Page 112, Proust and eternal return.  To clarify Nehamas's use of Proust, I cite the paragraph from which the quotation above is drawn:

            The life of Proust's narrator need not have been, and never was, Nietzsche's own specific ideal.  But the framework supplied by this perfect novel which relates what, despite and even through its imperfections, becomes and is seen to be a perfect life, and which keeps turning endlessly back upon itself, is the best possible model for the eternal recurrence. (168)

Music vs. literature.  HHI:626, "Without Melody," describes a strikingly non-"literary" way of living as worthy of emulation.  See also 611.

Living in order to be paid:

            You want to be paid as well, you who are virtuous!  Do you want reward for virtue and heaven for earth and eternity for your today?

            And are you now angry with me because I teach that there is no reward-giver and no paymaster? [...]

            You love your virtue as the mother her child; but when was it heard of a mother wanting to be paid for her love? [...]

            Ah, my friends!  That your self be in the action, as the mother is in the child:   let that be your maxim of virtue! (ZII:5; 120.11-15, 121.3-4, 123.9-11)