Thus Spoke Zarathustra

Thus Spoke Zarathustra

by Friedrich Nietzsche

Zarathustra Character Analysis

Zarathustra is a sage and prophet. Practically no personal details are given about him in the novel; his identity consists of his teachings and his travels among his disciples. At age 30, he retreats to a mountain cave—but after 10 years of solitude, he decides that he must descend to humankind in order to bestow his wisdom. After the people reject Zarathustra’s teaching of the Superman (his vision of a more mentally and spiritually evolved human race), he realizes that he should proclaim his message not to the masses, but only to individuals who are already receptive to his teachings. He then addresses a long series of discourses to his followers, teaching them to reject the idea of objective values, instead becoming creators of new values in order to overcome the current version of humanity in pursuit of the Superman. He also teaches them to exercise the will to power, an inexhaustible procreative drive that cannot be contained or quelled by conventional values. Zarathustra is disgusted by the masses’ failure to embody this will to power, so he retreats back into solitude. When he awakens from sleep, he and his animal companions discuss the concept of the Eternal Recurrence: the infinite recurrence of all existence in the past and the future. Because Zarathustra is unburdened by conventional morals and their associated guilt, he fully accepts life, allowing him to welcome and even lust after Eternity. In the last part of the book, Zarathustra is visited by a gloomy prophet who tempts him to relieve the Higher Man’s distress. Zarathustra then searches through the forest and welcomes a number of people—include a scientist, a sorcerer, an old pope, and the ugliest man—into his cave to feast and discuss the Higher Man. The next day, a lion appears at Zarathustra’s cave, signaling that it’s time for Zarathustra’s final descent to humanity. Zarathustra realizes that he has finally overcome his weakness of pity for the Higher Man—and, being perfected, he can now go in search of his children, the Supermen of the future.

Zarathustra Quotes in Thus Spoke Zarathustra

The Thus Spoke Zarathustra quotes below are all either spoken by Zarathustra or refer to Zarathustra. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Rethinking Morality Theme Icon
).

Zarathustra’s Prologue Quotes

“With singing, weeping, laughing, and muttering I praise the God who is my God. But what do you bring us as a gift?”

When Zarathustra heard these words, he saluted the saint and said: “What should I have to give you! But let me go quickly, that I may take nothing from you!” And thus they parted from one another, the old man and Zarathustra, laughing as two boys laugh.

But when Zarathustra was alone, he spoke thus to his heart: “Could it be possible! This old saint has not yet heard in his forest that God is dead!”

Related Characters: The Old Saint (speaker), Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

I teach you the Superman. Man is something that should be overcome. What have you done to overcome him?

All creatures hitherto have created something beyond themselves: and do you want to be the ebb of this great tide, and return to the animals rather than overcome man? […]

The Superman is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: The Superman shall be the meaning of the earth!

I entreat you, my brothers, remain true to the earth, and do not believe those who speak to you of superterrestrial hopes! They are poisoners, whether they know it or not.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

A light has dawned for me: Zarathustra shall not speak to the people but to companions! Zarathustra shall not be herdsman and dog to the herd! […]

Behold the good and the just! Whom do they hate most? Him who smashes their tables of values, the breaker, the lawbreaker—but he is the creator. […]

The creator seeks companions, not corpses or herds or believers. The creator seeks fellow-creators, those who inscribe new values on new tables.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 51
Explanation and Analysis:

Of the Afterworldsmen Quotes

It was the sick and dying who despised the body and the earth and invented the things of heaven and the redeeming drops of blood: but even these sweet and dismal poisons they took from the body and the earth!

They wanted to escape from their misery and the stars were too far for them. Then they sighed: 'Oh if only there were heavenly paths by which to creep into another existence and into happiness!'—then they contrived for themselves their secret ways and their draughts of blood!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 60
Explanation and Analysis:

Of Reading and Writing Quotes

I should believe only in a God who understood how to dance.

And when I beheld my devil, I found him serious, thorough, profound, solemn: it was the Spirit of Gravity—through him all things are ruined.

One does not kill by anger but by laughter. Come, let us kill the Spirit of Gravity!

I have learned to walk: since then I have run. I have learned to fly: since then I do not have to be pushed in order to move.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 68
Explanation and Analysis:

Of the Thousand and One Goals Quotes

Zarathustra has seen many lands and many peoples: thus he has discovered the good and evil of many peoples. Zarathustra has found no greater power on earth than good and evil. […]

Much that seemed good to one people seemed shame and disgrace to another: thus I found. I found much that was called evil in one place was in another decked with purple honours. […]

Truly, men have given themselves all their good and evil. Truly, they did not take it, they did not find it, it did not descend to them as a voice from heaven.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

Of Love of One’s Neighbour Quotes

Do I exhort you to love of your neighbour? I exhort you rather to flight from your neighbour and to love of the most distant!

Higher than love of one's neighbour stands love of the most distant man and of the man of the future []

You cannot endure to be alone with yourselves and do not love yourselves enough: now you want to mislead your neighbour into love and gild yourselves with his mistake.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 87
Explanation and Analysis:

Of Voluntary Death Quotes

Truly, too early died that Hebrew whom the preachers of slow death honour: and that he died too early has since been a fatality for many.

As yet he knew only tears and the melancholy of the Hebrews, together with the hatred of the good and just—the Hebrew Jesus: then he was seized by the longing for death.

Had he only remained in the desert and far from the good and just! Perhaps he would have learned to live and learned to love the earth—and laughter as well!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 98
Explanation and Analysis:

Of the Bestowing Virtue Quotes

You solitaries of today, you who have seceded from society, you shall one day be a people: from you, who have chosen out yourselves, shall a chosen people spring—and from this chosen people, the Superman.

Truly, the earth shall yet become a house of healing! And already a new odour floats about it, an odour that brings health—and a new hope!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 103
Explanation and Analysis:

One repays a teacher badly if one remains only a pupil. And why, then, should you not pluck at my laurels? []

Now I bid you lose me and find yourselves; and only when you have all denied me will I return to you. []

And once more you shall have become my friends and children of one hope: and then I will be with you a third time, that I may celebrate the great noontide with you.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Related Symbols: Sun, Noon, Noontide
Page Number and Citation: 103
Explanation and Analysis:

On the Blissful Islands Quotes

This will lured me away from God and gods; for what would there be to create if gods – existed!

But again and again it drives me to mankind, my ardent, creative will; thus it drives the hammer to the stone.

Ah, you men, I see an image sleeping in the stone, the image of my visions! []

The beauty of the Superman came to me as a shadow. Ah, my brothers! What are the gods to me now!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

Of the Famous Philosophers Quotes

Free from the happiness of serfs, redeemed from gods and worship, fearless and fearful, great and solitary: that is how the will of the genuine man is.

The genuine men, the free spirits, have always dwelt in the desert, as the lords of the desert; but in the towns dwell the well-fed famous philosophers the draught animals. For they always, as asses, pull—the peoples cart!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Related Symbols: Lion
Page Number and Citation: 127
Explanation and Analysis:

Of Self-Overcoming Quotes

That is your entire will, you wisest men; it is a will to power; and that is so even when you talk of good and evil and of the assessment of values.

You want to create the world before which you can kneel: this is your ultimate hope and intoxication. []

[W]hat the people believe to be good and evil betrays to me an ancient will to power.

It was you, wisest men, who put such passengers in this boat and gave them splendour and proud names you and your ruling will!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 136
Explanation and Analysis:

Of the Sublime Men Quotes

Today I saw a sublime man, a solemn man, a penitent of the spirit: oh, how my soul laughed at his ugliness! []

Hung with ugly truths, the booty of his hunt, and rich in torn clothes; many thorns, too, hung on him but I saw no rose.

As yet he has not learned of laughter and beauty. This huntsman returned gloomily from the forest of knowledge.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

Of Manly Prudence Quotes

My will clings to mankind, I bind myself to mankind with fetters, because I am drawn up to the Superman: for my other will wants to draw me up to the Superman. []

And he who does not want to die of thirst among men must learn to drink out of all glasses; and he who wants to stay clean among men must know how to wash himself even with dirty water.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 164
Explanation and Analysis:

Of the Vision and the Riddle Quotes

'Spirit of Gravity! I said angrily, 'do not treat this too lightly! Or I shall leave you squatting where you are, Lamefoot—and I have carried you high!

Behold this moment!' I went on. 'From this gateway Moment a long, eternal lane runs back: an eternity lies behind us.

'Must not all things that can run have already run along this lane? Must not all things that can happen have already happened, been done, run past?

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 178
Explanation and Analysis:

The shepherd [] bit as my cry had advised him; he bit with a good bite! He spat far away the snake's head—and sprang up.

No longer a shepherd, no longer a man—a transformed being, surrounded with light, laughing! Never yet on earth had any man laughed as he laughed!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 180
Explanation and Analysis:

Of the Three Evil Things Quotes

Whether one be servile before gods and divine kicks, or before men and the silly opinions of men: it spits at slaves of all kinds, this glorious selfishness!

Bad: that is what it calls all that is broken-down and niggardly-servile, unclear, blinking eyes, oppressed hearts, and that false, yielding type of man who kisses with broad, cowardly lips. […]

And he who declares the Ego healthy and holy and selfishness glorious – truly he, a prophet, declares too what he knows: 'Behold, it comes, it is near, the great noontide!'

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Related Symbols: Sun, Noon, Noontide
Page Number and Citation: 209
Explanation and Analysis:

The Convalescent Quotes

Man is the cruellest animal towards himself; and […] all who call themselves "sinners" and “bearers of the Cross" and "penitents" […]

Ah, my animals, this alone have I learned, that the wickedest in man is necessary for the best in him,

that all that is most wicked in him is his best strength and the hardest stone for the highest creator; and that man must grow better and wickeder: […]

[I cried] ‘Alas, that his wickedest is so very small! Alas, that his best is so very small!’

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker), Zarathustra’s Animals
Page Number and Citation: 235
Explanation and Analysis:

'For your animals well know, O Zarathustra, who you are and must become: behold, you are the teacher of the eternal recurrence, that is now your destiny!

That you have to be the first to teach this doctrine—how should this great destiny not also be your greatest danger and sickness!

Behold, we know what you teach: that all things recur eternally and we ourselves with them, and that we have already existed an infinite number of times before and all things with us.

Related Characters: Zarathustra’s Animals (speaker), Zarathustra
Page Number and Citation: 237
Explanation and Analysis:

The Seven Seals (or: The Song of Yes and Amen) Quotes

If ever my anger broke graves open, moved boundary-stones, and rolled old shattered law-tables into deep chasms:

[…]

for I love even churches and the graves of gods, if only heaven is looking, pure-eyed, through their shattered roofs; I like to sit like grass and red poppies on shattered churches:

Oh how should I not lust for eternity and for the wedding ring of rings—the Ring of Recurrence!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 245
Explanation and Analysis:

Retired from Service Quotes

When he was young, this god from the orient, he was hard and revengeful and built himself a Hell for the delight of his favourites.

But at length he grew old and soft and mellow and compassionate, more like a grandfather than a father, most like a tottery old grandmother.

Then he sat, shrivelled, in his chimney corner, fretting over his weak legs, world-weary, weary of willing, and one day suffocated through his excessive pity.'

Related Characters: The Old Pope (speaker), Zarathustra
Page Number and Citation: 273
Explanation and Analysis:

The Greeting Quotes

You are only bridges: may higher men than you step across upon you! […]

From your seed there may one day grow for me a genuine son and perfect heir: but that is far ahead. You yourselves are not those to whom my heritage and name belong. […]

It is for others that I wait here in these mountains and I will not lift my foot from here without them, for higher, stronger, more victorious, more joyful men, such as are square-built in body and soul: laughing lions must come!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Related Symbols: Lion
Page Number and Citation: 294
Explanation and Analysis:

The Ass Festival Quotes

And Zarathustra began to speak once more. 'O my new friends,' he said, 'you strange men, you Higher Men, how well you please me now […]

Truly, you have all blossomed forth: for such flowers as you, I think, new festivals are needed.

a little brave nonsense, some divine service and ass festival, some joyful old Zarathustra-fool, a blustering wind to blow your souls bright.

Do not forget this night and this ass festival, you Higher Men! You devised that at my home, I take that as a good omen—only convalescents devise such things!

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 325
Explanation and Analysis:

The Sign Quotes

‘Pity! Pity for the Higher Man!’ he cried out, and his countenance was transformed into brass. 'Very well! That—has had its time! […]

‘The lion has come, my children are near, Zarathustra has become ripe, my hour has come!

This is my morning, my day begins: rise up now, rise up, great noontide!

Thus spoke Zarathustra and left his cave, glowing and strong, like a morning sun emerging from behind dark mountains.

Related Characters: Zarathustra (speaker)
Related Symbols: Sun, Noon, Noontide, Lion
Page Number and Citation: 336
Explanation and Analysis:
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Zarathustra Character Timeline in Thus Spoke Zarathustra

The timeline below shows where the character Zarathustra appears in Thus Spoke Zarathustra. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Zarathustra’s Prologue
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1. At the age of 30, Zarathustra leaves his home and retreats into the mountains. For 10 years, he enjoys living in... (full context)
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2. Zarathustra ventures down the mountain alone. In the forest, he meets an old saint who recognizes... (full context)
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3. Zarathustra arrives in a town, where people are waiting for a tight-rope walker’s performance in the... (full context)
The Superman and the Will to Power Theme Icon
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The Superman is and shall be the meaning of the world. Zarathustra urges people to believe this, instead of believing in “superterrestrial hopes” taught to them by... (full context)
Rethinking Morality Theme Icon
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Zarathustra says that the greatest thing a person can experience is “contempt.” A person feels this... (full context)
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4. Zarathustra marvels at the people and then continues. He explains that “man is a rope, fastened... (full context)
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5. Zarathustra falls silent, knowing that the people don’t understand—they’re are proud of their culture, so they’re... (full context)
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Zarathustra’s first discourse comes to an end. The crowd just laughs and mocks him, saying that... (full context)
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...with a cry. Shocked, the tight-rope walker loses his balance and falls to the ground. Zarathustra kneels beside the shattered figure, who isn’t quite dead. He tells the tight-rope walker that... (full context)
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7. By evening, the crowd disperses. Zarathustra sits thinking beside the man (now dead) for a long time. He didn’t catch anyone... (full context)
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8. As Zarathustra picks up the corpse and sets off, the buffoon catches up to him and warns... (full context)
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9. Zarathustra sleeps for a long time. The following day, he wakes suddenly, rejoicing over a new... (full context)
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Zarathustra knows that the “herdsmen” will call him a robber. The herdsmen are the “good and... (full context)
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10. Zarathustra has this realization at noon. Above, an eagle circles, with a serpent coiled around its... (full context)
Of the Three Metamorphoses
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Zarathustra names “three metamorphoses of the spirit”: the spirit becomes a camel, the camel becomes a... (full context)
Of the Chairs of Virtue
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Zarathustra is living in a town called The Pied Cow. One day, he goes to listen... (full context)
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Zarathustra laughs at the wise man, coming to a realization. The wise man teaches that one... (full context)
Of the Afterworldsmen
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Like those who believe in an afterlife, Zarathustra once imagined something existing beyond humankind. The world appeared to him like the work of... (full context)
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Zarathustra says that the Ego is the “measure and value of things.” Even when the Ego... (full context)
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Zarathustra isn’t hard on those who remain “sick” in this way, desiring that they, like him,... (full context)
Of the Despisers of the Body
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Zarathustra addresses whose who despise the body. He says that while a child sees himself as... (full context)
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Zarathustra tells the despisers of the body that the Self creates esteem and disesteem, including disesteem... (full context)
Of Joys and Passions
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Zarathustra believes that if someone has a virtue, they have that virtue in common with nobody... (full context)
Of the Pale Criminal
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...criminal is pale because he cannot endure the image of the deed he has committed. Zarathustra calls it “madness” for the criminal to see himself as the perpetrator of the deed.... (full context)
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Zarathustra wishes that so-called “good people” possessed a madness through which they could die, like the... (full context)
Of Reading and Writing
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Zarathustra only loves writings that are written in blood. In the long run, when everyone learns... (full context)
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People say that life is hard to bear, but Zarathustra says that people are built to bear burdens. When Zarathustra sees light, dainty things fluttering... (full context)
Of the Tree on the Mountainside
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Zarathustra notices that a young man is avoiding him; one evening, he finds the young man... (full context)
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The more a person wants to rise to the heights, Zarathustra tells the young man, the more his “roots” plunge earthward, into evil. The young man... (full context)
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The young man agrees again; he thinks that Zarathustra is that “lightning” for which he has been waiting, to destroy him. He begins to... (full context)
Of the Preachers of Death
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Zarathustra says that those who gain from preaching death, or “eternal life,” entangle others. He says... (full context)
Of War and Warriors
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Zarathustra says that he is the best enemy of his companions, and since they would not... (full context)
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Zarathustra urges his listeners to love life with an eye toward their highest hope, and their... (full context)
Of the New Idol
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Instead of peoples and herds, there are now states. Zarathustra calls these the coldest of monsters and liars. The state claims that it is “the... (full context)
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Zarathustra points out that every group of people has its own language of good and evil,... (full context)
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Zarathustra urges free souls to flee the state and be solitary. Where the state ceases, the... (full context)
Of the Flies of the Market-Place
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Zarathustra urges his friends to flee into solitude. The market-place, he says, is filled with uproar... (full context)
Of Chastity
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Zarathustra loves the forest because too many lustful people live in the towns. Zarathustra exhorts his... (full context)
Of the Friend
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Zarathustra says that “I and Me” are always in such earnest conversation that a third person,... (full context)
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...be overcome; neither a slave nor a tyrant can be a friend. This is why Zarathustra believes that women are not capable of friendship—woman is both slave and tyrant. Women are... (full context)
Of the Thousand and One Goals
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Zarathustra has seen many lands and peoples and discovered their good and evil; what seems good... (full context)
Of Love of One’s Neighbour
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Zarathustra says that people’s love of neighbor is really just “bad love of yourselves.” Rather than... (full context)
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Zarathustra says that it’s better to find a neighbor’s company unendurable; then, a person has to... (full context)
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Zarathustra distinguishes between the “friend,” who is a preview of the Superman, and the neighbor. The... (full context)
Of the Way of the Creator
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Zarathustra advises that the solitary must be on guard against the “good and just,” who hate... (full context)
Of Old and Young Women
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One day, an old woman asks Zarathustra to speak to her about women. Zarathustra says that everything about women is a riddle,... (full context)
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...recreation of the warrior; a woman’s hope should be that she might bear the Superman. Zarathustra describes woman’s nature as “a changeable, stormy film upon shallow waters,” while a man’s nature... (full context)
Of the Adder’s Bite
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One day, while Zarathustra is sleeping, an adder comes along and bites his neck. When the snake is about... (full context)
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When Zarathustra told this story to his followers, he explained its moral. The “good and just” accuse... (full context)
Of Marriage and Children
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According to Zarathustra, any person who is a self-conqueror, a lord of one’s own virtues, should desire a... (full context)
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Zarathustra thinks that most marriages are nothing more than a match between a “saint and a... (full context)
Of Voluntary Death
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Zarathustra says that many people die too late, and some die too early. He teaches that... (full context)
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Zarathustra says that there are too many preachers of patience and slow death. The “Hebrew” honored... (full context)
Of the Bestowing Virtue
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1. Zarathustra leaves the town called the Pied Cow, and many of his disciples follow him. They... (full context)
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...of selfishness, on the other hand, wants to steal what the givers have—this is degeneration. Zarathustra and his followers, by contrast, are progressing upward to the Superman. (full context)
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2. Zarathustra falls silent for a while and then changes his tone. Lovingly, he tells his disciples... (full context)
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3. Then Zarathustra tells his disciples that he is going away alone. They, too, should go away to... (full context)
The Child with the Mirror
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Zarathustra withdraws into the mountains once again, away from humanity. He has spread his teaching and... (full context)
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Zarathustra leaps up happily, and his animal companions (the eagle and serpent) look at him with... (full context)
On the Blissful Islands
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Zarathustra tells his followers that once they gazed upon the seas and spoke of “God,” but... (full context)
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Zarathustra says that teaching about an unmoved, self-sufficient God leads only to spiritual sickness. Creators must... (full context)
Of the Compassionate
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The history of humanity is filled with shame, and Zarathustra thinks that the compassionate are too lacking in shame. If someone must be compassionate, then... (full context)
Of the Priests
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Zarathustra speaks to his followers about priests. He pities them, as they are enslaved to the... (full context)
Of the Virtuous
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Beauty appeals to awakened souls and laughs at the so-called virtuous. Zarathustra teaches that virtue isn’t rewarded, not even by itself. Reward and punishment are lies—virtue is,... (full context)
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...in fact, believes that they’re practicing virtue, calling themselves experts in “good” and “evil.” But Zarathustra has come so that people will grow tired of these mere words—virtue should instead be... (full context)
Of the Rabble
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Zarathustra says that life is wonderful, but that the masses poisons the wells from which they... (full context)
Of the Tarantulas
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Zarathustra tells a parable of a tarantula, which symbolizes “preachers of equality.” Their “justice” is merely... (full context)
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Zarathustra warns his followers to mistrust anyone who has a strong desire to punish, especially when... (full context)
Of the Famous Philosophers
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Philosophers, Zarathustra teaches, have not served truth; they have served the people instead. The people have always... (full context)
The Night Song
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At night, the “unquenchable” speaks out. Zarathustra constantly gives and doesn’t know the joy of receiving; he has an unsated hunger and,... (full context)
The Dance Song
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One evening Zarathustra walks through the forest with his disciples, looking for a well. In a meadow, he... (full context)
The Funeral Song
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Zarathustra decides to go to the grave-island with a wreath of life, so he travels over... (full context)
Of Self-Overcoming
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Zarathustra addresses the subject of the will: he says that what urges his disciples on is... (full context)
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Zarathustra shares his teaching about life and the nature of living creatures. First, he explains that... (full context)
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Zarathustra says that life told him its secret—it is “that which must overcome itself again and... (full context)
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Zarathustra tells his followers that good and evil do not exist; these things must overcome themselves... (full context)
Of the Sublime Men
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Zarathustra describes seeing a sublime, solemn, repentant man—Zarathustra laughed at this man’s “ugliness.” Such a man,... (full context)
Of the Land of Culture
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Zarathustra describes flying into the future too far and being horrified by what he sees: only... (full context)
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Zarathustra has no home; he finds no homeland, and the men of the present are a... (full context)
Of Immaculate Perception
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Zarathustra critiques hypocrites who seek so-called “pure knowledge.” Such people purport to resent the earth, yet... (full context)
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Zarathustra says that only the one who wills to create something beyond t is innocent, and... (full context)
Of Scholars
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Once, while Zarathustra was sleeping, a sheep ate the ivy-wreath on his head and declared that he was... (full context)
Of Poets
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Zarathustra tells one of his disciples that he knows the body so well that the spirit... (full context)
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Zarathustra tells one of his disciples that the poets—including himself—lie too much and know too little.... (full context)
Of Great Events
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While Zarathustra is living on the Blissful Islands in the middle of the sea, a ship arrives,... (full context)
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Five days later, Zarathustra reappears and tells his followers a story about his conversation with a “fire-dog.” Zarathustra told... (full context)
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The state and church claim to be the most important beasts on Earth, Zarathustra continues, but this isn’t true. The fire-dog is cowed by this, and it retreats. But... (full context)
The Prophet
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A “great sadness” descends on humanity, and everything seems empty. Zarathustra hears a prophet speak, and what he hears transforms him. He grieves, wondering how to... (full context)
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Zarathustra’s favorite disciple interprets the dream for him. He says that the wind in the dream... (full context)
Of Redemption
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One day Zarathustra is going across the great bridge when he’s stopped by beggars, and a hunchback tells... (full context)
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Zarathustra tells his followers that it is terrible to walk among fragmented human beings. If he... (full context)
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...The will to power must learn to will backwards. At this point in the discourse, Zarathustra is terrified, and he falls silent. (full context)
Of Manly Prudence
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Zarathustra speaks of his heart’s “twofold will,” gazing downward into the abyss and simultaneously grasping upward.... (full context)
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Zarathustra second manly prudence is to be more considerate to the vain than to the proud.... (full context)
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...they would fear the Superman’s goodness—they would even think that the Superman was a devil. Zarathustra wants to see his fellow humans disguised as the good and just. Then he, too,... (full context)
The Stillest Hour
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Zarathustra must go into solitude again, because “the stillest hour” has ordered him to go away.... (full context)
The Wanderer
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Zarathustra journeys to the other side of his island to catch a ship. As he goes,... (full context)
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Reaching the top of a mountain, Zarathustra laments that he must now descend to the sea, his deepest descent yet. When he... (full context)
Of the Vision and the Riddle
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1. On board the ship, people are very curious about Zarathustra, but he remains sorrowful and withdrawn. After a couple of days, however, he begins listening... (full context)
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2. The dwarf hops down from Zarathustra’s shoulder. Zarathustra points out a nearby fork in the path; above the crossroad is a... (full context)
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Suddenly, Zarathustra is transported to a desolate spot among wild cliffs. He sees a young shepherd, who... (full context)
Of Involuntary Bliss
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Within a few days, Zarathustra has overcome his bitterness and rejoices again. It is afternoon, the time when he found... (full context)
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Someday, Zarathustra’s children, like trees, will each stand in solitude, “a living lighthouse of unconquerable life.” Then,... (full context)
Before Sunrise
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Zarathustra gives a hymn about the beauty of the sky, longing to disappear into its purity.... (full context)
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Zarathustra says that everything is “baptized […] beyond good and evil,” with good and evil themselves... (full context)
Of the Virtue that Makes Small
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1. On land again, Zarathustra undertakes many wanderings. He wants to find out whether humanity has grown bigger or smaller... (full context)
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2. As Zarathustra goes among the people, they won’t forgive him for the fact that he isn’t envious... (full context)
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3. Zarathustra is received by these people as “godless,” a label he accepts. He is disgusted by... (full context)
On the Mount of Olives
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Winter is an unwelcome guest in Zarathustra’s house, so he flees to the sunny “mount of olives,” where he can be joyful... (full context)
Of Passing By
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Zarathustra makes his way back to his cave by indirect wanderings. When passing a great city,... (full context)
Of the Apostates
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1. Zarathustra laments that many who once danced and laughed are now creeping toward the Cross. There... (full context)
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2. Zarathustra tells his “apostates” that it is disgraceful for those with “conscience” to pray. This allows... (full context)
The Home-Coming
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Zarathustra joyfully returns to his cave. He addresses his cave and himself, acknowledging that among other... (full context)
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Among humanity, there is nothing but noise and indulgence. Zarathustra tried to sit among humanity for their own sake and not to blame them for... (full context)
Of the Three Evil Things
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1. In the early morning, Zarathustra dreams that he weighs the world on a scale. By day, he decides to weigh... (full context)
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2. Those who believe in the afterlife have condemned sensual pleasure as worldly. Zarathustra, however, sees it as innocent—in his estimation, it’s the future’s way of thanking the present.... (full context)
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Zarathustra’s teaching also praises a “sound, healthy selfishness that issues from a mighty soul”—the rejoicing of... (full context)
Of the Spirit of Gravity
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1. Zarathustra’s tongue is too glib, his writing too foolish, and his foot too joyful for ordinary... (full context)
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2. The Spirit of Gravity teaches people to call life heavy, but Zarathustra teaches people to love themselves in order to become light and birdlike. One should not... (full context)
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Zarathustra did not arrive at his truth once and for all, but by trying and questioning... (full context)
Of Old and New Law-Tables
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1. Zarathustra sits among “old shattered law-tables” and “new, half-written law-tables.” He wants to descend to humanity... (full context)
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2. When Zarathustra visited humanity, each person thought he already knew what was good and evil for everyone.... (full context)
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3. In this envisioned future, Zarathustra saw the Superman and learned that humanity has to be overcome—it’s a bridge to the... (full context)
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(4) Zarathustra’s love commands distant humanity, “Do not spare your neighbour!” One must overcome oneself even in... (full context)
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...The first-born has always been sacrificed. “The old idol-priest” still lives on within the noble. Zarathustra loves those who don’t wish to spare themselves and are willing to perish. (7) Few... (full context)
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(11) Zarathustra pities the mob because they don’t remember any wisdom beyond their grandfathers’ generation. A “new... (full context)
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...to delight. Willing, which is creating, liberates. In order to create, one must learn from Zarathustra. (17) The world-weary must pass away, but doing this requires courage. (full context)
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...down inches from their goal. The “cultured” vermin must be scared away from them. (19) Zarathustra journeys over ever higher and holier mountains. He warns his followers to make sure that... (full context)
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(28) Zarathustra’s brothers must sail bravely into the human future amid the storms of their longing. (29)... (full context)
The Convalescent
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One morning in his cave, Zarathustra springs out of bed, shouting like a “madman.” His animals flee in terror. Zarathustra summons... (full context)
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Zarathustra’s animals urge him to go out into to the world now—he should sing new songs... (full context)
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Zarathustra’s animals remind him that he teaches that his recurrence is not to a new or... (full context)
Of the Great Longing
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Zarathustra breaks into song, addressing his soul. He sings of his self-overcoming, how he has purged... (full context)
The Second Dance Song
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(1) Zarathustra sings a song to Life, praising it for what it has taught him. It entices... (full context)
The Seven Seals (or: The Song of Yes and Amen)
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Zarathustra longs for eternity and for the wedding ring “of Recurrence.” He has never wanted to... (full context)
The Honey Offering
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Years pass; Zarathustra’s hair turns white. One day he’s sitting outside his cave overlooking the sea. His animals... (full context)
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Zarathustra declares that he will go “fishing” in the world, using his happiness as a net... (full context)
The Cry of Distress
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The next day, Zarathustra is sitting in front of his cave again when he’s alarmed by a shadow next... (full context)
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Zarathustra listens and hears the sound of a distant human cry. The prophet tells Zarathustra that... (full context)
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The prophet criticizes Zarathustra, telling him that anyone who seeks happiness here will not find it, because it no... (full context)
Conversation with the Kings
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After wandering through the forest for an hour, Zarathustra comes upon two kings driving a donkey before them. He hides behind a bush and... (full context)
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Zarathustra emerges from his hiding place and introduces himself. He asks the two kings what they... (full context)
The Leech
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Zarathustra walks deeper into the forest, lost in thought, and accidentally steps on a man, who... (full context)
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...has sought to know just this one thing and to do so with strict honesty. Zarathustra’s teaching has now seduced him. Zarathustra says that the blood pouring down the man’s arm... (full context)
The Sorcerer
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As Zarathustra continues on his way, he comes upon an old man, a sorcerer, who is flinging... (full context)
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Zarathustra, impatient, whacks the sorcerer with a stick and orders him to stop his complaints, accusing... (full context)
Retired from Service
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Next, Zarathustra encounters a haggard-looking man along the path and is distressed that some sort of priest... (full context)
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Zarathustra asks the old pope how God died, and the pope explains that when God was... (full context)
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Zarathustra muses that if God was going to be so angry with humanity for misunderstanding him,... (full context)
The Ugliest Man
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Zarathustra keeps searching for the one who has been crying in distress. He enters a deathly... (full context)
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The ugliest man detains Zarathustra when he tries to leave. He says that Zarathustra is his last refuge; he is... (full context)
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Zarathustra is chilled by the ugliest man’s words, but he encourages the man to find refuge... (full context)
The Voluntary Beggar
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As Zarathustra continues on his way, he feels warmer and more cheerful. Among a group of cows,... (full context)
The Shadow
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Zarathustra hears a voice calling him, but he is becoming grumpy about the loss of solitude... (full context)
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Zarathustra feels sympathy for his shadow, a “free spirit” to whom even a prison would be... (full context)
At Noontide
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Zarathustra encounters no one else and enjoys his solitude. Just before noon, however, he takes a... (full context)
The Greeting
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In the late afternoon, Zarathustra returns to his cave. Just before he enters it, however, he hears the cry of... (full context)
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To comfort his guests, Zarathustra offers them the security of his cave and his hand and heart. His guests reply... (full context)
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Zarathustra replies that, although these might be Higher Men, they are not high and strong enough... (full context)
The Last Supper
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At this point, the prophet steps forward and interrupts Zarathustra, reminding him that Zarathustra has promised them all a meal. The guests agree to lend... (full context)
Of the Higher Man
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(1) Zarathustra recalls his initial folly of trying to speak to humanity in the market-place. Nobody among... (full context)
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(4) Zarathustra calls upon the Higher Men to be courageous, even when faced with the abyss. (5)... (full context)
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...The one approaching their goal dances, even though they pass through dangers and afflictions. (18) Zarathustra “the laughing prophet” has found no one else strong enough for his crown today. (19)... (full context)
The Song of Melancholy
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(1) After the preceding discourse, Zarathustra escapes into solitude for a short time, embracing his animals. (2) The sorcerer wrestles with... (full context)
Of Science
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Just then, Zarathustra comes in and refutes the scientist. He says that courage, not fear, is what has... (full context)
Among the Daughters of the Desert
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(1) Zarathustra is about to leave, but his shadow begs him to stay, lest they fall into... (full context)
The Awakening
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After the shadow’s song, the cave is filled with revelry and laughter. Zarathustra withdraws from the cave, imagining that the men have sufficiently recovered from the spirit of... (full context)
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Suddenly, however, the cave falls silent, and there’s a smell of incense. Zarathustra looks inside and is astonished to see the Higher Men praying—they are kneeling before the... (full context)
The Ass Festival
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(1) Zarathustra interrupts the litany and asks the Higher Men what they’re doing. The old pope says... (full context)
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3. However, Zarathustra is pleased that the men have regained joy. He says that only “convalescents” (those who... (full context)
The Intoxicated Song
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(1) Zarathustra and the Higher Men go outside to admire the silence and beauty of the night.... (full context)
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(3) Zarathustra tells the Higher Men that things are being spoken at midnight which cannot be said... (full context)
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(7) The world having just become perfect, Zarathustra feels both happiness and woe. (8) The wind, howling as if drunk, speaks both joy... (full context)
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(10) Zarathustra appeals to the Higher Men—if they say yes to all joy, then they also say... (full context)
The Sign
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The next morning, Zarathustra springs out of bed and emerges from his cave “like a morning sun emerging from... (full context)
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Suddenly, birds swarm around Zarathustra, and as he tries to ward them off, he grasps a lion’s mane and realizes... (full context)
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The Higher Men wake up and venture outside to greet Zarathustra, but when the lion roars at them, they flee back into the cave. Zarathustra recalls... (full context)
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Zarathustra realizes that the time for pity has passed; he now aspires after his work. The... (full context)