“I had arrived at a high point in the road,” he says, “from where I could see the further path, broad and magnificent, striving towards lands of promise.” It is clear from Sinclair’s use of this road metaphor to describe his encounter with Frau Eva that she represents, in the last analysis, but a station on Sinclair’s journey to himself, albeit the most important or highest one. (Notice too how Sinclair says “a goal” in the quotation above and not “the goal.”). Just as Sinclair had to outgrow Beatrice and become independent of Pistorius, so, too, he must not lean on Frau Eva, for there can be no self-realization without self-reliance.