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EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY
EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS
POETRY AND
THE DRAMA
GOETHE'S FAUST
PARTS & U. TRANSLATED
I.
BY ALBERT G. LATHAM
THE PUBLISHERS OF £F£T{r.M^Ü<: S
L1B%J%T WILL BE PLEASED TO SEND
FREELY TO ALL APPLICANTS A LIST
OF THE PUBLISHED AND PROJECTED
VOLUMES TO BE COMPRISED UNDER
THE FOLLOWING TWELVE HEADINGS:
London :
J. M. DENT & CO.
New York : E. P. DUTTON & CO.
GOETHES
Parts landn
Trans/oted öy
ALBERTG-
LATHAMS
LONDON PUBLISHED
.'
by J- MD EN T- &-CO
AND IN NEW YORK.
BY E P-DUTTON &CO
All rights reserved
INTRODUCTION
The Collaboration of the Ages in a Great Work
of Art. —
The ground-theme of Goethe's Faust.
as is indeed the case \\'ith most if not with all
great poetical creations, is not the individual
fabrication of one gifted mind, but rather the
climax in a long evolutionary series, through
the medium of which the poet has enjoyed the
collaboration of the ages. To the material
which in the ripeness of time he found ready to
his hand have contributed, not only the con-
scious literary efforts of such of his predecessors
as have been attracted by the same subject, but
also the artless imaginations of the ignorant
and unlettered multitude who have, through
many generations of men. moulded the growing
mass of inherited fact and fiction into a coherent
whole in accordance with their own ways of
lifeand thought. The reader will doubtless
appreciate some introductory account of this
lengthy preliminary elaboration before entering
upon the study of the masterpiece in which it
culminates.
—
The Mythology of Sorcery. For the first germ
of this inherited material in the conception of
the mage or wizard, who by various devices
could persuade or compel to his service the
supernatural powers, gods or demons, and
through their agency pervert the accustomed
vii
viii Introduction
course of nature, we must go back to the very
dawn of literature,and even then we shall find
such a conception already in existence, an in-
heritance from the voiceless times beyond. It
will be sufficient merely to hint at the currency
of the belief in sorcery amongst the Jews, the
Greeks, and the Romans, and, for a parallel to
the forms in which it must have existed in pre-
historic times, to cite the magical practices in
vogue amongst savage nations in our own days.
Such a belief was, indeed, in the first instance
merely an outgrowth of religion, if it was not
rather of the very essence of primitive religion
itself. The earliest sorcerer was the priest,
and the practice of sorcery by no means carried
with it at first the odium which attached to it
in later times. It was, however, already looked
at askance amongst the Greeks and the Romans,
doubtless rather on moral grounds, as being em-
ployed as the instrument of malevolence, than
on religious grounds as an offence against the
Deity. Amongst the Jews, however, in view of
their monotheistic conception of religion, sor-
cery could not fail to be regarded as a form of
idolatry, and as such condemned and this
;
Introduction xi
xii Introduction
unwelcome association with such a disreputable
character as Faust, which had become an im-
portant feature in the legend. Neumann first
produced documentary evidence for the exist-
ence of an historical Faust, but none earlier
than that of Manlius, which is quoted later
(p. xxi.). His conclusion, that " Faust's life
is not a downright fable, nor yet a downright
history, but a middle-thing," is the view which
in more recent times has generally prevailed.
But the identification of the conjurer with
Johann Fust (a name w'hich would correspond
etymologically with the modern German Faust),
far from having been regarded as controverted
by Neumann's arguments, continued to be even
more generally accepted. The story, probably
fabulous, which relates how Fust incurred the
imputation of witchcraft by reason of the ap-
parently miraculous character of the new art,
itself underwent a legendary growth, and was
without any historical justification localised in
Paris. The Englishman, Daniel Defoe, contri-
buted not a little to its propagation by a
-
passage in his Political History of the Devil
(1726), which may be of interest to the English
reader. It runs as follows:
" John Faustus was Servant, or Journeyman,
or Compositor, or what you please to call it, to
Koster of Harlem, the first inventor of Printing,
and having printed the Psalter, sold them at
Paris as manuscripts; because as such they
yielded a better Price.
" But the learned Doctors not being able to
xvi Introduction
some notoriety as that of a magician before he
adopted it, but it cannot with any certaint}' be
traced beyond him. It is this circumstance
which furnishes Simrock wdth the opportunity
to bring the printer Fust or Faust again into
connection with the Faust-legend he holds the ;
Introduction xix
XX Introduction
backward in the taking of money, and further-
more, on his departure, he hath paid many with
heel-money."
The Protestant pastor of Basle, Johann Gast,
in his Convivales Sermones (Table-talk) (1548),
relates the following facts, already in a much
more credulous spirit: —
" Concerning the Necromancer Faust. To-
wards evening he turned into a certain very
rich monastery, intending to pass the night
there. One of the brothers set before him a
common wine of doubtful quality and nothing
pleasing to the palate. Faustus begged him to
draw from another cask a better wine, such as
he was wont to give to distinguished visitors.
The brother said: I have not the keys, the
'
Introduction xxi
xxii Introduction
mcLster, Philip Melanchthon, the great reformer
and friend of Luther. It is as follows:
" I Melanchthon) know one by the name
{sc.
of Faust, from Kundling, a small town in the
neighbourhood of my home. Whilst this man
was a student at Cracow he learnt the art of
Magic, which art indeed was aforetimes greatly
in vogue there, and of it there were public pro-
fessorial courses. He wandered far and wide
and talked of mysterious things. When he was
going to give an exhibition in Venice, he said
he would fly up into the sky. And accordingly
the Devil raised him aloft and so dashed him
down, that being hurled to the ground he was
well-nigh a dead man, but nevertheless he came
off with his life. Not many years since this
same Johannes Faustus sat very dismal on his
last day in a certain village of the Duchy of
Württemberg. The host asked him why, con-
trary to his use and wont, he was so sad, for he
was used to be a good-for-nothing losel, of a
foul way of life, so that on divers occasions his
debauchery had brought him to Death's door;
whereupon he said unto the host in that village:
'
See you be not affrighted this night.' And at
dead of night the house quaked, and when
Faust did not arise betimes and it was already
on midday, the host took others to himself,
went into his chamber and found him lying
beside his bed with his face twisted round to his
back, thus he had been destroyed of the devil.
Whilst he still lived he had a dog with him,
that was a devil. . .This Faust slipped
.
Introduction xxiii
Introduction xxvii
Introduction xxix
depart from the thing, or he would come to a
bad end, as indeed it fell out. But he gave no
heed thereto. Now once it was about ten of
the clock, and Master Philip went down from
bis study to table, and Faust was with him,
whom he had chidden hotly. And he speaks to
Mm: Master Philip, you always set upon me
'
Introduction xxxvii
a castle his magic upon a height
by how with
;
xlii Introduction
This version lived in successive editions until
the year 1 797, and it was doubtless in this form
that Goethe made acquaintance with the story,
though oddly enough he does not enumerate
it amongst the books, of the type of the English
Introduction li
Ivi Introduction
will be revealed to him such shuddering depths,
such an outlook over land and sea, such occa-
sional vistas of the heavens, as will carry him
along without weariness when even the First
Part of the drama has grown monotonous from
overgreat familiarity. As Mephistopheles says
to Faust of Helen's robe, so we may say to
him:
'Twill bear thee swift above the trivial
In ether high, so long thou weary not.
—
The Present Translation. The gratifying and
growing success which the present translation
"
has already enjoyed in the " Temple Classics
has encouraged the translator and the pub-
lishers to offer it to the public in this even more
popular form. The opportunity thus furnished
has been utilised to correct such misprints as
had crept into the earlier editions and to
remove a few flaws from the rendering. The
translator is fully conscious of the fact that
there is further room for this labour of the file,
and promises himself at some future time,
should his resolve be strengthened by continued
appreciation of his work, to subject it to a yet
more thorough revision than he has at present
found himself able to undertake, when he
trusts that a profounder study of the text and
commentaries and a riper technique may enable
him to render it a worthier reflection of its
great original. In the meantime, whilst well
aware that he has no title to speak as the final
judge, he ventures again to express the hope
that his version will be found on the whole
a more adequate presentation in English of
Goethe's masterpiece than its predecessors.
Introduction Ivii
Armstrong College
(in the University of Durham),
Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
April 1908.
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Faust. — Part I., part written in 1774-5: completed
in 1801; published 1806. Part II., first planned in
1796; finished in 1831.
—
English Translations. Among these are the fol-
lowing: Francis Leveson Gower (Part I.), 1823, 1825;
A. Havward, prose translation (Part I.). 1833, 1834;
eighth edition, 1864; tenth. 1874; J. B. Blackie (Part
I.), 1834, 1880; J.Anster (Part I.). 1835; (Part II.), 1864,
etc.,1893 (Lubbock's Hundred Books); Robert Talbot
(Part I.), 1835, 1839; L. J. Bernays (Part II.), 1839,
1840; Archer Gurney (Part II.), 1S42: J. Birch (Parts
I. and II.). 1839-43: Anna Swanwick (Parts I. and II.),
1849, 1879, etc., 1905 (York Library); \\ B. Clarke .
Bibliography Ixi
The dates
of some of Goethe's larger works are as
foUows :
MY WIFE
THIS TRANSLATION
IS
As into some cathedral's echoing aisle«,
Vast and mysterious in the failing light,
Where soaring arches melt into the night,
And massy pillars stretch out shadowy miles,
We enter here, O Master of many styles !
CONTENTS OF PART I
Dedication .......
Prelude upon the Stage . . . . .
PAGE
n
9
Prologue in Heaven . . . ic
Study
. .....
all classes stream fortii from
43
154,
8 Goethe's Faust
rAGE
Woodland and Cave . . 4 , . 156
Gretchen's Room
Gretclien at the spinning-ixiluel atom . . l6x
Martha's Garden . . . , . .164
At the Well . , , . . , .170
The Town-Wall
In a niche in the "wall, a picture of the Mater
Dolorosa f ivith ßoiver-jugs be/ore it , , . 1 72
Night
Minster
Walpurgis-Night
....
Street before Gretchen's door
....... . . . .174.
.
181
183
Walpurgis-Night's Dream
A Gloomy Day
Night
...... • - . . 201
208
DEDICATION /j^;
Ye wavering phantoms, yet again my leisure
Ye haunt, as erst ye met my troubled gaze.
Still doth mine heart the old illusion treasure ?
Now shall I fix the dream that round me plays ?
Ye throng upon me Nay then, have your
!
pleasure,
Ye that around me rise from mist and haze !
T o Goethe's Faust
I 2 Goethe's Faust
On to the pay-box fight, with shoves and
shrieks,
And as in direst dearth for bread about a bake-
house,
So for a ticket almost break their necks.
On such a varied throng, none but the poet
This miracle can work. To-day, my friend,
pray do it.
MERRY ANDREW.
Marry 1 don't prate to me of future ages !
MANAGER.
—
Let plenty happen do what else you will !
POET.
i^ Goethe's Faust
The botchwork of that guild most worshipful
Is now, I see, your oracle in these matters.
POET.
MERRY ANDREW.
Then use these noble powers that sway you,
And ply your poet's trade, I pray you,
As one a love-adventure may.
You meet by chance, you're drawn to her, you
stay;
6 ! —
1 Goethe's Faust
Little by little, you're entangled ;
Though all men live it, few there be that knew it.
MERRY ANDREW.
Youth, my good friend, I own is highly
requisite,
When in the fray the foe hard presses ;
MANAGER.
Come, come, of words enough we've bandied ;
r 8 Goethe's Faust
What boots long talk of inspiration f
PROLOGUE IN HEAVEN.
The Lord, The Heavenly Hosts, later
Mephistopheles.
RAPHAEL.
The sun, with many a sister-sphere.
Still sings the rival psalm of wonder.
And still his fore-ordained career
Accomplishes, with tread of thunder.
The sight sustains the angels' prime,
Though none may spell the mystic story
Thy Works, unspeakably sublime.
Live on, in all their ]Mimal glory.
20 Goethe's Faust
Round the great world a mighty chain
Ot deepest force in frenzy throwing.
And lo ! a flashing desolation
Heralds the thunder on its way !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Sith Thou, O Lord, dost once again draw near.
And ask what news with us, if news be any.
And Thou wert wont to make me welcome
here.
Me also dost Thou see amongst the meiny.
Pardon ! to words sublime I cannot soar,
Though all Thy court in mockery were scoff-
ing.
My sentiment would move Thy laughter, sure,
Hadst Thou not long unlearned the art of laugh-
ing.
No song of sun and worlds can I invent
I only see how men themseh'es torment.
The little god o' the world, in type unaltered
wholly,
Lives on, good lack ! in all his primal folly.
He'd live a little better even,
Gav'st Thou him not a glimmer of the light of
Heaven.
He calls it Reason, uses it but
More bestial to be than any brute.
!
Prologue in Heaven 21
THE LORD.
Is that the sum of thy narration ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
No, Lord ! all things on Earth still downright
bad I find.
Mortals their piteous fate upon the rack so
stretches.
Myself have scarce the heart to plague the
wretches.
THE LORD.
Dost thou know Faust ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The Doctor ?
THE LORD.
Aye, My servant.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Marry, and oddly of your will observant
Nay, the fool's meat and drink not earthly are.
Him doth his ferment drive afar.
! ;
22 Goethe's Faust
Half he is conscious of his madness.
On Heaven he calls for every fairest star,
He on Earth for every highest gladness
calls
Nor Heaven nor Earth, nor Near nor Far
Can win his deep-stirred bosom from its sadness.
THE LORD.
Though now his service be as a tangled skein,
Yet will I lead him soon to perfect vision.
The gardener knows, when the young tree is
green,
'Twill glad the years with blossom and fruition.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What will you wager ? Give me but permis-
sion
To leadhim gently on my way,
I'll win him from you to perdition.
THE LORD.
Whilst still he sees the earthly day,
So long it shall not be forbidden.
> Whilst still man strives, still must he strav.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
THE LORD.
Enough 1 his life into thy hand be given
From its well-head draw thou this soul astray,
Prologue in Heaven 23
MEPHISTOPHELES.
THE LORD.
Aye, show thy face, succeeds thy trial.
GOETHE'S FAUST
First Part of the Tragedy
NIGHT.
In a high-njaultedf narroiv Gothic chamber, faust.
restless, on his seat, at the desk.
20 Goethe's Faust
And then, I own nor wealth nor land,
Nor honour nor glory can command ;
Part 1 27
Vain instruments the room encumber,
Crammed in witli old, ancestral lumber •
28 Goethe's Faust
And with a strange, mysterious might
Withdraw fr.om Nature's powers the veil, to
cheer my sadness ?
Part I 29
I glow, as if with new-made wine.
Full-steeled to tread the world I feel ray
mettle,
Earth's woe. Earth's bliss, my soul can not
unsettle,
I would not blench with storms to battle,
Nor quail amidst the shipwreck's crash and
rattle !
SPIRIT.
Who calls to me ?
FAUST, turning aiuay.
Appalling Apparition !
—— !
30 Goethe's Faust
SPIRIT.
FAUST.
Part 1 31
SPIRIT.
SPIRIT.
[ Vanishes
Not thee ?
Whom then ?
32 Goethe's Faust
—
Pardon I heard your voice declaiming ;
Doubtless some old Greek tragedy you read ?
I too at progress in this art am aiming,
For now-a-days, it stands you in good stead.
Oft have heard it vaunted that a preacher
I
Might profit, with an actor to his teacher.
WAGNER.
Yet elocution makes the orator ;
Part I 33
WAGNER.
Ah God ! but art is long.
And short our life, and ever,
Discouraging my critical endeavour,
Depressing thoughts through head and bosom
throng.
How hard it is, the obstacles to level.
To gain the means which lead you to the
source !
FAUST.
34 Goethe's Faust
To see what thoughts of old the wise have
entertained,
And then, how we at last such glorious heights
have gained.
surely.
FAUST.
Aye marry, what ye call know, but then
Who to the child can fit the name securely ?
The few who aught thereof have known or
learned,
Who their hearts' fulness foolishly unsealed,
And to the vulgar herd their thoughts and
dreams revealed,
'Men in all times have crucified and burned.
I prithee, friend, 'tis far irTt^ the night,
We'll break off for this present season.
Part I
35
FAUST, alone.
real.
And count the Better but a mocking show.
The glorious fantasies, that erst our soul did
quicken.
Soon in this earthly welter swoon and sicken.
Once her bold flight would Fancy fain increase,
All hopeful, to the Infinite around her;
A narrow space suffices, when she sees
Venture on venture in Time's whirlpool founder.
Part I
37
As fire, water, poison, steel ;
thrust
I'm like the worm, that wriggles through the
dust,
Which, as in dust it lives and dust consumes,
The passing foot annihilates and entombs.
38 Goethe's Faust
Mysterious in the open day,
Nature lets no man of her veil bereave her.
What to thy mind herself will not betray,
Thou canst not from her wrest with screw and
lever.
Ye ancient gear, whose aid I ne'er invoked.
Because my father used you, here ye moulder.
Thou too, old pulley, growest strangely smoked,
So long upon this desk the lamp doth dimly
smoulder.
Far better had I spent my little without heed,
Than here to moil, where still that little doth
but cumber !
CHOIR OF ANGELS.
Christ is arisen !
Hall the meeh -spirited,
Whom the Ill-merited
Mortal, Inherited
Fallings did prison.
Part I 41
Thrills your glad song, ye choirs, already through
the gloom,
Which erst from angels' lips swelled round the
darksome tomb,
A new-sealed covenant with mortals founding ?
CHOIR OF WOMEN.
We myrrh and aloes,
Our poor memorial.
Mournfully zealous.
Brought for his burial
Then did ive bind him
All luith ßne linen o'er^
Ah ! and nve ßnd him
Noiv here no more.
CHOIR OF ANGELS.
Christ is ascended !
CHOIR OF DISCIPLES.
O'er death 'victorious
Master, in anguish.
Mourn ive Thy bhss.
Part I 43
CHOIR OF ANGELS.
Christ is arisen.
Out of the mouldering earth !
Burst from your prison
Joyfully forth /
Live for the fame of Him,
Love by the shame of Him,
Give name of Him,
in the
PRENTICE-LADS.
Why do you turn that way ?
OTHER PRENTICE-LADS.
On to the Hunters' Lodge we mean to stray.
A PRENTICE-LAD
Go to the River-Inn, that's my advice.
SECOND PRENTICE-LAD.
The road is anything but nice.
44 Goethe's Faust
THIRD PRENTICE-LAD.
I shall join the others.
FOURTH PRENTICE-LAD.
To Burgdorf come. You'll find there, never
fear,
The prettiest lasses and the choicest beer,
And first-class cudgel-play for pastime.
FIFTH PRENTICE-LAD.
SERVANT-MAID.
No, no, to town Pm going back.
ANOTHER.
There by the poplars — there he'll be I trow.
THE FIRST.
THE OTHER.
He won't be by himself, 'tis truth I tell ;
Part I 45
A stinging beer, and a biting weed,
And a lass in her gayest trim, — that's bliss
indeed.
BURGHERMAIDEN.
Look at those handsome fellows, now !
ANOTHER BURGHER.
On Sundays and on Saints' days, that's my
humour,
When out in Turkey yonder, far away,
The nations clash in arms — to sitfar from the
fray.
And talk of war and warlike rumour.
You stand beside the window, quaff your ale.
Watch the gay ships glide merrily down the
river,
And home you go, when day begins to fail,
THIRD BURGHER.
Aye, neighbour, that's a humour I'm with you
in.
—
Nay, not so proud there's no offence !
Part I
47
BURGHERMAIDEN.
Agatha, come ! in public to be seen
With such a hag I never should get over
'Tis true, she let me see last Hallowe'en,
In flesh and blood, my future lover.
THE OTHER.
To me she showed him in the crystal-ball,
In soldier-guise,with comrades bold around
him.
I've sought him everywhere, yet spite of all
I've sought in vain, and nowhere have I found
him.
SOLDIERS.
Us do the trumpets
Win by their 'wooing^
Be it to joyance
Or be it to ruin.
4^ Goethe's Faust
\_E titer Faust and Wagner.
a-thrill.
The sun would have all things in colour
arrayed
Yet bare of blossom the fields are still,
So he takes the folk's gay dresses instead.
Back from the upland turn thee round 1
Part I 49
See how burden overfills
its
OLD PEASANT.
Sir Doctor, this is kindly done,
Amidst our rude and boisterous play,
For such a larned gentleman
To honour us plain folk to-day.
So you take the finest mug
])lease ;
Part I 51
OLD PEASANT.
Nay, of a truth, but meet
it is
WAGNER.
O thou great man ! what must thy feelings be.
Hailed with such reverence by the people's
voice
O happy, who can win such joys,
And for his talents, find so rich a fee
.'
52 Goethe's Faust
The father shows you to his boys,
No man but asks, and throngs and hurries.
The fiddle stops, the dancer tarries,
You walk along —
rows they stand.
in
The caps fly off you draw nigh ;
as
A little more, and every knee would bend,
O my heart is hidden!
couldst thou read what in
Father and son, no more than babe unborn.
Merit the fame that seeks them thus unbidden.
My father was a worthy gentleman.
To fame unknown, who sought with honest
passion.
Yet whimsical device, as was his fashion.
Nature and all her holy rounds to scan ;
The we know
thing not is the thing we need ;
54 Goethe's Faust
The sun slopes down — the day is overworn ;
WAGNER.
1 toohave had my whimsies and my fancies,
But no such freak as that by any chances.
On woods and fields, I soon have looked my fill.
; ; ; !
Part I
55
I never shall begrudge the bird his pinion.
How elsewise flit we through the mind's
dominion,
From book to book, from leaf to leaf, at will
Such snug delights the wintry-eve console
A blissful warmth in every limb comes o'er you ;
FAUST.
S6 Goethe's Faust
With dangers myriad for man that teem,
©Thronging from every earthly region.
From the cold North the piercing Spirit-tooth
Searches you home, with tongue sharp as an
arrow
And from the East they flock, parching with
_l^,
ci^ drouth,
N, To feast upon your lungs and marrow ;
"~
/'
Those the fierce South sends from the sandy
waste,
is)
With scorching glow on glow your sconce be-
muddle ;
WAGN ER.
I saw him long ago ; he struck me not i' the
least.
FAUST.
Look at him narrowly ! What mak'st thou of
the beast I
!
Part I S7
WAGNER.
A poodle, who like any poodle breathing,
Casts Tor the scent, strayed from his master's
heels.
FAUST.
WAGNER.
He frisks in doubt and fear around us, lest un-
gracious
The strangers' welcome be. He thought his
lord to greet.
FAUST.
The circle narrows, now he's near
FAUST.
Come, join us, sirrah ! Leave thy chase !
58 Goethe's Faust
STUDY.
Enter Faust, luith the poodle.
FAUST.
6o Goethe's Faust
Which brightest shines, and is most eloquent,
,As shown in the New Testament.
I feel a prompting to determine,
From the original holy Text,
The sense, unwarped and unperplexed,
And this to render in mine own dear German.
[_He opens a volume, and sets to luorh.
'Tis written In the beginning ivas the Word,
:
Might.
Yet even as my pen the sentence traces,
A warning hint the half-writ word effaces.
—
The Spirit helps me from all doubting treed,
Thus write I In the beginning ivas the Deed.
:
Is it a shadow, or is it reality I
! !
Part I 6i
62 Goethe's Faust
And qualities,
He little merits
To govern the spirits.
Part I Ö3
Into mist 'twill melt and fleet.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
[^^s the mist clears, steps from behind
the stove in the garb of a strolling
scholar.
FAUST.
So that then was the poodle's kernel !
FAUST.
What is thy name ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A paltry question that.
For one that doth esteem the word so cheaply.
All outward show at naught doth rate,
And into the essence plunges deeply.
FAUST.
As for you, fair Sirs, as a rule your nature
Is easily read in your nomenclature.
—
64 Goethe's Faust
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part ofthat Power that would
Ever the Evil do, and ever does the Good.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I am the Spirit that Denies !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I tell thee but the modest truth,
Whilst Man, the mad-brained Microcosm,
Fancies himself a Whole with swelling bosom.
Part am I of that Part that once was Every-
thing ;
Part I 65
And yet its aim not all its toil achieves.
Fettered to bodies still it cleaves ;
FAUST.
Now do I know thine honourable duty !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And verily, 'tis but of slight avail !
FAUST.
So thou dost coldly strive, thou Canker,
The eternal thrill of Life to blight i
! ! —
;
66 Goethe's Faust
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Well, well perchance thine hint shall swav
! us.
But more on that head by and by.
Pray let me leave you for this present.
FAUST.
I do not see why
thou shouldst pray.
Though our acquaintance be but recent,
Look in upon me day by day.
Here is the window, there the entrance,
A chimney I can offer you.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Let me confess — there is a trifling hindrance
Which bars my course the doorway through
The wizard's foot upon your threshold.
FAUST.
The Pentagram ! that gives thee pain ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Observe it well the figure's not completed
!
FAUST.
A lucky chance, the Devil thus to entangle I
Part I 67
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The poodle leapt across it all unmindful,
But now things wear another face !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A law that binds all ghosts and devils that is,
MEPHISTOPHELES.
From what we promise, not a shred we whittle.
And unalloyed thou shalt enjoy the pact.
Yet these things ask a lengthier comment
We'll talk more of them by and by.
But now, I pray you instantly,
Dismiss me for the present moment.
68 Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
I setno snare ! Thou in hot haste
Didst blunder in, thyself entrapping.
Who holds the Devil, hold him fast.
Nor hope a second time to catch the Devil
napping
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Well then, I'll bear thee company, and fain,
Sir Doctor, if it be thy pleasure.
So this proviso I obtain,
That with mine arts I while away thy leisure.
FAUST.
Do so ! that will I gladly see.
So that thine art but pleasing be.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
My friend, this hour will be more lavish
In all that may thy senses ravish.
Than is the year's monotony.
That which the dainty sprites shall sing thee,
The beauteous visions they shall bring thee.
Will be no empty, juggling show.
To glad thy smell, sweet scents shall trickle,
Sweet savours then thy palate tickle,
Thy feeling last with rapture glow,
No preparation do we need ;
SPIRITS.
Vanish ye darksome
J
Vaultings above him.
Bright beyond measure
Shine in the azure
. y
Part I 69
Ethereal sky !
Scatter, ye darkling
Clouds, and the tender
Starlight be sparkling;
Suns softer splendour
Beam from on high /
Spirits' aerial
Beauty ethereal
Heaven ivith tremulous
Hovering covers.
Teaming all emulous
After it hovers.
Garments bright gleaming
JVith ribbons a-streaming
Float o'er the teeming
Land and the arbour.
Where till death smite them^
Thought in thought merging
7 rue lovers plight them,
Arbour by arbour !
Vine-tendrils burgeon ;
Foams effervescent
Through gems iridescent;
Streams from the highland ;
Widens to lakelets
Over the dry land.
Clasping like necklets
Emerald mountains
Slaked at their fountains
Wilclfoivl soar onivard.
! ; ;
70 Goethe's Faust
Fluttering sunivard
On tuhere the br'ightsome
Islesof the ocean,
Dance nvith a lightsome
Tremulous motion ;
Where the entrancing
Jubilant chorus.
Singing and dancing
Flits on before us
Flits o'er the meado'VJSy
Scatters like shadnnvs.
Some bent on scaling
Totvering mountains.
Others on sailing
Ocean s salt fountains^
Others on flying,
Lfeivards all hieing.
All to the far-aiüay
Lo'ue-beaming star aivay^
Gracious and blest.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Enough ! ye dainty, airy sprites, your numbers
Have lulled his sense in charmed slumbers !
FAUST, a'ivaking.
What am I
! once again then cheated ?
STUDY.
Faust, Mephistopheles.
FAUST.
FAUST.
Come in !
mephistopheles.
Three times you must invite me !
72 Goethe's Faust
Come in then !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Good ! Now we shall be
Fast friends, I hope, through all that chances !
Part I
7Z
Mars the creations of my fruitful bosom.
Nay, and when peaceful night sinks softly down
All fearful on my couch I lay me ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Yet Death's a guest 'gainst whom their hearts
men ever harden.
FAUST.
Happy whose brows in Victory's flush and
gladness
With blood-drenched laurels by Death's hand
are laden !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And some one, on a certain night,
yet hath
Such and such a brown juice not drunken
FAUST.
In eaves-dropping, it seems, is thy delight.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Much do I know — though not omniscient c^uite.
! —
;!
7+ Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
Since from my spirit's dread upheaval
Cliarmed me yon sweet, familiar chime,
Cheatingmy will with vain retrieval
Of moods from childhood's blissful time
Cursed be all baubles that enamour
With cheating, juggling charm, the soul
Or chain it with elusive glamour
Within this dreary, dungeon-hole !
Woe ! ivoe !
See hoiv it crumbles.
The beauteous ivorld.
Beneath thy bloiv !
It totters, it tumbles /
A demi-god smote it asunder !
We ivander.
Sadly bearing the ivrack of beauty ^
!
Part I 75
Where yonder
Gapes the Void iv'tth gloomy portal.
Dutiful
Do thou, great mortal,
Beautiful
In neiv splendour,
In thy bosom build it again.
A neiv life, if thou so ordain.
Commences
With clearer senses.
And songs more tender
Breathe a neiv strain,
MEPHISTOPHELES.
These are the tiny
Ones in my meiny.
They exhort to deeds and pleasure,
Shrewd beyond youth's measure.
Into the wide wide world they would
Draw thee from solitude,
Where sap and senses stagnate.
As draws the steel the magnet.
Cease toymg with thy melancholy,
That like a vulture eats into thine heart
No company so poor, but plentifully
'Twill teach that man with men thou art.
Yet that is not to say
I'd thrust theeamong the rabble !
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
There's time enough, on that we won't insist.
FAUST.
FAUST.
Yet hast thou food that fills not, yet thou hast
Red gold that trickles without rest,
Quicksilver-like, the fingers' clutch between ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Such a commission frights me not.
I'll serve thee with such treasures gaily.
But, good my friend, the time draws on apace^
When at our ease, a royal feast we'll savour.
FAUST.
78 Goethe's Faust
Self-pleased, to put my grief away,
Canst thou my soul with pleasures cozen.
Then be that day my life's last day I
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Done !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Bethink thee shrewdly —we shall not forget it
MEPHISTOPHELES.
This very day, my servant's part to do.
At the Doctor's banquet I'll be with thee.
But one thing still, come life, come death, I
prithee
Give me a written line or two.
Part I 79
MEPHISTOPHELES.
How canst thou in such heated wise
At once o'erstrain thine oratory ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Blood has quite matchless properties.
c2
8o Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
And thou that with this bond I'll palter.
fear not
The essence of my promise is
To strive with all my might, nor shall I falter.
I puffed me up beyond my height;
In thy rank only is my place.
Me the great Spirit did but slight.
Nature her door shuts in my face.
The thread of thought is snapped in twain.
All knowledge long hath loathsome been.
(Our glowing passions in a sensual sea
Now will we quench, nor in the shallows dabble!
In magic veils impenetrable
Straightway each marvel ready be 1
MEPHISTOPHELES.
For you no time or term is leased.
Would you all sweets of being rifle,
Or on the wing snap up a trifle,
I wish you joy of every feast.
Only fall to, and don't need pressing.
Part I 8
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Oh, take my word, who many a thousand year
This bitter cud to chew am driven,
That from the cradle to the bier
No man digests the old, old leaven.
Sure testimony we can render :
MEPHISTOPHELES.
That's bravely spoken
Alas ! there is but one thing wrong :
82 Goethe's Faust
Let him the secret find, to graft
On the same stock, nobility and craft.
And how, with youth hot in your bosom,
To fall in love according to a system.
I'd like to meet that paragon of wisdom !
FAUST.
What am I then, if Fate mine efforts thwart
The crown of all humanity from earning.
For which my senses all are ever yearning ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Why, in the end, thou'rt what thou art
Though thou be crowned with wigs of myriad
tresses.
Although thy foot on ell-high buskins presses,
Thou bidest ever what thou art.
FAUST.
I feel it ! vainly have I every treasure
Won by man's mind, raked up my hoard to
swell !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Well, my good Sir, to put it crudely.
You see things just as things exist.
We must lay hold of life more shrewdly,
Ere all the joys of life we've missed.
Parti 83
Is no less mine for that, I tell ye
Six stallions if my money buy,
Their strength is mine in all its plenty
I spank along, a right good man am I,
As though my legs were four-and-twenty.
Up then, let all this brooding be.
And out into the world with me
Mark me the wight that speculates.
!
MEPHISTOPHELES.
First get out of this !
FAUST.
I cannot see him now, indeed.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Nay, but booby
he's waited long, poor !
84 Goethe's Faust
Now trust my wits to do the necessary.
Some quarter of an hour is all I want
\_Enter a student.
STUDENT.
Newly arrived, I come direct.
Filled with the most profound respect.
—
To know since such your condescension,
A man whom all with reverence mention.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Your courtesy rejoices me ;
Part I 85
MEPHISTOPHELES.
You couldn't have come to a better place !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Believe me, 'tis but use you lack.
So at the first its mother's breast
A child not willingly doth take
Yet soon it sucks with right good zest.
So you at Wisdom's breasts new pleasure
Will find each day in growing measure.
STUDENT.
I'llhang on her neck with rapture, do not
doubt it.
But pray you, now, how shall I set about it?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
'Twere best,no further time to lose,
To say what Faculty you choose.
; ;
86 Goethe's Faust
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Why there you're on the proper trail.
STUDENT.
My heart and soul are in the chase
Yet to be frank, a little leisure
On beautiful sumnier-holidays.
And a little pastime would give me pleasure.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Husband your time. Time fleets so swiftly on
Yet order teaches how time may be won.
My dear young friend, I bid you therefore
A course of Logic first prepare for.
Then will your mind be
drilled and braced,
In Spanish boots be tightly laced.
And henceforth greater caution taught,
Shuffle along the path of thought,
Nor wind may blow.
zigzag, as the
Will o' to and fro.
the wisp it
STUDENT.
I fear I don't quite grasp the matter.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
After a while you'll manage better.
You'll learn to reduce things by and by,
And to classify all appropriately.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And then, the next thing I must mention.
Is Metaphysics. Give it your close attention.
With thought profound take care to span
What
But fit
won't
or not
—
fit into the brain of
'tis small concern,
man.
/
,
88 Goethe's Faust
A pompous word will serve your turn.
—
But for this session first of all
See that you be methodical.
Each day you're here for five hours' space
With the first stroke be in your place.
Be well prepared before you start.
Get all your paragraphs by heart,
That you may spy, with watchful look
Lest aught he say that's not i' the book.
And write for dear life's sake, as though
The Holy Ghost dictated to you.
STUDENT.
Nay, there need no second telling.
I'll
MEPHISTOPHELES.
But pray you, choose me a Faculty.
STUDENT.
For Jurisprudence, now, I've little inclination.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Why, there you don't incur my reprobation.
This science as it really is I see.
Like an eternal, rank contagion,
Statutes and laws are inherited.
They drag from generation on to generation.
And from place to place they spread.
stealthily
Reason to nonsense turns, blessings to curses ;
Woe's thee, that thou'rt the heir of Time !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I were loth to lead you into error.
Thus hold I of this discipline :
STUDENT.
Ye' some idea behmd the word must be.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
O yes ! yet need we not with too great scruples
rack us.
For just where all ideas lack us.
Comes an apt word to fill the vacancy.
With words you can argue, and subtly twist
'em ;
/
— ;
go Goethe's Faust
On Medicine, if it be your will,
A pithy word to speak I would constrain you.
Three years — how quickly will they glide !
MEPHISTOPHELES, astdf.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
My dear young friend, grey is all theory.
The golden tree of life is green !
STUDENT.
I feel as 'twere some dream I wander in !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What I can do, I gladly will.
STUDENT.
I cannot take my leave, until
Some word to grace my album I've bespoken.
Pray let your favour grant this token.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And fain!
[^He 'writes and gives it back again.
STUDENT reads.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Follow the ancient saw, and follow the snake,
my cousin ;
!
92 Goethe's Faust
God's image as thou art, thou'It rue the way
thou hast chosen
[_Enter Faust.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Whither it pleases thee.
The world and then the great we'll see.
little
MEPHISTOPHELES.
An outspread cloak is all we need,
Thorough the air to take our courses.
But this bold journey as we make
No bulky bundle must thou take.
A little inflammable air, which I'll make ready.
! ! !
Part I 93
From earth will waft us, sure and speedy.
Full quickly we shall rise, if light we are.
AUERBACH'S CELLAR IN
LEIPSIC.
Boon Companions at a Drinking-bout.
FROSCH.
Will no one drink ? Will none guffaw ?
BRANDER.
Thine is the fault — from thee we wait some
sign,
Some trick such as befits a clown or swine.
FROSCH.
BRANDER.
Thou double-swine !
FROSCH.
Nay, thou wouldst have it, the fault is thine.
SIEBEL.
ALTMAYER.
Woe's me ! I'm lost, alack !
FROSCH.
Ri-tooral-looral-li !
ALTMAYER.
R'l-tooral-looral-li !
FROSCH.
Now are our throats in tune.
Sings,
A song
filthy ! Thank God with day's return
The Holy Roman Empire's none of your con-
cern.
At least I hold it gain that Fortune fated me
Nor Emperor nor Chancellor to be.
And yet some overlord there must not lack us ;
Part I 95
FROSCH sings.
SIEBEL.
FROSCH.
Sings.
SIEBEL.
96 Goethe's Faust
For love-sick here in view
folk sit
r a rat
the cellar-nest there lived
That fed on fat and butter.
He gretu a little paunch as fat
As the paunch of Doctor Luther.
The cook laid poison one ßne nighty
Then greiv his little ivorld as tight
As had he love in his belly.
CHORUS, jubilant.
As had he love in his belly.
CHORUS.
Part I 97
Loud laughed the murderess to see him roll.
Aha ! he's a-p'iping on his very last hole^
As had he love in his belly.
CHORUS.
BRANDER.
They're high in favour, eh, with you
ALTMAYER.
The bald pate with the big round belly !
Faust, Mephistopheles.
mephistopheles
Now is my very first anxiety
To show thee jovial society.
That thou mayst see how lightly life can sit.
Each day these fellows make a feast of it.
With little wit and mickle comfort
Each in his narrow circle wheels.
As playful kittens chase their tails.
Save when their heads do ache and hum for't.
98 Goethe's Faust
BRANDER.
They're from travelling, as I'm a sinner
fresh !
FROSCH.
You've hit it ! Well of towns, my Leipsic is
the flower ;
SIEBEL.
BRANDER.
They're mountebanks, I'll lay a dollar !
ALTMAYER.
Maybe.
FROSCH.
I'll smoke them. Mark the event
MEPHISTOPHELES, tO Faust.
Part I 99
FAUST.
We greet you fairly, Sirs.
SIEBEL.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Pray, have we leave to join your merry party ?
Good drink is lacking here, yet fain we'd take
our ease
Amongst a company so hearty.
ALTMAVER.
Gadzooks ! You're very hard to please !
FROSCH.
'Twas doubtless late from Rippach when you.
started
With Squire Hans, belike, you broke your
evening fast ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
To-day we only travelled past.
Last time we talked with him, and ere v/e
parted.
He'd much to say of this and the other cousin.
And loaded us tor each with greetings by the
dozen.
\_IIe boius to Frosch.
ALTMAYER, in an undertone.
He's rapped you ovei the knuckles ! He's a
cunning dog
!
FROSCH.
Wait now ! I'll have him yet, the rogue!
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Methinks we heard in chorus sing
Voices that lacked not cultivation ;
And truly from this vault must ring
Y^our song with a rich reverberation,
FROSCH.
Are you perchance a virtuoso ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Oh no ! though fond of song, my singing is but
SO-SO.
ALTMAYER.
Sing us a stave.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Nay, if you wish it, twenty.
SIEBEL.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
We are but newly come from Spain,
The beauteous land of wine and song in plenty.
He sings.
Part I loi
FROSCH.
A flea,quotha Nay now, I pray
! you, heed
A flea's a dainty guest indeed.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A hing once ruled a nation
And he had a fair big flea.
He loved him in such fashion
As his oivn son tvere he.
Noiv the king his royal pleasure
To the tailor did disclose :
Take me young master's measure
For doublet andfor hose.
BRANDER.
And look you ! see you warn the man of
stitches
To take the measure to a hair.
'Twere pity of his life I'll swear,
An there were wrinkles i' the breeches.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
In silk and eke in velvet
Behold our hero dressed^
With ribbons on his doublet.
And a cross upon his breast.
Straightivay he's made a minister^
And a sparkling star doth sport ;
His kin, by intrigues sinister.
Are all great lords at court.
CHORUS, jubilant.
We hack 'em and nve crack 'em^
Whenever zu e feel 'em bite.
FROSCH.
Bravo ! bravo ! that was fine !
SIEBEL.
BRANDER.
Point your fingers and on them pounce
ALTMAYER.
Long live Freedom ! Long live Wine !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'd gladh' honour the toast, for Freedom I'm a
zealot,
Were but your wines more kindly to the palate.
SIEBEL.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Mine host might take't amiss, or for this toast
I'd treat this honourable party
From our own cellar, blithe and hearty.
SIEBEL.
Part 1 103
FROSCH.
Give us a right good glass, our thanks shall be
right ample.
But pray you, stint us not i' the sample.
If I'm to judge, brim up the bowl.
I judge best when you fill my jowl.
ALTMAYER, in an undertone.
They're from the Rhine, I guess.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now straightway
A gimlet here !
BRANDER.
? A gimlet
What's the gimlet for ?
Pray, have you got the casks there in the gate-
way ?
ALTMAYER.
His chest of tools the host keeps here behind
the door.
FROSCH.
What mean you ? Have you such variety ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
For each his taste. The choice is free.
ALTMAYER, to FrOSch.
Aha ! you start to lick your chaps already
FROSCH.
Good, I'll have Rhenish, then, since mine the
choice is.
I04 Goethe's Faust
Our heart with richest gifts the Fatherland *
rejoices.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
^Boring a hole in the edge of the table,
MEPHISTOPHELES, to Brttnder.
BRAN DER.
We can't quite shun the Foreign, howe'er we
may determine ;
The Good is oft so far away.
Your Frenchman's poison to your true-bora
German,
But your French wines he'd drink all day.
SIEBEL.
Part I 105
MEPHISTOPHELES, bor'tng.
ALTMAYER.
Nay, Sir, now look, me in the face !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Such noble guests How can you doubt us
! ?
ALTMAYER.
With any. Stand not on the question.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
But take good heed, lest any drop ye spill.
\They drink repeatedly.
!
ALL sing.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES
Nay, heed them first ! Now bestiality
Will be revealed in guise most glorious.
FROSCH.
ALTMAYER.
We'd better softly bid him shog, that's clear.
Part I 107
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Peace, thou old wine-tub !
SIEBEL.
Broomstick, out i
BRANDER.
Nay, marry, wait ! Like hail the blows shall
patter !
ALTMAYER.
[^Dratus a stopper out of the table.
SIEBEL.
Witchcraft ! Draw !
Have at him ! He's out o' the pale o' the law !
ALTMAYER.
Where am I ? What a beauteous land !
FROSCH.
Vineyards ! See I aright I
! ! !
BRANDER.
Here 'neath this arbour green and shady.
See what a vine ! what grapes hang ready !
MEPHiSTOPHELES, OS above.
Loose, Error, from their eyes the band I
Mark how the Devil's jesting goes.
[_
Vanishes iviih Faust ; the "was sailers
dranv aiuay from each other.
SIEBEL.
What is it I
ALTMAYER.
Hew?
FROSCH.
Was that thy nose '
BRANDER, to Siebel.
ALTMAYER.
Through every limb the shock did dart and
shiver.
Give me a chair ! My knees are all a-quiver !
FROSCH.
Pray, what has happened ? Well, I never
SIEBEL.
SIEBEL.
ALTMAYER.
And miracles are naught but old wives' stones,
say you ?
WITCH'S KITCHEN.
\Upon a lo'W hearth stands a great
cauldron over the ßre. In the
steam that rises from the cauldron
divers forms appear. A she-ape
sits beside the cauldron, skims ity
Faust, Mephistopheles.
FAUST.
My gorge doth rise at this mad magic-dealing !
; lo Goethe's Faust
In this wild waste of sorcery ?
Do I need counsel from a withered beldam ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now you talk sense again, my friend, and look !
FAUST.
I choose to know it
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Good ! No money doth it need,
No leeches' aid nor aid of witches.
Betake thee to the field with speed.
Turn up the clods, and dig out ditche«
Move ever in a narrow round
Content, and tug not at thy tether ;
FAUST.
I lack the use thereto. So low I may not
grovel
! !
Part I III
To fit my hand to spade and shovel.
So cramped a life my very soul would irk
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Why then, the witch must needs to work.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A pretty pastime I could build
!
lengthen.
Time only can the delicate ferment strengthen.
And wondrous strange too, sooth to say.
Are all things that belong unto it.
The Devil showed them first the way,
And yet the Devil cannot do it.
THE BEASTS.
Gone carousing,
Out she flew
The chimney through
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And how long goes she a-gadding, marry '
D 2
!
I 12 Goethe's Faust
THE BEASTS.
So long as our paws to warm we tarry.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What think you of the dainty beasties ?
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Nay now, a talk like this for me,
Above all other talk, a very feast is 1
THE BEASTS.
We're boiling sloppy pauper-skilly.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Why then, your public is not few
THE HE-APE.
[Sidles up and faivns upon Meph'isto-
pheles.
Oh! rattle the dice.
Make me rich in a trice,
And let me be gainer
I'm short of the trasli,
And were I in cash
I were so much the saner.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
How dearly would the ape now join the
acramble,
Part I 113
And in the lottery for fortune gamble !
THE HE-APE.
The world's a ball
Doth riseand fall,
As Fate doth spin it.
My son, I say,
Keep thee away !
It is but clay !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Whereto the sieve ?
1
14 Goethe's Faust
HE-APE AND SHE-APE.
The simple sot
He knows not the pot !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Unmannerly brute !
HE-APE.
Take the whisk, and to boot
Take a seat i' the settle !
doivn.
FAUST.
[_M^ho in the meanivhile has been
standing before a mirror, notu
approaching it, noiv retiring
from it.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye, marry ! if a God six days doth toil and
moil,
! — !;
Part I 115
And cries Well done i' the end o' the
: ! coil,
Itmust be something well worth seeing.
Gaze now thy fill, and presently
I'll look thee out just such a pretty sweeting
And happy man be his dole, say I,
Who on her lips shall press the bridegroom's
greeting
[_Faust gazes ever in the mirror.
Mephistopheles, stretching himself
in the settle and toying luith the
•whisky goes on speaking.
THE BEASTS.
[_Who hitherto have been dancing in
and out 'with all sorts of fantastic
gestures^ bring Mephistopheles a
cro'wn 'with loud shrieks.
Oh ! be so good
With sweat and blood
As stick it together !
1 1 Goethe's Faust
THE BEASTS.
And if sense come unsought,
Ifwe chance into thought,
Then our rhyme has its reason.
FAUST, as above.
What fire is kindled in my bosom !
THE WITCH.
Ow! Ow! Owl Ow!
Thou cursed beast !Thou damned sow !
May harrow
hell-fire
Your bones and marrow !
Atomy !
hinders
My wrath from smiting ruthlessly.
And smashing thee and thine apish sprites to
flinders ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Well, well this time we'll call
! it quits.
The case some leniency admits.
'Tis quite an age since my last visit.
And Culture, too, that fast licks into shape
! ; ;
I I 8 Goethe's Faust
The world Devil can't escape.
at large, the
No longer now you
Northern phantom.
see the
Horns, tail and claws, no more I flaunt 'em.
As for the hoof, 'twould harm me with the
folk.
And yet it may not well be lacking
And so I've worn for years, like many a gay
young buck,
In place of calf, a little packing.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
That name is now tabooed, old Dame.
THE WITCH.
Why, what's the matter with the name ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
This many a day 'tis written down a fable
Yet men are nowise winners in the game.
They're rid o' the Evil One, the Evil still are
able.
Sir Baron if thou call me, all is well and good.
A knight I am like others for the occasion.
Thou dost not doubt the blueness of my blood?
See here, now ! such the arms are which I
blazon.
\_He makes an unseemly gesture.
Part I 119
MEPHISTOPHELES, to FaUSt.
My friend, take lesson by my speeches ;
THE WITCH.
Now, Sirs, what is your errand, speak !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A bumper of the well-known juice we seek,
And for the oldest I am fain to trouble
For with the years its virtues double.
THE WITCK.
Right gladly Here now, from this bottle
I
IVhlsper'mg.
Yet if all unprepared this man the potion drinks.
Within an hour, ye wot, his sands have run their
measure.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
He's a good of mine ; it shall agree
friend
with him.
I grudge him not the best within thy Kitchen.
Draw now thy ring, on with thy witching.
And fill him a bumper to the brim.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A fiddlestick ! Know what a joke is !
FAUST.
The beldam raves as one distracted
MEPHISTOPHELES.
All isby no means yet enacted !
Parti 121
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Enough enough incomparable Sibyl
! !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Down with the stingo ! Toss it off
'Twill warm the cockles of thine heart
What ! with the Devil hand and glove,
And from a little flame dost start?
[TTif Witch breaks the circle. Faust steps forth
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Up and away ! Thou must not rest !
THE WITCH.
And may you thrive o' the dram, fair guest
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And can I pleasure thee, thy wish be spoken
Boldly, on May-day Eve, upon the Brocken.
THE WITCH.
Here is a charm which sung at times, I trow,
Will shrewdly help along the operation.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Come quickly ! Some brisk occupation
Must set thee in a perspiration.
So that through every pore the potent juice may
flow.
Later I'll have thee prize the dolce far ntente^
And soon thou'lt feel, with ravishment in plenty,
How Cupid stirs, and flutters to and fro.
!!
Part I 123
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Nav, nay Thou'lt see the paragon of
! women
Before thee soon in flesh and blood.
ylside.
Thy body so this philter dwell in,
In every wench thou'lt see a Helen
STREET.
Faust, Margaret passing by.
FAUST.
LVTy fair —
young lady bold the offer,
^et may I my arm and escort proffer ?
MARGARET.
[am not a lady, am not fair ;
FAUST.
By Heaven, but this maid is fair !
\_Enter Mephistopheles.
FAUST.
Saw you the girl ? I must possess her !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Which ?
FAUST.
She that passed.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
'Tis she you mean ?
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Marrj', vou talk like .lack-a-loose,
Who lusts for each sweet flower that blows,
And thinks no honour is — vain fool !
Part I 125
Unless this sweet young thing doth rest
This very night upon my breast,
Our pact at midnight doth determine.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Bethink thee what is feasible !
FAUST.
How speedy
Give me seven hours — so short a while '
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Nay now, already
Like a Mounseer almost you speak !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now once for all, sans jape or jest,
I tell you, with the pretty lass
No sudden stroke you'll bring to pass.
This tort by storm will ne'er be shaken;
By stratagem it must be taken.
! ! !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
That thou may'st see how I remember
Our pact, to help and ease thy smart
I'll lead thee promptly, for my part,
This very day, into her chamber.
FAUST.
And shall I see her ? — have her ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
No!
She to a neighbour's house will go.
In her atmosphere enfolded, though,
Of all good hope of future pleasure
Shalt meanwhile take thy fill at leisure.
FAUST.
Can we go ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
'Tis too early yet.
FAUST.
See thou a present for her get
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Presents already ? Bravo ! So he'll find her
brittle.
Full many a goodly place I know.
Part I 127
With treasures buried long ago.
I must refresh my memory a little.
TExit.
EVENING.
^j4 small and cleanly chamber. Mar-
garet plaiting and binding the
braids of her hair.
MARGARET.
I'd give a good deal, now, to know
Who 'twas to-day that stopped me so.
Indeed he had a gallant air !
Mephistopheles, Faust.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Come in ! Tread softly, but come in !
Part I 129
And thou how hast thou hither trrcd ?
!
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Quick, now ! The lass below there I discern !
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Here is a casket, pretty hi avy.
I've made elsewhere a little levy.
Here in this cofl^er will we lay't.
I'll take my oath she'll faint with rapture.
I've put in trifles might be bait
A very different prey to capture.
True, lass is lass, and jest is jest.
FAUST.
30 Goethe's Faust
MEHHISTOPHELES.
Thou questionest ?
\_Exeunt.
of the mirror.
In front
Did but the ear-rings belong to me !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
By all the love ever was slighted ! By the hellish
conflagration !
an imprecation !
FAUST.
What ails thee ? Marry, such an air
I've never seen. There's madness in it.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'd give myself to the Devil this very minute,
An I myself no devil were !
! !
Part I 133
FAUST.
Art ATong in thine head ? What means this
antic ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Just think ! The finery for Gretchen got,
A parson has whipped me off the lot.
Her mother gets me a sight o' the thing ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
So he sweeps me up chain, and ring, and ouch.
Like so many truffles, into his pouch.
He thanks no less and he thanks no more.
Than a basket of nuts he might thank 'em for.
But a heavenly guerdon he prophesied.
—
And he left them highly edified.
FAUST.
And Gretchen ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Sits in restless mood,
And knows not what she would or should ;
FAUST.
Part I ^35
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Yes, gracious Sir, with tiie greatest pleasure.
l^Exit Faust.
Such a love-sick fool with an easy grace,
To while away his sweetheart's leisure
Sun, moon and all the stars would puff you into
space. [_ExiL
MARGARET.
Dame Martha
MARTHA.
Margery, what is't ?
MARGARET.
—Oh how my
I've found ! knees are trembling !
MARGARET.
Oh, do but look now ! See now, do!
MARTHA, adorning her.
MARGARET.
I may not wear them, more's the pity,
At church, nor i' the streets o' the city.
MARTHA.
Only do thou come often hither ;
MARGARET.
Who can have brought the caskets, through
what cranny
Have slipped ? I'm sure it isn't canny !
[_A knock,
MARGARET.
My mother ! God ! if I be seen !
[_£nter Mephistopheks.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I make so bold forthwith to enter.
! ! ! —
Part I 1 37
Pardon that I disturb your leisure.
[^Steps back respectfully on seeing
Margaret.
Dame Martha Schwerdtlein, peradventure
MARTHA.
'Tis I, Sir. Pray you speak your pleasure.
MARTHA, aloud.
MARGARET.
Indeed I'm but a poor young thing
The gentleman's too flattering.
The finery is not mine own.
MEPHISTO» HELES.
'Tis not the finery alone !
MARTHA.
Your errand, Sir ? I long to hear—
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I would my tidings better were
Pray, blame not me for this sad meeting.
Your husband's dead and sends you greeting.
!
f 38 Goethe's Faust
MARGARET.
Alas, dear Dame, do not despair I
MEPHISTOPHELES.
To hear the doleful tale jDrepare
MARGARET.
For this I would not choose to love.
For loss would kill my heart with sadness.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Gladness must have its grief, and grief its •
gladness.
MARTHA.
My husband's end — tell me the way thereof.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
In Padua his bones recline,
Hard by Saint Anthony his shrine,
In holy ground, like a true believer,
For his cool resting-place for ever.
MARTHA.
Have you naught else ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
One thing there was he wanted—
1 A great and weighty matter. He commands
! And prays you, have for him three hundred
masses chanted.
But for the rest, I come with empty hands.
MARTHA.
What ! Not a lucky-penny ? Not a ring ?
! ; ;
Part 1
139
What every prentice-lad deep in his wallet
hoards,
Though poor, as keep-sake still affords.
E'en should he starve or begging wander 1
MEPHiSTOPHELES.
Madame, your grief my heart doth wring !
MARGARET.
Alas ! for the cruel lot of men ! Sure I will pray
Full many a requiem for peace upon his spirit.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Into the wedded state forthwith you merit
To enter, my sweet child.
MARGARET.
Ah, nay
There is no thought of that at once
MEPHISTOPHELES.
If not a husband, then a gallant for the nonce.
Such a dear thing in one's arms 'tis even —
One of the greatest gifts of Heaven !
MARGARET.
'Tis not the country's custom ! Nay !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Custom or not, it happens,
MARTHA.
Prav
Go on.
— ! —
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Yet she, God knows, was more to blame
than I !
MARTHA.
He lies! What, on the brink o' the grave, and
lying !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
He rambled, sure, as he lay dying,
If I am only half a judge.
I didn't gape my time away, I'd something
better
To do, said he. First children, and then bread
to get her.
And bread i' the widest sense, 1 had to drudge.
Yet could not eat my share in quiet for yon
fretful
MARTHA.
Of all my love and truth could he be so for-
getful ?
Part I 141
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Nav, but with kindlv thought did them requite.
He said Wliilst Malta faded from our eves,
:
MARTHA.
What is't ? Where is't ? Hid i' the earth he
kept it
Mayhap ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Who
knows by this where the four
winds have swept it ?
A fine ma'am'selle took pitv on him, rich
And lorn of friends in Naples as he tarried.
Tokens of love and truth she gave, the which
Your sainted husband to his death-bed carried.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Why, look you ! Now he's paid the scot
He's dead, and were I in your shoes.
For one chaste year I'd wear the willow.
And seek another spouse the while to share my
pillow.
142 Goethe's Faust
MARTHA.
Alas : to match my first, God knows,
In ail the world I scarce shall find a second 1
MARTHA.
Nay now, the gentleman is merry.
MEPHISTOPHELES, , Side.
\^To Gretcheh.
How is it with your heart, sweet tairy i
MARGARET.
How mean you. Sir ?
MEPHISTOPHELE-, aside.
Jllüud.
Farewell, fair dames !
MARGARET.
Farewell '.
—
Part I 143
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye, aye, good dame, through the mouth of
two
Whatever is testified must be true.
I have a fine comrade, who'll take if you
crave it,
MARTHA.
'
I pray you do
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Will the young lady be here too ?
MARGARET.
Before him I must needs blush scarlet.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Neither for king, nor yet for varlet.
STREET.
Faust, Mephistopheles.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Ah, bravo ! All aflame with passion ?
FAUST.
'Tis well
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Yet we the favour must requite.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
'Tis but in all due form to testify
Her wedded lord all stiff and stark doth lie
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Snncta SimpUcltas ! No need of such a toil !
Part 1 145
truly,
As now thou know'st of Gaffer Schwerdtiein's
death.
FAUST.
Thou art and dost abide a liar and a sophist
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Shouldst look a little deeper ere thou scoffest !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
All very fine
And then ot faith and love eternal,
! —
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'm right for all that
GARDEN.
\_Margaret on Faust^s arm and Martha
•with Mephistopheles, ivalking up
and doiun.
MARGARET.
1 feel the gentleman but humours me,
But shames me by his condescension.
Part I 147
'Tis but a traveller's courtesy
That uses for the deed to take the intention.
Too well I know that my poor speech is such
As scarce can please one that hath seen so much.
FAUST.
MARGARET.
Nay, trouble not yourself! How can you press
unto it
MARTHA.
And you, Sir, do you ever journey so ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Alas ! where trade and duty point the finger.
Though oftentimes, how loth ! there must we
go.
And though "we would, we may not linger.
MARTHA.
Wherefore, dear Sir, amend betimes your error !
MARGARET.
Aye, out of sight is out of mind !
FAUST.
Dear maid, believe me, so-called cleverness
Is oft but vanity and dull pretence.
MARGARET.
How mean you ?
FAUST.
Oh ! that simple innocence
Its own most holy worth may never guess
That meekness, lowliness, the richest treasure
That kindly lavish Nature can decree
MARGARET.
One little moment if you think of me.
To think of you, I shall have ample leisure.
FAUST.
MARGARET.
O yes ! Our household is but small,
And yet one needs must see to all.
Part I 149
We keep no maid, so I must sweep and cook
and cater
And knit and stitch and know no ease ;
So dear to me it was !
FAUST.
MARGARET. •,,.,•
I 50 Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
The purest bliss hath surely been thy dower '
MARGARET.
Yet surely, too, full many a weary hour !
no light matter !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Itneeds but such as you — I do not flatter
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The proverb says Own hearth and trusty wife
:
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Wherever I have been, the courtesies came
thronging.
MARTHA.
I spoke of love in earnest — a love you could not
stifle.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
One never should presume with woman's heart
to trifle.
MARTHA.
Ah ! You don't understand me '
MEPHISTOPHELES.
That grieves me, I declare !
FAUST.
Didst know me as I came into the garden,
Thou little angel, at a single look ?
MARGARET.
Saw you not how mine eyes fell ?
FAUST.
And dost pardon
The unpardonable liberty I took
As thou from church didst come, the shameless
boldness
That thou didst check with such a maideq
coldness ?
—
I 52 Goethe's Faust
MARGARET.
I was dumbfounded. That was new to mei. "•
bearing,
Or what unseemly freedom doth he see ?
—
He seemed to think some sudden plan pursuing
Now here's a wench will ask but little wooing.
Yet must own, straightway there stirred in me
I
I knownot what, that pleaded in your favour.
Yet angry with myself was I, to be
No angrier with you and your behaviour.
FAUST.
Sweet love 1
MARGARET.
Stay now !
FAUST.
MARGARET.
No, it is but a game !
FAUST.
What?
MARGARET.
Nay, you'll laugh at me.
\^Sbe plucks and murmurs.
FAUST.
Parti 153
MARGARET, Under her breath.
MARGARET continues.
He loves me
FAUST.
MARGARET.
A thrill runs through me !
FAUST.
MARTHA, coming
The night is falling.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye, we must away '
MARTHA.
This is a shocking place for scandal,
Else I would beg you still to stay.
You'd think no man had a tool to handle.
No trade, no labour.
Naught but to gape and stare at every step of
his neighbour.
People get talked about, though reason they
give none.
Where is our pretty pair ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Along the alley flitting
Frolicsome butterflies
MARTHA.
He seems with her quite smitten.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And she with him. And so the world wags on !
A SUMMER-HOUSE.
[_Margaret runs in, hides behind the
door, puts her ßnger-tip on her lips
and peeps through the chink.
MARGARET.
He comes
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
Part I 155
FAUST comes.
Ah rogue ! A very tease thou art
Thou'rt caught
[_He kisses her.
MARGARET.
[]
Clasping him and returning his kiss.
Dearest of men, I love thee from mine heart
\_Mephistopheles knocks.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A friend
FAUST.
A beast
MEPHISTOPHELES.
We must talce leave now, come
MARTHA comes.
FAUST.
FAUST.
And must I go ? Ah then,
Farewell
MARTHA.
Adieu !
ij6 Goethe's Faust
MARGARET.
But soon to meet again !
MARGARET.
Dear God in Heaven is there auqht
!
\_Ex\t.
Part I 157
While to its fall the hill rings hollow thunder,
Then to the sheltering cave dost lead me, then
Me to myself dost show, to mine own heart
Deep and mysterious marvels are revealed.
And if before my vision the pure moon
Rises with soothing from craggy cliff,
spell,
From the moist wood, float up before mine eyes
The silv'ry phantoms of a vanished age,
And temper Contemplation's joy austere.
Oh ! now I feel there falls to mortals' lot
No Thou gavest with this rapture
perfect gift !
MEPHISTOPHLLES.
Have you not led this life for long enough ?
58 Goethe's Faust
In thee as mate, ungracious, testy, mad,
In very truth, I should lose but little !
FAUST.
That's the right tone It stirs my mirth
! !
A sweet sport
fair, There sticks,
! I'll bet,
FAUST.
Dost understand what fresh new strength to live
This sojourn in the wilderness doth give ?
Part 1 159
Ali earth and heaven to clasp with rapture
flooded,
To swell and swell and deem oneself a Godhead,
With boding stress to pierce earth's very marrow,
The six days' work to compass in one narrow
Bosom, in haughty strength some phantom joy
to capture.
To overflow in all anon with loving rapture,
The child of earth vanished away.
Then close the lofty intuition
[^
JFith a gesture.
Nay,
I must not tell the end o' the chapter '
Fie on thee !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now I've shocked you ! now I've hurt you
You have the right to voice ofl^ended virtue,
And that before chaste ears we must not mention,
W herefrom chaste hearts nathless brook not
abstention !
I 60 Goethe's Faust
As when a brook o'erflows from melted snow
and rain
Into her heart didst pour thy torrent,
And now thy brook runs dry again.
Methinks instead of throning in the forest,
'Twould better seem the noble lord
The poor young monkey to reward
For her true love, now at its sorest.
The hours drag wearily along
She at her window watches the clouds drift by»
Over the old town-wall, across the sky.
/ ivould I 'were a bird ! so runs her song.
All day long, half the night long.
Now merry, mostly sad, poor dove 1
FAUST.
Serpent ! serpent
MEPHISTOPHELES, aside,
FAUST.
Thou vilest reptile ! Get thee hence !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What wilt thou then ? She thinks thee flown,
forsooth.
And half and half thou art in truth.
FAUST.
Near her am I, and were i ne'er so far !
— !
Parti i6i
MEPKISTOPHELES.
Good ! Your scorn provokes my laughter.
The God that lads and lasses made,
Sanctioned thereby the noblest trade
Likewise to make occasion, after.
Away ! A piteous case ! Remember
Your path leads to vour sweetheart's chamber
And not belike to death '
GRETCHEN'S ROOM.
GRETCHEN at the sp'inmng-ivheei aionf.
My peace is fled,
My heart is sore ;
Is turned to gall.
Part I 163
My weary head
Is sore disti augnt,
And my poor wits
With frenzy fraught.
My peace is fled,
My heart is sore ;
My peace is fled.
My heart is sore ;
My bosom yearns
For him, for him.
Ah ! could I clasp him
And cling to him,
MARTHA'S GARDEN.
Margaret, Faust.
margaret.
Promise me, Heinrich !
FAUST.
What I can !
MARGARET.
Tell me, how with thy religion, pray
is't ?
FAUST.
Must we ?
MARGARET.
Ah ! I sway thee in any manner
could !
FAUST.
I honour them.
MARGARET.
Yet dost thou not hunger
To share therein. To mass, to shrift tiiou
goest no longer.
Dost thou believe in God ?
!
Part I 165
FAUST.
What man can say, my dearest,
/ believe in God ?
Ask priest or sage,
and what thou hearest
Prompted will seem by such a mood
As mocks the questioner.
MARGARET.
Then thou believest not ?
I believe Him ?
Who that hath feeling
His bosom steeling,
Can say / believe Him
: not ?
The All-embracing,
The All-sustaining,
Clasps and sustains He not
Thee, me. Himself?
Springs not the vault of Heaven above us ?
Lieth not Earth firm-stablished'neath our feet?
And with a cheerful twinkling
Climb not eternal stars the sky ?
Eye into eye gaze I not upon thee i
1 66 Goethe's Faust
Call it Bliss ! Heart! Love I God:
I have no name tor it
Feeling is all in all
Name is but sound and reek,
A mist round the glow of Heaven '.
MARGARET.
'Tis all very fine and good ! 'Ti^ even
Almost what the priest doth speak.
Only in somewhat different phrases.
FAUST.
Dear child !
MARGARET.
Long have I grieved to see
That thou dost keep such company.
FAUST.
How so ?
MARGARET.
That man thou hast with thee, thy mate,
Within my deepest, inmost soul I hate.
In all my life hath nothing
! !
Part I 167
So stabbed my heart or filled me with such
loathing
As that man's hateful countenance '
FAUST.
MARGARET.
His glance,
His very presence maketh my blood run chill.
To all men else I bear good-will.
I long to see thee, no maid longs sorer,
Yet that man thrills me with secret horror ;
FAUST.
MARGARET.
I would not wish
FAUST.
1 68 Goethe's Faust
MARGARET.
Itoverpowers me so
That whenever he conies lo us, i even
Fancy I love thee no longer, and oh
When he is there, I could not pray to Heaven
Thou too must feel it, for thy part
FAUST.
Nay, nay, 'tis but an antipathy I
MARGARET.
1 must go now.
FAUST.
Ah
cannot ever I
!
FAUST.
MARGARET.
What would I not do for thy dear sake i
Part I 169
FAUST.
My dearest
'Tis I advise it, and thou fearest?
MARGARET.
Dear one, thy face if I but look upon,
I know not what compels me to thy will
So much for thee already have I done,
That almost naught to do remaineth still !
MEPHISrOPHELES.
The monkey ! Is she gone ?
FAUST.
What, eavesdropping again ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I heard it, every letter on't
Sir Doctor was put through his catechism.
I hope he'll be the better on't
The lassies are fain to know, God bless 'em,
If a man be pious and plain in the good old way.
If he knuckles there, he'll follow us too, think
they.
FAUST.
To thee, thou Monster, 'tis not known
How this true, loving soul, that nurtures
One single faith supreme,
In which alone
For her salvation lies, doth suffer tortures.
That she the man she loves for ever lost must
deem.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Thou supersensual, sensual wooer !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And Physiognomy what wondrous skill she
in
shows !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
AT THE WELL.
\_Gretchen and Lisle th^ iv'ith jugs,
LISBETH.
GRETCHEN.
Nay, not a word ! I leave the house but rarely.
LISBETH.
Part I 171
LISBETH.
Pah!
Now when she eats and drinks, it's two she's
feeding.
GRETCHEN.
Ah!
LISBETH.
GRETCHEN.
Poor thing 1
LISBETH.
GRETCHEN.
Of course he'll take her to be his wife i
! !
72 Goethe's Faust
GRETCHEN.
But that's not fair :
LISBETH.
Ah, bow
Thy gracious brow,
Parti 173
Mother of Woes, to the woebegone !
Who knows
The throes
That rack mine every bone ?
Ah, bow
Tliy gracious brow.
Mother of Woes, to the woebegone I
! —
1 74 Goethe's Faust
NIGHT.
[_Street before Gretchen^s door.
Part I 175
If he's one, by the scrufF I'll catch him,
And dead upon the spot I'll stretch him
Faust, Mephistopheles.
FAUST.
How from the window of the chancel there
Upwards the never-dying lamp doth glimmer !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'm like a tom-cat sick with longing,
That on the fire-ladders slinks.
Close by the walls then softly shrinks.
Quite virtuous withal am I,
A touch of thievishness, a touch of lechery.
Already thrills my body thorough
The glorious Walpurgis-night
We keep it on the morrow's morrow,
And well the vigil 'twill requite.
FAUST.
And will the treasure rise into the air
Meanwhile, which I see glimmering there ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Full shortly shalt thou have the pleasure
To lift the pot that holds the treasure.
The other day I took a squint ;
FAUST.
What ! not a trinket, not a ring.
Wherewith to deck mine own dear leman ?
!
FAUST.
'Tis well ! it hurts me, if my sweet
Without a present I must greet.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
It should not be a sore annoyance
To get for naught a little joyance.
Mark to ! a masterpiece I'll tune my tongue,
The while the stars Heaven's vault bespangle :
Heed ye aright !
Is't ended quite ?
Nny, then, good-night
Poor things, he ivdl not linger ,'
Part I 177
VALENTINE, comtng forivard.
Whom wilt thou lure ? God's element
Damned rat-catcher ! I'll stay thy laughur !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The cithern is in twain ! Its fate is past al
hazard !
VALENTINE.
And now to split in twain thy mazzard !
MEPHISTOPHELES, tO FuUSt.
VALENTINE.
Then parry that
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And why not, pray ?
VALENTINE.
That too 1
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye, aye !
VALENTINE.
The Devil's in the fray !
MEPHISTOPHELES, to FauSt,
Thrust home !
! ! ! !
78 Goethe's Faust
VALENTINE yä//f
Ah, God
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now is the lubber tame '
A light ! a light
MARTHA, as above.
They bawl and brawl, they shriek and fight
CROWD.
'
There's one lies here in parlous case !
CROWD.
Thy mother's son
GRETCHEN.
Almighty God ! what sore distress !
!
Part I 179
VALENTINE.
I'm dying that is quickly said,
!
GRETCHEN.
My brother ! God ! to me you spoke ?
VALENTINE.
VALENTINE.
Could I but come
thy withered skin,
at
Thou shameful go-between,
sinful,
For all the sins my soul that burden,
I'd trust to find abundant pardon !
GRETCHEN.
My brother ! Oh, what agony !
VALENTINE.
I tell thee, let thy weeping be !
Parti i8i
MINSTER.
[_Service, Organ, and Choir.
EVIL SPIRIT.
Gretchen !
GRETCHEN.
Woe ! woe
Would I could free me of the thoughts
That to and fro within my bosom throng
Despite me
CHOIR.
02 Goethe's Faust
EVIL SPIRIT.
GRETCHEN.
Would I were forth !
GRETCHEN.
I cannot breathe !
Air ? Light I
Woe's thee !
!
Parti 183
Woe!
CHOIR.
GRETCHEN.
Neighbour ! Your smelling-salts !
WALPURGIS-NIGHT.
( Mayday-eve. )
Faust, Mephistopheles.
mephistopheles.
Wouldst not be fain a broomstick to bestraddle ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Marry, no trace of such
I feel !
yonder
A will-o'-the-wisp ; I'll bidhim to our aid.
Ho, there ! my friend, a word ! Come hither
with thee
Why wilt thou flare for naught, I prithee ?
WILL-o'-THE-WISP.
By reverence my nature may be steadied
I hope, yet is it but light-headed.
Our course is wont to go but zigzag still.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Dost think to ape mankind, thou giddy flame
See thou go straight, a' devil's name,
Else will I blow thy flickering candle out.
m Parti 185
WILL-O -THE-WISP.
Nay, you're the master o' the house, I doubt.
Gladly I'll make your will my pleasure.
Bethink you, though, the mount is magic-mad
to-day.
And if a will-o'-the-wisp must lead you on your
way.
You must not use too nice a measure.
1 86 Goethe's Faust
Is't the salamander brushes
Fat-paunch, long-legs, through the bushel
And the roots like serpents ivr'tthe and
Wriggle forth from sand and rfted
Rock, and ivave long ßngers lithe and
Weird to scare and snare, and gfted
With a monstrous life malicious.
Knots and gnarls like devil-ßshes
Stretch out tentacles to take us;
And the mice troop on together
Myriad-hued through moss and heather
And the ßreßies in a ha%y
Sivarm about us iveave their ma%y
Morrice till our 'wits forsake us.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Come now ! grasp my mantle cheerly !
Parti 187
Here to a slender thread it tapers,
Here gushes forth, a living stream.
Here for a space it weaves a tangle
Of myriad veins through all the dell
And there within the crowded angle
They all unite with sudden spell.
There sputter sparks, as from a fountain
That sprinkles golden sand, and lo !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Lord Mammon for this feast his palace
With lavish splendour lights. Dost mark ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Clasp thou the cliff's old ribs ! Cling to the
boulders !
I 88 Goethe's Faust
And all crash down in a hideous tangle
One on another, and choke and strangle
With their wrack the wild abysses,
And through them howls and hisses
The storm-wind. Hear'st thou voices o'er us
Far and near that sing in chorus ?
All the magic-mount along
Wildly streams the wizard-song.
WITCHES IN CHORUS.
The ivltches to the Brocken sail.
VOICE.
Parti 189
CHORUS OF WITCHES.
The road is ivide, the road is long.
Was ever such a Bedlam throng ?
The broom doth scratch, the fork doth poke.
The dam doth burst, the brat doth choke.
SEMI-CHORUS OF WARLOCKS.
Like the house-bound snail tue craivl.
Far ahead are the ivomen all.
When to the Devil's house tue speed.
By a thousand steps the tvomen lead.
VOICE above.
VOICE beloiv.
Take me with you ! Take me up !
BOTH CHORUSES.
The broomstick bears and bears the stocky
The stovefork bears and bears the buck.
He luho cannot rise to-day
Is lost for ever and lost for aye.
HALF-WITCH below.
So long I hobble on behind,
The others pass me like the wind.
At home I know nor peace nor rest,
Nor find them in this weary quest.
CHORUS OF WITCHES.
The salve puts heart in every hag,
For sail she hoists a fluttering rag,
A trough is a boat all trim and tight.^
MEPHISTOPHELES.
They thrust and throng, they rush and clatter,
They whirl and whistle, stream and chatter,
They glitter, sputter, stink and burn,
The very air to hags doth turn !
FAUST.
Thou Spirit of Contradiction ! Nay then, be my
pilot.
And yet how shrewd, to the Brocken thus to
fare
! !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
See yon gay flames that light the heather.
A merry club is got together ;
FAUST.
Up yonder though I'd rather be !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye, and what riddles will be knit !
Part I 193
They dance, they chat, they cook, they drink,
they love.
Tell me now, where is aught above
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Marry, it is my way
To go incognito, but on a gala-dav
One may display one's orders. True
No Garter graces me, but here the horse-hoof too
Is honourable wear. See where yon snail comes
creeping.
She with her groping face hath nosed
Some inkling of my secret out. Its keeping
Were hopeless here, e'en were I so disposed.
Come now, of all the fires we'll make the tour.
I am the wooer's man —
thou art the wooer.
\_To divers ivho are sitting about fa ding embers.
Old gentlemen, what do ye here aloof?
There, where the throng is thickest, there had I
rather found you,
There, where the rush and crush of youth sur-
round you.
At home is every man alone enough.
GENERAL.
What man can set his trust in nations
No matter what his services, forsooth !
AUTHOR.
A work that has a single grain of sense
They simply will not read, and naught '11 make
'em.
And the young folk, confound their impudence!
They've never been so malapert, plague take 'em!
Part I 195
Wrought on the world and on mankind
No dagger but liath dripped with blood ; no
chalice
But from its Judas-lips into the healthy frame
The guilty tool of treacherous malice
Hath poured the poison's slow-consuming flame ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Nay, thou dost read the times but badly, Gammer
For done is past, and past is done 1
MEPHISTOPHELES.
All the eddy
Sways and swirls, still upwards moving.
Thyself art shoved that thinkest thou art shoving.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Look at her narrowly !
'Tis Lilith
FAUST.
Who ?
96 Goethe's Faust
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Adam's first wife is she.
Have thou a care before her beauteous tresses.
The sole adornment she doth deign to wear !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye, seldom
The rout to-day hath need of rest.
A new dance is afoot — we'll trip it with the best.
PROKTOPHANTASMIST.
What take ye on yourselves, you cursed train ?
FAUST, dancing.
Why, bless your heart, he's everywhere I
PROKTOPHANTASMIST.
Are you still there ? Well, well ! Was ever
such a thing ?
PROKTOPHANTASMIST.
I tell you spirits to your face,
Of spirit-tyranny I'll have no trace.
My spirit cannot exercise it.
PROKTOPHANTASMIST.
Alas ! to-day 'tis useless, now I know it.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
To seek relief, as usual in a puddle
He'll seat himself, and when the leeches feast
Upon his rump, from all his brains that muddle,
From phantoms and from fancy he's released.
[To Faust y ivho has left the dance.
Why hast tliou let the beauteous maiden from
thee.
That while ye danced so sweetly sang ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A mighty matter Thou'rt too squeamish
! !
Nay,
Thank thy good stars it was not grey !
;
Part I 199
When love is kind, who with such toys would
quarrel ?
FAUST.
Then saw I
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
No more o' that ! It worketh naught but scathe.
'Tis glamour —show ! 'Tis lifeless ! 'Tis a
wraith !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
'Tis sorcery, thou lightly-cozened fool !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye, 'tis there !
SERVIBILIS.
We're
A brand-new piece—
just about to begin't.
'tis the last piece of seven.
That is the custom here, so many and so few.
A dilettante wrote it. Even
The players are dilettanti too.
Excusemy vanishing. I too am a dilettante.
And my pet branch of art is pulling up the
curtain.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What, even the Blocksberg summits haunt ye ?
Nay, that is well There ye belong, that's
!
certain !
Part I 20 1
WALPURGIS-NIGHT'S DREAM,
OR
OBERON AND TITANIa's GOLDEN WEDDING.
Intermexzo
STAGE MANAGER
We may take a rest to-day,
Ye sturdy sons of Mieding.
Misty vale and mountain grey
Are all the scene we're needing.
HERALD.
Golden the wedding after years
Of wedlock fifty holden,
But that which ends the strife appears
To me the better golden.
OBERON.
Are ye spirits hovering nigh.
Then come when ye are cited.
King and Queen with loving tie
Are once again united.
PUCK.
Up comes Puck and twirls amain
And slides his foot in measure.
Hundreds follow in his train
To share with him the pleasure.
ARIEL.
Ariel doth move the song
And heavenly sweet his lute is.
TITANIA.
A LITTLE COUPLE.
Mincing step and lofty leap
Through honey-dew and fragrance.
Marry, daintily ye trip.
Yet soar ye not, sweet vagrants .'
!
Part I 203
INQUISITIVE TRAVELLER.
not Lenten-mummery ?
Is this
Refuse mine eyes their duty ?
Or Oberon do I really see.
The god in all his beauty ?
ORTHODOX.
Nay now, he hath no claws, and eke
He hath no tail, but cavil
The case admits not, like the Greek
Gods he too is a devil.
NORTHERN ARTIST.
Sketchy in these northern climes
I feel my grasp of art is.
YOUNG WITCH.
Powder is like the petticoat
For an old and grizzled goody.
So I sit naked on my goat
And show a lusty body.
HENNINGS.
In a thronging swarm they flit
MUSAGETES.
To mingle with this witches' rout
My fancy gladly chooses,
For these I could mislead no doubt
More easily than the Muses !
'
Part I 205
Ci-devant genius of the times.
Come, my robe with proper folk.
seize ;
BALLET-MASTER.
How each one lifts a leg i' the dance,
This peasant-like, that duke-like.
The buxom hop, the crooked prance,
Nor care they what they look like.
2o6 Goethe's Faust
REALIST.
That which is, is torture, and
Me on the rack 'tis putting !
SUPERNATURALIST.
Gladly I join this jovial crew
And share with joy their revels,
For that there are good spirits too
I argue from the devils.
Parti 207
CONDUCTOR.
Croaking frog and cricket shrill,
Plague on ye, dilettanti !
SKILFUL TRIMMERS.
THE HELPLESS.
At court we licked the platter clean,
r the dance we had a rare foot.
We've danced our shoes through to the skin,
—
God help us we go barefoot
WILL-o'-THE-WISPS.
From the bog we come, whence we
First rose as ragged callants,
And yet in rows we're here to see
A train of brilliant gallants.
SHOOTING-STAR.
Hither from the zenith I
Did glance, a gleaming meteor.
All of a heap i' the grass I lie, —
Who'll help me to my feet here ?
HEAVY-WEIGHTS.
Room and room and room all round
Down the grasses trample !
Spirits
With massy
come —limbs shake
yet the ground
and ample.
2o8 Goethe's Faust
ORCHESTRA, pianissimo.
Misty veil and cloud-ivreath flush
By daivn illuminated.
Breeze in leaf and ivind in rush
And all is dissipated ,'
A GLOOMY DAY.
Open Country.
Faust, Mephistopheles.
In misery Despairing
! Long a piteous !
Part I 209
loathsome presence i A captive ! In irretriev-
able misery ! Abandoned to
and to the evil spirits
pitiless justiceof mortals And me thou lullest !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
She is not the first
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now we are again already at our wits' end,
where you mortals lightly slip over into madness.
Why dost thou seeic community with us if thou
canst not carry it through ? Wilt thou fly, and
! !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Hast thou done ?
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Dost clutch at the thunderbolt ? Well that
itwas not given to you pitiful mortals ! To
smash to pieces the innocent that crosses his
path, that is your true tyrant's way of giving his
fury a vent in perplexities.
FAUST.
Bring me to her ! She shall be free !
Part I 2 11
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And the risk that thou wilt run ? Know that
still there lieth blood-guilt upon the town from
thine hand. Over the place of the slain hover
avenging spirits, lying in wait for the returning
murderer.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I will lead and what I can do, hear
thee,
thou Have I all power in Heaven and on
!
FAUST.
Up and away 1
NIGHT.
Open country,
FAUST.
What do they weave round the raven-stone ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I know not what they are brewing and doing.
;
2 I 2 Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A witclies' guild.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Away ! Away 1
DUNGEON.
FAUST lu'tth a bunch of keys and a lamp, before an
iron ivicket.
FAUST, softly.
FAUST.
FAUST.
Shall I ever outlive this woe ?
MARGARET.
I am thine ; now do what thou needs must do
But let me first give suck to the child !
Satan,
With din appalling,
Doth rage and threaten !
Gretchen ! Gretchen !
— !
Part I 215
MARGARET, llsten'mg attentively.
'Tis I 1
MARGARET.
'Tis thou ! O, say it yet again !
I am free !
MARGARET.
O tarry !
FAUST.
Hurry !
MARGARET.
What, and canst thou kiss no more ?
FAUST.
Come ! Follow me ! Dear heart, but now be
bold!
And I will fondle thee with passion thousand-
fold ;
FAUST.
Tis I ! Come with me !
— — !
Part I 217
MARGARET.
Wilt thou loose my chain ?
think !
FAUST.
Come ! come ! deep night doth swiftly wane-
MARGARET.
My mother have I foully slain,
My babe I've drowned deep.
'Twas given thee and me to keep.
Thee too 'Tis thou, though false it seem
! I
wet !
MARGARET.
Nay, thou must live ! There's work for thee !
21 Goethe's Faust
Me a little space aside,
But not too wide.
And my one lay on my right breast,
little
None but my
babe by me will rest !
—
Close into thy side to nestle.
That was a sweet, a gladsome bliss
But now I know not what is amiss !
FAUST.
O come, if such thou hold me in thy mind.
MARGARET.
Out yonder ?
FAUST.
MARGARET.
Is the grave there?
Lies Death in wait ? Then come !
Part I 219
It is so wretched to beg one's bread,
With an evil conscience, ill-bestead.
It is so wretched to roam forsaken
And do what I will, T shall still be taken !
FAUST.
MARGARET.
O haste ! O haste !
Save it ! Save it
MARGARET.
Ah would we were only past the hill
! !
There my
mother on yonder stone
sitteth
And wags her head before me.
She winks not, she blinks not, so heavy her
head.
She'll waken no more, her sleep is of lead.
! !
2 20 Goethe's Faust
She slept, that our love might have leisure.
O ! days of bliss beyond measure !
FAUST.
Here boots it not to ])ray and reason,
I'll bear thee forth with loving treason.
MARGARET.
Hands off! Nay, I'll not brook, violence !
FAUST.
MARGARET.
Day ! Aye, it grows to day ! The last day
struggles in ;
Part I 22 1
FAüST,
MARGARET.
What risesyonder from out the eartft :
Him ! him send him forth
! !
Me ! he seek s me !
FAUST.
MARGARET.
Judgment of God ! Myself to thee I give !
MEPHISTOPHELES, tO FiJUSt.
MARGARET.
Thine am Father Save me I, ! !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
She is condemned
222 Goethe's Faust
VOICE Jrom above.
She is redeemed !
MEPHISTüPHELES, tO FtWSt,
Hither to me I
Heinrich ! Heinrich S
NOTES TO PART 1
Page 27.
The ivori of Nostradamus^ hand.
Page 28.
N01V, noiv I knoiv ivhat 'tis the sa^c hath spoktn.
the sky, and earth, and watery plains, and the moon's
bright sphere, and Titan's star, a Spirit feeds within;
and a mind, instilled throughout the limbs, gives
energy to the whole mass and mingles with the
mighty body. Thence springs the race of men and
beasts, and the lines of viringed fow^l, and the monsters
Ocean bears beneath his marble floor " (Lonsdale
and Lee's Translation). The Spirit here portrayed
has many features in common with Goethe's Earth-
Spirit. The Earth-Spirit as conceived by Goethe is
a personification of the active, vital forces of nature,
the principle of change and growth Avithin the
universe. As such he is the giver of all gifts toman,
both good and evil (see page 156, Woodland and Cave,
and page 210). Goethe's first conception of the Faust
assigned to the Earth-Spirit a much more important
part than that which he plays in the completed
Faust. As is seen from the passages to which refer-
ence has just been made, Mephistopheles was origin-
ally regarded as an envoy of the Earth-Spirit, not of
the Lord as in the final version, nor of the Prince of
the Devils as in the Faust-book.
Page 31.
And I iveav! God's Having garment there.
Gad's living garmentis visible nature, in which God
clothes Himself for our perception.
—
Page 31. Famulus. The Famulus was a student
who dwelt in the professor's house and performed
menial duties, in return for w^hich he enjoyed free
instruction and the privilege of intercourse with the
great man, as here Wagner.
Page 51.
When for thi plague a bound he set.
Page 52.
A little more, and every knee ivould bend^
As came the Holy Housel by.
The consecrated wafer of the Eucharist in the
Roman Catholic Church, enclosed in a transparent
receptacle, the monstrance, is borne abroad in pro-
cessions, e.g. on Corpus Christi Day, or for the
administration of tlie viaticum to the dying. Inas-
much as according to the doctrine of transubstan-
tiation Jesus Christ is " truly present whole and
entire, both God and man, under the appearance of
bread," it logically follows that true believers are
expected to prostrate themselves reverently as the
Holy Host is borne past them
—
Page 52. The Black Kitchen. By the Black Kitchen
is meant the laboratory of the alchemists, so called
rather in allusion to the Black Art than from the
thought of its being begrimed with smoke.
Page 52.
There a Red Lion ivith the Lily -wedded, etc.
Page 60.
'Tis -written : In the beginning ivas the Word.
The Greek word logos, translated in the Authorized
Version (John i. i) by "Word," is indeed suscept-
ible of more than one interpretation, but scarcely of
those which Faust successively puts upon it. It is
FAUST.
The pentagram /
The pentagram or pentalpha is a well-known and
widely-spread magic-symbol, which has the form of
a five-pointed star, and may be drawn by producing
the five sides of a regular pentagon to the points
of intersection, thus:
The figure has the peculiarity
that it may be drawn from be-
ginning to end without re-
moving the pencil from the
paper, beginning at one angle
and returning thither. The
pentagram shares \vith the
horse-shoe the virtue of pro-
tecting a house from the in-
trusion of evil spirits. It is apparently an innovation
of the poet to attribute this virtue to the perfectly-
formed angles and withhold it from those not com-
pletely closed. In German the pentagram is also
called the Druden foot, which, following previous trans-
lators, I have rendered by the not altogether satis-
factory ivizara's foot. In German mythology the
Druden were the clouds personified as beneficent winged
maidens with swans' feet. After the advent of
Christianity they shared the fate of the heathen
deities in general and were degraded into demons or
witches. The pentagram was called the Druden foot
30 Goethe's Faust
because of a fancied resemblance to the footprint of a
bird, in allusion to theswan feet of the Druden.
Page 71.
The lord of rats and bats and mice,
Offrogs and ßies and bugs and lice.
Page 75.
Cease toying ivith thy melancholy^
That like a "vulture eats into thine heart.
Page 77.
Shoiv me the fruit that ere 'tis plucked doth rot.
And trees that deck them -with netv verdure daily f
The fruit that ere 'tis plucked duth rot is the prize
coveted at first, but which loses for us its charm
even before we attain it the trees that deck them ivith
;
32 Goethe's Faust
nearer to fruition. The first are Dead-Sea fruit, the
second are the fruits of Tantalus.
Page 78
When to the moment ßcet'ing past me^
Tarry ! I cry, so fair thou art !
Then intojetters mayst thou cast me.
Then let come doom, -with all my heart /
These lines contain the essence of the wager be-
tween Faust and Mephistopheles. If the demon can
for one instant still his aspirations, can make him
wallow content in a sensual sty, then the bond shall
fall due. The words take us back to the words of
the Lord in the Prologue in Heaven, Whilst still man
must he stray.
strives, still They also point Us on to
the speech of Faust in the second part, on the
strentjth of which, somewhat prematurely, Mephis-
topheles ventures to foreclose the mortgage. Busied
with a scheme of unselfish activity, with the draining
of a pestilential marsh and its conversion into a
happy and healthful dwelling-place for men, and
carried away by hopeful anticipations of the realiza-
tion of his scheme, Faust cries out :
Pag.- 86.
In Spanish hoots br tightly laced.
Page 92.
A little inßammable air, lohich I'll make ready,
From eartli ivill luaft us, sure and speedy.
The
Devil has, in place of one foot, a horse's hoof
(see page 117 and page 197).
Page 99.
'Tivas douLtless late from Rippach "when you started.
Rippach was the last posting-station between
Weissenfels and Leipsic. Hans von Rippach was
used in Leipsic to signify a country bumpkin Squire —
Hodge, as we might say.
Page 103.
l^oiv straight-way
A gimlet here !
This and the following conjuring-trick both appear
in one of the Faust-books (see Introduction, p. xli.),
but in different connections, and there not Mephisto-
pheles but Faust plays the tricks.
—
Page 109. Witch's Kitchen. Here we take leave
of the old Faust-Legend, and shall not find it again in
this first part of Goethe's Faust.
Page III.
. . . I could build
As soon a thousand bridges, I've a notion.
Page 144.
Sancta S impliciias /
Page 156.
Spirit sublime, didst freely give me all.
All that I prayedfir.
The " Spirit sublime " is the Earth-Spirit (see
note to page 28).
Page 161.
/ envy, ivhen her lips upon it are.
The very Body of the Lord that favour.
Page 175.
And ivlll the treasure rise into the air
JVLeanivhile, ivhich I see glimmering there ?
Treasures buried in the earth rise every year a little
nearer the surface. Over the place where they lie a
littleflame flickers. In the first Faust-book the Devil
bids Faust dig for treasure in an old ruined chapel.
Faust does so, and finds a " loathly great worm lying
on the treasure, and the treasure seemed as it were a
light kindled."
Page 176.
/'// treat her to a moral song.
Mephistopheles' moral song is founded upon
Ophelia's song in Hamlet, Act IV., Scene 5.
Page 177.
Damned rat-i,atcher.
The allusion is to the Rat-catcher of Hamelin,
Browning's Pied Piper, whose music lured first the
rats and then the children to follow after him.
Page 177.
My hand groivs sudden lame.
Valentine's hand is not wounded, but paralysed by
Mephistopheles' magic.
Page 181.
Is^tfor thy mother^s soul thou prayest, that
Through thee to long, long torment fell asleep ?
Gretchen's mother, like Hamlet's father, was "cut
off even in the blossoms of her sin, unhousel'd, dis-
appointed, unanel'd," and must therefore sojourn long
in Purgatory. Similarly Hamlet stays his hand when
he takes his uncle at prayer, lest he should send him
straight to Heaven.
Page i8i.
Dies irae, dies ilia
Solvet saeclum infanjilla
238 Goethe's Faust
Day of wrath, that dread day
Shall melt the world into ashes.
The chant of the choir is the well-known Latin
hymn of Thomas of Celano, which goes back to the
thirteenth century. It was freely translated by Sir
Walter Scott in the Lay of the Last Minstrel, Canto VI
Judex ergo cum sedehit,
Quidquid latet adparebtt,
Nil inultum remanebit.
When then the Judge shall take His seat,
Whatever is hidden shall come to light,
Naught shall remain unavenged.
Quid sum miser tunc dicturus ?
Quern patronum rogaturus ?
Cum -uix Justus sit securus.
Wretched me what shall I then say
! ?
Upon what saint shall I call,
When scarce the just shall be free from dread ?
Page 183. Walpurgis- Night. —
Saint Walpurga,
whose undeserved fate it was to give her name to the
orgy of witches and devils on the Brocken, was an
English nun who died (in 779) as abbess of a Bene-
dictine convent in Bavaria. The day dedicated to her
in the Christian Calendar, the first of May, with its
promise of returning summer, was already associated
with various heathen celebrations, from which, under
the hostile influence of Christianity, the tradition of
an annual Witches' Sabbath on that day took form.
The Brocken or Blocksberg, the highest point of the
Harz Mountains, was regarded as the seat of such a
gathering at least as far back as the fifteenth century.
The leading characteristic of the gathering was the
grossest sensuality, which Goethe has certainly not
painted with too great reticence.
As in the Witch's Kitchen, Goethe has often given
an allegorical turn to the fantastic scenes of the
Witches' Revel, or made it a vehicle of satire upon
contemporary men and movements. Thus it is very
probable that the climbing of the Brocken is an
allegory of the " struggle for life," the effort to get
one's head above water at the cost of one's neighbours.
It is a picture of the tumult ot worldly aims, a kind
of Vanity Fair.
Notes to Part I 239
Page 183. Schierke and Elend. —
These are two
Tillages on the south slope of the Brocken.
Page 185. Faust, Mfphistophdes and Will-J -the-tjoisp
In alternate song. —
Düntzer assigns verses I and 4 to
Mephistopheles, verse 2 to Will-o'-the-wisp, verses
3 and 5 to Faust.
Page 186.
In the mount hoiv Mammon glo-ws.
Mammon put for the gold, which is seen un-
is
Page 189.
IVe ivash and are ivhite as ivhite can be,
7~et barren, ever barren are ive.
Page 195.
^Tis Lil'ith.
'
The
legend of Lilith arose from the discrepancy
in the two accounts of the creation of w^oman in Gen.
I
Page 197.
We're mighty "wise, but Tegel still is haunted.
Page 19°.
From pkantomi andfrom fancy he s released.
The poet puns again on the same word lit. He's —
cured of ghosts and of wit^
—
Page 200. The Prater. The Prater is a well-known
park in Vienna.
—
Page 200. Ser-uibilis. The word seems to be of
Goethe's own coinage, used of the stage-manager or
scene-shifter.
Page 201. Walpurgis-Night's Dream. The title, and —
in some sense the subject, is suggested by Shak-
•
Page 2c6.
SCEPTIC.
They think them near the treasure, ivhen
They track the ßamelrt fitting.
The sceptic sarcastically applies to the super-
naturalist, who concludes from too slender evidence to
the existence of spirits, the superstition concerning
hidden treasure (see note to page 175).
Page 207. Skilful Trimmers, et seq. The remain- —
ing epigrams deal with political and social matters.
The Skilful Trimmers are those who, when the
world is turned topsy-turvy (by the Revolution),
themselves turn with it to maintain their places.
They are the " Vicars of Bray." The helpless ones
are those that lack the wit to do this. The Will-o'-the-
wisps are the parvenus, the Shooting-stars the fallen
great ones. The Heavy-weights are the advocates of
violent measures, the "root-and-branch" politicians.
Page 208.
And all is dissipated.
Page 220.
The ivand is snapped.
ACT I
A PLEASANT LANDSCAPE
[^Faust bedded onßoivery turf, weary,
restless, seeking sleep.
Twilight.
^Spirit-ring in hovering motion.
Graceful, tiny forms.
ARIEL.
I 2 Goethe's Faust
—
Four watches night hath ere her fading
—
Pause not let each with kindly deeds be rife.
And first, lay ye his head on the cool pillow,
Bathe him in dew from Lethe's waters drawn.
Soon will the cramp-racked limbs be lithe as
willow.
If new-refreshed he sleep to meet the dawn.
Fulfil the fairest elfin-rite,
Give him again to the holy light.
( Serenade. )
{Notturno. )
Part II I
3
[Mattutino.)
Now the hours are spent and over,
Weal and woe are swept away.
Dream of health Thou wilt recover
1 !
(Revet/. )
ARIEL.
Hark ! The Hours in storm are winging,
And, to spirit ears loud-ringing,
Now the new-born day is springing.
Rocky portals clang asunder,
Phoebus' wheels roll forth in thunder,
What a tumult brings the light
Loud the trump of dawn hath sounded,
Eye is dazzled, ear astounded.
The Unheard no ear may smite.
Slip ye to your silent palace,
Deep within the flow'ret's chalice.
In the cliffs and 'neath the leaf!
14 Goethe's Faust
heightens,
Where bloom and blade with quivering pearls
are cumbered.
A very Paradise about me lightens
Part II 15
He sallies forth, and I mine overpowered
And aching eyes to turn away am driven.
1 Goethe's Faust
IMPERIAL PALACE
The Throne-Room
Privy Council, aivaiting the Emperor.
Flourish of trumpets.
emperor.
Greeting, my Trusty, Well-beloved,
Gathered from near and far ! Now marry.
The Wise Man at my side doth tarry,
But whither is the Fool removed ?
SQUIRE.
SECOND SQUIRE.
And in his place another straightway .
MEPHISTOPHELES,
\_kneeHng at the throne.
What is welcome ever
accursed, yet i"
Part II 17
What is aye taken into favour ?
What chidden and condemned for aye ?
MEPHISTOPHELES
Part II 2 1
EMPEROR,
\_after some reßection, to Mephistophdes.
Say, Fool, canst not thou too some ill record ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Marry, not I ! To look upon this splendour
What could such sight but confidence engender,
Where Majesty bears undisputed sway,
Where ready might sweeps hostile arms away.
And where Good-will, by Reason nerved, doth
stand
With manifold activity at hand ?
CONFUSED MURMURS.
That is a rogue — That knows his cue
And lies himself — Well into view
: — : —
22 Goethe's Faust
Full well I know —What lurks behind
What pray ? — He'll moot some Scheme,
you'll find
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Where doth not something lack, on this wide
earth ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Thereby the learned Sir I recognise !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'll get you all you wish and more. 'Tis true
The
It lies
task is light
already there
——yet light is heavy too.
but how to reach it ?
24 Goethe's Faust
LORD HIGH TREASURER.
The Fool hath wit
Such is indeed the ancient Emperor's right.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
CONFUSED MURMURS.
Two —They're hand and
rogues they are
glove
and Fool — They move
Fantastico
Beside Throne — The song
the is stale
The Fool doth prompt — The Wise Man's
tale
ASTROLOGER
\jpeahs, Mephhtopheles prompts.
Part II 25
Dame Venus hath bewitched you all, for she
Morning and eve looks on you lovingly
Chaste Luna hath her Junes most whimsical ;
CONFUSED MURMURS.
Some trick I smoke — A threshed-out joke-
Calendary, Alchymistry
Time and again — —hoped
I've in vain
And should he come 'Twill prove a hum-
MEPHISTOPHELES.
They stand about and gape in wonder,
Trust not the treasure-trove I've found ;
But some of magic mandrakes maunder.
Some maunder of the Sivarthy Hound.
What though the one sets all the prickles
Of his keen wit on end, and one
Cries sorcery, his sole still haply tickles,
Stumbles his foot where is no stone.
; — ——
!
26 Goethe's Faust
All feel the secret operation
Of Nature's never-failing sway,
And from Earth's nethermost foundation
A living worms up its way.
trail
CONFUSED MURMURS
My feet are turned to lead throughout
I've cramp i' the arm — but that is gout
How my great toe doth twitch and tweak-
And all my back is but one ache
By all these tokens lies around
The very richest treasure-ground.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'd find my way there unassisted, marry !
—
Yet to proclaim I cannot weary
What ownerless lies waiting everywhere.
The hind through earth that drives the share
Turns with the clod a crock of gold up.
From the clay wall he seeks saltpetre, and
All fearful glad, he findeth rolled up
Gold upon gold, within his needy hand.
—
! ;
Part H 27
What vaults to burst ! Into what courses,
What rifts and shafts, what hidden sources
His way the treasure-seeker forces,
The confines of the nether-world !
EMPEROR.
Them leave I thee ! If aught hath worth,
beshrew me
It must unto the light What boots the gloomy ?
!
28 Goethe's Faust
Then mayst adorn with joy ecstatic
Thyself, thy love, shun no extravagance ;
Jewels that flash with myriad hues prismatic
Beauty and Majesty alike enhance.
EMPEROR.
Forthwith ! Forthwith ! Come, put rae off no
longer
MEPHISTOPHELES.
How Fortune linked is with Merit
To their fools' wits doth ne'er occur.
Had thev the Philosopher's Stone, I swear it,
Part II 29
Spacious Hall,
[jufith sidt-chambers, adorned and ar-
ranged Jor the Masquerade.
FLOWER GIRLS.
FLOWER-GIRLS.
Buy, come buy, where joy is regnant.
But no chaffering, we crave !
!
Part II 31
Pithy words with meaning pregnant,
Teach to each what he may have.
^
OLIVE-BRANCH LADEN WITH FRUIT.
I notenvy any blossom,
Open not to strife my bosom,
Strife is to my nature strange.
Am I not of lands the marrow.
Amulet "gainst spear and arrow.
Badge ot Peace where'er you range?
And this day I hope discreetly
Some fair head to garland meetly.
FANCY WREATH.
Bright-hued blossoms like to mallows,
Wrought from moss, a magic-bloom !
FANCY NOSEGAY.
32 Goethe's Faust
CHALLENGE.
ROSEBUDS.
seek a shy retreat.
Blest who finds us fresh and sweet
When her banner Summer raises,
Rosebud into blossom blazes.
What a bliss each heart surcharges !
Part II 33
Proffer faces brown and swarthy,
Berries, cherries, plums and peaches.
Buy, for tongue, for palate teaches
Eyes are judges all unworthy.
GIRL-PLAYMATES
\_young and fair, jfAti her. A confiden-
tial chatter is heard.
WOODCUTTERS
\jnter boisterously and uncouthly.
Room ! Make a clearing !
Crashing it tumbles.
And jolts and rumbles
The load we're bearing.
—
;
Part II 35
Due honour grudge not,
But pray divine, folk,
Did rough folk, drudge not
All round about them.
How would the fine folk
Make shift without them,
For all their fretting *
PULCINF.LLI.
36 Goethe's Faust
PARASITES.
( Faivningly lickerish )
Of 3'ou, stout bearers.
And your toil's sharers.
The charcoal-burners.
We are not spurners.
For all our bowing,
Assenting faces,
And fulsome phrases,
Our double-blowing
That warms or chilleth
As one man feeleth,
What could it profit ?
Your dainty-picker
The platter-licker.
Scents roast, is able
At fish to guess too.
It whets his zest to
His patron's table.
TOPER, maudlin.
Part II 37
So my clay I sprinkle, sprinkle !
38 Goethe's Fausi
THE HERALD
_announces divers poets. Poets of
Nature, Courtly and Knightly
Minstrels, Sentimentalists and En-
thusiasts. In the throng of rivals
of all sorts, no one alloivs another
to come to speech. One slinks past
ivith a few ivords.
SATIRICAL POET.
The Graces.
Part II 39
HEGtMONE.
Take with grace if ye be taking.
Charming is to get what's lacking.
EUPHROSYNE.
The Fates.
ATROPOS.
LACHESIS.
HERALD.
They that come next, ye would not recognise
them.
And were ye ne'er so versed in ancient writers.
— —
Part II 41
To look on them, that are the fierce inciters
Of mischief fell, as welcome guests ye'd prize
them.
The Furies.
ALECTO.
What boots it ? For to trust us ye'll ne'er
stickle.
We're coaxing pussies, pretty, young and tricksy.
Hath one of ye a darling kicksy-wicksy.
His ears we will so softly scratch and tickle,
42 Goethe's Faust
Of her to such an one heith lightly spoken,
And though they make it up, the wound will
fester.
MEGAERA.
That is but jest ! Are
they once wed, the sequel
I take hand, and no one could be fitter
in
The fairest bliss with humours to embitter.
Unequal are man's moods, the hours unequal,
TISIPHONE.
44 Goethe's Faust
HOPE.
Fairest greeting, each dear sister !
PRUDENCE.
Two of man's worst foes enchained.
Fear and Hope, in bonds unshivered,
From the Commonwealth restrained
Bring I ! Room ! Ye are delivered
Part II 45
Glance and glory round her hover,
Radiant afar she fideth.
Victory, that goddess over
All activities presideth.
ZOILO-THERSITES.
46 Goethe's Faust
CONFUSED MURMURS.
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
Halt!
Fold, ye steeds, your pinions idle,
Quick to own the wonted bridle.
Quell, as I quell, this your fiery
Mettle, rush when I inspire ye
Onward. Here due honour showing
Pause ye. Mark in numbers growing,
Ring on ring, admirers round us.
Herald, up Thine to expound us,
!
HERALD.
Nay, thy name I cannot gather.
Haply could describe thee rather.
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
Try it, then !
HERALD.
One must avow
Firstly, young and fair art thou.
A half- grown stripling — yet the women's
pleasure
Would be to see thee grown to fullest measure.
To me thou dost appear a future wooer,
Frail woman's born and sworn undoer.
48 Goethe's Faust
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
Naj', that's worth hearing ! On with thee !
dusk in
A gleaming jewelled diadem !
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
Yet must thou cease not to survey him.
Right narrowly thou must portray him.
Part II 4Q
Full and cheeks that richly blooming
lips
Beneath the turban shine becoming.
His robe, that falls in folds, the essence
Of richest ease, and what a presence !
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
Plutus, thegod of riches he,
Himself in pomp come hither, for
Him wishes the lofty Emperor.
HERALD.
What, and what like thyself art, signify.
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
Iam Profusion, Poesy am I
The Poet, wrought to perfect measure
When he his most peculiar treasure
Doth lavish, rich with wealth untold,
And Plutus' peer for all his gold.
I grace and gladden dance and rout,
And what he lacks, that deal 1 out-
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
I snap my fingers! — How it flitters
About the car, and gleams and glitters
Look, where a string of pearls appears !
50 Goethe's Faust
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
Masks canst thou usher in, rehearse each feature,
But 'neath the shell to pierce unto the nature
Is not a herald's court employ.
That doth demand a keener eye.
Yet shun I quarrels all and each ;
Part II 51
How oft soe'er for thee I strove
Hath not my labour ever thriven ?
To grace thy brow was laurel given,
What art, what hand but mine the laurel wove ?
PLUTUS.
If need be of my testimonv, hear it!
I gladly own thou'rt spirit of my spirit.
women's chatter.
He that on high
i' the car doth prank,
52 Goethe's Faust
THE STARVELING.
Avaunt, ye loathsome woman-kind !
FIRST WOMAN.
With dragons be the dragon greedy
'Tis all but fleeting, cheating stuff.
WOMEN IN A CROWD.
Part II 53
HhRALD.
Peace! Bv my stafflet peace be holden !
BOY-CHARIOTEER.
I go,myself an honoured envoy deeming,
My nearest, dearest kinsman thee esteeming.
Where thou sojournest, plenty is, where I,
Each man enriched doth feel him gloriously.
^4^ Goethe's Faust
And in life's contrarieties oft wavers
If he shall seek thy grace or court my favours.
Thy votaries may idly rest, 'tis true ;
PLUTUS.
Now time to free the precious metals.
is it
HERALD.
What ails ye all, ye foolish folk?
'Tis but a masquerading joke.
— •
Part II 55
We look for nothing more to-night.
Think ye we give you gold outright?
Nay, marry, in this game for such
As ye, e'en counters were too much.
Ye blocks ! A pretty show, forsooth.
Ye straightway take for solid truth.
Why, what were Truth to you ? Ye grip
Dull Error by each fluttering tip.
Thou masking-hero, Plutus veiled,
Clout me this rabble from the field.
PLUTUS.
Back on all sides the circle shrinks.
And yet hath none been singed, methinKs.
5Ö Goethe's Faust
The crowd gives way
In wild affray.
Yet will I draw an unseen bar
As pledge that none such order mar.
Part II S7
The gold he kneadeth all to dough.
Soft in his fingers doth it grow,
Yet squeeze and mould it as he will
The mass remaineth shapeless still.
Now to the women turneth he ;
They shriek and all are fain to flee
With gestures of disgust and loathing.
The saucy rascal sticks at nothing.
I fearme he doth most delight
If Decency he can but slight.
Here must the herald not be lacking
Give me my staff! I'll send him packing.
PLUTUS.
Of that that threats without he hath no heed ;
PLUTUS.
I know you well, ye and your great god Pan.
A daring deed hath done your boisterous clan.
What all not know, full well I know the thing,
And open dutiful the narrow ring.
They go, good luck be with their going
The most amazing things may hap.
Whither they go but little knowing
Blindly they rush into the trap.
;8 Goethe's Faust
SONG OF THE WILD FOLK.
Bedizened folk, ye tinsel-stuff!
Here come they rude, here come they rough
In lofty leap, in breathless chase,
They come, a stout and sturdy race.
FAUNS.
In merry round
The Faun-troop flocks,
Their curly locks
With oak-leaves crowned.
A delicately pointed ear
Forth from the curly pate doth peer;
Snubnose, fair breadth of face, yet them
For that the women no worse esteem,
And doth the Faun his paw advance
The fairest shrinks not from the dance.
Part II 59
In mossy garb, with ianiplet bright,
They flit and mingle feat and light,
6o Goethe's Faust
CHORUS OF NYMPHS
DEPUTATION OF GNOMES
Part II 6
62 Goethe's Faust
Then to the deep the flames withdraw,
And gloomy gapes the open jaw.
Again it surges in flame and foam.
The great god Pan stands quite at home
Rejoicing at the wondrous sight,
Whilst troth of pearl to left and right
Spirts out. How can he trust the thing?
He stoops to peer deep down the spring.
And now, behold, his beard falls in !
Part II 63
O Youth, O
Youth, wilt never thou
In the pure measure of joy contain thee ?
64 Goethe's Faust
PLEASAUNCE.
Morning Sun.
^The Emperor, his Court, men ana
nvomen; Faust, Mephistopheles,
dressed ivith decency, according to
the fashion, but not so as to chal-
lenge attention, both kneeling.
FAUST.
EMPEROR,
Part II 6s
MEPHISTOPHELES.
That element
art thou, Sire, since every
To Majesty's dominion doth assent.
Fire hast thou proved obedient. Where most
dread
The ocean raves, leap in, and scarce thou'lt tread
The pearl-strown bottom ere the sea O wonder —
Unto a glorious globe will surge asunder ;
The billows lucent-green, with purple bordered,
Sway up and down about thee, swiftly ordered
To fairest dwelling. Wander at thy will.
The palaces will wander with thee still.
—
The very walls have life they ripple, wrinkle.
Heave to and fro, and arrowy-swift they twinkle.
Around the soft new sheen sea-monsters throng
and rollick ;
They dartle up, yet at the precinct pause.
There gold-scaled dragons iridescent frolic.
—
There gapes the shark thou laughest in his jaws.
What though thy court around thee fiock en-
tranced !
Part II 67
FAUST.
68 Goethe's Faust
Tens, Thirties, Fifties, Hundreds, all are there ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Who on the terrace lonely strays doth spy
The fairest fair, pranked splendidly. One eye
—
Part II 69
With the proud peacock-fan she cover* shyly,
And smirks, and looks for such a note full slyly,
And its good offices more swift and sure
Than wit or words Love's richest boon procure.
Who now with purse or pouch himself will
harry ?
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
70 Goethe's Faust
Goblet and chain are straight by auction sold,
The paper then, redeemed with sterling gold.
The doubter shames that whets on us his wit.
Naught else the folk, will have they're used —
to it.
EMPFROR.
PAGE, tak'irg,
Part II 71
ANOTHER, ditto.
I in a trice
Will buy my sweetheart chain and rings.
CHAMBERLAIN, accepting.
My throttle
Henceforth I'll wet with twice as good a bottle.
ANOTHER, ditto.
ANOTHER, ditto.
EMPEROR.
I hoped for heartand will to new endeavour.
Who knows ye though will lightly read veever.
Well do I see, though treasures on ye pour.
Ye still are, after, what ye were before.
EMPEROR.
What, art alive again ? Thou'lt drink itj
marry
FOOL.
EMPEROR.
Aye marry, for thou'lt make bad use of it.
! '
EMPEROR.
Why, pick them up, thy share they fell unto.
\_Extt.
FOOL.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
FOOL.
Betides me oft, but not to luck like this
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Uj)on my word, thou'rt all asweat with bliss !
FOOL.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
FOOL.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Aye truly, so thou offer, naught will lack.
FOOL.
Part II 73
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Take my word !
Who still will doubt that this our fool hath wit I
GLOOMY GALLERY.
Faust, Mephistopheles.
mephistopheles.
To this dark walk why draw'st thou me
capricious ?
be—
Helen and Paris 'fore his face to see,
74 Goethe's Faust
The paragon of men and eke of women
Distinctly to behold, their mortal trim in.
My word I gave, help me to disengage it.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 75
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The heathen-folk doth not concern me,
It dwells in its particular hell.
And yet there is a means
FAUST.
Come, come ! Thy history !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Not fain do mystery.
I reveal a lofty
In solitude throne goddesses sublime,
Round them no place is, and still less a time.
Only to speak of them the brain doth swim.
The Mothers are they !
FAUST, startled.
Mothers J
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Art afeard ?
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
marry !
FAUST.
76 Goethe's Faust
MEPHISTOPHELES.
No way ! To the unexplorable
Aye unexplored ; a way to the unimplorablc,
Aye unimplored ! Art thou in the mood ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And swum through Ocean's vasty
hadst thou
hollow
And there beheld the boundless room,
Vet wouldst thou see on billow biliow follow.
Aye, even shuddering at threatened doom
Something thou still wouldst see. The emerald
gulf in
Of tranquil seas, wouldst spy the gliding dolphin,
Wouldst see the clouds drift by, sun, moon and
star
Naught wilt thou see i' the ever-empty Far,
Not hear thy footstep where 'tis prest,
Nor find firm ground whereon to rest.
!
Part II 17
FAUST.
Like the first mystagogue thou speak'st, that ever
Proved him the trustful neophyte's deceiver.
The other way round though. Me thou dost
despatch
Unto the Void, that there I may be able
Both art and mind to enhance. Thou'dst have
me scratch
Thy chestnuts from the fire, like the old cat \'
the fable.
But on, we'll plumb the Deep whate'er befall,
For in thy Naught I trust to find the All.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
If tight
Thou grasp it, then its worth thou wilt not
slight.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
78 Goethe's Fanst
FAUST, shuddering.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Art borne, so to stint at a new word ?
Wilt only hear what thou hast ever heard ?
Let naught amaze thee more, sound as it may,
Grown used to strangest things since many a
day.
FAUST.
And yet my weal in torpor seek I not.
The thrillof awe is still mankind's best lot.
cheaply,
Yet awe-struck, the stupendous feels he deeply.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
FAUST, enthusiastic.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 79
The Mothers by its light wilt thou descry,
Some sitting, standing some, or walking nigh,
E'en asmay chance. Formation, transformation.
The Eternal Mind's eternal recreation.
And round them float forms of all things that be
They'll see thee not, tor wraiths alone they see
Then pluck a heart up, for the danger's great
Unto that tripod do thou walk up straight
And touch it with the key.
^Faust assumes a resolutely imperious
attitude ivith the key.
FAUST.
What next then ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Downward
tend with might and main.
Sink stamping, stamping wilt thou rise again.
MEPHISTOPHtLES.
T hope the key may profit him, good lack :
8o Goethe's Faust
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 8
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What ! Such a radiant darling, peppered
With spots, alas, in May, like any leopard !
A DARK BEAUTY.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
requital.
82 Goethe's Faust
THE DARK BEAUTY, shrieking.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now canst thou put the healing to the proof.
Now to thine heart's content to dance art able
Or press thy gallant's foot beneath the table.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The case is grave but not quite hopeless.
Hark!
This charcoal take, and softly press him nigh.
On sleeve or mantle, as occasion chances.
Or shoulder, do thou make therewith a mark.
Straightway remorse within his breast will ply
Her gracious sting. The charcoal swallow
fasting,
Without delay, nor wine nor water tasting.
This very night before thy door he'll sigh
LADY.
It isn't poison ?
MEPHISTOPHELES, indignantly.
Don't insult me, pray !
PAGE.
MEPHISTOPHELES, Os'tde.
[I'rumpets
ASTROLOGER.
ASTROLOGER.
ARCHITECT.
So that's antique ! H'm, can't say I approve it,
ASTROLOGER.
With revereöce hail the star-accorded season,
Let potent word of magic fetter reason.
But hither from afar, unshackled-free.
Resplendent come, audacious Fantasy !
86 Goethe's Faust
ASTROLOGER.
A thaumaturge, in priestly robe and wreath,
Rises triumphant from the vault beneath ;
With him a tripod, and meseems already
The brazier from, an incense-breath doth eddy.
He girds himself the lofty work to hallow.
Henceforth can nothing but auspicious follow.
FAUST, majestically.
In your name, O
ye Mothers, ye that throne
In the Illimitable, ever alone.
And yet companionably. Restless rife
Float round ye, lifeless, images of life.
What once hath been, in radiance supernal
—
Yonder doth move for it would be eternal.
And ye, almighty Powers, apportion it
Unto the cope of day, the vault of night.
Those doth the gracious course of life embrace.
These the bold wizard seeketh in their place,
And confident and lavish shows to us.
What all are fain to see, the marvellous.
ASTROLOGER.
Part II 87
The vapour sinks, from out the filmy gauze
A beauteous youth in graceful measure draws.
Mine office here is mute, I need not name him.
As the fair Paris who would not proclaim him
LADY.
O what a glory of blooming youth I see
SECOND LADY.
Fresh as a peach, as full of juice is he !
THIRD LADY.
The lips, sweet-swelling, daintily outlined !
FOURTH LADY.
At such a beaker wouldst thou sip full fainly.
FIFTH LADY.
SIXTH LADY.
He might be — sooth — a little less ungainly !
KNIGHT.
Merely the shepherd-lad ! What could be
plainer ?
ANOTHER KNIGHT.
Half-naked, aye, the lad is well enow.
We ought to see him in his harness, though.
LADY.
He sits him down — how languidly, how sweet
!
88 Goethe's Faust
KNIGHT.
Doubtless you'd find his lap a pleasant seat!
ANOTHER LADY.
His arm he daintily leans o'er his head.
CHAMBERLAIN.
What liberties he takes ! How underbred !
LADY.
CHAMBERLAIN.
What ! In the Presence all his length to sprawl
LADY.
CHAMBERLAIN.
E'en plays must courtly be before the Throne.
LADY.
CHAMBERLAIN.
'Tis to the life. Soon we shall hear him snore.
OLDER LADY.
In truth a breath doth pierce the deepest bosom.
It comes from him.
! ! !
Part II 89
ELDEST LADY.
It is his growth's sweet blossom,
Within the youth ambrosia-like distilling,
And all the atmosphere around us filling.
[^Helena steps forth,
MEPHISTOPHELES.
ASTROLOGER.
Have eyes ?
I stillOr in my being deep
Doth Beauty's source in flood outpoured sweep ?
90 Goethe's Faust
Mephistopheles, from the Prompter s Box.
You do forget yourself! Pray you, discretion.
OLDER LADY.
Tall, shapely, but the head too small for me
YOUNGER LADY.
Look at the foot ! More lumpish could it be ?
DIPLOMATIST.
Princesses have I seen of such a kind.
From head to foot she's fair unto my mind.
COURTIER,
She nears the sleeper, artfully demure.
LADY.
How hideous, by that form so youthful-pure
POET.
LADY.
POET.
DUENNA.
In public too ! Most reprehensible
FAUST.
Part II 91
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Be still
COURTIER.
She steals away light-footed ; at her touch
He wakens.
LADY.
COURTIER.
He marvels ! What befalls him is a wonder.
LADY.
'Tis none to her, what she beholdeth yonder.
COURTIER.
She turns her round to him in modest fashion.
LADY.
KNIGHT.
LADY.
PAGE,
KNIGHT.
92 Goethe's Faust
LADY.
OTHER LADY.
From her tenth year of her was little profit.
KNIGHT.
Why, each man takes the gifts the gods have
sent.
With these fair leavings I'd be well content.
DRYASDUST.
I see her plainly, but for all that might one
I must confess —have doubts if she's the right
one.
The present tempts us to exaggeration.
i take my stand of all things on the written.
Well then, I read, she hath in wondrous fashion
Troy's graybeards with admiration smitten.
all
ASTROLOGER.
A boy no longer, now a hero bold,
Her that can scarce resist he doth enfold.
With stalwart arms he lifts her high m air,
KAUST.
Part II 93
MEPHISTOPHELES.
ASTROLOGER.
ASTROLOGER.
94 Goethe's Faust
MEPHISTOPHELES
[_tak'mg Faust on his shoulder
9^ Goethe's Faust
How yonder lad I taught of yore,
Who haply still as youth chews on my lore.
Marry I itch again, allied
Thou mantle shaggy-warm with thee,
To pufF me up with professorial pride.
So fully in the right they ween to be!
Your learned man attains that level.
The art long since has failed the Devil
CHORUS OF INSECTS.
Fair welcome, old gaffer
Our homage we pay.
We hum and we hover
And know thee straightway.
But singly in silence
The seed didst thou sow ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 97
Up and around, sweet chicks ! Fly helter-
skelter
To hundred thousand nooks for shelter.
In yon old cardboard-boxes cage,
Here in this parchment, brown with age.
Into old crockery merrily flock it.
g8 Goethe's Faust
Shall I flee or shall I stay ?
MEPHisTOPHELES, heckoti'mg.
FAMULUS.
High-reverend Sir, such is my name. Oremus !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Not 80 !
FAMULUS.
You know me ! With what joy I thrill
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I know it well. In years, yet student still
O moss-grown sir ! Nay, even a learned man
Still studies on, since nothing else he can.
A goodly house of cards we build us so.
The mind can ne'er complete it though.
greatest
And yet your master He's no ignoramus ! !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part TI I Ol
What they knew without believing,
Me, themselves of life bereaving.
How ! Within there by the bureau
One still sits in chiaroscuro !
Nay, I see —
have I my wits still ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MFPHISTOPHELES.
BACCALAUREUS.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 103
BACCALAUREUS.
Experience ! froth and foam alone,
With mind not equal-born. Avow it,
BACCALAUREUS.
I'm fain to hear Now you're talking sense
it ! !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
For golden treasure did I poke and proddle,
And gained but sorry coals when all was done.
BACCALAUREUS.
Confess now, your pate, your old bald noddle
it
MEPHISTOPHELES, good-humourcdly
MEPHISTOPHELES,
\_rolling himself in his chair ivith castors
ever nearer into the Proscenium,
addresses the Pit.
MEHHISTOPHELES.
This puts the devil out of office fairly.
BACCALAUREUS.
There is no Devil, save I will it, I !
MEPHisTOPHELES, aside.
He'll lay thee by the heels though, by and by !
BACCALAUREUS.
The noblest calling this for youthful wit!
The world was not, till I created it ;
Part II 105
Upon my beck, in yonder primal night
The glory of all the stars unfolded bright;
Who, if not I, from all the bars unbound you
That cramping thoughts Philistian welded round
you ?
But I, as bids my mind, unhampered quite,
Blithely I follow mine own inner light,
And with a rapture all mine own, swift onward,
Darkness behind my back, I journey sunward.
lExit.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Original, go thy ways in all thy glory
This truth to thee were purgatory :
LABORATORY
\jn the medieval style ; huge, univieldy
apparatus, for fantastical purposes.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Fair welcome ! Nay, I mean you well
WAGNER, anxiously.
ISoftly.
But word and breath within the mouth fast bar.
Soon is achieved a glorious undertaking.
MEPHISTOPHELES, more softly.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
A man ? And pray what couple tender
Have ye shut up i' the chimney there ?
WAGNER.
Forbid it, God ! The mode wherein man used
to gender
For idle folly we declare.
The tender point wlierefrom life sprang of yore,
The gracious force that pressed from out its core,
—
Part II T07
And took and gave, itself to outline fated,
First nearest, foreign then assimilated,
Now of its dignity is dispossessed ;
WAGNER,
\jwho has never diiterted his attention
from the phial.
grows to one,
It rises, flashes,
For here
The secret lies to light unfolded.
Unto this sound but give an ear,
It turns to voice, to speech 'tis moulded.
WAGNER.
But one word more This oft doth mortify me
!
Part II 109
As tnter alia, how each with either
Body and soul can fit so well together,
And cling so close as would they never sever
Yet each to each make life a burden ever ?
And then
MEPHISTOPHELES.
HOMUNCULUS.
What is to do ?
HOMUNCULUS, amazed.
-Sigfltfieant
[^The phial slips from Wagner's hands
hovers above Faust and illumines
him.
Fair-encompassed ! Limpid waters
In a thick grove ! Women, that disarray them !
I TO Goethe's Faust
^Of highest heroes born, nay, God-born hnply.
Her foot she dips the bright pellucid pool in,
The sweet life's flame that warms her form
how shapely !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
HOMUNCULUS.
Part [I III
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'd hear the means with pleasure ! f-O»^
HOMUNCULUS. . . ..
-<_,*• - . t<?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The like I never yet have heard of!
HOMUN'CULUS.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
HOMUNCULUS.
Northwestward, Satan, is thy pleasure-ground,
Southeastward, though, at present are we bound.
—
I I 2 Goethe's Faust
By a great plain, through thicket and through
grove
Peneus flows, in still and humid reaches ;
HOMUNCULUS. AaX*-^"^
Why let men be, as is their nature, froward !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Here many a Brocken-farce might tempt a trial.
What next ?
— ; !
'i>>-
^Ki^
Part II 113
HOMUNCULUS.
Faith, thou'rt not one whom shyness
twitches,
And when I touch upon Thessalian witches
I think I have not spoke for naught.
MEPHISTOPHELES, lustfully.
WAGNER, anxiously.
And I, pray ?
HOMUNCULUS.
Oh!
Thou'lt stay at home, most weighty work to do.
The ancient parchments thou'lt unroll, fair father.
The elements of life by precept gather.
And each to other fit with foresight. Ponder
The what, more to the how thy thoughts apply.
Whilst through a cantle of the world I wander
ßelike I'll find the dot upon the I. !U/ c^-^^^^AJ^
T'^us the great goal reached
is the cap—
Well-merited is this of such an earnest study
! — !
Farewell
WAGNER, sadly.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Darkness.
iX-
To this night's awful festival, as often now,
Erichtho, come I hither, I the sinister,
Yet not so loathsome as the pestilent poets me
Surcharging slander. . Verily never know
. .
they bound
y^ In praise and censur. . . . Whitened o'er .
who won.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
As when through the window old I
Gazed on Northern dread and gloom,
Spectres wholly foul behold I,
Here as there I am at home.
HOMUNCULUS.
Lo, a tall gaunt figure stalking
From us there with hasty stride !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Faith, as were she scared she's walking;
Through the air she saw us ride.
HOMUNCULUS.
Let her stalk. Quick as thou'rt able
Set thy knight dowrr! I'll be sworn,
Life will, in the realm of fable
Where he seeks it, straight return.
Part TT 117
FAUST
[^as he touches the ground.
Where is she ?
HOMUNCULUS.
I've no inkling of it,
But here methinks may'st ask with profit.
There's time ere dawn to go with speed
From flame to flame, enquiry making.
Who to the Mothers ventured, need
Recoil before no undertaking.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
HOMUNCULUS.
Thus shall it flash, thus chime sonorous.
[The glass hums and flashes mightily.
Now on ! New marvels lie before u«.
FAUST, alone.
I I 8 Goethe's Faust
Through me, the sleeper, what a warm life
darted !
GRIFFINS, snarling.
rings
Some echo of the source wherefrom it springs.
Grey, gruesome, grim, graves, grumpy, grisly,
tally
And chime together etymologically,
Yet grate upon our ear
Part II 119
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Gr'if- pleases if in
The honourable title heard of Griffin.
GRIFFIN
GRIFFINS.
ARIMASPIANS.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
SPHINX.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
SPHINX.
May be Hast
! any planetary lore?
What sayst thou to the aspect of the hour ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 12 1
Do —
thou express thyself 'twere riddle enough !
He likes me not
BOTH.
MEPHISTOPHELES, brutally.
SPHINX, gently.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
What birds are these that softly swinging
Upon the river-poplars rest ?
SPHINX.
Part II 123
MEPHISTOPHELES.
These are your precious airs new-fangled
Where tone with tone is intertangled,
The throat from out, from ofl^ the string.
They waste on me their caterwauling ?
SPHINXES.
I 24 Goethe's Faust
Which faithful and unfailing these did ward.
I feel there breathes a quickening spirit through
me !
SPHINXES.
We reach not down unto her generation.
Hercules slew the latest of our nation.
Chiron might give thee information.
He gallops round upon this spectral-night ;
Will he but stand for thee, thou'rt sped aright.
MEPHisTOPHELES, petulantly.
SPHINX.
I 26 Goethe's Faust
The Lamiae, rare wanton lasses,
With smiling lips and brazen faces,
Such as the Satyrs' taste most tickle.
A goat-foot there at naught need stickle
MEPHISTOPHELES.
PENEUS SURROUNDED BY
WATERS AND NYMPHS.
Part II 127
FAUST, approaching the river.
NYMPHS, to Faust,
Part II I 29
FAUST.
Sooth it seems to me as under
Hurrymg steed the earth did thunder.
Thither my glance !
CHIRON.
FAUST.
I tarry not
FAUST.
I 30 Goethe's Faust
FAUST, mounting.
Whither thou wilt. I'll thank thee evermore,
The noble pedagogue, great man indeed,
That to his fame reared an heroic breed,
The Argonauts, with deathless glory gilded,
And all of old the poets' world that builded.
CHIRON.
Nay, let that be ! As Mentor none.
Not Pallas' self, is to be gratulated.
They follow their own bent when all is said and
done.
As had they ne'er been educated.
CHIRON.
Beside me was a hero hurt.
Then aid and counsel could I tender,
But in the end did I mine art
To herbwives and to priests surrender.
CHIRON.
Thou seemest skilled with glozing matter
People and prince alike to flatter.
Part II 131
FAUST.
At thou wilt not contravene
least
That thou the greatest of thine age hast seen,
The noblest emulated, spent thy days
As seemed a demigod, in strenuous ways.
But tell me now, I pray thee, whom thou ratest
Of all the great heroic forms, the greatest.
FAUST.
CHIRON.
Alas, my longing wherefore wak'st thou ?
I 32 Goethe's Faust
Self-blessed Beauty —
cold and listless,
is
FAUST.
CHIRON.
man's joy.
FAUST.
Part II 135
Black night, and turn them from their reckless
slaughter
Best loved to me of all the Sibyl-guild,
No grinning mummer, but humanely mild.
She will not fail, so thou but tarry duly,
With potent herbs and roots to heal thee
throughly.
FAUST.
CHIRON.
Miss not the healing ofthat gracious fount!
We are upon the spot. Quickly dismount
CHIRON.
r 36 Goethe's Faust
CHIRON.
E'en so !
MANTO, aivak'ing.
CHIRON.
MANTO.
What, all-unwearied still thou ridest ?
[1 hey descend.
38 Goethe's Faust
CHORUS OF EMMETS.
As the gigantic brood
Heaved it on high there,
Twitter-feet, antic brood,
Speedily fly there !
Tiniest particle
Must ye discover ;
Haste ye in seizing
Seat that is pleasing.
Busily bustle
Speed against muscle !
Emmets a-fluster,
Swarm ye and cluster
Metals to muster !
Heap in a pyre
Smouldering fire,
Charcoal prepare ye !
GENERALISSIMO.
Part II H3
What a moaning, what a cry
To our heights doth pierce the sky
All have fallen in the slaughter,
Crimsoned with their blood the water.
Greed misshapen, foul and cruel
Robs the herons' fairest jewel.
On the helm I see it wave there
Of yon fat-paunch, crook-leg knave there.
Ye that in our train are fellows,
Linked farers of the billows,
Ye we call. Avenge them dearly
For the cause doth touch ye nearly.
Let none grudge or strength or blood
Hate eternal to this brood !
I
44 Goethe's Faust
Still dance and float before me, flee and woo
With knavish jugglery the wanton crew.
After them softly ! Pampered with too much
plenty,
Whate'er it be, one snaps at every dainty.
It is so merry,
The old Deceiver,
Thus to decoy him.
To penance fitting
He comes unwitting.
With stiff foot hobbling,
Stumbling and wabbling.
He trails his foot
The while we fly hini^
In vain pursuit.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Curst fate ! That man so great a gull is !
LAMiAE, halting.
Halt! He bethinks him, falters, stands
Counter him, that he slip not from your hands •
MEPHISTOPHELES.
EMPUSA, intruding.
EMPUSA, to Mephistopheles.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I looked to meet but strangers thorough
And find near kinsfolk to my sorrow.
Nay, as an ancient book doth tell us,
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 147
Snap up such lot as seems most fair.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I choose the fairest, glad and gleesome.
[_ETnbrac'mg her^
Alack-a-day, the withered besom !
\_Sei'z.'ing another^
Well, what of this one ? Out, thou blot
LAMIAE.
Deserv'st thou better ? Think it not
MEPHISTOPHELtS.
The little one I'll try. The wizard !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Wisdom, it seems, I'm still gone little forth in.
Absurd is't here, absurd the North in,
The spectres here as there bizarre.
The people and poets tasteless are.
A mask, aseverywhere doth chance
Is here an emblematic dance.
At comely masking-trains I grasped
I thrill to think what things 1 clasped.
Yet fain I'd lend me to their cheating
Did the delusion prove less fleeting.
\_Los'tng his luay amongst the rocks.
Where am I ? Where's the outway ! How !
Part II 149
That fabric of a dream will fade
At cock-crow with the nightly shade.
The like childs' fables oft I see arise
And perish in like sudden wise.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Honour to thee, thou reverend head,
With lofty oak-crown chapleted !
HOMUNCULUS.
From place to place I flit and hover,
And fain would I in the best sense exist.
Impatiently I long my glass to shiver.
To risk me though I do not list
MEPHISTOPHELES.
HOMUNCULUS.
Good counsel though a man should never scout.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Then get thee gone ! We'll see how it turns
out.
[_ They part,
ANAXAGORAS, to Thales.
ANAXAGORAS.
This cliff was born of fiery vapour fumid !
THALES.
Suffer me by
your side to go,
Myself would fain exist, you know.
ANAXAGORAS.
THÄLES.
THALES.
ANAXAGORAS.
The^ount bears myrmidons in bevies
^To Homunculus.
To a great end hast ne'er aspired,
But, hermit-like, hast lived retired.
If unto lordship thou canst use thee
As crowned king I'll have them choose thee.
HOMUNCULUS.
Approves my Thales ?
152 Goethe's Faust
Not a tittle !
Part II I
S3
Am I too quickly heard?
Hath my prayer
To yonder sphere
The constant course of nature stirred ?
Nay, what not all this man hath seen and heard!
As to what chanced myself am hazy,
Neither hath my sensation squared
With his. Let us confess the hours are crazy,
And Luna in her place doth soar
All unconcerned as heretofore.
HOMUNCULUS.
Glance at the Pigmies' seat. I vow
The mount was round, 'tis pointed now.
——
DRYAD.
In homespun wisdom hug thyself at home !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
We think upon the thing we miss.
What we were used to still is Paradise !
!
Part II ^55
But say what in the cavern there
In dim uncertain twilight threefold cowers ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
PHORKYADS.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
PHORKYADS.
He lacks not sense, this spirit, of all things !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
PHORKYADS.
Sunken in solitude and stillest night
The three of us have never thought of it.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
PHORKYADS.
Hush Teach us not to covet!
!
ONE.
Is't feasible in truth,
Sisters ?
THE OTHERS.
We'll try, but not with eye and tooth,
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Ye take away the best by such restricture
And render faulty the austerest picture.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
You flatter ! Be it so !
PHORKYADS.
So be it !
Done!
Here stand I, Chaos' well-beloved son !
! !
MEPHISTOPHELES,
O fie ! Hermaphrodite must I be flouted !
PHORKYADS.
In the new triple sisterhood what beauty
Two eyes, two teeth ! Fair sisters I salute ye !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Now must I shun all eyes, forgo all revels.
And in Hell-sump strike tenor to the devils
SIRENS
SIRENS.
stirred
—
Part II i6i
Creatures that would be gods by hi<jh endeavour
Yet doomed to dwell in their own likeness ever.
'Twas mine long years since like the gods to
rest
Yet must I seek to benefit the best,
And looked I on the finished deed, 'twas even
As never at all my counsel had been given.
tale!
His lust he followed, and high Ilium fell,
A giant-corpse, stark from long agony
Where Pindus' eagles glutted them in glee.
Ulysses too, foretold I not to him
The wiles of Circe and the Cyclops grim.
I 62 Goethe's Faust
His tarrying and comrades' levity
his
And what not all What boot of it had he ?
?
THALES.
The wise man such behaviour needs must pain,
The good man though will try yet once again.
A dram of thanks, him mightily to pleasure,
A hundredweight of unthanks will outmeasure.
Hear but our suit ! No trifling matter is't.
NEREUS.
Away ! My
humour do not mar
rarest !
Part II 163
THALES.
We have, forsooth, small profit of that cast,
And meet we Proteus, straight he'll melt .
asunder
And should he stand, he will but say at last
What strikes the mind with wilderment and
wonder.
But once for all, ouch counsel dost thou need ;
[They ivithdraiv.
Small of height,
Great of might.
Helpers when shipwreck rages,
Gods honoured in primal ages.
!
64 Goethe's Faust
NEREIDS AND TRITONS.
We bring ye the Kabiri
With a tranquil feast to cheer ye,
For where they reign auspicious
Is Neptune's sway propitious.
SIRENS.
Wherever may
Be a throne, we pray,
By night and day.
For that doth pay.
Y Uhe Kabiri.
HOMUNCULUS.
The uncouth creatures look I on,
For sorry clay pots I take them.
Now knock the wise their pates thereon,
And thick as they are they break them.
!
I 66 Goethe's Faust
PROTEUS, unpercelved.
The like^elights me, ancient fabler.
The stranger 'tis, the honourabler.
THALES.
Where art thou, Proteus ?
THALES.
The stale jest pass I. What, to fleer
A friend with idle words thou seekest ?
HOMUNCULUS.
Straightway a flood of light I'll scatter.
Yet modestly, lest that the glass I shatter.
Part II 167
THALES, veiling Homunculus.
PROTEUS, in amaze.
A shining dwarf! The like I ne'er did see
THALES, softly.
HOMUNCULUS.
The air breathes soft, 'tis redolent
Of growth, me ravishes the scent.
PROTEUS.
Most charming lad, the truth hast hit there,
And further in 'tis more excelling sweet,
On yonder narrow sandy spit there
The atmosphere past telling sweet.
Before us there the train I spy
That even now doth draw anigh.
Thither !
THALES.
I'll bear ye fellowship.
HOMUNCULUS.
Threefold noteworthy spirit-trip !
Telchines of Rhodes,
[^on Hippocampi and Sea-dragons, bear-
ing the trident of Neptune.
CHORUS.
The trident of Neptune that quells the im-
passioned
Wild-turbulent billows we forged and we
fashioned.
Part II 169
Unfurleth the storm-clouds the Lord of the
Thunder
Its hideous roll answers Neptune from under,
And let the forked lightning flash down as it
will
Will billow on billow spirt up to it still,
And all that between them hath wrestled con-
founded,
Long-tossed, is engulfed in a sea never-sounded,
And therefore he gives us the sceptre this night.
Now festally float we, unruffled and light.
Helios' initiated.
Ye to bright day consecrated,
Greet we hour
in this stirring
When we worship Luna's power.
TELCHINES.
I JO Goethe's Faust
There sees him in myriad forms the Refulgent,
As youth and as giant, the Great, the Indulgent.
'Twas we that the might of Immortals on earth
In fashion of mortals first nobly set forth.
PROTEUS.
E'en let them and vaunt their folly,
sing
For to the quick'ning sunbeams holy
Dead works are but a sorry jest.
Tireless they melt and mould, and flatter
Themselves, forsooth, 'tis some great matter
If once the thing in bronze is cast.
What have these vaunters for their wages ?
The statues of the gods stood great.
An earthquake laid them desolate.
All have been melted down for ages.
THALES.
Yield to the well-advised hortation
From the first step to start creation ;
THALES.
PROTEUS, to Thaies.
Worthy immortality.
Yet like winsome human women
Of a charming grace is she.
DORIDS,
[_To Nereus.
THE YOUTHS.
Us gallant sailor-lads to lap
In like delights still spare not.
We never had so good a hap.
And for a better we care not.
[^GALATEA, gl'ules Up in her shell-chariot.
NEREUS.
'Tis thou, tfiea, Beloved ?
GALATEA.
O Sire, the delight !
Part II 175
How me blooming,
I rejoice
By truth and beauty penetrated ! .
HOMUNCULUS.
This all-benignant rheum in
Whatever my light illumine
Is wondrous fair to see.
blossomed !
HELEN.
Admired much and much reviled, Helena,
Leaving the shore where we but now did land,
I come
Still drunken with the unrestful billow's
tumultuous
Commotion, that from Phrygian lowlands hither-
wards
On its high-swelling bosom, by Poseidon's
grace.
And Eurus' might, hath borne us to our native
bays.
Below there King Menelaus rejoices glad at
heart.
He and his bravest warriors, at their home-
coming.
But do you bid me welcome, O ye lofty halls,
That Tyndareus, my father, near the mountain-
slope,
From Pallas' Hill returning, built to be his
own,
178
! !
Part II 179
And as with Clytemnestra blithely sporting here,
With Castor and with Pollux, sisterly I grew,
Before all Sparta's houses gloriously adorned.
I greet ye, ye twin leaves that form the brazen
gates
Athwart the ample gateway ye, wide open
thrown
In hospitable welcome, once let shine on me
In bridegroom's guise Menelaus, chosen not
from few.
Open again unto me that I may fulfil
Truly, as seems the wife, the king's most urgent
best.
Let me pass in, and henceforth all behind me
bide
That hitherto around me fatefully hath stormed !
CHORUS.
Disdain thou not, O beauteous Dame,
The rarest treasure's glorious gilt
With the greatest boon thou alone art
endowed.
With Beauty's fame above all that doth tower.
The Hero's name before him resounds.
Thus proudly he treads,
Yet bends forthwith the stubbornest man
Unto all-o'erpowering Beauty his will !
8o Goethe's Faust
ward,
And now unto his city am sent, his harbinger.
Yet what the purpose he within his heart enfolds
That guess I not. Come I a wife ? Come I
a queen ?
82 Goethe's Faust
CHORUS.
Cast now, O ye
sisters,
Mournfully captive-made,
184 Goethe's Faust
Part II 185
Deep-stirred, with step impetuous, to rejoin us
here ?
What is it, O great Queen, that in thy palace-
halls
Hath met thee, save thy menials' greeting, what
that could
Unseat thy steadfast soul. Dissemble wilt thou
not.
For on thy brow displeasure deeply writ I see.
And generous indignation, battling with surprise.
HELEN,
\jwho has left the folding-doors open, deeply
moved.
The daughter of Zeus ill-seemeth an ignoble fear.
And Panic's hand, light-brushing, comes her not
anigh ;
And yet the horror from the womb of ancient
Night,
From primal Chaos rising, that yet multiform
Like glowing vapours from the mountain's fiery
maw
Doth billow upwards, shaketh even the hero's
breast.
And such a mark the Stygians, in appalling wise.
This day upon mine entrance in this house have
set,
I 86 Goethe's Faust
Some cleansing rite I'll seek, that so with genial
glow
The hearth, new-hallowed, greet its Lady as its
Lord.
LEADER OF THE CHORUS.
Reveal, O
noble Lady, to thine handmaidens
That compass thee with homage, what hath
befallen thee.
PHORKYAS.
Old is the saw, yet bideth high and true its
190 Goethe's Faust
green promises.
Wasters of others' husbandry, marauding host,
That blight and devastate prosperity m the bud ;
PHORKYAS.
Hideousness !
PHORKYAS.
Part II .
193
CHORETID I.
CHORETID II.
PHORKYAS.
Get hence to Orcus, seek thou there thy kith
and kin !
CHORETID III.
PHORKYAS.
The old Tiresias unto thy leman woo
CHORETID IV.
CHORETID V.
PHORKYAS.
Not upon blood, which thou too hotly lustest for.
o'
194 Goethe's Faust
CHORETID VI.
corpse.
PHORKYAS.
PHORKYAS.
Who lengthy years of fortune manifold recalls,
Him seems at length the highest favour of Gods
a dream.
But highly-favoured past all measure thou and
bound,
In Life's procession savvest none but love-
inflamed.
Swift-kindled to all manner of valorous emprise.
Thee Theseus first, by longing goaded, reft
betimes.
As Herakles strong, in fashion gloriously fair.
HELEN.
And led me forth, a ten-year old and slender
roe,
And me Aphidnus' keep in Attica immewed.
PHORKYAS.
But then bv Castor freed and Pollux speedily
Thou stoodest wooed for by a chosen hero-
throng.
HELEN.
PHORKYAS.
But thy Menelaus plighted thee,
sire's will to
The bold sea-ranger, careful husbander to boot.
PHORKYAS.
PHORKYAS.
PHORKYAS.
themselves.
I fade away, eidolon to myself I grow.
l^Sivoons into the arms of the
Semi-chorus.
CHORUS.
Hush thee, hush thee !
Malice-brooding,
Deep-enambushing monstrous beast?
PHORKYAS.
my frame.
Yet seemeth them that queens be, all men it
it
beseemeth well
Dauntlessly to nerve and brace them whatsoe'er
unlooked-for threat.
PHORKYAS.
HELEN.
PHORKYAS.
All is ready in the palace, laver, tripod, whetted
axe,
Lustral water, spice for burning, show what
shall be offered thou.
HELEN.
Thereof gave the king no token.
200 Goethe's Faust
PHORKYAS.
Spake it not ? O word of woe !
HELEN
Speak, what woe doth overwhelm thee ?
PHORKYAS.
Sovereign Lady, thou art meant !
HELEN.
I?
PHORKYAS.
And these too.
CHORUS.
Lamentation !
PHORKYAS.
By the axe thou'rt doomed to fall.
HELEN.
Fearful, but presaged. Me wretched 1
PHORKYAS.
Doomed thou art beyond reprieve !
CHORUS.
Woe ! and us, what will befall us ?
PHORKYAS.
She will die a noble death,
But within, hung from the rafter that upbears
the gabled roof,
Like the thrushes ta'en in fowling, ye shall wintle
all arow.
;
Part II 20I
HELEN AND CHORUS
PHORKYAS,
Ye Spectres !
— Petrilied like statues there ye
stand,
Aghast to leave the daylight, that not 'longs to
you.
And men too, that like ye are spectres, one and
all,
quick to work I
lave away
The hideous soilure of the black corrupted
blood.
The carpet sumptuously spread out here in the
dust
—
PHORKYAS.
HELEN.
CHORUS.
Speak and tell us, tell us quicklv, how shall we
escape the ghastly
Grisly nooses that with menace, as the shame-
fullest of necklets.
Round about our necks entwine them Wretched !
PHORKYAS.
But have ye patience silently the long-drawn
thread
Of my discourse to hearken ? 'Tis a motley
tale.
CHORUS.
Patience enough ! For list'ning, still we live
the while.
PHORKYAS.
Whoso at home abiding lordly treasure keeps,
And hath the wit to bind with tough cement
the walls
;
PHORKYAS.
Part II 205
PHORKYAS.
So many years forsaken stood the mountain-vale
That back from Sparta northwards slopes unto
the sky,
Flanked by Taygetus, where, as yet a sprightly
brook,
Eurotas downward rolls, and later through our
vale
Broad-flowing, fringed with rushes, nurtureth
your swans.
A daring breed behind there in the mountain-
vale
H;ith lodged in silence, pressing from Cimmerian
night.
And piled aloft a fastness, strong unscaleably.
Whence land and people now they harry as they
will.
HELEN.
That could they compass ? Quite impossible it
seems
PHORKYAS.
Time had they, marry ! Haply twenty years
or so.
HELEN.
Is there one lord ? Or robbers many, joined in
league ?
PHORKYAS.
Robbers thev are not, but amongst them one is
lord.
I'll not revile him, though he oft hath harassed
me.
All could he take, and yet contents himself with
few
Berifvnlences ; for thus, not tribute, called he it.
— ;
HELEN.
How looks he :
PHORKYAS.
Not amiss ! He likes me well enough.
He is a cheerful, unabashed, well-favoured man
As few among the Greeks are, a discerning man.
Barbarians we brand them, yet meseems that
none
So savage were, as in the leaguer of Ilium
Full many a hero cannibally-raging proved.
I prize his greatness, unto him I'd trust myself.
And That you should your-
then his castle !
behold
self !
And scutcheons
— —
Part II 207
CHORUS.
What are scutcheons r
PHORKYAS.
Why, upon his shield
Yourselves have seen it Ajax bare a wreathed
snake.
Yon Seven leagued 'gainst Thebes each on his
buckler bare
Embossed devices, pregnant with significance ;
CHORUS.
Say, are there partners for the dance ?
PHORKYAS.
The best with golden lovelocks, troops of
!
blooming boys.
Fragrant with youth. So fragrant only Paris
was
When he approached the Queen too nearly.
—
PHORKYAS.
CHORUS.
Oh!
Speak the brief word, and save thyself and us at
once !
HELEN.
PHORKYAS.
Hast forgotten then
In what unheard-of fashion thy Deiphobus,
The battle -slaughtered Paris' brother, he did
mar
Him that on thee, the widow, stubbornly laid
hands,
And held thee to his leman ? Nose and ears he
cropped
And further maimed him likewise. Ghastly
'twas to see.
HELEN.
CHORUS.
PHORKYAS.
HELEN.
I have bethought me what I may adventure first.
CHORUS.
Oh how fain thither we go.
Footing it swiftly,
Death in our rear,
Fronting us again
Towering stronghold's
Inaccessible ramparts.
Shield they but even as well,
Even as Ilium's walls,
Which, when fall they did,
Naught but treacherous craft o'erthrew.
\^Misis spread abroad veiling the bad-
ground and the foreground too, at
pleasure.
What pray is this ?
Part ii 211
Stillthough, aye still,
Them I hear atar
Hoarsely chant fearfullest lay,
I^eath foretelling, the legend saith
Ah ! if not for us likewise
Spite of pledged deliverance.
It foretell perdition at last,
E'en for us, swan-like, long-
Fair white-necked, and alas ! for
Her, our swan-begotten.
Woe is us ! ah woe !
Hover we but
Lightsomely tripping along the ground?
Seest thou naught? Floateth haply e'en
Hermes before Gleams not the golden wand.
?
we are imprisoned.
So imprisoned ne'er we were !
—
2 12 Goethe's Faust
HELEN.
Where art thou, Pythoness, or call thee how
thou wilt ?
sides.
The hideous form hath vanished, tarrieth belike
— ! —
Part II 213
behest
Can appear, all arrayed and all marshalled so
soon
The beauteous bevy of young damoiseaux ?
What admire I the most ? Is't the delicate
gait,
Or the head's crisp curls round the radiant brow,
Or the pair of cheeks that are peachy in hue,
And clad like the peach with a velvety down ?
2 14 Goethe's Faust
Part II 215
Slowly, with sober, reverend v composed tre;id
I see the Prince approach. Deign thou to tum,
O Queen !
Part II 217
2 1 8 Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
Quickly remove thy boldly-gotten load,
Unchidden truly, but unrecompensed.
Already all is hers that in its womb
The Castle hides. To oiler this and that
Is bootless. Go, and heap in meet array
Treasure on treasure. Build a stately .scene
Of unbeholden splendour. Let the vaults
Twinkle like very Heaven. Paradises
That nothmg lack of life but life prepare.
Forestalling every footprint, let beflowered
Carpet unroll on carpet, let her tread
Soft floors encounter, and her gaze, the Gods
Alone not dazzling, radiance supreme.
LYNCEUS.
Feeble is the lord's behest.
What the servant doth is jest.
Sovereign over good and blood
Is this Beauty's queenly mood.
Lo, thine army all is tame,
Every sword is blunt and lame.
By her form of glorious mould
E'en the Sun is dim and cold.
By her face with beauty fraught
All is idle, all is naught. [^£xit.
HELEN, to Faust.
I would hold converse with thee, but do thou
Come up here by my side. The empty place
Invites its lord, and duth assure me mine.
— —
Part II 22 1
HELEN.
Manifold marvels do I see and hear.
Amazement smites me, much I fain would ask.
Yet would I be enlightened why the speech
Of this man rang so strange, so strange, yet
pleasing.
It seemed as did one tone unto another
Fit itself, fell one word upon the ear,
i\nd straight another came to dally with it.
FAUST.
HELEN.
FAUST.
HELEN.
Who shares the glow ?
——
2 22 Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
Nor back nor forward in an hour like this
The mind doth look ; the present
HELEN,
[s our bliss.
FAUST.
HELEN.
My hand.
CHORUS.
Wlio would think to chide our princess,
If she give the Castle's lord
Tokens of her favour ?
Part II 223
Over the throne's
Deep-encushioned stateliness.
Not denies itself Majesty
Joys that are secret
To the eyes of the people
Proudly indifferent thus to reveal.
2 24 Goethe's Faust
FAUST.
Rash interruption Odiously she thrusts her in
!
;
FAUST.
Part II 225
Steel-clad, whilst lightning round them quivers,
The host who
realm on realm o'erthrew,
They come, the earth beneath them s'livers!
They march, the thunder marches too
CHORUS.
Who the Fairest for his desires,
Stoutly of all things let him
Prudently cast about him for arms.
Flattering he won himself
What on earth is the highest
But in peace he retains it not;
Skulkers craftily coax her away.
Robbers daringly wrest her away,
How he may hinder it let him give heed»
E'en for this our Prince do I praise,
Prize him high above others :
Part II 227
boulders
The greedy goat a niggard meal doth crop.
p 2
;
2 28 Goethe's Faust
Part II 229
The blooming child to fatherhood unfoldeth
By favour of this limpid day ;
PHORKYAS.
How long a time the maidens sleep, that know
1 not ;
230 Goethe's Faust
CHORUS.
Only speak Oh, tell us, tell us, what of
!
PHORKYAS.
What, already weary, children, and ye scarce
have rubbed your eyes '.
CHORUS.
What ! within there ?
PHORKYAS.
Deep-secluded
From the world, but me, me only did they call
to silent service.
— ; !
Part II 231
what endearments.
Fond affection's playful banter, sportive shrieks
and gleeful clamour
Alternating deafen me!
Naked springs a wingless genius, faun-like, yet in
no wise bestial.
On the firm-set earth he springeth, yet the earth
with swift resilience
•Shoots him to the airy height, and in the second
leap he touches,
Or the third — the soaring vault.
!
forbid
And thus warns the trusty father : In the earth
resides the spring-force
That doth shoot thee upwards. Barely touch
the earth, but with thy toe-tips,
Like the son ot Earth, Antaeus, straightway
strengthened wilt thou be.
So he hops upon the shoulder of this cliff and
from margin
its
an apparition !
hear him.
Even so ye too shall see him, with a most
unique amaze.
CHORUS.
Cail'st thou a marvel this,
Greta's begotten ?
Part II 235
CHORUS.
Hath the witching strain outpoured,
Fearful Being, charmed thine ears.
We, as new to health restored.
Feel us touched to joy of tears.
EUPHORION.
Hear ye children's songs a-singing,
Straightway is your own the glee.
See ye me in measure springing,
Leap your hearts parentally.
HELEN.
Love, to bless in human fashion
Joins a noble Twain, yet she
Unto god-like rapturous passion
Straightway forms a charming Three.
! !! !
FAUST.
Everything forthwith is righted,
I am thine and thou art mine.
And so stand we here united ;
CHORUS.
Many years of tranquil pleasure
In the boy's mild radiance
Crowns this pair in plenteous measure.
How the bond doth me entrance 1
EUPHORION.
Let me be leaping !
Let me be springing !
Me such a yearning
Seizes upon.
FAUST.
EUPHORION.
Idly quiescent
Here will 1 stand not
Loose ye my tresses !
Ponder, ah ponder
How thou art grieving
Them thou belong'st to,
Fairest achieving
How thou dost shatter,
His, mine and thine !
CHORUS.
In rural leisure
Grace thou the green 1
EUPHORION.
dance.
HELFN.
FAUST.
Would it were o'er ! The joy
In all these antics I
No wise can share.
EUPHORION AND CHORUS
[jdanc'tng and singing, luind in and out
in a braided dance.
When thy twin arms in air
Winsome thou liftest,
In sheen thy clustered hair
Shakest and shiftest,
When thou with foot so light
Skimmest o'er earth in flight,
Featly from side to side
Limb after limb doth glide,
Then hast thy goal attained.
Loveliest child !
V_Pause.
EUPHORION.
Ye are all roe-like,
Fleet-footed and lithesome;
To a new frolic
Forth again blithesome !
I am the huntsman,
Ye are the chase.
CHORUS.
Us wouldst thou capture
Fare not too fleetly !
Unto me hateful is
Lightly-won spoil ;
EUPHORION.
Higher must I rise and higher,
Far and further must I see.
Now where I am I spy
In the mid-isle am I.
Pelop's land rounds me in.
Earth-akin, sea-akin.
CHORUS.
In mount and wood wilt thou
Peaceful not tarry.
Part II 241
Straight where the grape-vines grow
Thee will we carry ;
EUPHORION.
CHORUS.
Whosoever
War wishes back, in peace,
Himself doth sever
From hope's fair bliss.
EUPHORION.
EUPHORION.
Wall or bulwark, none environ !
Soar Heaven-iiigh
aloft !
Gladly we hear.
EUPHORION.
Nay, now I appear not.
as a child
The youth comes .irmed, and all at one
With strong men, free men, men that fear
not,
Already in his mind hath done.
Away !
For stay
I may not. Yonder fame is won.
Part II 24.J
Are then we
Naught to thee?
Is the gracious bond a dream ?
EUPHORION.
Hear o'er the deep the thunder bellow 1
EUPHORION.
Shall I gaze afar ? Ah, never !
THE FORMER.
Banefully overbold
Deadly the doom !
EUPHORION.
Natheless and wings unfold,
!
Say me not no !
CHORUS.
Icarus ! Icarus !
\_Pause.
CHORUS, dirge.
HELEN, to Faust.
truth.
That Fortune weds with Beauty never abidingly.
In sunder rent the bond of life is, as of love,
And both bewailing anguished I say farewell,
Upon thy bosom casting me yet once again.
Receive, Persephoneia, thou the child and me I
PANTHAI.1S.
ANOTHER PART.
And in gentle wavelets gliding we endearingly
will nestle
To the far-resplendent placid mirror of these
rocky walls ;
A FOURTH PART.
Wend ye others whither lists ye, we shall
cincture round and rustle
Round the wholly-planted hill-side where upon
its prop the vme
Clusters green, at every season the vine-drcsser's
passion shows us
The uncertain consummation of most loving
industry.
Now with spade and now with mattock, now
with earthing, pruning, binding.
All the gods he supplicateth, and the sun-god
first of all.
ACT IV
HIGH MOUNTAINS
[^^ mighty jagged rocky summit. A
cloud drifts up, clings to the peak,
and sinks upon a jutting ledge.
The cloud parts and Faust steps
forivard.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
That's Striding now, and of the wightest!
But prithee say what whim is this ?
Amongst these horrors thou alightest,
'Midst grisly crag and precipice ?
I know it well, but in another station,
For this was properly Hell's old foundation.
—
; ^
FAUST.
.V>>^'^
''•
MEPHisTOPHELES, ser'wusly.
Part II 255
And peak and in the gorge was glad,
in the
And and mount to mount did add.
cliff to cliff
MEPHISTOPHELES.
FAUST.
'Tis well worth while, as I'm a living creature
To see what views the Devils hold on Nature.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Be Nature what she will — what do I care ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 257
Still in my driving, in my riding,
Myself the cynosure abiding,
Honoured by myriads without cease.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Fame wouldst thou earn 'Tis patent truly
!
MEPHISTOPHELES.
But poets will relate the story,
To aftertimes proclaim thy glory,
By folly folly to inflame.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Then let it be as best thee pleases.
Confide to me the scope of thy caprices.
—
Part II 259
,i
And it is possible ! Flood as it will,
It yields, it moulds itself to every hill.
Ü2
——
MEPHISTOPHELES.
War again
Already ! That the wise man hears not fain !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Come war, come peace, from every circumstance
The wise man will essay to make his profit.
You watch, you wait for eacli auspicious cliance ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
From me was not hid as past I hurried,
it
Delusion
And monstrous error If a man would rule.
!
MEPHISTOPHELES.
hostility.
Where town with town, guild with nobility.
Castle with castle, bishop stood
With chapter and with flock at feud.
Where brother brother banished, slew, and no
man
Saw other but to be his foeman ;
plumped.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
And no man cared to censure such a state,
For each man could and each man would have
weight
For full the smallest even passed.
Yet for the best things grew too mad at last.
Then in their might the men of worth arose.
And said : — That man is lord who peace
bestows.
The Emperor cannot, will not. Come then,
choose we
A new Lord, into the Realm new soul infuse
we,
And, while he safeguards small and great,
The world be henceforth new-create.
And peace with justice wedded use we.
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Priests it was indeed !
Part II 263
FAUST.
So frank, so kindly ! Sooth he makes my heart
ache
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
No!
Like Master Peter Quince, of all
Part II 265
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Lo, even now my blades are here.
Thou seest, in years they greatly vary,
In varying garb and harness they appear.
Thou It not fare badly with them, marry !
{_^d Spectatores.
No child but now were fain to wear
The mail and collar of the Ritter,
And allegories though the rascals are.
On that account to please they are but fitter.
me in the eyes,
If one should look
With one blow of my fist upon the chaps I'll
fell him.
And if a craven dastard flies.
In taking indefatigable,
The rest may wait till that be done.
HOLDFAST,
[jn years, strongly -armed, luithout
garment.
Thereby is nothing consummated.
Great wealth is quickly dissipated.
Adown life's stream as swift as thought
It sweeps. To take is good, better to keep
when taken.
Follow the greybeard's rede unshaken
And from thee no man shall take aught.
[They go doivn the mountain together.
266 Goethe's Faust
ON THE HEADLAND.
\_Drums and martial music from beloiu.
The Emperor s tent is being
pitched.
generalissimo.
The project still approves it well-inspired.
That we in this secluded vale
Our hosts have concentrated and retired.
I firmly hope 'twill turn out well.
EMPEROR.
What shall be soon will show the meeting.
But this half-flight doth gall me, this retreating.
GENERALISSIMO.
See there, my Prince, on our left flank. The
Station
Could not be bettered in imagination !
GENERALISSIMO.
On the mid-meadow's level room in leaguer
The phalanx dost thou see, for battle eager.
Part II 267
Through morning's misty haze in sunshine there
The halberds flash and glitter in the air.
The mighty square heaves darkly to and fro,
There thousands to keroic exploits glow.
The might of our main force lies patent yonder,
Them will I trust the foeman's force to sunder.
EMPEROR.
There come the one and other
faithless kinsfolk,
Forsworn, that called me uncle, cousin, brother,
That step by step all bonds of fealty sundered,
Sceptre of might and throne of reverence
plundered ;
GENERALISSIMO.
SECOND SCOUT.
EMPEROR.
A rival Emperor me in good
stands stead.
Now do T feel me Emperor indeed !
Part II 269
The harness but as soldier did I don,
Now to a higher aim 'tis girded on.
At every feast, brilliant as it might be,
Whilst naught was lacking, danger lacked to me.
Ye counselled all the bloodless carrousel
While for the deadly joust mine heart did swell.
And had ye not from warfare one and all
dissuaded,
My brows a hero's laurels now had braided.
Valour upon my bosom set her sigil
When glassed in fire, on yonder masking-vigil.
Upon me leapt the flames infuriate.
A phantom, aye, yet was the phantom great.
Darkly I dreamed of victory and fame.
I will retrieve what then unto my shame
I left undone.
[^Heralds are despatched to challenge the
Rival-Emperor to single combat.
We
come, and hope unchidden,
Since forethought steads, e'en though by need
unbidden.
Thou know'st the mountain-minefolk think and
pore.
Of Nature's cypher and the rocks' hath lore.
The spirits, that the plains have long forsaken,
Still greater liking to the mounts have taken.
They work, through labyrinthian crevasses.
In noble fumes of metal-laden gases.
—
FAUST.
The Sabine sorcerer — thus. Sire, I answer
Thy faithful servant is, Necromancer
the
Of Norcia. What dread fate him threatened
dire!
The bavins crackled, leapt the tongues of fire ;
EMPEROR.
On the glad day, whenas the guests we meet.
That joyful come in joy the hours to fleet.
Part II 271
Each gladdens us as he doth throng and press,
And man by man, straitens the chambers' space ;
Yet passing welcome must the brave man be
If as ally he join us sturdily
I' the morning hour, dread issues that decideth,
EMPEROR.
Such is my
wrath, his might so would I crumble.
And his proud head to be my footstool humble.
HERALDS, returning.
FAUST.
E'en as the best had wished it doth betide.
That staunch and faithful stand here at thy side.
Thine burn to light, there come the hosts of
treason,
The onset bid, propitious is the season.
EMPEROR.
Here then do I surrender the command,
[I'o the General'tss'tmo.
And bid thee. Prince, thy duty take in hand.
GENERALISSIMO.
Then let the right wing straightway take the
field!
The foeman's left, that climbing even now is,
Ere it hath taken its last step shall yield
To the tried constancy of youthful prowess.
!
Part II 273
FAUST.
Then suffer thou this merry blade, I pray,
To place him in thy ranks without delay,
And intimately there incorporated
To ply his lusty calling with them mated.
[^Points to the right.
\_Exeunt amho.
GENERALISSIMO.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The right wing stoutly keeps its station.
There see I, hovering defiant,
Jack Swashbuckler, the nimble giant,
Alertly busy in his fashion.
FAUST.
Hast thou ne'er heard of mist-wreaths, over
The coasts of Sicily that hover ?
EMPEROR.
My fears a portent new enhances.
For every spear-head gleams and glances,
Lo there, our phalanx' glittering lances
On each a nimble flamelet dances !
Part II 277
MEPHISTOPHELES.
EMPEROR.
EMPEROR.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Tidings they bring of grievous fortune.
See how the foe doth sore importune
Our heroes on their rocky wall.
The nearest heights are scaled, and marry
The narrow pass if once they carry
'Twere much if we could stand at all.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Courage ! We
need not yet despair.
Patience and knack for the last knot.
The end as usual is hot.
My trusty envoys are at hand.
Command that I may take command.
GENERALISSIMO,
^jwho has come up in the m.eatitime.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The stupid staff! Now may he of it
FAUST.
What must we do ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
E'en now 'tis done !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
The welcome is of wondrous cast.
The boldest climber stands aghast.
FAUST.
Brook rushes down to brook with might already,
And twofold swollen from each gorge they
eddy.
An arched cascade leaps from the verge.
Suddenly o'er the width of level rock it gushes,
To this side and to that it foams and rushes,
And valewards step by step its course doth urge.
What boots a bold heroic opposition ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Naught see I of this water counterfeited,
For human eyes alone can thus be cheated.
I'm rarely tickled by so odd a case.
Forth from the field whole hosts at once they
bound there,
Poor fools ! They ween they shall be drowned
there,
The while they safely snort upon dry ground
there,
And drolly run with swimming gestures round
there.
Confusion reigns in every place.
[Ihe ravens have returned.
!
Part II 283
Unto the lofty Master I'll commend ye.
Yourselves to prove ye masters now pretend ye,
Haste to the dwarf- folks' glowing smithy,
Where stone and metal on their stithy
They smite to sparks and never tire.
Coax from them with your honeyed cackling,
A fire winking, gleaming, crackling,
A very high-fantastic fire.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
E'en so. Unbridled each his neighbours
With knightly buffetings belabours,
Wherewith the good old times were rife.
Now fan again vambrace and jambeau,
As Guelph and Ghibelline, the flambeau
Of the eternal jar to life.
Into the ancestral feud they throw then.,
And still implacable they show them ,
Now far and wide resounds the strife
Nay, party-rancour is the Devil's
Best instrument in all his revels,
E'en to the last, the grisly hour.
Adown the vale abliorrent-panic,
Now strident-harsh and shrill-satanic,
Resound with awe-inspiring power
\_JVarHke tumult in the Orchestra^
passing over at length into merry
martial music.
speedbooty.
HAVEQUICK.
Part II 285
SPEEDBOOTY.
Oh, what a treasure here heaped up
Where shall I start ? Where shall I stop ?
HAVEQUICK.
SPEEDBOOTY.
HAVEQUICK.
SPEEDBOOTY.
SPEEDBOOTY.
'Tis murderously heavy ! It
I cannot lift or bear one whit.
!
HAVEQUICK.
Bend thy back quickly ! Thou must stoop !
SPEEDBOOTY.
I'm done for now ! Alack ! Alack !
HAVEQUICK.
HAVEC2U1CK.
HAVEQUICK.
Part II 287
BODY-GUARDS.
That with our circle doth not suit,
Soldier and carrion-thief to boot.
Who nears our Emperor, let him see
An honest soldier that he be.
HAVEQUICK.
Honesty, quotha ! That we know ;
^7o Speedhooty.
FIRST BODY-GUARD.
SECOND.
Emperor.
Now be that as it may, the day is ours, and
shattered
The hostile force in flight across the plain is
scattered.
Here stands the empty throne, and hung with
arras round
The treasonable wealth encumbereth the ground.
We, sately fenced about by our own guard
domestic.
The peoples' envoys wait, imperially majestic.
From every side at once the joyful tidings roll,
The Empire is at peace, is ours with heart and
soul.
And what though in our strife was glamour
interwoven.
We in the end alone, but by ourselves have
stroven.
Oft with belligerents doth accident collude,
From heaven falls a scone, upon the foe rains
blood,
From rocky caverns rings a voice of awful
omen,
That lifts our hearts on high, strikes terror to
the foemen.
An endless gibing-stock the vanquished bit the
sod,
—
Part II 289
The victor in his pride lauds the propitious God.
Straightway a miliion throats — it needeth no in-
junction
" Thee God ive magnify ! " chant forth with
solemn unction.
Yet, as hath rarely chanced till now, for highest
praise
Back upon mine own breast I turn my pious
gaze.
A young and wanton prince his day may haply
squander.
Yet from the years he learns the moment's
worth to ponder,
I doff my
Wherefore I'll league myself, or e'er
helm,
With you, ye noble Four, for house and court
and realm.
HIGH-MARSHAL.
Thy loyal host, till now with intestine disorders
Engaged, thee and thy throne shall stablish on
thy borders.
Then by the festal throng, within the ample
space
Of thine ancestral keep the banquet bid ur>
grace.
290 Goethe's Faust
Naked before thee borne, beside thee held,
'twill be
An escort evermore to highest Majesty.
HI3H-SENESCHAL.
But be't so
undertaking.
— glad hearts too speed on an
HIGH-SEWE».
HIGH-CUPBEARER.
then
Or e'er you're ware of it, stands builded up to
men.
Myself too I transport to yonder solemn wassail.
Th' imperial buffet I with many a gorgeous
vessel
Will deck. Together there silver and gold
shall glance.
The rarest goblet, though, I'll choose thee in
advance,
A sheeny Venice-glass, wherein heart's-ease
awaiteth,
That spiceth still the wine, yet ne'er inebriateth.
Oft to such talisman too full a trust they yield.
Thee better, Thou Most High, thy temperance
doth shield.
EMPEROR.
and fine
Be yours, with royalties on mintage, salt and
mine.
Then that my gratitude be fully demonstrated,
Nearest unto my throne ye have I elevated.
ARCHBISHOP.
HIGH-CHANCELLOR.
HIGH-CHANCELLOR.
This weightiest statute straight to parchment I'll
confide.
Unto the Empire's weal, and ours, with joy and
pride.
The Chancery shall engross and with the seal
invest it.
EMPEROR.
Thus I dismiss ye then, that each at leisure may
With tranquil mind reflect on the momentous
day.
[The Secular Princes lu'ithdraiv.
THE ECCLESIASTIC
^remains, and speaks 'with deep feeling.
Speak !
ARCHBISHOP.
thou hope,
Yet spite of God the Lord and Holy Father
Pope.
When he shall hear thereof, as penalty the
latter
With holy thunderbolt thy sinful realm will
shatter.
For he forgetteth not how on that day of glee
The coronation-day, the wizard thou didst free.
Then from thy diadem, to Christendom a
scandal.
Upon that head accurst with bell and book and
candle
Fell the first ray of grace ; but beat thy breast
and pay
Of thine unholy gain a modest mite straightway
Back to the sanctuary ; the broad hill-space,
erected
Where stood thy tent, when thee foul fiends in
league protected,
Part II 297
Where to the Prince of Lies a willing ear didst
lend,
That, tutored piously, devote to holy end,
With mountains stretching wide, and all their
leafy vesture,
With heights that clothe them green to never-
failing pasture,
With limpid fishy lakes, brooklets in countless
tale
In thousand twists and turns swift-plunging to
the vale ;
ARCHBISHOP.
ARCHBISHOP.
ARCHBISHOP
[jwko has taken his leave, but turns round
again as he goes out.
Part II 299
In perpetuity. Its worthy sustentation
Will cost us much, and much its wise adminis-
tration.
The buildmg too to speed in such a desert spot.
From thy rich spoil wilt thou a little gold allot.
Moreover we shall need, thereon I can't keep
silence,
Timber and lime and slate, brought here from
many a mile hence.
Them will the people bring, from holy pulpit
taught,
The Church will bless the man that in her
service brought. \^£.xit.
ARCHBISHOP
[^returning again ivith a most profound
reverence.
EMPEROR, petulantly.
The land is not yet there — it lies beneath the
foam !
300 Goethe's Faust
ARCHBISHOP.
Who patience hath and right, his day will surely
come.
For us thy word may stand our undisputed
charter.
EMPEROR, alone.
ACT V.
OPEN COUNTRY.
WAYFARER.
PHILEMON, to Baucis.
Haste to spread the table yonder
Wliere the garden blossoms bright
Let him run, and start, and wonder.
For he will not trust his sight.
\_Follo-ivs htm.
Eden smiled.
Smiling, erst as
1,grown older, now with speedy
Help at hand no more did stay.
Part II 303
And as ebbed my strength, already
Was the billow tar away.
Ditches digged and built a rampire
Subtle master's servants bold,
Minished the ocean's empire,
Lordship in its place to hold.
See now verdant mead on meadow.
Pasture, garden, thorp and grove.
Come, for soon will fall the shadow,
Let the sight thy rapture move.
Aye, afar off sails are gliding,
Nightlings to the port repair ;
PHILEMON.
He would hear the wonder. Marry,
Fain thou talkest. Tell him it.
BAUCIS.
Well now, and it was a wonder!
Still to-day it puzzles me.
Something in their doings yonder
Was not what it ought to be.
—
PHILEMON.
Can the Emperor do evil ?
PHILEMON.
Yet his offer shouldst thou hide not
Fair domain in the newland !
BAUCIS.
In the water-ground confide not !
PHILEMON.
Let us to the Chapel wending,
There the sun's last glance behold.
Let us ring and kneel and bending
Pray, and trust the God of old.
;
Part II 305
PALACE.
Spacious Pleasaunce, Broad, Straight-Cut
Canal.
FAUST, starting.
TOWER-WARDER, US aboVC.
How the gay argosy doth glide
With the fresh breeze of eventide !
Here do we land
With costly hoard ;
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPKISTOPHELES.
For further meed ye must not look.
Marry, your share thereof ye took !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES, to Fuust.
With sombre gaze, with serious brow,
Thy lofty fortune learnest thou.
Now is high wisdom crowned. 'Tis done,
The shore is with the sea at one.
—
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Who doubts To
each noble ear
it ?
MEPHISTOPHELES.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
I'll bear them forth and on the ground
Set them again ere they look round.
When from the violence they recover
The fair abode will smooth all over.
\_lVh'tstles shrilly.
MEPHISTOPHELES, ad Spcctatores.
Here haps but what hath happed of yore,
For Naboth's vineyard was before.
\_Reguw I., 2 1.
DEEP NIGHT.
LYNCEUS, THE TOWER-WARDER,
Part II 311
1q all the eternal
Adornment I see,
WelJ-pleased with all things,
Well-pleased too with me.
Ye eye-balls entranced,
Whate'er ye have seen,
Where'er ye have glanced,
So fair hath it been !
^ Pause.
Not alone though to delight me
Am I posted here so high.
What a horror to affright me
Threatens from the midnight-sky !
So far-sighted must I be !
— !
3 I 2 Goethe's Faust
Crashes in the little chapel
Burdened 'neath the branches' fall.
Barbed flames already grapple,
Wreathing, with the summits tall.
Now unto the roots the hollow
Trunks are glowing purple-red.
[_Long pause. Singing.
What the eye once loved to follow,
With the centuries is dead.
Part II 313
But we, we made no more delay,
We cleared them speedily away.
The old folk fretted scarce a jot
For terror killed them on the spot.
A stranger hiding there made show
Of fight —
but him we soon laid low.
In the brief span of furious fray.
From embers, scattered round that lay,
Was kindled straw. Now flares it free,
A funeral-pyre for all the three.
FAUST.
Deaf unto my commands were ye
Exchange I wished, not robbery,
And this insensate brutal wrong,
I curse it ! Share it ye among !
CHORUS.
The good old saw is still good sense
Be willing slave of violence.
And artthou bold and steadfast, pelf
And house and home mayst stake, and self
MIDNIGHT.
\_Enter four grey hags.
FIRST HAG.
Men know me as Want !
!
THIRD HAG.
Men know me as Care !
FOURTH HAG.
Men know me as Need]
THE THREE.
Fast barred is the porta], we cannot within !
WANT,
There grow I a shadow.
GUILT.
To nothing I wane.
NEED.
GUILT.
I cieave to thy side, Sister. Up and away
NEED.
Part II 315
THE THREE.
The cloud-rack is scudding, and quenched each
star now !
fate !
3 I 6 Goethe's Faust
Thus are we overawed, we stand alone.
The door doth creak, and yet doth enter none !
[Shuddering.
Is any here ?
CARE.
The question asketh aye /
FAUST.
And thou, who art thou then ?
CARE.
Lo, here am I !
FAUST.
Withdraw thyself!
CARE.
In an ever-changing guise
Cruel power I exercise.
On the highway, on the billow.
Cleave I close, a carking fellow ;
Be joy or be it sorrow.
it
CARE.
FAUST.
Unhallowed spectres ! Aye, thus persecute ye
still
Part II 319
FAUST, blinde J.
ye
What is staked out be straight accomplished
by ye !
Ye Lemures loose-jointed !
MEPHISTOPHELES, asick.
Bailiff!
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Here !
FAUST.
Workmen throng on throng address
Thyself to get. Put forth all vigour.
Now with indulgence, now
with rigour
Encourage. Pay, entice, impress !
MEPHISTOPHELES, half-Ioud,
They talk — such nev/s to me they j^ave —
Not of a groove, but of a . . . gr..ve !
FAUST.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Him can no pleasure sate, no bliss suffice.
Thus ever after changing forms he springeth.
Even to this last sorry empty trice.
Poor wretch, with all his soul he clingeth.
Me did he sturdily withstand
Time triumphs, lies the graybeard in the sand.
The clock stands still
!
Part II 323
CHORUS.
Stands still ! As midnight hushed and dead!
The finger falls.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
It falls! 'Tis finished!
CHORUS.
'Tis past and over.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Past a stupid word. !
wholly one I
Entombment.
LEMUR, Solo.
LEMURES, Chorus.
For thee, dull guest in hempen vest
Is far too fair the hovel.
LEMUR, Solo.
LEMURES, Chorus.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Part II 325
Oft eyed I greedily the stiffened members
They seemed but dead — life quickened in the
embers.
\_lVith fantastic Jugleman-like
gestures oj incantation.
Lords of the straight and of the crooked horn,
Hither apace, around me swiftly settle,
Of sterling devii-mint and metal,
And with ye straight the jaws of Hell be borne.
True, Heli hath many many jaws. It swallows
With due regard to rank and dignity.
In this last dran.a though the time that follows,
As in all else, v/dl less punctilious be.
\T.he horrible jaivs of Hell open
up on the left.
HEAVENLY HOST.
Messengers holy,
Heaven's kin, slowly
Follow in flight
Sinners forgiving.
Dead dust reviving.
Leave, as ye hover
Lingering over.
To all things living
A trace of delight !
!
Part II 327
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Roses, ye twinkling.
Balsam-besprinkling,
Fluttering, thickening,
Secretly-quickening,
Leaflet-bewinged that are,
Rusebud-unringed that are,
Hasten to bloom !
ANGELS.
Blossoms, ye benedight,
Flamelets, ye frolic-light,
Love are ye lavishing,
Bosom-enravishing
Bliss ye purvey.
Words void of lying,
Th' ethereal sky in,
To hosts undying
Everywhere day !
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Curse on the oafs and shame ! Oh scurvy !
Part II 329
The lubbers, wheel on wheel they throw.
And into Hell plunge arsy-versy.
Joy to your well-deserved ho: bath below 1
clinging !
CHORUS OF ANGELS
MEPHISTOPHELES.
Me to befool if now
them. I let
Whom shall we henceforth fool esteem ?
The baggages, e'en though I hate them.
Lovely past everything to me thty seem.
ANGELS.
We do draw near. Why dost thou shrink
away ?
We come, abide our coming if thou can !
Part II 331
Ye hover to and fro, come down a little !
In the All-Unity
Blessed to be.
CHORUS OF ANGELS.
Holy, thrice holy
Flames, and he over
V»'hom they may hover
Blest feels him wholly.
Rise all together,
Laud and extol
Cleansed is the ether.
Breathe may the soul !
MOUNTAKV-RAVINES, FOREST,
CLIFF, WILDERNESS.
Holy Anchorites,
^scattered up the mountain-sides^ having
their diveIling in rocky clefts.
34 Goethe's Faust
Shine the endless star above,
Core of immortal love.
PATER SERAPHICUS.
Boys midnight born, the gateway
at
Half-unclosed of sense and mind ;
PATER SERAPHICUS.
Seek m higher spheres your station,
Grow by gradual period,
As in ever purest fashion
Strengtheneth the face ot God.
!
36 Goethe's Faust
For in ether free, supernal,
This as spirit-food sull holdeth,
Revelation of Eternal
Love that unto bliss unfoldeth.
Part II 339
All invincible we grow
When august Thou wiliest,
Tempered straightway is the glow
If our hearts Thou stillest.
It is not forbidden
That the light-beguiled all
Hear us imploring,
Peerless, Supernal,
Gracious, Maternal !
UNA POENITENTIUM,
^_formerly hnoivn as Gretchen, nestling
nearer.
Ah bow!
My youth's be oved,
From giief removed,
Returning is.
MATER GLORIOSA.
Come, soar to higher spheres ! Divining
Thee near, he'll follow on thy way.
CHORUS MYSTICUS.
All things corruptible
Are but reflection.
Earth's insufficiency
Here finds perfection.
Here the ineffiible
Wrought is with love.
The Eternal-Womanly
Draws U8 above.
NOTES
SECOND PART
I. A Pleasant Landscape.
In the First Part of the Faust-drama, when
Faust is on the eve of quitting his study with
his new mentor, Mephistopheles, the latter
announces his programme in the following
words :
" Tht little ivorld, and then the great
•we'll see." The through the little
excursion
•world, the circumscribed life of the obscure
citizen, came to a tragic end in Gretchen's
dungeon. In the Second Part of the drama
Faust is to be introduced to the great •world,
beginning with the croti'ded motley medleyi of the
Court. But he cannot pass immediately from the
black despair of the dungeon-scene to the brilliant
frivolity of the Court, We
must imagine an
undefined interval of remorse and paralysis, from
which he emerges slowly, under the healing
343
34-4 Goethe's Faust
influences of time. This cannot be presented
dramatically. The purpose of the Prelude, for
such the First Scene really is, is to portray it
figuratively. The period of healing is gnthered
up into the four watches of one night ; the
healing influences arc personified as tiny elves,
who, as powers of Nature, are non-moral, and
minister indifFtrently to the good and the evil,
and the completion of the healing synchronizes
with the dawn of a new day, of Faust's new
life.
Page 12.
Serenade, Notturno, Mattutino, Rei/LiL
Pajre 16.
JVfiat is accursed, yet -welcome ever ? etc.
Page 23.
thus 'neath the sivay
Of mighty Rome, and thus till yesterday,
Aye, till to-day it -was.
Page 25.
/ hear his every ivord tivice er,
Page 36.
Parasites.
Familiar figures of Greek, Roman, and Italian
comedy.
Page 38.
77/1? Nocturnal and Charnel-house poets.
—
Page 38.
Tht Graces.
Hesiod names Graces, Aglala^ splendour,
three
Thalia, good-fortune, and
Euphrosyne, cheerfulness,
For Thalia, familiar also as the name of a Muse.
Goethe substitutes Hegemone, leaderess, one of the two
Graces reverenced by the Athenians, the other being
Auxo, growth. Seneca says : Some think that it is one
Grace that bestoivs a benefit, a second that receives it, and a
third that repaijs it.
Page 39.
The Fates.
The Parcae or Fates, like the Graces, were three in
number Clotho, the spinner, holds the distatf Luchesis,
; ;
Page 41.
The Furies.
Page 42.
AsmudeuSj trusty fiend.
Page 45.
Zotlo- Thtnitei,
Page 46.
— athtvart the throng a splendid
Four-yoked chariot comes gliding.
Page 52.
With dragons be the dragon greedy.
Page 57.
They knotv ivhat no man else doth guess,
Page 59.
The IVildtvood-men.
The here described are familiar figures in
figures
heraldry, where they often appear as the supporters of
escutcheons.
Page 60.
And underneath the vaulted blue
He still hath kept him -wakeful too.
The Nymphs are grateful to Pan for not putting a
term to their sports by falling asleep, for when Pan
sleeps, all Nature sleeps with him. The allusion a few
lines below is of course to panic fears.
Page 63.
Already through the Wood aspire
The pointed tongues of lambent ßre.
The Wood is a scenic w^ood.
By the contrivance of Mephistopheles the masque
ends dramatically in a seeming universal conflagration.
Goethe had in mind two historical instances of the
disastrous termination of festivities by fire. In his
youth he had read in Abelin's chronicles an account of
a similar occurrence at a masquerade at the court of
King Charles VI. of France, when the tow and pitch
in the king's masking-costume caught fire, and four
gentlemen who sought to save him were burned to
death. There was also present to his mind a contem-
porary occurrence, the conflagration at the ball of
Prince Schwarzenberg at Paris in 1810, at which the
Emperor Napoleon v/as present.
Falseßre plays a frequent role in the first Faust-book.
—
IV. Pleasaunce.
The kernel of this scene
is the fulfilment of
Page 68.
N01V is the Alphabet indeed redundant ;
Page 85.
Impossible, thcrcjure most crediile.
ACT II.
Page 97.
£ver ivhere life thus rots and moulders
Are maggots bred.
The poet plays upon the two meanings of the
—
German Grillen crickets and crotchets.
Page 97.
Famulus.
Not Wagner, of course, but Wagner's famulus, now
that Wagner is himself professor. For famulus .'ec
Faust, part i., note to page 31.
Notes to Part II 359
Page 98.
Oremus.
Page 100.
There behind 7ne stirs a guest ivell-knoivn.
Page 100.
a simple hejan.
The German word is Fuchs, a University Freshman.
Page loi.
You look quite resolute, quite •valiant, but —
Pray don't go home quite absolute.
Page 103.
Expel ience / Froth and foam alone,
fVith mind not equal born.
Page 105.
Cram^nng thoughts Philist'ian.
A consistent
interpretation of the symbolical
of Homunculus is scarcely to be
significance
found, and was probably never intended. For
Düntzer he represents the soul of Faust in its
striving after the highest ideal of beauty ; for
Schröer he is the humanistic movement, the
revived interest in Greek literature of the
Renascence of Letters; again he is the pure
abstract human mind, ivithcut sense-organs, and
anterior to all experience. Von Loeper would
have us content ourselves with thejiction modelled
by the poet upon the oldfable, ivhich in individualisa-
tion is second to none of the personages of the dr^ma.
It is likely that this latter view coincides wiih
Goethe's original intention, and that various
and even conflicting symbolical significations
wove themselves into it both consciously and
unconsciously in the course of its elaboration.
From the Conversations ivith Eckermann we
gather, what, as Goethe himself felt, is not over
evident from the poem itself, that the final suc-
cess cf Wagner's experiment is due to the
co-operation of Mephistopheles, tvho comes, at a
most timely monnnt, his luck to hasten. Such
apparently was not Goethe's original intention.
Page 107.
many a crt^iialliz^d man.
A crystallized man is presumably wrhat English slang
calls a fossil, and is probably a sly hit at Wagner
himself.
Page 108.
IVhat thee, thou Rogue, Sir Cousin, here I "view.
• • Moreover he calls him cousin ; for such spiritual beings
(as Homunculus) -who are not yet darkened ana cramped by
64- Goethe's Faust
becoming men out and out luere counted among the demons,
•whence a sort of kinship betiveen the t^vo" ^Goethe to
Eckermannj.
Page 109.
Fair-encompassed / Limpid "waters, etc.
Page III.
The "warrior bid unto thefiaht,
Leaa thou the maid to tread a measure.
i.e. take everyone to the goal of his longing. Faust
will be in his element in ancient Greece.
Page III.
Classical Walpurgis-Night and Pharsalus
See note at beginning of next scene.
Page 112.
Asmi/dcus,
See note to page 42.
Page 113.
For Thessalian -witches see note at beginning of next
scene.
Page 1 1 3.
the dot upon the I.
moon !
" But for other reasons too the locality
lent itself to Goethe's grandiose conception. It
was at Pydna, actually in Macedonia, but near
the Thessalian frontier, that another decisive
had been fought (i68 B.c.), when the
battle
Roman Aemilius Paulus crushed the Macedonian
King Perseus, whereby Macedonia became a
Roman province. Nor were the mythical
associations less favourable than the historical.
Thessaly was the cradle of ancient Greek
mythology. Here was Olympus, the seat of
the gods ; the Temple of Apollo; the veil of
Temj^ie ; here the giants had assailed the gods
in their citadel— the rugged rock-strewn coun-
try still bore witness to the Titanic strife and ;
i. Pharsalian Plains.
Page 114.
Erichtho.
Page 1
1
5.
Page I 15.
Page 116.
As ivhen through the tvindotv old I
Gazed on northern dread and gloom.
So Wodan in German mythology looks out upon
the earth through a window (see note to page no).
Homunculus is repelled and Mephistopheles at-
tracted by the earliest representatives of Greek
mythology, the monstrous creations.
Page 117.
Is it the glebe not, her that bare, etc.
is Greece.
Notes to Part II 369
Page 118.
So stand I like Antaeus dauntless-hearleJ.
Antaeus, theLibyan giant, who won new strength
from contact with mother Earth, as Faust from the
touch oi Grecian soil.
Page 118.
Page 119.
Ants of the colossal species, Ar:maspians.
Page 1 20,
Me (lid they see
I the old stage-play as Old Iniquity.
Page J 20.
.'Some riddle, some charade at least propose mf.
Page 123.
Before the like Ulysses in hem ten bonds hath striven.
Page 124.
Hertules sleiv the latest of our notion.
Page 124.
Page 124.
With us ivhen Ulysses tarried.
Page I 26.
Page 1 26.
Page 127.
Such bliss ivas once before thu share.
Page 130.
As ]\dentor none.
Not Pallas' self is to be gratulatcd.
Page 131.
The glorious federation
Of Argonauts.
The Argonauts sailed to Colchis in the good ship
Argo under the leadership of Jason on the Quest of
the Golden Fleece. The chief of them are enumerated
in the following lines The Dioscuri are Castor and
:
Page 133.
On that occasion had the Dioscuri
From robbers' hanas their little sister freed.
Notes to Pcirt II 373
Did not Achilles, say, in Pherae ßnd her
iVithout the pale of time ?
Page 134.
Aesculapius'' duu-^^hter,
Manto.
Aljntowas the daughter of theTheban seer Tiresias,
and with the cult of Apollo.
wa-! associated Goethe
makes her the daughter of the divine physician,
Aesculapius, and gives her as seat the Temple of
Apollo on Olympus.
Page 135.
Here Rome and Greece each challenged ejch in ßght, etc.
Page 136.
Leads to Persephone the gloomy portal, etc.
Page 137.
For the ill-starred people s good.
Page 142.
The cranes of Ibycus.
Page 143.
Yon fat-paunch ^ crook-leg knave.
Page 143.
Give me my Blocksberg for a revel-rout , etc.
Page 148.
A mask, as everywhere doth chance.
Is here an emblematic dance.
Notes to Part II 377
Mcphistophelcs' pursuit of the Lamiae is the anti-
thesi-.of Faust's quest of Helen ; it is bestial lust, con-
trasted with ideal love. It is unnecessary to interpret
in detail the significance of the emblematic dance.
Page 148.
Oread.
Page 15c.
Anaxagoras and Thaies.
See introduction to notes on this scene, page 374.
Page 151.
The mount bears myrmidons in bevies.
Page 152.
Diana, Luna, Hecate.
The Moon Diana on earth. Luna in heaven, and
is
Page 154.
Dryad,
Nymph of the oak-tree.
Page 155.
The Phorkyads,
The Graiae, were the daughters of
Phorkides, or
J'horkys,Darkness, and Keto, the Abyss. They were
represented as three gray hags, of surpassing ugliness,
who liad but one eye and one tooth amongst them,
which they interchanged as need was. They had
their abode in outer darkness, where neither sun nor
moon ever looked upon them. Goethe has recast their
name on the model of other Greek patronymics into
Phorkyads {cf. page 189 .
Page 155.
^Tis more than mandrakes , ivhat is yonder !
Page 155.
Ops and Rhea.
was the sister and
Ops of Saturn, Rhea thebride
mother of Zeus; the one the other a Greek
a Roman,
divinity. Mepb.istopheles' flattery of the grisly Three
reminds us forcibly of Satan's cajolery of Sin and
Death in the '• Paradise Lost."
Page 156.
Page 157.
1'e three one eye, one tooth, sirßiceth ivell.
^Tivere mythologically feasible
In tivo, of three to concentrate the essence.
The thought seems to be, since one eye and one tooth
suffice you, the number three is manifestly not essential
to the myth.
Page 158.
fte ! Hdrmafhrodite must I be ßouted !
I.e.male as Mephistopheles, female as a Phorkyad,
with one of whom he has incorporated himself.
Page 158.
Did Thessaltan hags infernal
Impiously draiv dozvn thy yelloiv
Orb.
Page 159.
Nereids and Tritons, as sea-monsters.
Page 1 60.
the lofty Kahiri.
Page 160.
Wereus
An aged sea-god, endowed with the
gift of prophecy
and the power of self-transformation. Contrary to
Goethe's conception of his character he is represented
as kindly-minded to men. His prophecy to Paris of
the sack of Troy forms the subject of an ode of Horace
fi. 15), that to Ulysses is the poet's invention.
Page 161.
Where Pindus' eagles glutted them in glee,
Page 162.
Cyj?ris.
Page 161.
A'way to Proi'us ! Ask that ivizard-elf
H01V one can best exist and change oneself.
Proteus is a sea-god, who shares with Nereus the gift
of prophecy and the power of transforming himself
Of this power he avails himself to evade questioning,
and can only be brought to speech by such as are
cunning enough to catcli him and bold enough to hold
him until he has exhausted his transformations and
appears in his own form. As H; munculus cannot
cla<;p him, Goethe invents another way of bringing
iiim to speech (page 166).
Notes to Part II 381
Page 163.
Chelone's shell,
Page 164.
The Kabiri.
The whole episode of the Kabiri would seem to be
little more than one of those satires directed at con-
temporary questions of ephemeral interest which
Goethe, with questionable judgment, has so frequently
introduced into both parts of the Faust.
The Kabiri were mysterious deities worshipped
especially at Samothrace, of whom very little is known,
or apparently ever was known in historical times.
That little may almost all be found in the text Q:f.
also page 367). There arose a controversy amongst
German scholars concerning their names, attributes,
number, and significance, which is unedifying and
wearisome at the present day, and which tlie curious
reader may read elsewhere. Amongst other forms
attributed to them was that of earthen crocks, and
with these the clairvoyant Homunculus identifies
them.
It is doubtless the apparent pointlessness of the
whole passage which has led commentators to seek a
deeper meaning in it As an example of the ingen-
uity with which they embroider allegory to fit their
canvas, it may be interesting to give a brief account of
one such interpretation. Kiintzel explains these
mysterious deities, hunger-bitten, ever-hurning for the
Unattainable, as the successive religions in which the
aspirations of man after the unknowable have from
time to time been embodied. The three which are
brought to the feast are the Indian, Egyptian, and
Pelasgian faiths. The fourth, which claims to be the
only true, is the faith of the ancient Hebrews, the cult
of Jehovah. The three that are not forthcoming are
Buddhism, Christianity, and Mohammedanism, all
unknown to the ancient Greek world; whilst the
eighth, -whom none hath thought of hereto, is the all-
embracing religion of the future.
In spite of the striking ingenuity of this theory, and
,
exists there.
Page 167.
He is, methinks, hermafhroditical.
Page 168
Threefold notetvorthy spirit-trip,
Page 168.
Telchines oj Rhodes, on hippocampi and sea-dragons.
Page 170.
In March 1807 :
—
Nature makes no leaps, she could, for example, never make
a horse, unless all the other animals had gone before, upon
which, as upon a ladder, she climbs up to the structure of the
horse.
Page 172.
Psylli and Marsi,
These are both races of snake-charmers, the former
Libyan, the latter Italian. The Psylli are mentioned
by Lucan {Pharsalia, ix.\ the Marsi by Virgil
(Aeneid, vii., 758% and both together in Pliny's
Natural History, in a passage the misinterpretation of
which has apparently led Goethe to locate them in
Cyprus, and thence to associate them with the cult of
Aphrodite.
Page 172.
Nor Eagle nor -winged Lion heed zve,
Cross nor Crescent Moon.
These are the insignia of the successive lords of
Cyprus, Rome, Venice, Christian, and Mohammedan.
Page 177.
To Eros the empire, ivhence all first things first
blossomed.
ACT III.
Page 178.
Pallas' Hill.
i.e. Atliens.
Page 179.
Cytherea^s shrine.
Cytherea Aphrodite, Venus.
is Tradition has it,
however, that Helen was borne away by Paris whilst
sacrificing at the shrine of Artemis.
Page 187.
The ThaLimus.
The bridal-chamber, or the chamber of the lord and
lady of the house. Also the bridal-bed.
Page 187.
Phorkyas.
The disguised Mephistopheles.
Page 189.
Which of the ddughtert
Art thou of Porkys.
See note to page 155.
Page 192.
H01V hidiotis, side by side "with Beauty, is HiJeoiisness ?
The following dialogue
alternate single lines
in
(Greek stiJwmythia) is characteristic of the Greek
drama, and is particularly efTective when employed,
as here, in railing or in dispute.
Page 193.
N^ot upon hlooJ ivhich thou too hotly lustest for.
Page 197
Yet thou a livofold phantum didst appear, m;n ^ay,
In Ilium beheld, beheld in Esypt too.
According to one version of the legend, followed by
Euripides in his Helena, the Helen carried off by Paris
was only a wraith, the real Ht-len having been con-
veyed by Hejmtjs at the instance of Hera to Egypt,
where Menelaus iound her on his retuin from Troy.
The story saves Helen's reputation.
Page 197.
Then do I'ley say, from forththe holU-w Realm of Shaaes,
Aßame -with longing, Achdles mated h'-m ivi'h thee.
Page 205.
A daring breed behind there in the motin'.ain-vale
Hath lodged in silence, pressing from Cimmerian night.
Page 207.
lii'hat are scutch::ons ?
The ancient heroes bore devices on their shields, as
appears notably in a striking passage of Aeschylus'
Se-v^n against Theb.s here referred to, but these were not
coats-of-arms, not being hereditary. Phorkyas makes
the difference clear in the words from their moA remote
progenitors. The ivreathed snake of Ajax' shield Goethe
took from a picture on a vase belonging to the Dowager
Duchess of Weimar.
Page 211,
Floateth haply e'en
Hermes before? Gleams not the golden ivawi ?
Amongst the functions of Hermes, the messenger or
herald of the gods, was that of conducting the souls of
the dead to Hades. He bore a golden wand in token
of his office
Page 215.
In lieu of solemn greeting as beho'v^d.
The representatives of the romantic medieval world
speak in blank verse, the metre par exeellenee of the
romantic drama wrought out by the English Eliza-
bethans, or in some form of rhymed verse Helen,
with ready courtesy, frames her speech at once to the
former, which, being unrhymed, is not wholly foreign
to the genius of Greek, but is unable to rhyme until
she learns from Faust. Faust occasionally uses the
classic iambic trimeter, Phorkyas and the Choretids
mostly use classical metres. The choice of metre
usually has reference to the occasion.
The attitude of medieval chivalry towards women,
which forms so strong a contrast with the almost
Oriental attitude towards them of the Greek world,
finds striking expression in Faust's speech.
Page 216.
Lynceus, the Warder of the Toiver.
The name is taken from the lynx-eyed steersman of
Page 218.
M^e ivandercdfrom the rising sun,
Aiui straightixiaij ivas the West undone.
In the following lines is described the Völker-
ivanaerung, or migration of the Teutonic tribes, which
pressing in from the East overthrew Roman civilisa-
tion in the West (see in the Temple Classics, Willutm
Tell, page 194).
Page 220.
Feeble is the lord's behest.
What the servant doth is jest.
Page 221,
// seemed as did one tone unto another
Fit itself, etc.
It is the rhyme
that has impressed Helen. In the
following passage, in which Helen learns to rhyme in
alternate speech with Faust, Goethe has availed him-
self of a Persian legend to the elFt-ct that rhyme was
thus discovered by a pair of lovers. Htlensoon proves
herself an apt pupil.
Page 225.
fVe disembarked at Pylos, shattered —
For ancient Nestor is no more —
The pcttij kinglets' arms.
It was the aged Nestor whose sage counsel composed
the quarrels of the Grecian princes before Troy, and
thus held the army together (see Iliad, iv. 293, ,
et serj.^
Page 225.
/ hail ye Dukes as forth ije sally.
Page 227.
Thou All-hut-isle.
The Peloponnesus.
Page 227.
IVhen, ivhilst Eurotas' seages lightly
Whispered, she burst her shell ablaze.
Page 228.
And every man immortal in his place is
Page 231.
As I gaze there springs an urchin, from the ivomans lap he
leapeth
To the man, from sire to mother.
Page 235.
IVhat from out the heart arises
Can alone the heart control.
Page 236.
Let me he leiipiny, etc.
Page 244
IVe think ive recognize a tvell-knoivn form in the dead body.
Page 246.
The old Th-ssalum hell-hag.
This must be Phorkyas, though some commentators
prefer Erichtho (page 114).
Page 247.
Beside the throne of Her the Unsearchable,
i.e. Persephone.
Page 147.
He that no name hath ivon him, nor hath high resolve.
Unto the elements belongs.
Page 247.
Not meril alor.e
Page 251.
The Epilogue,
The Epilogue was never written.
ACT IV.
I. High Mountains.
Page 252.
A se-vcn-lcague buot clatters on to the stage.
Page 255.
Earth bristles still ivith ponderous foreign masses.
Page 256.
Some —
capital its inner ring
A horror of burgher-v'ictualling, itc.
Page 269,
IVIiei! glassed in fire on Tuender misiing-vigil
Up'in me leapt the ßames infuriate.
Page 274.
Sbeedbooty,
Page 276.
Mist-ivreaths over
The coasts of Sicily that hover, etc.
Page 279.
There com my ravens iivain.
Page j3i.
The Unaenes.
S,e Fans', part i., note to page 61.
Page 284.
Guelph and Ghibelline.
See note to page 20.
Page 288.
N^ij-w ht that as it may, the dai^ is ours, and shattered
The hostile force in ßight across the plain is scattered.
Page 293.
The Archbishop- Archchancelhr.
See note to page 22,
Page 299.
That mast notorious man
Was ivith the Empire's strand enfeoffed.
ACT V
An indeterminate time has passed since the
events of the last act. Faust's scheme for the
reclamation of land from the sea has succeeded.
He dwells as a feudal lord, surrounded by a
thriving people engaged in agriculture and com-
merce. But in the very heart of his possessions
there stands demesne which, being
a small
situated upon was already habitable
a height,
before Faust had reclaimed the shore and had
prior owners. This enclave poisons for Faust
the pleasures of ownership. The land in ques-
tion is occupied by a pious old couple, who have
there a cottage in a grove of lime-trees and a
little church. To these Goethe gives the names
of Philemon and Baucis, drawn from a story in
Ovid {^Metamorphoses viii., 629). Philemon
and Baucis showed hospitality to Jupiter and
Mercury, who were travelling in disguise, when
Notes to Part II 401
no one else would receive them. The indignant
gods drown the inhospitable land beneath a flood,
sparing only the cottage of the old folk, which is
turned into a marble temple. Philemon and
Baucis, bidden to ask for a boon, desire only to
be priests in the new temple, and that neither
may survive the other. Their wish is granted,
and in the ripeness of time the one is transformed
into an oak-tree, the other into a lime-tree.
Goethe's choice of these names has given rise
to some confusion. His Philemon and Baucis
must not in any way be identified with Ovid's.
He has chosen the names, on the same principle
which led him to call his watchman Lynceus,
and the captains of Mephistopheles' phantom-
army the Three Mighty Men, because these
names already connote certain qualities which
he intends his personages thus named to possess,
so that the readermay at once have an inkling
of the characters to be presented to him. For
a similar reason in Italian and French comedy
the same name occurs again and again in different
pieces to denote the same type of character, and
in English comedy the dramalls personae fre-
quently bear names indicative of some outstanding
Sheridan's Sir Anthony
trait in their.character, e.g.
Page 309.
Go then and shift them.
Page 311.
In all the tternal
Adornment I see.
The universe is for Lynccus, as for the Greeks, a
koimos, an adornment.
Page 3IZ.
Your pai don f Sooth, it -went not ivell,
Page 314.
ikfc-n kn-.-w me as Guilt.
Page 315.
Could I butfrom my path all magic banish^
Bid every spell into oblivion vanish,
And stand mere man before thee. Nature / Then
^Tivere "uorth the -while to be a man ivith men.
Page 323.
Who hath the grave so badly built
With mattock and ivith shovel, etc.
Page 325.
The horrible jaivs of Hell open up on the left.
luminous clouds, ivitli rays and splendour, ivith angels and the
elect in the distance, represented in perspective. (Frisch,
quoted by Schröer.) The disposition of the tableau
the Jaws of Hell on the left, the Heavenly Glory
above on the right— tallies with that of the Pisan
fresco mentioned above. The contest between the
Heavenly Hosts and the Hosts of Hell for the soul of
the dead, a familiar medieval conception, is illustrated
in the same fresco.
Page 327.
The boyish-girlish botch-work.
The
angels are represented as sexless, a compromise
between youth and maiden. It is not clear whether
they themselves, as being neither one thing nor the
»ther, or their music, is railed at as botch-work.
4o6 Goethe's Faust
Page 327.
IVhat ive invented of most shameful
To their devotion apt they find.
Page 327.
Chorus of Angels streiving roses.
Page 333.
Holy anchorites , scattered up the mountain-sides,
having their divelling in rocky clefts.
Page 333-
Pater eaijticus.
The was given to various
title saints, e.g. to Filippo
Neri, of whom Goethe writes in his Italian Journey. —
In the course of his life there developed in him the highest
gifts of religious enthusiasm the gift of tears, of ecstasy, and
:
at last, even of rising from the ground and hovering above it,
which is held by all to be the highest.
Goethe's pater ecstaticus, however, as also his other
patres,must not be identified with any particular saint.
He is a type of religious ecstasy.
Page 333-
That the un-worthy all
Pass ivith the earthly all,
Shi e the endless star abomCf
Core of immortal Love.
Page 334.
Pater profundus.
This too was
title borne by several, notably by
Bernard of Clairvaux.
— — —
Page 33S.
In mine eyes descend, I pray ye^
Organs apt for ivorld and earth,
Use them as your otun ; so may ye
On this neighbourhood look forth.
Page 337.
'Tis not ail free from stain
Were it asbestos.
Page 338.
Doctor Marianus.
Page 340.
Magna Peccatrix, Mulier Samaritaiia, Maria Aegyptiaca.
Page 341.
Una poenitentium.
41 o Goethe's Faust
the shrine of the Mater Dolorosa in Faust, part i.
page lyz.
Page 342.
The Eternal- Womanly.
The Eternal-Womanlij is pure and unselfish love,
revealed to mortals in its most perfect form in the love
of woman.
OS
L.