I tear open the telegram and look first at the signature. From my wife. "What does she want?" "Gnekker was secretly married to Liza yesterday. Return." I read the telegram, and my dismay does not last long. I am dismayed, not by what Liza and Gnekker have done, but by the indifference with which I hear of their marriage. They say philosophers and the truly wise are indifferent. It is false: indifference is the paralysis of the soul; it is premature death. I go to bed again, and begin trying to think of something to occupy my mind. What am I to think about? I feel as though everything had been thought over already and there is nothing which could hold my attention now. When daylight comes I sit up in bed with my arms round my knees, and to pass the time I try to know myself. "Know thyself" is excellent and useful advice; it is only a pity that the ancients never thought to indicate the means of following this precept. When I have wanted to understand somebody or myself I have considered, not the actions, in which everything is relative, but the desires. "Tell me what you want, and I will tell you what manner of man you are." And now I examine myself: what do I want?