Page:Karl Kautsky - The Social Revolution - tr. Wood Simons (1902.djvu/195

 (Uebermensch), if you will, not as an exception but as a rule, an over-man compared with his predecessors, but not as opposed to bis comrades, a noble man who seeks his satisfaction not by being great among crippled dwarfs, but great among the great, happy among the happy—who does not draw his feeling of strength from the fact that he raises himself upon the bodies of the down-trodden, but because a union with his fellow-workers gives him courage to dare the attainment of the highest tasks.

So we may expect that a realm of strength and of beauty will arise that will be worthy the ideal of our best and noblest thinkers.