Friedrich Nietzsche
“To live in a
vast and proud tranquility; always beyond . . . To have, or not to have, one's
emotions, one's For and Against, according to choice; to lower oneself to them
for hours; to SEAT oneself on them as upon horses, and often as upon
asses:--for one must know how to make use of their stupidity as well as of
their fire. To conserve one's three hundred foregrounds; also one's black
spectacles: for there are circumstances when nobody must look into our eyes,
still less into our "motives." And to choose for company that roguish
and cheerful vice, politeness. And to remain master of one's four virtues,
courage, insight, sympathy, and solitude. For solitude is a virtue with us, as
a sublime bent and bias to purity, which divines that in the contact of man and
man--"in society"--it must be unavoidably impure. All society makes
one somehow, somewhere, or sometime--"commonplace."
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