and she's largely -- many nietzsche scholars will admit we have elizabeth forester nietzsche to thank, his sister, prior to some early folks who discovered him, his name had not yet broken, and she was instrumental. um, the unfortunate part of that story is that she was, um, anti-semitic, she was very nationalistic. and, in fact, she is the one who over the course of the early '30s helps to make the nietzsche archives, basically, an instrument or an institution devoted to the nazis. there's a famous picture where she welcomes hitler, and there's a picture next -- you know, of hitler next to nietzsche. so she plays some unfortunate roles in helping to refashion nietzsche as a proto-nazi. and then she's crucial to getting the translations out, so she's really crucial for just getting nietzsche out there. how did she respond to the letter writers? the problem in the archive is simply the spottiness of the record. they do not have a track, they were unable to have any kind of record of whether, what degree -- how many letters, the letters that are still existent reflect. we in some cases