Page:Selections from the writings of Kierkegaard.djvu/114

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112 University of Texas Bulletin

Splendidly didst thou fashion her, but more splendidly still in that thou never didst fashion one woman like another. In man, the essential i s the essential, and insofar always alike ; but in woman the adventitious is the essential, and is thus an inexhaustible source of differences. Brief is her splendor; but quickly the pain is forgotten, too, when the same splendor is proffered me anew. It is true, I too am aware of the unbeautiful which may appear in her there- after; but she is not thus with her seducer.


They rose from the table. It needed but a hint from Constantin, for the participants understood each other with military precision whenever there was a question of face or turn about. With his invisible baton of command, elas- tic like a divining rod in his hand, Constantin once more touched them in order to call forth in them a fleeting remin- iscence of the banquet and the spirit of enjoyment which had prevailed before but was now, in some measure, sub- merged through the intellectual effort of the speeches — in order that the note of glad festivity which had disappeared might, by way of resonance, return once more among the guests in a brief moment of recollection. He saluted with his full glass as a signal of parting, emptying it, and then flinging it against the door in the rear wall. The others followed his example, consummating this symbolic action with all the solemnity of adepts. Justice was thus done the pleasure of stopping short — that royal pleasure which, though briefer, yet is more liberating than any other pleas- ure. With a libation this pleasure ought to be entered upon, with the libation of flinging one's glass into destruction and oblivion, and tearing one's self passionately away from every memory, as if it were a danger to one's life: this libation is to the gods of the nether world. One breaks off, and strength is needed to do that, greater strength than to sever a knot by a sword-blow ; for the difficulty of the knot tends to arouse one's passion, but the passion required for breaking off must be of one's own making. In a superficial