TREATISE ON THE STEPPENWOLF -1
, often at great sacrifice, to avoid all sucs. It ue rested. On t nor bribed. er able. Only, tue, o iny of suffering. It o does to all; and most stubborn instinct of o , but more t er fate. t. ook orders from no man and ordered o suit no man. Independently and alone, to do and to leave undone. For every strong man attains to t of ttained ood alone. t even concerned about o suffocate slomospeness and solitude. For no , but rat and ence. t be cancelled, and it o open o y. People left , of red and repugnance. On trary, many people liked it ations, presents, pleasant letters; but no more. No one came near to , and no one could in . For till atmospionsmosp w earmarks of his life.
Anot must be said t to call suicides only tually destroy t and in y and stamped e, account to type of tion; ed as suicides by ture of ty, ; and necessarily live in a peculiarly close relationso deat being a suicide. is peculiar to t ly or to be an extremely dangerous, dubious, and doomed germ of nature; t o an extraordinary risk, as tood est foot pus or an instants o precipitate o te in t suicide is t probable manner of deat mig sucemperaments, t of vital force. On trary, among t;suicidesquot; are to be found unusually tenacious and eager and also ures. But just as t t indisposition develop a fever, so do tional and sensitive, develop at t sion of suicide. y to concern itself ead of al pure of an antters of fact o every one.
of suicides touc t is psycly papter and a muc.