266; the
question
and the
artist, 279; its opposite, 280; against the roman-
ticism of great passion, 283.
artist, 279; its opposite, 280; against the roman-
ticism of great passion, 283.
Nietzsche - v18 - Epilogue, Index
134;
the worship of the ancients and, 176; the spirit
of emulation, 179.
— the Italian style of, xiv. 65; what it proves, 74; the
Reformation as a wild and plebeian counterpart
of, 75-
— the inability of modern man to stand the prevailing
conditions of, xvi. 91; the last great age, 93;
Goethe's attempted ascent to the naturalness of,
109; defined—the transvaluation of Christian
values, 228; the splendour of its attack, 228; its
destruction by a vindictive monk—Luther, 229.
— alluded to, xvii. 124.
Renan, his religious sensitiveness, xii. 68; quoted, 69.
— alluded to, xiii. 204.
— criticised, xvi. 61; and the evolution of the concept
God, 144; his monstrous ideas regarding the
heroism and genius of Jesus, 164; his treatment
of Jesus, 168.
Renunciation, the danger of, vii. 161; invests us with
youthful pride, 176.
— the vita contemplativa and, ix. 318.
— and the happiness of rediscovery, x. 188; the pledge
of—ExcelsiorI 220; possibilities of, 221.
— the first principle of men of the highest rank—the
renunciation of happiness and ease, xvi. 266-7.
Repentance, never to be allowed free play, vii. 355.
Repose, the seekers of, x. 188.
Reputation, a bad conscience easier to get on with than
a bad, x. 87; the significance attached to one's
having a fixed reputation, 231.
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.
r 257
## p. 258 (#356) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Research, "hunting," ix. 299.
Resentment, the resentful man as opposed to the aristo-
crat, xiii. 36; the aristocratic inability to hold,
37; the real "love of one's enemies," 38; not
the basis of justice, 84; Duhring refuted, 85.
— early Christian methods of, xvi. 182.
— the psychology of, xvii. 21.
Reserve, on lack of, x. 201.
Resignation, what it is, ix. 356.
Resistance, surprise at, ix. 319.
Responsibility, the history of the origin of, xiii. 63; the
proud knowledge of the privilege in man—
conscience, 65.
Retrospect, on pathos and, x. 246.
Revelation, the formation of religions and the belief in,
ix. 63.
Revenge, the wish for, and the wish to take, vi. 76;
coarser natures revel in ideas of, 78.
— difficulty in defining the word, vii. 211; the ele-
ments of, 212 ; punishment the end of, 212-5 ,
most terrible when identified with equity, 316;
the contempt of, an exquisite form of, 321.
— and magnanimity, x. 86; on capacity for, 102.
— the bridge to Zarathustra's highest hope—the re-
demption of man from revenge, xi. 117; the
spirit of—suffering and penalty, 169; the
dialogue of the kings—no longer known, 296
et seq.
— not the basis of justice, xiii. 84 ; Duhring refuted, 85.
— the instinct of, underlying the actions of the de-
cadents, xv. 209-14.
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, 11. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
258
## p. 259 (#357) ############################################
REVENGE—RHYTHM
Revenge, Paul the greatest of all the Apostles of, xvi. 193;
the concealed lust of, as becoming the master
of the culture of the ancient world, 225;
Christianity the one great instinct of, 231.
Reverence, for them that know, vii. 333.
— noble origin to be inferred where there is a delight in,
xii. 237-9.
— as the supreme test of honesty, xiv. 378.
Revolution, and change, ix. 363.
— Zarathustra's account of his interview with the fire-
dog, xi. 157.
— as a show word, xiv. 68.
— made Napoleon possible, xv. 314.
Revolutionists, on dangerous revolutionary spirits, vi.
329.
Revue des Deux Mondes, article by Taine quoted, xv. 397.
Reward, motives of, vi. 105.
— and punishment, vii. 44.
— Zarathustra and the virtuous who seek payment for
their virtue, xi. 109.
Reward and punishment, the determination of action by,
xv. 195; two things that stand or fall together,
196.
Reynard the fox, the New Testament as reminiscent of
his methods, xiv. 173.
Rhythm, the beautifying effect of, vi. 157.
— introduced into speech, x. 117; as a means to con-
strain the gods, 117; the origin of, in music, 118;
nothing more serviceable to the superstitious
ancients than, 119; preference for metrical form
in our own time, 120.
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.
259
## p. 260 (#358) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Rich, the, the actual valuers, the artists, the glorifiers of
the good and the beautiful, x. 120-1.
Rich and poor as signs that life shall again and again
surpass itself, xi. 119.
Riches, our rich people—they are the poorest, xiv. 57.
— the essence of the desire for, xv. 353.
Richter (Jean Paul) quoted, ii. m.
— Nietzsche's judgment of, vii. 247.
— his estimate of the Germans, xii. 197.
Riehl, his music for the home, iv. 25 ; again, 38.
Riemann, his services to rhythmics, viii. 33.
Rienzi, the characters in Wagner's, iv. 11 o.
Right, the, on being in, from time to time, vii. 142.
Rights, the origin of, vii. 217; non-assertion of, 319.
— on the natural history of our duty and our, ix. 11o.
— descended into claims, x. 191.
— no such thing as the right to live—to work—to be
happy, xv. 208.
Ring of the Nibelung, The, characters of Wotan and Brun-
hilde, iv. 11o; the most moral music where
Brunhilde is awakened, 110; the composition of,
165; a huge system of thought, 173; the hero of,
201; its plot, 202; alluded to, 179.
— instanced, viii. 6; its history, 9.
Ritschl, the only genial scholar ever met by Nietzsche, xvii
.
51; quoted, 59-60.
Ritter, the works of, v. 190.
Robespierre, the moral fanaticism of, as affecting Kant,
ix-5
— as fanatic, xvi. 211.
Rogue, an innocent, vii. 45.
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, ail-too-Human, i. VII, Human, all-too-
260
## p. 261 (#359) ############################################
ROLAND—ROMANTICISM
Roland (Madame), alluded to, xii. 184.
Role, on selecting and acting a, x. 302; the European as
stage player, 303; the problem of the actor of a
role, 318.
Roman Catholic Church, the, the results of its influences,
vi. 130.
Roman Catholicism, its inheritance from the profound
Orient, x. 291.
— the attachment of the Latin races to, xii. 68.
Romans, two ways of women sinning mortally, according
to the ancient, x. 80.
— the, as a fructifying nation, xii. 206.
— a nation stronger and more aristocratic than ever
existed, xiii. 54.
— Nietzsche's indebtedness to, xvi. 113 ; their organisa-
tion could stand bad emperors, but not the
Christians, 222; their culture, science, art, and
the destruction of the whole, 224-5.
Romanticism, Nietzsche defends himself against,
i. 12-5.
— the revivers of the past, ix. 165.
— former misunderstanding and new views concerning, x.
331-5-
— the music of, xii. 201.
— regarding, xiv. 67; as the counterstroke of the
eighteenth century, 79; the pre-eminence of
music in the romanticists, 1830-40, 88; German
music and the age of, 89.
— false accentuation in, xv.
266; the question and the
artist, 279; its opposite, 280; against the roman-
ticism of great passion, 283.
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.
26l
## p. 262 (#360) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Romanticists, the, mummery in, xiv. 67; those whose faith
has gone to pot, 68.
Rome, her Dionysian festivals, i. 29-30.
— the Christian revenge on, ix. 72.
— the greatest fight there ever has been—Rome
against Judsea, Judaea against Rome, xiii. 54.
— Nietzsche's dislike of the city, xvii. 103; The Night
Song composed in, 104.
Rossini, theeighteenth century sang itself out in Beethoven
and, vii. 88.
— his overflowing spirits, viii. 46; and the eighteenth
century, 64.
— his contempt for librettos, x. 113.
— Nietzsche's predilection for, xvii. 45.
Rousseau, his Emile quoted, i. 36.
— and David Strauss, iv. 81.
— themenof,—thethreateningforceofhumanity,v. 139.
— a superstition of, alluded to, vi. 334; the example of
how to use one's weakness, 389.
— the phantom formed by his writings, vii. 307; the
danger of enlightenment, 310; alluded to, 178.
— the moral tarantula, and Kant, ix. 5 ; and the alterna-
tives concerning our civilisation, 167; his mag-
nanimity, 327 ; and Diderot, 348 ; the nature of,
instanced, 364; alluded to, 338.
— the Confessions of, alluded to, x. 125.
— alluded to, xii. 201.
— the eighteenth century of, xiv. 58 ; and the liberation
of women, 76; feminism and the reign of feeling,
77; as a symptom of self-contempt and of in-
flamed vanity, 82 ; criticised and compared with
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-
262
## p. 263 (#361) ############################################
ROUSSEAU—RULING
Voltaire, 82-5; his use of the phrase—" away
from idylls and operas," 96; the struggle between
him and Voltaire, 101; alluded to, 74, 100, 306.
Rousseau, his anathemas against the society of Voltaire
recalled, xv. 203; the surpassing of his "man of
nature" in the nineteenth century, 396.
— among my impossible people, xvi. 60; alluded to
in critique of Sainte-Beuve, 61; his influence on
George Sand, 64; compared with Napoleon to
illustrate Nietzsche's sense of progress, 108 ; as
fanatic, 211.
Rubens painted according to his patrons' vague con-
ception of taste—not to his own measure of
beauty, xiii. 220.
— an apotheosis artist, xv. 280; instanced, 281.
Rule, the, and the exception, ix. 319.
Rulers, Zarathustra longeth for,—the best shall rule, the best
also willeth to rule, xi. 256-7.
— the training of, xvi. 272.
Ruling class, the, its corruption, has brought ruling into
evil odour, xv. 205.
Ruling classes, the degeneration of the ruler and the ruling
classes the cause of all the great disorders in
history, xv. 312.
Ruling instinct, the, interpretations of the world as
symptoms of, xv. 150.
Ruling race, the, time to set about rearing—thoroughly,
artificially, and conscientiously—a type that
shall establish the virtues of democracy, xv.
360 ; the ruling of the earth, 361-6.
Ruling types, theshepherdasopposed to the "lord," xv. 330.
Human, il. 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.
263
## p. 264 (#362) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Russia, emigration of the intelligence from, vii. 314.
— the power of will as conserved in, xii. 146.
— its songs, xvi. 4; the only great nation to-day, 96;
the most valuable material of, to be found in
Siberia, 104; Dostoiewsky's testimony, 104.
Russian, the, and the imitation of foreign culture, iii. 67.
Sacrifice, regarding, vii. 30.
— and knowledge, ix. 52; the morality of victims, 226;
its morality, 231.
— he who is a firstling is ever sacrificed, xi. 244; The
Honey Sacrifice (Zarathustra's discourse), 287-91.
— as the essence of Christian faith, xii. 65; three rounds
in the ladder of: of human beings—of natural
instincts—of God Himself, 73; not a dis-
interested action, 164.
Saga, the Icelandic, and master morality, viii. 49.
Sage, the, giving himself out to be a fool, vii. 130; the
monotone of, 352; his affability, 360.
— the inhumanity of, ix. 333.
— as astronomer, xii. 86.
— Nietzsche's happy conviction that the sage is once
more possible in Europe, xv. 382.
— first ideas of the decadence of, xvi. 9.
Saint, the, the visions, terrors, torpors, and ecstasies
of, vi. 128-9; his aids, 142; imaginations, 143
et seq. ; condition of soul, 147; the belief in, 149
et seq.
— Zarathustra and the saint in the forest, xi. 4-6.
— his strength of will, the object of reverence, xii. 70;
the will to power in, 71.
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-
264
## p. 265 (#363) ############################################
SAINT—SANKHYAM
Saint, the, regarding, xiv. 67 ; criticised, 282-90; as the
most powerful type of man, 290.
Sainte-Beuve, an observation of, quoted, vii. 258.
— alluded to, xii. 68.
— instanced, xiv. 342.
— criticised, xvi. 61.
Saint-Evremond, Homer and the historical sense unintelli-
gible to, xii. 168.
Saint-Francis. See "Francis of Assisi. "
St. Moritz, Nietzsche's summer there in 1879, xvii. 10.
Saint-Paul. See " Paul, the Apostle. "
Saint-Simon, as fanatic, xvi. 211.
Sallust, Nietzsche's model, xvii. 31; his early indebted-
ness to, 112.
Salome (Miss Lou), her Hymn to Life, xvii. 98; Nietzsche's
musical setting, 209-14.
Salvation, two psychological realities out of which the doc-
trine has grown, xvi. 165-6.
Salvation Army, the, the result of the latest display of re-
ligious neurosis, xii. 67; a reasonable admission
regarding, 211.
Sanctification, as a weapon to fight race depression, xiii.
170; the relief found by sportsmen of saintliness,
171.
Sand (George), alluded to, xii. 184.
— again, xiv. 58.
— lactea ubertas, xvi. 60; Lettres (Tun voyagcur, and
their authoress criticised, 64.
Sand (Ludwig), his knowledge of the Germans, xii. 197.
Sankhyam, among Indians, Jesus would have used the
ideas of, xvi. 169.
Human, ii. VII, 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.
265
## p. 266 (#364) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Satyr, the, the significance of, in Greek tragedy, i. 63 et seq.
Saume, an allusion to his poem Der Wilde, vii. 364.
— his Die Gesange, and the significance of song and
singing, xvi. 4.
Savant, the, less common characteristics of: firstly, v. 167;
to twelfthly, 171 ; the servant of truth, 17 2.
— why they are nobler than artists, vii. 106; their morals,
11o; the great danger of, 281.
Saviour, The. See under "Jesus. "
Saviour, the, remains an individual, viii. 114.
the worship of the ancients and, 176; the spirit
of emulation, 179.
— the Italian style of, xiv. 65; what it proves, 74; the
Reformation as a wild and plebeian counterpart
of, 75-
— the inability of modern man to stand the prevailing
conditions of, xvi. 91; the last great age, 93;
Goethe's attempted ascent to the naturalness of,
109; defined—the transvaluation of Christian
values, 228; the splendour of its attack, 228; its
destruction by a vindictive monk—Luther, 229.
— alluded to, xvii. 124.
Renan, his religious sensitiveness, xii. 68; quoted, 69.
— alluded to, xiii. 204.
— criticised, xvi. 61; and the evolution of the concept
God, 144; his monstrous ideas regarding the
heroism and genius of Jesus, 164; his treatment
of Jesus, 168.
Renunciation, the danger of, vii. 161; invests us with
youthful pride, 176.
— the vita contemplativa and, ix. 318.
— and the happiness of rediscovery, x. 188; the pledge
of—ExcelsiorI 220; possibilities of, 221.
— the first principle of men of the highest rank—the
renunciation of happiness and ease, xvi. 266-7.
Repentance, never to be allowed free play, vii. 355.
Repose, the seekers of, x. 188.
Reputation, a bad conscience easier to get on with than
a bad, x. 87; the significance attached to one's
having a fixed reputation, 231.
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.
r 257
## p. 258 (#356) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Research, "hunting," ix. 299.
Resentment, the resentful man as opposed to the aristo-
crat, xiii. 36; the aristocratic inability to hold,
37; the real "love of one's enemies," 38; not
the basis of justice, 84; Duhring refuted, 85.
— early Christian methods of, xvi. 182.
— the psychology of, xvii. 21.
Reserve, on lack of, x. 201.
Resignation, what it is, ix. 356.
Resistance, surprise at, ix. 319.
Responsibility, the history of the origin of, xiii. 63; the
proud knowledge of the privilege in man—
conscience, 65.
Retrospect, on pathos and, x. 246.
Revelation, the formation of religions and the belief in,
ix. 63.
Revenge, the wish for, and the wish to take, vi. 76;
coarser natures revel in ideas of, 78.
— difficulty in defining the word, vii. 211; the ele-
ments of, 212 ; punishment the end of, 212-5 ,
most terrible when identified with equity, 316;
the contempt of, an exquisite form of, 321.
— and magnanimity, x. 86; on capacity for, 102.
— the bridge to Zarathustra's highest hope—the re-
demption of man from revenge, xi. 117; the
spirit of—suffering and penalty, 169; the
dialogue of the kings—no longer known, 296
et seq.
— not the basis of justice, xiii. 84 ; Duhring refuted, 85.
— the instinct of, underlying the actions of the de-
cadents, xv. 209-14.
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, 11. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
258
## p. 259 (#357) ############################################
REVENGE—RHYTHM
Revenge, Paul the greatest of all the Apostles of, xvi. 193;
the concealed lust of, as becoming the master
of the culture of the ancient world, 225;
Christianity the one great instinct of, 231.
Reverence, for them that know, vii. 333.
— noble origin to be inferred where there is a delight in,
xii. 237-9.
— as the supreme test of honesty, xiv. 378.
Revolution, and change, ix. 363.
— Zarathustra's account of his interview with the fire-
dog, xi. 157.
— as a show word, xiv. 68.
— made Napoleon possible, xv. 314.
Revolutionists, on dangerous revolutionary spirits, vi.
329.
Revue des Deux Mondes, article by Taine quoted, xv. 397.
Reward, motives of, vi. 105.
— and punishment, vii. 44.
— Zarathustra and the virtuous who seek payment for
their virtue, xi. 109.
Reward and punishment, the determination of action by,
xv. 195; two things that stand or fall together,
196.
Reynard the fox, the New Testament as reminiscent of
his methods, xiv. 173.
Rhythm, the beautifying effect of, vi. 157.
— introduced into speech, x. 117; as a means to con-
strain the gods, 117; the origin of, in music, 118;
nothing more serviceable to the superstitious
ancients than, 119; preference for metrical form
in our own time, 120.
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.
259
## p. 260 (#358) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Rich, the, the actual valuers, the artists, the glorifiers of
the good and the beautiful, x. 120-1.
Rich and poor as signs that life shall again and again
surpass itself, xi. 119.
Riches, our rich people—they are the poorest, xiv. 57.
— the essence of the desire for, xv. 353.
Richter (Jean Paul) quoted, ii. m.
— Nietzsche's judgment of, vii. 247.
— his estimate of the Germans, xii. 197.
Riehl, his music for the home, iv. 25 ; again, 38.
Riemann, his services to rhythmics, viii. 33.
Rienzi, the characters in Wagner's, iv. 11 o.
Right, the, on being in, from time to time, vii. 142.
Rights, the origin of, vii. 217; non-assertion of, 319.
— on the natural history of our duty and our, ix. 11o.
— descended into claims, x. 191.
— no such thing as the right to live—to work—to be
happy, xv. 208.
Ring of the Nibelung, The, characters of Wotan and Brun-
hilde, iv. 11o; the most moral music where
Brunhilde is awakened, 110; the composition of,
165; a huge system of thought, 173; the hero of,
201; its plot, 202; alluded to, 179.
— instanced, viii. 6; its history, 9.
Ritschl, the only genial scholar ever met by Nietzsche, xvii
.
51; quoted, 59-60.
Ritter, the works of, v. 190.
Robespierre, the moral fanaticism of, as affecting Kant,
ix-5
— as fanatic, xvi. 211.
Rogue, an innocent, vii. 45.
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, ail-too-Human, i. VII, Human, all-too-
260
## p. 261 (#359) ############################################
ROLAND—ROMANTICISM
Roland (Madame), alluded to, xii. 184.
Role, on selecting and acting a, x. 302; the European as
stage player, 303; the problem of the actor of a
role, 318.
Roman Catholic Church, the, the results of its influences,
vi. 130.
Roman Catholicism, its inheritance from the profound
Orient, x. 291.
— the attachment of the Latin races to, xii. 68.
Romans, two ways of women sinning mortally, according
to the ancient, x. 80.
— the, as a fructifying nation, xii. 206.
— a nation stronger and more aristocratic than ever
existed, xiii. 54.
— Nietzsche's indebtedness to, xvi. 113 ; their organisa-
tion could stand bad emperors, but not the
Christians, 222; their culture, science, art, and
the destruction of the whole, 224-5.
Romanticism, Nietzsche defends himself against,
i. 12-5.
— the revivers of the past, ix. 165.
— former misunderstanding and new views concerning, x.
331-5-
— the music of, xii. 201.
— regarding, xiv. 67; as the counterstroke of the
eighteenth century, 79; the pre-eminence of
music in the romanticists, 1830-40, 88; German
music and the age of, 89.
— false accentuation in, xv.
266; the question and the
artist, 279; its opposite, 280; against the roman-
ticism of great passion, 283.
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.
26l
## p. 262 (#360) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Romanticists, the, mummery in, xiv. 67; those whose faith
has gone to pot, 68.
Rome, her Dionysian festivals, i. 29-30.
— the Christian revenge on, ix. 72.
— the greatest fight there ever has been—Rome
against Judsea, Judaea against Rome, xiii. 54.
— Nietzsche's dislike of the city, xvii. 103; The Night
Song composed in, 104.
Rossini, theeighteenth century sang itself out in Beethoven
and, vii. 88.
— his overflowing spirits, viii. 46; and the eighteenth
century, 64.
— his contempt for librettos, x. 113.
— Nietzsche's predilection for, xvii. 45.
Rousseau, his Emile quoted, i. 36.
— and David Strauss, iv. 81.
— themenof,—thethreateningforceofhumanity,v. 139.
— a superstition of, alluded to, vi. 334; the example of
how to use one's weakness, 389.
— the phantom formed by his writings, vii. 307; the
danger of enlightenment, 310; alluded to, 178.
— the moral tarantula, and Kant, ix. 5 ; and the alterna-
tives concerning our civilisation, 167; his mag-
nanimity, 327 ; and Diderot, 348 ; the nature of,
instanced, 364; alluded to, 338.
— the Confessions of, alluded to, x. 125.
— alluded to, xii. 201.
— the eighteenth century of, xiv. 58 ; and the liberation
of women, 76; feminism and the reign of feeling,
77; as a symptom of self-contempt and of in-
flamed vanity, 82 ; criticised and compared with
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-
262
## p. 263 (#361) ############################################
ROUSSEAU—RULING
Voltaire, 82-5; his use of the phrase—" away
from idylls and operas," 96; the struggle between
him and Voltaire, 101; alluded to, 74, 100, 306.
Rousseau, his anathemas against the society of Voltaire
recalled, xv. 203; the surpassing of his "man of
nature" in the nineteenth century, 396.
— among my impossible people, xvi. 60; alluded to
in critique of Sainte-Beuve, 61; his influence on
George Sand, 64; compared with Napoleon to
illustrate Nietzsche's sense of progress, 108 ; as
fanatic, 211.
Rubens painted according to his patrons' vague con-
ception of taste—not to his own measure of
beauty, xiii. 220.
— an apotheosis artist, xv. 280; instanced, 281.
Rule, the, and the exception, ix. 319.
Rulers, Zarathustra longeth for,—the best shall rule, the best
also willeth to rule, xi. 256-7.
— the training of, xvi. 272.
Ruling class, the, its corruption, has brought ruling into
evil odour, xv. 205.
Ruling classes, the degeneration of the ruler and the ruling
classes the cause of all the great disorders in
history, xv. 312.
Ruling instinct, the, interpretations of the world as
symptoms of, xv. 150.
Ruling race, the, time to set about rearing—thoroughly,
artificially, and conscientiously—a type that
shall establish the virtues of democracy, xv.
360 ; the ruling of the earth, 361-6.
Ruling types, theshepherdasopposed to the "lord," xv. 330.
Human, il. 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.
263
## p. 264 (#362) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Russia, emigration of the intelligence from, vii. 314.
— the power of will as conserved in, xii. 146.
— its songs, xvi. 4; the only great nation to-day, 96;
the most valuable material of, to be found in
Siberia, 104; Dostoiewsky's testimony, 104.
Russian, the, and the imitation of foreign culture, iii. 67.
Sacrifice, regarding, vii. 30.
— and knowledge, ix. 52; the morality of victims, 226;
its morality, 231.
— he who is a firstling is ever sacrificed, xi. 244; The
Honey Sacrifice (Zarathustra's discourse), 287-91.
— as the essence of Christian faith, xii. 65; three rounds
in the ladder of: of human beings—of natural
instincts—of God Himself, 73; not a dis-
interested action, 164.
Saga, the Icelandic, and master morality, viii. 49.
Sage, the, giving himself out to be a fool, vii. 130; the
monotone of, 352; his affability, 360.
— the inhumanity of, ix. 333.
— as astronomer, xii. 86.
— Nietzsche's happy conviction that the sage is once
more possible in Europe, xv. 382.
— first ideas of the decadence of, xvi. 9.
Saint, the, the visions, terrors, torpors, and ecstasies
of, vi. 128-9; his aids, 142; imaginations, 143
et seq. ; condition of soul, 147; the belief in, 149
et seq.
— Zarathustra and the saint in the forest, xi. 4-6.
— his strength of will, the object of reverence, xii. 70;
the will to power in, 71.
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-
264
## p. 265 (#363) ############################################
SAINT—SANKHYAM
Saint, the, regarding, xiv. 67 ; criticised, 282-90; as the
most powerful type of man, 290.
Sainte-Beuve, an observation of, quoted, vii. 258.
— alluded to, xii. 68.
— instanced, xiv. 342.
— criticised, xvi. 61.
Saint-Evremond, Homer and the historical sense unintelli-
gible to, xii. 168.
Saint-Francis. See "Francis of Assisi. "
St. Moritz, Nietzsche's summer there in 1879, xvii. 10.
Saint-Paul. See " Paul, the Apostle. "
Saint-Simon, as fanatic, xvi. 211.
Sallust, Nietzsche's model, xvii. 31; his early indebted-
ness to, 112.
Salome (Miss Lou), her Hymn to Life, xvii. 98; Nietzsche's
musical setting, 209-14.
Salvation, two psychological realities out of which the doc-
trine has grown, xvi. 165-6.
Salvation Army, the, the result of the latest display of re-
ligious neurosis, xii. 67; a reasonable admission
regarding, 211.
Sanctification, as a weapon to fight race depression, xiii.
170; the relief found by sportsmen of saintliness,
171.
Sand (George), alluded to, xii. 184.
— again, xiv. 58.
— lactea ubertas, xvi. 60; Lettres (Tun voyagcur, and
their authoress criticised, 64.
Sand (Ludwig), his knowledge of the Germans, xii. 197.
Sankhyam, among Indians, Jesus would have used the
ideas of, xvi. 169.
Human, ii. VII, 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.
265
## p. 266 (#364) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Satyr, the, the significance of, in Greek tragedy, i. 63 et seq.
Saume, an allusion to his poem Der Wilde, vii. 364.
— his Die Gesange, and the significance of song and
singing, xvi. 4.
Savant, the, less common characteristics of: firstly, v. 167;
to twelfthly, 171 ; the servant of truth, 17 2.
— why they are nobler than artists, vii. 106; their morals,
11o; the great danger of, 281.
Saviour, The. See under "Jesus. "
Saviour, the, remains an individual, viii. 114.
