by careful meditation of the past, 1 1 8.
-
nearest things
its first
distant, 318.
xiii.
146.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
52
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CONTEMPLATIVE
CONVICTIONS
which
an aversion
is
of, xii.
92.
vii.
231.
290-2.
the use
made
of,
by the thinker,
in, ix.
vii.
317.
284.
examined,
vi.
395
;
good, 396 ; their
the belief that they represented absolute truth,
398 ; the rise of the scientific spirit, 399 ; the
justice
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
53
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
science,
of,
between
art,
his refutation of
alluded
wisdom, and
159.
atomism,
xii.
v.
167.
19.
201.
to, xiii.
Copiousness, the
com
last quality
vii.
265.
in
happy
Corneille,
ix.
xvi. 33.
190.
Nietzsche
43
and
45-7.
the word, as applied by Nietzsche, free from moralic
"yea"
"nay,"
marks
after
vii.
on two kinds
Zarathustra
createth
reading Sallust,
of, vi.
xvi. 112.
372.
21.
the courage
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
54
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
COURAGE
had
thustra that
answer to
he
who
life,
CRIMINAL
slain every dejection^
men name
the higher
with eagles
courage
189;
its
218;
of,
353
eyes,
Zarathustra,
371-2.
Courage, of what one really knows, xvi. i ; its experience
when associated with intellect, 73.
the meaning
of, xvii. 3.
from
suffering,
and
we
70-4 for
x.
330.
annihilate, x. 96-7.
life s
the creator to
discourse),xi.
the higher
men
ye creating ones
356.
Crime, as a result of decadence, xiv. 34.
Criminal, the, his act as comprehended by himself and
his judge, vii. 205 ; how he takes his punish
ment, 207
upon
on
society, 287.
and the
lunatic,
ix.
205
the
289.
discourse),
xi.
40-3.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
55
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
and
xii.
91.
its
society
judgments
a decadent, xvi. 1 1 ; the type of a strong man amid
unfavourable conditions, 103 ; his virtues banned
by
104;
society,
and concert
training of, and
the historical
-
hall,
i.
171.
its results, v.
45.
150; the
critic, xii.
vi.
of, x.
240.
316.
Cromwell, alluded
Cross, the, the feelings of Goethe with regard to, xiv. 147.
Cruelty, the, which lies at the heart of culture, of power,
of nature,
ii.
et seq.
the enjoyment
of, ix.
24
in prehistoric times,
formed
27; on
child, x.
virtues, 208.
the creditor
The volumes
referred to under
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
56
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CULTURE
CRUELTY
assassins,
195.
Emperor Frederick
Culture, contrast between
nature, i. 64 ; a
n., 227.
its
Germany,
65.
its
36
its
state
in;
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
ii.
XVI,
Antichrist.
57
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Culture, defined,
and German
philistines of,
1 1;
33
9 unreality of modern, 32
what a cultured people should
a, v.
"
08
as regarded
135; man s
second initiation
described,
158; its real
aim, 159; and the self-interest of the busi
ness man, 159 and of the State, 161 ; its aim
most unknown where the interest in it seems
;
liveliest,
ledge of
and
its
"lower"
of"
higher"
219;
of,
its
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
58
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CULTURE
what would it belike? 224; founded
genius
like a bell, 227 ; the Cyclopes of, 228 ; suffering
from past, 230 ; the masculinity of Greek culture,
237 phases of individual culture, 250 et seq. ;
what a retrograde movement may conceal, 252 ;
a sign of superior culture, 252 ; the microcosm
and macrocosm of, 254; and happiness, 255;
;
dependence on two
danger
it is in,
its
319; the
distinct castes,
362.
of, vii.
98 ; the cult
of,
100
sentiments
spiritual
and
literary,
its
its
greatest failure
the political
The
last
man
covered
its
discourse),
"we
have dis
and
blink
its
(Zarathustra
happiness"
xi.
acknowledged immor-
X, Joyful
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day.
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
59
INDEX
ality, xv.
culture,
203
349
NIETZSCHE
purpose, 404.
Culture, its decline in Germany, xvi. 53 ; its relation to
politics and the State, 54 ; of the Greeks and
Romans, 224;
its
instinct; destruction
Nietzsche s belief only in
Culture-philistinism,
working
class, iv.
of, ix.
14
and orig
inality, 17
principle of civilisation, 23 ;
to physical beauty in the
leads
conformity with,
first
individual, 31.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
60
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
D^MON DARWIN
the, of Socrates,
Daemon,
Damon, and
x.
i.
105.
the purging of a love-sick youth by music,
118.
of, vi.
256.
126-30;
xi.
his second
live in
209
is
to
danger, 219.
s last
refuge,
xi.
184.
as the
Virgil,
vi.
i.
its
237.
199.
alluded
new abode,
148.
to, xiii.
the Divina
of, xii.
185.
51.
uom
am
the creation
of eternal
love, 406.
the hyaena that writes poetry in the tombs, xvi. 60.
by the side of Zarathustra, xvii. 107.
Darwin, and David Strauss, iv. 50 ; the Strauss-Darwin
morality, 52
his theory, 71
alluded
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
ii.
XVI,
Antichrist.
61
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
x.
306.
158-60.
criticised, xvi. 71.
for existence
tion of progress,
208.
vi.
xiv.
199
202 ; an objection
with philosophy, 337.
tion,
to,
322
Daughters of
Dawn
Dawn
experience
how
to
of, x.
be read,
as
confounded
discourse),
xi.
221.
ix.
325.
its
atmosphere, 10; re
"or?"
of,
how
treated, 355.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
62
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
DEATH
DECADENCE
ix.
284.
49-51
xi.
way
that one
may have
the
to die
should be chosen
freely, xvi.
88
the idea
of,
lacking in the
Gospels, 173.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
63
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Decadent,
pessimism in search of re
209-1 1 ; his theory and
xv.
sponsible parties,
Christianity, 211-4.
Decalogue, the, the moral prohibitions
91
cess
223.
as savouring of,
of,
of, vii.
316.
modern man
that characterises
xiv.
ix.
92.
x.
187.
ix.
341.
one
a concept
of,
which
judgments,
Dejection,
vii.
is
just
xv. 320.
34.
Rome and
Delaporte, quoted,
iv.
41.
Delphian oracle,
103.
-
Delphic
ii.
26.
of the past,
v. 56.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
64
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
DEMOCRITUS
DELUSIONS
Delusions, on avoiding,
Demands,
effects of,
x.
ix.
198.
348.
of, vii.
343
its
goals
and means,
344-
calls
their
257.
the conditions
>
tional
of,
men,
xii.
195.
- its
hatred of
"
will to
power,"
xv.
205
represents the
Human
quoted,
Democratic movement,
Human,
all-too-
xvi. 96.
the, as
alluded
to, v. 44.
alluded
ii.
"above,"
"below,"
vi.
27
alluded
242.
to, ix.
173.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
65
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
xiv. 345.
xvi. 22.
of
"being,"
concept
the
Demoralisation,
history of, xv. 229-38.
iv.
with,
185.
of words, 181
his speeches, as
vii.
purposes,
recommended
alluded
as a model,
gait,
for reading
250-1.
241.
to,
of, ix.
viii.
144.
247.
of, xiii.
of, x.
174
218.
et seq.
Descartes, v. 44.
and the springs of happiness, ix. 382.
the father of rationalism, xii. 112.
T not to
and
xiii.
135.
Germans,
Desert, the,
xvii.
Among
course),
xi.
127.
373-9.
xi.
that higher
xii.
men
have despised,
352.
87.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
66
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
DESTINY
DIGNITY
of, x.
249.
Deussen
(Paul), his
xiii.
it,
xv.
58-62
the
235.
172.
v. 85.
as seen by Zarathustra, xi. 45 ; God s advocate am I with
the devil ; he, however, is the spirit ofgravity, 127.
tolerated by God, xv. 394.
xvii. 137.
Nietzsche
rest
on moral prejudices,
xiv.
359.
xvii. i o.
300-2.
Diderot, his indebtedness to Sterne,
quoted on the solitary, ix. 348.
vii.
61.
eating
on the
ix.
230
and
ignorance, 391.
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
Genealogy of Morals.
ii,
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
67
INDEX
Dignity, the loss
in
of,
Diminutives, a world
NIETZSCHE
man,
of, vii.
xiv. 19.
41.
vii.
365.
Diogenes
spirit,
and
its
of,
n;
import,
compared
190.
i. 6
the origin of the term,
;
the contrast between the
"Dionysian"
that existing
ness,
"
"
"
"
"
antithesis
"
ment, 142
157
its
to belief in the
call
fraternal
rebirth
of,
"
"Apollonian
com
"
the antithesis
of,
and the
"
"
Apollonian
set forth,
ii.
et seq.
36
Dionysian ecstasy,
416.
xvi.
68
68.
the presentment
of, in
xvii.
69
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
68
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
DISCIPLINE
DIONYSIAN
becomes the
the concept
highest
deed
in Zara-
thustra, 106.
Dionysus,
i.
ate, xii.
his greatness
among
Hellenes, 187.
as prototype of
initi
261-3.
Hellenic
mysteries
"
will to life
of, 1
18
"
"
"
Dionysian
phenomena, 119.
the
means
to
382.
x.
73.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
69
INDEX
N IETZSCHE
345.
ix.
57-
Dishonest praise,
vii.
ix.
285.
45.
Disinterestedness as a deified
human
an ex
abstraction
ample
of, in
"
xii.
person,
"
163.
vii.
131.
Tancred quoted,
Disraeli s
xvi. 129.
vi.
384.
dissatisfied people, x.
66
trans
of,
performed by the
Stoic,
191.
as a duty,
ix.
242.
the increase
Distinction,
of, xv.
of,
the quality of a
Distress, the
52.
on the desire
gaining
x.
feelings,
54.
for, ix.
180.
man s mind
263.
x.
84
the
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
70
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
DOSTOIEWSKY
DISTRESS
Distress,
discourse),
xi.
291-6.
Dithyramb,
the,
whence the
new
67
i.
Dog,
I have given
x.
a name
to
my
suffering,
and
call it
my,
244.
art,
"
"
petuated
and
most valuable portion of the Russian people, al
luded
to, xv.
199
relief to
pessimism, 264.
incidentally
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
71
INDEX
learn
NIETZSCHE
104.
life,
transcendental effect
1
its
of, 1
80.
Wagner s discovery
163.
248.
Wagner
as, iv.
149;
of,
i.
67.
ecstatic
moments
of the dithy
misunderstanding
of, vi.
17
the logic
of, 23.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
72
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
DREAMS
EARTH
ix.
Dreams, on dreaming,
x.
202.
Drunken
in, xii.
Dubois-Reymond, one of
i6 3
his
xi.
388-98.
judgments alluded
to, v.
alluded
114.
exhortation against,
262.
iii.
vi.
284.
22.
to, ix.
manent moral
blusterer,
60 alluded
;
to, 88,
204.
ruined by
alluded to (note),
Diirer,
i.
xvii. 17.
156.
duty to truth,
vii.
220.
of, x.
40.
xii.
249.
themoralisationof the ideas
"ought"
and
"duty,"
xiii.
no.
Dyspepsia, the intellectual dyspeptic,
xii.
253.
Earth, the, superman as the meaning of, xi. 7 ; Zarathustra s new pride in the body and, 33-5.
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
Genealogy of Morals.
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
73
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
alluded
i.
137.
to, v. 73.
German book,
intellect
vii.
by the
250.
State,
181.
ix.
54-5
thusiasts,
on Christian
of, and art,
ecstasy, 88.
66
xvi.
the anti
and
"Apollonian"
"
Diony-
sire,
38
lic
all
submis
proper edu
cation, 114.
-
where the chief fault in our system lies, iv. 137 pre
conceived ideas of, and the rise of Wagner s art,
;
196.
in
example of the Re
life
modern, 32 ;
34 and free person
historical
the
v.
naissance,
19 ;
and the needs of culture,
;
ality, 41 ; the absurdity of the extremely his
torical,
"inner
"in
65 protest against
cation, 59
its
starting
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
74
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
EDUCATION
difficulty of the
education of professors,
HI
on
Education, the
artistic
belief in miracle-education
and the
pupil,
48
vii.
172; the
vi.
combated, 224.
a distortion, 97
there are no
teachers, 325.
philology as a
means of instruction,
126
viii.
its
task,
its
classical education,
Greeks taught
worthlessness
at the
of,
no
surprise, 151
the question
on the
the ruining
of higher education a
beginner, 56
higher education as a
in the matter
;
men, 56
man
objects for
of thirty years
is
to see,
to think,
to
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
75
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
system, 46
in, 47 j and
education and
German composition,
classical
of,
85
of,
civil service
filled
real,
135
its fate,
- alluded
to,
-
to,
137
iv.
on German,
v.
126, 127.
no.
exploitable
servants of the State, xvi. 55.
Educators, the lack of, xvi. 55 ; the three objects for which
they are needed, 57.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
76
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
EFFECT
EGOISM
ments
of, ix.
140;
de
sires, 257; and limits, 258; thoughts of one s
own tree, 345 not to imbue our neighbours with
our own demon, 355 self-hatred and self-love,
the
demands
of,
its
356
flight
xiv.
actions, 295.
the belief in the ego
Subject, xv.
to the species, 154.
its
xi.
33
the body as
128
our egoistic
12-9;
relation
its
"being,"
xvi. 21.
Egoism, not
the
187;
harmed,
and
altruism, 58
and
terests of,
promoted
294; case in which
its
problem, 291
the in
press, 296.
understanding
of,
311.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
77
INDEX
Egoism,
its
value, xvi. 85
NIETZSCHE
;
becomes a duty
in
Buddhism,
149.
x. 154.
their error regarding "being," xvi. 22.
Electra, typical of Greek womanhood, ii. 23.
Eliot (George),
retrieving any
emancipation from theology by becoming
a moral fanatic, xvi. 63.
trifling
Emerson, quoted,
v.
286.
x.
191.
200.
as a master of prose,
compared with
vi.
x.
126.
Carlyle,
and
priest, xiii.
results
[77; the ascetic ideal in its service, 181
the
real
in
the
of, 185
fatality
history of the
;
Empedocles,
alluded
to,
ii.
77;
of the
company of
alluded
and message,
to, vi.
v.
131.
240.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
78
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
EMPEDOCLES
ENGLISH
x.
118.
worst,
ix.
vi.
x.
77;
364.
304.
xiii.
38.
eternally active
Energy, limited not infinite, xvi. 237
but unable to create new forms, 238; first
;
principles,
241
to, vii.
xii.
174
comfort andfashion,
364.
their ideal of happiness
and
the plebeianism of
modern
what
xiii.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
ii.
XVI,
Antichrist.
79
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
would
do as you
music, 211.
the necessity of being an Englishman in order to
believe that a man is always seeking his own
discourse),
xi.
187-92.
quest, indefatigableness,
existence,
vii.
ix.
73.
198.
169.
quoted, 28.
a hint
to, vii.
352
alluded
to, 18.
ix.
372.
ix. 288.
of,
is
really recognised,
vii.
and
equality,
xi.
117.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
80
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
EPICURUS
EPIC
the, described
Epic poet,
and the
artist
Epictetus,
little
vii.
quoted,
slave
and
lyrist,
i.
plastic
46.
Epicureans, the,
their
x.
239.
the
vi.
xvi. 166.
81.
Greek,
viii.
67.
in hell,
ix.
73
once
12.
Buddhism expresses
the
same
criticism of
173-
with
two
Pyrrho
xiv.
361
his
forms
war
of
Greek
against
decadence,
the
old
faith,
362.
combated
223;
his
triumph
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
81
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
who
action
were,
ix.
381.
moral values
what extent its positions are the con
sequence of moral valuations, 80.
78
to
to, vii.
268.
of, vi.
323.
attitude of
xi.
13;
The
Tarantulas
Zarathustra
its
place no one
equal rights as a show-word,
xiv. 68.
the most
universal suffrage and equal rights for all
threadbare and discredited of ideas, xv. 203 ; the
mash which
is
;
respects in which the concept
are equal before God does an amount
all
men
"
of harm, 310.
culture, xvi.
93
the Chris
186; the
of, vii.
200-3.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
82
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ETERNAL
EQUITY
of, xiii.
80.
of,
and the
Error about
and truth,
xiv.
its
ii.
is
74.
true,
of, x.
114.
the concept not even true, xvii. 52.
Eternal recurrence, the effects of new influences on the
masks of many thousands of years, vi. 62.
Eternal
life,
the doctrine
271
of, x.
270
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
83
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
thought, 263
man
and, 265
I not
and for
the
marriage
iii.
(Part
Book
the doctrine
iv.) xv.
422-32.
xvi.
237-50;
eternally true
matter, 249
effects
mankind
immediate
rebirth,
253;
the
lead-
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
84
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ETERNAL
EUROPE
"yea"
and
"
amen"
lay
Eunuch,
See
"
Panegyrists."
to-day, v. 44.
Euripides, Dionysus ceased to be the tragic hero with, i.
81-5 ; and the death struggle of tragedy, 86 ; his
his
alluded
his
methods review
in.
to, vi 174.
of, vii.
329
in, x.
ix.
94.
67 ; belief
will as
spread over,
overlooked, 218
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
85
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
25
characteristics of the
to-day, 67
and
in,
European nation
century, 226
overhanging, 229.
condition, xv.
xi.
248.
2I 5-
Evil,
302.
vi.
97-
in primitive states of
man and
humanity,
solitude, 348.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
86
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
EXCESS
EVIL
Evil,
291-311.
the fear
of, in
primitive
man s soul,
the evil
is
everything good
rendered serviceable, 404.
evil
men have no
and
"
xv.
398 ; thesis
which
has been
ofyore
songs, xvi. 4.
Good and
Evil
"
and
"
Beyond Good
Evil."
Evolution,
63.
tempo
- the
x.
45
37; the
purifi
a species of atavism, 46
the
47.
whole course
xiv.
of,
of, ix.
of,
295.
stabil
and
Exaggeration,
vii.
168.
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
vi.
81.
40
on acquired,
42.
instinct
dream, 89
there
is
tion, 263.
Exotericism, the more essential distinction between the ex
oteric
and
esoteric classes,
xii.
43.
to,
391.
vi.
ix.
129.
59.
at, vi.
287.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human ,
88
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
FALSEHOOD
FAITH
Faith, the value of,
126;
vi.
its
origin, 211.
vii. 121.
ness in a
an analysis of Christian
faith,
"
64
xii.
faith,"
287.
and the
the maintenance
as a
of, in
step, xv. 25
first
which
the pathos
xvi.
134; its place in Christianity,
152; merely a cloak, 179; as an imperative,
a veto against science, 196; its psychology,
200; its power to save, 201; and Christi
instinct,
ii.
173
et seq.
truth
more
easily
spoken than,
vi.
72.
of, xiv.
the powerful
and destroying
by, 221
ship of Christianity
221.
to,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
89
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
the
moment
of, x.
17; the
vi.
292.
190.
xi.
83.
Familiarity of superiors,
xii.
101.
rules
where
vii.
modernity
303-6.
Fasting as a prescription of religious neurosis, xii. 66 ;
the necessity of, 109; and the sublimation of
sexual impulse into love, iro.
-
spoilt
xv. 337-
to
282
the
fate
of
still
all
elevation,
world and
its infinite
we seem
to
periods, 342
pious, 276;
our unintel-
335-6
our
new
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
90
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
FLAUBERT
FEASTS
as
Argo
xiv. 77.
motor induction),
xv. 253.
Fettered
spirits,
the rule
of, vi.
xiii. 125.
Fichte, alluded to,
quoted,
vii.
308.
ix.
285.
his flattery of the Germans,
alluded to, xvii. 126.
Fidelity, the
xii.
197.
iv.
of,
to be found in
m.
First
punishment,
xiii.
views regarding
97.
vi. 272.
the climate for,
Flattery,
ix. 165.
Flaubert, the overflow of life in
as psychologist, xii. 161.
alluded
hate,
viii.
67.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
91
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
mode
of
life,
xv. 259.
quoted, xvi. 6.
Flight, Zarathustra s bird-nature and hostility to the spirit
of gravity, xi. 235 ; in order to become light and
must
be as a bird, one
lose
one s
to fall faster,
Florence,
its
255
self,
236
and
iv. 1
10
200.
of,
the case
of,
woman
in, 7
"
"
wholly
Folly, prudence,
"Apollonian"
and the
epos, 51.
dignity
of, x. 57.
daring words
his
in
Dialogues of the
certain
Dead
xi.
228.
historically, 8
xiii.
6T
without
no hope, no
it
pride,
no
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
92
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
FREDERICK
FORGIVENESS
vii.
we have
the right to
231.
Zarathustra counsels
all great love,
xi.
how
to forgive
thus speaketh
104.
growing
German
culture
of,
iii.
66.
Franco-German War,
results of,
the, the
iv.
German
evil
of, 6.
German
culture
revenge on,
the justice
vi.
vii.
230.
316.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
93
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
148.
his nature,
Frederick
i.
xiii.
218.
(King of
Prussia),
and
first
of Europeans,
122.
xii.
218.
xiii.
Rome
toward
attitude
and Islam,
xvi.
227
227.
memento
to, xvii.
103.
Freedom,
many
man hath
servitude,
xi.
cast
71
vii.
108.
he
show word,
Nietzsche
xiv. 67.
concept
principle
of,
of,
xvi.
94
defined, 95
first
96.
of, v.
vi.
41
hope
the great
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
94
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
FREE
moments of temptation produced by art, 158;
and marriage, 311; the golden cradle, 312;
women, 314; ceterum censeo, 316.
Free spirit, the, on the apostate of, ix. 58.
the free spirit par excellence x. 287.
hated by the people as the wolf by the dogs,
ever dwelt in the wilder ness 122.
-,
xi.
120
>
The Free
Spirit,
(Chap
ii.)
xii.
35-61
the tests
of,
rise of genius,
ordering their
263
and
lives,
262
an exhortation
to,
et seq.
free-thinkers
and
free-doers,
ix.
28
the tragedy
of,
59-61
the hopes
of,
mission, 131 ;
172 ; and the
80; their
the need of, xiii.
1
fixed in the
men
of,
modern propensity
for disguises,
task, 181.
1 16 ; characterised, i i
7 ; the coming
of superman, the redeemer ofgreat love and scorn,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
95
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Free
nothing
is true,
everything
allowed, 195.
xvi.
all
no;
of,
ourselves a
man
82 ;themean-
defined,
vi.
209.
vi.
for,
to, 30.
an anti-religious movement,
xiv.
237
theatricalness
alluded
to, xv.
143.
of Season,
ii.
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
FREE-WILL
Free-will, the error
FRIENDSHIP
offree-will,
xvi. 41.
"
of,
"Journalists
referred to,
62.
iii.
his
ix.
190;
French Revolution,
Wagner
as a believer in,
viii.
ii.
14.
9.
"
by, 291.
past, xii.
53
scepticism
the
among
xiii.
women
friendship, 297.
vii.
131
alluded
126,
to,
129.
self-sacrifice to friends in
need of
it,
ix.
343
the
100;
Human,
stellar
and
terrestrial, 217.
Wisdom.
97
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
the neighbour do
thus steadfast
my friends,
120.
Hymn
223.
Future, the, the poet as a guide to,
vision
of,
vii.
54-6
vi.
Nietzsche
96.
I make
happiness in his
fate,
198
of,
"
Will to
Power
centuries, xiv.
-
the lawgivers
Galiani, the
and
"
290-1
laugh
of, xv.
xii.
i.
Abb, as cynic
century,
years,
39
man of his
256.
the falling off of cheerfulness, xiv. 73
108.
quoted,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
98
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
CAST
GENIUS
too-
Human
97 ;
Gautier (Thdophile), his dislike of Rome, xiv. 87.
favourable to a reasonable mode of life, xv. 259.
alluded
to,
193-
xvii.
116-8
curious
xiv. 13.
312.
Generosity gives pleasure when it denotes wealth,
the charitable man, 279.
ix.
270
the cult
Human,
some of
Wisdom.
99
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
and
no
for genius,
"Providence"
viii.
185
the work of
breeding, 187.
the tincture of insanity in, ix. 21; the contradiction
incarnate and animated in, 248; its purifying eye,
347 ; its moral insanity, 364 ; the valuation of,
379requisites of,
and
xii.
86
"
"
fructifying,"
205-6.
German, and
Italian
Nietzsche
concept
101.
of, xvi.
and
its
160.
vi.
value,
life, viii.
189.
his relation to the average scientific
two kinds
of
the
man,
xii.
"
"
engenderer
138
and
the
the
"
fructifyer,"
205-6.
his characteris
103.
Genius of the heart the, xii. 260.
Genoa, the city and its builders,
tics,
Nietzsche
10
x. 225.
winter in, and The Dawn of Day xvii.
The Dawn of Day written near, 92; Nietz
s first
sche an invalid
at,
103.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
100
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GERMAN
GENTLENESS
German
culture, in relation to
ii.
for, ix.
236.
Schopenhauer s philosophy,
65-9.
desire for
- the cast-off
good form,
system of, and
164.
its
substitute,
ix.
187.
and
alluded
German
schools,
on the tone
German
47
x.
of>
no thought given to
music, to be despaired
German
debted
alluded
culture, 55.
141-4.
of,
philosophy, 152
i.
oneness with
12
to
whom we
its
are in
for, 176.
to, v. 59.
the growth,
capabilities,
and
characteristics of,
x.
139-
German
iii.
141
effect of a
of,
141
the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
101
INDEX
German
philosophy, and
i.
its
NIETZSCHE
its
oneness with
German
music,
152.
xiv. 332
as a form of romanticism,
growing daily more and more Greek,
importance,
334-5
336.
German Reformation,
the,
German
the,
spirit,
efforts of
to ally
it
i.
176.
"
Reformation."
"
"
strength, 184;
Dionysian
the hopes for
its
hopes
for,
185.
pseudo-culture,
and
the
criti
new conception
of,
148.
Christianity, xiv. 71
and
progress, 1788-1888,
72.
Germans,
advice
-
to
oneself, 154.
to,
ii.
66
their
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
102
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GERMANY
GERMANS
the
"
xii.
by
to
as a fructify
their
;
commanding
of their mystics
50-9
the
if
we never
get
for,
"little
by
German theatre,
86
poets, 86
little,"
vii.
85
v.
90.
German sentimentality,
culture, 87
German according
what is
on German
music, 88
to Goethe, 144
foreignisms, 155-7
acquisitions
X, Joyful
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day.
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
103
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
famous
which divines
childlike character
221
world, 224.
her poverty in great souls, xv. 237.
German intellect,
xvi.
again, 5
as
becoming ever
of Europe, 53 ;
55-9 ; the Emperor
Rome and
Islam,
227.
German cookery
in general,
xvii.
30;
Nietzsche
by
Schleierrriachers,
Nietzsche
126; German
German,
intellect as
as the inter
Nietzsche
of,
books, 130.
Gervinus, his interpretation of Shakespeare,
i.
171
alluded
to, 161.
as literary historian,
iii.
60.
his criticisms of
warmth
for
symphony,
39.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
IO4
i.
VII,
Human,
all-too-
GESNER
GOD
Gethsemane,
vii.
26.
of, xiii.
176.
history, v. 90.
Gifts, the
xiv.
as following in the
56
wake
of enlightenment, 73.
Gluck, his dispute with Piccini alluded to, vii. 272.
Goals, on fixing nothing in excess of attainment, ix. 388.
The thousand and one Goals (Zarathustra s discourse),
xi.
his
shadow
on men
for
self,
269.
God
of, vii.
115-7
the danger
as a personality, 238.
the honesty
x.
97
the
of,
that he is dead,
which
we should
against
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
105
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
x. 151
the parable of the mad
the
dead,
167;
churches, tombs,
seeking
and monuments of, 169 ; the conditions for, 172 ;
be on our guard,
man
"
of,
believe in
knew how
could ye create a
Then
to dance,
Ipray you
45
God who
God?
Could
ye
conceive a
God
the ugliest
man
now do we desire
equality before, 351 ;
the superman to live, 351.
the Cross, the paradox of the formula, xii. 65 ; the
passion for, instances of Luther, St. Augustine,
dead
on
Madame
torture,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
1
06
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GOD
Christian
psychological falsity
of, as
imagined according
man s own
"
409.
the problem,
God
Man,
xvi. 2
142
the evil
God
just as ur
nounced
this
of,
146
de
Jew-
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
ID/
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
ish priestly ideas regarding the will of, xvi. 158; the
kingdom
God denied,
197;
not even
of,
real, xvii.
52
necessity,
Him,
deadly
one hor
in
142.
of,
35
i.
all
hostility to life
invented as
life
their justification of
the
life
of man, 35.
the
122.
Goethe, his
to dramatic musicians,
75
alluded
his epilogue to
to, 83.
man
iii.
the stand
effects of
Ger
ler,
107
the age
of,
to,
for culture,
s
Rob
garding
Homer
quoted, 149
on Homer, 156.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
108
i.
VII,
Human,
all-too-
GOETHE
Goethe, Conversations with Eckermann quoted ; the culture
of the German nation, iv. 9-10 ; the criticism of
Gervinus referred to, 33; on the exceptional
156
on instruction
1
before the
Shakespeare, 43
his
demand
for science,
64
against so-called
of,
on Sterne,
quoted, 394
again, 399
vii.
60
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
109
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
viii.
what he
his feelings
Byron, 88
in
and
culture in
Germany,
149
his
more,
xiii.
184-5;
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
110
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GOOD
GOETHE
Goethe, his
mode
Hegel,
Germany s
and Mendelssohn
stanced, 417
for,
as a
means
to power,
ix.
209
viii.
20.
beautiful, 160.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
Ill
INDEX
Good, the
first
degree
NIETZSCHE
of, ix.
37
of everything, 352.
the birth of logical, x. 156.
what
its
denned
as
people
harm
strength,
call the
xvi.
128;
whom and
what
good, 259.
of,
xvii.
good
Good and
the
antithesis,
xii.
227-30.
the origin of the antithesis, xiii. 20.
evil, the phrase applied to Nietzsche by him
self in 1886, vi. 3 ; the free spirit, and thoughts
Good and
of,
actions,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
112
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GOOD
59
ard
Good and
of,
64
the stand
1 1
knowledge, 246.
Europeans and
their asserted
knowledge
of, xii.
and
evil"
"good
and
bad"
(first
126
230-2
essay),
;
.
xiii.
15-58
tion of
man
as, x.
309.
346.
the declaration
of, x. 345.
hoiv distinguished from patriots, xiv. 106-8.
Good-natured, the distinguishing points of the, x. 194.
Good
taste,
and
practical people,
ix.
351.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
113
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
alluded
to, 69.
is
vi.
67.
to resist being se
duced
Christian
first
xvi.
communities,
187; Matthew,
Mark, and Luke quoted, 191-2 one does well
to put on one s gloves when reading the New
;
Testament, 193-4.
Gothic cathedrals, the present indication of, vi. 199.
Gotterddmmerung^Die^ the second act of, examined, viii. 96.
Gottsched, the once lauded classicism of, v. 90.
Government, on new and old conceptions of,
its interests
of, vii.
Gradations
of rank,
states
their super-law,
corresponding,
between
84.
156
lofty
to recognise, 165
ideas, 255.
Gratitude, amongst the
xii.
xiii.
psychic
the
as
maintains, 163
325;
in hand,
152-4.
spirituality,
vi.
first
vi.
64
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
114
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GREAT
GRATITUDE
Gratitude, the
x.
its
of,
138.
life of the
ancient Greeks,
69.
xi.
130-4.
Dwarf! Thou!
234-9.
ity*
ii.
74.
of,
and
their reception,
101.
v.
81
as regarded
by the
least
valuable history, 84
how
144.
recipe for the great
man
ix.
379
power, 380.
the systematic falsification of great creators
and great
v. Pt. i. Bk.
iv.) xv. 366-73
broad arch which spans two banks lying
370; Carlyle as interpreter of, 371.
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
Great man,
NIETZSCHE
10 1
>
utility,
in.
i.
way, 362.
vii. 172; and its contemplators, 175; the
all great men, 177.
of
glory
and the ability to inflict pain, x. 250.
not understood by the people whose taste is for actors
as a mask,
of great things,
xi.
57
Zarathustra
path to great,
ness, 184.
- the true
philosopher s conception of,
xii.
153
his
de
community
Greed,
for stifling
it,
vii.
119.
266.
ix.
Dionysian
barbarian,
Dionysian
wrought by the
the
"
"
"
"
"
Dionysian,"
"Apollonian"
i.
29
Greek and
the effects
as they appeared to
Greek, 41.
the cleverness
x. 1 74.
"Antiquity."
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
116
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GREEK
Greek
art,
on how
little
GREEKS
we understand
of, ix.
74.
"
Art."
science, 364.
Plato, 163-70.
Greek poets,
and
its
overcoming,
vii.
264.
Greek
over,
ii.
x.
175.
"
"
Tragedy
and
"
Chorus."
conception regarding,
relationship with the State, 22-4.
upon, 113
ii.
21; their
i.
29 ; the dependence of
our shining guides, 176.
of,
;
with a
trait
as interpreters,
vii. 1 1 1
in;
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
ii,
XVI,
Antichrist.
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
56
1
59 ; the political
161; their gods, 165; their ideas of life,
the hereafter as conceived by, 166 viewed
defeat
of,
166 ;
from the Catholic Middle Ages, 176.
the value set on hope by, ix. 44 their conception of
;
Moira, 135
and culture, 254; no utilitarians, 287; theircolourblindness in regard to blue and green, 310 ; phil
osophy
the emulation
in
of, x.
social
sense,
their
their
114;
aim
of, re
their transformation
xi.
66.
xii.
69
as a fructify
men
evolved hitherto,
xiv.
336.
down
brought
75
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
118
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
GREEKS
GYP
and
life
among,
by,
"beautiful souls"
1 1
and
the
Plato,
to redis
"golden
means"
its
destruction, 224-5.
xiv. 45.
Grief and
its
ix.
manifestations,
165.
36;
quoted,
Grimaces, the makers
history, 52.
of,
for, x.
187.
Grimm (Hermann),
vii.
64.
Guilt,
on the moralisation
ment
of, xiii.
no;
Guilt,
1 1 1
essay),
xiii.
of,
61-
118.
iv.
135
85.
xii.
Gwinner, as Schopenhauer
some of
iii.
to, 58.
Guyon (Madame
culture,
his papers,
Gyp, as a representative of
example
of, ix.
191.
70.
179.
modern
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
ii.
XVI,
Antichrist.
119
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Habits, on short-lived,
x.
may become
a,
and there
96.
229
230; conscience,
habits,
life
vi.
viii.
to, vii.
177.
71.
123.
i.
man
"
to,
61.
the case
88; his un
his musical
methods,
267.
of a strong race,
viii.
46
its
now
German
and the
to for
historical sense, 9.
vii.
165.
rapidity of feeling and thinking, viii. 184.
built up, ix. 13; sources of individual happi
ness, 104; of the evil ones, 246; no argument
lies in
how
for or against
effect of,
of,
289;
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
I2Q
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too*
HAPPINESS
HARTMANN
totle
to, x.
198
the condition
of,
236; the
humanity, 265
The
ness
he
sacrifices his
the night
how
the danger
man
and music,
as life
xvi. 6
is
Nietzsche
in the
formula
ascending
line,
of,
as long
happiness
xi.
the
is
98-102.
141.
as
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
121
INDEX
one of the
v.
time,
78
mock
the
phised, 82
"
process
NIETZSCHE
first
gospel
;
his
of,
"
"
in the balance, 83
"
quoted, 86.
187.
Nietzsche
his
xvi. 73.
iv.
to
100.
passion,
ix.
302
alluded
288.
to,
Haydn, the
to, xii.
of,
"
"
soup
Haydn
to,
37.
Hazard,
signs
the
163.
and
x.
98.
117.
illness, xiv.
38
people, suffices to
imity of God, 115.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
122
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
HEALTHINESS
HEGEL
w\ Joyful
Wisdom quoted,
99-100.
Heavens,
the, Zarathustra s
xi.
198.
Hedonism, as a signpost to Nihilism, xiv. 29.
Hegel, education and the State according to, iii. 87
Hegelian
1 08; the
"reasonableness in
historical
iv.
view
happenings,"
45.
personality
history as under
75 ; quoted, 77.
the disciples of, vii. 86.
Wagner and the doctrine of the Idea,
viii.
6; culture in
the
129.
of,
stood by,
all
Germany
31
to
dialectics,
193-
Europe prepared
Darwinism
for
the opposition
306 as a
Schopenhauer and
by, x.
307.
of,
in France, 214.
alluded
to, xiii.
218.
79; his
mode
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
123
INDEX
332
men, 332
side,
Hegel, alluded
NIETZSCHE
on Taine,
xvii.
38
alluded
126.
German
Heine,
language,
iv.
94.
new modes
214; as a master of
xii.
of speech, 218-9.
alluded
alluded
in, xv.
271
alluded
270.
to,
Nietzsche
appreciation
of, xvii.
39.
51;
ii.
twofold char
and
relationship with
its
fate of Miltiades,
60
art,
59
the
et seq.
Hellenic
will, the,
its
combat
i.
35
horrors,
ii.
European
62.
iii.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
I2 4
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
HERD
HELVETIUS
Helvetius, the best abused of
many,
Bentham
vii.
all
good moralists
in
Ger
308-9.
xii.
174.
79
ii.
his disciples,
alluded
v.
94-1
oracle,
14.
98
to, 44.
alluded
to,
102.
predecessor, 273.
Herd,
the,
and egoism,
the extent of
many from
the herd,
its
ones, 80
1 1
voice, 71
3-6
he
who
is
gratuitously^ 243 ;
believes in higher
men, 351.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
125
INDEX
Herd,
NIETZSCHE
the,
man
of to-day, 121
and
"modern
126;
ideas,"
shake
the
communal
xiii.
45
wherein
prevail, 177
of weakness leads
to herd-organisation,
lies their
happiness, 147
will
by,
235
Nietzsche
between
egoistic
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
126
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
HERD-MORALITY
HESIOD
of,
107.
activity at the present time, xv. 362.
Herder, his life and work, a critical estimation,
its
vii. 253-5 ;
were either new or antiquated, 259.
with reference to Goethe, viii. 8.
his writings
alluded
to,
Herdsmen,
bad
bad blood,
xii.
239-40.
a false notion, xv. 37 1 ; a man s ancestors have always
paid the price of what he is, 371 ; alluded to, 125.
of,
instanced,
x. 74.
viii.
127; alluded
to,
175-
tasks,
ix.
his persuasion
hauer,
228.
Herostratus, alluded
Herwegh,
262.
314.
ix.
xiii.
129.
are
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
127
INDEX
Hesiod, and the
NIETZSCHE
101
his advice
ix.
43
on
and of
hope, 44.
- his
Higher
Higher
art,
cruelty,
xii.
176.
296.
distinguishing characteristics
more than an
of, xiv.
182.
a combination of
246
their
God is
before
destiny
of,
to
become
creators, 279.
Higher self,
Hil^ The Tree on
Hillebrand
vi.
392.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
128
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
HINDUS
HISTORY
attack on Strauss,
Nietzsche
Hindus,
and
the,
xvii.
78
quoted concerning
courage, 79.
their beliefs,
ix.
146.
vii.
353-
Hippocrates, alluded
Historian, the,
and
10
unhistorical perceptions,
what we
x. 115 ;
the tendency of the new sentiment, 263 ; how
to be born in the interests of future humanity,
264.
defined,
xii.
art in,
alluded
philosophers lack
History, Wagner s use
of, xvi.
of, iv.
17.
18
of,
the preference
symptom,
"i
needed
for life
and
action, v. 3
thoughts on, 4
the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
129
INDEX
use and abuse
Hume
NIETZSCHE
of, v.
quoted, 13
;
opposition between life and wisdom,
15; the three kinds of history monumental,
antiquarian, and critical, 16 ; the man who
point, 13
method
method, 28
life,
30
modern man,
soul of
excess
of,
68
theology
still,
"
of,
95
the learnin
of,
I, Birth
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow
Ill, Future of Educa
II, Early Greek Philosophy.
of Tragedy.
tional Institutions.
IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
:
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
130
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
H^LDERLIN
HISTORY
antiquity
what
hidden
lies
in, x.
in,
73
of, ix.
11-2
the
267.
the voice
of,
and
society,
188.
as a storeroom for the
masquerades of the
the nihilistic
modern European,
62
xii.
166.
tion
and the
of, 303.
belief in the senses, xvi. 18
Jewish priestly
German
art, vi.
Hobbes, alluded
164.
to, iv. 51.
Hoffmann
iv.
20
in
s attack
on Strauss,
xvii. 78.
men
thoughts,
v.
62
his
unconventionality, 120.
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, L XV, Will to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
vi.
Holderlin, quoted,
NIETZSCHE
238.
of,
122.
common
to Confucius,
Manu, Mohammed, the
Christian Church, and even Plato, xvi. 214.
the mistake of those who pay, vii. 322 ; the tax
Homage,
of,
335;
on unconditional homage
to the greatest
x.
men,
ix.
169.
137.
our yea
343-6.
"Future."
i.
29
the naive
artist,
37
iii.
61
the public-school
enjoyment
of,
62
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
132
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
HOMER
HOMERIC
aesthetic
meaning of Homer,
Homer,
128
of,
162; the case of Achilles and, 189; the panHellenism of, the greatest fact in Greek culture,
how
244.
paradoxical he can be, vii. 101 ; quoted, 109;
his achievement, 112 ; on the true sphere of all
anxiety, 187; his convention, 255; alluded to,
91, 114, 251.
the
Hades
alluded
to,
the appreciation
xii.
47.
of,
68.
the gods
Homer and
xiii.
78
the
Homeric
Homeric poems,
-,
the,
question,
iii.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
133
INDEX
ing,
iii.
152
NIETZSCHE
the deviations
in,
the author
167.
of,
52.
79.
may be
all
354;
fanatics,
vi.
348.
to, 38,
the great
virtuous
the
thumbscrew, 363.
as a virtue of free spirits, xii. 172.
Honour, the transference of, from the person to the thing,
vi.
Hope,
-
84.
the horizon
of,
x.
dead,"
as opening
vi.
now
82.
the
God
"old
275.
Zarathustra
the place
alluded
s
242
vi.
113.
as a guide to the understanding of Socrates,
Bentley
49
xi.
of,
Horace, quoted,
is
vii.
to, 35.
treatment
of, viii.
141.
- as translator of Alcseus
Nietzsche
s early
his odes, xvi. 113.
Hospitality,
ix.
271.
Hour, The
Hugo
at
stillest
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
134
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
HUGO
mired
Hugo
HUMANITY
same way
in the
admire, 25.
(Victor), scene at his burial,
and Spain,
xiv.
alluded
87
young Frenchmen
that
xii.
214.
to, 58.
the, the
Huguenots,
example
of, ix.
191.
Human,
as the
memorial of a
the
crisis, xvii.
82
to, 2.
the meaning of
title, 83 ;
freezing atmosphere, 83 ; begun
during the first musical festival at Bayreuth, 84 ;
principally written at Sorrento and finished at
its
Bale, 89
early
Humane,
Humanism,
x. 209.
and
lunatics, ix.
205
ii.
it
separates
man from
nature
51.
Images of
Man
v.
for,
138-9; the three
Rousseau, Goethe, Schopen
hauer, 139.
intoxicated by the scent of the blossoms
religion
and
art,
44;
development may only be of
limited duration, 228-9; the statue of, 237;
vi.
alluded
its
to,
273.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
135
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
126.
animals view
of,
279.
historical sentiment
and
future, 263-4.
Hume,
alluded
to, x.
as philosopher
alluded
in
Germany,
188.
xii.
210; Kant
opposition
to,
210.
judgments,
ix.
x.
xv. 45.
304.
5.
now an
affair
ii.
61
of fancy and
72.
ix.
306.
nihilism,
xiii.
92.
107.
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
136
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
HYGIENE
IDEAL
at
Cordova by the
Hymn
to Life^ its
and an
actor, 74.
xiv.
301.
xiv. 34.
xiv. 70.
Ideal, the,
of,
how
seen,
vii.
45
on being
idealised, 162
the setting up
to
tuary
troyed,
the origin
be set
the
courageous
a call to the
x.
178-9;
xiii.
115; to enable, a sanc
up a sanctuary has to be des
of,
1 1 6.
of, xiv.
275.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
137
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Nietzsche attributes
xvn 35
-
all
alluded
life to,
to, 124.
character
of, vii.
21
of, vi.
a warning
163.
to,
356.
their
wisdom,
ix.
204
alluded
293.
new world
of,
x-
95
-
the mystery as to
world,
xiii.
47-5 1
What
is
the
Meaning of
pampering by means
of, xiv. 1 7
dangerous always,
but occasionally indispensable as cures, 183 ; the
danger of, 201 ; a criticism of, 264-82 ; the
;
cult of Christian
moral
ideals, 274.
the economic valuation of
all
The volumes
referred to under
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
138
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
IMAGINARY
IDEAS
and the
great
columbarium
of,
the cemetery of
perceptions, 187.
Ideas,
on
modern and
ancient valuations
of, x.
254-
the sort
of,
life, xii.
75.
xi.
54-7.
Idols, their cross-examination a means of recovery of spirits,
Idol,
discourse),
xvi. pref.
242
man
to,
the process
of,
243
the evolution of
244.
ix.
39i-
- as a
psychological prerequisite of Christianity, xiv. 161.
Ihering, Der Zweck im Recht alluded to, xiii. 89.
Illness, as
a result of decadence,
35
Illogical, the,
Illusions, three
history
xiv.
of,
i.
nervous
illness,
46.
136.
of, v.
every people, 60
the destruction of, vii. 351.
veil to
vi.
34
of, xvi.
57
and
37
life,
the need of a
61.
the psychological
the whole domain
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
139
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
may be
under
classified
Imitation,
of, ix.
171.
an imperious
in
stinct, 260.
Imitators, on,
206.
x.
Immoral,
to be really
Christian would
different to
dogmas,
mean
cults,
ix.
14.
to be absolutely in
priests, church,
and
why
(1886),
the free
vi. 3.
man
Nietzsche, the
is
an immoralist,
first, xvii.
volved in the
title,
ix.
14.
exceptions
ix.
among
1 6.
we immoralists
! xii. 172.
are to-day the strongest power, xiv. 95 ; God as the
greatest immoralist, 251; the immoralist in
deeds, 318.
the value of the services
The volumes
referred to under
to
of,
Moral
the antithesis,
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
140
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
IMMORTALITY
IMPURE
Immortality,
to those
185
all
reality,
231.
Impatience in
men
Importunacy
vii.
ix.
324.
lives,
and never
131.
of, vii.
vii.
41.
130.
Improvement by means of
immoralist
attitude,
lion tamers,
ix.
43
six
proves, 109
impulses, 388.
x. 158; on natural,
and ideas of self-control, 239.
should one show one s feelings ? xv. 346.
Impure, the, The Rabble, xi. 113-6 the food and happi
ness of Zarathustra would be as fire and ice caves
to the bodies and the spirits of, 115.
;
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
Incomplete,
NIETZSCHE
177
an
artistic stimulus,
184.
one
is
destined
and command, 56
for,
self-
test, 57.
Indifference
and
religion,
viii.
no;
the philologist
as,
man
112-3;
remains
ix.
16.
xii.
236.
modern man
life, xvi.
85.
of Season, ii.J^VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
I
42
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
INDIVIDUALITY
INJUSTICE
v.
self,
107.
Individuality,
wash
in dirty water,
Individualism,
Schopenhauer
xi.
172.
philosophy as an indi
principle
of,
modest and
still
225; the
men, 226 a
xv.
will to
power, 227.
Individuation, the apotheosis of, i 40.
Industrious, the farce of many industrious persons,
on making friends only with, 133.
Industry, two entirely different sources
ix.
of, vi.
34
350.
55.
in,
vii.
inculcated by enthusiasts,
ix.
of,
and the
54
belief
alluded
to,
56.
Infinite, the, in the horizon of, x. 167.
Infirmities, bodily
Influence, a
x.
vii.
186.
xii.
251.
186.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
H3
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
good
ix.
271.
right of,
vi.
vi.
the danger
401.
129
of,
through
the
x.
185.
New
Testa
xiv. 164.
Inspiration,
of greatness, 105.
Instinct, the
banishment
of,
by
history, v. 40.
xii.
in.
when
life is
in the
ascend
124
dreams
as
compensation
for
absence
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
144
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
INTELLECT
INSTINCTS
and the big sagacities, xi. 36 ; Zaracounsel not to slay the instincts, but to
thustra
the
results
"animal
man "ashamed
xii.
122
of his instincts,
and ward
xiii.
75.
im
the saturnalia
the
gift
of, to
ii.
174
189.
of,
vi.
193; the
aeronauts
394.
of,
What is
of,
superiority, 329.
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Witt to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
145
INDEX
Intellect, of the
NIETZSCHE
German,
science
xvi.
50-2
of, 73.
xvii. 30.
and
Intelligence
ix.
on,
fear,
in
telligence, 298.
vi.
criti
Schopenhauer,
59-61.
and
vii. 318.
and of nature,
authors
of
Interpretations, over-profound,
Intercourse, impossible
intimate, on,
alone possess,
vi.
and philosophers
the
166;
inspiration in women s
judgments, 305.
Invalids, thoughts
and
reflections for,
of,
in ancient
vii.
280.
and modern
civilisa
open
to, x. 42.
vi.
289.
vi. 59
Moralite larmoyante, 90 ; the doctrine
of, 105 ; the simile of the waterfall, 106 ; and
innocence, an analysis, 107 et seq.
et seq.
Irritability,
how awakened
in talented
men,
vii.
351.
The volumes
referred to under
I,
Birth
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
146
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ISLAM
JESUS
Frederick
to,
227.
instinct, x. 87.
xii.
leads
248 ; also the high
to,
profound suffering
est sense of purity, 248 ; as distinction, 249.
Italian and German culture compared, iii. 66.
Italian, the,
vanity,
xiii.
221.
157.
its
Jerusalem,
vi.
73.
v.
85.
219; the
the death
physician, 239.
the appearance of, in a vision to the Apostle Paul,
ix. 69; his cry from the Cross, 116.
a single
sunbeam
in a
Jewish landscape,
x.
176; his
whom ye
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
147
INDEX
thustra),
xi.
NIETZSCHE
84
the hatred
84
just,
;
knowledge about
as temptation in
dom
love, 247.
most
its
sinister
and
irresistible
132;
is
called
the king
subsequent
Christianity as pessimism,
whereas Jesus wished to bring the peace and
happiness of the lambs, 159; his having paid
having stuffed so
much
his teach
by higher men,
80.
his
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
148
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too -
JEWS
163; the psychological type, 164; Kenan s
monstrous ideas regarding his heroism and
genius, 164; the distorted form in which the
type of the Saviour has reached us, 166 ; de
plorable that
no Dostoiewsky
bourhood of
167
the
most mournful
their ideas
Wagner s hatred
of,
the invention
as Schopenhauerian,
x.
136; sin
74
men and
actors,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
49
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
xii.
117
Europe owes
207
as a fructifying nation,
206
to,
German
206
what
anti-Semitism,
at present living in
xiii. 30 ;
Jewish hate, the most sublime and profound,
out of which grew a new love, the most sub
33 ; represented to the
of the unnatural, 54 ;
resentment par
Romans
the incarnation
again victori
French Revolu
tion, 56.
as a blessing
his teaching,
duced
and the
162
of, at
their
to a caricature
alluded
origin of Christianity,
priesthood, 245 ; re
by the Romans, 298 ;
to, 67.
150
JEWS
Jews,
JOY
why they
"
"
being
or
"
non-being,"
their use of
fluence, 155 ;
156; their history,
priestly agitators
punishment, 157
158; the
will
and
;
holy people,
161
as
Christianity
masterpiece of Judaism,
as the Jew over again, 188
188
the
the
final
Christian
129.
286
of, x.
German
jingoes, 310.
explained, 207.
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyfid
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
XV, Will to Power,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i.
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
,foys
NIETZSCHE
man
reviewed by Nietzsche,
xvii.
ning of Zarathustra,
great healthiness as
95
97 ;
a condition of the type
Zarathustra, 99-101.
Schopenhauer s characteristic
two kinds of, 116.
Joyfulness,
116; the
of, v.
"
Jews."
Judgment, on
true
188.
"
and
Justice."
its
counterpart,
ix.
the origin
vi.
of,
change, 90
earlier
90
its
1 2.
vii.
ii.
250.
103.
primary character of ex
of, not applicable to
the standards
periods,
TOO; on recompensing,
105;
344
of,
404.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
152
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
KANT
JUSTICE
Justice,
alluded
ix.
390.
to, x.
193.
the judgment of the pale criminal,
injustice is half justice, 78.
80;
the
made
everything has
its
40; shared
price,"
xiii.
self-destruction
to find
aggressive
man who
as a
"
of,
xi.
its
man
show word,
xiv. 68.
"Judgment."
Rome,
vii.
119.
Spir
criticism
alluded
the
German
iii.
of,
Strauss
his
44
93
to,
of,
quoted,
127,
ii.
to,
IT.
128.
139.
judgment
alluded
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
153
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
25; alluded
vii.
to,
254,
308.
his fatal
answer to morality,
ix.
as outside the
and Schopenhauer,
154; quoted, 199; in German morals, 220;
criticised with regard to
soul,"
338 alluded
movement,
socialist
141
"
to, 281.
306
the Tartuffery
German
contempt
for pity,
xiii.
151;
critic,
examined, 130;
as that which pleases without interesting,
compared with Stendhal s definition, 131 ; not
of,
ful,
to
confession
as
astronomy, 201
logical
his
to
;
the
humiliating
of
his
of
doctrine
effect
to,
217.
intelligible
criticism,
305
to, 74, 3 2
9>
33 2 341.
>
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
154
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
KANT
Kant, the theological bias
KLEIST
of, in
of the world
into
"true"
and
"ap
parent,"
xvi.
and
Parsifal,
viii.
vii.
250.
71.
Key
to
hidden treasures,
a, vi. 179.
Kingdom of God,
the,
xiii.
80.
life,
xvi.
172; as the
not some
Talk with
xi.
the
Kings (Zarathustra
discourse),
296-301.
instanced,
alluded
viii.
to, xii.
on
himself, 124.
76.
245.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
155
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
own
of,
life, v.
over radical
vii.
lifetime,
259;
96.
evil, vi.
74
relation
its
to sorrow, 112.
occasional harmfulness,
its
18
vii.
and
Don Juan
thyself,
taciturnity,
satiety,
349;
340
of,
sacrifices
to,
350;
beauty and,
381;
x. 48 ; persons
not qualified to become the disciples of, 68 ;
on the origin of, 153-6; something more than
a means to virtue, 165 ; the sign of the seeker
nature of
to another,
300; the
xii.
35
its
to
me
predilec-
of Season,
ii,
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
156
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
KNOWLEDGE
tion for error, 36
paradise, 97
"
LABOUR
own
for its
sake,"
85
and
late,
and
are also
based on a belief in
34; as either
"being,"
method
of acquiring,
not explanation, 102.
as
69;
the greatest
to,
64
one
interpretation,
on the German
his influence
knew
the
Germans
Kundry, Wagner
as a type,
Labour,
its
xii.
character
xii.
of,
theatre,
vii.
85.
197.
instanced,
viii. 6.
67.
dignity,
modern
well,
and Alexandrine
culture,
conception
of,ii.
i.
138.
3; the Greek
of, 4.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
ii.
XVI,
Antichrist.
157
INDEX
Labour,
its
value,
vii.
NIETZSCHE
340.
something
See also under
La
42.
Work."
Lamartine and
x.
"
of,
vii.
praised,
302.
Lambert (Mme. de), her remark to her son quoted, xii. 1 85.
Landor (Walter Savage) as worthy to be called a master of
x.
prose,
126.
of
all
real culture,
and modern
its
58
philologists, 81.
a presumptive science,
vi.
many
new language pre
dicted, 248.
in, a sign of immature taste, vii. 260.
and conclusions regarding rationality, viii. 163.
innovations
- often
Zarathustra
I become
xi.
97-
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
158
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
LANGUAGE
LAUGHTER
and
Laocoon group,
Lao-tze,
among
in the
of, xvi.
169.
Larochefoucauld,
- alluded
to,
his
ix.
99.
for pity,
contempt
xiii. 8.
Latin
style,
the study
value,
of,
an exercise
vi.
185.
Laughter, nature reveals itself in, vii. 137.
a possible future for, x. 32 ; corrective laughter, 34-5
an educational means, lacking in Germany, 191
is
if,
is
257
for in
sanctified
and
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
159
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
their laughter,
the invention
260.
xii.
arbitrary,
vi.
331.
laws,
x.
80.
law" \
Ihering alluded to, 89 ; the relationship
of the existing generation to its ancestors, 106 ;
first submission to, by the noble races, 145.
in
- laws
for, x.
192.
The (Zarathustra
Leech,
xv.
forming mankind,
Leibnitz, alluded to,
ii.
in
means of
361-2.
109.
and consciousness,
x.
296
xiii.
135
alluded
to, 218.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-ioo-Human,
1
60
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
LEIBNITZ
LESSING
of, xvii.
Lemaitre
Leo
(Jules), representative of
modern
poets,
quoted,
v.
instanced,
115
iv.
195.
15.
viii.
76
modern
the
ideal of a philologist,
tri2
greatest
stylist
alluded
to, xv.
x.
126.
193.
i.
115; quoted,
ii.
174; letter of, quoted in note, 174.
the standard of culture established by, iii. 60 ; his
education, 105 ; a victim of barbarism, 106.
his son,
the suspicious
for, iv.
34
Strauss, 55
alluded
of,
79
to, 32.
to,
259.
xii.
41.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
161
INDEX
Letters, the
good
alluded
writers of,
to, vii.
their style
NIETZSCHE
vi.
272.
322.
and
spirit,
x.
xii.
"
Socialists."
tions,
ii.
177.
iv.
28
on
ii.
style,
7.
84
alluded
quoted,
Lie,
vi.
135.
his aphorisms,
vii.
on
viii.
prejudices,
he who cannot
thustra)
lie
xi.
in.
to,
127.
doth not
356
the dishonest
the
250; alluded
lie,
know what
truth
is
lie, xiii.
(Zara-
179;
179.
Holy
Wagner s discovery of
and,
iv.
i.
10
lie,
morality as the
131-2.
knowledge dominated
by, v. 96.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
162
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
LIFE
the vita contemplative 258;
vii.
19
to,
19
the
326.
a reason for a long
ages
of,
quies
of,
on
the
living,
and
14
torture-crosses
song to
life,
unto me
some
all
251; Zarathustra
275
his
life s
answer, 277.
defined as will to power, xii. 20 the way to part with,
90; at its mildest, exploitation, 226.
life,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
163
INDEX
Life, the
NIETZSCHE
iii.)
xv.
123-61;
there
is
338as judged
by the wisest of
happiness
is
of,
all
TO
ages, xvi. 9
where
synonymous with
life is
axiom
re
ascending,
16; the
instinct,
Hymn
to Life, xvii.
209-14.
to, vii. 15.
of, xi.
354
of Zarathustra s
wisdom, 354.
Liszt, the first representative of all musicians, but
cian,
viii.
noble orchestration,
women,
xvi. 60.
xvii. 45.
no musi
99.
becoming a good
novelist,
167.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
164
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
LON ELY
LITER A RY
Literary painting, vi. 187.
Literature, the misfortune of
x.
326
spirit
traits
vii.
and
of the
Locke, refuted,
xii.
as philosopher,
alluded
ix.
253.
when approaching
instinct
question, xvi.
117
the
quoted, 118.
29.
xii.
v.
193.
exist,"
28
defined,
33-
of, x.
156.
species,"
"
individual
"
and
xv. 35-7.
thoroughly depicted
the theme
of,
- the case
of, instanced,
viii.
the prelude
idea of Elsa, 30.
in, 7
117
in,
its
question, 162;
201.
to,
22
addressed, 393.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
165
INDEX
N IETZSCHE
Loom,
at the,
vii.
xi.
83.
26.
it
springs,
Bk.
i.
x.
130.
iv.) xv.
expressed by Mozart,
of,
viii.
360-6.
88 ;
vii.
64.
vii.
Love,
why overestimated
81
to,
381
forth the
soul, 391.
in, vii.
deception
appeal, 49.
the knowledge of
31
and
43;
duality,
its
universal
mankind and,
337
truthfulness,
called, x. 51
is
52
ideal love, 53
by which we learn to
love,
258
321
alluded
Neighbour
honour, 75
love, 8 1
of the best
myself do
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
1
66
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
LUCIAN
LOVE
/ offer unto my
105
love
solar love
lunar love
innocence
mankind, 100
God
xii.
98
and one
by>
217;
as love, 317.
;
and the
lover,
desires, 100
99
to
and the
better, 65
defined, 65
64
the
girls
know
depreciation of sexual
love
Love
story,
passions,
ix.
78.
Lovers, shortsightedness
Lubbock and
of, vi.
x.
303.
201.
Lucian, Wieland
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
I6 7
INDEX
Lucretius, alluded to,
NIETZSCHE
ix.
73.
thrown on by Epicurus,
light
many
how men and
lustful, xi.
xvi. 223.
61.
preservation
of,
German
vi.
41
call,
gaiety,
i.
iv.
the chance
222.
trait
of,
ix.
quoted,
viii.
63.
doctrine
concerning faith
having experienced similar feelings with the
Apostle Paul, 68 ; the theological attack of,
his loquacity, x.
alluded
to,
piece of
the historian
quoted,
saints,
181.
God,
xii.
69
German
prose, 205.
of, wanted, such as Taine, xiii. 180 ;
188; his opposition to the mediaeval
189;
his
talks
"straight
from
the
shoulder"
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
168
i.
VII,
Human,
all -too -.
LUTHER
MAGIC
xiv.
158.
a cursed monk,
xvii.
125.
ix.
Lying, inability to
man
of simple
life, vii.
301.
as being far from love of truth,
lie,
356.
sources of, xvi. 6
hatred
xi.
of, 6.
i.
45
his
union with
phenomenon
of, 54.
ii.
37.
as, vii.
248.
Lyric poetry with vocal music exists only for those
Lessing
sing,
Machiavelli,
ii.
who
41.
and the
State,
vi.
209.
Madman,
Magic,
its
how
far
it
humiliates, 342.
the, the parable of, seeking the
332
167.
influence
dead God,
on primitive imaginations,
vi.
x.
117.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
169
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Magny
s,
dinners
at,
symptom
of, vi.
as a spiritualising agent,
Malthus, alluded
102
xii.
alluded
to, 88.
162.
borne by, 51
for the
simulation reaches
175
side, 190.
compendia, 43
men of to-day
the race of eunuchs
incarnate
compared
with the
called
of culture
the
vi.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
I/O
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MAN
Man, promises, woman
sonal
in the
182
viii.
215
things, 354.
all
classes
magnanimous,
character
in,
existence,
89;
the
attribute
of,
will
of
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
I/I
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
>
320;
his
fidelity in,
322.
Man,
is
something that
man ?
9
is to
(Zarathustra),
the last
man
and
metamorphoses
xi.
blink thereby,
25-8;
2-4
the three
backworldsmen,
31-4.;
diver
virtue
they desire
206
"parasite,"
women,
of the careful
man
man,
320-6;
the
best,
higher
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-loo-Human,
172
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MAN
vironment, xii. 82 ; aphorisms regarding, 89 ;
the differences among men as manifested by
for
their regard
possession,
between contrary
types
of,
work of
122
instincts in,
aristocratic
man
"animal"
75;
instincts,
what
is
meant
learnt to be
the
growing
ashamed of
internalisation
his
of
stage
102
air
applied to
ideal
66
intellect,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
173
NIETZSCHE
INDEX
admires
288
the
real
man
as representing a
higher value than the desirable man, 311.
Man, (Sec. ii. Pt. ii. Bk. iii.) xv. 132-61 the surpassing
tyrant,
150;
of,
Darwin and
the
domestication
of,
and weak
"strong
man,"
298
half his
life
he
man
strong
Bk.
i.
(Sec.
the Earth, (Sec.
-
vi.
Pt.
Man
i.
Bk.
as
power and
man
of nature
Pt.
v.
Pt.
i.
Law- Giver of
iv.)
great
iv.)
iv.
Pt.
iii.
373-87
Rousseau
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
174
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MANKIND
MAN
Man,
contempt
for the
man
of to-day, 176;
and
his
Man
Man
alom
fry
vi.
355-407.
those
Raphael
man
who
is
live
three
classes
of,
ix.
in prison
the limitations of
30 ;
propensity
our senses, 122 ; on good-natured people, 268 ;
the darkening of the heavens by petty vengeful
of,
mankind, 332.
instincts and economy for
the conservation
of the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
75
human
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
species, x.
31-5
natures, 37
men and
advanced, 39.
Mankind, Zarathustra on
return
his
home
reflects
on
human
baseness, 384.
itself,
269; Zarathustra
men
behind,
v.
103.
^s
quoted on the
book
of,
183; on
State, xv.
alluded
to,
virtue,
184; the
200.
hood, 49
the
Law-Book
the
"
holy
of,
lie"
214;
as
common
to,
different to every
214 ;
kind
215
Christian ends
those of,
women,
and means compared with
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
176
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MANZONl S
MARRIAGE
Manzoni
making
flourish, 221.
life
discourse),
xi.
57-6i.
Markland, the repugnance he exhibited, toward the end
of his
Marriage and
friendship,
tests of a
298;
tunity
future
ness
to scholarly reputation,
life,
for
of,
of,
vi.
295
viii.
142.
usual consequences
of,
feminine
309
311.
love, elevated
duration,
to a higher
ix.
296.
discourse),
number
alluded
xi.
79-
for a limited
of years, 258.
of,
191;
192;
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
177
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Martial, quoted,
201.
xii.
115.
vi.
83.
Martyrdom,
xii.
36
the theatricality
of,
37-
a criticism
of, xiv.
Martyrs, alluded
a criticism
375.
to, vi.
374.
of, xiv.
374.
for, xii.
54
on the
em
Masses, the,
some
Europe,
xiii.
26.
224
of Season,
ii.
178
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MEISTERS/NGER
MASTERY
the world, must
come
to
an understanding with
England, 225.
Mastery, the mastery of them that know,
liminary
to,
when reached,
vii.
150
a pre
230.
ix.
364.
Materialism, a criticism of, xv. 117 et seq.
the political mania as, xvi. 251.
Maternity, the instinct of, in animals, x. 105.
Maupassant (Guy
xvii. 38.
Mazzini, alluded
to, x.
41.
vii.
125.
x.
201.
vii.
280.
its
adays, 237.
of gold, and all that glitters, xv. 302 ;
as a polite term for, 303 ; the philoso
liberal
pher s attitude to, 325.
command
"
"
no;
the soul of
composition, 165
Germany depicted
;
the
theme
of,
in,
118;
its
201.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
179
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Hans Sachs
Meistersinger, Die,
quoted,
60.
v.
as expressing Nietz
;
thoughts with regard to the Germans, 192.
and the gayest and boldest period of its composer,
sche
xiii.
122.
of, ix.
344.
Melody analysed,
51.
Memory, the influence of
i.
tainment of reason by
the process
of, xv.
its aid,
23.
68.
of, viii.
of, vii.
270.
99.
German
music,
xii.
201-2.
natural
alluded
way
in the world,
xiii.
most
220.
Romans
in, xv.
271.
expressed by,
x.
187.
and
his influence
upon the
libretto to
Carmen,
an honest
x.
viii. 3.
126.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
1
80
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too*
METAPHOR
MIDAS
and
1
truth, 177
for,
ii.
to,
truth as an
30
contra, 42
army of metaphors,
seeks a
new impulse
in
art, 188.
of,
in the future, 21
20
vi.
the harm-
phenomenon and
in itself," 28-30
metaphysical explana
"thing
tions^ i; fundamental questions of, 3 1-3; conflict
of, with free spirits, 158.
;
psychology
74-96
concerning the
77-80.
of,
Meyer
69.
(Jiirgen), of
Bonn
157-
on
his
vii.
and Raphael
of, vi.
199.
74-5.
s
genius,
ix.
366
alluded
to,
367.
his conception of
of, for
i.
34.
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
Middle Ages,
NIETZSCHE
sense in which
we
are
passion
Middle
in, vii.
memento mori,
of, vi.
v.
66
the
still
348.
311.
class, the, as
Middleman,
modern
the, as infesting
expensive, xiv. 65
life,
and making
it
pre-eminent in intellectual
spheres, 65.
Military profession, the, an educational danger to
its
privi
Military
create
the military
16.
ii.
genius,
the military development of Europe, xiv. 104.
the last means of adhering to the great traditions of
on indulgence,
ix.
55
xii.
be done
1 2.
by,"
343
"do as
you would
an adverse criticism of, 344.
Miltiades,
Milton,
and Themistocles,
vii.
ii.
56
77.
Mind, the, the question as to its presence at all to-day, iv. 142.
its development feared by the State, vi. 345.
the worse and less fertile soils of, as the first to be
cultivated to-day,
spirits,
vii.
294,
the danger of the impatient
107; virtuous stupidity needed, 108.
the discipline
of, x.
107
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
183
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MODERN
MIND
Mind,
and the
esoteric class
of, xii.
43.
n.
the (Zarathustra
xii.
67.
discourse),
xi.
95-
98.
far too
eager philanthropy,
x.
189.
Misfortune, the narcotics of, vi. in.
the ancient means of solace against, and a higher, ix.
23 ; the valuations of, by Christianity and anti
quity, 8 1
vii.
Mistrust,
the subtlety
in,
282.
44.
xiv. 192.
Mithras, Christianity and the cult
vi.
of, xvi.
223.
335.
Modern life,
of,
Modern
Modern
for,
107
the outlines
of,
the appearance
depicted,
v.
135
of,
;
ix.
106;
287.
another side
137-
society,
women
spirit, the,
intellect in,
vii.
327.
in, xiv.
67.
X, Joyful
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day.
XI, Zarathustra. 2(11, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
J8 3
INDEX
Modernity, regarded
xiv.
64
63
NIETZSCHE
favourite obstacles
a criticism
and
digestion,
xvi.
of,
and remedies
of,
of,
103-4-
127; we
hyperboreans, 127.
ix.
of, xvii.
115.
340.
the
lie"
"holy
common
as
Mohammedanism and
its
to, xvi.
use of a
214.
"
beyond,"
xiv.
125
an
the realm
of, ix.
135.
Mommsen,
Strauss,
the confessions
iv.
230
xvii. 38.
57.
vii.
of, xv.
206.
in
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MONTAIGNE
MORALITY
v.
116.
on doubt,
ix.
52-3.
his loquacity, x.
Nietzsche
Monumentum
130
alluded
to, 61.
38.
Moon,
Moore (Thomas),
afraid to publish
so he burnt
it,
xiii.
Byron
autobiography,
179.
Moral sentiments,
the history of
(a.
of, is
vi.
of,
60.
xv.
229-38.
of, xiv.
248-51.
of,
flowing through
Wagner s
characters,
no.
of Christian
virtues, v.
112
the ne
private
and oecumenical,
vi.
40
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
I8 5
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
94
et seq.
its
relation to
alluded
custom and
tradi
to, 61.
found
in
literature instanced,
Greek
252;
literature,
252
alluded
to,
300.
viii.
the conception
morality, 17
history
of,
20;
The volumes
referred to under
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI.
Human,
all-too-Human,
1
86
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MORALITY
the practice of, 36; the
most ancient moral judgments, 98 two classes
of people who deny, 99 on picturesque morality
more beautiful but less valuable, 150; the
68
Germans
217
to,
the
281
its
vie wing,
conditions
discourse),
65-8.
the surmounting
popular, 48
present
enemies,
in
1
of, xii.
47
60
61
the dis
tinction
the
30
slave
morality^
230-2
and mediocrity,
237.
Nietzsche on his
first
explorations
in, xiii.
TO; the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
187
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
17
of,
the
more
lie,"
a criticism
task
the new
(Part ii. Bk. ii.) 210-326
and reveal the problem of, 218 ; as
0f,
to see
221
moral, 224
an
illustrative parable,
225
im
as the
237-47 regarded as an attemptatestablishinghumanpride,237; acountermovement, 238 morality for its own sake, 245 ;
a form of immorality, 251 ; in the valuation of
races and classes, 254-6 ; as a means of seduction,
280 Christian morality, 306 ; intolerance on the
Pt.
iii.
ii.
Bk.
ii.)
part
of,
as a counter
325
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
188
i.
VII,
Human,
all-too-
MORALS
MORALITY
of philosophers, 380
3 8i.
Morality, a means of defence, xv. 1 88 essentially the means
of making something survive the individual, 190 ;
;
239
tion,
man
"
at>
Indian, 46
90-4
Christian-Jewish, 157
historical falsification,
why
it
has
to
opened
in
The
Dawn of Day
91
Nietzsche the
to
related,
may be
ix.
18; animal equivalents of, 33;
described as of animal origin, 34 on
;
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
ix.
103
tory of duty
s neighbour, 156
looking
ahead, 158; effects of fashionable morals on
;
French
esprit
106
straint,
109
tion
06 ; longobedience
aversion
to the new,
commencement
of
the
slave
insurrection
in
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
190
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MORALS
love
to
mother
one
of,
124
the deliverers
165
what
fallacy
;
the
MOTHER
English
distinction
is
Utilitarians
174; the
instanced,
of rank between
the
essentially the
same
naturalism, 246.
a moral defined, xv. 28; moral values in epistemo-
logy
itself,
immoral^
229-38.
rungs in the ladder,
moral
xvi.
the
non-existence
of
facts, 44.
ning of
into,
spirit, 67.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
191
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
combat
the belief
Mountains,
in, x. 81.
the,
127
the
of the wanderer
soliloquy
the
iv.
in, vii.
truth, 160.
41.
interpreters, 273.
his relation to music,
62
plied to,
viii. 17;
prevalent tastes ap
the golden seriousness of, 63 ; the
German charm
lacks the
of,
in,
92
64;
his
Wagner
Requiem^
101.
the music
the
of, ix.
229.
"
alluded
of, xii.
200
as
218.
to, xiii.
Munich,
its
alcoholic drinks
there live
my
antipodes^ xvii.
3-3i.
Murat, Napoleon
opinion
of, x.
189.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
192
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MUSIC
Music, the
"
"
Dionysian
sian music
i.
art,
and music
21
in general,
vinities,
et seq.
how
related to
130
the truly
"
Dionysian,"
und
act of Tristan
bility of,
function
from
of,
Isolde^
tragic
185.
33
in the
Wagner-
connection between
life,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
193
INDEX
its
NIETZSCHE
sight, iv.
rect feeling,
fate,
;
mood
strife in
itself,
music, 182
the
harmony
re
Wagner s,
vi.
183.
177; a definition of,
moved
development alluded
its
vii. 7 1
how
to
style, 75 ; the
of
the
a
80
as
late
comer in every
new,
;
danger
culture, 87-90; as the sound architecture of the
by, 71
Middle Ages
recitative,
critical
its
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
194
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MUSIC
and those who would be
modern
ideas
affected
make
its
of,
song, 64.
Music, and the subtle divination of feelings and sympathy,
ix.
151; on soul expression by, 174: and
tragedy,
interpreter
of love,
sublimity,
by
of,
Wagner s, 328
325
;
physio
as a
means
xii.
91
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
195
INDEXNIETZSCHE
Music, on
false
accentuation
266
in, xv.
in,
its
271;
275; the
descriptive,
classification,
68;
its
"
Nietzsche
exactions from,
xvii.
45
"
73.
"
by his conceit,
of,
x.
122
Music."
;
the, as the
Musset (Alfred
again,
ix.
de), instanced,
viii.
Orpheus of all
words of, 202.
76.
380.
Mystery,
St.
Paul
Mystical explanations,
x.
x.
82-3.
xiv. 137.
169.
und
in Tristan
bolisation of
State,
"
"
"
the re-birth of
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
196
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
MYTH
Myth,
NAPOLEON
its inseparability
myth, 183; its nature, 184;
from music, 185 ; their united function, 185.
vi.
the
way of, before the brighter sun of truth,
giving
239
et seq.
viii.
162; the
the expendi
origin of the envy of the gods, 164 ;
ture of intelligence in Greek polytheism, 165.
i.
36.
Names
of things
"
selves, x.
instanced,
ix.
107
his
56
the
coming century
will follow in
34
his
his
attempt
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
197
INDEX
to
NIETZSCHE
alluded
to, 23.
one isolated
which he appeared,
xvi.
102
alluded
126.
to, xvii.
vi.
of, ix.
303.
320.
ISational genius,
German, and
European man,
Nations, the prestige
ix.
200
of,
how
vi.
and
the rise of
346-8.
assigned by
lustre
its
men
of culture,
xi.
54.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
198
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
NATURE
NATURAL
Natural history,
how
should be expounded,
it
vii.
98.
Naturalism,
Natural law, a phrase of superstition, vii. 16.
on opposite modes of interpreting, xii. 32.
xiv.
101
Paganism
pression
of,
vii.
35
49
all
24
in, 129 ;
;
307; theembellishments of science, 311
ists
of, ix.
the purposes
of,
moral
312.
on guarding our
of, x.
beliefs respecting,
151-3 ;
its grandeur loved, because human grandeur is
lacking, 186; the voice and kinship of, 188;
97
opposite
modes of
interpretation
xii.
13;
regarding
providence, 199
more
and the hypothesis of divine
vestiges of the
depreciation
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
199
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
seau
themselves, 353.
and
artist, 65.
Natures,
of.
See under
art, as
"
Irresponsibility."
described,
art,
10; the
"Negation."
See under
Necessity, the doctrine of.
Need, the nature of, x. 196.
Needers of
xvii.
vii.
let
that be
my
sole, x. 213.
xiii.
xi.
58.
154-6.
neighbour
The volumes
new
table
man must
referred to under
be
be overleapt, 243.
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
2OO
i.
VII,
Human,
all-too-
NEIGHBOUR
Neighbour, the value of
own, xiv. 221.
Neighbour
NIETZSCHE
my
neighbour
welfare
and
my
68-70.
New
New
Testament,
"
See
the.
Testament, the
New."
to be
at any time
Newspaper,
the, the
peculiar
viii.
141.
ix.
199.
to, x. 75.
the,
the monsters
of,
alluded
quoted,
of,
25
v.
12
viii. 8.
instanced,
xiii.
222.
on
his critics,
vi.
up
to the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
201
INDEXNIETZSCHE
new outlook
of 1886,
vii.
i-io
e
g>
his ever-recur
Arcadia
et in
autobiographical
68
how
Dawn
8.
of Day,
my
suffering
have
to
my
and
lion
245
storms are
245
life
250
call it
213
maxim
I have given
"
dog? 244
and my
my danger
eagle
(the
of,
a name
;/ want
about
last
me,
hour),
referred to under
Season,
ii.
I,
his
Birth
II, Early
of Tragedy.
tional Institutions.
IV,
f
202
NIETZSCHE
as to the origin of evil, 4;
impulse to publish some of his
boyish questions
owed
his
first
Moral Emotions,
ality,
99-118;
conscience,
his
of
dislike
reverence
it is
coquettish
the
for
honourable, 205 ;
and whited
bugs
sepulchres, 205.
Nietzsche, on his hitherto published work, xiv. 1-2 ; as hav
ing outlived Nihilism in his own soul, 2 ; The Birth
236; my phil
"
Dionysian
fight,
334
wisdom
my innovations, 333
precursors, 382
the direction of
my
my
my yearning
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
203
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
382
freedom,
spiritual
384.
an
irrefutable
289-92
334
teach that
single individual
336
may justify
"
from which
five noes,
401
;/
391 ; my
have taught the knowledge of
man
406; we
believe in
of
my
concept of Freedom,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
2O4
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
NIETZSCHE
of a certain degree of immortality for his works
of Zaraof himself as stylist
of the aphorism
thustra, xvi.
(Chap,
x.)
1 1 1
things
112-20;
I owe
his books,
to the ancients^
112; his
style,
for the
ment
man
eternal accusation
has returned
my
doctrine,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
205
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
philosophy, 3
his lifework,
7
3-4
on
at Bale, 1879, IO
written
at
ii
and
to
1 1
10
life,
12
his nerve
symptoms,
and the
a decadent
to health
his existence
would prefer
;
his conception of
xvii. i
reverse, 12
his will
describes himself, 13
noblemen, 14
his father,
the
names, 15
to
life,
Stein
his privileges, 15
his
15;
temperament,
compliment, 17 ; why he reproaches the
his
tianity,
without religious
difficulties,
28; unacquainted
9f Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
2O6
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
NIETZSCHE
with atheism,
xvii.
his susceptibility to
tions to his morality, 33
his illness compelled
climatic influences, 33
:
him
to reflect
on such matters, 34
unable to
him
37
38
40
his overture to
Byron s Manfred,
Manfred, 40 his estimate
of Shakespeare, 40 Bacon versus Shakespeare,
his most intimate relationship with
40-1
Wagner, 41 Wagner and Paris, 42 Wagner s
;
und
moment, 43
44
all
Isolde,
;
43
Wagner
effects of
his exactions
music go
if
musical impressions, 46 ;
of defence, 46 ; restraint,
intercourse with books, 48 ; has known
ceptions, 45 ; his
the instinct
taste
47
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
207
NIETZSCHE
people read
to
ruins at thirty,
xvii.
48 ; on becom
versity professor, 51
ance of
diet, climate,
tion, reiterated, 52
his life to
the
have
heaviest
some
books, 55-130; his time not yet come
are born posthumously, 55; early criticisms, 56;
general remarks on books, 57 ; his would-be
interpreters, 58; notsuccessfulat being pompous,
Feminine, 65
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
208
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
NIETZSCHE
hauer
on Human^
ail-too-
Human,
82
et
intellect,
seq.
and
83
first
days at Bayreuth, 84
Re"e,
coming, 97 ; the
Hymn
105
10 ; Ariadne
Song quoted,
II 112; determines
but
113; the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
209
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
xvii.
114-6
The Genea
Wagner,
will attempt
to
immoralist, 133
the meaning
mouth of the
of honour, 138
the
first
vii.
it,
139.
189.
>
lies in
its
;
European Nihilism,
(Bk. i) 5-109; plan of the book, 5-7; denned
as the absolute repudiation of worth, purpose,
veloped truthfulness, 8
consequences
of,
as a
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
2IO
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
NIHILISMNOBILITY
result of moral valuation, xiv. 10 pessimism as
a preparatory state of, 1 1 as a psychological con
dition, 12-4; disillusionment in regard to pur
pose of existence a cause of, 12; the final form of,
;
tremest form
active
list,
and
22
action,
and
Christianity, 203
its
great counter
feit
courage, 302.
Nihilism may be a symptom of increasing strength or of
increasing weakness, xv. 91.
Nihilist, the, his attitude to the world, xv. 90.
Niobe, the heart-moving fate of, ii. 56.
Nobility, the
in
ix.
201
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
211
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
>,
anew
word
which shall
inscribe
new
love
the
"noble"
on
"
tables,
:
247
let this
passes
for, as
thanks
and foul,
false
to
and worse
curers,
297.
"
iii.
(Sec.
Pt.
i.
Bk.
that of birth
is
354-7
constitutes,
of,
358.
"
Nobility, the.
Nobility of disposition,
vi.
Noise, in applause,
196
my
x.
357.
;
in
danger
the voice,
199
antipathy, 199.
vi.
vii.
191.
350.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
212
i.
VII,
Human,
all-too-
NOONTIDE
OBEDIENCE
now>
ity
human
xvii. 93.
xii.
68.
"
Novalis, quoted on
Nutrition."
holiness,
mummery
Novelists,
vi.
148.
becoming a good,
master:
vi.
167.
18.
it
Nutrition,
alluded
to,
its
importance reiterated, 52
142.
Kant s Morals,
xii.
obey, xi.
as the moral
essentiality of long-continued, 107
imperative of nature, 108 ; the need created by,
;
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
213
INDEXNIETZSCHE
120; the moral hypocrisy of the commanding
class, 121.
Ober-Engadine,
no true
art without,
Objectivity,
the eternal objective, v. 45
i.
i.
44.
and
historical writing,
ix.
109-10.
an analytical
42
description of the objective spirit , xii. 139as a disguise for the paralysis of the will,
the ability
of, xiii. 80
have the pros and cons in one s power, 152.
as a show word, xiv. 67
we objective people 96 de
;
to
fined
regarded as the
24.
xii.
40.
"
Masks."
fate,
i.
35
ofpassivity 72-5.
Offenbach, the genius and music
again,
40
of, vii.
186.
as the glory
of, xv.
270.
xi.
239-63.
I, Birth
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow
Ill, Future of Educa
II, Early Greek Philosophy.
of Tragedy.
V, Thoughts out
tional Institutions.
IV, Thoughts out of Season, i.
:
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
214
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ORATOR
OLD
Old Testament.
On
Olive Mount,
Old."
Olympian world,
dream
its
the,
i.
birth,
35
xi.
209-13.
the evolu
One s
self,
Opera,
when
the,
it is
time to vow
the culture
critical
layman,
i.
false
artistic process,
146-7
postulate
of
of,
belief
;
its
the
concerning
148
characteristics,
its fatal
ii.
42.
vulgarity
and
Italian, x.
on sticking
and
to,
vi.
v.
363
103.
the
convictions, 404-5.
the tailor s philosophy,
on,
congelation
vii.
157;
final
of,
into
opinion
161.
of opponents,
ix.
314.
the
importance with taste, x. 76
to
the
for
attached
reputation
significance
compared
in
to, xii.
the inconvenience
of, ix.
vigour,
i.
8.
283.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
215
INDEX
vii.
Oratory, Greek,
on yielding
70
NIETZSCHE
and the baroque
emotion
to
multitude, 203.
Order, Vordre du jour pour
Orestes, his matricide,
i.
the
Originality, on,
vii.
61.
ii.
Part
ii.
Book
iii.)
of
prejudices
sources of,
x.
Roi,
35.
le
style, 75.
x.
in,
vii.
the
xv.
xiii.
123-32.
215.
184.
metaphysician
regarding
xii. 6.
105.
material
very
idea
of
"owe,"
xiii.
the
69;
no.
Pagans defined
is
13.
who say
word for
all those
whom God
vii.
"yea"
the
to life,
and
to
"
the great
"yea
to
vii.
113.
to
"yea"
all
that
is
Pain,
wisdom
in, x.
247
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
216
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PARENTAL
PAIN
best to give
as the
pain
76
not so acutely
felt
xiii.
66
the equiva
of,
formerly as nowadays,
77-
as
>
an
the music
vi.
of,
i.
142.
197.
vi.
82.
xiv.
49.
is
Parasite, the,
vi.
282.
Parasites, their ways, xi. 254; the loftiest soul shall have
the worst parasites (Zarathustra), 255.
xii.
116.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
217
INDEX
Parental
Paris,
folly in
German
its
NIETZSCHE
vi.
308.
may be
and
useful to strong
xiii.
223
for
centuries, the
versatile statesmen,
the
tasks
226.
alluded
to, vi.
240.
28
its
the music
Parsifal,
viii.
of seduction, 40
of,
as
Lohengrin
father,
vii.
146
viii.
124;
conducive to
to the
xiii.
its
author, 126.
29.
of, vi.
368.
the strengthening of party-
writers,
vi.
268.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
218
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PARVENUS
Parvenus, the philosophy
PASSION
of, vii.
44.
now
little
alluded
vi.
read,
to, vii.
and Flaubert,
258.
178.
viii.
67.
on doubt upon,
and the
Apostle Paul, 67
his
338.
the quality of his faith contrasted with that of Luther
and Schopenhauer, 69
moral scepticism, 85
his use of
197 ;
through Christianity, as unforgiveable,
his famous example, 209 ; instanced, 223 ;
;
his ruin
207
an
anti-artist, xvi.
alluded
to,
310.
his
67
130.
Nietzsche
s literal
love
for, xvii.
38.
By
Passing
not an
as a
argument
show word,
xiv. 67.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
219
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Passion and
we should endeavour
of joy,
vii.
the regarding
on
unknown,
82.
vi.
to convert
them
into sources
of,
their suppression, x. 83
ideals regarding, 177.
the advantages
310.
the spiritualisation
against, 27
its
26
xvi.
of,
the church
war
tion, 27.
v.
of, vi.
ix.
198.
329.
296.
its
170.
Patriotism of
180.
iv.
192; an overheard
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
22O
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PAUL
PENTHESILEA
71
his
lief in sacrifice,
1 77 ; as a founder
of religion, 295.
- his transformation of
Christianity into a mysterious
much
stood of
in
"faith,"
Rome, 223
shown
to,
when he
Penthesilea, the
Muse
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
221
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
and
high enough,
of,
v.
64.
viii.) xii.
Countries, (Chap,
191-221.
twenty-seven fragments, intended by Nietzsche as a
supplement to the eighth chapter of Beyond Good
Peoples
and Evil
xiii.
214-29.
and the
artist, ix.
362.
i.
a characteristic
alluded
to, vi.
104.
of,
ii.
57
345.
Persians, the,
and
their ideal,
their gods,
xi.
weak
his aris
136.
66.
40
ix.
example of
of,
v.
44.
how
affected
Personalities,
by opinions,
where the search
vii.
for,
38.
321.
Perspective, the advantage of estranging one
one
on
age,
vi.
from
s self
389.
far-off perspectives,
ix.
341.
illusions of
referred to under
it,
348.
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
222
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PERSPECTIVE
PESSIMISM
and knowing
spective,
in
xiii.
from a per
153.
moral differentiations,
of
xiv. 224.
the instinct
of knowledge, xv.
20-5.
i.
2.
and
"Dionysian"
pessimism, 335.
and
the probing
of,
ideal of
1 1 ; the pessim
ism of strong natures, 23 ; the infancy of Euro
pean, 27; causes effecting its rise, 28; its ex
ment,
73.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
223
INDEX
Pessimism
in art, xv.
kinds
of,
ment,
vi.
263
NIETZSCHE
;
of strength, 398
the principal
400.
Petrarch, his name inscribed on the banner of enlighten
42.
Phenomenalism,
alluded
again,
the>
ii.
to,
vii.
155.
94.
x.
188.
of,
49
why
v.
the,
of,
66.
ii.
44.
says
"forgery"
to
Christianity,
xvi.
197.
his use of books, xvii. 48.
79
77-8
of,
addressed, 80
their
occupa
of Season,
ii-
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
224
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too*
PHILOLOGY
PHILOLOGISTS
language, 8 1
I3
new and
exclusive generation
of,
viii. 1 10 ; re
Philologists, the incapacity of the majority of,
sults, 1 1 1 ; born philologists, 115; their attitude
herited characteristic
Philology,
academic,
129;
iii.
Homer and
Classical
its
friends
and
enemies, 147.
the aim
of,
suggested,
vi.
248
and the
art of
reading
rightly, 249.
viii.
112; the
difficulty
of
valuing,
antiquity, 127
sad story
of,
classical
the
philology as the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
22$
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
the theologian
lack of capacity
for, xvi.
206.
conditions favourable
to,
191-2
advantages
to,
if
day,
philosophy were de
prived of
195
vi.
131.
ix.
ones, 211.
the influence of his instincts on his conscious think
ing,
xii.
average
the long
man
and
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
226
i.
VII,
Human,
all-too-
PHILOSOPHER
lightened by the Cynics, 39 ; his ever ready
mistrust, 49 ; the possible elevation of beyond
in his discip
;
the dangers
besetting his
scepticism, 142
scientific
man, 151;
155; the
combination,
truly philosophical
155 ; the cor
responding gradation of rank between psychic
states and philosophical problems, 156; as a
man, 154
defined, 258.
xiii.
nal"
instinct,
;
143-
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
227
INDEX
Philosopher, his load,
NIETZSCHE
xvi. 2
to
truth, 100.
of, ix. 3
young men
and
reconciliation, 351.
their feeling of being furthest
natures,
x.
291
removed from
priestly
293-
the
Prejudices
law-givers, 152.
at marriage,
shudder
xiii. 135
of the ascetic ideal, 136
most indispensable,
that which to
136-7
them
is
retreat,
138
points of
141.
their prejudices, xiv. 327 ; other characteristics,
their highest ideal, 337 ; confounded with
328
men
of,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
228
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PHILOSOPHY
PHILOSOPHERS
343
truths
and errors
of,
369-78
why
they are
slanderers, 378-81.
Egyptianism,
first
and
things, 19.
vii.
28-30.
vii.
26.
Philosophical novices,
vi.
378.
Philosophically minded, on being, vi. 390.
Philosophy, its effects on the health of a nation,
made
8S
of,
ii.
75 ; use
without rights,
of, iv.
18
it exists to-day,
the asylum offered by, to mankind, 122 ;
every philosophy that believes the problem of
existence to be shelved is a sham, 134; the en
v.
42
couragement
of,
what
it
means, 186;
its
con
aged
if
its political
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
22 9
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
of,
200.
vi. 13 ;
appreciation of unpretentious truths, 15 ; the
question over which it separated from science,
19 ; a substitute for a religion, 42 ; fidelity as a
its
and
reconciliation,
ix.
Sun, 222
of, x.
4-5
power,
a call for
life,
305
Suns, 223
Leibnitz,
Kant,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
23O
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PHILOSOPHY
PHYSICIAN
of
criticism antichristian,
as epistemological
though by no means
anti-
physicians, 134
135
osophy,
the resultant
ill-will
to all phil
philosophers, 136
has rights
ception,
recommended
to
psychologists,
162
bond between
Philosophy, the
xiii.
it
and the
ascetic ideal,
142-3.
a criticism
of, (Pt.
iii.
Bk.
ii.)
xiv.
- the
history of, a story of a secret
the prerequisites of
- a decadent
human
life, xiv.
327-84.
- reason in,
(Chap, iii.) xvi. 17-23 ; ruined by the blood
of theologians, 135.
- as understood
by Nietzsche a retirement into regions
of ice, xvii. 3.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
231
INDEXNIETZSCHE
on
Physician,
ix.
without a doctor
living
when
xvi.
88-90
says incurable to
Christianity, 197.
Physicists, their belief in a true world after their
xv.
own
kind,
20.
no;
possible,
273.
x.
vi.
195
the
241.
296.
xvi.
vii.
of,
272.
instead of the studio of
386.
vii.
107.
New
what
is
truth
196.
quoted,
Pioneers, the
xvi. 127.
men required
promise
to,
for, x.
218
an exhortation and
aboard
ship I 222.
he
who
is
-firstling is
what
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
232
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PITY
was meant by Homer in his time,
i6 3
Pity,
on the wish
to arouse,
68
vi.
how
55
his period,
self,"
on the
ego, 147
213;
danger, 226
thustra,
Zarathustra, in poverty
ice of
knowledge, mocks
at
my greatest
the soothsayer reappears to Zara
"
ugliest man"
who declaims
against, 322-6.
its effect on a man of
knowledge, xii. TOO ; the saint s
as
pity, 249 ;
regarded from the heights, 249.
held in contempt by great minds, xiii. 8 ; the problem
of,
as
8-9.
vice, xiv.
46
the view
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
233
INDEX
Pity,
NIETZSCHE
an analysis
Pity*
33-
why reproached,
xvii.
18
and
of,
54-5.
lyrist,
i.
46
music, 121-8.
of,
ii.
17
his
conception of Hellenic
Ph&drus quoted,
alluded
-
and
iii.
114.
to, iv.
151.
the teaching of children, v. 93
the
new
state,
93
Niebuhr
lost no
and, 184; and the folly of fathers, 185
dignity whilst a court philosopher, 187; alluded
;
to,
his
judgment
that pity
weakens the
soul, vi.
68
his
241
345
vii.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
234
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PLATO
Beethoven, 268
on the
effects of abolition
of
Plato, as
all
aim
his
origin, 337.
- his invention of
"
"pure
spirit
a dogmatist error,
xii.
and
"
the
good in
itself,"
against Platonism, 3
thought, and the imperatives of our naturalists,
;
his
pillow of his death-bed, 42 ; the place of Socratism in the morality of, no; and the relative
authority of instinct
-
his
contempt
for pity,
xiii.
not to be imagined as
to,
351, 359.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
235
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
doubted
49
xvi. 10;
;
never
his proposi
"
to, 24.
the use he
the
made
same
as Nietzsche
105
in
nonsense, 191
through, 265.
- allied to
good conscience,
antique world, 101.
the most gratifying of all,
vii.
36
ix.
305.
5.
;
reading, 116.
now
little
read,
his heroes,
vii.
vi.
258.
199.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
236
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PLUTARCH
POLITENESS
Plutarch, his
in
i.
67.
vii.
90
gods, 93.
and the bird Phoenix,
ix. 393.
the charm exercised by the imperfections of
and the liar, 200.
v.
x.
no;
90.
style, vii.
75
the origin
of,
x.
116-20
and, 125.
Poets, the younger philologist as poetaster, iii. 77-8.
- as
lighteners of life, vi. 155.
- of
emotion, vii. 58 ; to the poets of great towns, 59
their real thoughts
Zarathustra
and
go about with a
discourse entitled,
exploitation,
xii.
xi.
151-5.
99.
vii. 33.
isolated impulses operate as, x. 159.
Polis, the Greek, its constitution a Phoenician invention,
Poisons, on,
viii. 1
of, ix.
298.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
237
INDEX
Political
economy, the
Politics, the
NIETZSCHE
of, vi.
325
new and
the propa
askingtobeheard,3i7-9; high
gandists
and
politics
xii.
;
146.
conditions,
the scholars
of, xiv.
81.
idyllic, vii.
vii.
149.
346.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
238
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PRACTICAL
POVERTY
of my poverty 210.
Power, alluded to, vii. 36.
- in
high politics, ix. 186 ; Danae and the god of gold,
209 wealth as a means of, 210 ; the subtlety of
)
and
of, 240 ; the demon of, 248
moods, 253 ; and our circumstances, 276 ;
the feeling of, 283 ; the first effect of happiness,
286 ; the Greek estimate of, 287 the victory of
the feeling
festive
the great
man over,
of,
by the
of, x.
49
5i-
Zarathustra
the passion
for,
desire
of,
>
for, xv.
concerning
its
the man
and the
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
239
INDEX
Praise, to
one who
is
NIETZSCHE
praised,
vii.
161.
disappointing,
Praise
xii.
ix. 149.
Prayer, the sense
in, rests
Christianity,
for
whom
its
vii.
172.
Precedence, the intellectual order
x.
of,
of, vii.
167.
to, 104.
of, vii.
ix.
241.
35.
ideal selfishness,
ix. 383.
Prehistoric epoch, the, the character of mankind estab
lished in, ix. 26; the morality of, 27.
Presence, on the value of a noble, x. 77; lack of, in
Present, the,
the soul
vi.
its
value,
of,
217.
art, vii. 67.
the power
of,
power
untrustworthiness,
323.
vii.
154.
opposed, xv. 206.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
240
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PRIDE
Pride, alluded to,
PRIESTS
vi.
174.
their different pride,
the ancient savour of, unfamiliar to us,
perfect lovers
more forbearing
Zarathustra
xi.
proud,
Priest,
and
ix.
x.
300.
55.
172.
an
that it
actor, xiv. 117; his desire
should be understood that he is the highest type
the, as
"
great conservative
154
and
affirmative forces of
life,
164
is
he
really a physician ?
168
philosophers,
tion
of,
x.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
241
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Priests,
"
modes
as
of valuation, 29.
becoming Chandala
in
our midst,
xiv. 94
condi
and the doctrine
reward and
their
axiom,
and
their yoke,
desire
is
94.
Princes as symbols,
ix.
Principles, regarding,
the use
made
359.
vi.
355.
of, vii.
vii.
240.
176.
viii.
vii.
vii.
356.
168.
their, viii.
09.
126.
x.
190.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
242
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too
PROGRESS
PROSE
as a
tarding influences to, 72; the Chinaman
more successful type of, than the tender son of
culture, 73
spheres, 93
the belief
vidence, 199.
Progress,
sense
of,
xvi.
day, 129.
Prohibition, the effect of, xv. 196.
Prometheus, the great philanthropist,
108; a
i.
35
to illustrate
false idea to
his
exemplary
love, 40.
Prometheus,
the,
ix.
75-
i.
284.
and
in,
Philetas, x,
85
ix.
vii.
103.
x.
125
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
243
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Protective
tariffs,
the justification
of, xv.
x.
190.
291.
defined
Provence,
Providence, on the
xiii.
37
xi.
171-5.
et seq.
of sympathy, 150 et
131
Shakespeare,
Psychological observation, the advantages
seq.
seq.
of
et seq.
x.
vi.
of,
53
et
sympathy,
viii.
75.
xii.
63
his
diffi
new methods re
commended
its
162.
I, Birth
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IV, Thoughts out of Season, L V, Thoughts out
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:
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
244
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PSYCHOLOGY
PSYCHOLOGIST
Beyond
Good and Evil quoted, to give some idea, 67.
the classification
Psychologists, the new tasks of, xii. 20
;
Nietzsche
xiii.
17-
to
- their error in
regarding the indistinct idea as lower
than the distinct, xv. 41.
- a moral
for, xvi.
64
72.
ill
problems, 34
between psychic
sophy, 156.
of philosophers, 343.
on which the nature
the unitary view
of,
of, is
161-3;
determined, xv. 72
its
taint of
revenge
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
245
INDEX
Psycho-motor
NIETZSCHE
demands
of,
education
artistic
from tragedy,
of,
vi.
171; the
172.
of,
46
iii.
ing methods
the exist
three would-be
of, criticised, 47 ;
compared, 47 ; its inability to inculcate
severe and genuine culture, 60; hope for the
future of, 67 ; the connection of, with State ap
pointments, 86 ; true and reprehensible culture
aims
of,
modern
student, 131.
ne
>
xiii.
69
the
legiti
grace,
82
84
logists,
the
83
89
its
fluid elements,
itself to
self-destruction of justice,
evolution, 90
92
of,
96;
its
tendency
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
246
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
PUNISHMENT
to harden
QUOTATION
and benumb, 96
on, 97.
9 7 ; in ancient times,
isolation
Pygmalion, alluded
ii.
77.
alluded
to, vi.
240.
vii.
274.
power of woman
fested
in,
ii.
to
of,
iii.
30.
compensate the
State,
mani
25.
of, vii.
ix.
191
251.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
247
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Race.
under
See
xi.
113-6.
Race,"
"Ruling
"Species,"
and
"Types."
88; alluded
vii.
to, 91.
the art
of,
Nietzsche
s artistic
viii.
64.
xvii. 38.
in, xv.
90.
v.
128.
the
271.
v.
of,
one
ii.
means of
elevating
life
new
and
it
because
it
requireth
xi. 119;
which shall be
require steps,
nobility is needed
247
.
the distinction
test of,
247
verence,"
the sign
of, in
"self-re
nobility
256.
ti 53
of,
94
Nietz-
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
248
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
RANK
sche
RAPHAEL
aims of his
regarding the
declaration
philosophy, 237.
Rank, the order of, (Ft- i. Bk. iv.) xv. 295-387 ; the doctrine
of the order, 295-8 ; concerning the order, 316 ;
in
human
values, 319.
the order
of,
exist side
alluded to as
all
of,
alluded
of,
by
side,
clever opportunists,
my Thuringian
270; the
281.
xiii.
180.
on the
131
Sistine
regarding, 165
Madonna
of, vii.
234.
the three classes into which he divided mankind,
13
and modestly
down
to him,
x.
244.
ix.
handed
216.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
249
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
xvi. 67.
Rascality,
the
rationalism, 175.
rational thought defined, xv. 38.
Rationality, or irrationality, cannot stand as attributes of
their insults,
69
the worst
readers, 72.
well,
ix. 8.
125-6.
the ideal reader according to Zarathustra,
Reading, the art of, vi. 249.
the ability to read aloud,
vii.
xvi.
xvii. 62.
253.
xi.
43-
45-
German methods
- as an art
of, xii.
rumination a quality
of,
204.
48
the
necessity of experience to
I, Birth
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:
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
250
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
REASONS
REALITY
the wooers
vi.
192.
and
x.
95
on names and
livelier thinkers
from
Reason, daily
honour
of, vii.
of,
184;
96
the world
as applied to
viii.
184.
any
price, xvi.
Reason in
i8 5
the
"
lie,
vi.
45
ix.
287.
the art
of,
249.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
251
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Reasons, the
vii.
313.
on philosophy, 257.
Recoaro, the spring of 1881 spent there by Nietzsche and
his works,
xii.
257
his verdict
46
its
vi.
132
a psychological ex
et seq.
(Zarathustra
"
is
11
/"
demption^
68.
Buddhism
Ree
or Christianity,
xiii.
virtue,
upon Nietzsche,
xiii.
by
172.
and
its
critically alluded
to, 10.
the use
made
of his
name
in
Human,
all-too-Human,
xvii. 90.
Reflection,
need
for
sometimes necessary
to
remain
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
252
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
REFORMATION
sance,
vi.
opinions
and
Reformation
220-1
the
RELIGION
means used
400.
the conception
to
promote the
of,
of
antiquity,
viii.
134.
why it
as a wild
Italian
Re
x.
182.
good teacher,
134.
at, vii.
121-3.
Relationship between friends, the dangers of too intimate,
vi.
312.
Religion, the
manner of
the death of
philosophy as a substitute
a,
for, vi.
i.
84.
42
and
suicide,
85
the truth
in,
113;
its
and
the interests
of,
;
referred to
the interests
of government^ go hand-in-
hand, 337-43-
and the
images
of,
165
viii.
no
again,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
253
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
by
its
sin, ix.
57
traits in
which
lusts,
after all
bind them
to earth, 252.
for the
become the
its
final
end, 82-4.
Criticism
"
ought
"and
"duty,"
08.
xiv.
113-209; concerning
113-32; rudi
ii.)
the
mentary psychology of
religious man, 1 15-20
1
the criticism of the
holy
20-3 ; of the Lawof,
(Second Book)
(Pt.
i.
Bk.
"
lie"
moralities
and religions,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
254
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
RELIGIOUS
RELIGION
125-8
Christianity
the history of Christianity, (Pt. ii. Bk. ii.) 13279 ; the psychology of the Apostle Paul, 140-4 ;
147-9
paltry people,
144-7
^ne reaction
of
concerning the psycho
life,
logical
Religion, a decadent
when
human institution,
xv.
239
in music,
religious belief,
ciated, 251
I am
as
rebirth are
eternity,
254
mightiest thought
necessary, 256.
- Nietzsche not a
63.
affirmative
Religious
xiv. 126.
to
117;
object
impose a law on nature, 119; likewise based
on nobler representations, 121.
cult,
its
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
255
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
72.
vi.
111-51
the
double
fight
132;
138
et seq.
Religious neurosis,
fasting,
its
Salvation
Army
solitude,
66; the
xii.
of, 67.
and happiness, v.
happiness possible without, 7 ; on feeling
Remembrance, the
6
dangerous prescriptions
relation of, to
life
historically, 9.
and
x. 78.
against,
purely psychical treatment^ xiv. 190-4.
Renaissance, the, the cultured man of, and Greek art, i.
its
148.
in Italy, state instinct of the
its
culture raised
men,
v.
19
men
of,
n.
ii.
25 \
of, vi.
alluded
to,
41.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
256
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
RENAISSANCE
REPUTATION
conditions
Goethe
modern man
109; defined
values, 228
alluded
Renan,
to, xvii.
124.
- alluded
-
to, xiii.
xii.
68
quoted, 69.
204.
criticised, xvi. 61
of Jesus, 1 68.
Renunciation, the danger
of,
vii.
ix.
161
invests us with
318.
x. 188; the
pledge
Excelsior! 220; possibilities of, 221.
- the first
the
principle of men of the highest rank
renunciation of happiness and ease, xvi. 266-7.
of
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
257
INDEX
Research,
"hunting,"
ix.
NIETZSCHE
299.
the psychology
Reserve, on lack of,
Resignation, what
201.
it is, ix.
356.
conscience, 65.
Retrospect, on pathos and, x. 246.
Revelation, the formation, of religions and the belief
ix.
in,
63.
to
of,
for,
take,
vi.
76;
78.
the
bridge to Zarathustra
demption of
of
spirit
man from
suffering
highest hope
revenge,
and
xi.
penalty,
the
re
117; the
169; the
et seq.
of,
xiii. 84
Diihring refuted, 85.
underlying the actions of the de
;
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
258
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
RHYTHM
REVENGE
Revenge, Paul the greatest of all the Apostles of, xvi. 193
the concealed lust of, as becoming the master
;
of
the
the
of
culture
ancient
world,
225;
237-9.
as the
xi.
378.
fire-
157.
show word,
made Napoleon
Revolutionists,
xiv.
xiv. 68.
on dangerous revolutionary
spirits,
vi.
3 2 9-
Revue
-
des
and punishment,
vii.
44.
xi.
195
who
109.
fall
together,
196.
Reynard the
fox,
the
New
Testament
as reminiscent of
x.
the origin
7 ;
of, in music, 1 18 ;
nothing more serviceable to the superstitious
ancients than, 119; preference for metrical form
in our own time, 120.
1 1
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
259
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
itself, xi.
life
shall again
and again
119.
Riches, our rich people they are the poorest xiv. 57.
the essence of the desire for, xv. 353.
,
Wagner s,
iv.
no.
happy,
Ring
no;
Brunhilde
instanced,
viii.
its
51
of,
history, 9.
of,
met by Nietzsche,
xvii.
quoted, 59-60.
works
of, v.
190.
of,
as affecting Kant,
ix.
5
as fanatic, xvi. 211.
Rogue, an innocent,
vii.
45.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
26O
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too
ROLAND
ROMANTICISM
role, 318.
Roman
Roman
its
influences,
130.
its
Catholicism,
x.
Orient,
291.
- the attachment of the Latin races
to,
of
women
xii.
68.
a nation stronger
existed,
Nietzsche
xiii.
54.
indebtedness
206.
xii.
and more
to, xvi.
113
their organisa
Romanticism,
i.
against,
12-5.
ix.
165.
x.
331-5the music
of, xii.
regarding,
xiv.
201.
67
as
counterstroke of the
the
of,
279
its
89.
266
opposite, 280
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
26?
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
festivals,
i.
29-30.
Rome
been
vii.
88.
viii.
46
century, 64.
his
contempt
Nietzsche
for librettos,
predilection
and David
113.
i.
36.
81.
iv.
Strauss,
x.
themenof,
nanimity, 327
the nature
of,
of, xiv.
58
and the
liberation
flamed vanity, 82
criticised
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
262
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
RULING
ROUSSEAU
Voltaire, 82-5
operas,"
"away
306.
"
among my
George Sand, 64
illustrate
Nietzsche
to
fanatic, 211.
ception of taste
beauty, xiii. 220.
an apotheosis
artist, xv.
the training
Ruling
xi.
256-7.
Ruling
instinct,
the,
symptoms
Ruling race,
the,
interpretations
of, xv.
of the
world as
150.
thoroughly,
shall
360
the ruling
artificially,
"lord,"
xv. 330.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
263
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
104; Dostoiewsky
Siberia,
Russian, the,
Sacrifice, regarding,
and knowledge,
its
who
he
testimony, 104.
culture,
iii.
67.
30.
ix.
52
morality, 231.
is
a firstling
is
ever sacrificed,
244
xi.
The
discourse), 287-91.
as the essence of Christian faith, xii. 65 ; three rounds
in the ladder of: of human beings
of natural
instincts
God
of
Himself,
73
not a
dis
and master
monotone
the inhumanity
352
of,
of, ix.
viii.
morality,
49.
130; the
fool, vii.
333.
more possible
first
Saint,
once
is
in
the,
the
visions, terrors,
of, vi.
et seq.
128-9;
;
his aids,
torpors,
and
ecstasies
149
et seq.
xi.
4-6.
xii.
70
in, 71.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
264
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SAINT
SANKHYAM
Sainte-Beuve, an observation
alluded to, xii. 68.
of,
quoted,
vii.
258.
Saint- Evremond,
Homer and
Assisi."
xvii. 10.
"
to Life, xvii.
98
Nietzsche
regarding, 211.
Sanctification, as a weapon to fight race depression,
170; the
relief found
xiii.
by sportsmen of saintliness,
171.
to, xii.
184.
Sand
60
xii.
and
197.
of, xvi.
169.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
265
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
his
and
significance of song
singing, xvi. 4.
to twelfthly, 171
no
firstly, v.
167
vii.
Saviour, The.
"
112.
164; the
ix.
and the
87 ; greater in women
in men, 100; the
than
old
testing of truth,
appearance
of,
x.
155; ultimate:
truth, irre
modern scepticism
anti-religious,
by no means
anti-Christian, but
xii.
72
as a soporific to pessi
144; the disguises for
of,
manliness, 148
147
the
145 ; prospects of a
the scepticism of daring
German form
148.
of,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
266
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SCEPTICISM
SCHILLER
the
strange
origin,
of
piety
68
xii.
vii.
con
42.
alluded
to, xii.
alluded
17
29
poem
ii.
and Beethoven
to Joy,
ninth symphony,
38.
Goethe
quoted,
speak
iii.
of,
114
The Robbers
and
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
267
INDEX
the
German
NIETZSCHE
philologists,
personality, 151.
Schiller, as criticised
by the
"
on, 199.
-
vi.
regarding,
quoted,
vii.
German
men
85-6
stage,
method, 256
fallen
308.
quoted,
and
viii.
90
culture in
alluded
Germany,
to, 8, 24.
ix.
188.
- his
William
alluded
to, x.
again, 95.
to, xiv.
278.
- the
to, 65.
alluded
and culture
alluded
vi.
to, vii.
in
iv.
46.
132.
308.
Germany,
to, xvii.
ix.
188.
126.
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
268
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SCHOPENHAUER
SCHMIDT
Schmidt
iii.
60.
39
iii.
is
interesting,
vi.
235.
134; the
on young
scholars,
138;
his
"
"
"
merely saying
xvii. 48.
Scholars (Zarathustra
discourse),
xi.
149-51.
vi.)
diet, xii.
42
We
133-57.
School, the, the most important of the tasks of, vi. 245 ;
the undervalued effect of public-school teaching,
246.
the functions of,
vii.
152-4.
Schopenhauer, regarding,
i.
iii.
96-7.
views on tragedy,
1 1
and
1 2
the victory
compared
equal,
156
porcupines referred
to, 172.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
269
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
iii.
94
19; Strauss
quoted
Strauss
translating
ercise,
Schopenhauer as
Edu
lation,
third danger
128
religion,
126-7
scars an d victory,
of Schopenhauer
of the man
character,
of,
the whirlpool of
life,
151
osophers,
and
saints,
artists,
the deliverers
phil
152; questions re
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
27O
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SCHOPENHAUER
nature
198.
joy,
102
220.
14 quoted and
of Germans, 86
criticised,
women
elements
criticised,
criticised,
of,
vii.
;
of
29
302-3
Nietzsche
68
antipodes, 66
Nietzsche
at
home
in France,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
271
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
pathy, 153;
his
sym
homage to,
and German philosophy, 199
magnanimity, 327
and
quoted, 221
dialectic,
his
336; psycho
alluded
to, 64,
193,
347his loquacity, x.
assumption regarding
of,
132-7; his
70; propositions
set against those of, 171; estimate of German
non-Christian qualifications, 181 ; his position
volition,
reappears
to
xi. 1
60; the
Zarathustra on the
in the
new modes
referred
xiii.
to,
of speech, 218-9.
by Nietzsche, as his great
the influence his philosophy
Wagner, 128;
his
teacher,
had over
use of the Kantian treat-
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
272
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SCHOPENHAUER
ment of the ascetic problem, 130; and the
working of the aesthetic contemplation, 131; The
and
World as Will and Idea quoted, 132
;
Stendhal
definition of the
133;
"beautiful,"
of,
133; treat
the chief
more dan
and Pascal, 69 as an
;
fundamental misunderstanding
the attempt to regard him as
of the
Will," 70 ;
mentally unsound, 70 ; as representing animal
ism and the reign of the passions, 77 ; instanced,
gerous than a vice, 46
Epigone, 69
his
"
"
on the
"tragic"
criticised,
286
272
;
and
390
397
modern
Pascal, 397.
The World as
criticised
a case of the
his morality
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
273
INDEX
of
"
92
pity,"
NIETZSCHE
his ideas
alluded
to, 55,
73, 90-
Plato
i.e.
way,
made
alluded
to,
German event
in
126.
made
the use he
of
his romanticism,
art, viii.
202
xii.
music, 202.
the romanticist ingredients
his
Manfred^
149.
as a
xvii. 40.
German
of a strong race
luded
Goethe
now
in, xv.
271.
extinct, xvii. 45
al
to, 123.
131.
art,
ii.
iv.
its
as ruling
ing
95
187.
life, v.
its
"new belief,"
progress, 63
71.
the popularis
of,
;
60
64
its
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
274
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SCIENCE
Science, the separation of philosophy from,
conflict
of,
vi.
19; the
coming
than
its
women
con
251
of,
the embellishment
attempter
323
in,
73; on apparent
and consolation, 308
311 the investigator and
truth
of,
its
task, 378.
the ultimate question for, x. 44 ; the goal of, 48 ;
three errors that have favoured, 75 ; our as
tonishment at its stability, 82
as the exact-
ledge,
Pope Leo
its
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
275
INDEX
atmosphere
NIETZSCHE
it is, x.
228
sorcerers, alchemists,
and
regarded as a prelude
to,
convictions
tific
234
>
on scien
its
"hypotheses,"
rests
196;
on the same
200.
to,
the
nihilistic
trait
measure or as an
of,
61
instinct,
as
362
a disciplinary
Socrates and
German
University, 52;
its
re-intellectualising
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
276
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SELF-ASSURANCE
SCIENTIFIC
53;
influence,
Scientific
victions,
vi.
401.
lack
his thirteenth-century
Englishmen,
of,
341.
xv. 269.
Sculpture,
common
with,
x.
203.
Sedentary
life,
Seeing, on learning
Self, will
36
vii.
168.
and the
spirit,
that be
let
of virtue; 112.
your formula
morphology of the feelings of, xv. 217.
Self-annihilation, as a weapon to fight race depression,
- the
xiii.
Self-assurance,
170.
and
belief in
one
s self, x.
220.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
277
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Self-concealment, a
Self-control,
an attempt
Self-criticism,
at,
1-15.
i.
how
Self-knowledge,
to surprise
"know thyself"
ing individuality,
selves, 225.
oracle
of,
xii.
as steps to,
87
x.
we are unknown
ourselves to ourselves,
xiii.
i.
Self-love, as taught
xi. 235.
Self-observation, the lack
of
is
everyone
farthest
from
himself, x. 259.
x.
69.
discourse),
xi.
134-8.
Self- teaching,
Selfishness,
I, Birth
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow
Ill, Future of Educa
II, Early Greek Philosophy.
of Tragedy.
tional Institutions.
IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
:
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
278
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SENSUALITY
SELFISHNESS
two kinds
Selfishness, the
by
of, xi.
229;
Zarathustra,
86
j
placed in the scales
defined and revalued,
232.
a criticism
of, xv.
217.
of no value either in
heaven or earth,
x.
280.
85.
is
50.
Seneca, a saying
iii.
now
126.
of,
170.
little
read,
vi.
258.
repugnant to Nietz
the fear
of,
sions, 414.
- the
injustice done to, by
modern philosophers,
an exception, 18 ;
on the evidence of,
founded
triumphs
17;
Heraclitus,
man s,
xii.
87
xvi.
scientific
19.
its effect
on
love, 93.
VIII, Case of Wagner.
IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
279
INDEX
Sensuality,
NIETZSCHE
its
and
in art,
the spiritualisation
of,
of, xii.
Sermon
252.
on the
idealism in love
248.
Mount,
the, the
all
thinking with,
whole moral
of, vi.
Zarathustra
x.
140.
(The
of,
herd
throat,
xi.
192.
by Calvin,
vi.
100.
discourse),
xi.
314-20.
Servitude, as the final worth of many,
See
Saume."
Seume.
xi.
71.
"
(Madame
Sewers of the
Sex, the
soul,
symbol
of,
222.
as the
- the
woman
to be, 257
again,
2 73-
of, xvii.
II, Early
of Tragedy.
tional Institutions.
IV,
of Season,
ii.
65.
280
xii.
life, xvii.
Sexual love, the poisoners of the natural spirit of, xvii. 66.
Sexual relationship, in bourgeois marriages, xv. 191 ; as
a symbol merely to all true lovers, 191 marriage
;
as understood
by the mz/old
nobility, 192.
"
Marriage."
"
"
Dionysian
and
"Apollonian"
states,
241
242
preponderates in budding
made impure by
artists, 243.
Christianity, xvi. 119.
Grillparzer
Montaigne,
reference
quoted on, 43
to,
iv.
118.
quoted,
v.
36
Goethe
quoted, 87.
vi. 77 ; the
religious uncon
as too serious to be effective, 176;
cern
of,
128
and, 203
-
alluded
to, 165.
91.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
28l
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
131.
of, xii.
168-9
wnat
68.
Christopher alluded
to, xiii.
169
again, 171.
the morality
of,
xv.
Nietzsche
Nietzsche
type of C&sar,
ing than, 40
Baconian
could not
hypothesis, 41 ;
breathed Zarathustra s atmosphere, 106.
Shame, where
the refinement
of, vi.
87
ii.
have
6.
to, xii.
201.
Show
xiv.
67
testimony regard
ii.
VI,
Human,
282
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SICK
Sick,
the,
SILS-MARIA
woman, 159
priest as their
162.
saviour,
predestined
Sick man, the, a moral for doctors, xvi. 88-90.
Sickliness, the uses of, vii. 166.
selves sick,
danger to
xiii.
man
157
the ambition
had discovered
iv.
life,
108; the
Sign,
discourse),
145-8.
xi.
398-402.
Silence,
- so
difficult, xi. 104.
Silenus, the story of his capture
by Midas,
i.
34
alluded
to, 181.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
283
INDEX
Similes, abhorred
NIETZSCHE
vii.
by science,
266.
vi.
viii.
159.
166.
the, its
Simple
life,
vii. 115-7.
Simultaneous, the, the superstition regarding, vi. 235.
Sin, the idea of, brought in by Christianity, vii. 237.
doubt
ix.
83
Christianity
declaration
89.
is,
- the
Jewish origin of, x. 174; repentance for,
174
the
why
masterpiece of religious
183 ; the ascetic priest as the
fatal
xiii.
Church the
first
to enrich
mankind with
the
this
misery, 230.
the concept of, not even real, xvii. 52 ; invented to
confuse and muddle our instincts, 142.
Sincerity, everything that makes for a step towards true
-
Sirius,
and
its
view
of, x.
55.
i.
138.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
284
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SLAVE MORALITY
SOCIAL SYSTEM
examined,
on
ii.
if
may
and labourers,
slaves
vi.
of, 9.
330.
its
of,
289.
the, of to-day, xv. 207.
alluded
to, xvii.
127.
revolt, 66.
Smug ones, the, the rise of, iv. 16 their aims and influence
among the Culture-philistines, 17.
;
of, vii.
Sociability, he who
is
158.
capable
of,
has
hundreds
of
friends,"
in, vii.
210.
96.
323
"
Anchorite
"
speaks regarding,
x.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
285
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
iii.
37.
and
caste,
319 ;
a question of power, not of right, 322 ; the decoycry of parties, 326 ; possession and justice, 327 ;
the delusion of subversive doctrines, 334; the
of, 343 ; the place given by, to inertia
despotism
cause and
victory of
democracy, 343.
the common ground of the principles of, ix. 139;
its ideals, 140; the chief moral current of our
time, 140.
watchword
x.
78; the
304.
Zarathustra s analysis of the mental attitude toward,
xi. 116-20 ; he who is of the populace wisheth to
of,
"
"
220
individual,
251Socialists, the
ix.
183
ii.
7.
as possible
makers
of laws, 183.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
286
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SOCIETY
SOCIALISTS
Socialists withheld
tions, x. 67.
The Tarantulas
attitude,
xi.
the
name
59
in reality, at
herd,
their
the
and
community as
deliverer, in the
their
cries a result of
lives
have been
failures, ix.
viii.
116.
225.
on playinga
"
"
- the art of
adapting oneself in,
xii.
254; renders us
commonplace, 255.
our haute voice as more natural (nineteenth century),
xiv. 98; transvalued and replaced, 381.
the will to
xv.
power
183-238;
and
iii.
Bk.
iii.)
the State,
183-214;
give up war
decadent,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
287
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
"
is
social
Man
Society,
transvalued, 381.
objection to English and French, xvi. 93.
sociology, 45
Nietzsche
due
to,
i.
his influence,
06 his attitude
:
tragedy and on
influence upon
to
optimist,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
288
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SOCRATES
Socrates, of the
ii.
company
79.
173; sacrificed
v.
185
alluded
to,
47-
Daimonion
the
alluded
- the
death
of,
vi.
of,
129;
to,
vii.
49
of
"cause
and
375.
effect,"
regarding,
x.
and the
73
of,
75.
in;
126
meaning of
351
the problem
350 characterised
353; solution and criti
of,
cism, 355.
-
The Problem
his
of,
(Chap,
equation
lectics,
xvi.
ii;
his
12;
alluded
12; dia
methods,
faith in reason, 15
16
ii.)
physiognomy,
to,
149.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
289
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
70; alluded
of, in
xvii.
to, 10.
vi.
19.
xiv.
3 6 4-
on
and believing apart, 275; and renuncia
tion, 318 and education, 319 society and, 335;
the perspectives of, 341
and the springs of
the
evil
man
as still more evil
thought, 344;
;
living
in,
echoes
348.
in, x.
192
175-9
Zarathustra
another matter
one thing
is forsakenness
loneliness , 223.
is
great
is
things
xii.
66
the
acquainted with,
249.
Nietzsche
need
of, xvii.
25
its
and assumed
Song, the nature
insanity,
of,
i.
Songs of Zarathustra,
song,
363-8
the
21.
126-30
dance song^
ix.
48.
the
xi.
the dance
124-6;
the second
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
290
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SOUL
SONGS
evil
men have no
songs, xvi. 4.
than
realists,
349.
i.
56 ; the CEdipus, 73-5 ; his
perplexity with regard to the chorus, 1 1 1 ; his
CEdipus at Colonus, 135 ; alluded to, 90, 91, 100.
- as
taught in public schools, iii. 61
logists and the CEdipus 79.
- the
Ajax
referred to,
vi. 77.
alluded
vii.
81
to, 91.
on
ix.
distress of, x.
268
84
day
-
its
contempt
its
relation to the
271-5
he speaks to
asleep, 336-40.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
291
INDEX
Soul, the, the health
of,
NIETZSCHE
and
its
xv.
of,
nothing romantic about, nothing
whatever amiable either, xv. 379; should not
be separated from intellectual greatness, 380.
Soul, greatness
on
music, 217.
-
the rediscovery
of,
in
one
s self,
xv. 419.
- its
vii.
S 8.
226.
xvi.
x.
296-
300.
the origin
of,
and
with
struggle
"unfavourable"
conditions,
xii.
234-7-
the relation
to
of,
"species"
and
preservation
- See also
The volumes
under
of,
xiv. 319.
the Ego, xv.
61-2.
"Anthropology"
referred to under
and
"Darwinism."
I,
Birth
Tragedy.
II,
292
SPEECH
SPINOZA
of freedom
of, ix.
285.
our real experiences are not at
all
Huxley
xiii.
reproach
life,
92;
to, 92.
- as a decadent in
biology, xiv. 45
and the
the Ethics
al
330; anglo-angelic-back-parlour-smugness a
la
Spencer, 357.
- a
decadent, xvi. 94.
-
of,
iii.
62.
alluded
-
to, vii.
vi.
347
alluded
to,
ix.
382
alluded
to,
178.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
293
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
xiii.
concern
his views
won
by, xiv.
as treated
to,
329.
one of Zarathustra
Spir, his
49
alluded
ii.
141.
Spirit, the, the three
which
ye know
122
life,
Zarathustra
the concept
of,
xvii.
body,
142.
man,
Spitteler
162
xii.
(Karl),
his
the Bund,
Stae l
(Madame
account of Nietzsche
works
in
xvii. 56.
de),
Napoleon
of,
to,
remark
quoted,
of, ix.
on women made by
xii.
184; alluded
to,
184.
238.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
294
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too*
STATE
word
behaviour
of,
ii.
political
life
to,
197;
of philosophy on
earth, 199.
vi.
ix.
181
of
all is
called
rainbow and
the origin
its
of,
life,
55
where
the bridges
xiii.
it
ceaseth
the
the
of
superman, 57.
103; the theory that makes
it
to, vii.
339.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
295
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
and Strength
Greatness
xii.
vi.
322
the
overheard dialogue),
in (an
193.
s reply,
monument
56.
to, v. 25.
vii. 325.
imperfectly understood by the French, x. 129.
on a feature of the portrait of the free - spirited
Stendhal, quoted,
xii.
philosopher,
speech, 218.
of Kant,
xiii.
133
aesthetic,
54
"beautiful"
131
alluded
;
new modes of
224.
to,
xiv. 88.
quoted,
his Life of
Napoleon alluded
to a reasonable
mode
of
to, xv.
52
quite
xvii.
priceless,
maxim
39
39
by Nietzsche
in attacking Strauss
alluded
Sterility as a result of
Sterne, a criticism
Stifter, his St.
favourable
and
to,
his
best
aesthetic joke,
79
259.
discovery of Stendhal
life,
xvi. 104.
Dostoiewsky,
to
a master of
into society by
one should
means of a
duel,
128.
decadence,
60-2.
xiv. 34.
of, vii.
Martin
Summer,
vii.
250.
xv. 402.
signs of strength in,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
296
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too*
STILLEST HOURS
Stillest hours,
our,
STRAUSS
method
ean,
x.
ii.
191.
of,
239.
defined
and
noisiest but
158.
the
our
in
Greek togas
Stone, on turning
to, ix.
106.
of, xii.
367.
fessor, 22
ity,
56
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
297
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
and
the theological
book, 66
his
modern metaphor, 89
ex
liberal
to
the
Latin, 93.
Strauss, alluded to, v. 78.
on paper,
vii. i.
xv. 276.
fooling, 163.
xvii.
24
success of the
the measure
of, xiv. 1 7
wherein
the strength of
39 ; the experi
lies
of,
;
signs of increasing
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
298
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
STRENGTH
STUPIDITY
tury,
109
1 1
204-5.
Strength, the sensation
of, xv.
136
there
is
260
of,
fetter
means
one
to
s terrible qualities,
of, xvi. 2.
Strong, The,
and
the
Weak,
ii.
(Sec.
Ft.
i.
Bk.
iv.) xv.
298-350.
Student, the modern,
iii.
131
a metaphysical picture of
137; need
for leaders,
Stupid, the,
Stupidity,
on doing harm
to, x.
Bur-
140; the
vii.
32.
253.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
299
INDEX
Style, the journalistic,
position,
51;
NIETZSCHE
41
iii.
German com
so-called
results of 54,;
and
real culture,
58.
Strauss as
84 Lichtenberg quoted, 84
Schopenhauer quoted, 85 distorted and slip
shod styles, 87 modern metaphor in Strauss,
iv.
stylist,
89
examples of Strauss, 90
style
and language, 93
Schopenhauer on
the style of
Wagner s
of religious
men judged by
more
the
literary style
difficult
ix.
on, 260-1
201
ful,
mannerisms
in,
218.
I become,
The volumes
referred to under
I,
Birth
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
300
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
STYLE
Style,
on the tempo
SUFFERING
xii.
of,
German, 204
Luther
Bible as a master
205.
Nietzsche on the formation of his prose style, xvi. 112.
on the art of, xvii. 62-3 ; the seven seals quoted as
piece
of,
an example
64.
of,
hypothesis, 18
cept,
53-5
i.
and
Bk.
iii.)
xv.
12-20; Nietzsche
psychological history
materiality, 59.
Europe,
xiii.
25.
of, demanded,
and the term, v. 5 1
conquest
- historical
writing
i.
44.
Schiller
and
overflowing
vitality,
332
vitality,
;
333-
viii.
77
disguises
of,
78
uses
of, 79.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
301
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
ix.
24;
no decisive step
116; indulgence
sufferer,
for,
285
on seeking
proud
in,
we gods
sufferers
in exile, 309.
for a
in, x.
90
my dog, 244 ;
suffering
suffering of prophetic men illustrated by a simile,
245 ; the secret nature of personal and profound,
265
the necessity
means
as a
of,
to happiness,
266.
Zarathustra
what
in
the
tellectual haughtiness
by,
Epicurism as a form of
248.
for,
as a satisfaction,
of,
of, vi.
on reasonable death,
and
85
the prevention
of,
88.
286.
vii.
ix.
205.
x.
173.
so-called natural death as nothing else than suicide,
Christianity,
xvi. 89.
"
Voluntary
Death."
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
302
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too
SUN
SUPERMAN
second apostrophe
thou
398.
109.
discourse),
xi.
198-202.
Superficiality, the
him
superficial, 220.
as a preservative instinct,
xii.
78
piety as a
means
to, 79.
ix.
34.
dream, 189.
the prayer of an aspirant,
of
man from
ix.
22
the divine,
and
beliefs in the
descent
in the ascent of
man
spirit,
man
of
chism
of,
pioneers
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
303
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
of,
218; Excelsior! renunciation, 220; the
incarnation of a single lofty mood, 222; our
atmosphere, 227; the bearing of the historical
OUT yea
/ 342-6.
Zarathustra
s discourse in the market-place
Superman,
08
I all-too-human I
we live
neighbours to the eagles, neigh
bours to the snow, neighbours to the sun thus
will
now
evilest,
do
we
desire
superman
as necessary for
the
to live,
351
superman
the
best,
353-
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
304
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SUPERMAN
Superman, as the opposite ideal to pessimism, xii. 74 ; his
desire for Eternal Recurrence, 74; theherdinstinct
and the art of command, 120; lofty instincts and
the morality born of fear, 124 ; our hope fixed in,
128-9; the mission of 129-31; and the struggle
)
for the
the critical
as
commander and
law-giver, 152 ;
philosopher s definition of greatness,
>
149-51;
the
real
155; the
rank between
gradations of
psychic states and problems, 156 ; on preparing
the way for the coming of the philosopher, 157 ;
the task of, 181 ; first teachers of the conception
corresponding
"higher
man"
218-20; aphilosopher:
definition,
258
prophesied
xiii.
and scorn,
117.
the class of
ideal,
and
179
our claim
to
superiority ,
180
as
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
305
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
"
dawn, 420.
Superman, manifestations of lucky strokes, xvi. 129; the
overcoming of morality preparatory to, 263; new
teachers
as preparatory stages,
holiness
266-7
265
the
new
and
ease,
his creation,
270;
men
the recurrence
manner
of his living
of supermen,
like
279 the
an Epicurean god,
;
280.
the word
xvii.
its
57
than in
58
Parsifal,
the concept of in
Thus
also
under
"Fearless
"
Nietzsche"
and
Ones,"
"Free
Spirits,"
"
Zarathustra."
soul,
I, Birth
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow
Ill, Future of Educa
II, Early Greek Philosophy.
of Tragedy.
IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
tional Institutions.
:
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
306
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
SWEDENBORG
Swedenborg, alluded
Swift, a
maxim
of,
quoted,
vi.
64; on
lies,
72.
as, ix.
Symbols, princes
359.
Symbolism, the expression of
in music,
TAINE
vi.
192-3;
"
Dionysian,"
in gesture,
i.
32.
actual,
196
architecture, 197.
Sympathy, cases in which, is stronger than suffering,
a bad characteristic of, vii. 41.
vi.
an analysis
of, ix.
150
of
66.
viii.
and, 165
the quality
of,
as possessed by the
man
xiii.
169; alluded
to, 187.
Systemisers, beware
Systems,
of, ix.
why avoided,
271.
xvi. 5.
vii.
xii.
xi.
239-63.
265.
214.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
307
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
180.
xiii.
139; recognition
talent as
atavism
279.
of,
opposed to learning,
the origin
in,
ix.
366-7.
question
the case of, instanced,
in,
the theme
viii.
Tasso, quoted,
on
works of
x.
Zarathustra
tasting,
all
xi.
76
and
of our taste
the
to,
and
116-20.
xi.
life
a dispute about
and
taste
139.
man
no;
200.
the overture
discourse),
how
of,
alteration in,
109
24.
in, iv.
136.
of, in
Taste, origins
viii.
it
so-called
48
iii.
and
the usual
a necessary
evil,
335.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
3 08
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too*
TESTAMENT
TEACHER
body
iii.
72
the surplus
84.
of,
ix.
345.
of morals and
31
in
of
existence,
34.
design
religion, 33 ;
of
effect
the
undervalued
teaching,
public-school
Teaching,
vi.
Teleology,
x.
246.
ideas
to
combat,
xv.
58-62
history of
purposes, 68.
on the
vii.
off,
of the
134.
origins
ix.
of,
241
ignorance of one
s,
an
advantage, 281.
on
lofty
Tempters,
moods,
x.
men who
dogma,
57.
Terpander,
critics of
Tertullian, quoted,
xiii.
51-3.
tells
much
of Christ no
man occas
that
an act of
Testament,
?i-
the arch-book
of Christian
literature, criticised,
xiii.
187-90.
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day.
X, Joyful
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
309
INDEX
Testament, the Semitic
religion
NIETZSCHE
125; and negative
of
the
of
the
is
the
product
the
Sermon on
the
beside Manu, 46
gloves
ing, 195.
Teutonism, the
spirit of,
12.
i.
79
company
of philosophers,
86
his system
ii.
of
Thamyris, the
Muses,
ii.
56.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
310
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
THAYER
THERESA
the
xiii.
179.
i.
65.
- there
man
33-
what we become
in,
- the
example
of, ix.
201.
Theognis,
mouthpiece
of
i.
35.
Greek
the
as
nobility
"
truthful," xiii.
24.
i.
137.
338-
41.
Theresa
xiii.
171.
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
Thiers, alluded
NIETZSCHE
to, v. 56.
and, 28-30.
224.
and
versation, 317
358
joy,
the
many
his
magnanimity,
327
dependence of practical
people on, 351 escaping from one s virtues, 353;
digressions of, 360; in old age, 368-72; the
motto of the Thinker of the Future^ 379 his
cheap and innocent mode of life, 392.
the grain, 349
the
the
immense
characteristic of,
xii.
258.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
312
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
THINKER
Thinker.
THUCYDIDES
"
Contemplative
310
269
the hierarchy
Man."
their colour-blind
320.
of,
ix.
290-1
to future
virtues, 383.
x.
2 5 2 -3-
the process
of,
it
thought
when
"/"
on learning
analysed, xii. 23
comes when
"t t"
the condition of
wishes
and
not
wish, 24.
1 1 ;
ultimately
becomes
passion, 105.
Thought-personalities, form the most intimate experience of
the thinker; vii. 22-4
objects
two essays, 80
as
Thucydides, alluded
his dialogue
to,
ii.
57.
on Justice referred
to, vi.
90
alluded
to,
241, 345-
imagined immortal
life
vii.
265.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
313
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
ix.
172.
summing up
of,
xiii.
203.
a symptom of Russian pessimism, xiv. 68.
his
xv. 400.
the
of
true
counterpart
music,
Tone-painting,
wisdom,
ix.
ix.
i.
133.
267.
14; what
is
tradition ?
i5-
the instinct
of,
"
"
origin
of,
cause
of,
examined, 53
56
et seq.
"
"
Apollonian
part of, 72 et seq. the place of Dionysus
81-5 ;
the death of and the rise of the new Attic comedy,
;
in>
86-93
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
3*4
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
TRAGEDY
by Euripides,
94-101
TRANSLATIONS
has
use
1
Dionysus
in,
attained,
of,
167.
breath
fills
iv.
and music,
of,
155;
171
the
ix.
of,
of,
"
"
yea
and
to
life, xvii.
73.
its,
115.
in, xii.
41.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
315
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
new
the
xi.
227-33
old
and
239-63.
tables,
things,
the principal innovations , xiv. 381.
xiii.
144.
"
"
thustra."
grades
ix.
191.
of, vii.
125.
at the
Court of
Prussia, 128.
Tristan
und
an analysis of
Isolde,
161-7.
the character of
Marke
physicum of
the case
of,
instanced,
glorified in, 7
alluded
in, iv. 1
all art,
to, ix.
its
165
viii.
10
the
;
i.
theme
plot, 27.
238.
Nietzsche on his
first
acquaintance with,
xvii.
43
as
ultra, 44.
falsity in
ii.
173
et
seq.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
316
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
TRUTH
Truth, the nominal degrees
falsehood, 72
of,
355
385
395
is
of,
154; enemies
vii.
for,
to,
of,
184;
358.
93 ; the most personal question
for,
? ix.
and
alluded
361, 362.
20; a standard for the value
;
304 ;
the "beautiful" and the
;
359
champions
and the methodical search
truth
197
sense
convictions,
on dying
what
of,
et seq,
regarding,
of, vi. 7 1
the artist
acting,
for
whom
it
"powerful"
exists,
of,
308
seldom learn
208
distrust and
to, 277
metaphysical belief and, 279.
hour, xi. 175 ; the seed out of
trustfulness,
Zarathustra
278
my stillest
which truth
is produced, 244.
the clumsy wooing of, by the dogmatists, xii. i ; the
problem of the value of, 5 ; the equal values of
Human,
Wisdom.
ii.
INDEX
of,
and the
NIETZSCHE
alluded
to, 87.
78 ;
Truth, motto for free spirits nothing is true, everything is
allowed^ xiii. 195; the over-estimation of, by
as a
vention of the
"
holy
122;
lie,"
as part of the in
Paul s idea of,
St.
as more fatal
not a sign
1 1
inability to contradict,
30
the criterion
enhancement of the
of,
208
chamber
it,
268.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
TRUTHFULNESS
UGLINESS
upon
its
morality, 9.
xvi. 135.
Tubingen seminary,
able"
conditions,
xii.
234-7.
277; the
tent,
decadence
signified
stoical, 278.
>
35the criminal
and
239
e t seq.
the genius
Greek philosophers,
of,
vi.
364.
xii.
196.
x.
ix.
31.
172.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
319
INDEX
Ugly, the, nothing
Ulysses, the words
NIETZSCHE
is
of,
ix.
xvi. 75.
201
the
39his parting
Unbelief,
its
from Nausicaa,
different
Catholics,
xii.
90.
xii.
68.
45.
Unconditioned,
the,
cannot be known,
xv.
64
the deriva
Unconscious
virtues, x. 44.
XV. II.
Underworld,
the, Ulysses
of, ix.
390.
as
Unfavourable conditions^
essential
Unhappiness, regarding,
vi.
to
existence^
xii.
365.
ment
Universe, the,
existence
concept
of,
on guarding our
confined
to,
xv.
214; a new
428.
beliefs respecting, x. 151.
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
320
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
VALUATIONS
UNIVERSITIES
and
to,
art,
137;
iii.
its
138.
v.
199.
Unknown,
Unrest, the, of
life
has placed
itself
evil, xii. 9.
xii.
Utilitarians, regarding,
criticised,
174-6.
Utility,
ix.
42.
319;
My
on possible
vi.
Utopia, 333.
futures,
ix.
184.
ix.
98
the devisers of
from
new
values,
the market-place
xi.
58
their dwelling/czr
andfame, 59
the creating
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
321
INDEX
ones,
xi.
67
NIETZSCHE
the Creator in
metaphysicians regarding,
xii.
6; the recognition
9.
29
nature
of
certain
valuations,
38
the
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
322
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
VALUATIONS- VANDYCK
216; the necessity of false values, 217; the
predominance of moral values, 224 ; those of the
herd, 228 the more dangerous a quality seems to
;
242
the real
tions,
381
et seq.
the
161-82;
179-82;
188;
of,
the
concerning the optics of valuation, 223
order of rank in human values, 319 ; the trans;
valuation
aristocracy,
new
values must
transvaluation
of,
which Nietzsche
first
implies,
s
valuations are
determined,
39ian astonishingly
the value of life cannot be estimated
subtle axiom, xvi. 10; convictions and the
valuer,
tion
209
of Christian
values,
amount
xiii.
220.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
323
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
arrears
in,
of,
174.
to the denier of his, vii.
a form
itself," 34 ;
128;
vain,
175.
mind
the
without, vi. 85
phases of, described, 88 ;
367 marvellous vanity, 373 ;
self-enjoyment
s, ii.
32
the
human
"thing
to,
in
its
in
133;
foe,
after-growth, 210;
283.
utility,
vanity,
357
299
proud,
xi.
on wounding,
172.
xii.
difficult for
92
when
men
distasteful,
100
most
233-
Veaux
Vega (Lope
de),
Aryan philosophers
20.
quoted on Emerson,
xvi. 71.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
324
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
VEGETARIANISMVIRTUE
Vegetarianism, the controversy for and against, states
there is no philosophy of nutrition, x. 43.
the nonsense
of,
alluded
xvii.
3i-
of,
dangerous,
x.
180.
man
284.
of, vii.
165
how we must
is
conquer, 361.
deprived of the fear of
defeat, x. 188.
Ah who
!
may be
inexorable in his
new heaven
of, xiii.
147.
works alluded
xiii.
216.
Virgil.
in, x.
in his ethnology,
xiii.
194.
25.
"
Vergil."
Virtue, regarding,
vi.
misunderstanding concerning,
of,
87.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
325
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Germans,
vii.
143
the scape
i8 7 .
xi.
no one, 38
virtue,
39
the devisers
28-31
possessed in
common
dis
with
jealous
is
72-4
The Bestowing Virtue 85-91 the origins ofyour
The
so much flown-away virtue, 88
virtue, 87
Virtuous, 109-1 2 The Bedwarfing Virtue, 202-9;
virtue,
modern man
virtue,
on believing
in
one
own,
xii.
an d that which
it
attains power,
Part
dominate,
ii.
262
have lent
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
326
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
VIRTUEVISION
new charms
provement
Virtue, in
to virtue,
man
of
man who
mighty
first
to be, 404.
the concept not even real, xvii. 52.
Virtues, those that are profitable to, and
damage
soils,
that
on warm and
cold,
the
four
353;
man
those
vii.
society,
ix.
255
cardinal,
s,
concerning,
xii.
95
Our
Virtues,
as psychological conditions
(Chap,
vii.)
159-90.
of,
explained,
175.
Virtuous man,
towards history
he ever
22.
Middle Ages,
The
Vision
xi.
ix.
65.
discourse),
187-93.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
327
INDEX
Visionaries, against,
vii.
NIETZSCHE
15
may
profitably be consorted
46
its origin,
48
concerning, 50
of, ix.
Luther, and
join in singing,
ii.
who
41.
ix.
wish,"
130; and the
domains of chance, 134; on knowing what you
"I
want, 365.
See also under "Will."
Voltaire,
his
to, 334.
quoted, vii. 14; his revenge on Piron and Frederick
the Great, 316.
ix.
139
the
German
natural
alluded
quoted,
73 ;
nature and man, 82
gress
and
to,
74
168.
his conclusions
on
84
the
101.
of Season,
ii.
VI, Hitman,
ail-too -Human,
328
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WAGNER
VOLTAIRE
Voltaire,
Human,
Vulgarity, the
iv.
of,
viii.
my
thoughts, 230.
mentioned
in
115.
its
consciousness of
its,
142.
shame and,
x.
108.
122
accredits
Act
ment
in the
development
of,
106
problems
in,
109
the
spirit
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
329
INDEX-
NIETZSCHE
ment of his
and of philosophy,
123;
and the simplification of the universe, 131 ;
his discovery of the connection between
music
and music and the drama," 132 the
and
verse,"
125
"
"
life,"
first
and
sight,
135
the
summons
of,
137
the voice
art,
145
magnetism of his nature, 148; as the dithyrambic dramatist, 149 the ecstatic moments of
;
his evolution as
dithyrambic
effects,
157
as the revolutionist
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
330
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WAGNER
his early works,
iv.
167-8
all to,
the classification
of,
as
an
artist,
172
German
characteristics, 164.
his
of, viii.
9; aground on Schopenhauer
s philosophy, 10;
the artist of decadence, n; the Germans de
ceive themselves concerning, 12 ; the great corrupter of music, 14 ; the success of, become flesh
to be speaking, 14-8
the
transformation of art into histrionics a sign of
;
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
331
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
cost us,
36
to,
36-42
of,
38
40
for
youths
Wagnerite, 42
music, 43
women, 41
of,
40
bad
the female
approachable, 57
admired when he
sets
him
self to
music, 58
maniac objected
60
unending melody
the ap
propriation of old sagas by, 64 how first inter
with Schopenhauer
preted by Nietzsche, 65
among Nietzsche s antipodes, 66 Paris the very
soil for, 69
Parsifal, 70 his apostasy from and
to,
the climax, 62
Nietzsche
ideal
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
332
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WAGNER
monster and the Wagner of Bayreuth,
viii.
86
come manias, 89
the envy
of,
91
his teutonism,
style,
and music
in his works,
x.
physiological
attitudes
by,
329; as romanticist,
xi.
133;
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
333
INDEX
Wagner,
NIETZSCHE
his character of
quence,
xii.
critically estimated,
191
;
as having set
Tannhduser
his
Hegel
as not yet
the
homage he paid
122
Die
Aleiste rsinger,
122
Parsifal, 124
his
xiii.
;
the
going over to
and
earlier
unsound,
xiv.
his dislike of
Rome, 87
Parsifal referred
the problem
96 ; alluded
to,
273-5; courage
of,
Nietzsche and
Wagner towards
1876, 389.
xvi. 83.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
334
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WAGNER WANDERER
Wagner, Nietzsche on his attack, xvii. 24 converted Nietz
Nietzsche on
sche back from vegetarianism, 31
his most intimate relationship with, 41 his flight
;
criticism
and
of Wagner, 74
translation
the
Bayreuthian, 85
Human,
ail-too-
of higher culture
instanced,
the,
among
an exhortation
the free
to,
of,
vi.
iii.
x.
80.
377.
6.
spirits, vi.
405.
the lament of the wanderer
out of the seventh soli
tude,
x.
241.
second mask,
xii.
251.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
335
INDEXNIETZSCHE
Wanderer, The (Zarathustra s discourse), xi. 183-7.
Wanderer and his Shadow, The, vii. 1 8 1 et seq.
written in
at
1879
xvii.
Naumburg,
10; alluded
to, 88.
15.
pro
et contra, vi.
casus belli
322
and the
like,
wars,
ix.
379.
on
of, iv. 3.
288.
182.
xi. 51-3;
good war halloweth every cause, 52 ; Zaraman shall be trainedfor war, and woman
thustra
the
diversion
for
of the warrior, 75.
the renunciation of war is the renunciation of a grand
the
life,
xvi.
(Chap,
29
ix.)
war with
Skirmishes in a
the age,
60-111.
women,
therefore
liketh
he
75.
of,
ii.
86.
on drinking from
and
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
336
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WELCKER
WEBER
Weber, the German student and the Lyre and Sword songs,
iii.
Wagner
139.
lacks the
charm and
92.
as patience,
50; eternal
xiii.
life
The Strong and the Weak, (2, Pt. i. Bk. iv.) xv. 298350; why they triumph, 299; result, 302; re
flection, 303.
in
modern
xi.
society,
205.
the interpretation of, as freedom,
its
end
be a duty, 39
failing
47.
mildness as a condition
of,
in, vii.
147
equity and
106.
vi.
351.
xiii.
in failure, xiv.
means of power,
for, x.
ix.
209.
254.
its real
purpose forgotten, xiv. 57.
Weather, the, on, ix. 271.
Weimar, Nietzsche s paternal grandmother; Erdmuthe
Krause spent her youth there, not without com
s circle, xvii.
14.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
337
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Widmann
the
xi.
173.
in
"
Bund,"
xvii. 56.
Wieland, the writings and ideas of, vii. 249 ; alluded to, 259.
Wife and Child (a series of aphorisms), vi. 295-316.
will to be tragic in the Greeks, i. 7 ; mor
Will, the, the
"
"
ality
defined as the
to
"will
disown
life,"
10;
ashamed of the
of,
the
"
42
164.
will to
ix.
intellect, vii.
subdue
"
and the
113.
the thoughtless
passionate^
265-8; the
"will
to
truth,"
277;
its
implication, 278.
bringer
still
101
Zarathustra apostro
;
the
133;
emancipator and joychained to the past, 168; how it
willing emancipateth,
xi.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
338
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WILL TO POWER
WILL
"
will to
xii.
truth,"
"
the causality
whom most
of,
52 ; in
diseased and degenerated, 144;
European disguises
and paralysis of the
decked-out scepticism
for
will,
how
weakness
of,
xiv.
a strong, 38
37
Schopenhauer
understanding of, 70; and
;
free-will morality,
238-
will
belonging to fiction,
freewill or
no
as
freewill,
143-
as cause, xvi. 21
Will to
life,
"Volition."
Hartmann quoted
on,
v.
80.
"holy
lie,"
124.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
339
INDEX
Will, the
"
will to truth
"
NIETZSCHE
a form
sary to
its
Bk.
3-108;
of, xv.
84
obstacles neces
Bk.
i.
ii.
ii.)
exemplified in society
and
iii.
Bk.
()a
stronger species,
Bk.
iii.)
(c)
239-92
Nietzsche
xvi. 115
the alternative of God s, 144.
Power, The, an attempt at a transvaluation of all
values, alluded to as under preparation, xiii.
;
Will
to
207.
on the
xvii.
120.
Willing, the
the claims
of,
to
of morals, 28.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
340
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WISDOM
WINCKELMANN
driven
Winckelmann,
iv.
to
the
the youth
and
philological studies
Philistines,
of, viii.
by
Jesuits
35-
in,
143
Wolf
as glorified by
218.
to, xiii.
Wisdom, and
tragic
and Socratic
culture,
i.
140.
viii. 116-7.
the ideal of victorious wisdom, ix. 204
on the igno;
one s wisdom, 267 ; the convey
ance of, 278; one s happiness no argument
against his, 282; without ears, 357.
bility of trading
as a
Zarathustra
coercive, so
wisdom, 98
delight:
his song,
wisdom
pose of Zarathustra
modern world
in the
best
wisdom, 225
and pass
ancient babbling
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
341
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Wisdom,
Wit, concerning,
vi.
244.
regarding,
vii.
105
how
the lack
claimed, 245.
Witchcraft, the fundamental rule
heresy and,
x.
74
oftenest pro
of, is
the guilt
of,
205.
Homer, 149
64
iii.
researches
and, 169.
viii.
132
and the
on
first steps in moulding scholarship, 140
Bentley, 142; on Winckelmann, 143; his judg
ment of philological amateurs, 144.
;
Women,
the position
of,
among
tion, 25.
-
wisdom, 303
emancipation
;
in hatred,
of,
305
304
in love,
304
the
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
342
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
WOMEN
ments
of,
305
310;
spirits,
to,
Women,
of,
and free
vii.
136
fulfils,
the
in
"will
to
beauty,"
pregnancy, 197-8
303-6;
141
the
modern
intellect of, in
society, 327.
in the distance,
98
woman
100;
devotedness
strength
of,
101
in,
x.
80
a vision
in music,
wherein
lies
100
old,
the
conception
is
so
artistic,
fidelity
322.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
343
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Women,
their
adopted to
gam
182
repugnance and
183
their
hostility to truth,
their imperfect understanding and regard
in culinary matters,
for,
185
woman,
the
man
woman and
literature, 3
as an
example of the
Law-book ofManu
and, 215.
the revengeful instincts of, xvii. 23; Nietzsche s know
ledge of, part of his Dionysian patrimony, 65 ;
their strugglefor equal rightsasymptomof disease,
65
the needs
of,
66; emancipation
of,
aplot, 66.
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
344
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
their
and
use,
vii.
reality,
of, ix.
53
of
elevating^
312-20.
banners
as
Work, on the
day
glorification of,
s
or
tion of
as a
life s
the
criticism
ix.
work, 270
new
x. 79 ; the most
the
of good con
and,
194;
winning
leisurely,
science by, 255 ; ancient and modem valuations
means
to profits or delights,
xiii.
174.
the blessing of
future of the
Working
workmen, 208-9.
man, the, the question of, xvi. 98 ; the
Chandala apostles who undermine his instincts,
220.
Workman,
the,
become the
danger of dangers,
ix.
177.
vii.
40.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
345
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
dream
its
the
xii.
48
same
from
all
philosophical
as a fiction, 50
of
degree
as pos
as our
reality
the present
;
erroneous
to, 82-7 ;
concepts
and apparent 92-6 ; the re
,
lative world,
what it
worth lies
the will to
432.
a point of view
22
how
of,
the true
an hypothesis opposed to
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
346
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too
WORLD
YEA-SAYING
or
World
Worms
of the intellect,
vii.
v.
75
165.
the
Worth,
he
cost
of
371.
is,
Writing,
and
vii.
72
the
good German
vii. 78; on
learning to
what the reader brings to and
expects from the author, 249 ; demands of the
desire of victory,
as a
Writing^
means
Reading
and (Zarathustra
x.
127.
discourse),
xi.
43-5-
Yea-saying.
See
Affirmation."
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
347
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
of, v.
89
the desire
of, for
patience
324; sympathy
of,
with, 325.
of,
youth
grave song,
xi.
130-4.
of, xii.
45.
Greece,
77.
Zarathustra apostrophises the sun at the
ii.
downgoing
Incipit Tragoedia,
x.
dawn
of his
271.
the same,
xi.
man is a rope
I love the great
de~
I am
thee a present
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
348
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra
corpse, 17 ; having slept he wakes and says in
a new light hath dawned on me ; /
his heart
panions and
corpses
no more
19
will,
dead com
need companions
which
will
he discourse to the
their downgoing, 21
his animals
ongoing be
my
come
to him,
wanteth
will
26
to be
well laden, 25
it
capture
the child
beginning, 27
the wise
word
own
freedom
wilderness^
is
his fancy
beyond man, 31
and
speaks
on
courses
its
the lion
in
28
virtue,
and lordship
dis
and
passions, 38 ; the
on
reading and writing, 43 ;
pale criminal, 40
the
speaks to the youth who had avoided him
virtue, joys,
;
tree
47
on the
stra to
continues
death,
49
on
to
51
on
the death
many
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
349
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra
of neighbour-love, 68 ; of the way of the creating
70 ; of old and young women, 74 ; falling
asleep under a fig-tree, he is bitten by an adder,
one,
"
when ye have
all denied
me will I return un
of a
child
a mirror.
with
the
Interpreting
dream
he
paths do
I tread,
in the
I
God ?
99
Isles
Then
creating
Ipray ye
that
is
from
he
100; willing emancipated, 101
discourses on the Pitiful, 102 ; the Priests, 105 ;
the Rabble, 113 ; finds again
the Virtuous, 109
the well of delight and apostrophises it
my heart
on which my summer burneth
how my sum
suffering,
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
350
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra
the bridge to his highest hope, 117; with preach
ers of equality will I not be mixed up and con
my
doctrine of life
ers of equality ,
rising to
and are
118
119
and
in
surpass
of an ancient temple in the Tarantulas den, 119;
is there bitten by a Tarantula, but refuses to
dance,
ones
song
my
itself,
124
he lighted upon a green meadow
peacefully surrounded with trees and bushes
wheremaidens were dancing, 126 j hisdancesong
is
in the forest
his
on him, but
I saw
no
rose,
many
thorns
hung
139; he promises
future
alien to
me and a mockery
unto
my
children will
the child of
my
fathers,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
351
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra
145
moon
Immacu
145 verily not as creators, as procreators, or asjubilators do ye love the earth, 146 ;
recalls that he once was the dupe of the pure
late perception,
his discourse
stillest
hours, 158;
"
"It
"
it
and
his vary
in addressing
pupils,
171
hunchbacks,
he discourses on
ii.
VI,
Human,
all>too-Human> i.
352
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra
Manly Prudence
that
is
terrible,
171
the declivity
manly prudence,
173; last and dis
it is
his first
once more he
my
last
manly pru
I am
and
Involuntary Bliss, 193-4;
came
and
unto
nigher
nigher
happiness
him, 198 ;
speaks his optimistic avowal of life in his apos
meditates
203
he
satirises their
customs, 205
when
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
353
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra
he
calls
that
adore, they
answer Zarathustra
is Godless,
207 ;
Great Noontide, 209 on the
winter, a bad guest, sitteth with me
Olive
Mount
at home, 209
the purpose
Zarathustra
on
his experiences
The volumes
referred to under
I,
Birth
Tragedy.
II,
354
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra
be not considerate of thy neighbour, 242-3 ;
the instability of all things, 245 ; consecrates his
not to a nobility purdisciples to a new nobility
table
248
the spirit of gravity, 234; his doctrine of SelfLove, 235 ; Old and New Tables, 239; whilst
waiting his hour Zarathustra telleth himself his
own story, 239 ; on ancient pessimistic babbling
Indifference,
O
I then cruel ? But I say what falleth that shall
:
one
s foes,
255
;
therefore must ye pass by many
the unworthiness of the democracy,
serve yourselves
a one, 256
pray you
the
"good
and
261
man-hearts,
hard! 261
the
just,"
teaches
them
"
260
encour
"
to
Become
thatthou mayest
that I may one
.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
355
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra
the convalescent
most
et seq.
I come again
O my soul
eternally,
.
270;
271
Great Longing
the
song
seven seals, or
the Zarathustra
kingdom of a thousand
years,
the
human
all
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
ail-too -Human,
356
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra
treads, unawares,
able,
302
him
one,
304
Zara
and pro
Zara
320-1
Zarathustra encounters
my guest, 331;
which he endeavours to
turning, the
the
Zarathustra
tree,
;
be
337 ; the
Greeting, 340 ; on returning to his cave he again
hears the cry of distress, this time issuing from
VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day.
X, Joyful
XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and EviL XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii.
XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
357
INDEX
NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra
it,
his
346-7
347
rupts,
Man, 350
the Supper,
347
spoke
now do
"
"we
350
desire
the Higher
the
superman
to live,
351
men
crown of
the laughter
this rose-garland
crown
... 361
pinions
373 ; and
ing
becomes
the
ugliest
391
man
finds expres
Zarathustra
Rounde
Thou
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
all-too-Human,
358
i.
VII,
Human,
ail-too-
ZARATHUSTRA
398 ;
great star, thou deep eye of happiness
the Sign, 398 ; a sign that cometh to him that
.
- an old
atheist, xv. 410; alluded to, 108.
- the
people s estimation of the good,
xvi.
259
on the lack of
266
the
my predecessors,
education, main
the
"will
to
suffering,"
276
277 ; the
typical suffering of the reformer, 279; can only
dispense happiness once the order of rank is rein
despair,
Human,
ii.
Wisdom.
359
INDEX
281
stored,
NIETZSCHE
his
doctrines
must be taught,
281.
s life-work,xvii.
quoted, 4
future
on deliver
endowment
of
Wagner
in the essay
Richard Wagner
in
Bay-
life task,
quoted, x. 350.
Nietzsche and the reader
i.
15.
whom
he would allow
xiii.
to
12.
sf Tragedy.
tional Institutions
of Season,
ii.
VI,
Human,
360
ZELLER
ZOOLOGY
mental idea
ceived 1881
thus noted
classified
of,
under
written in
Wagner gave
131-
the reward
of, v.
186.
Zeus, his
and
gift
v.
53.
x.
296.
Wisdom.
361
VOCABULARY OF FOREIGN
P.
V.
COHN,
B.A.
THE
I.
p.
5.
in artibus\ in art.
profanum vulgus
9.
p.
10.
p.
25.
terminus technicus
Welt, etc.
World
artistic end.
and Idea.
as Will
principium individuationis
principle of in-
dividualisation.
p.
35.
p.
51.
Moira
Fate.
perpetuutn vestigium
endless trace.
Oceanides
p.
57.
p.
96. epos
p. 100.
Daughters of Oceanus.
epic.
deus ex machina
who
God
in the car.
The god
known
as
machina.
vovg (nous) mind.
:
p.
02. sophist:
make
"the
364
his school.
p. 103.
daimonion
supernatural thing.
lit,
dai-
theos.
voice"
ing
per defectum
p. 109. ancilla
p.
(see context).
by
p. 123.
deficiency.
handmaid.
p. 121.
"warn
a priori
"
lit.
logic to ideas
p. 132.
p.
dithyramb hymn
Dionysus.
:
in
denouement: unravelling of a
p. 142. stilo
plot.
eternal verities.
rappresentativo
representative style.
imperium:
p. 171.
p. 177.
empire.
rule,
tit
for tat.
365
sub specie
"
(lit.
").
p. 187.
ZWz
p. 191.
II.
p.
12.
tf
bellum
war.
23.
to.
of
all
against
Xa$s
all.
live without
fliaffag (lathe biosas)
attention
to
drawing
yourself (lit. escape
:
quality,
solemn mass.
p.
37.
missa solemnis
p.
47.
From
p.
55.
Vergil.
odium figulinum
ters).
agens\ agent.
p.
58.
p.
p.
absurdum
est: I believe it
because
p.
Horace
68. in
p.
82.
p.
83.
summa
Epigones
fatum
altogether.
see on
libellorum
I.,
p. 155.
An
89.
p.
p. 100.
Orpheans
followers of Orpheus.
effective terms.
World."
Logos\ Word.
p.
in.
plaudite,
man
amid!: applaud,
plays were wont
my
to
friends!
Ro
end with a
re
26. existentia
existence.
indispensablecondition.
ambulo, ergo
sum
walk, therefore
am.
30.
atomon
veritas eterna
p. 132.
see above, on
argumenta ad kominem:
128.
p.
arguments
ad
ex concessis
p. 144.
p. 145.
chalaza: hail.
p. 149.
prczmissa: premisses.
p. 152.
deus ex machina
p. 156.
see on
I.,
p. 100.
\
I
it
hate the un
at a distance.
From Horace.
p. 158.
causa
efficiens-.
causa finalis
p. 165.
efficient (i.e.
vBiKog (neikos)
strife.
a-roppo/a/ (aporrhoiat)
ovru
immediate) cause.
final cause.
outflows.
p. 169.
p. 176.
p.
p. 182.
p.
88.
hidden quality.
templum: temple.
mythos: myth.
III.
p.
55. laisser-aller
p.
p.
by a
benefit of nature.
fertility
of genius.
p. 104.
p.
omne
all
that class.
p. 137.
p. 141.
The name
p. 147.
exprofesso-. avowedly.
p. 153.
p. 162.
punctum
IV.
p.
12. tutti
p.
17. nil
p.
19.
unisono
all
one sound,
admirari\ see on
II., p.
67.
33-
p.
36.
tamquam
re bene gesta
as
if
been won.
on
etc.; see
II., p. 12.
p.
50.
bellum>
p.
58.
p.
p.
69.
p.
p.
totum ponere
p. 103. raison
p. 165.
V.
p.
3.
d etre-,
to present as a whole.
see on
II., p.
67.
censeo-.
however,
am
n.
of the opinion.
p.
20. deus
p.
29.
ex machina see on
;
a posteriori-,
plied to
p.
p. 100.
the
later": in
logic, ap
on experience.
based
arguments
lit. "from
though
I.,
life
let
be destroyed.
370
truth be done,
p.
56. historians
de
M.
Thiers
M. Thiers band of
historians.
p.
59 theologuS)
p.
60.
p.
73. ira
etc.
p.
ex causafinali: from a
p.
83.
from
on
soul.
efficient causes.
final cause.
p. 29.
in reference
Hannibal.
p.
p.
sum
being.
vivere living.
:
see on
II., p. 1
28.
think, therefore
I live,
therefore
am.
think.
VI.
p.
3.
p.
6.
acedia
carelessness.
(Odes, I V.I,
p.
12.
i.
otium
5).
leisure.
O si tacuisses,philosophusmansisses
O, if only
p.
24. causa
p.
36.
cause.
monumentum
perennius: a
cere
monument
generally nothing
butaphantom created
60. esse
see on
V,
p. 94.
operari\ operating.
p.
70.
pudendum
thing to be ashamed
know
of.
75.
372
is
for the
HUMAN, ALL-TOO-HUMAN
tearful morality.
p.
p.
much
it.
p. 100.
abvrov (aduton)
p. 114.
sensu allegorico
p. 116.
consensus sapientium
sanctuary.
an allegorical sense.
in
philosophers.
consensus gentium
is
thecommon opinion of
common
the
opinion of
the nations.
p. 129.
daimonion; see on
p. 135. si
on
croity etc.: if
I.,
we
p.
103.
think that
we
we love our
are
much mis
to despise one
spernere se sperni:
being
despised.
p. 155.
epigoni: after-born
= weak
imitators),
art.
p. 175. corriger la
p. i%i.
feuilleton:
newspaper
serial story or
des
criptive article.
des\ c sharp
and d
flat.
p. 195.
ctSy
p. 199.
of
Dante
373
great epic.
The
pudendum
see above, on
powerful mind.
p. 229.
nous
p. 70.
ne, etc.
we
in
that
direction.
p. 230. ah,
p. 251.
mon,
pensum\ school
exercise.
life,
p. 316.
p. 316.
quand
when
la populace, etc.:
p. 3.
321. patria
one
the masses
is lost.
native land.
p. 327. in
summa
p. 328. le
p. 334. ecrasez
p. 345. polls
p. 375.
in
sum.
city, city-state.
punctum saliens
umana commedia
see on
III., p. 162.
human comedy.
of coalescence of Dante
media
"
and Balzac
s
"
maine."
cause of war.
p. 379.
casus
p. 384.
belli
374
p. 29.
"
sort
Divina Corn-
Comedie Hu-
HUMAN, ALL-TOO-HUMAN
p. 389.
p.
bellum, etc.
VII.
p.
I.
see on
see on
II., p. 12.
II., p.
65.
maybe rendered
"
"
"
is
Ipsissimum
"
p.
14.
the selfest
croyez-moi
etc.
also has
p.
21.
plaudite
p.
24.
pereat,
long as
35. beatus ille
at
my
selfest."
and means
lit.
thing."
my
friend, error
merits.
history in a nutshell,
see on
amid]
etc.
neuter,
believe me,
its
p.
p.
u.
II., p.
in.
let
I
quiprocul negotiis
happy he who
from money-
lending,
with his
p.
52.
oremus
nos,
own
Deus
God work.
laboret: let us
Nietzsche
p.
to
work and
to
pray."
meaning.
p.
64.
pulchrum,
etc.
beauty
of the few.
375
is
p.
94.
p.
1 1
6.
p. 129.
p. 143.
vox populi
numen\ godhead.
tuum\ mine and
meum>
thine.
p. 157.
Jmeute:
p. 161.
gaudeamus
riot.
The opening
of
famous German
students song.
p. 184.
from
p. 202.
man.
p. 203.
ignorantia legis
p. 211.
aquum:
p. 219. in
p. 222. le
p.
229.
equity.
majorem gloriam
bon Dieu
Moira
Natura,
p. 297. lese
p. 302.
Destiny.
p. 270. arriere-pensee
p. 295.
ignorance of law.
etc.
majest^
Dialogues des
after thought.
376
WAGNER
ESSAYS ON
p. 315. polls
p. 325.
on VI.,
see
p. 345.
tellect.
p.
admirari
3.
limpidezza
p.
5.
L amour, etc.
67.
ETC.
most
it is
9.
5 1
clearness.
p.
p.
II., p.
ON WAGNER,
VIII. ESSAYS
see on VIII., p.
see on
sacrifice of the in
Jesuit phrase.
p. 352. nil
egotistic,
la philosophic, etc.
for the
philosophy
not enough
is
mass of mankind
they need
holiness.
I made a good voyage when
been shipwrecked.
p.
p.
1 3.
p.
14.
par
excellence
of,
have
a neurotic.
down
to the
ground.
p.
15.
Pulchrum
est
paucorum hominum\
see on
VII., p. 64.
p.
17.
Sursum
Bumbum
to
upwards!
a nonsense German exclamation
mock high-sounding
377
language.
sit
venia verbo
may
p.
p.
p.
24. ancilla
p.
actor.
dramaturgica
recitative secco
handmaid
Genoese
to drama.
style.
recitative.
dry
leitmotif: leading motive (applied particu
:
Wag
ner opera).
p.
29.
etc.:
Wagnerus,
on chastity.
gay a scienza
p.
32. la
P-
33- fable
p.
p.
40. cave
p.
50.
convenue
musicantibus
of music and musicians.
canem
moi
est toujours
ways hateful.
fceda superstitio
51.
in
matters
feminini generis
le
p.
ha issable
foul superstition.
How
long, pray,
"
How
"
373
WAGNER
ESSAYS ON
p.
60.
p.
p.
67.
etc.
est,
is
p.
Flaubert
man
testable, the
is
always de
is
nothing, the
work
everything.
69. delicatesses
delicatenesses.
rdme moderne
the
modern
soul.
p.
79.
p.
p.
to understand everything
is
to
Mme
"
stand everything
is
to
pardon every
thing."
p.
90.
C est
la, etc.
and
p.
91.
feel
aXo 2
a>*p
It is madness to seek
beyond our strength.
ar
to think
fl
Socrates.
with gusto.
p.
P-
95- genres
p.
p.
no.
p. 115.
lively
dubito
p. 136. il faut
doubt
on
fire.
p. 11.
it.
one must
tell
oneself.
p. 140.
serious studies.
379
non
tarn, etc.:
little
source.
p. 143.
p.
54.
rs^va/
p. 155. a,piGrzvtiv(aristeueiri).
No single equivalent
"
expression.
WX/
p. 157.
(sophrosyne)-.
2ay<pp0<76v7;
temperance,
self-
restraint.
p. 158.
nugari
60.
to
on possessing.
trifle,
"
ayuv
(agon)
"
380
etc.,
at
"
"
"
"
"
p. 164.
the rationalising
pudendum
see
on VI.,
spirit."
p. 70.
see tragedy.
p. 1 66. vide tragoediam\
p.
IX.
moral censorship.
p.
5.
p.
6.
credo quia
p.
8.
lento
8.
post
absurdum
on
II., p.
65.
hoc-,
p.
p.
54.
p.
41. arriere-pensees
p.
p.
p.
49.
p.
50. abstracta:
p.
pudenda
active
origo
life.
contemplative
life.
shameful origin.
abstracts.
I
strange to me.
p.
est\ see
spernere se ipsum
381
61. arriere-pensees
p.
65.
Nietzsche
humani
as objective
p.
p.
93. in effigie
p.
99.
p. 136.
p. 138.
origo
Moira\ see on
On
hidden god.
in effigy.
O pudenda
VII., p. 229
riesty etc.:
:
We
are
therefore there
of pity
p.
also be
them by
for
race."
p.
may
it
felt
"hatred
subjective
the human
in all
our feelings.
hidden quality,
p. 164.
refugium: refuge.
p. 173.
more straight
p. 179.
homo pa mphagus
omnivorous man.
Horace means
believe this:
"
let
don
382
a credulous person
t."
It
seems strange,
ever have
Jew should
this
inexplicable superstitions.
p. 193.
esprit: wit.
p. 211.
p. 215.
bestia
book Spaccio
p.
see on
II., p.
67.
p. 223. in
summa
p. 258. chi
p.
263.
in
non ha non
ad
sum.
e
is
not.
of God.
p. 267.
facta
ficta
p. 303.
facts.
invented.
"Re-
"
known poem
p. 304. credo
well-
of Ovid.
believe
it
because
believe
it
because
it is
practical
383
life.
Rhodus
hie salta
here
is
Rhodes, here
leap.
P- 335-
p atria where
am
my
is
P 353- bon
p. 357.
3.
good form.
gloria
X.
p.
fatherland."
incipit tragcedia
incipit parcedia
p.
21. et hoc
primum
all
that breed.
first
to
p.
49. raison
p.
61. Vordre
etre
du jour pour
day
p.
p.
edy
le roi\
is
hidden history.
applaud,
over.
is
being
384
is
be
p.
physis
this is
nature, constitution.
p. 101.
pudendum
p. 104.
in eroticis
p. 115. esprit
matters of love.
in
wit.
p.
1 1
6.
p.
1 1
8.
Romanum Roman
imperium
Empire.
p. 125.
Vita nuova:
The New
Dante s auto
Life.
biography.
p. 128. regime: rule, system.
p. 129.
Ah I mon
Ah! my
ami, etc.:
friend,
principium individuationis
39. in
usum Delphinorum
see on
I.,
am
must
p. 25.
Dau
phins.
sics
royal princes.
p. 140.
bourgeois
middle-class.
noblesse: nobility.
esprit
Elegance
p. 165.
elegance.
p. 169.
2B
crimen
p. 185.
homopceta-.
p.
as poet.
mentiri
p. 191. les
p.
man
to
lie.
man
p. 207. sit
p. 213.
is
black,
sum,
etc.
am, therefore
I am.
p. 18.
reflect
reflect,
therefore
amor fati
love of (one
p. 235.
vis contemplativa
vis creativa
p. 238.
media vita
p. 254. esprit
otium:
p. 256.
p. 257.
on
IX., p. 48.
life.
contemplative power.
creative power.
p. 250. in
p. 255.
destiny.
s)
in the
midst of
life.
bellum\ see on
II., p.
12.
non
ridere, etc.
p.
see on
386
p. 3.
You
tremble,
would tremble
whither
p. 281. consensus-,
p. 286.
you
you knew
taking you.
naturalisme
naturalism.
289. deraisonnable
true truth.
addle-pated.
p. 290.
homines
p. 294.
disciplina voluntatis
p. 295.
p.
if
agreement.
la verite vraie
p.
am
my carcase?
more
far
religiosi
religious
men.
psychological
psychologica:
ele
gance.
artibus
in literature
and
art.
P- 335-
p. 336.
praxis
amor
very
own
(lit.
selfest).
practice.
of
God.
deus\ god.
in
summa
in
sum.
p. 349.
p. 365.
rimus remedium
rhyme
387
by brooding night
as a remedy.
XII.
EVIL.
p.
7.
p.
8.
niaiserie: stupidity.
p.
9.
a priori
p.
10.
see on
I.,
p. 123.
comedy.
mise en
scene-,
p.
12.
p.
13. adventavit,z\.c.\
stage setting.
p.
14.
p.
p.
p.
6.
causa prima\
a priori
17. niaiserie
1
8.
first
see on
cause.
I.,
p. 123.
allemande:
German
stupidity.
there is in it a soporific
quia, etc.: because
virtue (virtus dormitiva), the property
of which is to numb the senses (sensus
assoupire).
Assoupire
is
a comically
malgrt Ini.
atomon\ atom, indivisible thing.
p.
19.
p.
22. reductio
ity.
ad absurdum
reduction to absurd
uncaused cause.
p.
p.
28.
p.
the effect
human
ligion of
is
p.
34. sacrifizio
p.
35.
p.
41. tempo:
on VII.,
p. 25.
holy simplicity!
nuances
shades.
in moribus et artibus
p.
re
intelletto\ see
sancta simplicitas:
presto
humaine: the
suffering.
p.
deW
myself.
42. allegrissimo
in
morals and
art.
p.
on
p. 41.
"
advocate."
p.
p.
50. valeurs
p.
51. il
values.
he
le vrai que pour faire le bien
only looks for truth so as to do good.
ne cherche
389
54.
pour
64.
homines
religiosi\ see
Romanum
imperium
p.
65.
they are.
on X., p. 290.
see on X., p. 1
16.
p.
p.
let
is
How
moments
that
man
sees best
delicatezza
p.
religious
delicacy.
physical and
mys
union.
p.
71. rococo
p.
390
p.
p.
78.
homines
p.
88.
tempo
p.
91.
p.
religiosi\ see
is
on X.,
a vicious circle,
p. 290.
in real love
it is
p.
need the
stick.
p. 100.
p. 104.
neminem.etc.
all
06. laisser-aller
p.
p.
p.
in.
vrpofffe
love.
middle.
monster Chimera
p. 114.
whatever he was
he acts over in darkness.
quidquid) etc.
p. 115. licentia
morum
p.
in daylight,
licence of morals.
commonwealth.
133. montrer
p. 134.
ses plaies
to display
p. 254.
391
p. 32.
one
wounds.
p. 141.
caputmortuum\
Achemical
anything.
p. 142.
presque
rien
almost.
nothing.
p. 143.
bonce voluntatis
p. 145.
p. 148. cet,
etc.
that
phelian
p. 149.
p. 155.
Voila un
presto
of good
homme\
p. 162.
homo
there
a man.
man
of good
morals and
wasteful mind.
Parliamentarian.
that
easy-going
lit.
Pococurante,
"
care-little."
art.
detail.
senateur Pococurante-,
Tar tuffism
will.
fellow.
inpuncto: in
disinterested.
bonhomme: worthy
p. 174. ce
is
middle-class stupidity.
bonce voluntatis
p. 163. desinteresse
mephisto-
betise bourgeois e:
p.
ironic,
fatalistic,
spirit.
p. 161.
p. 165.
will,
392
without
p. 202. noli
p. 203.
p. 208.
me
rubate
tangere
p. 210.
p. 213.
resfacta
don
touch me.
thing made.
thing born.
je meprise:
despise.
noblesse
soul.
nobility.
p. 214. bourgeois:
middle-class person.
robbed.
res nata
p. 209.
wit.
soul.
romanciers: novelists.
boulevardiers de Paris: Parisian
men about
town.
in voluptate psychologica
in psychological
pleasure.
p. 219. lento
p. 229.
desinteressement
p. 230.
raffinement: refinement.
p. 231.
un bonhomme
disinterestedness.
sense as usual
p. 232.
is
The
contemptuous.
p. 234. polls
city (especially as
393
"
city-state
").
p. 236.
cornucopias
p. 238. difference
horns of plenty.
engendre haine
difference begets
hatred.
p. 239.
demi-monde
p. 240.
furca
half-world.
pitchfork.
naturam
naturam expellas
recurret
"
tamen usque
drive
furca,
progressus in simile
similar.
p. 252. contradictio in adjecto\ see
XIII.
p.
4.
p.
9.
p.
17.
virtue
is
see on
excellence
Tartuffism
I.,
p. 123.
above
all.
see
inerti<z\
de corps
p.
20. esprit
p.
21. desinteresse
on XL,
p. 295.
corporate
spirit.
disinterested.
394
p. 23.
enthusiasm.
a priori
par
enthousiasme
above, on
23. Schlecht
schlicht
bad.
both mean
p.
24.
p.
25.
\ ff
The two
simple.
simply."
6 g (esthlos)
K a x 6 g (kakos]
& e / X 6 g (deilos}
good.
bad.
cowardly.
ayadog
Xa
mains: bad.
[L k
p.
following words
"
26. bonus:
bellum
this
man
is
black.
good.
:
war.
good.
p.
28.
p.
p.
33. quaeritur:
p.
36.
^/^>
mystica
X6g
mystic union.
under
this flag.
doubtful.
it is
(deilos)
me
an"
wretched."
fAO%vrjpog (inochtheros]
bg (pizuros]
woeful.
,
^appy.
(dustuchein)
(A
(p
o p
to be unfortunate.
a (xumphora)
accident,
misfor
tune.
(gennaios)
395
p.
p.
48.
p.
chef
among
d?<zuvre\
equals.
:
nonchalance.
masterpiece.
happy
in the
heavenly kingdom,
52.
may
that
be swallowed up
shall
in
one
fire.
How
How
day
shall admire,
own
their
ness
the Christians
naught on
return
to
their former
bodies!
And
396
seat,
their
the charioteer
of
fire,
all
then must
"
version
his
own
the crowd of
What praetor
damaged by
visitors."
or consul or
pagan
priest in his
gazingonsuchasight,ofexultinginsuch
oy s ? And yet even now (at the present
hour) we in a measure have them by faith
397
of this passage
which
is
p.
p.
p.
71. si plus-,
p.
deadweight.
in
of doing
it.
doing harm
less, let it
p.
73.
p.
home-sickness for
the Cross.
tour de force
p.
p.
82.
p.
83. compositio
p.
v&
victis
woe
exile
").
to the vanquished
compounding
"
(for crimes).
immediate cause
happening).
p.
p.
90. progressus
p.
91.
altogether.
:
progress.
(lit.
cause of
93.
p.
95.
per analogiam
by analogy.
instrumentum instrument
morsus conscientice sting of conscience.
:
gaudium
joy.
p. 109.
p. 121.
morbidezza: morbidity.
novissima glories cupido: latest desire for
glory.
p. 129. in
to the greater
glory of music.
p. 131.
p. 134.
desinteressement
remedium
optimum:
p.
36.
instrument.
remedy.
disinterestedness.
best.
pereat mundus,
etc.
p. 143.
bidden.
p. 144.
je combats
spider
p. 145.
etc.
s
web.
right of the
first
night.
In
some
upon
his
night
of the latter
399
bride on
s
the
marriage.
first
This
VOCABULARY OF FORKICN
p. 151. crux,
p. 153.
p.
158.
RASES
ll
right
or at
vetitum
is,
any
ex hypothcsi: fundamentally.
homines
voluntatis
bona>
men
of good
p. 167.
p. 169.
prima facie
p. 170. il
faut
on the face of
abMir:
will.
it.
we must make
ourselves
stupid.
p. 171. hesychasts
p.
quietists.
p. 174.
see XIII.,
p. 28.
p. 176. ccenacula
clubs.
despectus sui
self-contempt.
p.
80.
causa fortior
p.
86.
stronger cause.
p. 187.
magnO)
etc.
From
in artibus ct litteris
p. 190.
par excellence
secretum
arts
and
letters.
unsurpassable.
interval.
Virgil.
down on
oneself.
secret.
400
factum brutum
petit fait
ce
raw
fact.
event.
little
untranslateable
petit faitalisme\
the
ce petit fatal-
p. 202.
F habitude,
etc.
elegantia syllogismi
p. 204. species
anarchistica
%aff[A ofiovruv
p. 206.
elegance of syllogism,
gap
la religion de la souffrance
the religion of
suffering.
p.
p.
p. 217.
p. 2
1 8.
p.
63. prestissimo
p.
forgive
p.
i.
to understand
all is
to
all.
69. unmonstreetunc/ia0s:3Lmonstera.ndacha.os.
see on XII., p. 145.
I art pour I art
;
2C
401
73.
un monslre,
etc.
a cheerful brute
is
better
From
to rush
into slavery.
Tacitus.
rich.
p.
77.
p.
and
p.
83.
free.
umanitd
humanity.
honnetes gens
respectable folk.
la bonne compagnie
le
good
society.
forbidden thing.
seigneur de Ferney the lord of Ferney,
vetitum
The
Voltaire.
"citizen
of
Geneva"
i.e.
is
Rousseau.
p.
84.
un
bel esprit
a wit.
rhonnetete: respectability.
hommes de lettres men of letters.
:
V insouciance
m
nonchalance.
p.
85. vide
p.
86.
a la Rousseau
p.
87.
Campagna romana
see.
:
in
Rousseau
:
the
manner.
Roman Campagna,
Rome.
Romulus must have been
drunk when he thought of building a
i.e.
il fallait,
etc.
on so ugly a site.
parce que, etc. because no nation has bor
rowed less from antiquity, because Spain
has undergone no classical influence.
city
402
Mar
know nothing else for
should make so great an effort.
And
riage"?
which
p.
89. le ttntbreux
p.
absurdus
cause he
Thor
is
p.
96. reine
p.
p.
see on
demonstratio
believe
him be
fool.
upper ten
p. 100. laisscr-aller
p. 103.
pure
est:
absurd.
high
(lit.
flight).
III., p. 55.
ad absurdum
proof by reduc
tion to absurdity.
marasmus femininus
feminine decadence.
p. 199.
p. 206.
infimarum,
etc.; see
juste milieu
among
p. 249.
pur,
etc.
its
p. 154.
equals.
p. 238. arriere-pensee
causa prima
on VIII.,
see on VII.,
cause.
p. 270.
first
on
V., p. 94.
403
99.
p. 260.
deus
p. 263.
cum grano
p. 264.
desiderata
p. 266.
myops
sensorium
a short-sighted God.
salts
p. 301.
primum
sense-system.
p. 312.
p.
313.
inventory.
mobile
inter pares-,
p. 308. in rebus
first
among
moralibus
homo natura
equals.
in matters of morals.
man
motive.
as nature.
fact.
3/1/1-
on XII.,
p. 23.
Pensees: Thoughts.
salt.
things to be desired.
inventarium
p. 282.
with a pinch of
to
p. 345. sophist
see on
p. 102.
I.,
force majeure
p. 352. inter pares
p. 353. esprit
see above, on
frondeur-.
spirit.
soil.
superior force.
p.
skirmishing
The Fronde
(ca.
301.
(lit.
slinging)
404
de rigueur-. compulsory.
p. 358. roturier:
plebeian.
\
indifferentism.
One
non plus
ultra-,
unsurpassable.
29.
p.
31.
a priori
see on
n.
p. 123.
I.,
principium contradictionis
principle of con
tradiction.
p.
(proton pseudos)
first false
hood.
p.
p.
44. a posteriori
48.
omne
illud, etc.
clearly
p.
50.
see
and
on V,
all is
p. 29.
true that
is
perceived
distinctly.
is
the seal of
truth.
dico
p.
52.
say.
une croyance^
lief with
etc.:
an almost instinctive be
me is that
every
so
p.
53.
man
lies
p.
55.
causa finalis
p.
56.
causa
final cause.
efficiens
this.
efficient cause.
405
of power
still
more
p.
p.
89.
primum
mobile
march
to infinity.
retreat to infinity.
efficient causes.
progress to infinity.
54.
r animal,
etc.
makes pro
made
p. 155.
p. 157.
p. 200.
p. 217. les
p. 202.
more
and
souls,
virtues
than
common
designs."
p. 226.
p. 232.
pulchrum
one must
.94.
live, in
order to
p. 244.
primum
p. 250.
pudeurs\ reticences.
p. 252.
p. 255.
suggestion mentale
p.
259. erotica
p. 282.
mental suggestion.
matters of love.
406
p. 266. expressive
p. 267. tons, etc.
expressiveness.
all
who
One
has
mignardise: affectedness.
p. 275. in
p. 302.
p. 336.
aurea mediocritas
Horace.
diners chez
in the
matter of music
From
golden mean.
Magny:
dinners at
Magny s.
niaiserie anglaise
English stupidity.
Principe: Prince.
p. 350. delicatesse: delicacy.
p. 351.
new
be
you
;
to
for us
munity
we
agan): nothing in ex
nkrateid]: continence.
(askesis): discipline, exercise.
407
is
to
equalise.
p. 355.
otium\
leisure.
laisser-aller
p. 368.
p. 377.
see on
III., p. 55.
voluntas: will.
more sublime.
cursed be he
p. 381. maledetto,Qtc.:
immortal
who saddens an
spirit.
etc.
made
fly in
company.
We must
leave that to
is
To
the
ipso facto
p. 396. in
p.
of
very nature.
its
praxi\ in practice.
in the
impossible.
p. 397.
pur, cru
pure, raw.
p. 412.
amor fati\
expressive frenzy.
blind alley.
see on VIII.,
408
p. 59.
THE TWILIGHT OF
IDOLS,
p.
THE ANTI-CHRIST,
either
God
ETC.
or Nature,
my
spirits rise,
3.
its
my
valour
wound.
pudeurs: modesties.
"
"
4. contradictio^ etc.;
p.
6.
p. 9, 10.
On
ne>
consensus sapientium
agreement of philoso
phers.
p.
ii.
in
appearance, a freak
in soul.
buffo
grotesque.
contest.
p.
13.
Agon:
p.
14.
monstrum
p.
15.
Lerigueur-. compulsory.
p.
17.
p.
8.
in
animo
freak in soul.
409
20.
causa sui
cause of
ens realissimum
itself.
most
p.
p.
p.
31. ecce
p.
32.
p.
p.
36. antecedentia
p.
37.
horrendum pudendum
and ashamed of.
p.
38.
nervus sympathicus
p.
p.
49.
pia fraus
p.
51.
Deutschland^ etc
per
homo
we must
real entity.
kill
Behold the
the passions.
Man
se: in itself.
believe one
who has
tested.
antecedents.
thing to be dreaded
sympathetic nerve.
pious fraud.
:
all!
etc.
pulchrum,
p.
56.
p.
p.
").
lactea ubertas
milky copiousness.
p.
64.
p.
70.
proprium
p.
71.
peculiar characteristic.
p.
78.
410
THE TWILIGHT OF
p. 79, 80.
Agon
see above, on
p.
p. 13.
verrai, etc.
me
ETC.
THE ANTI-CHRIST,
IDOLS,
read myself,
shall
Is it possible that
shall say
been so clever ?
"
have
"
p.
p.
85.
p.
89.
pur
et vert
p.
91.
per
p.
96. in infinitum
privy part.
best.
optimum:
downright
06.
il est
p. 32.
it is unworthy of noble
communicate the pain which
indigne, etc.
they
feel.
grandeur de c&ur
greatness of heart.
canaille:
p. 109.
p.
hearts to
p.
on
(lit.
p. 100. laisser-aller
p.
par
mob.
excellence
downright, thorough.
on XV.,
p.
p. 20.
396.
p. 114.
XV,
411
p. 343.
p. 115.
niaiserie allemande
p. 116.
p. 117.
p. 127.
stupidity.
p. 345.
mindedness.
p. 132. praxis-, practice.
p. 135.
peccatum originate
p. 137.
par
original sin.
p. 140. arriere-pensee-,
on
p. 109.
afterthought.
see above, on
p. 142.
nervus sympathicus
p. 143.
ardeurs
p. 146.
p. 38.
ardours.
absolutum
p. 147.
ultimum\
p. 155.
non plus
absolute.
last thing.
ultra-,
unsurpassable degree.
p. 158. in historicis-. in
matters of history.
in
matters of psyschology.
p. 167.
p. 168. le
grand,
esprit
p. 70.
master of irony.
wit.
imperieux: imperious.
Romanum
p. 175.
imperium
p. 179.
in psychologicis
see above, on
412
p. 164.
THE TWILIGHT OF
p.
80. canaille
p.
88.
ultima
THE ANTI-CHRIST,
IDOLS,
ratio-,
perfection.
he
is
a festival in himself.
in praxi
p. 197.
p. 201.
p.
ETC.
is
the
Maid of Orleans,
of God.
folie circulaire
p. 204.
imperium
recurring mania.
empire.
In hoc signo
by this sign.
thou
shalt conquer
this
by
sign
the Latin version of the motto on
in hoc signo
vinces
is
("
"
Constantine
banners.)
p. 215.
p. 216. in flagranti
p. 217. in
red-handed.
pulchrum,
etc.; see
on VII.,
p. 64.
par
mystic union.
excellence
p. 17.
413
p. 230.
rancunes
p. 231.
p. 135.
rancours.
humanitas
humanity.
dies nefastus
calendar).
p. 278. arriviste.
this
"
"
at
any
price.
HOMO AND
XVII. ECCE
p.
3.
nitimur in vetitum
is
we
POEMS.
strive
towards what
forbidden.
p.
p.
in
men speak
their cups
p.
p.
37.
German
the
(lit.
in
unique
fashion.
the truth
wine there
(lit.
of
its
is
own
when
in
truth).
kind).
de fontibus,
etc.
Diogenes
p.
39.
Laertius.
exungue Napoleonem
414
the
lion.
omme\
p.
p.
42. mise-en-scene
p.
43.
p.
p.
54.
stage-setting.
amor fati;
that sort.
all
highest achievement.
know
thyself.
toutesmesaudacesetfinesses-,
and
p.
all
myaudacities
subtleties.
German language
union.
p.
p. 109.
dithyramb
p.
1 1
6. petits faits
p.
1 1
8.
freethinkers,
see on
little
I.,
p. 131.
events.
(lit.
for
want of a
better).
p. 122.
Verum
p. 123.
laughingly."
dicere
Deutschland,ttc.\
everything.
p. 124. in historicis: in history.
nevrose nationale
nerves.
p. 128. la canaille-,
the rabble.
415
wit.
amor fati\
p. 139. in psychologists
p. 140.
in
matters of psychology.
"
is
p. 143.
circular
this
madness."
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These
five historical
rise to
art,
and thought.
Now
is
amply
reflected in
contemporary
age,
and
that
literature,
a poet.
is
It is as
a poet
"
mend themselves
there
is
Gobineau was a
("
America.
"
We
NIETZSCHE
HIS LIFE
AND
WORKS
ANTHONY
By
M.
Preface by Dr.
103 pages,
LUDOVICI
OSCAR LEVY
is.
&
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Co)
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standpoint.
"
ANTHONY
M. LUDOVICI.
Not only
to the
book ought
to be of particular value
and
seeing that
the
is
it
first
Art.
Mr
all
deal
Ludovici
more
besides.
"
things,"
says the
To
Mr
"
simplicity
are
upheld, and
this
is
observed."
art
in
can
and
be the flower
which an
aristocratic
THE MASTERY OF
By
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LIFE.
WRENCH.
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This book
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The author
artistic,
RELIGIONS AND
PHILOSOPHIES OF THE EAST.
J.
Author of
*"
All
KENNEDY,
M.
"The
Quintessence of Nietzacbe.*
Crown 8va
6s.
East,"
the East
is
bound up
net
and
in its religions
all
the
wisdom
earliest
Mr.
J.
of
B.C.
at giving in a single
religions
and philosophies
India,
feature of the
influence of the
book
is
guidance
in this respect.
ample, that
It
of
in
may
now
be remembered,
for
ex
who,
upon the
in his turn, as
Nietzsche,"
shown
in
much
influence on Nietzsche,
Mr. Kennedy
"
Quintessence
is
generations to come.
for
many
T.
WERNER
LAURIE, CLIFFORD S
INN,
LONDON
THE PHILOSOPHY
OF FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
By H.
L.
Demy
MENCKEN
(FISHER UNWIN)
One of the most interesting and instructive books that has come
from the American press in many a long day. Mr. Mencken can
In addition, he has something to write about." Educational
write.
Review.
A clear exposition, in vigorous, straightforward language, and a
Outlook.
really interesting and thoughtful biographical memoir."
A very readable and clear account of the philosophy and the
New York Sun.
philosopher."
1
"
"
MEN
By
VS.
THE MAN
L.
and
MENCKEN
Co.,
NEW
mt
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more
years."
"
"
to see
of
Topics,
LEO
G. SERA by
M. KENNEDY.
6d. net.
(JOHN LANE.)
Dr
and
"
of the race.
Stimulating chapters on Stendhal,
Nietzsche, Goethe, The Origin of Society, Work, and the
Aristocratic Ideal, show current opinions of Genius, Aristo
cracy, Democracy, Sport, and Sexuality in a new light
Scientific thought is put upon a new basis more in conformity
The audacity of Dr
with modern Continental views.
Sera s theories has evoked much discussion in England and
on the Continent ; and his work is certain to appeal to all
serious thinkers, and to students of modern moral problems.
eration
be well
"Written
this character, few readers could peruse the volume without intel
Western Morning News.
lectual quickening and expansion."
"A
vigorously written bit of
Birmingham Post.
thinking.
work, packed
full
of
shrewd
"
"The
and of
own
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE:
HIS LIFE AND WORK.
MUGGE,
By M. A.
i
os. 6d.
Ph.D.
Third Edition. )
(FISHER UNWIN.)
To
those
who have
already perused
Dr Miigge s
valuable
and prophet.
Almost invaluable to the student of Nietzsche is the com
plete and accurate bibliography, at present the most reliable
compendium of English and foreign literature on this subject
obtainable.
misunderstood."
PRESS CRITICISMS.
1
Undoubtedly the
best
Welcomed by
"
THE QUINTESSENCE OF
NIETZSCHE.
By
M.
J.
KENNEDY.
6s.
370 pages,
(T.
WERNER
net.
LAURIE.)
German philosopher s
Church
English
Democracy,
Socialism,
The
general.
application of the
politics, the
first
to
principles
and
to
British
of
England,
Institutions
in
letters
has thrown new light on Nietzsche s opinions
concerning love, woman, and marriage, all of which are
referred to or cited in the course of the work.
Quotations
are given from all Nietzsche s writings, no work of the
For the chapters
philosopher being left unmentioned.
C M ample
dealing with Nietzsche s life, studies, travels,
use has been made of the newly issued autobiography,
"Ecce Homo," from which several quotations are given.
The volume
is
tastefully illustrated,
NIETZSCHE
"
A.
R.
as.
6d.
Mr Orage
IN
made
is
further pro
index.
and
full
New
Age.
176
and judgment.
teaching, which
many
By
Fcap.
pages.
8vo,
will
"
NIETZSCHE, The
ORAGE.
With
By A.
Portrait.
Ss pages.
Crown
8vo, boards,
is.
net.
R.
(T. N,
FOULIS.)
"
This
esting
little
and
readable."
in
England
very inter
HENRI LICHTENBERGER,
PROF.
WITH AN INTRODUCTION
BY
M.
J.
KENNEDY.
Although
Nietzsche
last
three
or
four
English
55.
net.
works
with
dealing
few years,
it is
Prof. Lichten-
j
berger s book, while containing sections which form a good
may be
now
in its fourteenth
into
German by Mrs.
scent
and early
emancipation,"
French
his
and
book
is
Foerster-Nietzsche.
training,
and
edition,
studies,
his philosophical
Nietzsche s de
his
"intellectual
message, are
all fully
summed up
in the
T. N.
FOULIS, PUBLISHER
WHO
TO BE MASTER OF
IS
THE WORLD?
An
By A. M. LUDOVICI.
With a Preface by Dr OSCAR LEVY.
pages,
2$.
6d. net.
(T. N. FOULIS.)
numerous philosophers,
scientists
who may be
Nietzsche
s position.
"
The
anism really
means."
and
historians,
Friedrich
Glasgow Herald.
If this little book does not impel some young and gallant spirits
Mr
to the works of the philosopher, I shall be surprised.
Ludovici shows such clearness, method, constructive art, as belong
Westminster Gazette.
to a master of exposition."
"
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(PROBSTHA1N.)
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appeared."
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(1880-1905).
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IB. 6d.
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The two
felt
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question,
writers have
together
with
several
authors
who,
although
known
to the
known
in
to
century
basis of
recognise
s liberal
new
the
necessity of
and romantic
traditions.
FRAU FOERSTER-NIETZSCHE
showed
for Fritz
my
brought
me
lot
importance to
my
The present
my own
brother s
of
things,
had already
publication
is
productions."
posthumous works.
death,
and incorpor
Though published
connec
in
VOL.
II.
added
to
different
have not
original.
appear shortly.
By
NEW YORK
(BOSTON AND
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN
Co., 1912)
THE PHILOSOPHY OF
NIETZSCHE
An
By
CHATTERTON-HILL
Dr. G.
"
"
German
tongue.
PUBLISHER S ANNOUNCEMENT
Nietzsche translation is now completed, the pub
begs to suggest to that part of the public which takes
the lead in matters of taste and intellect, that these volumes
should not be wanting in the library of any cultured person.
The antagonism to Nietzsche s teaching, which first took the
As
this
lisher
come more
generally
known through
this translation.
The
."
development, &c., so
T. N.
91
GT.
FOULIS, PUBLISHER
15
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