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FAUST
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
PROLOGUE IN HEAVEN
THE LORD. THE HEAVENLY
HOSTS.
Afterwards MEPHISTOPHELES.
Three Archangels come forward.
RAPHAEL
The Sun, in ancient guise, competing
With brother spheres in
rival song,
With thunder-march, his orb completing,
Moves
his predestin’d course along;
His aspect to the powers
supernal
Gives strength, though fathom him none
may;
Transcending thought, the works eternal
Are fair as
on the primal day.
GABRIEL
With speed, thought baffling, unabating,
Earth’s splendour
whirls in circling flight;
Its Eden-brightness
alternating
With solemn, awe-inspiring night;
Ocean’s
broad waves in wild commotion,
Against the rocks’ deep base are
hurled;
And with the spheres, both rock and
ocean
Eternally are swiftly whirled.
MICHAEL
And tempests roar in emulation
From sea to land, from land
to sea,
And raging form, without cessation,
A chain of
wondrous agency,
Full in the thunder’s path careering,
Flaring the swift destructions play;
But, Lord, Thy servants
are revering
The mild procession of thy day.
THE THREE
Thine aspect to the powers supernal
Gives strength, though
fathom thee none may;
And all thy works, sublime,
eternal,
Are fair as on the primal day.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Since thou, O Lord, approachest us once more,
And how it
fares with us, to ask art fain,
Since thou hast kindly welcom’d
me of yore,
Thou see’st me also now among thy
train.
Excuse me, fine harangues I cannot make,
Though all
the circle look on me with scorn;
My pathos soon thy laughter
would awake,
Hadst thou the laughing mood not long
forsworn.
Of suns and worlds I nothing have to say,
I see
alone mankind’s self-torturing pains.
The little world-god
still the self-same stamp retains,
And is as wondrous now as on
the primal day.
Better he might have fared, poor
wight,
Hadst thou not given him a gleam of heavenly
light;
Reason, he names it, and doth so
Use it, than
brutes more brutish still to grow.
With deference to your
grace, he seems to me
Like any long-legged grasshopper to
be,
Which ever flies, and flying springs,
And in the grass
its ancient ditty sings.
Would he but always in the grass
repose!
In every heap of dung he thrusts his nose.
THE LORD
Hast thou naught else to say? Is blame
In coming here, as
ever, thy sole aim?
Does nothing on the earth to thee seem
right?
MEPHISTOPHELES
No, Lord! I find things there, as ever, in sad plight.
Men,
in their evil days, move my compassion;
Such sorry things to
plague is nothing worth.
THE LORD
Know’st thou my servant, Faust?
MEPHISTOPHELES
The doctor?
THE LORD
Right.
MEPHISTOPHELES
He serves thee truly in a wondrous fashion.
Poor fool! His
food and drink are not of earth.
An inward impulse hurries him
afar,
Himself half conscious of his frenzied mood;
From
heaven claimeth he the fairest star,
And from the earth craves
every highest good,
And all that’s near, and all that’s
far,
Fails to allay the tumult in his blood.
THE LORD
Though in perplexity he serves me now,
I soon will lead him
where more light appears;
When buds the sapling, doth the
gardener know
That flowers and fruit will deck the coming
years.
MEPHISTOPHELES
What wilt thou wager? Him thou yet shall lose,
If leave to
me thou wilt but give,
Gently to lead him as I choose!
THE LORD
So long as he on earth doth live,
So long ‘tis not forbidden
thee.
Man still must err, while he doth strive.
MEPHISTOPHELES
I thank you; for not willingly
I traffic with the dead, and
still aver
That youth’s plump blooming cheek I very much
prefer.
I’m not at home to corpses; ‘tis my way,
Like cats
with captive mice to toy and play.
THE LORD
Enough! ‘tis granted thee! Divert
This mortal spirit from
his primal source;
Him, canst thou seize, thy power
exert
And lead him on thy downward course,
Then stand
abash’d, when thou perforce must own,
A good man in his darkest
aberration,
Of the right path is conscious still.
MEPHISTOPHELES
‘Tis done! Full soon thou’lt see my exultation;
As for my
bet no fears I entertain.
And if my end I finally should
gain,
Excuse my triumphing with all my soul.
Dust he shall
eat, ay, and with relish take,
As did my cousin, the renowned
snake.
THE LORD
Here too thou’rt free to act without control;
I ne’er have
cherished hate for such as thee.
Of all the spirits who
deny,
The scoffer is least wearisome to me.
Ever too prone
is man activity to shirk,
In unconditioned rest he fain would
live;
Hence this companion purposely I give,
Who stirs,
excites, and must, as devil, work.
But ye, the genuine sons of
heaven, rejoice!
In the full living beauty still
rejoice!
May that which works and lives, the
ever-growing,
In bonds of love enfold you,
mercy-fraught,
And Seeming’s changeful forms, around you
flowing,
Do ye arrest, in ever-during
thought!
(Heaven closes, the
Archangels disperse.)
MEPHISTOPHELES (alone)
The ancient one I like sometimes to see,
And not to break
with him am always civil;
‘Tis courteous in so great a lord as
he,
To speak so kindly even to the devil.
FIRST PART OF THE TRAGEDY
NIGHT
A high vaulted narrow Gothic
chamber.
FAUST, restless, seated at his desk.
FAUST
I have, alas! Philosophy,
Medicine, Jurisprudence
too,
And to my cost Theology,
With ardent labour, studied
through.
And here I stand, with all my lore,
Poor fool, no
wiser than before.
Magister, doctor styled,
indeed,
Already these ten years I lead,
Up, down, across,
and to and fro,
My pupils by the nose,--and learn,
That we
in truth can nothing know!
That in my heart like fire doth
burn.
‘Tis true I’ve more cunning than all your dull
tribe,
Magister and doctor, priest, parson, and
scribe;
Scruple or doubt comes not to enthrall me,
Neither
can devil nor hell now appal me--
Hence also my heart must all
pleasure forego!
I may not pretend, aught rightly to
know,
I may not pretend, through teaching, to find
A means
to improve or convert mankind.
Then I have neither goods nor
treasure,
No worldly honour, rank, or pleasure;
No dog in
such fashion would longer live!
Therefore myself to magic I
give,
In hope, through spirit-voice and might,
Secrets now
veiled to bring to light,
That I no more, with aching
brow,
Need speak of what I nothing know;
That I the force
may recognise
That binds creation’s inmost energies;
Her
vital powers, her embryo seeds survey,
And fling the trade in
empty words away.
O full-orb’d moon, did but thy rays
Their last upon mine
anguish gaze!
Beside this desk, at dead of night,
Oft have
I watched to hail thy light:
Then, pensive friend! o’er book
and scroll,
With soothing power, thy radiance stole!
In
thy dear light, ah, might I climb,
Freely, some mountain height
sublime,
Round mountain caves with spirits ride,
In thy
mild haze o’er meadows glide,
And, purged from knowledge-fumes,
renew
My spirit, in thy healing dew!
Woe’s me! still prison’d in the gloom
Of this abhorr’d and
musty room!
Where heaven’s dear light itself doth
pass,
But dimly through the painted glass!
Hemmed in by
book-heaps, piled around,
Worm-eaten, hid ‘neath dust and
mould,
Which to the high vault’s topmost bound,
A
smoke-stained paper doth enfold;
With boxes round thee piled,
and glass,
And many a useless instrument,
With old
ancestral lumber blent--
This is thy world! a world!
alas!
And dost thou ask why heaves thy heart,
With
tighten’d pressure in thy breast?
Why the dull ache will not
depart,
By which thy life-pulse is oppress’d?
Instead of
nature’s living sphere,
Created for mankind of old,
Brute
skeletons surround thee here,
And dead men’s bones in smoke and
mould.
Up! Forth into the distant land!
Is not this book of
mystery
By Nostradamus’ proper hand,
An all-sufficient
guide? Thou’lt see
The courses of the stars unroll’d;
When
nature doth her thoughts unfold
To thee, thy soul shall rise,
and seek
Communion high with her to hold,
As spirit doth
with spirit speak!
Vain by dull poring to divine
The
meaning of each hallow’d sign.
Spirits! I feel you hov’ring
near;
Make answer, if my voice ye hear!
(He opens the book and perceives the sign of the Macrocosmos.)
Ah! at this spectacle through every sense,
What sudden
ecstasy of joy is flowing!
I feel new rapture, hallow’d and
intense,
Through every nerve and vein with ardour
glowing.
Was it a god who character’d this scroll,
The
tumult in my spirit healing,
O’er my sad heart with rapture
stealing,
And by a mystic impulse, to my soul,
The powers
of nature all around revealing.
Am I a God? What light
intense!
In these pure symbols do I see,
Nature exert her
vital energy.
Now of the wise man’s words I learn the
sense;
“Unlock’d the spirit-world is lying,
Thy sense is shut, thy
heart is dead!
Up scholar, lave, with zeal undying,
Thine
earthly breast in the
morning-red!”
(He contemplates
the sign.)
How all things live and work, and ever blending,
Weave one
vast whole from Being’s ample range!
How powers celestial,
rising and descending,
Their golden buckets ceaseless
interchange!
Their flight on rapture-breathing pinions
winging,
From heaven to earth their genial influence
bringing,
Through the wild sphere their chimes melodious
ringing!
A wondrous show! but ah! a show alone!
Where shall I grasp
thee, infinite nature, where?
Ye breasts, ye fountains of all
life, whereon
Hang heaven and earth, from which the withered
heart
For solace yearns, ye still impart
Your sweet and
fostering tides--where are ye--where?
Ye gush, and must I
languish in despair?
(He turns
over the leaves of the book impatiently, and perceives
the sign
of the Earth-spirit.)
How all unlike the influence of this sign!
Earth-spirit,
thou to me art nigher,
E’en now my strength is rising
higher,
E’en now I glow as with new wine;
Courage I feel,
abroad the world to dare,
The woe of earth, the bliss of earth to bear,
With storms to
wrestle, brave the lightning’s glare,
And mid the crashing
shipwreck not despair.
Clouds gather over me--
The moon conceals her
light--
The lamp is quench’d--
Vapours are
rising--
Quiv’ring round my head
Flash the red
beams--
Down from the vaulted roof
A shuddering horror
floats,
And seizes me!
I feel it, spirit,
prayer-compell’d, ‘tis thou
Art hovering near!
Unveil
thyself!
Ha! How my heart is riven now!
Each sense, with
eager palpitation,
Is strain’d to catch some new
sensation!
I feel my heart surrender’d unto thee!
Thou
must! Thou must! Though life should be the
fee!
(He seizes the book, and
pronounces mysteriously the sign
of the spirit. A ruddy flame
flashes up; the spirit appears in the
flame.)
SPIRIT
Who calls me?
FAUST (turning
aside)
Dreadful shape!
SPIRIT
With might, thou hast compelled me to appear,
Long hast been
sucking at my sphere,
And now--
FAUST
Woe’s me! I cannot bear the sight!
SPIRIT
To see me thou dost breathe thine invocation,
My voice to
hear, to gaze upon my brow;
Me doth thy strong entreaty
bow--
Lo! I am here I--What cowering agitation
Grasps
thee, the demigod! Where’s now the soul’s deep cry?
Where is
the breast, which in its depths a world conceiv’d
And bore and
cherished? which, with ecstasy,
To rank itself with us, the
spirits, heaved?
Where art thou, Faust? whose voice I heard
resound,
Who towards me press’d with energy profound?
Art
thou he? Thou,--who by my breath art blighted,
Who, in his
spirit’s depths affrighted,
Trembles, a crush’d and writhing
worm!
FAUST
Shall I yield, thing of flame, to thee?
Faust, and thine
equal, I am he!
SPIRIT
In the currents of life, in action’s storm,
I float and I
wave
With billowy motion!
Birth and the grave
A
limitless ocean,
A constant weaving
With change still
rife,
A restless heaving,
A glowing life--
Thus
time’s whirring loom unceasing I ply,
And weave the
life-garment of deity.
FAUST
Thou, restless spirit, dost from end to end
O’ersweep the
world; how near I feel to thee!
SPIRIT
Thou’rt like the spirit, thou dost comprehend,
Not me!
(Vanishes.)
FAUST (deeply moved)
Not thee?
Whom then?
I, God’s own image!
And not rank with thee! A knock.
Oh
death! I know it--’tis my famulus--
My fairest fortune now
escapes!
That all these visionary shapes
A soulless
groveller should banish thus!
[…]
STUDY (PACT)
FAUST. MEPHISTOPHELES
FAUST
A knock? Come in! Who now would break my rest?
MEPHISTOPHELES
‘Tis I!
FAUST
Come in!
MEPHISTOPHELES
Thrice be the words express’d.
FAUST
Then I repeat, Come in!
MEPHISTOPHELES
‘Tis well,
I hope that we shall soon agree!
For now
your fancies to expel,
Here, as a youth of high degree,
I
come in gold-lac’d scarlet vest,
And stiff-silk mantle richly
dress’d,
A cock’s gay feather for a plume,
A long and
pointed rapier, too;
And briefly I would counsel you
To
don at once the same costume,
And, free from trammels, speed
away,
That what life is you may essay.
FAUST
In every garb I needs must feel oppress’d,
My heart to
earth’s low cares a prey.
Too old the trifler’s part to
play,
Too young to live by no desire possess’d.
What can
the world to me afford?
Renounce! renounce! is still the
word;
This is the everlasting song
In every ear that
ceaseless rings,
And which, alas, our whole life
long,
Hoarsely each passing moment sings.
But to new
horror I awake each morn,
And I could weep hot tears, to see
the sun
Dawn on another day, whose round
forlorn
Accomplishes no wish of mine--not one.
Which
still, with froward captiousness, impains
E’en the presentiment
of every joy,
While low realities and paltry cares
The
spirit’s fond imaginings destroy.
Then must I too, when falls
the veil of night,
Stretch’d on my pallet languish in
despair,
Appalling dreams my soul affright;
No rest
vouchsafed me even there.
The god, who throned within my breast
resides,
Deep in my soul can stir the springs;
With
sovereign sway my energies he guides,
He cannot move external
things;
And so existence is to me a weight.
Death fondly I
desire, and life I hate.
MEPHISTOPHELES
And yet, methinks, by most ‘twill be confess’d
That Death is
never quite a welcome guest.
FAUST
Happy the man around whose brow he binds
The bloodstain’d
wreath in conquest’s dazzling hour;
Or whom, excited by the
dance, he finds
Dissolv’d in bliss, in love’s delicious
bower!
O that before the lofty spirit’s might,
Enraptured,
I had rendered up my soul!
MEPHISTOPHELES
Yet did a certain man refrain one night,
Of its brown juice
to drain the crystal bowl.
FAUST
To play the spy diverts you then?
MEPHISTOPHELES
I own,
Though not omniscient, much to me is known.
FAUST
If o’er my soul the tone familiar, stealing,
Drew me from
harrowing thought’s bewild’ring maze,
Touching the ling’ring
chords of childlike feeling,
With sweet harmonies of happier
days:
So curse I all, around the soul that windeth
Its
magic and alluring spell,
And with delusive flattery
bindeth
Its victim to this dreary cell!
Curs’d before all
things be the high opinion,
Wherewith the spirit girds itself
around!
Of shows delusive curs’d be the dominion,
Within
whose mocking sphere our sense is bound!
Accurs’d of dreams the
treacherous wiles,
The cheat of glory, deathless
fame!
Accurs’d what each as property beguiles,
Wife,
child, slave, plough, whate’er its name!
Accurs’d be mammon,
when with treasure
He doth to daring deeds incite:
Or when
to steep the soul in pleasure,
He spreads the couch of soft
delight!
Curs’d be the grape’s balsamic juice!
Accurs’d
love’s dream, of joys the first!
Accurs’d be hope! accurs’d be
faith!
And more than all, be patience curs’d!
CHORUS OP SPIRITS (invisible)
Woe! woe!
Thou hast destroy’d
The beautiful
world
With violent blow;
‘Tis shiver’d! ‘tis
shatter’d!
The fragments abroad by a demigod
scatter’d!
Now we sweep
The wrecks into
nothingness!
Fondly we weep
The beauty that’s
gone!
Thou, ‘mongst the Sons of earth,
Lofty and mighty
one,
Build it once more!
In thine own bosom the lost world
restore!
Now with unclouded sense
Enter a new
career;
Songs shall salute thine ear,
Ne’er heard
before!
MEPHISTOPHELES
My little ones these spirits be.
Hark! with shrewd
intelligence,
How they recommend to thee
Action, and the
joys of sense!
In the busy world to dwell,
Fain they would
allure thee hence:
For within this lonely cell,
Stagnate
sap of life and sense.
Forbear to trifle longer with thy grief,
Which,
vulture-like, consumes thee in this den.
The worst society is
some relief,
Making thee feel thyself a man with
men.
Nathless, it is not meant, I trow,
To thrust thee
‘mid the vulgar throng.
I to the upper ranks do not belong;
Yet if, by me
companion’d, thou
Thy steps through life forthwith wilt
take;
Upon the spot myself I’ll make
Thy comrade;-- Should
it suit thy need,
I am thy servant, am thy slave indeed!
FAUST
And how must I thy services repay?
MEPHISTOPHELES
Thereto thou lengthen’d respite hast!
FAUST
No! No!
The devil is an egoist I know:
And, for
Heaven’s sake, ‘tis not his way
Kindness to any one to
show.
Let the condition plainly be exprest!
Such a
domestic is a dangerous guest.
MEPHISTOPHELES
I’ll pledge myself to be thy servant here,
Still at thy back
alert and prompt to be;
But when together yonder we
appear,
Then shalt thou do the same for me.
FAUST
But small concern I feel for yonder world;
Hast thou this
system into ruin hurl’d,
Another may arise the void to
fill.
This earth the fountain whence my pleasures
flow,
This sun doth daily shine upon my woe,
And if this
world I must forego,
Let happen then,--what can and
will.
I to this theme will close mine ears,
If men
hereafter hate and love,
And if there be in yonder spheres
A depth below or height
above.
MEPHISTOPHELES
In this mood thou mayst venture it. But make
The compact! I
at once will undertake
To charm thee with mine arts. I’ll give
thee more
Than mortal eye hath e’er beheld before.
FAUST
What, sorry Devil, hast thou to bestow?
Was ever mortal
spirit, in its high endeavour,
Fathom’d by Being such as
thou?
Yet food thou hast which satisfieth never,
Hast
ruddy gold, that still doth flow
Like restless quicksilver
away,
A game thou hast, at which none win who play,
A girl
who would, with amorous eyen,
E’en from my breast, a neighbour
snare,
Lofty ambition’s joy divine,
That, meteor-like,
dissolves in air.
Show me the fruit that, ere ‘tis pluck’d,
doth rot,
And trees, whose verdure daily buds anew!
MEPHISTOPHELES
Such a commission scares me not,
I can provide such
treasures, it is true;
But, my good friend, a season will come
round,
When on what’s good we may regale in peace.
FAUST
If e’er upon my couch, stretched at my ease, I’m found,
Then
may my life that instant cease!
Me canst thou cheat with
glozing wile
Till self-reproach away I cast,--
Me with
joy’s lure canst thou beguile
Let that day be for me the
last!
Be this our wager!
MEPHISTOPHELES
Settled!
FAUST
Sure and fast!
When to the moment I shall say,
“Linger
awhile! so fair thou art!”
Then mayst thou fetter me
straightway,
Then to the abyss will I depart!
Then may the
solemn death-bell sound,
Then from thy service thou art
free,
The index then may cease its round,
And time be
never more for me!
MEPHISTOPHELES
I shall remember: pause, ere ‘tis too late.
FAUST
Thereto a perfect right hast thou.
My strength I do not
rashly overrate.
Slave am I here, at any rate,
If thine,
or whose, it matters not, I trow.
MEPHISTOPHELES
At thine inaugural feast I will this day
Attend, my duties
to commence.--
But one thing!--Accidents may happen,
hence
A line or two in writing grant, I pray.
FAUST
A writing, Pedant! dost demand from me?
Man, and man’s
plighted word, are these unknown to thee?
Is’t not enough, that
by the word I gave,
My doom for evermore is cast?
Doth not
the world in all its currents rave,
And must a promise hold me
fast?
Yet fixed is this delusion in our heart;
Who, of his
own free will, therefrom would part?
How blest within whose
breast truth reigneth pure!
No sacrifice will he repent when
made!
A formal deed, with seal and signature,
A spectre
this from which all shrink afraid.
The word its life resigneth
in the pen,
Leather and wax usurp the mastery
then.
Spirits of evil! what dost thou require?
Brass,
marble, parchment, paper, dost desire?
Shall I with chisel,
pen, or graver write?
Thy choice is free; to me ‘tis all the
same.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Wherefore thy passion so excite
And thus thine eloquence
inflame?
A scrap is for our compact good.
Thou
under-signest merely with a drop of blood.
FAUST
If this will satisfy thy mind,
Thy whim I’ll gratify,
howe’er absurd.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Blood is a juice of very special kind.
FAUST
Be not afraid that I shall break my word!
The scope of all
my energy
Is in exact accordance with my vow.
Vainly I
have aspired too high;
I’m on a level but with such as
thou;
Me the great spirit scorn’d, defied;
Nature from me
herself doth hide;
Rent is the web of thought; my
mind
Doth knowledge loathe of every kind.
In depths of
sensual pleasure drown’d,
Let us our fiery passions
still!
Enwrapp’d in magic’s veil profound,
Let wondrous
charms our senses thrill!
Plunge we in time’s tempestuous
flow,
Stem we the rolling surge of chance!
There may
alternate weal and woe,
Success and failure, as they
can,
Mingle and shift in changeful dance!
Excitement is
the sphere for man.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Nor goal, nor measure is prescrib’d to you,
If you desire to
taste of every thing,
To snatch at joy while on the
wing,
May your career amuse and profit too!
Only fall to
and don’t be over coy!
FAUST
Hearken! The end I aim at is not joy;
I crave excitement,
agonizing bliss,
Enamour’d hatred, quickening
vexation.
Purg’d from the love of knowledge, my
vocation,
The scope of all my powers henceforth be
this,
To bare my breast to every pang,--to know
In my
heart’s core all human weal and woe,
To grasp in thought the
lofty and the deep,
Men’s various fortunes on my breast to
heap,
And thus to theirs dilate my individual mind,
And
share at length with them the shipwreck of mankind.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Oh, credit me, who still as ages roll,
Have chew’d this
bitter fare from year to year,
No mortal, from the cradle to
the bier,
Digests the ancient leaven! Know, this
Whole
Doth for the Deity alone subsist!
He in eternal
brightness doth exist,
Us unto darkness he hath brought, and
here
Where day and night alternate, is your sphere.
FAUST
But ‘tis my will.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Well spoken, I admit!
But one thing puzzles me, my
friend;
Time’s short, art long; methinks ‘twere fit
That
you to friendly counsel should attend.
A poet choose as your
ally!
Let him thought’s wide dominion sweep,
Each good and
noble quality,
Upon your honoured brow to heap;
The lion’s
magnanimity,
The fleetness of the hind,
The fiery blood of
Italy,
The Northern’s stedfast mind.
Let him to you the
mystery show
To blend high aims and cunning low;
And while
youth’s passions are aflame
To fall in love by rule and
plan!
I fain would meet with such a man;
Would him Sir
Microcosmus name.
FAUST
What then am I, if I aspire in vain
The crown of our
humanity to gain,
Towards which my every sense doth strain?
MEPHISTOPHELES
Thou’rt after all--just what thou art.
Put on thy head a wig
with countless locks,
And to a cubit’s height upraise thy
socks,
Still thou remainest ever, what thou art.
FAUST
I feel it, I have heap’d upon my brain
The gather’d treasure
of man’s thought in vain;
And when at length from studious toil
I rest,
No power, new-born, springs up within my breast;
A
hair’s breadth is not added to my height,
I am no nearer to the
infinite.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Good sir, these things you view indeed,
Just as by other men
they’re view’d;
We must more cleverly proceed,
Before
life’s joys our grasp elude.
The devil! thou hast hands and
feet,
And head and heart are also thine;
What I enjoy with
relish sweet,
Is it on that account less mine?
If for six
stallions I can pay,
Do I not own their strength and
speed?
A proper man I dash away,
As their two dozen legs
were mine indeed.
Up then, from idle pondering free,
And
forth into the world with me!
I tell you what;--your
speculative churl
Is like a beast which some ill spirit
leads,
On barren wilderness, in ceaseless whirl,
While all around lie fair and verdant meads.
FAUST
But how shall we begin?
MEPHISTOPHELES
We will go hence with speed,
A place of torment this
indeed!
A precious life, thyself to bore,
And some few
youngsters evermore!
Leave that to neighbour
Paunch!--withdraw,
Why wilt thou plague thyself with thrashing
straw?
The very best that thou dost know
Thou dar’st not
to the striplings show.
One in the passage now doth wait!
FAUST
I’m in no mood to see him now,
MEPHISTOPHELES
Poor lad! He must be tired, I trow;
He must not go
disconsolate.
Hand me thy cap and gown; the mask
Is for my
purpose quite first rate.
(He
changes his dress.)
Now leave it to my wit! I ask
But
quarter of an hour; meanwhile equip,
And make all ready for our
pleasant trip!
(Exit FAUST.)
MEPHISTOPHELES (in FAUST’S long gown)
Mortal! the loftiest attributes of men,
Reason and
Knowledge, only thus contemn,
Still let the Prince of lies,
without control,
With shows, and mocking charms delude thy
soul,
I have thee unconditionally then!
Fate hath endow’d
him with an ardent mind,
Which unrestrain’d still presses on
for ever,
And whose precipitate endeavour
Earth’s joys
o’erleaping, leaveth them behind.
Him will I drag through
life’s wild waste,
Through scenes of vapid dulness, where at
last
Bewilder’d, he shall falter, and stick fast;
And,
still to mock his greedy haste,
Viands and drink shall float
his craving lips beyond--
Vainly he’ll seek refreshment,
anguish-tost,
And were he not the devil’s by his bond,
Yet
must his soul infallibly be lost!
[…]
Source: Goethe’s Faust, translated by Anna Swanick, with an introduction and bibliography by Karl Breul. London: George Bell and Sons, 1905, pp. 8–20, 50–60.