<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0063" id="link2H_4_0063"></SPAN></p>
<h2> LVI. OLD AND NEW TABLES. </h2>
<h3> 1. </h3>
<p>Here do I sit and wait, old broken tables around me and also new
half-written tables. When cometh mine hour?</p>
<p>—The hour of my descent, of my down-going: for once more will I go
unto men.</p>
<p>For that hour do I now wait: for first must the signs come unto me that it
is MINE hour—namely, the laughing lion with the flock of doves.</p>
<p>Meanwhile do I talk to myself as one who hath time. No one telleth me
anything new, so I tell myself mine own story.</p>
<p>2.</p>
<p>When I came unto men, then found I them resting on an old infatuation: all
of them thought they had long known what was good and bad for men.</p>
<p>An old wearisome business seemed to them all discourse about virtue; and
he who wished to sleep well spake of "good" and "bad" ere retiring to
rest.</p>
<p>This somnolence did I disturb when I taught that NO ONE YET KNOWETH what
is good and bad:—unless it be the creating one!</p>
<p>—It is he, however, who createth man's goal, and giveth to the earth
its meaning and its future: he only EFFECTETH it THAT aught is good or
bad.</p>
<p>And I bade them upset their old academic chairs, and wherever that old
infatuation had sat; I bade them laugh at their great moralists, their
saints, their poets, and their Saviours.</p>
<p>At their gloomy sages did I bid them laugh, and whoever had sat
admonishing as a black scarecrow on the tree of life.</p>
<p>On their great grave-highway did I seat myself, and even beside the
carrion and vultures—and I laughed at all their bygone and its
mellow decaying glory.</p>
<p>Verily, like penitential preachers and fools did I cry wrath and shame on
all their greatness and smallness. Oh, that their best is so very small!
Oh, that their worst is so very small! Thus did I laugh.</p>
<p>Thus did my wise longing, born in the mountains, cry and laugh in me; a
wild wisdom, verily!—my great pinion-rustling longing.</p>
<p>And oft did it carry me off and up and away and in the midst of laughter;
then flew I quivering like an arrow with sun-intoxicated rapture:</p>
<p>—Out into distant futures, which no dream hath yet seen, into warmer
souths than ever sculptor conceived,—where gods in their dancing are
ashamed of all clothes:</p>
<p>(That I may speak in parables and halt and stammer like the poets: and
verily I am ashamed that I have still to be a poet!)</p>
<p>Where all becoming seemed to me dancing of Gods, and wantoning of Gods,
and the world unloosed and unbridled and fleeing back to itself:—</p>
<p>—As an eternal self-fleeing and re-seeking of one another of many
Gods, as the blessed self-contradicting, recommuning, and refraternising
with one another of many Gods:—</p>
<p>Where all time seemed to me a blessed mockery of moments, where necessity
was freedom itself, which played happily with the goad of freedom:—</p>
<p>Where I also found again mine old devil and arch-enemy, the spirit of
gravity, and all that it created: constraint, law, necessity and
consequence and purpose and will and good and evil:—</p>
<p>For must there not be that which is danced OVER, danced beyond? Must there
not, for the sake of the nimble, the nimblest,—be moles and clumsy
dwarfs?—</p>
<p>3.</p>
<p>There was it also where I picked up from the path the word "Superman," and
that man is something that must be surpassed.</p>
<p>—That man is a bridge and not a goal—rejoicing over his
noontides and evenings, as advances to new rosy dawns:</p>
<p>—The Zarathustra word of the great noontide, and whatever else I
have hung up over men like purple evening-afterglows.</p>
<p>Verily, also new stars did I make them see, along with new nights; and
over cloud and day and night, did I spread out laughter like a
gay-coloured canopy.</p>
<p>I taught them all MY poetisation and aspiration: to compose and collect
into unity what is fragment in man, and riddle and fearful chance;—</p>
<p>—As composer, riddle-reader, and redeemer of chance, did I teach
them to create the future, and all that HATH BEEN—to redeem by
creating.</p>
<p>The past of man to redeem, and every "It was" to transform, until the Will
saith: "But so did I will it! So shall I will it—"</p>
<p>—This did I call redemption; this alone taught I them to call
redemption.—</p>
<p>Now do I await MY redemption—that I may go unto them for the last
time.</p>
<p>For once more will I go unto men: AMONGST them will my sun set; in dying
will I give them my choicest gift!</p>
<p>From the sun did I learn this, when it goeth down, the exuberant one: gold
doth it then pour into the sea, out of inexhaustible riches,—</p>
<p>—So that the poorest fisherman roweth even with GOLDEN oars! For
this did I once see, and did not tire of weeping in beholding it.—</p>
<p>Like the sun will also Zarathustra go down: now sitteth he here and
waiteth, old broken tables around him, and also new tables—half-written.</p>
<p>4.</p>
<p>Behold, here is a new table; but where are my brethren who will carry it
with me to the valley and into hearts of flesh?—</p>
<p>Thus demandeth my great love to the remotest ones: BE NOT CONSIDERATE OF
THY NEIGHBOUR! Man is something that must be surpassed.</p>
<p>There are many divers ways and modes of surpassing: see THOU thereto! But
only a buffoon thinketh: "man can also be OVERLEAPT."</p>
<p>Surpass thyself even in thy neighbour: and a right which thou canst seize
upon, shalt thou not allow to be given thee!</p>
<p>What thou doest can no one do to thee again. Lo, there is no requital.</p>
<p>He who cannot command himself shall obey. And many a one CAN command
himself, but still sorely lacketh self-obedience!</p>
<p>5.</p>
<p>Thus wisheth the type of noble souls: they desire to have nothing
GRATUITOUSLY, least of all, life.</p>
<p>He who is of the populace wisheth to live gratuitously; we others,
however, to whom life hath given itself—we are ever considering WHAT
we can best give IN RETURN!</p>
<p>And verily, it is a noble dictum which saith: "What life promiseth US,
that promise will WE keep—to life!"</p>
<p>One should not wish to enjoy where one doth not contribute to the
enjoyment. And one should not WISH to enjoy!</p>
<p>For enjoyment and innocence are the most bashful things. Neither like to
be sought for. One should HAVE them,—but one should rather SEEK for
guilt and pain!—</p>
<p>6.</p>
<p>O my brethren, he who is a firstling is ever sacrificed. Now, however, are
we firstlings!</p>
<p>We all bleed on secret sacrificial altars, we all burn and broil in honour
of ancient idols.</p>
<p>Our best is still young: this exciteth old palates. Our flesh is tender,
our skin is only lambs' skin:—how could we not excite old
idol-priests!</p>
<p>IN OURSELVES dwelleth he still, the old idol-priest, who broileth our best
for his banquet. Ah, my brethren, how could firstlings fail to be
sacrifices!</p>
<p>But so wisheth our type; and I love those who do not wish to preserve
themselves, the down-going ones do I love with mine entire love: for they
go beyond.—</p>
<p>7.</p>
<p>To be true—that CAN few be! And he who can, will not! Least of all,
however, can the good be true.</p>
<p>Oh, those good ones! GOOD MEN NEVER SPEAK THE TRUTH. For the spirit, thus
to be good, is a malady.</p>
<p>They yield, those good ones, they submit themselves; their heart
repeateth, their soul obeyeth: HE, however, who obeyeth, DOTH NOT LISTEN
TO HIMSELF!</p>
<p>All that is called evil by the good, must come together in order that one
truth may be born. O my brethren, are ye also evil enough for THIS truth?</p>
<p>The daring venture, the prolonged distrust, the cruel Nay, the tedium, the
cutting-into-the-quick—how seldom do THESE come together! Out of
such seed, however—is truth produced!</p>
<p>BESIDE the bad conscience hath hitherto grown all KNOWLEDGE! Break up,
break up, ye discerning ones, the old tables!</p>
<p>8.</p>
<p>When the water hath planks, when gangways and railings o'erspan the
stream, verily, he is not believed who then saith: "All is in flux."</p>
<p>But even the simpletons contradict him. "What?" say the simpletons, "all
in flux? Planks and railings are still OVER the stream!</p>
<p>"OVER the stream all is stable, all the values of things, the bridges and
bearings, all 'good' and 'evil': these are all STABLE!"—</p>
<p>Cometh, however, the hard winter, the stream-tamer, then learn even the
wittiest distrust, and verily, not only the simpletons then say: "Should
not everything—STAND STILL?"</p>
<p>"Fundamentally standeth everything still"—that is an appropriate
winter doctrine, good cheer for an unproductive period, a great comfort
for winter-sleepers and fireside-loungers.</p>
<p>"Fundamentally standeth everything still"—: but CONTRARY thereto,
preacheth the thawing wind!</p>
<p>The thawing wind, a bullock, which is no ploughing bullock—a furious
bullock, a destroyer, which with angry horns breaketh the ice! The ice
however—BREAKETH GANGWAYS!</p>
<p>O my brethren, is not everything AT PRESENT IN FLUX? Have not all railings
and gangways fallen into the water? Who would still HOLD ON to "good" and
"evil"?</p>
<p>"Woe to us! Hail to us! The thawing wind bloweth!"—Thus preach, my
brethren, through all the streets!</p>
<p>9.</p>
<p>There is an old illusion—it is called good and evil. Around
soothsayers and astrologers hath hitherto revolved the orbit of this
illusion.</p>
<p>Once did one BELIEVE in soothsayers and astrologers; and THEREFORE did one
believe, "Everything is fate: thou shalt, for thou must!"</p>
<p>Then again did one distrust all soothsayers and astrologers; and THEREFORE
did one believe, "Everything is freedom: thou canst, for thou willest!"</p>
<p>O my brethren, concerning the stars and the future there hath hitherto
been only illusion, and not knowledge; and THEREFORE concerning good and
evil there hath hitherto been only illusion and not knowledge!</p>
<p>10.</p>
<p>"Thou shalt not rob! Thou shalt not slay!"—such precepts were once
called holy; before them did one bow the knee and the head, and take off
one's shoes.</p>
<p>But I ask you: Where have there ever been better robbers and slayers in
the world than such holy precepts?</p>
<p>Is there not even in all life—robbing and slaying? And for such
precepts to be called holy, was not TRUTH itself thereby—slain?</p>
<p>—Or was it a sermon of death that called holy what contradicted and
dissuaded from life?—O my brethren, break up, break up for me the
old tables!</p>
<p>11.</p>
<p>It is my sympathy with all the past that I see it is abandoned,—</p>
<p>—Abandoned to the favour, the spirit and the madness of every
generation that cometh, and reinterpreteth all that hath been as its
bridge!</p>
<p>A great potentate might arise, an artful prodigy, who with approval and
disapproval could strain and constrain all the past, until it became for
him a bridge, a harbinger, a herald, and a cock-crowing.</p>
<p>This however is the other danger, and mine other sympathy:—he who is
of the populace, his thoughts go back to his grandfather,—with his
grandfather, however, doth time cease.</p>
<p>Thus is all the past abandoned: for it might some day happen for the
populace to become master, and drown all time in shallow waters.</p>
<p>Therefore, O my brethren, a NEW NOBILITY is needed, which shall be the
adversary of all populace and potentate rule, and shall inscribe anew the
word "noble" on new tables.</p>
<p>For many noble ones are needed, and many kinds of noble ones, FOR A NEW
NOBILITY! Or, as I once said in parable: "That is just divinity, that
there are Gods, but no God!"</p>
<p>12.</p>
<p>O my brethren, I consecrate you and point you to a new nobility: ye shall
become procreators and cultivators and sowers of the future;—</p>
<p>—Verily, not to a nobility which ye could purchase like traders with
traders' gold; for little worth is all that hath its price.</p>
<p>Let it not be your honour henceforth whence ye come, but whither ye go!
Your Will and your feet which seek to surpass you—let these be your
new honour!</p>
<p>Verily, not that ye have served a prince—of what account are princes
now!—nor that ye have become a bulwark to that which standeth, that
it may stand more firmly.</p>
<p>Not that your family have become courtly at courts, and that ye have
learned—gay-coloured, like the flamingo—to stand long hours in
shallow pools:</p>
<p>(For ABILITY-to-stand is a merit in courtiers; and all courtiers believe
that unto blessedness after death pertaineth—PERMISSION-to-sit!)</p>
<p>Nor even that a Spirit called Holy, led your forefathers into promised
lands, which I do not praise: for where the worst of all trees grew—the
cross,—in that land there is nothing to praise!—</p>
<p>—And verily, wherever this "Holy Spirit" led its knights, always in
such campaigns did—goats and geese, and wryheads and guyheads run
FOREMOST!—</p>
<p>O my brethren, not backward shall your nobility gaze, but OUTWARD! Exiles
shall ye be from all fatherlands and forefather-lands!</p>
<p>Your CHILDREN'S LAND shall ye love: let this love be your new nobility,—the
undiscovered in the remotest seas! For it do I bid your sails search and
search!</p>
<p>Unto your children shall ye MAKE AMENDS for being the children of your
fathers: all the past shall ye THUS redeem! This new table do I place over
you!</p>
<p>13.</p>
<p>"Why should one live? All is vain! To live—that is to thrash straw;
to live—that is to burn oneself and yet not get warm."—</p>
<p>Such ancient babbling still passeth for "wisdom"; because it is old,
however, and smelleth mustily, THEREFORE is it the more honoured. Even
mould ennobleth.—</p>
<p>Children might thus speak: they SHUN the fire because it hath burnt them!
There is much childishness in the old books of wisdom.</p>
<p>And he who ever "thrasheth straw," why should he be allowed to rail at
thrashing! Such a fool one would have to muzzle!</p>
<p>Such persons sit down to the table and bring nothing with them, not even
good hunger:—and then do they rail: "All is vain!"</p>
<p>But to eat and drink well, my brethren, is verily no vain art! Break up,
break up for me the tables of the never-joyous ones!</p>
<p>14.</p>
<p>"To the clean are all things clean"—thus say the people. I, however,
say unto you: To the swine all things become swinish!</p>
<p>Therefore preach the visionaries and bowed-heads (whose hearts are also
bowed down): "The world itself is a filthy monster."</p>
<p>For these are all unclean spirits; especially those, however, who have no
peace or rest, unless they see the world FROM THE BACKSIDE—the
backworldsmen!</p>
<p>TO THOSE do I say it to the face, although it sound unpleasantly: the
world resembleth man, in that it hath a backside,—SO MUCH is true!</p>
<p>There is in the world much filth: SO MUCH is true! But the world itself is
not therefore a filthy monster!</p>
<p>There is wisdom in the fact that much in the world smelleth badly:
loathing itself createth wings, and fountain-divining powers!</p>
<p>In the best there is still something to loathe; and the best is still
something that must be surpassed!—</p>
<p>O my brethren, there is much wisdom in the fact that much filth is in the
world!—</p>
<p>15.</p>
<p>Such sayings did I hear pious backworldsmen speak to their consciences,
and verily without wickedness or guile,—although there is nothing
more guileful in the world, or more wicked.</p>
<p>"Let the world be as it is! Raise not a finger against it!"</p>
<p>"Let whoever will choke and stab and skin and scrape the people: raise not
a finger against it! Thereby will they learn to renounce the world."</p>
<p>"And thine own reason—this shalt thou thyself stifle and choke; for
it is a reason of this world,—thereby wilt thou learn thyself to
renounce the world."—</p>
<p>—Shatter, shatter, O my brethren, those old tables of the pious!
Tatter the maxims of the world-maligners!—</p>
<p>16.</p>
<p>"He who learneth much unlearneth all violent cravings"—that do
people now whisper to one another in all the dark lanes.</p>
<p>"Wisdom wearieth, nothing is worth while; thou shalt not crave!"—this
new table found I hanging even in the public markets.</p>
<p>Break up for me, O my brethren, break up also that NEW table! The
weary-o'-the-world put it up, and the preachers of death and the jailer:
for lo, it is also a sermon for slavery:—</p>
<p>Because they learned badly and not the best, and everything too early and
everything too fast; because they ATE badly: from thence hath resulted
their ruined stomach;—</p>
<p>—For a ruined stomach, is their spirit: IT persuadeth to death! For
verily, my brethren, the spirit IS a stomach!</p>
<p>Life is a well of delight, but to him in whom the ruined stomach speaketh,
the father of affliction, all fountains are poisoned.</p>
<p>To discern: that is DELIGHT to the lion-willed! But he who hath become
weary, is himself merely "willed"; with him play all the waves.</p>
<p>And such is always the nature of weak men: they lose themselves on their
way. And at last asketh their weariness: "Why did we ever go on the way?
All is indifferent!"</p>
<p>TO THEM soundeth it pleasant to have preached in their ears: "Nothing is
worth while! Ye shall not will!" That, however, is a sermon for slavery.</p>
<p>O my brethren, a fresh blustering wind cometh Zarathustra unto all
way-weary ones; many noses will he yet make sneeze!</p>
<p>Even through walls bloweth my free breath, and in into prisons and
imprisoned spirits!</p>
<p>Willing emancipateth: for willing is creating: so do I teach. And ONLY for
creating shall ye learn!</p>
<p>And also the learning shall ye LEARN only from me, the learning well!—He
who hath ears let him hear!</p>
<p>17.</p>
<p>There standeth the boat—thither goeth it over, perhaps into vast
nothingness—but who willeth to enter into this "Perhaps"?</p>
<p>None of you want to enter into the death-boat! How should ye then be
WORLD-WEARY ones!</p>
<p>World-weary ones! And have not even withdrawn from the earth! Eager did I
ever find you for the earth, amorous still of your own earth-weariness!</p>
<p>Not in vain doth your lip hang down:—a small worldly wish still
sitteth thereon! And in your eye—floateth there not a cloudlet of
unforgotten earthly bliss?</p>
<p>There are on the earth many good inventions, some useful, some pleasant:
for their sake is the earth to be loved.</p>
<p>And many such good inventions are there, that they are like woman's
breasts: useful at the same time, and pleasant.</p>
<p>Ye world-weary ones, however! Ye earth-idlers! You, shall one beat with
stripes! With stripes shall one again make you sprightly limbs.</p>
<p>For if ye be not invalids, or decrepit creatures, of whom the earth is
weary, then are ye sly sloths, or dainty, sneaking pleasure-cats. And if
ye will not again RUN gaily, then shall ye—pass away!</p>
<p>To the incurable shall one not seek to be a physician: thus teacheth
Zarathustra:—so shall ye pass away!</p>
<p>But more COURAGE is needed to make an end than to make a new verse: that
do all physicians and poets know well.—</p>
<p>18.</p>
<p>O my brethren, there are tables which weariness framed, and tables which
slothfulness framed, corrupt slothfulness: although they speak similarly,
they want to be heard differently.—</p>
<p>See this languishing one! Only a span-breadth is he from his goal; but
from weariness hath he lain down obstinately in the dust, this brave one!</p>
<p>From weariness yawneth he at the path, at the earth, at the goal, and at
himself: not a step further will he go,—this brave one!</p>
<p>Now gloweth the sun upon him, and the dogs lick at his sweat: but he lieth
there in his obstinacy and preferreth to languish:—</p>
<p>—A span-breadth from his goal, to languish! Verily, ye will have to
drag him into his heaven by the hair of his head—this hero!</p>
<p>Better still that ye let him lie where he hath lain down, that sleep may
come unto him, the comforter, with cooling patter-rain.</p>
<p>Let him lie, until of his own accord he awakeneth,—until of his own
accord he repudiateth all weariness, and what weariness hath taught
through him!</p>
<p>Only, my brethren, see that ye scare the dogs away from him, the idle
skulkers, and all the swarming vermin:—</p>
<p>—All the swarming vermin of the "cultured," that—feast on the
sweat of every hero!—</p>
<p>19.</p>
<p>I form circles around me and holy boundaries; ever fewer ascend with me
ever higher mountains: I build a mountain-range out of ever holier
mountains.—</p>
<p>But wherever ye would ascend with me, O my brethren, take care lest a
PARASITE ascend with you!</p>
<p>A parasite: that is a reptile, a creeping, cringing reptile, that trieth
to fatten on your infirm and sore places.</p>
<p>And THIS is its art: it divineth where ascending souls are weary, in your
trouble and dejection, in your sensitive modesty, doth it build its
loathsome nest.</p>
<p>Where the strong are weak, where the noble are all-too-gentle—there
buildeth it its loathsome nest; the parasite liveth where the great have
small sore-places.</p>
<p>What is the highest of all species of being, and what is the lowest? The
parasite is the lowest species; he, however, who is of the highest species
feedeth most parasites.</p>
<p>For the soul which hath the longest ladder, and can go deepest down: how
could there fail to be most parasites upon it?—</p>
<p>—The most comprehensive soul, which can run and stray and rove
furthest in itself; the most necessary soul, which out of joy flingeth
itself into chance:—</p>
<p>—The soul in Being, which plungeth into Becoming; the possessing
soul, which SEEKETH to attain desire and longing:—</p>
<p>—The soul fleeing from itself, which overtaketh itself in the widest
circuit; the wisest soul, unto which folly speaketh most sweetly:—</p>
<p>—The soul most self-loving, in which all things have their current
and counter-current, their ebb and their flow:—oh, how could THE
LOFTIEST SOUL fail to have the worst parasites?</p>
<p>20.</p>
<p>O my brethren, am I then cruel? But I say: What falleth, that shall one
also push!</p>
<p>Everything of to-day—it falleth, it decayeth; who would preserve it!
But I—I wish also to push it!</p>
<p>Know ye the delight which rolleth stones into precipitous depths?—Those
men of to-day, see just how they roll into my depths!</p>
<p>A prelude am I to better players, O my brethren! An example! DO according
to mine example!</p>
<p>And him whom ye do not teach to fly, teach I pray you—TO FALL
FASTER!—</p>
<p>21.</p>
<p>I love the brave: but it is not enough to be a swordsman,—one must
also know WHEREON to use swordsmanship!</p>
<p>And often is it greater bravery to keep quiet and pass by, that THEREBY
one may reserve oneself for a worthier foe!</p>
<p>Ye shall only have foes to be hated; but not foes to be despised: ye must
be proud of your foes. Thus have I already taught.</p>
<p>For the worthier foe, O my brethren, shall ye reserve yourselves:
therefore must ye pass by many a one,—</p>
<p>—Especially many of the rabble, who din your ears with noise about
people and peoples.</p>
<p>Keep your eye clear of their For and Against! There is there much right,
much wrong: he who looketh on becometh wroth.</p>
<p>Therein viewing, therein hewing—they are the same thing: therefore
depart into the forests and lay your sword to sleep!</p>
<p>Go YOUR ways! and let the people and peoples go theirs!—gloomy ways,
verily, on which not a single hope glinteth any more!</p>
<p>Let there the trader rule, where all that still glittereth is—traders'
gold. It is the time of kings no longer: that which now calleth itself the
people is unworthy of kings.</p>
<p>See how these peoples themselves now do just like the traders: they pick
up the smallest advantage out of all kinds of rubbish!</p>
<p>They lay lures for one another, they lure things out of one another,—that
they call "good neighbourliness." O blessed remote period when a people
said to itself: "I will be—MASTER over peoples!"</p>
<p>For, my brethren, the best shall rule, the best also WILLETH to rule! And
where the teaching is different, there—the best is LACKING.</p>
<p>22.</p>
<p>If THEY had—bread for nothing, alas! for what would THEY cry! Their
maintainment—that is their true entertainment; and they shall have
it hard!</p>
<p>Beasts of prey, are they: in their "working"—there is even
plundering, in their "earning"—there is even overreaching! Therefore
shall they have it hard!</p>
<p>Better beasts of prey shall they thus become, subtler, cleverer, MORE
MAN-LIKE: for man is the best beast of prey.</p>
<p>All the animals hath man already robbed of their virtues: that is why of
all animals it hath been hardest for man.</p>
<p>Only the birds are still beyond him. And if man should yet learn to fly,
alas! TO WHAT HEIGHT—would his rapacity fly!</p>
<p>23.</p>
<p>Thus would I have man and woman: fit for war, the one; fit for maternity,
the other; both, however, fit for dancing with head and legs.</p>
<p>And lost be the day to us in which a measure hath not been danced. And
false be every truth which hath not had laughter along with it!</p>
<p>24.</p>
<p>Your marriage-arranging: see that it be not a bad ARRANGING! Ye have
arranged too hastily: so there FOLLOWETH therefrom—marriage-breaking!</p>
<p>And better marriage-breaking than marriage-bending, marriage-lying!—Thus
spake a woman unto me: "Indeed, I broke the marriage, but first did the
marriage break—me!</p>
<p>The badly paired found I ever the most revengeful: they make every one
suffer for it that they no longer run singly.</p>
<p>On that account want I the honest ones to say to one another: "We love
each other: let us SEE TO IT that we maintain our love! Or shall our
pledging be blundering?"</p>
<p>—"Give us a set term and a small marriage, that we may see if we are
fit for the great marriage! It is a great matter always to be twain."</p>
<p>Thus do I counsel all honest ones; and what would be my love to the
Superman, and to all that is to come, if I should counsel and speak
otherwise!</p>
<p>Not only to propagate yourselves onwards but UPWARDS—thereto, O my
brethren, may the garden of marriage help you!</p>
<p>25.</p>
<p>He who hath grown wise concerning old origins, lo, he will at last seek
after the fountains of the future and new origins.—</p>
<p>O my brethren, not long will it be until NEW PEOPLES shall arise and new
fountains shall rush down into new depths.</p>
<p>For the earthquake—it choketh up many wells, it causeth much
languishing: but it bringeth also to light inner powers and secrets.</p>
<p>The earthquake discloseth new fountains. In the earthquake of old peoples
new fountains burst forth.</p>
<p>And whoever calleth out: "Lo, here is a well for many thirsty ones, one
heart for many longing ones, one will for many instruments":—around
him collecteth a PEOPLE, that is to say, many attempting ones.</p>
<p>Who can command, who must obey—THAT IS THERE ATTEMPTED! Ah, with
what long seeking and solving and failing and learning and re-attempting!</p>
<p>Human society: it is an attempt—so I teach—a long seeking: it
seeketh however the ruler!—</p>
<p>—An attempt, my brethren! And NO "contract"! Destroy, I pray you,
destroy that word of the soft-hearted and half-and-half!</p>
<p>26.</p>
<p>O my brethren! With whom lieth the greatest danger to the whole human
future? Is it not with the good and just?—</p>
<p>—As those who say and feel in their hearts: "We already know what is
good and just, we possess it also; woe to those who still seek thereafter!</p>
<p>And whatever harm the wicked may do, the harm of the good is the
harmfulest harm!</p>
<p>And whatever harm the world-maligners may do, the harm of the good is the
harmfulest harm!</p>
<p>O my brethren, into the hearts of the good and just looked some one once
on a time, who said: "They are the Pharisees." But people did not
understand him.</p>
<p>The good and just themselves were not free to understand him; their spirit
was imprisoned in their good conscience. The stupidity of the good is
unfathomably wise.</p>
<p>It is the truth, however, that the good MUST be Pharisees—they have
no choice!</p>
<p>The good MUST crucify him who deviseth his own virtue! That IS the truth!</p>
<p>The second one, however, who discovered their country—the country,
heart and soil of the good and just,—it was he who asked: "Whom do
they hate most?"</p>
<p>The CREATOR, hate they most, him who breaketh the tables and old values,
the breaker,—him they call the law-breaker.</p>
<p>For the good—they CANNOT create; they are always the beginning of
the end:—</p>
<p>—They crucify him who writeth new values on new tables, they
sacrifice UNTO THEMSELVES the future—they crucify the whole human
future!</p>
<p>The good—they have always been the beginning of the end.—</p>
<p>27.</p>
<p>O my brethren, have ye also understood this word? And what I once said of
the "last man"?—</p>
<p>With whom lieth the greatest danger to the whole human future? Is it not
with the good and just?</p>
<p>BREAK UP, BREAK UP, I PRAY YOU, THE GOOD AND JUST!—O my brethren,
have ye understood also this word?</p>
<p>28.</p>
<p>Ye flee from me? Ye are frightened? Ye tremble at this word?</p>
<p>O my brethren, when I enjoined you to break up the good, and the tables of
the good, then only did I embark man on his high seas.</p>
<p>And now only cometh unto him the great terror, the great outlook, the
great sickness, the great nausea, the great sea-sickness.</p>
<p>False shores and false securities did the good teach you; in the lies of
the good were ye born and bred. Everything hath been radically contorted
and distorted by the good.</p>
<p>But he who discovered the country of "man," discovered also the country of
"man's future." Now shall ye be sailors for me, brave, patient!</p>
<p>Keep yourselves up betimes, my brethren, learn to keep yourselves up! The
sea stormeth: many seek to raise themselves again by you.</p>
<p>The sea stormeth: all is in the sea. Well! Cheer up! Ye old seaman-hearts!</p>
<p>What of fatherland! THITHER striveth our helm where our CHILDREN'S LAND
is! Thitherwards, stormier than the sea, stormeth our great longing!—</p>
<p>29.</p>
<p>"Why so hard!"—said to the diamond one day the charcoal; "are we
then not near relatives?"—</p>
<p>Why so soft? O my brethren; thus do <i>I</i> ask you: are ye then not—my
brethren?</p>
<p>Why so soft, so submissive and yielding? Why is there so much negation and
abnegation in your hearts? Why is there so little fate in your looks?</p>
<p>And if ye will not be fates and inexorable ones, how can ye one day—
conquer with me?</p>
<p>And if your hardness will not glance and cut and chip to pieces, how can
ye one day—create with me?</p>
<p>For the creators are hard. And blessedness must it seem to you to press
your hand upon millenniums as upon wax,—</p>
<p>—Blessedness to write upon the will of millenniums as upon brass,—harder
than brass, nobler than brass. Entirely hard is only the noblest.</p>
<p>This new table, O my brethren, put I up over you: BECOME HARD!—</p>
<p>30.</p>
<p>O thou, my Will! Thou change of every need, MY needfulness! Preserve me
from all small victories!</p>
<p>Thou fatedness of my soul, which I call fate! Thou In-me! Over-me!
Preserve and spare me for one great fate!</p>
<p>And thy last greatness, my Will, spare it for thy last—that thou
mayest be inexorable IN thy victory! Ah, who hath not succumbed to his
victory!</p>
<p>Ah, whose eye hath not bedimmed in this intoxicated twilight! Ah, whose
foot hath not faltered and forgotten in victory—how to stand!—</p>
<p>—That I may one day be ready and ripe in the great noontide: ready
and ripe like the glowing ore, the lightning-bearing cloud, and the
swelling milk-udder:—</p>
<p>—Ready for myself and for my most hidden Will: a bow eager for its
arrow, an arrow eager for its star:—</p>
<p>—A star, ready and ripe in its noontide, glowing, pierced, blessed,
by annihilating sun-arrows:—</p>
<p>—A sun itself, and an inexorable sun-will, ready for annihilation in
victory!</p>
<p>O Will, thou change of every need, MY needfulness! Spare me for one great
victory!—-</p>
<p>Thus spake Zarathustra.</p>
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