Friedrich Nietzsche Quote

"Grant me, ye gods, but one certainty," runs Parmenides' prayer, "and if it be but a log's breadth on which to lie. on which to ride upon the sea of uncertainty. Take away everything that comes-to-be, everything lush, colorful, blossoming, illusory, everything that charms and is alive. Take all these for yourselves and grant me but the one and only, poor empty certainty.


p. 81. - Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks (posthumous)


Grant me, ye gods, but one certainty, runs Parmenides' prayer, and if it be but a log's breadth on which to lie. on which to ride upon the sea of...

Grant me, ye gods, but one certainty, runs Parmenides' prayer, and if it be but a log's breadth on which to lie. on which to ride upon the sea of...

Grant me, ye gods, but one certainty, runs Parmenides' prayer, and if it be but a log's breadth on which to lie. on which to ride upon the sea of...

Grant me, ye gods, but one certainty, runs Parmenides' prayer, and if it be but a log's breadth on which to lie. on which to ride upon the sea of...