Page 182 - beyond-good-and-evil
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statesman were to stimulate the slumbering passions and
       avidities of his people, were to make a stigma out of their
       former diffidence and delight in aloofness, an offence out
       of their exoticism and hidden permanency, were to depreci-
       ate their most radical proclivities, subvert their consciences,
       make their minds narrow, and their tastes ‘national’—what!
       a statesman who should do all this, which his people would
       have to do penance for throughout their whole future, if
       they  had  a  future,  such  a  statesman  would  be  GREAT,
       would he?’—‘Undoubtedly!’ replied the other old patriot ve-
       hemently, ‘otherwise he COULD NOT have done it! It was
       mad perhaps to wish such a thing! But perhaps everything
       great has been just as mad at its commencement!’— ‘Misuse
       of words!’ cried his interlocutor, contradictorily— ‘strong!
       strong! Strong and mad! NOT great!’—The old men had ob-
       viously become heated as they thus shouted their ‘truths’
       in each other’s faces, but I, in my happiness and apartness,
       considered how soon a stronger one may become master of
       the strong, and also that there is a compensation for the
       intellectual  superficialising  of  a  nation—namely,  in  the
       deepening of another.

       242. Whether we call it ‘civilization,’ or ‘humanising,’ or
       ‘progress,’ which now distinguishes the European, whether
       we call it simply, without praise or blame, by the political
       formula  the  DEMOCRATIC  movement  in  Europe—be-
       hind all the moral and political foregrounds pointed to by
       such formulas, an immense PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESS
       goes on, which is ever extending the process of the assimi-

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