Chapter 68
The Preacher and the Cows
When Zarathustra had left the ugliest man, he was chilled and felt lonesome: for much coldness and lonesomeness came over his spirit, so that even his limbs became colder thereby. When, however, he wandered on and on, uphill and down, at times past green meadows, though also sometimes over wild stony couches where formerly perhaps an impatient brook had made its bed, then he turned all at once warmer and heartier again. “What hath happened unto me?” he asked himself, “something warm and living quickeneth me; it must be in the neighbourhood. Already am I less alone; unconscious companions and…
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Now let's explore the literary elements.
Key Quotes & Analysis
"something warm and living quickeneth me; it must be in the neighbourhood."
Context: Zarathustra senses the presence of living beings nearby while still chilled from his encounter with the ugliest man, feeling warmth return before he can even identify its source.
This shows how even simple presence can comfort us. The warmth comes from the animals before Zarathustra can consciously process what he is feeling, illustrating how being near living things restores something the mind alone cannot.
In Today's Words:
Something alive and warm is nearby, changing how this cold loneliness feels even before I can see or name what it is. The presence of living things has a way of reaching us before our rational minds can locate the source, warming us from the inside when we least expect it.
"Except we be converted and become as kine, we shall in no wise enter into the kingdom of heaven."
Context: Explaining to Zarathustra why he has been preaching to cows, inverting the biblical injunction to become as children and replacing it with cattle as models of contemplative wisdom.
The voluntary beggar uses spiritual language to justify his retreat from human complexity. He's seeking the peace of slow, non-judgmental processing he cannot find among demanding people, dressing up withdrawal as enlightenment.
In Today's Words:
We would all be better off if we could learn the cow's secret: taking in what nourishes us, processing it slowly and repeatedly without rushing to conclusions or dramatic reactions. Society creates so much unnecessary distress by insisting on speed, certainty, and visible productivity instead of this patient, ruminating kind of wisdom.
"Thou doest violence to thyself, thou Preacher-on-the-Mount, when thou usest such severe words."
Context: Observing that the voluntary beggar's gentle face and nature directly contradict the harsh, bitter words he uses to describe society, revealing the performance beneath the cynicism.
Zarathustra cuts through the performance by simply observing the mismatch between the man's words and his physical presence. Real character always shows through to someone who knows how to look, making the beggar's rage seem practiced rather than genuine.
In Today's Words:
You are hurting yourself by forcing anger and contempt into words your whole being rejects. Your face, your hands, your actual presence tell a completely different story from the bitter speech you have been practicing, and the contradiction between them reveals exactly the kind of person you are actually trying to be.
"Thou thyself art good, O Zarathustra, and better even than a cow!"
Context: The voluntary beggar's parting compliment to Zarathustra, offered as his highest praise before being playfully chased away, revealing that his preference for animals over people has a notable exception.
This comic moment reveals the contradiction at the heart of the voluntary beggar's position: he claims to prefer cattle over people, yet offers his deepest admiration to another human. Zarathustra's laughter and dismissal expose the flattery for what it is.
In Today's Words:
This is meant as the warmest compliment someone deeply disappointed by humanity can offer, ranking another person above the only companions they now trust. But Zarathustra hears it as exactly what it is: hero-worship dressed as wisdom, the kind of flattery that replaces genuine engagement with comfortable admiration from a safe distance.
Thematic Threads
Class
In This Chapter
The beggar's disgust with both rich corruption and poor entitlement reveals class prejudices disguised as moral superiority
Development
Continues exploring how class shapes our judgments and relationships with others
In Your Life:
Notice when you judge entire groups based on limited interactions with individuals from those backgrounds
Social Responsibility
In This Chapter
The failed attempt at charity shows how good intentions without wisdom can backfire and lead to withdrawal
Development
Introduced here as a new dimension of personal responsibility
In Your Life:
Consider whether your helping efforts are actually effective or just make you feel better about yourself
Human Relationships
In This Chapter
The beggar chooses animals over humans because they're simpler and don't challenge his worldview
Development
Extends the theme of avoiding difficult human connections
In Your Life:
Ask yourself if you're choosing easier relationships to avoid the growth that comes from challenging ones
Identity
In This Chapter
The man constructs an identity as 'voluntary beggar' to justify his retreat from society
Development
Shows how we create noble-sounding identities to mask our failures or fears
In Your Life:
Watch for times when you give yourself impressive titles to avoid admitting you simply gave up
Personal Growth
In This Chapter
Zarathustra sees through the performance and drives away the flatterer, refusing false comfort
Development
Demonstrates the importance of rejecting easy praise and comfortable illusions
In Your Life:
Be suspicious when someone tells you exactly what you want to hear, because they might be avoiding real engagement
You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.
Discussion Questions
This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.
- 1
Why did the voluntary beggar choose to talk to cows instead of people?
analysis • surfaceOne way to read it
He gave away his wealth hoping to help the poor but was rejected and became disgusted with both the rich and the poor. He retreated to cattle because they offered simple, non-judgmental companionship without the complexity and disappointment of human interaction.
- 2
Zarathustra tells the voluntary beggar that 'bestowing well is an ART, the last, subtlest master-art of kindness.' What separates effective giving from naive charity according to this chapter?
analysis • mediumOne way to read it
Effective giving requires understanding what the recipient actually needs, not just what the giver wants to provide. The voluntary beggar failed because he approached charity as a transaction and felt betrayed when people didn't respond with gratitude or transformation.
- 3
Think of a time you offered help that wasn't received well. Looking back, were you solving the problem you thought they had or the one they actually needed solved?
application • mediumOne way to read it
Most helping failures happen when we project our own framework of what a good solution looks like onto someone else's situation. Effective support starts with listening to what is actually being asked for rather than offering the help we are most comfortable giving.
- 4
The voluntary beggar became disgusted with both the corrupt rich and the rebellious poor. How do you help people effectively when you have lost faith in an entire group or system they are part of?
application • deepOne way to read it
Sustainable helping requires distinguishing between people and systems, and between individual situations and group patterns. When disgust with a category takes over, the solution is narrowing focus to specific people and specific needs rather than abstract generalizations.
- 5
Zarathustra immediately drives away the voluntary beggar after he offers flattery. What does this response reveal about how genuine teachers and leaders handle admiration and hero-worship?
reflection • deepOne way to read it
Zarathustra refuses the flattery because hero-worship replaces honest engagement with comfortable projection, preventing the beggar from developing his own thinking. Real teachers fear becoming someone's escape route more than they fear criticism or rejection.
Critical Thinking Exercise
Map Your Own Escape Routes
Think of a time when you tried to help someone or fix a problem but got frustrated and wanted to give up. Write down what you expected to happen versus what actually happened. Then identify what your 'cows' are - the simpler alternatives you retreat to when human relationships get messy.
Consider:
- •Notice if you expected gratitude or specific responses from people you helped
- •Consider whether you were solving the problem you wanted to solve or the problem they actually had
- •Identify your pattern of retreat - do you withdraw completely, blame others, or find easier targets for your energy?
Journaling Prompt
Write about a relationship or situation where you could re-engage instead of retreating. What would it look like to stay in the messy middle and learn better ways to help?
Coming Up Next...
Chapter 69: The Shadow Who Lost Himself
Just as Zarathustra finds solitude again, another voice calls out - his own shadow appears, seeking attention. But Zarathustra's patience with followers and admirers has reached its limit.





