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<h2> LVIII. THE GREAT LONGING. </h2>
<p>O my soul, I have taught thee to say “to-day” as “once on a time” and
“formerly,” and to dance thy measure over every Here and There and Yonder.</p>
<p>O my soul, I delivered thee from all by-places, I brushed down from thee
dust and spiders and twilight.</p>
<p>O my soul, I washed the petty shame and the by-place virtue from thee, and
persuaded thee to stand naked before the eyes of the sun.</p>
<p>With the storm that is called “spirit” did I blow over thy surging sea;
all clouds did I blow away from it; I strangled even the strangler called
“sin.”</p>
<p>O my soul, I gave thee the right to say Nay like the storm, and to say Yea
as the open heaven saith Yea: calm as the light remainest thou, and now
walkest through denying storms.</p>
<p>O my soul, I restored to thee liberty over the created and the uncreated;
and who knoweth, as thou knowest, the voluptuousness of the future?</p>
<p>O my soul, I taught thee the contempt which doth not come like
worm-eating, the great, the loving contempt, which loveth most where it
contemneth most.</p>
<p>O my soul, I taught thee so to persuade that thou persuadest even the
grounds themselves to thee: like the sun, which persuadeth even the sea to
its height.</p>
<p>O my soul, I have taken from thee all obeying and knee-bending and
homage-paying; I have myself given thee the names, “Change of need” and
“Fate.”</p>
<p>O my soul, I have given thee new names and gay-coloured playthings, I have
called thee “Fate” and “the Circuit of circuits” and “the Navel-string of
time” and “the Azure bell.”</p>
<p>O my soul, to thy domain gave I all wisdom to drink, all new wines, and
also all immemorially old strong wines of wisdom.</p>
<p>O my soul, every sun shed I upon thee, and every night and every silence
and every longing:—then grewest thou up for me as a vine.</p>
<p>O my soul, exuberant and heavy dost thou now stand forth, a vine with
swelling udders and full clusters of brown golden grapes:—</p>
<p>—Filled and weighted by thy happiness, waiting from superabundance,
and yet ashamed of thy waiting.</p>
<p>O my soul, there is nowhere a soul which could be more loving and more
comprehensive and more extensive! Where could future and past be closer
together than with thee?</p>
<p>O my soul, I have given thee everything, and all my hands have become
empty by thee:—and now! Now sayest thou to me, smiling and full of
melancholy: “Which of us oweth thanks?—</p>
<p>—Doth the giver not owe thanks because the receiver received? Is
bestowing not a necessity? Is receiving not—pitying?”—</p>
<p>O my soul, I understand the smiling of thy melancholy: thine
over-abundance itself now stretcheth out longing hands!</p>
<p>Thy fulness looketh forth over raging seas, and seeketh and waiteth: the
longing of over-fulness looketh forth from the smiling heaven of thine
eyes!</p>
<p>And verily, O my soul! Who could see thy smiling and not melt into tears?
The angels themselves melt into tears through the over-graciousness of thy
smiling.</p>
<p>Thy graciousness and over-graciousness, is it which will not complain and
weep: and yet, O my soul, longeth thy smiling for tears, and thy trembling
mouth for sobs.</p>
<p>“Is not all weeping complaining? And all complaining, accusing?” Thus
speakest thou to thyself; and therefore, O my soul, wilt thou rather smile
than pour forth thy grief—</p>
<p>—Than in gushing tears pour forth all thy grief concerning thy
fulness, and concerning the craving of the vine for the vintager and
vintage-knife!</p>
<p>But wilt thou not weep, wilt thou not weep forth thy purple melancholy,
then wilt thou have to SING, O my soul!—Behold, I smile myself, who
foretell thee this:</p>
<p>—Thou wilt have to sing with passionate song, until all seas turn
calm to hearken unto thy longing,—</p>
<p>—Until over calm longing seas the bark glideth, the golden marvel,
around the gold of which all good, bad, and marvellous things frisk:—</p>
<p>—Also many large and small animals, and everything that hath light
marvellous feet, so that it can run on violet-blue paths,—</p>
<p>—Towards the golden marvel, the spontaneous bark, and its master:
he, however, is the vintager who waiteth with the diamond vintage-knife,—</p>
<p>—Thy great deliverer, O my soul, the nameless one—for whom
future songs only will find names! And verily, already hath thy breath the
fragrance of future songs,—</p>
<p>—Already glowest thou and dreamest, already drinkest thou thirstily
at all deep echoing wells of consolation, already reposeth thy melancholy
in the bliss of future songs!—</p>
<p>O my soul, now have I given thee all, and even my last possession, and all
my hands have become empty by thee:—THAT I BADE THEE SING, behold,
that was my last thing to give!</p>
<p>That I bade thee sing,—say now, say: WHICH of us now—oweth
thanks?— Better still, however: sing unto me, sing, O my soul! And
let me thank thee!—</p>
<p>Thus spake Zarathustra.</p>
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