Nietzsche, An Approach, J. Lavrin, 1948
Nietzsche, An Approach, J. Lavrin, 1948
Nietzsche, An Approach, J. Lavrin, 1948
< r: \=
Call No 1 l3 "
^ Accession No .^Q Co j
Author
Titla
JANKO LAVRIN
WITH A PORTRAIT FRONTISPIECE
Vll
I
INTRODUCTION
II
popularization of Nietzsche. We
must equally endeavour
to penetrate behind the numerous masks which he donned
in order to mystify his readers. Does he not himself
acknowledge (in Beyond Good and Evil] that 'every
philosophy also conceals a philosophy; every opinion is
also a lurking-place, every word is also a mask?' Blaise
Pascal's Se moquer de la philosophie c'est vraiment philo-
sopher can therefore safely be applied to Nietzsche in so
far as the face-value of his philosophy is often entirely
II
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, danger-
ous 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
IV
Nietzsche's attitude towards pain is clearly shown in
utterances of this kind. Knowing that he was doomed
to suffer, he further transmuted his pain into an exercise,
or rather into a proof of that highest courage from which
he now could derive both his pride and his creative
ecstasy. Nor was he reticent regarding the artistic
benefits won from such psychological alchemy. In The
Will to Power he stresses (with some exaggeration) that
'it is
exceptional states that determine the artist such
states as are intimately related and entwined with morbid
'OUT OF SEASON 1
ii
IV
The word 'destroyers' was here directed primarily
against that effete system of life which was devoid of
purpose, of all distant tasks and ideals. In spite of his
afflictions, or rather because of them, Nietzsche wanted
to be on the side of life, that is of creative life, regardless
of the price he had to pay for it.
Schopenhauer's will to
exist with pessimism' was therefore transformed
its 'lazy
II
in
The above passage is but further evidence that to
Nietzsche the problem of 'to be or not to be' mattered
more than any stable philosophic truth or system. And
since life means change and flux that is continuous
becoming, he did not hesitate to base his own philosophy
on the same principle and to let 'immutable' theories
take care of themselves. Thus he joined a tradition which
goes at least as far back as Heraclitus. But such a course
was again necessitated by Nietzsche's 'artifice of self-
preservation', which alone is enough to explain most of
his apparent eccentricities. Why indeed should he not
II
Ill
IV
II
m
As a contrast to such
'taming' morals, Nietzsche
devised a most rigorous system for rearing an tlite of
humanity. His aim was to mobilize all those biological
and vitalist forces which could still lead, perhaps, to a
1
It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that Hitler's Nazis
adopted (and adapted) this principle in some of their concentration
camps with the ghastliest results ever recorded in history.
ON THE MARGINS OF THE SUPERMAN 55
that of Theognis) that there were born masters and born
slaves. So he postulated an aristocratic class whose funda-
mental belief ought to be that 'society is not allowed to
exist for itsown sake, but only as a foundation and a
scaffolding, by means of which a select class of beings may
be able to elevate themselves to their higher duties, and
in general to a higher existence'./ For this reason he
demanded that there should be two&pposite sets of values:
the ascending one for the ruling masters, and the other
the descending one for the ruled 'herd*. Such was,
according to him, the basic relationship between human
beings a relationship ordained by Nature herself. But
having once adopted this view, Nietzsche was quite willing
to put up with the herd-morality, provided the latter
was confined to the 'herd' only. He even found such a
state of things desirable in so far as it procured for the
masters the material on which they could exercise their
will to power as on their own opposites. While violently
struggling against decadence, he thus toyed with the idea
that a process of decay among the masses was not only
desirable but even necessary as a kind of manure
required by the growth of a 'higher' ftite.
It was on this basis that Nietzsche reversed the values
of Christianity, of democracy and of humanism in general.
He postulated that man as he is should be sacrificed to the
man of the future without mercy and without reserve.
He did not shrink even from gruesome methods, provided
these foster the supra-human ideal of his own
would
choicoi Oblivious of the fact that on a mere biological
plane there can be no strict dividing line between supra-
human and sub-human, ^ietzsche often and as if willy-
nilly confused the two. Hfence he objected to the socialists,
for example, who believed that 'circumstances and social
combinations could be devised which would put an end
to all vice, illness, prostitution and poverty'. According
IV
How clearly can one perceive in all these harangues the
voice of a patient determined to fight for the health of his
own body by means of the most desperate discipline
required by the strategy of the moment. But even here
his essentially idealistic and reformatory temperament
helped him to go beyond mere personal considerations.
Having own case with that of mankind at
identified his
adore.'
In the state he was in he could hardly have acted other-
wise without weakening his will to health and jeopardizing
his self-imposed therapy. In spite of all the wishes of his
heart, he persisted in 'cruelty' towards himself. So he
turned his back on all religion in the very teeth of his
unusually strong religious temperament. What he wanted
to know was not in how far such and such a religion was
true, but only whether it was valuable or harmful from
the standpoint of ascending life. And no sooner had he
noticed its emphasis on the 'beyond' at the expense of our
earthly existence than he rejected it as being of no value
at all. The same applies to the problem of God. Even
had he been sure that God existed, Nietzsche would not
have accepted Him unless He first produced credentials
to the effect that He was not hostile to life, that is, to
our 'biological' life this side of the grave.
It is here that wemust seek for the roots of Nietzsche's
attacks upon religion, and particularly upon Christianity
in which he detected (or thought he had detected) all the
NIETZSCHE AND RELIGION 63
elements of nihilism and decadence. The first proof of
these he saw in the hypocritical and lukewarm attitude
towards religion on the part of the Christians themselves
an attitude which he regarded as infinitely more demoraliz-
ing than honest downright atheism. To call ourselves
Christians, when the whole of our life is one continuous
refutation of Christianity in practice is just the height of
indecency and also of moral cowardice at its worst, which
Nietzsche could not but despise. Neither Christianity
nor a God of this kind was of any use to him J and he
made no bones about it.
'That which separates us from other people', he argued
in The Anti-Christ, 'is not the fact that we can discover
no God in either history or nature, or behind nature
but that we regard what has been revered as "God" not
as "divine" but as wretched, absurd, pernicious; not as
an error but as a crime against life. We deny God as
. . .
in
'Ungodliness' as expressed by Nietzsche is quite likely
to occur when men's current idea of God has not pro-
gressed with their mental and moral development: God
is left behind. Besides, only a latent Christian of the
highest order attacking his own secret inclinations,
could have been so violently anti-Christian as was
Nietzsche. This is why his fury should not be taken at
its face value. Nor should be over-exaggerated. 1
its effect
1
In one of his letters to H. Albert, Paul Vale"ry wrote, in August
1903, about Nietzsche's attacks on Christianity: *Ses critiques du
christianisme sont des ombres brossant Pombre d'un chrtien' (His
criticisms of Christianity are shadows brushing the shadow of a
Christian).
56 NIETZSCHE
is only one of the many illustrations of Nietzsche's
Christian charity in practice. Had he been a genuine
pagan, he would certainly have insisted much less on his
paganism. And did he not confess that in him the
Christianity of his forebears, with their 'stern intellectual
conscience, fostered by Christianity', had turned against
itself in order to go beyond itself?
Whether it ever succeeded in this is a different matter,
since the whole of Nietzsche's inner make-up was nearer
to a self-tormented Pascal, or even a St. Paul, than an
ancient Greek. At the same time, the manner in which
he tackled the problem puts us all before the dilemma:
are we still Christians, or are we not? Can we still be
Christians? And if not, why not? Even in the case of
believers, he demanded that in the name of conscience
and spiritual integrity they should test their Christian
faith through its opposite before definitely accepting it.
Those who are still Christians at heart 'owe it to their
faith that they should thus for once take up their abode
in the wilderness if for no other reason than that of
IV
The first of them was defined by Nietzsche, in The
Birth of Tragedy, not as an act of transcending one's
individual consciousness, but rather of ecstatically dis-
solving it in nature, in the collective group-consciousness,
or even in the universal Will. 'From the height of joy in
which man feels himself completely and utterly a deified
form and self-justification of nature, down to the joy of
healthy peasants and healthy semi-human beasts, the
whole of this long and enormous gradation of the light
and colour of happiness was called by the Greek not
without that grateful quivering of one who is initiated
into the secret, not without much caution and pious
silence by the god-like name of Dionysus/ In the Greece
of the sixth century B.C., the differentiation between the
individual and the collective group-soul (symbolized by
the chorus in Attic tragedy) was not yet finally com-
pleted, and so the temptation to return to the latter via
all sorts of orgiastic rites and festivals and dissolve in
itmust have been very strong and 'ecstatic'.
Refusing to become a mystic on a Christian plane,
Nietzsche the invalid thus philandered with an ersatz
mysticism on the plane of the 'biological' man, who
instead of transcending nature, himself pantheistically
returns to her even at the risk of losing his own identity.
But such going 'back to nature', i.e. to the collective
unconscious, at the expense of the individuated self, can
only be a temporary dope. Once the ecstasy is over, the
individual consciousness may even assume a critical and
hostile attitude towards 'nature'. As if dissatisfied with
such a solution, Nietzsche modified the symbol of
Dionysus in terms of his own pressing needs and urges.
In The Will to Power in particular this pre-individual
68 NIETZSCHE
deity was made to accept like Nietzsche himself all
the pain of existence and yet say a joyful Yea to life.
Dionysus became a divine anti-pessimist: an expression
of that 'great pantheistic sympathy with pleasure and
pain, which declares even the most terrible and most
questionable qualities of existence good and sanctifies
them'. At the same time Nietzsche combined this
symbol with another quasi-mystical element of his
philosophy: the idea of Eternal Recurrence.
The latter came to him so he says as a revelation at
the beginning of August 1881 in the Engadine; but he
must have known long before that the idea itself can be
traced at least as far back as the Pythagoreans. What was
new in the case of Nietzsche was of course its emotional
texture, strongly redolent of his own religious urge. The
whole of it is based on the supposition that our Universe
possesses only a definite quantum of atoms, and that,
after having passed through all possible combinations,
every single combination must have been and will be
repeated a countless number of times. The existence of
the Universe can thus be looked upon as an eternal
circular movement of rigidly determined identical
processes. Each of us must, therefore, have existed
and will have to exist (under identical conditions) again
and again throughout the aeons.
However mechanical and tedious such a recurrence
may look, in Nietzsche's case it may have been a plausible
substitute for the idea of eternity, even if in the light of
our present-day science his hypothesis appears to be a
1
fallacy. But regardless of its scientific value, the theory
1
This is what Sir Arthur Eddington says on the subject in his
New Pathways in Science, p. 68: 'By accepting the theory of the
expanding universe, we are relieved of one conclusion which we had
felt to be intrinsically absurd. It was argued that every possible
distribution faster than the atoms can work through them, and there
is no longer any likelihood of any particular distribution being
repeated."
VIII
THE TWILIGHT OF GOD
I
come when thou wilt feel that it is infinite, and that there
is nothing more frightful than infinity. Oh, the poor bird
that felt itself free and now strikes against the walls of
this cage! Alas, homesickness for the land should
if
attack thee, as if there had been more freedom there and
there is no land any longer.'
Nietzsche's conclusions are hardly meant to decrease
one's homesickness for the land. In this infinity of void
he sees but a casual, chaotic Universe, without any goal
or meaning. And since its process is a blind one, there
can be no real distinction between an active and a passive
1
This inner process is tackled in Dostoevsky, by the present
author.
THE TWIJL1UHT OF UOD 73
in
Here one cannot help recalling Dostoevsky's maniac
Kirillov (in The Possessed) who, long before Nietzsche,
and for analogous reasons, divided history into two parts:
from the gorilla to man, and from man to man-God
through the 'death of God'. Overwhelmed by the fact
that, having abolished God altogether, he was bound to
regard himself as God and his own self-will (or will to
power) as divine, Kirillov went mad. But as he was
unable to accept, despite his 'divinity', the senseless and
idiotic universe he was still doomed to live in, he saw
that the only freedom left to him was the freedom to pro-
test by committing suicide. Such was the final outcome
74 NIETZSCHE
of his 'new terrible liberty'. But in the last resort, the
void around can be filled, for the time being, with the
pride of a self-appointed task of such dimensions as to
make one ready to dispense with God even if He hap-
pened to exist. This kind of Satanic consciousness
(representing the negative pole of an essentially religious
mind) can be felt on many a page of Nietzsche's Thus
Spake Zarathustra:
'God is a conjecture: but I do not wish your con-
jecturing to reach beyond your creating will.
'Could ye conceive a God? Then, I pray you, be
silent about all Gods! But ye could well create a Super-
man.
'Could ye conceive a God? But let this mean Will to
Truth unto you, that everything be transformed into the
humanly conceivable, the humanly visible, the humanly
sensible! Your own discernment shall ye follow out to the
end!
'And how would ye endure lifewithout that hope, ye
discerning ones? Neither in the conceivable could ye
have been born, nor in the irrational.
'But that I may reveal my heart entirely unto you, my
friends: If there were Gods, how could I bear to be no
God! Therefore there are no Gods.'
Here, if anywhere, the biological superman merges
with the proud man-God. The very recklessness of his
challenge to a world devoid of God tempts him as an
adventure, full of dangerous experiments upon his 'free-
dom'. Nietzsche the invalid, who saw in the amount of
pain he was able to withstand a proof of his courage,
could not but welcome such a senseless universe as
another test for his own power of endurance. 'We
philosophers and "free spirits" feel ourselves irradiated,
as by a new, rosy dawn, by the report that the "old God
is dead"; our hearts thereby overflow with gratitude,
IV
In he resembles Dostoevsky's Ivan Kara-
this respect
mazov who repudiated God with the greater vehemence the
more he was secretly longing for Him. Nietzsche's case
was analogous but not identical Ivan rebelled because
of other people's sufferings, whereas Nietzsche was con-
cerned primarily with the suffering he himself had to
endure. In a state of health such as his, God might even
76 NIETZSCHE
have allured him as the last solace and refuge for anyone
willing to resign himself and to submit to divineProvidence.
But Nietzsche preferred the path of rebellion. Neither
pride nor his innate decency would allow him to 'wag his
taiP before God, when he knew that he needed Him as a
solace and a comfortable shelter.
It was here that the magnitude of his own suffering
Smite deeper!
. Smite yet once more!
Pierce through and rend my heart!
What meaneth this torture
With dull indented arrows?
Why look'st thou hither,
Of human pain not weary,
With mischief-loving, godly flash-glances?
Not murder wilt thou,
But torture, torture?
For why me torture,
Thou mischief-loving, unfamiliar God?
Away!
There fled he surely,
My final, only comrade,
My greatest foe,
Mine unfamiliar
My hangman God! . . .
Nay!
Come thou back!
With all thy great tortures!
To me the last of lonesome ones,
Oh, come thou back!
All my hot tears in streamlets trickle
Their course to thee!
Oh, come thou back
Mine unfamiliar God!
My pain!
My final bliss!
IX
'WE IMMORALISTS'
ii
'The farthest ones are they who pay for your love to the
near ones; and when there are but five of you together, a
sixth must always die.
'Let the future and the farthest be the motive of thy
to-day; and in thy friend shalt thou love the Superman as
thy motive.
'My brethren, I advise you not to neighbour-love I
advise you to the farthest love!'
in
Looking upon the present-day man only as raw material
for the superman to come, Nietzsche demanded that this
material should be treated accordingly. Common human-
ity meant just so much clay to him, necessary for the
fashioning of a noble work of art. His idea of biological
rearing made him further clamour for those conditions of
hardness and perpetual conflict which alone according
to him could foster the strongest and the highest type
on earth. From a harmonious life in peace and organized
well-being he expected nothing but standardized medioc-
rities. So the more danger, hardship and conflicts there
are to be overcome the greater will be the number of
strong exceptional individuals. Nietzsche goes so far as
to demand a parallel development of what he calls good
and evil features. In his opinion, both good and evil (in
German hose as distinct from schlecht) come from strength
and are complementary, even necessary, to each other.
The contrast to and the opposite of good is not what is
'WE IMMORALISTS* 83
called evil, but what is bad (schlecht). The source of the
latter is in weakness, and weakness is likely to be immoral
no matter what virtuous and pious disguises it may
put on.
Ingenious though such definitions be, one is still at a
loss as to how exactly to draw a line between 'bad* and
'evil', or even between strength and weakness. Where
does one cease and the other begin? Moreover, does not
weakness often pose as strength, and strength as weakness?
It all leads to further confusion, from which Nietzsche
himself was unable to escape. In his enthusiasm for
training the superman through a maximum of resistance
he waslogically compelled to postulate an ever-increasing
amount of conflict and evil on earth. But life in terms
of perpetual conflict ceases to be life. It becomes hell,
in spite of its highfalutin labels. Nietzsche even pro-
claimed, in the end, the subtilization of the evil as a
symptom of the highest culture not unlike certain
decadents, who were so prone to eulogize cruelty as to
identify with refinement.
it
IV
One of them is his conviction that mere power devoid
of an adequately high aim and direction is always in
danger of lapsing into brutality. So he granted the right
to power only to those made of the noblest material. As
a contrast to the above passage, we can therefore quote
this portraiture of a noble man, depicted in Beyond Good
and Evil\ In
the foreground there is the feeling of pleni-
tude, of power, which seeks to overflow, the happiness
of high tension, the consciousness of a wealth which would
fain give and bestow the noble man also helps the un-
fortunate, but not or scarcely out of pity, but rather
from an impulse of superabundance of power/ Well and
good. But the trouble still lies in the vagueness of the
C
WE IMMQRALISTS' 85
words employed. What exactly does Nietzsche mean by
the 'happiness of high tension*? Or by 'plenitude',
'power'? The contents of these words are bound to vary
with the level of consciousness on which they are taken,
and two men can use one and the same word for entirely
different things. This certainly does not diminish the
confusion least of all in morals. No wonder that
Nietzsche had to rely primarily on man's innate decency
and nobility, failing which no 'tables of value' would be
of any avail, unless they were imposed and controlled by
adequate dictatorial force. 'I deprive you of everything,
of God, of duty now you must stand the severest test of
a noble nature. For here the way lies open for the profli-
gate take care.' Nietzsche an essentially noble nature
stood the test. But how could he possibly expect
others to do the same, without idealizing man as he is
beyond all deserts?/ If God is. irrevocably Jjlead', then
man alone of jhings. And since
become^ fEe^measure
tKeref is no 1ft sc^uter Common
standard of measure, each
individual is free to jygard himself as the centre of the
Universe ancTtb see in his own self-will the only right^
rioBIe~nature^the morafity"o!
self-will may drift, sooner or later, towards self-glorifica-
tion and self-aggrandizement. And so it does. According
to Nietzsche, the noble type of man, being a determiner of
values does not require to be approved of. 'He passes
the judgment: What is] injurious to me is injurious in
itself; he knows that it is he himself only who confers
honour on things; he is a creator of values. He honours
whatever he recognizes in himself; such morality is self-
1
ii
in
These few lines provide one of the most important
psychological clues to Nietzsche's writings. And since his
illness, isolation and helplessness were on the increase,
he found it necessary to increase also the doses of his
'self-concocted medicine' according to the needs of the
moment, or rather of the situation. What at first was
mere wishful thinking became, step by step, a fixed
idea with him, and then an imaginary compensatory
reality to which he clung the more tenaciously the more
he suspected what its loss would have meant to him. 'If
I do not go so far that for thousands of years people will
make their highest vows in my name, then I have achieved
nothing according to my own judgment', he wrote to
Professor Overbeck in May 1884. 'Was ever anyone's
attitude towards things more daring than mine?' he
asked in a letter (1886) the philosopher Paul Deussen,
and added: 'But one must be able to bear it (man muss
aushalten konneri)\ this is the test; I am indifferent to what
one "says" or "thinks" about it. After all I want to be
right not for to-day or to-morrow, but for millennia.'
Some two years after (February 1888) he assured Baron
von Seydlitz: 'It is quite possible that I am the first
QO NIETZSCHE
IV
We need not deal with all the phases of this process.
For our purpose it is enough to point out that Nietzsche
'NIETZSCHE-CAESAR' 91
redemption.'
The contradiction is clear. No matter what labels
Zarathustra gives it, the thou must of the clockwork can
by no means be turned into creative freedom. Such free-
dom is possible only on that true religious plane with
which Nietzsche refused to have anything to do. So the
deadlock was complete, and no strategic or tactical ruse
on the part of Nietzsche was strong enough to oust it
from his consciousness. Hence his private uncertainty,
so different from his high-sounding words in public. In
a letter to Erwin Rohde, written in May 1887, ^e referred
to Jakob Burckhardt, Hippolyte Taine and himself as the
96 NIETZSCHE
three fundamental nihilists 'irrevocably bound to one
5
another and added: 'As you perhaps suspect, I have not
,
in
The change of the fatalistic 'thou must' into the would-
be free 'I will' was another strategic ruse, by means of
which Nietzsche hoped not only to rescue one of the
fundamental tenets of his philosophy, but also to put his
own yea to life to its last and severest test in the name
of the Eternal Recurrence itself. For once his elation
over this substitute for eternity was gone he became the
more aware of its alarming aspects. The repeated and yet
identical cycles of existence, the minutest details of which
have been predetermined once and for all, implied in
Nietzsche's case nothing less than countless repetitions
of the same excruciating pain and suffering throughout
eternity. Was not such a prospect too terrifying even
for his power of endurance?
In The Joyful Wisdom he actually formulated the whole
dilemma from his personal standpoint. 'What if a demon
crept after thee into thy loneliest loneliness some day or
night and said to thee, "This life, as thou livest it at
present, and hast lived it, thou must live once more, and
also innumerable times; and there will be nothing new
in it, but every pain, and every joy, and every thought,
ZARATHUSTRA'S IMPASSE 97
and every sigh, and all the unspeakably small and great
things in thy life must come to thee again, and all in the
same series and sequences and similarly this spider and
this moonlight among the trees, and similarly this moment,
and I myself. The eternal hour-glass of existence will
ever be turned once more, and thou with it, thou speck
of dust." Wouldst thou not throw thyself down and
gnash thy teeth, and curse the demon that so spake?'
But had Nietzsche himself done such a thing, he would
have acknowledged thereby his utter defeat. Unable to
give up his proud 'I will', he had recourse, once again,
to his 'artifice of self-preservation' in order to convince
himself that the choice between accepting or rejecting
existence on these terms was still his in so far as he
'freely' longed for the inevitable. So the above passage
from The Joyful Wisdom was concluded as follows: 'The
question touching all and everything, "Dost thou want
this once more and also innumerable times?" would lie
as the heaviest burden upon thy activity! Or, how wouldst
thou have to become favourably inclined to thyself and to
life, so as to long for nothing more ardently than for this
last eternal sanctioning and sealing?'
Anxious as he was to remain favourably inclined to
himself and to life, Nietzsche answered with precisely
this kind of 'sanctioning and sealing'. Two delusions
the amor fati and the Eternal Recurrence thus met and
blended in order to enable him to affirm life even in its
most terrifying shape. Yet the iron necessity of the cosmic
clockwork cannot be transmuted into individual freedom
it can only be faked into a semblance of freedom, and
IV
What all this philosophizing with clenched teeth must
have cost him can be gathered from his own hint in a
letter to Professor Overbeck (July 1885) where we come
across this sentence: 'My life consists at present in the wish
that all things be different 1 from the manner in which I
understand them, and that someone would discredit my
"truths" in my own eyes' (und dass mir jemand meine
9
'Wahrheiten unglaubwurdig mache).
One of the reasons why he stuck to his positions so
desperately in spite of all, was his determination not to
give way to weakness the most unpardonable sin in a
heroic sufferer. But was not the 'metaphysical comfort'
of art he finally adopted also a sign of weakness? And
so was perhaps the very 'strength' with which he persevered
in his defiant state of warfare against himself. By refusing
a religious solution he abandoned perhaps the only path
which might have led to an integration of his split per-
sonality, especially if we assume that what is called the
spiritual plane is a complement rather than an antithesis
of the biological plane. Supposing even that our spirit is
(in Nietzsche's words) 'only the name of something in the
body', we still cannot dismiss the fact that this 'something'
has a life of its own which refuses to be forced back to
mere biology.
2
A
narrow biological view might in fact be
as harmful to an ascending life as the one-sided spirituality
of the ascetics and the puritans. It might preclude even
a successful biological existence. If, as Nietzsche con-
tends, truth is but that kind of error without which a
certain species of living beings cannot exist, then why
should we refuse to adopt that integrative religious
attitude which promises a deeper and fuller life here on
earth than mere 'biology' could ever give us? In the worst
1
Italics are his. J. L.
2
Among the contemporary psychologists it is Carl Jung in particu-
lar who rejects the idea that man's spiritual life is a mere super-
structure on his 'instinctual life*.
IOO NIETZSCHE
case thiswould be only one Vital error' set up against
another and less vital one.
Nietzsche's erratic pragmatism itself bids our will
overcome that vitalist-biological gospel which he was so
reluctant to abandon. And the more he defended it the
more dearly he had to pay for it. His nerves and his
health in general thus only grew more deplorable. The
mysterious drug to which he was addicted for years in
order to alleviate his pain, failed to improve either his
physical or his mental state. The catastrophe overtook
him because under the circumstances there was no
escape from it. The surprising thing was that it had been
so long in coming.
XII
NIETZSCHE AND ANTIQUITY
II
in
That which he found among the sixth-
tragic attitude
century Greeks Nietzsche gradually worked out in a
manner designed some of his own needs. It is
to satisfy
for this reason that The Birth of Tragedy represents a
link between Greek thought and Nietzsche's principal
ideas. This holds good despite the spell of Schopenhauer,
and especially of Richard Wagner in whose work he so
mistakenly looked for analogies with the spirit of Greek
tragedy before Euripides.
Suffering from the split between Mind and Instinct,
Nietzsche obviously stressed the instinctive Dionysian
element as against the abstract 'Socratic' tendency in
modern man. And since his own inner dilemma grew
more and more involved, he was bound to modify also
hisDionysian view, which he combined even with his
thoroughly camouflaged death-instinct.
Most telling in this respect is a passage in The Twilight
of the Idols (1888). Looking back to his first book, he
commented on it in the light of all the inner and external
experiences he had passed through since, and came to the
following conclusion: 'The affirmation of life, even in its
most unfamiliar and severe problems, the will to life,
enjoying its own inexhaustibility in the sacrifice of its
highest types that is what I called Dionysian, that is
IO6 NIETZSCHE
what Idivined as the bridge to a psychology of the tragic
poet. Not in order to get rid of terror and pity, to realize
in fact the eternal delight of becoming, the delight which
even involves in itself the joy of annihilating. In this
sense I have the right to understand myself to be the first
tragic philosopher that is, the antithesis and antipode to
a pessimistic philosopher/
As if determined to make his attitude towards his own
suffering Dionysian in this sense, Nietzsche was drawn
to the Greeks of the tragic age even if he suspected in
their sensuous revels (mentioned in his first book) only
a trick of nature, eternally active without any other
motive except that of destroying everything she creates.
But a strong man must be able to face such a truth about
existence without succumbing to the temptations of
Schopenhauer's pessimism. After all, the mysterious
process of the World- Will demands that the revelling
Dionysus should alternate with the destroyed and yet
invariably resurrected Dionysus Zagreus ('cut to pieces').
IV
Aware of the separation between Mind and Nature,
Nietzsche the invalid could not but side with Nature and
Instinct as against Mind. By Mind he understood above
all two phenomena against which he directed all his
fury. One of them was that abstract reasoning and
moralizing for its own sake the origin of which he saw
in Socrates; and the other Christian spirituality, tradi-
tionally distrustful of human instincts.
We need not dwell on Nietzsche's hatred of Socrates.
But it is significant that he put even the Greek sophists
higher than him. Similarly, he preferred Aeschylus to the
moralizing Euripides. As for Nietzsche's struggle with
his own latent Christian spirituality,
it is enough to point
II
met, but I grudge her the fact that she ruined Wagner.
How could such a thing have happened? He was unworthy
of such a wife: so as a matter of thanks he became her
victim (zum Dank dafur verfiel er ihr).'
in
was not the only frustrated love in Nietzsche's
Cosirria
life. During the festivals at Bayreuth, in 1876, he met a
IV
Nietzsche was thirty-eight years old when he parted
with Lou Salome. Nothing reliable is known about his
sexual life from that time on, apart from the fact that
he still cherished the hope of getting married. But his
demands were now less exacting. In a semi-bantering
tone he kept urging a few of his friends, especially the
good-hearted Malwida, to be on the look-out for a
suitable Hausfrau for him, even if she were unable to
share any of his deeper interests. He seemed to have
resigned himself to such modest ambitions particularly
after his sister'smarriage (in 1884) to a man whom he
despised, but these hopes, too, were doomed to failure.
The only course left was to accept the inevitable and to
'transvalue' his defeat into an asset and a virtue by
lowering woman, once again, to something unworthy of
him and therefore undesirable. Yet no matter how much
he tried to repress his libido, his need of a woman's love
and affection, smouldering in the deeper layers of his
consciousness, threatened all the time to break through.
II
in
It would not be without interest to follow up, at this
and hung one belief and one love over them; thus they
served life.
'Destroyers are they who lay traps for many, calling
them the State: they hung a sword and a hundred desires
over them.
'The State is a liar in all tongues of good and evil:
whatever it saith it lieth; whatever it hath it hath stolen.
'False everything in it; with stolen teeth
is it biteth,
the biting one. False are even its intestines.
'"On earth there is nothing greater than I. God's
regulating finger am I", thus the monster howleth. And
not only those with long ears and short sight sink
upon
their kneesl
'What I call the State is where all are poison-drinkers,
the good and the evil alike. What I call the State is where
all lose themselves, the good and the evil alike. What I call
II
IV
Events which took place in the first half of the twentieth
century confirmed that Nietzsche's fears had been only
too well founded. Twice in our lifetime Europe has been
raped, trampled down and paralysed, even though by
some miracle she escaped the fate of being turned into a
huge concentration camp after the Auschwitz and Belsen
pattern. Starved and martyred, she is now licking her
wounds, while striving painfully towards a more tolerable
future. But will she ever recover her spirit? And if so,
on what conditions? Will the few sparks of 'good
Europeanism' that are still smouldering under her ruins
be strong enough to flare up into a flame which may
brighten our prospects of a better, a more human and
humane world?
But since prophets are among the major casualties of
the last war, it is no use indulging in prophecies. All one
can say for certain is that if Europe including the new
132 NIETZSCHE
post-war Germany does not work out her own salvation,
she will have to perish. And there is only one path along
which both cultural and political salvation is still possible
the path of 'good Europeanism'. An epoch priding
itselfon having conquered space and abolished the
boundaries between continents, surely ought to be able
to do away with our interminable wrangles and to
promote that unity which (at least in his brighter moments)
was advocated by Nietzsche. 'I see over and beyond all
these national wars, new "empires", and whatever else
lies in the foreground', he writes in The Genealogy of
Morals. 'What I am concerned with for I see it pre-
paring itself slowly and hesitatingly is the United
Europe.' Let us remember that in spite of his incon-
sistencies, his gospel of hardness and of a ruthless will
to power, Nietzsche anticipated not only the idea of a
League of Nations, but also the advent of the supra-
national European man as a new biological type, resulting
from the mixture of races: one more proof of how much
he had at heart the integral unity of Europe.
We need not dwell on those factors which have frus-
trated such unity. Besides, a true account of them would
tarnish the reputations of too many 'statesmen' for whose
muddleheadedness and political imbecility the world is
now paying such a terrible price. One of the basic
features of professional politicians is their inability to
learn from events. But is at least the common man
intelligent enough to learn from the expensive lessons of
history? On the answer to this question will perhaps
depend not only the fate of Europe but the future of the
world, now on the threshold of the atomic age. It is for
Europe and the world to make the choice.
XVI
NIETZSCHE AND DOSTOEVSKY
II
sake, the other devises the scheme for a new world order
which starts with absolute freedom of one's self-will and
inevitably leads to absolute totalitarian slavery with a
few self-appointed 'supermen' on top of it all. Such
a character as Stavrogin, again, is so undermined by his
own scepticism as to be unable to see in any action
(whether positive or negative) anything real, and there-
fore walks about like a living corpse, equally indifferent
to everybody and everything. A prey to his own inner
void, he has reached that final dead line along the path of
the 'beyond good and evil' which is likely to crush even
the strongest individual.
Nowhere, however, did Dostoevsky tackle Nietzsche's
own dilemma with a deeper psychological and spiritual
insight than in Ivan Karamazov. In Ivan's Grand
Inquisitor we see as it were a tragic parody of Nietzsche's
evil for which, anyway, they are much too weak. Ivan,
like his Grand Inquisitor, cannot endure the suffering
inflictedupon human beings, however much he may
despise their stupidity, their spiritual and moral torpor.
His tragedy is due to the depth of his own con-
science which bars his way towards the hardness of a
Nietzschean superman. At the same time his intellectual
integrity prevents him from going in the opposite direc-
tion that of a religious acceptance and affirmation of
138 NIETZSCHE
life, however much he would like to do so. This vacilla-
tion between utter negation and a passionate will to
believe proved, however, infinitely more painful than
downright scepticism. Unable to remain in the same
tension as Ivan, nor willing to adopt a solution such as
that of Nietzsche (which he considered no solution at
all), Dostoevsky was driven to a conclusion peculiarly
his own, which, inits essentials is the exact reversal of
ill
IV