Chapter 12

Meysenbug, Fräulein von,42.Military service,17,23.Miscellaneous Opinions and Aphorisms,39.Mohammedanism,101.Monarchy,193.Monism,109,138.Montaigne,37,143footnote,256,266.Moonlight on the Pussta, composition,8.Moral order of the world,160.Morality—Definitions of,75,172.Expression of expedience,75-78,89et seq.,210.How it becomes fixed,80-81.Master and slave morality,82et seq.,93et seq.Nietzsche's criticism of,92et seq.More, Paul Elmer,256,263,285-289,294.Mügge, M. A.,255,262,263,266,291,293.Music, Nietzsche's compositions,8,55,292.Music, Nietzsche's love of,8-9,27,54-55.Natural morality,202,282-283.Natural selection,seeStruggle for existence.Naumann, C. G.,47.Naumburg, Nietzsche at,6-12,22,49.New Thought,51.Nice,45.Nicholas of Cusa,148-150,153.Nietzsche, Ermentrude, Nietzsche's grandmother,6-7,22,265.Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, his characteristics—As a boy,7-9.Pride in his Polish descent,6,23,29,266.Love of music,8-9,54-55.A brilliant pupil,12.His dislike ofbiergemüthlichkeit,14-15.Drug-taking,23,52.As a professor,22,27-29.Method of writing,41,51.His intolerance,28,133,261,268,271.Personal appearance,50.Illnesses,23,40-41,48,51-52.Insanity,48,52-54.Literary style,55-56,133.Women,56-58.Relations to his sister,59.Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, his life—Birth,4.Boyhood at Naumburg,7-12.First writings,8-11.At Pforta,12-13.Matriculates at Bonn,13.Student of Ritschl,16.Removes to Leipsic,16.Military service,17,23.First philological work,17.Discovery of Schopenhauer,18et seq.Takes his degree,22.Professor at Basel,22.First breakdown,23.Publishes "The Birth of Tragedy,"23.Other early essays,30-36.Meeting with Wagner,16.Meeting with Rée,37.Human, All-too Human,38,39.Affair with Lou Salomé,42.Failing health,40.Income,54.Breakdown at Turin,48.Death,49.Nietzsche, Josef, Nietzsche's brother,5.Nietzsche, Karl Ludwig, Nietzsche's father,4-6.Nietzsche, Therese Elisabeth Alexandra, Nietzsche's sister,seeFörster-Nietzsche.Nietzsche versus Wagner—Publication of,46.English translation of,291.Nietzschy,6.Nirvana,101.Nobility,165,166.Nordau, Max,37,53,269-273,275,295.Orage, A. R.,293,294.Osler, William,132footnote,159.Overbeck, Franz,48.Paganism, Nietzsche's,257-259.Paget, Violet (Vernon Lee),120,172-173,275-277,295.Paine, Thomas,128.Parmenides,256.Parsons, Elsie Clews,184.Pasteur, Louis,198.Pattison, A. Seth Pringle,295.Peace, universal,162.Petre, Maude D.,292,295.Pfleiderer, Otto,91,128.Pforta,12-13.Philologists, We, essay,291.Philosophy,32,218,229.Pindar, Judge, of Naumburg,265.Pleasure and pain,20footnote.Plowshare, The,38.Poetry, Nietzsche's,6,293.Polish origin of Nietzsche family,6.Poor Laws, effect of English,281.Prayer,129-130.Predestination,130-131.Priestcraft,231.Professor at Basel,22.Progress, Nietzsche's program of,114,163,172,201.Property rights,165.Proudhon,256.Pussta,8.Pyrrho,256.Pythagoras,118footnote,256.Rée, Paul—Nietzsche's meeting with,37.Rivals in love,42,57.Influence on Nietzsche,37,256.Renaissance, Second,255.Richard Wagner in Bayreuth—Publication of,34.English translation of,291.See alsoWagner.Ritschl, Albrecht,128.Ritschl, Frau,16-17.Ritschl, Friedrich Wilhelm,16-17.Robertson, J. M.,295.Röcken,4-5,49.Romantic movement in Germany,266,286.Roosevelt, Theodore, ix.Rousseau,255.St. Austin,76footnote.Sallust,56.Salomé, Lou—Meeting with Nietzsche,42.Book on Nietzsche,42,118.Marriage,42.Nietzsche's affair with,42-57.Hymn to Life,292.Samuel, Horace B.,292.Science, its aims,236.Scheffauer, Hermann,292.Schiller,267.Schooldays at Naumburg,10-12.Schopenhauer, Arthur—Nietzsche's discovery of,18.The will-to-live,19-21,101.Nietzsche's divergence,21,33.Essay on,32,291.Influence on Nietzsche,22,32-33,54,63-64,100,174,177,189,242et seq.,255,257-260.Schopenhauer as a Teacher—Publication of,32.Quotations from,32,33,219.English translation of,291.Schumann, Robert,272.Self-control,233.Sera, Leo G.,294.Seydlitz, Baron von,52.Shaw, G. Bernard, ix,82,250,295.Silberblick,49.Sils Maria,45.Sin, the Christian idea of,214.Skepticism,148-151,158,214,264.Sklavmoral, seeSlave-morality.Slave-morality,85-87,105,106,133,175,237.Smith, Adam,256.Social contract,203et seq.,209.Socialism,98,164,256,286,288,295.Socrates,91,153,155.Sorrento,37.Spencer, Herbert,35,51,54,55,98,99,115,140,221,247,261,268,272.Spinoza,255.State, origin of,204.Stendhal,255,262.Stirner, Max,255,262-263.Strauss, David Friedrich,30,128;see alsoDavid Strauss, the Confessor and the Writer.Strauss, Richard,55.Struggle for existence,94,102,133,138et seq.,163,204,223.Style, Nietzsche's German,55-56,133,266.Suicide,226,227-228.Superman—Described,109-113.His purposes,113-114,169.His characteristics,115,122et seq.Sympathy,136-137,280,287,288.Taine,256.Teacher, Nietzsche as a,22-23.Teachers, their characteristics,217,219-220.Thoughts Out of Season,seeInopportune Speculations.Tille, Alexander,140,222,256,290.Tobacco, Nietzsche's dislike of,15.Tr——, Fräulein, Nietzsche's proposal to,18.Tragedy, its origin,26,65et seq.Tribschen,25,27,37,244.Truth—Definitions of,147et seq.,159.Its origin in error,154.The scientific method,151-157,236.Turck, Dr.,172-173.Turin, breakdown at,48.Twilight of the Idols, The—Publication of,46.Quotations from,66,142footnote,161,234,235,236,265.English translation of,292.Vauvenarges,38,266.Venice,42.Voltaire,128,256.Wagner, The Case of—Publication of,46,249.Quotation from,249.English translation of,291.Wagner, Cosima,25,27,48,57,244,245,266.Wagner, Richard—Meeting with Nietzsche,16,244.Nietzsche visits at Tribschen,25,27,37,244.Richard Wagner in Bayreuth,34,246.Burlesqued in Thus Spake Zarathustra,45.The Case of Wagner,46,249.Nietzsche vs. Wagner,46,251.Nietzsche as a Wagnerian,242.Wagner and Schopenhauer,243.Parsifal,247,248.Bayreuth opening,247.Break with Nietzsche,245,251.Nietzsche's last words on,49.Walker, J. L.,263.Wallace, Alfred Russell,140footnote.Wallace, William,295.Walling, William English,295.Wanderer and His Shadow, The,39.War, benefits of,169,175,236.War, Heracleitus on,263.Weimar,48-49.White, Andrew D.,35,89,274.Wieland,267.Wife,182,185.Will-to-live,19-22,64,114.Will-to-power,64,105,114,157,188.Will-to-Power, The—Plan of proposed work,47.Notes published,48.Quotation from,289.English translation of,292.Windelband, Wilhelm,69footnote.Women—Nietzsche's personal attitude,57,186.Their chief duty,175,188.Their slave-morality,175,179,186.Sources of their weakness,176.Their guile,177,180,187.Man's attitude toward them,178-179.Marriage,180et seq."Don't forget thy whip!",187.Schopenhauer on,57,174,189.The lady,189.Wrench, G. T.,292,294.Wright, Willard H.,294.Zarathustra, Thus Spake—Publication of,44.Plan of,45.Quotations from,90,102,104,105,106,109,111,112,113,115,119,169,175,184,185,187,188,193,228.Richard Strauss' tone-poem,55.English translation of,292.Zeno,256.Zimmern, Helen,291.Zoroaster,seeZarathustra.


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