The Gay Science
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Dating from the era when Nietzsche was at the peak of his intellectual powers, most of this book was written just before Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and the rest of it five years later, after Beyond Good and Evil. Zarathustra makes his first appearance in these pages, along with the author's well-known proclamation of the death of God. Readers will find this volume a wellspring for some of Nietzsche's most sustained and thought-provoking discussions of art and morality, knowledge and truth, the intellectual conscience, and the origin of logic, as well as the largest collection of Nietzsche's published poetry.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844 1900) was a German philosopher. He began his career as a classical philologist before turning to philosophy. He became the youngest person to hold the Chair of Classical Philology at the University of Basel in 1869 at the age of 24, but resigned in 1879 due to health problems that plagued him most of his life; he completed much of his core writing in the following decade. In 1889, at age 44, he suffered a collapse and afterward a complete loss of his mental faculties, with paralysis and probably vascular dementia. He lived his remaining years in the care of his mother until her death in 1897 and then with his sister Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche. Nietzsche died in 1900, after experiencing pneumonia and multiple strokes.
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Reviews for The Gay Science
314 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5For believe me! — the secret for harvesting from existence the greatest fruitfulness and the greatest enjoyment is: to live dangerously! Build your cities on the slopes of Vesuvius! Send your ships into uncharted seas! Live at war with your peers and yourselves! Be robbers and conquerors as long as you cannot be rulers and possessors, you seekers of knowledge! Soon the age will be past when you could be content to live hidden in forests like shy deer!
While this wasn't my point of departure into Theory, though it should've been. Ideas bubbled and grew fecund in my youthful soul. Pints of Carlsburg and shit food from Hardees nourshed my wretched body, but it was Nietzsche's frisson which propelled me forward. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Next to Ambrose Bierce's Devil's Dictionary, The Gay Science is my favorite source of clever soundbites about various topics, so invest in an edition with an index!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Imagine, if you will, that you (and everyone else) had to keep living the same life over and over again for eternity. What changes would you make? Nietzsche’s theory of the Eternal Recurrence should make us all stop and examine the lives we are leading. A must read!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Gay Science: the source of and solution to all your worries about lack of meaning in life. That is how it feels right now anyway.
I came to this book to find out Nietzsche's interpretation of reality and framework of life; what was his answer to the question - what should one do? As to interpretation of reality it is hard to be disappointed; there are so many compelling conclusions on all aspects of humanity, language, morality and existence - delivered on the most part with wit and clarity. Here and there it is spoiled by the odd super long sentence or vague metaphor that tests the limits of comprehension, but it is still a gold-mine of ideas in bite-size chunks. Recipe for two: read a few pages on a low heat, set simmering for 20 minutes (perhaps go for a walk or bike ride) and serve immediately to a companion. For me its been the source of most of the best topics of conversation for the last half year.
What about a framework of life? Philosophy for me is the attempt to concisely describe reality and help us decide how to live - to arrive at a theory/framework, relying on the most irreducible and unshakable axioms, which singles out some courses of action as the better ones. I did not find anything like this. After all the talk of his free spirit type, I arrive at perhaps contradictory conclusions: on the one hand I have many scattered ideas about the life he presents persuasively as a good one, but on the other hand I hear the louder message 'Be yourself!'.I wonder if such things as axioms and basic truths existed in Nietzsche's head and he chose not to present things that way - or whether he really did think as he wrote.
He persuades me better than books on Buddhism did to mistrust dichotomies - I feel like he has succeeded where they failed because he reasoned more forcefully the many contradictions we can stumble upon when demanding clear reasoned black-and-white everlasting truths. I am left feeling more alone and lost than ever in my head, but more at peace and at home in the universe. I feel less secure of my ideas about how to live, but far less urgency to remedy that. I feel profoundly happier, and equally sad. Everything, everything, everything.1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The majority if this book consists of just under 400 short pieces, between a few lines and couple of pages in length, in which Nietzsche delivers his profound reflexions and aphorisms. There are also a few poems at the beginning and the end. .
The outlook of the pieces are quite varied, and if you flicked though, picked one, and read it, you might be cheered up, made to think about a miscellaneous issue, pushed towards an existential abyss, or just feel like going outside for walk. I will list a small selection of the varied headings of the pieces that stood out to me as I flicked through just now:
"The Danger of Vegetarians", "Too Oriental", "The Origin of Religion", "Dignity of Folly", "Against Remorse", "Work and Ennui", "Epicurus",
"The Way to Happiness"
There is quite a variety of things that are written about in this book, which might give it more appeal than some of his other ones. The way that Nietzsche writes is not technical, but his ideas will be more easily received by some people than others. I happen to agree with a lot of it, but some of it is also subversive, he entices us with the poetic sentiment, but after analysis we realise it is callous, or amoral.
Due to the structure of the book, and the fact that a lot seems to be said in each of the pieces, it will probably be a book that the reader will come back to, and re-read, after the initial reading. I did read the book right through, but it would be easy to read one piece and then spend five minutes thinking about it, over a cup of tea, then move onto another.
But if you don't like to think about deep issues, are intellectually squeamish, or don't like philosophy, then you will probably want to avoid this book. But for anyone who likes to think, then this is a book that will be quite enjoyed.
Book preview
The Gay Science - Friedrich Nietzsche
DOVER THRIFT EDITIONS
GENERAL EDITOR: SUSAN L. RATTINER
EDITOR OF THIS VOLUME: JANET B. KOPITO
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 by Dover Publications, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Bibliographical Note
This Dover edition, first published in 2020, is an unabridged republication of The Joyful Wisdom (La gaya scienza
) from Volume 10 of The Complete Works of Friedrich Nietzsche, originally published by T. N. Foulis, London and Edinburgh, 1909–1913. Throughout this edition, the phrase joyful wisdom
uniformly has been changed to gay science.
The book was first published in German as Die Fröhliche Wissenschaft by Ernst Schmeitzner, Chemnitz, in 1882. The present volume follows the second edition (published by E. W. Fritzsch, Leipzig, in 1887), for which Nietzsche added a fifth book and an appendix of fourteen poems as well as the Italian subtitle La gaya scienza.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844–1900, author. | Common, Thomas, translator. | Cohn, Paul V. (Paul Victor), translator. | Petre, Maude Dominica, 1863–1942, translator.
Title: The gay science / Friedrich Nietzsche ; translated by Thomas Common ; poetry rendered by Paul V. Cohn and Maude D. Petre.
Other titles: Fröhliche Wissenschaft. English
Description: Dover thrift edition. | Mineola, New York : Dover Publications, Inc., 2020. | Series: Dover thrift editions | Originally published: 1882. | Summary: "This volume, which the author called ‘the most personal of all my books,’ features the largest collection of Nietzsche’s published poetry. It also offers an extensive, sophisticated treatment of his core philosophical themes and views as well as the ideas that proved most influential to later philosophers.
Thought-provoking discussions address art and morality, knowledge and truth, the intellectual conscience, and the origin of logic"— Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019054699 | ISBN 9780486841687 (paperback)
Subjects: LCSH: Philosophy.
Classification: LCC B3313.F72 E513 2020 | DDC 193—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019054699
Manufactured in the United States by LSC Communications
84168501
www.doverpublications.com
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
2020
Note
ICONOCLASTIC, CONTROVERSIAL, HIGHLY INFLUENTIAL—all describe a premier philosopher of the second half of the nineteenth century: Friedrich Nietzsche. In an ironic twist of fate, Nietzsche, whose father and grandfathers were clergymen, is known to many for his pronouncement God is dead
(Gott ist tot
).
Only four years old when his father died, Friedrich grew up with his mother, grandmother, two aunts, and his younger sister, Elisabeth. He attended boarding school and received a classical education, after which he studied philology and theology at the University of Bonn, transferring later to the University of Leipzig. In his early twenties, he interrupted his studies to serve in the military but went on sick leave after being injured while mounting a horse. Returning to Leipzig, Nietzsche began reading Schopenhauer, whose philosophical writings greatly appealed to him. Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl, with whom Nietzsche had studied in Bonn, recommended him for a professorship in Basel, Switzerland. Soon after, however, Nietzsche left Basel to volunteer as an orderly in the Franco-Prussian War—an unfortunate decision, as he contracted diphtheria as well as dysentery.
His first published work, The Birth of Tragedy from the Spirit of Music, appeared in 1872. Reflecting Nietzsche’s classical studies, the book explores the dichotomy between the opposing Greek concepts (and contradictory elements of the human psyche) Apollonian (rational and structured) and Dionysian (irrational and chaotic). Nietzsche claimed that the Dionysian forces, which produced classical tragedy, nevertheless led to the affirmation of life against the inevitability of human suffering. Nietzsche had tried his hand at composing and was for a time an enthusiastic supporter of Richard Wagner, hence the reference to the Spirit of Music
(he wrote, in Beyond Good and Evil [1886], By means of music the very passions enjoy themselves
). Later works, such as The Gay Science (1882), Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883–85), The Genealogy of Morals (1887), and Ecce Homo (1888), although highly regarded in the twentieth century and an influence on cultural figures such as Sigmund Freud, Thomas Mann, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Hermann Hesse, were not well received during his lifetime. Chronically suffering from poor health, Nietzsche roamed Europe toward the end of his life. In 1889, after collapsing in a street in Turin, Italy, Friedrich Nietzsche had a mental breakdown. His mother and sister cared for him until his death on August 25, 1900, in Weimar, Germany. Only thereafter did his books begin to find their audience.
The Gay Science,
written in 1882, just before Zarathustra,
is rightly judged to be one of Nietzsche’s best books. Here the essentially grave and masculine face of the poet-philosopher is seen to light up and suddenly break into a delightful smile. The warmth and kindness that beam from his features will astonish those hasty psychologists who have never divined that behind the destroyer is the creator, and behind the blasphemer the lover of life. In the retrospective valuation of his work that appears in Ecce Homo,
the author himself observes with truth that the fourth book, Sanctus Januarius,
deserves especial attention: The whole book is a gift from the Saint, and the introductory verses express my gratitude for the most wonderful month of January that I have ever spent.
Book Fifth, We Fearless Ones
; the Appendix, Songs of Prince Free-as-a-Bird
; and the Preface, were added to the second edition in 1887.
The translation of Nietzsche’s poetry has proved to be a more challenging problem than that of his prose. Not only has there been a difficulty in finding adequate translators—a difficulty overcome, it is hoped, by the choice of Miss Petre and Mr. Cohn—but it cannot be denied that even in the original the poems are of unequal merit. By the side of such masterpieces as To the Mistral
are several verses of comparatively little value. The Editor, however, did not feel justified in making a selection, as it was intended that the edition should be complete. The heading Jest, Ruse and Revenge
of the Prelude in Rhyme
is borrowed from Goethe.
Contents
Preface to the Second Edition
Jest, Ruse and Revenge: A Prelude in Rhyme
Book First
Book Second
Book Third
Book Fourth: Sanctus Januarius
Book Fifth: We Fearless Ones
Appendix:
Songs of Prince Free-as-a-Bird
Preface to the Second Edition
1
PERHAPS MORE THAN one preface would be necessary for this book; and after all it might still be doubtful whether anyone could be brought nearer to the experiences in it by means of prefaces, without having himself experienced something similar. It seems to be written in the language of the thawing-wind: there is wantonness, restlessness, contradiction and April-weather in it; so that one is as constantly reminded of the proximity of winter as of the victory over it: the victory which is coming, which must come, which has perhaps already come. . . . Gratitude continually flows forth, as if the most unexpected thing had happened, the gratitude of a convalescent—for convalescence was this most unexpected thing. Gay Science
: that implies the Saturnalia of a spirit which has patiently withstood a long, frightful pressure—patiently, strenuously, impassionately, without submitting, but without hope—and which is now suddenly o’erpowered with hope, the hope of health, the intoxication of convalescence. What wonder that much that is unreasonable and foolish thereby comes to light: much wanton tenderness expended even on problems which have a prickly hide, and are not therefore fit to be fondled and allured. The whole book is really nothing but a revel after long privation and impotence: the frolicking of returning energy, of newly awakened belief in a to-morrow and after-to-morrow; of sudden sentience and prescience of a future, of near adventures, of seas open once more, and aims once more permitted and believed in. And what was now all behind me! This track of desert, exhaustion, unbelief, and frigidity in the midst of youth, this advent of grey hairs at the wrong time, this tyranny of pain, surpassed, however, by the tyranny of pride which repudiated the consequences of pain—and consequences are comforts,—this radical isolation, as defence against the contempt of mankind become morbidly clairvoyant, this restriction upon principle to all that is bitter, sharp, and painful in knowledge, as prescribed by the disgust which had gradually resulted from imprudent spiritual diet and pampering—it is called Romanticism,—oh, who could realise all those feelings of mine! He, however, who could do so would certainly forgive me everything, and more than a little folly, boisterousness and Gay Science
—for example, the handful of songs which are given along with the book on this occasion,—songs in which a poet makes merry over all poets in a way not easily pardoned.—Alas, it is not only on the poets and their fine lyrical sentiments
that this reconvalescent must vent his malignity: who knows what kind of victim he seeks, what kind of monster of material for parody will allure him ere long? Incipit tragoedia, it is said at the conclusion of this seriously frivolous book; let people be on their guard! Something or other extraordinarily bad and wicked announces itself: incipit parodia, there is no doubt. . . .
2
—But let us leave Herr Nietzsche; what does it matter to people that Herr Nietzsche has got well again? . . . A psychologist knows few questions so attractive as those concerning the relations of health to philosophy, and in the case when he himself falls sick, he carries with him all his scientific curiosity into his sickness. For, granting that one is a person, one has necessarily also the philosophy of one’s personality; there is, however, an important distinction here. With the one it is his defects which philosophise, with the other it is his riches and powers. The former requires his philosophy, whether it be as support, sedative, or medicine, as salvation, elevation, or self-alienation; with the latter it is merely a fine luxury, at best the voluptuousness of a triumphant gratitude, which must inscribe itself ultimately in cosmic capitals on the heaven of ideas. In the other more usual case, however, when states of distress occupy themselves with philosophy (as is the case with all sickly thinkers—and perhaps the sickly thinkers preponderate in the history of philosophy), what will happen to the thought itself which is brought under the pressure of sickness? This is the important question for psychologists: and here experiment is possible. We philosophers do just like a traveller who resolves to awake at a given hour, and then quietly yields himself to sleep: we surrender ourselves temporarily, body and soul, to the sickness, supposing we become ill—we shut, as it were, our eyes on ourselves. And as the traveller knows that something does not sleep, that something counts the hours and will awake him, we also know that the critical moment will find us awake—that then something will spring forward and surprise the spirit in the very act, I mean in weakness, or reversion, or submission, or obduracy, or obscurity, or whatever the morbid conditions are called, which in times of good health have the pride of the spirit opposed to them (for it is as in the old rhyme: The spirit proud, peacock and horse are the three proudest things of earthly source
). After such self-questioning and self-testing, one learns to look with a sharper eye at all that has hitherto been philosophised; one divines better than before the arbitrary by-ways, side-streets, resting-places, and sunny places of thought, to which suffering thinkers, precisely as sufferers, are led and misled: one knows now in what direction the sickly body and its requirements unconsciously press, push, and allure the spirit—towards the sun, stillness, gentleness, patience, medicine, refreshment in any sense whatever. Every philosophy which puts peace higher than war, every ethic with a negative grasp of the idea of happiness, every metaphysic and physic that knows a finale, an ultimate condition of any kind whatever, every predominating, aesthetic or religious longing for an aside, a beyond, an outside, an above—all these permit one to ask whether sickness has not been the motive which inspired the philosopher. The unconscious disguising of physiological requirements under the cloak of the objective, the ideal, the purely spiritual, is carried on to an alarming extent,—and I have often enough asked myself, whether on the whole philosophy hitherto has not generally been merely an interpretation of the body, and a misunderstanding of the body. Behind the loftiest estimates of value by which the history of thought has hitherto been governed, misunderstandings of the bodily constitution, either of individuals, classes, or entire races are concealed. One may always primarily consider these audacious freaks of metaphysics, and especially its answers to the question of the worth of existence, as symptoms of certain bodily constitutions; and if, on the whole, when scientifically determined, not a particle of significance attaches to such affirmations and denials of the world, they nevertheless furnish the historian and psychologist with hints so much the more valuable (as we have said) as symptoms of the bodily constitution, its good or bad condition, its fullness, powerfulness, and sovereignty in history; or else of its obstructions, exhaustions, and impoverishments, its premonition of the end, its will to the end. I still expect that a philosophical physician, in the exceptional sense of the word—one who applies himself to the problem of the collective health of peoples, periods, races, and mankind generally—will some day have the courage to follow out my suspicion to its ultimate conclusions, and to venture on the judgment that in all philosophising it has not hitherto been a question of truth
at all, but of something else,—namely, of health, futurity, growth, power, life. . . .
3
It will be surmised that I should not like to take leave ungratefully of that period of severe sickness, the advantage of which is not even yet exhausted in me: for I am sufficiently conscious of what I have in advance of the spiritually robust generally, in my changeful state of health. A philosopher who has made the tour of many states of health, and always makes it anew, has also gone through just as many philosophies: he really cannot do otherwise than transform his condition on every occasion into the most ingenious posture and position,—this art of transfiguration is just philosophy We philosophers are not at liberty to separate soul and body, as the people separate them; and we are still less at liberty to separate soul and spirit. We are not thinking frogs, we are not objectifying and registering apparatuses with cold entrails,—our thoughts must be continually born to us out of our pain, and we must, motherlike, share with them all that we have in us of blood, heart, ardour, joy, passion, pang, conscience, fate and fatality. Life—that means for us to transform constantly into light and flame all that we are, and also all that we meet with; we cannot possibly do otherwise. And as regards sickness, should we not be almost tempted to ask whether we could in general dispense with it? It is great pain only which is the ultimate emancipator of the spirit; for it is the teacher of the strong suspicion which makes an X out of every U¹, a true, correct X, i.e., the ante-penultimate letter. . . . It is great pain only, the long slow pain which takes time, by which we are burned as it were with green wood, that compels us philosophers to descend into our ultimate depths, and divest ourselves of all trust, all good-nature, veiling, gentleness, and averageness, wherein we have perhaps formerly installed our humanity. I doubt whether such pain improves
us; but I know that it deepens us. Be it that we learn to confront it with our pride, our scorn, our strength of will, doing like the Indian who, however sorely tortured, revenges himself on his tormentor with his bitter tongue; be it that we withdraw from the pain into the oriental nothingness—it is called Nirvana,—into mute, benumbed, deaf self-surrender, self-forgetfulness, and self-effacement: one emerges from such long, dangerous exercises in self-mastery as another being, with several additional notes of interrogation, and above all, with the will to question more than ever, more profoundly, more strictly, more sternly, more wickedly, more quietly than has ever been questioned hitherto. Confidence in life is gone: life itself has become a problem.—Let it not be imagined that one has necessarily become a hypochondriac thereby! Even love of life is still possible—only one loves differently. It is the love of a woman of whom one is doubtful. . . . The charm, however, of all that is problematic, the delight in the X, is too great in those more spiritual and more spiritualised men, not to spread itself again and again like a clear glow over all the trouble of the problematic, over all the danger of uncertainty, and even over the jealousy of the lover. We know a new happiness. . . .
4
Finally (that the most essential may not remain unsaid), one comes back out of such abysses, out of such severe sickness, and out of the sickness of strong suspicion—new-born, with the skin cast; more sensitive, more wicked, with a finer taste for joy, with a more delicate tongue for all good things, with a merrier disposition, with a second and more dangerous innocence in joy; more childish at the same time, and a hundred times more refined than ever before. Oh, how repugnant to us now is pleasure, coarse, dull, drab pleasure, as the pleasure-seekers, our cultured
classes, our rich and ruling classes, usually understand it! How malignantly we now listen to the great holiday-hubbub with which cultured people
and city-men at present allow themselves to be forced to spiritual enjoyment
by art, books, and music, with the help of spirituous liquors! How the theatrical cry of passion now pains our ear, how strange to our taste has all the romantic riot and sensuous bustle which the cultured populace love become (together with their aspirations after the exalted, the elevated, and the intricate)! No, if we convalescents need an art at all, it is another art—a mocking, light, volatile, divinely serene, divinely ingenious art, which blazes up like a clear flame, into a cloudless heaven! Above all, an art for artists, only for artists! We at last know better what is first of all necessary for it—namely, cheerfulness, every kind of cheerfulness, my friends! also as artists:—I should like to prove it. We now know something too well, we men of knowledge: oh, how well we are now learning to forget and not know, as artists! And as to our future, we are not likely to be found again in the tracks of those Egyptian youths who at night make the temples unsafe, embrace statues, and would fain unveil, uncover, and put in clear light, everything which for good reasons is kept concealed.² No, we have got disgusted with this bad taste, this will to truth, to truth at all costs,
this youthful madness in the love of truth: we are now too experienced, too serious, too joyful, too singed, too profound for that. . . . We no longer believe that truth remains truth when the veil is withdrawn from it: we have lived long enough to believe this. At present we regard it as a matter of propriety not to be anxious either to see everything naked, or to be present at everything, or to understand and know
everything. Is it true that the good God is everywhere present?
asked a little girl of her mother: I think that is indecent
:—a hint to philosophers! One should have more reverence for the shame-facedness with which nature has concealed herself behind enigmas and motley uncertainties. Perhaps truth is a woman who has reasons for not showing her reasons? Perhaps her name is Baubo, to speak in Greek? . . . Oh, those Greeks! They knew how to live: for that purpose it is necessary to keep bravely to the surface, the fold and the skin; to worship appearance, to believe in forms, tones, and words, in the whole Olympus of appearance! Those Greeks were superficial—from profundity! And are we not coming back precisely to this point, we dare-devils of the spirit, who have scaled the highest and most dangerous peak of contemporary thought, and have looked around us from it, have looked down from it? Are we not precisely in this respect—Greeks? Worshippers of forms, of tones, and of words? And precisely on that account—artists?
RUTA, near GENOA
Autumn, 1886
¹ This means literally to put the numeral X instead of the numeral V (formerly U); hence it means to double a number unfairly, to exaggerate, humbug, cheat.—T R .
² An allusion to Schiller’s poem: The Veiled Image of Sais.
—T R .
JEST, RUSE AND REVENGE
A Prelude in Rhyme
1
Invitation
Venture, comrades, I implore you,
On the fare I set before you,
You will like it more to-morrow,
Better still the following day:
If yet more you’re then requiring,
Old success I’ll find inspiring,
And fresh courage thence will borrow
Novel dainties to display.
2
My Good Luck
Weary of Seeking had I grown,
So taught myself the way to Find:
Back by the storm I once was blown,
But follow now, where drives the wind.
3
Undismayed
Where you’re standing, dig, dig out:
Down below’s the Well:
Let them that walk in darkness shout:
Down below—there’s Hell!
4
Dialogue
A. Was I ill? and is it ended?
Pray, by what physician tended?
I recall no pain endured!
B. Now I know your trouble’s ended:
He that can forget, is cured.
5
To the Virtuous
Let our virtues be easy and nimble-footed in motion,
Like unto Homer’s verse ought they to come and to go.
6
Worldly Wisdom
Stay not on level plain,
Climb not the mount too high,
But half-way up remain—
The world you’ll best descry!
7
Vademecum—Vadetecum
Attracted by my style and talk
You’d follow, in my footsteps walk?
Follow yourself unswervingly,
So—careful!—shall you follow me.
8
The Third Sloughing
My skin bursts, breaks for fresh rebirth,
And new desires come thronging:
Much I’ve devoured, yet for more earth
The serpent in me’s longing.
’Twixt stone and grass I crawl once more,
Hungry, by crooked ways,
To eat the food I ate before,
Earth-fare all serpents praise!
9
My Roses
My luck’s good—I’d make yours fairer,
(Good luck ever needs a sharer),
Will you stop and pluck my roses?
Oft mid rocks and thorns you’ll linger,
Hide and stoop, suck bleeding finger—
Will you stop and pluck my roses?
For my good luck’s a trifle vicious,
Fond of teasing, tricks malicious—
Will you stop and pluck my roses?
10
The Scorner
Many drops I waste and spill,
So my scornful mood you curse:
Who to brim his cup doth fill,
Many drops must waste and spill—
Yet he thinks the wine no worse.
11
The Proverb Speaks
Harsh and gentle, fine and mean,
Quite rare and common, dirty and clean,
The fools’ and the sages’ go-between:
All this I will be, this have been,
Dove and serpent and swine, I ween!
12
To a Lover of Light
That eye and sense be not fordone
E’en in the shade pursue the sun!
13
For Dancers
Smoothest ice,
A paradise
To him who is a dancer nice.
14
The Brave Man
A feud that knows not flaw nor break,
Rather then patched-up friendship, take.
15
Rust
Rust’s needed: keenness will not satisfy!
He is too young!
the rabble loves to cry.
16
Excelsior
How shall I reach the top?
No time
For thus reflecting! Start to climb!
17
The Man of Power Speaks
Ask never! Cease that whining, pray!
Take without asking, take alway!
18
Narrow Souls
Narrow souls hate I like the devil,
Souls wherein grows nor good nor evil.
19
Accidentally a Seducer
¹
He shot an empty word
Into the empty blue;
But on the way it met
A woman whom it slew.
20
For Consideration
A twofold pain is easier far to bear
Than one: so now to suffer wilt thou dare?
21
Against Pride
Brother, to puff thyself up ne’er be quick:
For burst thou shalt be by a tiny prick!
22
Man and Woman
The woman seize, who to thy heart appeals!
Man’s motto: woman seizes not, but steals.
23
Interpretation
If I explain my wisdom, surely
’Tis but entangled more securely,
I can’t expound myself aright:
But he that’s boldly up and doing,
His own unaided course pursuing,
Upon my image casts more light!
24
A Cure for Pessimism
Those old capricious fancies, friend!
You say your palate naught can please,
I hear you bluster, spit and wheeze,
My love, my patience soon will end!
Pluck up your courage, follow me—
Here’s a fat toad! Now then, don’t blink,
Swallow it whole, nor pause to think!
From your dyspepsia you’ll be free!
25
A Request
Many men’s minds I know full well,
Yet what mine own is, cannot tell.
I cannot see—my eye’s too near—
And falsely to myself appear.
’Twould be to me a benefit
Far from myself if I could sit,
Less distant than my enemy,
And yet my nearest friend’s too nigh—
’Twixt him and me, just in the middle!
What do I ask for? Guess my riddle.
26
My Cruelty
I must ascend an hundred stairs,
I must ascend: the herd declares
I’m cruel: Are we made of stone?
I must ascend an hundred stairs:
All men the part of stair disown.