| Patrick's had given him to print a volume of
                                
                                    letters
                                
                                         
                                of his and mine,"
 which, he said, "came from London with a letter," of which he
 enclosed a copy.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | This instinct hated the Burschenschaft with an intense hatred for two reasons: first of all on ac-
 count of its organisation, as being the first attempt
 to construct a true educational institution, and,
 secondly, on account of the spirit of this in-
 stitution, that earnest, manly, stern, and daring
 German spirit; that spirit of the miner's son,
 Luther, which has come down to us
                                
                                    unbroken
                                
                                         
                                from
 the time of the Reformation.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | Habcos Cappellaniam collatiuam, aut
                                
                                    quoduis
                                
                                         
                                aliud Beneficium Ecclefiafticum, & ſtudio litterarum vacct, fatisfacit ſuæ obligationi, ſi Officium per alium reciret.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | But what follows is the result of a low order of thought: the fear of pain, of defilement, of cor-
 ruption, is great enough to
                                
                                    provide
                                
                                         
                                ample grounds
 for allowing everything to go to the dogs.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v14 |  | 
                                    
                        | But the nobler nature of Tortesa now breaks forth; and,
 smitten with admiration of the lady's conduct, as well
 as convinced that her love for himself was feigned,
 he resigns her to Angelo — although now feeling and
 acknowledging for the first time that a
                                
                                    fervent
                                
                                         
                                love
 has, in his own bosom, assumed the place of this mis-
 anthropic ambition which, hitherto, had alone actuated
 him in seeking her hand.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | Tragedy appeals to souls who feel pity in this way, to those fierce and
                                
                                    warlike
                                
                                         
                                souls which are
 difficult to overcome, whether by fear or pity, but
 which lose nothing by being softened from time to
 time.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | If you wish to guide a young man on the path of true culture,
 beware of interrupting his naive, confident, and, as
 it were,
                                
                                    immediate
                                
                                         
                                and personal relationship with t—
 nature.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | 99 (#153) ############################################# 
 EARLY GREEK PHILOSOPHY 99
 so
                                
                                    fearlessly
                                
                                         
                                that Aristotle before the tribunal of
 Reason accuses him of the highest crime, of having
 sinned against the law of opposition.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v02 |  | 
                                    
                        | Here the pupils learn to speak of our unique Schiller
 with the superciliousness of prigs; here they are
 taught to smile at the noblest and most German
 of his
                                
                                    works—at
                                
                                         
                                the Marquis of Posa, at Max and
 Thekla—at these smiles German genius becomes
 incensed and a worthier posterity will blush.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | The method of this critique is more than
                                
                                    anything
                                
                                         
                                a continued
 renunciation in that spirit of natural science men-
 tioned above, the law of economy applied to the
 interpretation of nature.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v02 |  | 
                                    
                        | Original and
                                
                                    valuable
                                
                                         
                                introductions are prefixed to all the translations, giving all details
 as to dates, circumstances, Nietzsche's development, &c, so that each volume
 may be bought separately.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | Pope's, we ought to be the less vain, since the
                                
                                    resemblance
                                
                                         
                                proceeds much less
 from our diligence and study to copy his manner, than from
 his own daily revisal and correction.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v05 |  | 
                                    
                        | Nothing can be more
                                
                                    shocking
                                
                                         
                                than to be perpetually meeting the ghost of
 an old acquaintance, which is all you can ever see of me.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | " The worse memory man had, the ghastlier the signs presented by his customs ;
 the severity of the penal laws
                                
                                    affords
                                
                                         
                                in particular
 a gauge of the extent of man's difficulty in
 conquering forgetfulness, and in keeping a few
 primal postulates of social intercourse ever present
 to the minds of those who were the slaves of
 every momentary emotion and every momentary
 desire.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v13 |  | 
                                    
                        | (c) A “personality” is a relatively
                                
                                    isolated
                                
                                         
                                phen- omenon; in view of the superior importance of
 the continuation of the race at an average level, a
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v15 |  | 
                                    
                        | A man passed by my place of concealment with a feeble
 and
                                
                                    unsteady
                                
                                         
                                gait.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v02 |  | 
                                    
                        | Fermor by name, as a piece of justice in return to the wrong
                                
                                    interpretations
                                
                                         
                                she has suffered
 under on the score of that piece.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | Such roving about
                                
                                    christeneth
                                
                                         
                                itself "brotherly love "; with these words hath there hitherto been
 the best lying and dissembling, and especially by
 those who have been burdensome to every one.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v11 |  | 
                                    
                        | inform me he has done, I will make you a visit without armour; I will eat anything you give me without
                                
                                    suspicion
                                
                                         
                                of poison,
 take you by the hand without gloves, nay, venture to follow
 you into an arbour without calling the company.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | He must have felt like a nocturnal traveller, broken with fatigue, exasperated from
 want of sleep, and tramping wearily along be-
 neath a heavy burden, who, far from fearing the
 sudden
                                
                                    approach
                                
                                         
                                of death, rather longs for it as
 something exquisitely charming.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | : at 25,000 feet
                                
                                    elevation
                                
                                         
                                the sky appears nearly black, and the stars are distinctly visible;
 218
 
 
 
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v02 |  | 
                                    
                        | —“Very good | But how can this decadent spoil one's taste if perchance one is not a musician, if
 perchance one is not oneself a
                                
                                    décadent
                                
                                         
                                P”—Con-
 versely .
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | The elements of that beauty which is felt in sound may be the mutual or common
                                
                                    heritage
                                
                                         
                                of Earth and
 Heaven.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | As such, they often lose their strength and prime
                                
                                    earlier
                                
                                         
                                than
 artists do—and, as has been said, they are aware of
 their danger.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v07 |  | 
                                    
                        | At the end of all their
                                
                                    searching
                                
                                         
                                for knowledge what will men
 at length come to know?
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | I am now, and for some weeks have been, confined to my chamber by the gout, which I look upon to bo
 an annual
                                
                                    tribute
                                
                                         
                                which I must pay till the lease of my tene-
 ment expires.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | It was some- thing similar to the demonian
                                
                                    warning
                                
                                         
                                voice which
 urged him to these practices ; it was because of his
 Apollonian insight that, like a barbaric king, he
 did not understand the noble image of a god and
 was in danger of sinning against a deity—through
 ignorance.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | indications of human peril and
                                
                                    frailty
                                
                                         
                                they can pro- duce a painful effect upon us.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | debility |  
                                            | Question: | Can this be overcome as pitiless? |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | The universal degener- acy of mankind to the level of the
 man of the
 future"-as idealised by the socialistic fools and
 shallow - pates - this
                                
                                    degeneracy
                                
                                         
                                and dwarfing of
 man to an absolutely gregarious animal (or as they
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | castrating |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v12 |  | 
                                    
                        | which no longer
                                
                                    expressed
                                
                                         
                                the inner essence, the will itself, but only rendered the phenomenon in-
 sufficiently, in an imitation by means of concepts;
 from which intrinsically degenerate music the truly
 musical natures turned away with the same re-
 pugnance that they felt for the art-destroying
 tendency of Socrates.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | Depending on the nature of subsequent use that is made,
                                
                                    additional
                                
                                         
                                rights may need to be obtained independently of anything we can address.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | They were much too variously gifted to be
                                
                                    gradual
                                
                                         
                                in the orderly man-
 ner of the tortoise when running a race with Achilles,
 and that is called natural development.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | Original from:
                                
                                    University
                                
                                         
                                of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Digitized by:  Google
 
 Generated on 2022-10-13 00:16 GMT
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | cxxxix the Swift correspondence which he sent to the Dean, he may,
 perhaps, have remained
                                
                                    concealed
                                
                                         
                                from the inferior agents,
 and have conducted the details of the business through the
 medium of Worsdale.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | Besides, one of the few who had the right to speak to
                                
                                    Germans
                                
                                         
                                in terms of reproach
 publicly drew attention to the fact.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | 370 Then rose the guests; and as the time required,
 Each paid his thanks, and
                                
                                    decently
                                
                                         
                                retired.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | Swiftly |  
                                            | Question: | Who feted the diners? |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | I must further acquit myself of the pre- sumption of having lent my name to
                                
                                    recommend
                                
                                         
                                any Mis-
 * In the manuscript he added,
 “which indeed was my chief view in
 making it, for in the present liberty
 of the press, a man is forced to appear
 as bad as he is, not to be thought
 worse.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | Salt
                                
                                    provisions
                                
                                         
                                of the most exciting kind had been niy chief, and, indeed, since
 41
 
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v05 |  | 
                                    
                        | 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.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v18 |  | 
                                    
                        | Bottles
                                
                                         
                                of various wines and cordials, together with jugs, pitchers, and flagons of
 every shape and quality, were scattered profusely upon
 the board.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | You certainly guessed right when you
                                
                                    imagined
                                
                                         
                                I would hasten to town as soon as I
 heard you were there.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | ) I will die before I receive one in an art I am ignorant of, at a place where there remains any scruple of bestowing
 one on you, in a
                                
                                    science
                                
                                         
                                of which you are so great a master.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Alexander Pope - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | 12; the con- ception of space and, 13; self-knowledge and,
 53;
                                
                                    distrust
                                
                                         
                                awakened by, 73; on apparent
 toleration of, 251 ; truth and consolation, 308;
 the embellishment of, 311; the investigator and
 attempter in, 314; the temptations of know-
 ledge, 323; its task, 378.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v18 |  | 
                                    
                        | He reacts slowly to all kinds of stimuli, with that
                                
                                    tardiness
                                
                                         
                                which long caution and
 deliberate pride have bred in him—he tests the
 approaching stimulus; he would not dream of
 meeting it half-way.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v17 |  | 
                                    
                        | May blessed reason
                                
                                    preserve
                                
                                         
                                us from ever thinking that mankind will at any time discover
 a final and ideal order of things, and that happi-
 ness will then and ever after beam down upon us
 uniformly, like the rays of the sun in the tropics.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | Greek tragedy had a fate different from that of all her older sister arts: she died by suicide,
 in consequence of an irreconcilable
                                
                                    conflict
                                
                                         
                                ;
 accordingly she died tragically, while they all
 passed away very calmly and beautifully in ripe old
 age.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | The cripple hurled his torch at them, clambered
                                
                                    leisurely
                                
                                         
                                to the ceiling, and disappeared through the sky-light.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | As an eager missionary, I have
                                
                                    naturally
                                
                                         
                                asked myself the reason of my failure.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | 223 (#309) ############################################ 
 PERSPECTIVE—PESSIMISM
 Perspective, the only seeing and
                                
                                    knowing—from
                                
                                         
                                a per-
 spective, xiii.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v18 |  | 
                                    
                        | But a home have I found
                                
                                    nowhere
                                
                                         
                                : unsettled am I in all cities, and decamping at all gates.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | Nowhere |  
                                            | Question: | Watcha do? |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v11 |  | 
                                    
                        | And yet, in the face of this well-known and natural principle, there will always exist a set of
 homunculi, eager to grow
                                
                                    notorious
                                
                                         
                                by the pertinacity
 of their yelpings at the heels of the distinguished.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | 228 (#247) ############################################ 
 228
 >
 1
 vitatis Taquiftoribus diftri&è præcipit, vt in ſua quifque Diceceli, vel Provincia ſeda
 Id pervigilene, ne finc approbationibus prædi&tis imagines cum
                                
                                    memoratis
                                
                                         
                                signis cx-
 ponantur , ami miracula, reuelationccs, aq bencficia prædicta publiccatur, aliau.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | falsis |  
                                            | Question: | quales signa sunt? |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | Lettre de
                                
                                    Monſieur
                                
                                         
                                Arnauld Docteur de Sorbonne à vne perſonne de códition, ſur cc, qui eſt arrivé depuis peu dans vnc des Paroiſſes de Paris à vn Seigneur de la Cour.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | The man in a state of Dionys- ean excitement has a
                                
                                    listener
                                
                                         
                                just as little as the
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v02 |  | 
                                    
                        | He
                                
                                    overcame
                                
                                         
                                Pessimism by sa)'er- discovering an object in existence; he saw the
 possibility of raising society to a higher level and
 preached the profoundest Optimism in consequence.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v11 |  | 
                                    
                        | It is clear that he found publication difficult and often long-
 delayed, and also that his
                                
                                    productivity
                                
                                         
                                in this kind of com-
 position almost ceased in the last four years of his life, as
 at other times it had shown a low degree of vitality.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | Users are free to copy, use, and
                                
                                    redistribute
                                
                                         
                                the work in part or in whole.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | (The curve of human sensibilities to pain seems indeed to sink in an extraordinary
 and almost sudden fashion, as soon as one has
 passed the upper ten thousand or ten millions of
 over-civilised humanity, and I personally have no
 doubt that, by comparison with one painful night
 passed by one single hysterical chit of a cultured
 woman, the suffering of all the animals taken
 together who have been put to the question of the
 knife, so as to give
                                
                                    scientific
                                
                                         
                                answers, are simply
 
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v13 |  | 
                                    
                        | His head, though wise ere to this
                                
                                    pastime
                                
                                         
                                lent, Straight to the devil—no, to woman went!
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v10 |  | 
                                    
                        | Of course an odd spectacle re- sulted, when certain scholars brought together the
 alleged masters from the Orient and the possible dis-
 ciples from Greece, and exhibited
                                
                                    Zarathustra
                                
                                         
                                near
 Heraclitus, the Hindoos near the Eleates, the Egyp-
 tians near Empedocles, or even Anaxagoras among
 the Jews and Pythagoras among the Chinese.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v02 |  | 
                                    
                        | He may possibly seek the cause of his failure in other people;
 he may even, in a fit of passion, hold the whole
 world guilty; or he may turn defiantly down secret
 byways and
                                
                                    secluded
                                
                                         
                                lanes, or resort to violence.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | In fact, he had made up his mind for a voyage to the South Seas,
 when a night's reflection
                                
                                    induced
                                
                                         
                                him to abandon the
 idea.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v02 |  | 
                                    
                        | 5 I When we examine the history of
                                
                                    philology
                                
                                         
                                it is
 borne in upon us how few really talented men have
 taken part in it.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | " Thus spake Zarathustra, and, laughing with eyes
 and entrails, he stood still and turned round
 quickly—and behold, he almost
                                
                                    thereby
                                
                                         
                                threw his
 shadow and follower to the ground, so closely had
 the latter followed at his heels, and so weak was
 he.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v11 |  | 
                                    
                        | The first who will d to be quite
                                
                                    straightforward
                                
                                         
                                in this respect will h
 his honesty re-echoed back to him by thousar
 of courageous souls.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | The Founder of Christianity had to pay dearly for having
                                
                                    directed
                                
                                         
                                His teaching at the lowest
 classes of Jewish society and intelligence.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v14 |  | 
                                    
                        | And you do not need him yet because you have always possessed the
                                
                                    British
                                
                                         
                                virtue of not carry-
 ing things to extremes, which, according to the
 German version, is an euphemism for the British
 want of logic and critical capacity.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | So dense was this
                                
                                    pleasant
                                
                                         
                                fog, that I could at no time see more than a dozen yards of the path before
 me.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | And he took no further notice of anything, but sat there motionless,
 without repelling the
                                
                                    animals
                                
                                         
                                further.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v11 |  | 
                                    
                        | On his lap lay the big fiddle at which he was
                                
                                    scraping
                                
                                         
                                out of
 all time and tune, with both hands, making a great
 vol.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | It is necessary here to summarize the speculations which
 were put forth elsewhere by Poe,
                                
                                    especially
                                
                                         
                                in the meta-
 physical tales, and either led up to or supplemented the
 views of ‘ Eureka.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | The paper represents the lec- ture of the same title which Poe was accustomed to de-
 liver, partly as an
                                
                                    elocutionary
                                
                                         
                                performance.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | that is to say, we must use the precise words employed as the defini-
 tion of
                                
                                    English
                                
                                         
                                Grammar itself.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | The arrangement is moreover said to be for the purpose of
                                
                                    producing
                                
                                         
                                " harmony by the regular alter-
 nation,” etc.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | Griswold's letter, and found that his version of the poem
                                
                                    differed
                                
                                         
                                very materially from Motherwell's,
 and seemed to be but a fragment of some longer ballad.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | 194 (#213) ############################################ 
 194
 ►
 >
 A
 Miſali ad verbum deſcribuntur ,
                                
                                    pleniùs
                                
                                         
                                continetur.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | ACRÆ Indisis Congregationis Decreto damnati, prohibiti, ac refpe&iuè ſuſpen- fi fucrunt
                                
                                    infraſcripri
                                
                                         
                                omncs Libri vbicumque, & quocunque
 idiomate impreſſi,
 imprimcndiuc.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | Veſtphalo & Tractatus huic annexus de Erotematicus
                                
                                    Commentarius
                                
                                         
                                in libros
 Republica Romano-Germanica lacobi
 Codicis.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | Dcfenlo tractationis de diverfis Miniſtrorum Evangelij
                                
                                    gradibus
                                
                                         
                                , ab Hadriago Saravia cdica, contra Reſponlioncm Thcodori Bezæ : eodem Hadriano Saravia due
 thore.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | Quæ omnia tam accuratè, & prudenter conſtituca, fatis camcn non fucruoc ad quorondam Impreſſorom, præfertim
 io Civicatc Venctiarum,intolerabilem audaciam frænandam : nam manum in meffem
 planè alicnam per fummam comcricacem immitentes , in
                                
                                    Miffali
                                
                                         
                                Romano ab cisim-
 preffo ab anno 1596.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | Fritsch, and which gave perhaps no slight
                                
                                    indication
                                
                                         
                                of my
 spiritual state during this year, in which the essen-
 tially yea-saying pathos, which' I call the tragic
 pathos, completely filled me heart and limb.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v17 |  | 
                                    
                        | Hence, indeed, arises the just idea that'
 
 " Great wit to
                                
                                    madness
                                
                                         
                                nearly is allied.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | Triumph |  
                                            | Question: | How is wit dangerous to mental coherence? |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | For thunders loud Upon the blasts of storm triumphant ride,
 And bastions and
                                
                                    ramparts
                                
                                         
                                sway and rock,
 .
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | Billows |  
                                            | Question: | Where are we sailing? |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v17 |  | 
                                    
                        | 172; the
                                
                                    metaphysical
                                
                                         
                                requirement and the origin of, 184; the origin of religions, 294; the
 psychological qualities of a founder of, 295.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v18 |  | 
                                    
                        | Cardinaliųın in tota Republica Chriſtiana ge- neralium Inquiſicorum; Moru proprio & ex cerca fcientia noſtra, deque Apoſtolicæ
 poreſtatis
                                
                                    plenitudine
                                
                                         
                                , prefatas Cenſuras uti præſumptuoſas, temerarias , atquc ſcan-
 daloſas, auctoritace Apoſtolica damnamus & pro damnatis Laberi volumus , caſque
 'nullius
 Dionis
 :
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Pope Alexander VII - Index Librorum Prohibitorum |  | 
                                    
                        | Concerning the characteristics of national genius in regard to the
                                
                                    strange
                                
                                         
                                and to the
 borrowed
 English genius vulgarises and makes realistic
 everything it sees;
 
 
 ## p.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v15 |  | 
                                    
                        | He may parade it as his virtue; there is no doubt whatever that
                                
                                    weakness
                                
                                         
                                makes people gentle, alas,
 so gentle, so just, so inoffensive, so "humane"!
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v10 |  | 
                                    
                        | Nothing
                                
                                         
                                daunted, however, the Spirit, addressing a thousand Pinnacles
 and Steeps, desires them to deplore the glory that de-
 parts, or is departing — and we can almost fancy that
 we see the Pinnacles deploring it upon the spot.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v08 |  | 
                                    
                        | The
                                
                                    spoiled
                                
                                         
                                meat I could well spare, but my heart sank as I thought of the water.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v05 |  | 
                                    
                        | The whole fatality was made possible by the fact that a
                                
                                    similar
                                
                                         
                                form of megalomania was
 already in existence, the Jewish form (once the
 gulf separating the Jews from the Christian-Jews
 was bridged, the Christian-Jews were compelled to
 employ those self-preservative measures afresh
 which were discovered by the Jewish instinct, for
 their own self-preservation, after having accent-
 uated them); and again through the fact that
 Greek moral philosophy had done everything
 that could be done to prepare the way for
 moral-fanaticism, even among Greeks and Romans,
 and to render it palatable.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v14 |  | 
                                    
                        | "
                                
                                    interjected
                                
                                         
                                the ph sopher in a strong and sympathetic voice,
 understand you now, and ought never to h
 spoken so crossly to you.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v03 |  | 
                                    
                        | Learned man, the, his origin and antecedents
                                
                                    displayed
                                
                                         
                                in his methods and works, x.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: | Contained |  
                                            | Question: | What is his message (method)? |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v18 |  | 
                                    
                        | In the former the merit consists in seeing into the nature of affairs a
 very great deal
                                
                                    farther
                                
                                         
                                than anybody else.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v04 |  | 
                                    
                        | Willis's stage direction about the back wall's being “ so arranged as
 to form a
                                
                                    natural
                                
                                         
                                ground for the picture”?
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | Will our readers kindly forgive us if we have not always attained an ideal which was too high
 above us to be reached at all; will they forgive us when
 we assure them that no one has suffered from that
 unattained ideal more than
                                
                                    ourselves?
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v18 |  | 
                                    
                        | We thus reach the
                                
                                    proposition
                                
                                         
                                that the zm- portance of the development of the terrestrial vitality
 proceeds equably with the terrestrial condensation.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v09 |  | 
                                    
                        | Thus the critical writings, however
                                
                                    fragmentary
                                
                                         
                                and uneven,
 of a persistent literary journalist, the most nervous
 and free-spoken of our early reviewers, are important
 from the scientific point of view.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Poe - v06 |  | 
                                    
                        | Hence, in order to form a true estimate of the Dionysian capacity of a people, it would seem that
 we must think not only of their music, but just as
 much of their tragic myth, the second
                                
                                    witness
                                
                                         
                                of
 this capacity.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v01 |  | 
                                    
                        | In the young, the females find
                                
                                    gratification
                                
                                         
                                for their lust of dominion; the
 young are a property, an occupation, something
 quite comprehensible to them, with which they
 can chatter: all this conjointly is maternal love,—
 it is to be compared to the love of the artist for
 his work.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v10 |  | 
                                    
                        | This con- stitutes the nature of the dithyrambic dramatist,
 if the meaning given to the term includes also
 the actor, the poet, and the musician; a concep-
 tion necessarily borrowed from ^Eschylus and
 the contemporary Greek
                                
                                    artists—the
                                
                                         
                                only perfect
 examples of the dithyrambic dramatist before
 Wagner.
 
                                    
                                        
                                            | Guess: |  |  
                                            | Question: |  |  
                                            | Answer: |  |  
                                            | Source: | Nietzsche - v04 |  |