The Portable Nietzsche (Portable Library)
it swept me away and up and far, in the middle of my laughter; and I flew, quivering, an arrow, through sun-drunken delight, away into distant futures which no dream had yet seen, into hotter souths than artists ever dreamed of, where gods in their dances are ashamed of all clothes—to speak in parables and to limp and stammer like poets; and verily
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” “O my animals,” replied Zarathustra, “chatter on like this and let me listen. It is so refreshing for me to hear you chattering: where there is chattering, there the world lies before me like a garden. How lovely it is that there are words and sounds! Are not words and sounds rainbows and illusive bridges between things which are eternally apart?
Friedrich Nietzsche • The Portable Nietzsche (Portable Library)
Winter, a wicked guest, is sitting at home with me; my hands are blue from the handshake of his friendship. I honor this wicked guest, but I like to let him sit alone. I like to run away from him; and if one runs well, one escapes him. With warm feet and warm thoughts I run where the wind stands still, to the sunny nook of my mount of olives. There
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asked. Then I learned that they came out of the sea. The evidence is written in their rocks and in the walls of their peaks. It is out of the deepest depth that the highest must come to its height.
Friedrich Nietzsche • The Portable Nietzsche (Portable Library)
” The lust to rule: which, however, also ascends luringly to the pure and lonely and up to self-sufficient heights, glowing like a love that luringly paints crimson fulfillments on earthly skies.
Friedrich Nietzsche • The Portable Nietzsche (Portable Library)
in the end, one experiences only oneself.
Friedrich Nietzsche • The Portable Nietzsche (Portable Library)
And how much honey of hope I carried from here to my beehives!
Friedrich Nietzsche • The Portable Nietzsche (Portable Library)
Man has already robbed all the beasts of their virtues, for of all beasts man has had the hardest time. Only the birds are still over and above him. And if man were to learn to fly—woe, to what heights would his rapaciousness fly?
Friedrich Nietzsche • The Portable Nietzsche (Portable Library)
There is little of man here; therefore their women strive to be mannish. For only he who is man enough will release the woman in woman.