V,
Thoughts
out
of Season, ii.
of Season, ii.
Nietzsche - v18 - Epilogue, Index
Works and Deeds, vii. 40.
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
345
## p. 346 (#458) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
World, the dream birth of the Olympian, i. 35.
— the metaphysical, vi. 20; on thinking too well or
too ill of, 391.
— the work of a suffering and tortured god, xi. 31; still
unexhausted and undiscovered, 89; Zarathustra's
dream of weighing it, 227; how clearly it ap-
peared—not riddle enough to scare human love
from it, 228; as a humanly good thing did it
come unto me, 229.
— its erroneousness obvious from all philosophical
stand-points, xii. 48; as a fiction, 50; as pos-
sessing the same degree of reality as our
emotions, 51; as will to power, 52.
— interpreted by our needs, xv. 13; a criticism of the
concept real and apparent, 70-2; the present
attitude of science to, 82-7; erroneous concepts
concerning the real and apparent, 92-6; the re-
lative world, and its comprehensibility, 101-2;
what it means to humanise the world, 106; its
worth lies in our interpretations, 106; the me-
chanical interpretation of, 109-23; interpreta-
tions of, as symptoms of the ruling instinct,
150; an objective valuation necessary, 175-7;
Nietzsche's Dionysian world of eternal self-
creation . . . the will to power and nothing
else, 432.
— a point of view of, condensed into four theses, xvi.
22; how the true world ultimately became a fable
—the history of an error, 24; without a goal—
any goal would have been reached, 243; the cir-
cular process, 243; an hypothesis opposed to
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out oi Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
346
## p. 347 (#459) ############################################
WORLD—YEA-SAYING
that of the Eternal Recurrence, 244-6; rationality
or irrationality cannot stand as attributes of,
247; beliefs to guard against, 248; everything
has returned, 248; the world of energy, 249; the
Eternal Recurrence of all things, 250; mankind's
hour of noon, 250.
World process, the, a phrase of modern cynicism, v. 75;
Hartmann and, 77 ; the meaning of, 88.
Worms of the intellect, vii. 165.
Worth, the cost of a great man, xv. 371; a man's
ancestors have already paid the price of what
he is, 371.
Wotan, the divine image of, iv. 203.
Wrath and punishment, from whence inherited and what
lies beyond, vii. 284.
Writers, signs of a good writer, vii. 72; the good German
view of the bad, 266.
Writing, and desire of victory, vii. 78; on learning to
write well, 242; what the reader brings to and
expects from the author, 249; demands of the
art of, 250.
— as a means of getting rid of thoughts, x. 127.
Writing, Reading and (Zarathustra's discourse), xi.
43-5-
Xantippe, quite the right wife for Socrates, vi. 314.
Xenophanes, his relationship with Homer, ii. 56; the
system of, revived, 119.
Xerxes, alluded to, vi. 86.
Yea-saying. "See Affirmation. "
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Warner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
347
## p. 348 (#460) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Youth, history and the sign of, v. 89; the desire of, for
experiencing things, 92; the mission of, 97;
the individuality of the youthful soul, 106; the
effective way for the youthful soul to find itself,
107.
— regarding, vi. 366.
— from the youthful soul, vii. 137; and unintelligible
old age, 141; and the middling good, 144; im-
patience of, 324; sympathy with, 325.
— problem, why philologists should be the teachers of
our noblest, viii. 129; and the age for the study
of antiquity, 147; the whole feature of study,
183; the introduction of, to natural laws, 185.
— Zarathustra sings of the ideals and friendships of his
youth—the grave song, xi. 130-4.
— the illusions and disillusions of, xii. 45.
Zarathustra, the oriental sage, and the philosophers of
Greece, ii. 77.
Zarathustra apostrophises the sun at the dawn of his
downgoing—Incipit Tragcedia, x. 271.
— the same, xi. 3; begins his downgoing, and is re-
cognised by an old saint, 4; arrived at the town,
speaks to the pople—/ teach you the superman,
6; again addresses the people—man is a rope . . .
over an abyss, 9; continues—I love the great de-
spisers . . . 9; not understood by the people—
I am not the mouth for these ears, 1 1 ; the people
interrupt—give us this last man; we will make
thee a present of the superman, 14; the fall of the
rope-dancer, 15; Zarathustra bears away his
'The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow:—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
348
## p. 349 (#461) ############################################
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra—
corpse, 17; having slept he wakes and says in
his heart—a new light hath dawned on me; /
need companions—living ones; not dead com-
panions and corpses which I carry with me where
I will, 19; no more will he discourse to the
people—I make for my goal; over the loitering
and tardy will I leap. Thus let my ongoing be
their downgoing, 21; his animals come to him,
21; he designates three metamorphoses of the
/*-', spirit: the camel—then kneeleth it down and
± wanteth to be well laden, 25; the lion—freedom
will it capture and lordship in its own wilderness,
N26; the child—innocence andforgetfulness, a new
beginning, 27; is commended by the people to
the wise man who discourses well about sleep and
virtue, 28; takes the view of the backworlds-
men and casts his fancy beyond man, 31; speaks
his word to the despisers of the body, 35; dis-
courses on virtue, joys, and passions, 38; the
pale criminal, 40; on reading and writing, 43;
speaks to the youth who had avoided him—the
tree on the hill, 45; the youth declares Zarathu-
stra to be the lightning for which he had waited,
^ 47; continues to speak on the preachers of
death, 49 ; on war and warriors, 51; on the death
of peoples, and the new idol—the State, 54 ; coun-
sels his friend, the youth, to flee into his solitude,
57; speaks on chastity, 61; on friendship, 63;
having discovered the good and bad of many
peoples, speaks of the thousand and'onegoals, 65;
1
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
349
## p. 350 (#462) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra—
of neighbour-love, 68; of the way of the creating
one, 70; of old and young women, 74; falling
asleep under a fig-tree, he is bitten by an adder,
77; discourses on the treatment of enemies, 78;
on child and marriage, 79; on voluntary death,
82; he takes leave of the town of which the
name is "The Pied Cow," and in response to
their request addresses his disciples—iheBestow-
Iing Virtue, 85; his farewell to his disciples—
now do I bid you lose me and find yourselves; and
only when ye have all denied me will I return un-
to you, 90; the Great Noontide, 91; in his moun-
tain solitude longs for those he loves—hedreams
of a child with a mirror. Interpreting the
dream to portend that his doctrine is in danger
he again goes down, 95; on his language—new
paths do I tread, a new speech cometh to me, 97;
in the Happy Isles—once did people say God:
I have taught ye superman, 98; can ye conceive
God 1 Then I pray ye be silent about all gods,
99; creating—that is the great salvation from
suffering, 100; willing emancipateth, 101; he
discourses on the Pitiful, 102 ; the Priests, 105;
the Virtuous, 109; the Rabble, 113; finds again
the well of delight and apostrophises it—my heart
on which my summer burneth . . . how my sum-
mer heart longeth for thy coolness, 115; ends—
verily a strong wind is Zarathustra to all low
places, 116; speaketh the parable of the Tarantu-
las, 116; the redemption of man from revenge
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow:—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
350
## p. 351 (#463) ############################################
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra—
Manly Prudence—not the height, it is the declivity
that is terrible, 171 ; his first manly prudence,
172; second, 172 ; third, 173; last—and dis-
guised will I sit amongst you—that I may mistake
you and myself; for that is my last manly pru-
dence, 175 ; once more he retires to his solitude,
but joylessly this time. He relates to his dis-
ciples the parable of the Stillest Hour, 175; the
wanderer—his reflections in the mountains—
I am a wanderer and a mountain climber, 183;
the path to his greatness—now hath it become my
last refuge what was hitherto my last danger, 184;
he looks out upon his destiny, 185; the Vision
, and the Enigma, spoken on board ship to the dar-
ing venturers and adventurers, and whoever hath
embarked with cunning sails upon frightful seas,
187-8; his defiance of the dwarf which was the
spirit of gravity, 189; his enunciation of the v
doctrine of the Eternal Recurrence of all things,
190; the parable of the serpent in the shepherd's
throat, 192; having surmounted all his pain he
meditates—Involuntary Bliss, 193-4; and
happiness came nigher and nigher unto him, 198;
speaks his optimistic avowal of life in his apos-
trophe—Before Sunrise, 198; counsels the ex-
ploitation of chance, 201; the Bedwarfing
Virtue—he wanders among men and into the
small houses, 202; they bite at him because he
says that for small people small virtues are neces-
sary, 203; he satirises their customs, 205 ; when
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
Z 353
## p. 352 (#464) ############################################
mttnmqorn. Tr?
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra—
he calls out—curse all the cowardly devils in you
that would fain whimper and fold the hands and
adore, they answer Zarathustra is Godless, 207;
his vision of the Great Noontide, 209; on the
Olive Mount—winter, a bad guest, sitteth with me
at home, 209; / am jealous of my poverty, 210;
the purpose of his long clear silence, 211;
frozen with the frost of knowledge, he mocks at
all pity, 213; on Passers by: after his wander-
ings he comes to the gate of the great city, where
he is met by a foaming fool, called by the people
Zarathustra's ape, who speaks, 213; Zarathustra
interrupts him and shuts his mouth—out of love
alone shall my contempt and my warning bird
take wing, 216; gives this precept to the fool—
where one can no longer love,there should one" pass
by," 217 ; the Apostates, 217 ; his first and second
companions, 218; the susceptible simpletons
for whom the mousetraps of the heart are set, 220;
he overhears the five words of the nightwatch-
men about old things, 221; at which his heart
writhes with laughter, 222; the Return Home—
O lonesomenessI my "home" lonesomeness, 223;
reflects on his experiences among men, 225;
declares pity to have ever been his greatest
danger, 226; speaks his dream of the three evil
things, 227; in his dream he weighs the world,
227; the world as it appeared to him, 228;
voluptuousness, passion for power, and selfish-
ness, placed in the scales, 229; presents a new
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
354
## p. 353 (#465) ############################################
, ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra—
table—be not considerate of thy neighbour, 242-3;
'> the instability of all things, 245; consecrates his
disciples to a new nobility—not to a nobility pur-
chaseable with trader's gold, 247 ; your children's
land shall ye love; let this love be your new
nobility, 248; the hostility of his bird-spirit to
the spirit of gravity, 234; his doctrine of Self-
. Love, 235; Old and New Tables, 239; whilst
waiting his hour Zarathustra telleth himself his
own story, 239; on ancient pessimistic babbling
that passes for wisdom, 249; the Preachers of
Indifference, 251; taunts the world-weary ones
with their lusts, 252; the foiled and wrecked
hero, 253; describes the way of the Parasite,
254; anticipates his critics—O my brethren, am
I then cruel? But I say: what falleth that shall
one also push, 255; on Bravery and pride in
one's foes, 255 ; for the worthier foe shall ye re-
serve yourselves; therefore must ye pass by many
a one, 256; the unworthiness of the democracy,
256; the sexes and marriage, 257; refers to
Jesus and the Pharisees, 259; and to himself
as the second one who discovered the country
of the Pharisees, 260; Break up, break up, I
pray you the "good and the just," 260; encour-
ages his disciples with—Cheer up I ye old sea-
man-hearts, 261; teaches them to—Become
hard I 261; prays to his will—that thou mayest
} be inexorable " in " thy victory . . . that I may one
'*** day be ready and ripe in the great noontide, 262;
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
355
## p. 354 (#466) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra—
he calls out—curse all the cowardly devils in you
that would fain whimper and fold the hands and
adore, they answer Zarathustra is Godless, 207;
his vision of the Great Noontide, 209; on the
Olive Mount—winter, a bad guest, sitteth with me
at home, 209; / am jealous of my poverty, 210;
the purpose of his long clear silence, 211;
frozen with the frost of knowledge, he mocks at
all pity, 213; on Passers by: after his wander-
ings he comes to the gate of the great city, where
he is met by a foaming fool, called by the people
Zarathustra's ape, who speaks, 213; Zarathustra
interrupts him and shuts his mouth—out of love
alone shall my contempt and my warning bird
take wing, 216; gives this precept to the fool—
where one can no longer love,there should one" pass
by," 217 ; the Apostates, 217 ; his first and second
companions, 218; the susceptible simpletons
for whom the mousetraps of the heart are set, 220;
he overhears the five words of the nightwatch-
men about old things, 221 ; at which his heart
writhes with laughter, 222; the Return Home—
O lonesomeness I my "home" lonesomeness, 223;
reflects on his experiences among men, 225;
declares pity to have ever been his greatest
danger, 226; speaks his dream of the three evil
things, 227; in his dream he weighs the world,
227; the world as it appeared to him, 228;
voluptuousness, passion for power, and selfish-
ness, placed in the scales, 229; presents a new
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow:—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, all-too-
354
## p. 355 (#467) ############################################
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra—
table—be not considerate of thy neighbour, 242-3;
the instability of all things, 245; consecrates his
disciples to a new nobility—not to a nobilitypur-
chaseable with trader's gold, 247 ; your children's
land shall ye love; let this love be your new
nobility, 248; the hostility of his bird-spirit to
the spirit of gravity, 234; his doctrine of Self-
Love, 235; Old and New Tables, 239; whilst
waiting his hour Zarathustra telleth himself his
own story, 239; on ancient pessimistic babbling
that passes for wisdom, 249; the Preachers of
Indifference, 251; taunts the world-weary ones
with their lusts, 252; the foiled and wrecked
hero, 253; describes the way of the Parasite,
254; anticipates his critics—O my brethren, am
I then cruel 1 But I say: what falleth that shall
one also push, 255; on Bravery and pride in
one's foes, 255 ; for the worthier foe shall ye re-
serve yourselves; therefore must ye pass by many
a one, 256; the unworthiness of the democracy,
256; the sexes and marriage, 257; refers to
Jesus and the Pharisees, 259; and to himself
as the second one who discovered the country
of the Pharisees, 260; Break up, break up, I
pray you the "good and the just" 260; encour-
ages his disciples with—Cheer up I ye old sea-
man-hearts, 261; teaches them to—Become
hard I 261; prays to his will—that thou may est
be inexorable " in " thy victory . . . that I may one
day be ready and ripe in the great noontide, 262; *
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
355
## p. 356 (#468) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra—
the convalescent: his exclamation to his most
abysmal thought, 263; his animals minister to
him, 264; he converses with his animals on
man and the Eternal Recurrence of all things, 265
et sea. ; his animals suggest to him how he would
speak were he about to die—now do I die . . .
I come again eternally, 270; the Great Longing
—O my soul . . . , 271; his second dance song
—into thine eyes gazed I lately, O life, 275; the
seven seals, or the yea and amen lay, 280; Zara-
thustra's song to Eternity and the marriage ring
of rings, Eternal Recurrence: his alpha and
omega, 283; the Honey Sacrifice—his animals
persuade him to leave his cave for the mountains,
287 ; he counsels—Become what thou art I—thus
may men come up to me, 289; predicts his Hazar
—the Zarathustra kingdom of a thousand years,
290-1; the Cry of Distress: the reappearance of
the soothsayer, 291-2 ; the soothsayer would se-
duce him to his last sin—Pity, 293; and tells Zara-
thustra that the cry of distress comes from the
Higher man in the forest, 295; Zarathustra meets
with two kings, and overhearstheirdialogue, 296;
the kings declare their mission—we are on our
way to find the Higher man . . . there is no
sorer misfortune in all human destiny than when
the mighty of the earth are not also the first men,
299; the kings do homage to him in words,
300; he offers them the hospitality of his cave
and proceeds, 301; the Leech: Zarathustra
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow:—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i.
V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
356
## p. 357 (#469) ############################################
ZARATHUSTRA
Zarathustra—
treads, unawares, on a man, and speaks a par-
able, 302; the trodden one declares himself to
be the spiritually conscientious one, 304; Zara-
thustra directs him also to his cave and pro-
ceeds, 305; encounters the magician who sings
a lament, 306; takes his staff and strikes the
wailer with all his might, 310; the magician de-
clares himself to be the representative of the
Penitent in Spirit, 311; and that he seeks Zara-
thustra, 313; he is directed by Zarathustra to
his cave, 313; out of service, 314; his encounter
with the Last Pope, 315; who seeks the most
pious of those who believe not in God, 316; the
last pope describes the old dead God, 317; Zara-
thustra rejoins concerning the old dead God,
318; and directs the last pope to his cave, 319;
Zarathustraentersthe valley called serpentdeath,
320-1 ;where he encounters the ugliest man, 321;
directs him to his cave and to his animals—the
proudest animal and thewisest animal, 325-6; The
Voluntary Beggar, 326; Zarathustra encounters
the Preacher on the Mount, 327 ; bids him—be
to-night my guest, 331; the Shadow, 332; from
which he endeavours to escape but cannot, and
turning, the shadow speaks, 333; Zarathustra
answers sadly, 335; lies down beside the tree,
at the hour of perfect noontide and sleep, 337; be-
fore falling asleep speaks to his heart, 337 ; the
Greeting, 340; on returning to his cave he again
hears the cry of distress, this time issuing from
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
357
## p. 358 (#470) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Zarathustra—
it, 340; his astonishment when he meets his
guests, 341; he speaketh plainly with them, 345;
for others do I wait. . . laughing lions must come,
346-7; the Supper, 347; the soothsayer inter-
rupts, 347; other guests follow, 348; the Higher
Man, 350 ; Zarathustra recalls his folly in speak-
ing in the market-place—when I spoke to all I
spoke to none, 350; Take heart I God hath died:
now do "we" desire—the superman to live, 351;
calls to the Higher men to surpass the masters
of to-day, 352; If ye would go up high then use
your own legs, 356; his songs to laughter—this
crown of the laughter—this rose-garland crown
. . . 361; he escapes from his guests and seeks
his animals, 363; is missed by the old magician,
364; who seizes his harp and sings, 365; save
the spiritually conscientious one all are captured
by the magician's song, 369; Zarathustra is ac-
claimed by the Higher men as courage with eagle's
pinions and serpent's wisdom, 371-2; among
daughters of the desert, 373; the wanderer who
called himself Zarathustra's shadow reappears,
373 ; and after speaking, sings, 374 ; the Awaken-
ing: the cave where the guests are assembled
becomes full of noise, 379; the guests perform a
strange litany, in which the braying of the ass
fills a prominent part, 382; the ass festival, 384;
the drunken song: the ugliest man finds expres-
sion for a question, 389; Zarathustra's Rounde-
lay, 391; he again apostrophises the sun—Thou
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow:—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
358
## p. 359 (#471) ############################################
ZARATHUSTRA
great star, thou deep eye of happiness . . . 398;
the Sign, 398; a sign that cometh to him that
his children are nigh—a long, soft lion-roar, 400;
his departure, 402.
Zarathustra, his domain, xiii. 118.
— an old atheist, xv. 410; alluded to, 108.
— the people's estimation of the good, xvi. 259;
on the lack of goals, 259; the dissolution of
morality, 260; the burden of the commander,
261; men and deeds, 262 ; the aim of, the over-
coming of morality, 263; the herald to call forth
law givers, 264; the ruler, 264; the ruler must
first rule in himself, 265; rejoices that the time is
ripe for an order of rank among individuals, 266;
his task, 266; the new holiness of rulers—the
renunciation of happiness and ease, 266-7 , tne
creator, far-sighted—the good man, near-sighted,
267; we must make our ideals prevail—the
Eternal Recurrence, the turning point in history,
267 ; opens the chamber of truth, 268; we must
create beyond ourselves, 269; his desire with re-
gard to mankind, 269; his creation of super-
man, 270; his fundamental proposition, 271;
my predecessors, 273; his transvaluations of death,
disease, procreation, pity, 273; education, main-
tenance of the species, 274; the creation of the
thought of Recurrence, 274; the hesitation of
the disciples, 275 ; the "will to suffering," 276;
Higher men who come in despair, 277; the
typical suffering of the reformer, 279; can only
dispense happiness once the order of rank is re-
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
,/
359
## p. 360 (#472) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
stored, 281; his doctrines must be taught,
281.
Zarathustra, as holdinga place in Nietzsche's life-work,xvii.
3 ; his halcyonic tones, 4; quoted, 4 ; on deliver-
ance from loathing, 26; future endowment of
chairs for interpreting, 55; on the ideal reader,
62; his name may be substituted for that of
Wagner in the essay—Richard Wagner in Bay-
reuth, 74; to understand the type one must be
clear as to the condition of great healthiness, 99;
Joyful Wisdom quoted, 99-100; on inspiration,
103; Nietzsche's psychological view of himself
during the years of unparalleled distress that were
relieved by the periods of industry during which
Zarathustra was conceived, 105; described,
107; the concept superman, 108; the psycho-
logical problem presented by the type, 109; his
night song quoted, 11o; his determination of his
life task, 112-3; the question as to what Zara-
thustra precisely meant answered, 133; quoted,
136; the first psychologist of the good man, and
perforce the friend of the evil man, 137.
Zarathustra Thus Spake, quoted, i. 15.
— quoted, x. 350.
— Nietzsche and the reader whom he would allow to
pass muster as knowing that book, xiii. 12.
— the deepest book mankind possesses, xvi. i11;
alluded to in the preface to The Antichrist, 125;
Explanatory Notes to, 259-81.
— as holding a place in Nietzsche's life-work, xvii. 3;
future endowment of chairs for interpreting, 55;
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV', Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
N
360
## p. 361 (#473) ############################################
ZELLER—ZOOLOGY
reviewed by Nietzsche himself, 96-105 ; the funda-
mental idea of,—Eternal Recurrence—first con-
ceived 1881—thus noted—six thousand feet be-
yond man and time, 96 ; might be classified under
the rubric Music, 97; the last part of, written in
the hallowed hour when Richard Wagner gave
up the ghost in Venice, 97; circumstances in
which it originated, 98-9 ; the periods of its com-
position, 104; Nietzsche's psychological view of
himself during the years of its composition, 105;
nothing ever produced out of such a superabund-
ance of strength, 106.
Zeller, the works of, v. 190.
Zeno, and the idea. of the Infinite, ii. 129 ; and Parmenides,
131-
— the reward of, v. 186.
Zeus, his gift of hope to encounter Pandora's ills, vi. 82.
Zola, his love of ugliness, xv. 264 ; an example of the art
of tyrannising, 267.
— and the love of stinking, xvi. 60.
Zollner, alluded to, v. 53.
Zoology, and consciousness, x. 296.
Human, ii. VIII, Case ofWagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. 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.
36I
## p. 362 (#474) ############################################
## p. 363 (#475) ############################################
VOCABULARY OF FOREIGN
WORDS AND PHRASES
TRANSLATED BY P. V. COHN, B. A.
The Editor has from time to time received letters
suggesting that translations should be given of the
Latin, French, and other foreign quotations which
occur rather frequently in the works of Nietzsche. In
most cases these words and phrases have been pre-
served in the text, in order to keep the flavour of the
original: nor was it considered desirable to disfigure
the pages with an excess of footnotes. The following
vocabulary will, it is hoped, meet the needs of readers.
The volumes are given in alphabetical orderofnumber
as in the advertisement index, but the quotations are
arranged in order of pages, the numbers heading the
quotations being those of the pages. Wherever a word
or phrase seemed to require comment as well as trans-
lation, notes have been added. Cross references are
given to the pages of the volumes.
## p. 364 (#476) ############################################
VOCABULARY OF FOREIGN PHRASES
I. THE BIRTH OF TRAGEDY.
p. 5. in artibus: in art.
profanum vulgus: the uninitiated mob. A
phrase from Horace.
p. 9. terminus technicus : artistic end.
p. 10. Welt, etc. : World as Will and Idea.
p. 25. principium individuationis: principle of in-
dividualisation.
p. 35. Moira: Fate.
p. 51. perpetuum vestigium: endless trace.
Des Knaben Wunderhorn: The Boy's En-
chanted Horn. A famous collection of
folk-songs by Arnim and Brentano, 1806.
p. 57. Oceanides : Daughters of Oceanus.
p. 96. epos : epic.
p. 100. deus ex machina: God in the car. The god
who in Euripides often cuts the knot of
a difficult situation was lowered on to
the stage in a contrivance known as
machina.
vo Ūs (nous): mind.
p. 102. sophist: wisdom-monger. The Sophists in
fifth-century Greece were men who trav-
elled about thecountryteaching rhetoric
and science for considerable fees. Their
methods (especially their attempt to
make "the worse appear the better
364
## p. 365 (#477) ############################################
THE BIRTH OF TRAGEDY
cause ") were attacked by Socrates and
his school.
p. 103. daimonion: lit, supernatural thing: A dai-
mon was a lower order of divinity than a
theos. Applied by Socrates to his "warn-
ing voice" (see context).
per defectum: by deficiency.
p. 109. ancilla: handmaid.
p. 110. deus ex machina; see above, on p. 100.
p. 121. principiumindividuationis; seeabove,onp. 25.
p. 123. a priori: lit. " from the former ": applied in
logic to ideas which are innate and do
not proceed from outside experience.
p. 125. abstracta: abstracts.
universalia post rem, ante rem, in re: gener-
alities after the particular, before the
particular, in the particular.
p. 131. dithyramb: hymn in honour of the wine-god
Dionysus.
p. 132. de'nouement: unravelling of a plot.
p. 139. aterna veritates: eternal verities.
p. 142. stilo rappresentativo: representative style.
p. 155. epigones: after-born, successors, posterity.
p. 158. imperium: rule, empire.
p. 171. quid pro quo: tit for tat.
p. 177. sub specie (Eterni: in eternal form (see below).
365
## p.
