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<h2> CHAPTER II. THE FREE SPIRIT </h2>
<p>24. O sancta simplicitiatas! In what strange simplification and
falsification man lives! One can never cease wondering when once one has
got eyes for beholding this marvel! How we have made everything around us
clear and free and easy and simple! how we have been able to give our
senses a passport to everything superficial, our thoughts a godlike desire
for wanton pranks and wrong inferences!—how from the beginning, we
have contrived to retain our ignorance in order to enjoy an almost
inconceivable freedom, thoughtlessness, imprudence, heartiness, and gaiety—in
order to enjoy life! And only on this solidified, granite-like foundation
of ignorance could knowledge rear itself hitherto, the will to knowledge
on the foundation of a far more powerful will, the will to ignorance, to
the uncertain, to the untrue! Not as its opposite, but—as its
refinement! It is to be hoped, indeed, that LANGUAGE, here as elsewhere,
will not get over its awkwardness, and that it will continue to talk of
opposites where there are only degrees and many refinements of gradation;
it is equally to be hoped that the incarnated Tartuffery of morals, which
now belongs to our unconquerable "flesh and blood," will turn the words
round in the mouths of us discerning ones. Here and there we understand
it, and laugh at the way in which precisely the best knowledge seeks most
to retain us in this SIMPLIFIED, thoroughly artificial, suitably imagined,
and suitably falsified world: at the way in which, whether it will or not,
it loves error, because, as living itself, it loves life!</p>
<p>25. After such a cheerful commencement, a serious word would fain be
heard; it appeals to the most serious minds. Take care, ye philosophers
and friends of knowledge, and beware of martyrdom! Of suffering "for the
truth's sake"! even in your own defense! It spoils all the innocence and
fine neutrality of your conscience; it makes you headstrong against
objections and red rags; it stupefies, animalizes, and brutalizes, when in
the struggle with danger, slander, suspicion, expulsion, and even worse
consequences of enmity, ye have at last to play your last card as
protectors of truth upon earth—as though "the Truth" were such an
innocent and incompetent creature as to require protectors! and you of all
people, ye knights of the sorrowful countenance, Messrs Loafers and
Cobweb-spinners of the spirit! Finally, ye know sufficiently well that it
cannot be of any consequence if YE just carry your point; ye know that
hitherto no philosopher has carried his point, and that there might be a
more laudable truthfulness in every little interrogative mark which you
place after your special words and favourite doctrines (and occasionally
after yourselves) than in all the solemn pantomime and trumping games
before accusers and law-courts! Rather go out of the way! Flee into
concealment! And have your masks and your ruses, that ye may be mistaken
for what you are, or somewhat feared! And pray, don't forget the garden,
the garden with golden trellis-work! And have people around you who are as
a garden—or as music on the waters at eventide, when already the day
becomes a memory. Choose the GOOD solitude, the free, wanton, lightsome
solitude, which also gives you the right still to remain good in any sense
whatsoever! How poisonous, how crafty, how bad, does every long war make
one, which cannot be waged openly by means of force! How PERSONAL does a
long fear make one, a long watching of enemies, of possible enemies! These
pariahs of society, these long-pursued, badly-persecuted ones—also
the compulsory recluses, the Spinozas or Giordano Brunos—always
become in the end, even under the most intellectual masquerade, and
perhaps without being themselves aware of it, refined vengeance-seekers
and poison-Brewers (just lay bare the foundation of Spinoza's ethics and
theology!), not to speak of the stupidity of moral indignation, which is
the unfailing sign in a philosopher that the sense of philosophical humour
has left him. The martyrdom of the philosopher, his "sacrifice for the
sake of truth," forces into the light whatever of the agitator and actor
lurks in him; and if one has hitherto contemplated him only with artistic
curiosity, with regard to many a philosopher it is easy to understand the
dangerous desire to see him also in his deterioration (deteriorated into a
"martyr," into a stage-and-tribune-bawler). Only, that it is necessary
with such a desire to be clear WHAT spectacle one will see in any case—merely
a satyric play, merely an epilogue farce, merely the continued proof that
the long, real tragedy IS AT AN END, supposing that every philosophy has
been a long tragedy in its origin.</p>
<p>26. Every select man strives instinctively for a citadel and a privacy,
where he is FREE from the crowd, the many, the majority—where he may
forget "men who are the rule," as their exception;—exclusive only of
the case in which he is pushed straight to such men by a still stronger
instinct, as a discerner in the great and exceptional sense. Whoever, in
intercourse with men, does not occasionally glisten in all the green and
grey colours of distress, owing to disgust, satiety, sympathy, gloominess,
and solitariness, is assuredly not a man of elevated tastes; supposing,
however, that he does not voluntarily take all this burden and disgust
upon himself, that he persistently avoids it, and remains, as I said,
quietly and proudly hidden in his citadel, one thing is then certain: he
was not made, he was not predestined for knowledge. For as such, he would
one day have to say to himself: "The devil take my good taste! but 'the
rule' is more interesting than the exception—than myself, the
exception!" And he would go DOWN, and above all, he would go "inside." The
long and serious study of the AVERAGE man—and consequently much
disguise, self-overcoming, familiarity, and bad intercourse (all
intercourse is bad intercourse except with one's equals):—that
constitutes a necessary part of the life-history of every philosopher;
perhaps the most disagreeable, odious, and disappointing part. If he is
fortunate, however, as a favourite child of knowledge should be, he will
meet with suitable auxiliaries who will shorten and lighten his task; I
mean so-called cynics, those who simply recognize the animal, the
commonplace and "the rule" in themselves, and at the same time have so
much spirituality and ticklishness as to make them talk of themselves and
their like BEFORE WITNESSES—sometimes they wallow, even in books, as
on their own dung-hill. Cynicism is the only form in which base souls
approach what is called honesty; and the higher man must open his ears to
all the coarser or finer cynicism, and congratulate himself when the clown
becomes shameless right before him, or the scientific satyr speaks out.
There are even cases where enchantment mixes with the disgust—namely,
where by a freak of nature, genius is bound to some such indiscreet
billy-goat and ape, as in the case of the Abbe Galiani, the profoundest,
acutest, and perhaps also filthiest man of his century—he was far
profounder than Voltaire, and consequently also, a good deal more silent.
It happens more frequently, as has been hinted, that a scientific head is
placed on an ape's body, a fine exceptional understanding in a base soul,
an occurrence by no means rare, especially among doctors and moral
physiologists. And whenever anyone speaks without bitterness, or rather
quite innocently, of man as a belly with two requirements, and a head with
one; whenever any one sees, seeks, and WANTS to see only hunger, sexual
instinct, and vanity as the real and only motives of human actions; in
short, when any one speaks "badly"—and not even "ill"—of man,
then ought the lover of knowledge to hearken attentively and diligently;
he ought, in general, to have an open ear wherever there is talk without
indignation. For the indignant man, and he who perpetually tears and
lacerates himself with his own teeth (or, in place of himself, the world,
God, or society), may indeed, morally speaking, stand higher than the
laughing and self-satisfied satyr, but in every other sense he is the more
ordinary, more indifferent, and less instructive case. And no one is such
a LIAR as the indignant man.</p>
<p>27. It is difficult to be understood, especially when one thinks and lives
gangasrotogati [Footnote: Like the river Ganges: presto.] among those only
who think and live otherwise—namely, kurmagati [Footnote: Like the
tortoise: lento.], or at best "froglike," mandeikagati [Footnote: Like the
frog: staccato.] (I do everything to be "difficultly understood" myself!)—and
one should be heartily grateful for the good will to some refinement of
interpretation. As regards "the good friends," however, who are always too
easy-going, and think that as friends they have a right to ease, one does
well at the very first to grant them a play-ground and romping-place for
misunderstanding—one can thus laugh still; or get rid of them
altogether, these good friends—and laugh then also!</p>
<p>28. What is most difficult to render from one language into another is the
TEMPO of its style, which has its basis in the character of the race, or
to speak more physiologically, in the average TEMPO of the assimilation of
its nutriment. There are honestly meant translations, which, as
involuntary vulgarizations, are almost falsifications of the original,
merely because its lively and merry TEMPO (which overleaps and obviates
all dangers in word and expression) could not also be rendered. A German
is almost incapacitated for PRESTO in his language; consequently also, as
may be reasonably inferred, for many of the most delightful and daring
NUANCES of free, free-spirited thought. And just as the buffoon and satyr
are foreign to him in body and conscience, so Aristophanes and Petronius
are untranslatable for him. Everything ponderous, viscous, and pompously
clumsy, all long-winded and wearying species of style, are developed in
profuse variety among Germans—pardon me for stating the fact that
even Goethe's prose, in its mixture of stiffness and elegance, is no
exception, as a reflection of the "good old time" to which it belongs, and
as an expression of German taste at a time when there was still a "German
taste," which was a rococo-taste in moribus et artibus. Lessing is an
exception, owing to his histrionic nature, which understood much, and was
versed in many things; he who was not the translator of Bayle to no
purpose, who took refuge willingly in the shadow of Diderot and Voltaire,
and still more willingly among the Roman comedy-writers—Lessing
loved also free-spiritism in the TEMPO, and flight out of Germany. But how
could the German language, even in the prose of Lessing, imitate the TEMPO
of Machiavelli, who in his "Principe" makes us breathe the dry, fine air
of Florence, and cannot help presenting the most serious events in a
boisterous allegrissimo, perhaps not without a malicious artistic sense of
the contrast he ventures to present—long, heavy, difficult,
dangerous thoughts, and a TEMPO of the gallop, and of the best, wantonest
humour? Finally, who would venture on a German translation of Petronius,
who, more than any great musician hitherto, was a master of PRESTO in
invention, ideas, and words? What matter in the end about the swamps of
the sick, evil world, or of the "ancient world," when like him, one has
the feet of a wind, the rush, the breath, the emancipating scorn of a
wind, which makes everything healthy, by making everything RUN! And with
regard to Aristophanes—that transfiguring, complementary genius, for
whose sake one PARDONS all Hellenism for having existed, provided one has
understood in its full profundity ALL that there requires pardon and
transfiguration; there is nothing that has caused me to meditate more on
PLATO'S secrecy and sphinx-like nature, than the happily preserved petit
fait that under the pillow of his death-bed there was found no "Bible,"
nor anything Egyptian, Pythagorean, or Platonic—but a book of
Aristophanes. How could even Plato have endured life—a Greek life
which he repudiated—without an Aristophanes!</p>
<p>29. It is the business of the very few to be independent; it is a
privilege of the strong. And whoever attempts it, even with the best
right, but without being OBLIGED to do so, proves that he is probably not
only strong, but also daring beyond measure. He enters into a labyrinth,
he multiplies a thousandfold the dangers which life in itself already
brings with it; not the least of which is that no one can see how and
where he loses his way, becomes isolated, and is torn piecemeal by some
minotaur of conscience. Supposing such a one comes to grief, it is so far
from the comprehension of men that they neither feel it, nor sympathize
with it. And he cannot any longer go back! He cannot even go back again to
the sympathy of men!</p>
<p>30. Our deepest insights must—and should—appear as follies,
and under certain circumstances as crimes, when they come unauthorizedly
to the ears of those who are not disposed and predestined for them. The
exoteric and the esoteric, as they were formerly distinguished by
philosophers—among the Indians, as among the Greeks, Persians, and
Mussulmans, in short, wherever people believed in gradations of rank and
NOT in equality and equal rights—are not so much in
contradistinction to one another in respect to the exoteric class,
standing without, and viewing, estimating, measuring, and judging from the
outside, and not from the inside; the more essential distinction is that
the class in question views things from below upwards—while the
esoteric class views things FROM ABOVE DOWNWARDS. There are heights of the
soul from which tragedy itself no longer appears to operate tragically;
and if all the woe in the world were taken together, who would dare to
decide whether the sight of it would NECESSARILY seduce and constrain to
sympathy, and thus to a doubling of the woe?... That which serves the
higher class of men for nourishment or refreshment, must be almost poison
to an entirely different and lower order of human beings. The virtues of
the common man would perhaps mean vice and weakness in a philosopher; it
might be possible for a highly developed man, supposing him to degenerate
and go to ruin, to acquire qualities thereby alone, for the sake of which
he would have to be honoured as a saint in the lower world into which he
had sunk. There are books which have an inverse value for the soul and the
health according as the inferior soul and the lower vitality, or the
higher and more powerful, make use of them. In the former case they are
dangerous, disturbing, unsettling books, in the latter case they are
herald-calls which summon the bravest to THEIR bravery. Books for the
general reader are always ill-smelling books, the odour of paltry people
clings to them. Where the populace eat and drink, and even where they
reverence, it is accustomed to stink. One should not go into churches if
one wishes to breathe PURE air.</p>
<p>31. In our youthful years we still venerate and despise without the art of
NUANCE, which is the best gain of life, and we have rightly to do hard
penance for having fallen upon men and things with Yea and Nay. Everything
is so arranged that the worst of all tastes, THE TASTE FOR THE
UNCONDITIONAL, is cruelly befooled and abused, until a man learns to
introduce a little art into his sentiments, and prefers to try conclusions
with the artificial, as do the real artists of life. The angry and
reverent spirit peculiar to youth appears to allow itself no peace, until
it has suitably falsified men and things, to be able to vent its passion
upon them: youth in itself even, is something falsifying and deceptive.
Later on, when the young soul, tortured by continual disillusions, finally
turns suspiciously against itself—still ardent and savage even in
its suspicion and remorse of conscience: how it upbraids itself, how
impatiently it tears itself, how it revenges itself for its long
self-blinding, as though it had been a voluntary blindness! In this
transition one punishes oneself by distrust of one's sentiments; one
tortures one's enthusiasm with doubt, one feels even the good conscience
to be a danger, as if it were the self-concealment and lassitude of a more
refined uprightness; and above all, one espouses upon principle the cause
AGAINST "youth."—A decade later, and one comprehends that all this
was also still—youth!</p>
<p>32. Throughout the longest period of human history—one calls it the
prehistoric period—the value or non-value of an action was inferred
from its CONSEQUENCES; the action in itself was not taken into
consideration, any more than its origin; but pretty much as in China at
present, where the distinction or disgrace of a child redounds to its
parents, the retro-operating power of success or failure was what induced
men to think well or ill of an action. Let us call this period the
PRE-MORAL period of mankind; the imperative, "Know thyself!" was then
still unknown.—In the last ten thousand years, on the other hand, on
certain large portions of the earth, one has gradually got so far, that
one no longer lets the consequences of an action, but its origin, decide
with regard to its worth: a great achievement as a whole, an important
refinement of vision and of criterion, the unconscious effect of the
supremacy of aristocratic values and of the belief in "origin," the mark
of a period which may be designated in the narrower sense as the MORAL
one: the first attempt at self-knowledge is thereby made. Instead of the
consequences, the origin—what an inversion of perspective! And
assuredly an inversion effected only after long struggle and wavering! To
be sure, an ominous new superstition, a peculiar narrowness of
interpretation, attained supremacy precisely thereby: the origin of an
action was interpreted in the most definite sense possible, as origin out
of an INTENTION; people were agreed in the belief that the value of an
action lay in the value of its intention. The intention as the sole origin
and antecedent history of an action: under the influence of this prejudice
moral praise and blame have been bestowed, and men have judged and even
philosophized almost up to the present day.—Is it not possible,
however, that the necessity may now have arisen of again making up our
minds with regard to the reversing and fundamental shifting of values,
owing to a new self-consciousness and acuteness in man—is it not
possible that we may be standing on the threshold of a period which to
begin with, would be distinguished negatively as ULTRA-MORAL: nowadays
when, at least among us immoralists, the suspicion arises that the
decisive value of an action lies precisely in that which is NOT
INTENTIONAL, and that all its intentionalness, all that is seen, sensible,
or "sensed" in it, belongs to its surface or skin—which, like every
skin, betrays something, but CONCEALS still more? In short, we believe
that the intention is only a sign or symptom, which first requires an
explanation—a sign, moreover, which has too many interpretations,
and consequently hardly any meaning in itself alone: that morality, in the
sense in which it has been understood hitherto, as intention-morality, has
been a prejudice, perhaps a prematureness or preliminariness, probably
something of the same rank as astrology and alchemy, but in any case
something which must be surmounted. The surmounting of morality, in a
certain sense even the self-mounting of morality—let that be the
name for the long-secret labour which has been reserved for the most
refined, the most upright, and also the most wicked consciences of today,
as the living touchstones of the soul.</p>
<p>33. It cannot be helped: the sentiment of surrender, of sacrifice for
one's neighbour, and all self-renunciation-morality, must be mercilessly
called to account, and brought to judgment; just as the aesthetics of
"disinterested contemplation," under which the emasculation of art
nowadays seeks insidiously enough to create itself a good conscience.
There is far too much witchery and sugar in the sentiments "for others"
and "NOT for myself," for one not needing to be doubly distrustful here,
and for one asking promptly: "Are they not perhaps—DECEPTIONS?"—That
they PLEASE—him who has them, and him who enjoys their fruit, and
also the mere spectator—that is still no argument in their FAVOUR,
but just calls for caution. Let us therefore be cautious!</p>
<p>34. At whatever standpoint of philosophy one may place oneself nowadays,
seen from every position, the ERRONEOUSNESS of the world in which we think
we live is the surest and most certain thing our eyes can light upon: we
find proof after proof thereof, which would fain allure us into surmises
concerning a deceptive principle in the "nature of things." He, however,
who makes thinking itself, and consequently "the spirit," responsible for
the falseness of the world—an honourable exit, which every conscious
or unconscious advocatus dei avails himself of—he who regards this
world, including space, time, form, and movement, as falsely DEDUCED,
would have at least good reason in the end to become distrustful also of
all thinking; has it not hitherto been playing upon us the worst of scurvy
tricks? and what guarantee would it give that it would not continue to do
what it has always been doing? In all seriousness, the innocence of
thinkers has something touching and respect-inspiring in it, which even
nowadays permits them to wait upon consciousness with the request that it
will give them HONEST answers: for example, whether it be "real" or not,
and why it keeps the outer world so resolutely at a distance, and other
questions of the same description. The belief in "immediate certainties"
is a MORAL NAIVETE which does honour to us philosophers; but—we have
now to cease being "MERELY moral" men! Apart from morality, such belief is
a folly which does little honour to us! If in middle-class life an
ever-ready distrust is regarded as the sign of a "bad character," and
consequently as an imprudence, here among us, beyond the middle-class
world and its Yeas and Nays, what should prevent our being imprudent and
saying: the philosopher has at length a RIGHT to "bad character," as the
being who has hitherto been most befooled on earth—he is now under
OBLIGATION to distrustfulness, to the wickedest squinting out of every
abyss of suspicion.—Forgive me the joke of this gloomy grimace and
turn of expression; for I myself have long ago learned to think and
estimate differently with regard to deceiving and being deceived, and I
keep at least a couple of pokes in the ribs ready for the blind rage with
which philosophers struggle against being deceived. Why NOT? It is nothing
more than a moral prejudice that truth is worth more than semblance; it
is, in fact, the worst proved supposition in the world. So much must be
conceded: there could have been no life at all except upon the basis of
perspective estimates and semblances; and if, with the virtuous enthusiasm
and stupidity of many philosophers, one wished to do away altogether with
the "seeming world"—well, granted that YOU could do that,—at
least nothing of your "truth" would thereby remain! Indeed, what is it
that forces us in general to the supposition that there is an essential
opposition of "true" and "false"? Is it not enough to suppose degrees of
seemingness, and as it were lighter and darker shades and tones of
semblance—different valeurs, as the painters say? Why might not the
world WHICH CONCERNS US—be a fiction? And to any one who suggested:
"But to a fiction belongs an originator?"—might it not be bluntly
replied: WHY? May not this "belong" also belong to the fiction? Is it not
at length permitted to be a little ironical towards the subject, just as
towards the predicate and object? Might not the philosopher elevate
himself above faith in grammar? All respect to governesses, but is it not
time that philosophy should renounce governess-faith?</p>
<p>35. O Voltaire! O humanity! O idiocy! There is something ticklish in "the
truth," and in the SEARCH for the truth; and if man goes about it too
humanely—"il ne cherche le vrai que pour faire le bien"—I
wager he finds nothing!</p>
<p>36. Supposing that nothing else is "given" as real but our world of
desires and passions, that we cannot sink or rise to any other "reality"
but just that of our impulses—for thinking is only a relation of
these impulses to one another:—are we not permitted to make the
attempt and to ask the question whether this which is "given" does not
SUFFICE, by means of our counterparts, for the understanding even of the
so-called mechanical (or "material") world? I do not mean as an illusion,
a "semblance," a "representation" (in the Berkeleyan and Schopenhauerian
sense), but as possessing the same degree of reality as our emotions
themselves—as a more primitive form of the world of emotions, in
which everything still lies locked in a mighty unity, which afterwards
branches off and develops itself in organic processes (naturally also,
refines and debilitates)—as a kind of instinctive life in which all
organic functions, including self-regulation, assimilation, nutrition,
secretion, and change of matter, are still synthetically united with one
another—as a PRIMARY FORM of life?—In the end, it is not only
permitted to make this attempt, it is commanded by the conscience of
LOGICAL METHOD. Not to assume several kinds of causality, so long as the
attempt to get along with a single one has not been pushed to its furthest
extent (to absurdity, if I may be allowed to say so): that is a morality
of method which one may not repudiate nowadays—it follows "from its
definition," as mathematicians say. The question is ultimately whether we
really recognize the will as OPERATING, whether we believe in the
causality of the will; if we do so—and fundamentally our belief IN
THIS is just our belief in causality itself—we MUST make the attempt
to posit hypothetically the causality of the will as the only causality.
"Will" can naturally only operate on "will"—and not on "matter" (not
on "nerves," for instance): in short, the hypothesis must be hazarded,
whether will does not operate on will wherever "effects" are recognized—and
whether all mechanical action, inasmuch as a power operates therein, is
not just the power of will, the effect of will. Granted, finally, that we
succeeded in explaining our entire instinctive life as the development and
ramification of one fundamental form of will—namely, the Will to
Power, as my thesis puts it; granted that all organic functions could be
traced back to this Will to Power, and that the solution of the problem of
generation and nutrition—it is one problem—could also be found
therein: one would thus have acquired the right to define ALL active force
unequivocally as WILL TO POWER. The world seen from within, the world
defined and designated according to its "intelligible character"—it
would simply be "Will to Power," and nothing else.</p>
<p>37. "What? Does not that mean in popular language: God is disproved, but
not the devil?"—On the contrary! On the contrary, my friends! And
who the devil also compels you to speak popularly!</p>
<p>38. As happened finally in all the enlightenment of modern times with the
French Revolution (that terrible farce, quite superfluous when judged
close at hand, into which, however, the noble and visionary spectators of
all Europe have interpreted from a distance their own indignation and
enthusiasm so long and passionately, UNTIL THE TEXT HAS DISAPPEARED UNDER
THE INTERPRETATION), so a noble posterity might once more misunderstand
the whole of the past, and perhaps only thereby make ITS aspect endurable.—Or
rather, has not this already happened? Have not we ourselves been—that
"noble posterity"? And, in so far as we now comprehend this, is it not—thereby
already past?</p>
<p>39. Nobody will very readily regard a doctrine as true merely because it
makes people happy or virtuous—excepting, perhaps, the amiable
"Idealists," who are enthusiastic about the good, true, and beautiful, and
let all kinds of motley, coarse, and good-natured desirabilities swim
about promiscuously in their pond. Happiness and virtue are no arguments.
It is willingly forgotten, however, even on the part of thoughtful minds,
that to make unhappy and to make bad are just as little counter-arguments.
A thing could be TRUE, although it were in the highest degree injurious
and dangerous; indeed, the fundamental constitution of existence might be
such that one succumbed by a full knowledge of it—so that the
strength of a mind might be measured by the amount of "truth" it could
endure—or to speak more plainly, by the extent to which it REQUIRED
truth attenuated, veiled, sweetened, damped, and falsified. But there is
no doubt that for the discovery of certain PORTIONS of truth the wicked
and unfortunate are more favourably situated and have a greater likelihood
of success; not to speak of the wicked who are happy—a species about
whom moralists are silent. Perhaps severity and craft are more favourable
conditions for the development of strong, independent spirits and
philosophers than the gentle, refined, yielding good-nature, and habit of
taking things easily, which are prized, and rightly prized in a learned
man. Presupposing always, to begin with, that the term "philosopher" be
not confined to the philosopher who writes books, or even introduces HIS
philosophy into books!—Stendhal furnishes a last feature of the
portrait of the free-spirited philosopher, which for the sake of German
taste I will not omit to underline—for it is OPPOSED to German
taste. "Pour etre bon philosophe," says this last great psychologist, "il
faut etre sec, clair, sans illusion. Un banquier, qui a fait fortune, a
une partie du caractere requis pour faire des decouvertes en philosophie,
c'est-a-dire pour voir clair dans ce qui est."</p>
<p>40. Everything that is profound loves the mask: the profoundest things
have a hatred even of figure and likeness. Should not the CONTRARY only be
the right disguise for the shame of a God to go about in? A question worth
asking!—it would be strange if some mystic has not already ventured
on the same kind of thing. There are proceedings of such a delicate nature
that it is well to overwhelm them with coarseness and make them
unrecognizable; there are actions of love and of an extravagant
magnanimity after which nothing can be wiser than to take a stick and
thrash the witness soundly: one thereby obscures his recollection. Many a
one is able to obscure and abuse his own memory, in order at least to have
vengeance on this sole party in the secret: shame is inventive. They are
not the worst things of which one is most ashamed: there is not only
deceit behind a mask—there is so much goodness in craft. I could
imagine that a man with something costly and fragile to conceal, would
roll through life clumsily and rotundly like an old, green, heavily-hooped
wine-cask: the refinement of his shame requiring it to be so. A man who
has depths in his shame meets his destiny and his delicate decisions upon
paths which few ever reach, and with regard to the existence of which his
nearest and most intimate friends may be ignorant; his mortal danger
conceals itself from their eyes, and equally so his regained security.
Such a hidden nature, which instinctively employs speech for silence and
concealment, and is inexhaustible in evasion of communication, DESIRES and
insists that a mask of himself shall occupy his place in the hearts and
heads of his friends; and supposing he does not desire it, his eyes will
some day be opened to the fact that there is nevertheless a mask of him
there—and that it is well to be so. Every profound spirit needs a
mask; nay, more, around every profound spirit there continually grows a
mask, owing to the constantly false, that is to say, SUPERFICIAL
interpretation of every word he utters, every step he takes, every sign of
life he manifests.</p>
<p>41. One must subject oneself to one's own tests that one is destined for
independence and command, and do so at the right time. One must not avoid
one's tests, although they constitute perhaps the most dangerous game one
can play, and are in the end tests made only before ourselves and before
no other judge. Not to cleave to any person, be it even the dearest—every
person is a prison and also a recess. Not to cleave to a fatherland, be it
even the most suffering and necessitous—it is even less difficult to
detach one's heart from a victorious fatherland. Not to cleave to a
sympathy, be it even for higher men, into whose peculiar torture and
helplessness chance has given us an insight. Not to cleave to a science,
though it tempt one with the most valuable discoveries, apparently
specially reserved for us. Not to cleave to one's own liberation, to the
voluptuous distance and remoteness of the bird, which always flies further
aloft in order always to see more under it—the danger of the flier.
Not to cleave to our own virtues, nor become as a whole a victim to any of
our specialties, to our "hospitality" for instance, which is the danger of
dangers for highly developed and wealthy souls, who deal prodigally,
almost indifferently with themselves, and push the virtue of liberality so
far that it becomes a vice. One must know how TO CONSERVE ONESELF—the
best test of independence.</p>
<p>42. A new order of philosophers is appearing; I shall venture to baptize
them by a name not without danger. As far as I understand them, as far as
they allow themselves to be understood—for it is their nature to
WISH to remain something of a puzzle—these philosophers of the
future might rightly, perhaps also wrongly, claim to be designated as
"tempters." This name itself is after all only an attempt, or, if it be
preferred, a temptation.</p>
<p>43. Will they be new friends of "truth," these coming philosophers? Very
probably, for all philosophers hitherto have loved their truths. But
assuredly they will not be dogmatists. It must be contrary to their pride,
and also contrary to their taste, that their truth should still be truth
for every one—that which has hitherto been the secret wish and
ultimate purpose of all dogmatic efforts. "My opinion is MY opinion:
another person has not easily a right to it"—such a philosopher of
the future will say, perhaps. One must renounce the bad taste of wishing
to agree with many people. "Good" is no longer good when one's neighbour
takes it into his mouth. And how could there be a "common good"! The
expression contradicts itself; that which can be common is always of small
value. In the end things must be as they are and have always been—the
great things remain for the great, the abysses for the profound, the
delicacies and thrills for the refined, and, to sum up shortly, everything
rare for the rare.</p>
<p>44. Need I say expressly after all this that they will be free, VERY free
spirits, these philosophers of the future—as certainly also they
will not be merely free spirits, but something more, higher, greater, and
fundamentally different, which does not wish to be misunderstood and
mistaken? But while I say this, I feel under OBLIGATION almost as much to
them as to ourselves (we free spirits who are their heralds and
forerunners), to sweep away from ourselves altogether a stupid old
prejudice and misunderstanding, which, like a fog, has too long made the
conception of "free spirit" obscure. In every country of Europe, and the
same in America, there is at present something which makes an abuse of
this name a very narrow, prepossessed, enchained class of spirits, who
desire almost the opposite of what our intentions and instincts prompt—not
to mention that in respect to the NEW philosophers who are appearing, they
must still more be closed windows and bolted doors. Briefly and
regrettably, they belong to the LEVELLERS, these wrongly named "free
spirits"—as glib-tongued and scribe-fingered slaves of the
democratic taste and its "modern ideas" all of them men without solitude,
without personal solitude, blunt honest fellows to whom neither courage
nor honourable conduct ought to be denied, only, they are not free, and
are ludicrously superficial, especially in their innate partiality for
seeing the cause of almost ALL human misery and failure in the old forms
in which society has hitherto existed—a notion which happily inverts
the truth entirely! What they would fain attain with all their strength,
is the universal, green-meadow happiness of the herd, together with
security, safety, comfort, and alleviation of life for every one, their
two most frequently chanted songs and doctrines are called "Equality of
Rights" and "Sympathy with All Sufferers"—and suffering itself is
looked upon by them as something which must be DONE AWAY WITH. We opposite
ones, however, who have opened our eye and conscience to the question how
and where the plant "man" has hitherto grown most vigorously, believe that
this has always taken place under the opposite conditions, that for this
end the dangerousness of his situation had to be increased enormously, his
inventive faculty and dissembling power (his "spirit") had to develop into
subtlety and daring under long oppression and compulsion, and his Will to
Life had to be increased to the unconditioned Will to Power—we
believe that severity, violence, slavery, danger in the street and in the
heart, secrecy, stoicism, tempter's art and devilry of every kind,—that
everything wicked, terrible, tyrannical, predatory, and serpentine in man,
serves as well for the elevation of the human species as its opposite—we
do not even say enough when we only say THIS MUCH, and in any case we find
ourselves here, both with our speech and our silence, at the OTHER extreme
of all modern ideology and gregarious desirability, as their antipodes
perhaps? What wonder that we "free spirits" are not exactly the most
communicative spirits? that we do not wish to betray in every respect WHAT
a spirit can free itself from, and WHERE perhaps it will then be driven?
And as to the import of the dangerous formula, "Beyond Good and Evil,"
with which we at least avoid confusion, we ARE something else than
"libres-penseurs," "liben pensatori" "free-thinkers," and whatever these
honest advocates of "modern ideas" like to call themselves. Having been at
home, or at least guests, in many realms of the spirit, having escaped
again and again from the gloomy, agreeable nooks in which preferences and
prejudices, youth, origin, the accident of men and books, or even the
weariness of travel seemed to confine us, full of malice against the
seductions of dependency which he concealed in honours, money, positions,
or exaltation of the senses, grateful even for distress and the
vicissitudes of illness, because they always free us from some rule, and
its "prejudice," grateful to the God, devil, sheep, and worm in us,
inquisitive to a fault, investigators to the point of cruelty, with
unhesitating fingers for the intangible, with teeth and stomachs for the
most indigestible, ready for any business that requires sagacity and acute
senses, ready for every adventure, owing to an excess of "free will", with
anterior and posterior souls, into the ultimate intentions of which it is
difficult to pry, with foregrounds and backgrounds to the end of which no
foot may run, hidden ones under the mantles of light, appropriators,
although we resemble heirs and spendthrifts, arrangers and collectors from
morning till night, misers of our wealth and our full-crammed drawers,
economical in learning and forgetting, inventive in scheming, sometimes
proud of tables of categories, sometimes pedants, sometimes night-owls of
work even in full day, yea, if necessary, even scarecrows—and it is
necessary nowadays, that is to say, inasmuch as we are the born, sworn,
jealous friends of SOLITUDE, of our own profoundest midnight and midday
solitude—such kind of men are we, we free spirits! And perhaps ye
are also something of the same kind, ye coming ones? ye NEW philosophers?</p>
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