Page:Dawn of the Day.pdf/23

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
CONTENTS
xix
PAGE
503 Friendship 344
504 To reconcile 344
505 The practical 344
506 The necessary desiccation of all that is good 345
507 Against the tyranny of truth 345
508 Not to take a thing pathetically 346
509 The third eye. 346
510 To escape one's virtues 347
511 The temptress 347
512 Bold to the things 347
513 Limits and beauty. 347
514 To the stronger 348
515 Enhancement of beauty. 348
516 Not to run one's demon into the neighbour 348
517 Alluring into love 349
518 Resignation 349
519 Being deceived 349
520 Eternal exequies 349
521 Exceptional vanity 350
522 Wisdom void of hearing 350
523 Parentheses 351
524 Jealousy of the lonely hearts 351
525 Effect of praise 351
526 Unwilling to be a symbolum 352
527 The obscure ones 352
528 Rare discretion 352
529 Whereby men and nations gain lustre 352
530 Digressions of the thinker 353
531 Different conceptions of art 353
532 "Love equalises" 354
533 We beginners 355
534 The small doses. 355
535 Truth needs power. 356
536 The thumb-screw 356
537 Mastery 357
538 Moral insanity of genius 357
539 Do you know what you want? 358
540 Study 359
541 How should we turn to stone 360
542 The philosopher and old age 360
543 Let us not make passion an argument in favour of truth 365
544 How philosophy is pursued in our days 366
545 But we do not believe you 368
546 Slave and idealist 368