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Friedrich NietzscheA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Weary of Seeking had I grown, / So taught myself the way to Find: / Back by the storm I once was blown, / But follow now, where drives the wind.”
Nietzsche opens The Gay Science with a “Prelude In Rhyme,” a series of verses that introduce the book’s poetic voice. Here,the second verse, titled “My Good Luck,” presents a microcosm of how this book operates. The book presents a philosopher faced with a collapse of beliefs, tossed about by the storm of philosophical investigation. However, this verse suggests optimism. Further, it alludes to Greek mythology and the idea of an epic journey, as in the Odyssey. It foreshadows the ancient Greek drama and ideas central to Nietzsche’s philosophical investigations.
“Ask never! Cease that whining, pray! / Take without asking, take away!”
Nietzsche titles this brief verse, “The Man of Power Speaks.” It foreshadows Nietzsche’s conclusion about the type of empowered individual freed from the limits of morality and consciousness who follows their own needs for the sake of their happiness. Nietzsche proposes this egoism and drive for freedom produces the greatest intellectual insights towards experiencing self-fulfillment and joy.
“Brethren, war’s the origin / Of happiness on earth: / Powder-smoke and battle-din / Witness friendship’s birth! / Friendship means three things, you know, – / Kinship in luckless plight, / Equality before the foe / Freedom – in death’s sight!”
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By Friedrich Nietzsche