FAUST by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH, IN THE ORIGINAL METRES, BY Bayard Taylor A PENN STATE ELECTRONIC CLASSICS SERIES PUBLICATION Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, trans. Bayard Taylor is a publication of the Pennsylvania State University. This Portable Document file is furnished free and without any charge of any kind. Any person using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State University nor Jim Manis, Faculty Editor, nor anyone associated with the Pennsylvania State University assumes any responsibility for the material contained within the document or for the file as an electronic transmission, in any way. Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, trans. Bayard Taylor, the Pennsylvania State University, Electronic Classics Series, Jim Manis, Faculty Editor, Hazleton, PA 18202 is a Portable Document File produced as part of an ongoing student publication project to bring classical works of literature, in English, to free and easy access of those wishing to make use of them. Cover Design: Jim Manis Copyright © 2005 The Pennsylvania State University The Pennsylvania State University is an equal opportunity university. Goethe FAUST Hayward seemed to have been accepted as the standard, in default of anything more satisfactory: the English critics, generally sustaining the translator in his views concerning the secondary importance of form in Poetry, practically discouraged any further attempt; and no one, familiar with rhythmical expression through the needs of his own nature, had devoted the necessary love and patience to an adequate reproduction of the great work of Goethe’s life. Mr. Brooks was the first to undertake the task, and the by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH, IN THE ORIGINAL METRES, BY publication of his translation of the First Part (in 1856) induced me, for a time, to give up my own design. No previous English version exhibited such abnegation of the translator’s own tastes and habits of thought, such reverent desire to present the original in its purest form. The care and conscience with which the work had been performed were so apparent, that I now state with reluctance what then seemed to me to be its only deficiencies,—a lack of the lyrical fire and fluency of the original in some passages, and an occasional lowering of the tone through the use of words which are literal, but not equivalent. The plan of translation adopted by Mr. Brooks was so entirely my own, that when Bayard Taylor FAUST IT IS TWENTY YEARS since I first determined to attempt the translation of Faust, in the original metres. At that time, although more than a score of English translations of the First Part, and three or four of the Second Part, were in existence, the experiment had not yet been made. The prose version of 3 Faust further residence in Germany and a more careful study of both parts of Faust had satisfied me that the field was still open,—that the means furnished by the poetical affinity of the two languages had not yet been exhausted,—nothing remained for me but to follow him in all essential particulars. His example confirmed me in the belief that there were few difficulties in the way of a nearly literal yet thoroughly rhythmical version of Faust, which might not be overcome by loving labor. A comparison of seventeen English transla- Austin, in her “Characteristics of Goethe,” and accepted by Mr. Hayward),1 are quite independent of his views concern- tions, in the arbitrary metres adopted by the translators, sufficiently showed the danger of allowing license in this respect: the white light of Goethe’s thought was thereby passed through the tinted glass of other minds, and assumed the coloring of each. Moreover, the plea of selecting different metres in the hope of producing a similar effect is unreasonable, where the identical metres are possible. The value of form, in a poetical work, is the first question to be considered. No poet ever understood this question more thoroughly than Goethe himself, or expressed a more positive opinion in regard to it. The alternative modes of translation which he presents (reported by Riemer, quoted by Mrs. ciently known to all instructed persons, from masterly examples.’” Is it necessary, however, that there should always be this alternative? Where the languages are kindred, and equally capable of all varieties of metrical expression, may not both these “maxims” be observed in the same translation? Goethe, it is true, was of the opinion that Faust ought to be given, in French, in the manner of Clement Marot; but this was undoubtedly because he felt the inadequacy of modern French to express the naive, simple realism of many passages. The same objection does not apply to English. There are a few archaic expressions in Faust, but no more than are still allowed—nay, frequently encouraged—in the English of our day. 1 “‘There are two maxims of translation,’ says he: ‘the one requires that the author, of a foreign nation, be brought to us in such a manner that we may regard him as our own; the other, on the contrary, demands of us that we transport ourselves over to him, and adopt his situation, his mode of speaking, and his peculiarities. The advantages of both are suffi- 4 Goethe ing the value of form, which we find given elsewhere, in the clearest and most emphatic manner.2 Poetry is not simply a fashion of expression: it is the form of expression absolutely required by a certain class of ideas. Poetry, indeed, may be distinguished from Prose by the single circumstance, that it is the utterance of whatever in man cannot be perfectly uttered in any other than a rhythmical form: it is useless to say that the naked meaning is independent of the form: on the contrary, the form contributes essentially to the fullness of the meaning. In Poetry which endures through its own inherent vitality, there is no forced union of these two ele- 2 “You are right,” said Goethe; “there are great and mysterious agencies included in the various forms of Poetry. If the substance of my ‘Roman Elegies’ were to be expressed in the tone and measure of Byron’s ‘Don Juan,’ it would really have an atrocious effect.”—Eckermann. “The rhythm,” said Goethe, “is an unconscious result of the poetic mood. If one should stop to consider it mechanically, when about to write a poem, one would become bewildered and accomplish nothing of real poetical value.”—Ibid. “All that is poetic in character should be rythmically treated! Such is my conviction; and if even a sort of poetic prose should be gradually introduced, it would only show that the distinction between prose and poetry had been completely lost sight of.”—Goethe to Schiller, 1797. Tycho Mommsen, in his excellent essay, Die Kunst des Deutschen Uebersetzers aus neueren Sprachen, goes so far as to say: “The metrical or rhymed modelling of a poetical work is so essentially the germ of its being, that, rather than by giving it up, we might hope to construct a similar work of art before the eyes of our countrymen, by giving up or chang- ments. They are as intimately blended, and with the same mysterious beauty, as the sexes in the ancient Hermaphroditus. To attempt to represent Poetry in Prose, is very much like attempting to translate music into speech.3 ing the substance. The immeasurable result which has followed works wherein the form has been retained—such as the Homer of Voss, and the Shakespeare of Tieck and Schlegel—is an incontrovertible evidence of the vitality of the endeavor.” 3 “Goethe’s poems exercise a great sway over me, not only by their meaning, but also by their rhythm. It is a language which stimulates me to composition.”—Beethoven. 5 Faust The various theories of translation from the Greek and Latin poets have been admirably stated by Dryden in his Preface to the “Translations from Ovid’s Epistles,” and I do not wish to continue the endless discussion,—especially as our literature needs examples, not opinions. A recent expression, however, carries with it so much authority, that I feel bound to present some considerations which the accomplished scholar seems to have overlooked. Mr. Lewes4 justly says: “The effect of poetry is a compound of music and sug- word or phrase in the English lines he quotes, whereas the translator seeks precisely that one best word or phrase (having all the resources of his language at command), to represent what is said in another language. More than this, his task is not simply mechanical: he must feel, and be guided by, a secondary inspiration. Surrendering himself to the full possession of the spirit which shall speak through him, he receives, also, a portion of the same creative power. Mr. Lewes reaches this conclusion: “If, therefore, we reflect what a poem gestion; this music and this suggestion are intermingled in words, which to alter is to alter the effect. For words in poetry are not, as in prose, simple representatives of objects and ideas: they are parts of an organic whole,—they are tones in the harmony.” He thereupon illustrates the effect of translation by changing certain well-known English stanzas into others, equivalent in meaning, but lacking their felicity of words, their grace and melody. I cannot accept this illustration as valid, because Mr. Lewes purposely omits the very quality which an honest translator should exhaust his skill in endeavoring to reproduce. He turns away from the one best Faust is, and that it contains almost every variety of style and metre, it will be tolerably evident that no one unacquainted with the original can form an adequate idea of it from translation,”5 which is certainly correct of any translation wherein something of the rhythmical variety and beauty of the origi5 Mr. Lewes gives the following advice: “The English reader would perhaps best succeed who should first read Dr. Anster’s brilliant paraphrase, and then carefully go through Hayward’s prose translation.” This is singularly at variance with the view he has just expressed. Dr. Anster’s version is an almost incredible dilution of the original, written in other metres; while Hayward’s entirely omits the element of poetry. 4 Life of Goethe (Book VI.). 6 Goethe nal is not retained. That very much of the rhythmical character may be retained in English, was long ago shown by Mr. Carlyle,6 in the passages which he translated, both literally and rhythmically, from the Helena (Part Second). In fact, we have so many instances of the possibility of reciprocally transferring the finest qualities of English and German poetry, that there is no sufficient excuse for an unmetrical translation of Faust. I refer especially to such subtile and melodious lyrics as “The Castle by the Sea,” of Uhland, and the “Silent I have a more serious objection, however, to urge against Mr. Hayward’s prose translation. Where all the restraints of verse are flung aside, we should expect, at least, as accurate a reproduction of the sense, spirit, and tone of the original, as the genius of our language will permit. So far from having given us such a reproduction, Mr. Hayward not only occasionally mistakes the exact meaning of the German text,8 or Strodtmann thus reproduce Tennyson:— Land” of Salis, translated by Mr. Longfellow; Goethe’s “Minstrel” and “Coptic Song,” by Dr. Hedge; Heine’s “Two Grenadiers,” by Dr. Furness and many of Heine’s songs by Mr Leland; and also to the German translations of English lyrics, by Freiligrath and Strodtmann.7 “Es fällt der Strahl auf Burg und Thal, Und schneeige Gipfel, reich an Sagen; Viel’ Lichter wehn auf blauen Seen, Bergab die Wasserstürze jagen! Blas, Hüfthorn, blas, in Wiederhall erschallend: Blas, Horn—antwortet, Echos, hallend, hallend, hallend!” 6 Foreign Review, 1828. 7 When Freiligrath can thus give us Walter Scott:— —it must be a dull ear which would be satisfied with the omission of rhythm and rhyme. 8 On his second page, the line Mein Lied ertönt der unbekannten Menge, “My song sounds to the unknown multitude,” is translated: “My sorrow voices itself to the strange throng.” Other English translators, I notice, have followed Mr. Hayward in mistaking Lied for Leid. “Kommt, wie der Wind kommt, Wenn Wälder erzittern Kommt, wie die Brandung Wenn Flotten zersplittern! Schnell heran, schnell herab, Schneller kommt Al’e!—Häuptling und Bub’ und Knapp, Herr und Vasalle!” 7 Faust but, wherever two phrases may be used to express the meaning with equal fidelity, he very frequently selects that which has the less grace, strength, or beauty.9 9 I take but one out of numerous instances, for the sake of illustration. The close of the Soldier’s Song (Part I. Scene II.) is:— For there are few things which may not be said, in English, in a twofold manner,—one poetic, and the other prosaic. In German, equally, a word which in ordinary use has a bare prosaic character may receive a fairer and finer quality from its place in verse. The prose translator should certainly be able to feel the manifestation of this law in both languages, and should so choose his words as to meet their reciprocal requirements. A man, however, who is not keenly sensible to the power and beauty and value of rhythm, is likely to over- “Kühn is das Mühen, Herrlich der Lohn! Und die Soldaten Ziehen davon.” look these delicate yet most necessary distinctions. The author’s thought is stripped of a last grace in passing through his mind, and frequently presents very much the same resemblance to the original as an unhewn shaft to the fluted column. Mr. Hayward unconsciously illustrates his lack of a refined appreciation of verse, “in giving,” as he says, “a sort of rhythmical arrangement to the lyrical parts,” his object being “to convey some notion of the variety of versification which forms one great charm of the poem.” A literal translation is always possible in the unrhymed passages; but even here Mr. Hayward’s ear did not dictate to him the necessity of preserving the original rhythm. Literally: Bold is the endeavor, Splendid the pay! And the soldiers March away. This Mr. Hayward translates:— Bold the adventure, Noble the reward— And the soldiers Are off. 8 Goethe While, therefore, I heartily recognize his lofty appreciation of Faust,—while I honor him for the patient and conscientious labor he has bestowed upon his translation,—I cannot but feel that he has himself illustrated the unsoundness of his argument. Nevertheless, the circumstance that his prose translation of Faust has received so much acceptance proves those qualities of the original work which cannot be destroyed by a test so violent. From the cold bare outline thus produced, the reader unacquainted with the English ear is suspicious of new metres and unaccustomed forms of expression: there are critical detectives on the track of every author, and a violation of the accepted canons is followed by a summons to judgment. Thus the tendency is to contract rather than to expand the acknowledged excellences of the language.10 10 I cannot resist the temptation of quoting the following German language would scarcely guess what glow of color, what richness of changeful life, what fluent grace and energy of movement have been lost in the process. We must, of course, gratefully receive such an outline, where a nearer approach to the form of the original is impossible, but, until the latter has been demonstrated, we are wrong to remain content with the cheaper substitute. It seems to me that in all discussions upon this subject the capacities of the English language have received but scanty justice. The intellectual tendencies of our race have always been somewhat conservative, and its standards of literary taste or belief, once set up, are not varied without a struggle. The glish, through the derangement and relinquishment of its ancient laws of sound. The unteachable (nevertheless learnable) profusion of its middle-tones has conferred upon it an intrinsic power of expression, such as no other human tongue ever possessed. Its entire, thoroughly intellectual and wonderfully successful foundation and perfected development issued from a marvelous union of the two noblest tongues of Europe, the Germanic and the Romanic. Their mutual relation in the English language is well known, since the former furnished chiefly the material basis, while the latter added the intellectual conceptions. The English language, by and through which the greatest and most eminent poet of modern times—as con- passage from Jacob Grimm: “No one of all the modern languages has acquired a greater force and strength than the En- 9 Faust The difficulties in the way of a nearly literal translation of Faust in the original metres have been exaggerated, because certain affinities between the two languages have not been properly considered. With all the splendor of versification in the work, it contains but few metres of which the English tongue is not equally capable. Hood has familiarized us with dactylic (triple) rhymes, and they are remarkably abundant and skillful in Mr. Lowell’s “Fable for the Critics”: even the unrhymed iambic hexameter of the Helena occurs now and the trochaic, while in English it is the iambic: it is true that German is rich, involved, and tolerant of new combinations, while English is simple, direct, and rather shy of compounds; but precisely these differences are so modified in the German of Faust that there is a mutual approach of the two languages. In Faust, the iambic measure predominates; the style is compact; the many licenses which the author allows himself are all directed towards a shorter mode of construction. On the other hand, English metre compels the use of then in Milton’s Samson Agonistes. It is true that the metrical foot into which the German language most naturally falls is inversions, admits many verbal liberties prohibited to prose, and so inclines towards various flexible features of its sistertongue that many lines of Faust may be repeated in English without the slightest change of meaning, measure, or rhyme. There are words, it is true, with so delicate a bloom upon them that it can in no wise be preserved; but even such words will always lose less when they carry with them their rhythmical atmosphere. The flow of Goethe’s verse is sometimes so similar to that of the corresponding English metre, that not only its harmonies and caesural pauses, but even its punctuation, may be easily retained. I am satisfied that the difference between a translation of trasted with ancient classical poetry—(of course I can refer only to Shakespeare) was begotten and nourished, has a just claim to be called a language of the world; and it appears to be destined, like the English race, to a higher and broader sway in all quarters of the earth. For in richness, in compact adjustment of parts, and in pure intelligence, none of the living languages can be compared with it,—not even our German, which is divided even as we are divided, and which must cast off many imperfections before it can boldly enter on its career.”— Ueber den Ursprung der Sprache. 10 Goethe Faust in prose or metre is chiefly one of labor,—and of that labor which is successful in proportion as it is joyously performed. My own task has been cheered by the discovery, that the more closely I reproduced the language of the original, the more of its rhythmical character was transferred at the same time. If, now and then, there was an inevitable alternative of meaning or music, I gave the preference to the former. By the term “original metres” I do not mean a rigid, unyielding adherence to every foot, line, and rhyme of the to other lines which stand unrhymed in the original text. For the same reason, I make no apology for the imperfect rhymes, which are frequently a translation as well as a necessity. With all its supreme qualities, Faust is far from being a technically perfect work.11 The feminine and dactylic rhymes, which have been for the most part omitted by all metrical translators except Mr. Brooks, are indispensable. The characteristic tone of many passages would be nearly lost, without them. They give spirit German original, although this has very nearly been accomplished. Since the greater part of the work is written in an irregular measure, the lines varying from three to six feet, and the rhymes arranged according to the author’s will, I do not consider that an occasional change in the number of feet, or order of rhyme, is any violation of the metrical plan. The single slight liberty I have taken with the lyrical passages is in Margaret’s song,—“The King of Thule,”—in which, by omitting the alternate feminine rhymes, yet retaining the metre, I was enabled to make the translation strictly literal. If, in two or three instances, I have left a line unrhymed, I have balanced the omission by giving rhymes and grace to the dialogue, point to the aphoristic portions (especially in the Second Part), and an ever-changing music to the lyrical passages. The English language, though not so 11 “At present, everything runs in technical grooves, and the critical gentlemen begin to wrangle whether in a rhyme an s should correspond with an s and not with sz. If I were young and reckless enough, I would purposely offend all such technical caprices: I would use alliteration, assonance, false rhyme, just according to my own will or convenience—but, at the same time, I would attend to the main thing, and endeavor to say so many good things that every one would be attracted to read and remember them.”—Goethe, in 1831. 11 Faust AN GOETHE rich as the German in such rhymes, is less deficient than is generally supposed. The difficulty to be overcome is one of construction rather than of the vocabulary. The present participle can only be used to a limited extent, on account of its weak termination, and the want of an accusative form to the noun also restricts the arrangement of words in English verse. I cannot hope to have been always successful; but I have at least labored long and patiently, bearing constantly in mind not only the meaning of the original and the mechanical struc- Erhabener Geist, im Geisterreich verloren! Wo immer Deine lichte Wohnung sey, Zum höh’ren Schaffen bist Du neugeboren, Und singest dort die voll’re Litanei. Von jenem Streben das Du auserkoren, Vom reinsten Aether, drin Du athmest frei, O neige Dich zu gnädigem Erwiedern Des letzten Wiederhalls von Deinen Liedern! ture of the lines, but also that subtile and haunting music which seems to govern rhythm instead of being governed by it. II Den alten Musen die bestäubten Kronen Nahmst Du, zu neuem Glanz, mit kühner Hand: Du löst die Räthsel ältester Aeonen Durch jüngeren Glauben, helleren Verstand, Und machst, wo rege Menschengeister wohnen, Die ganze Erde Dir zum Vaterland; Und Deine Jünger sehn in Dir, verwundert, Verkörpert schon das werdende Jahrhundert. B.T. 12 Goethe First Love returns, with Friendship in his train. Renewed is Pain: with mournful repetition Life tracks his devious, labyrinthine chain, And names the Good, whose cheating fortune tore them From happy hours, and left me to deplore them. III Was Du gesungen, Aller Lust und Klagen, Des Lebens Wiedersprüche, neu vermählt,— Die Harfe tausendstimmig frisch geschlagen, Die Shakspeare einst, die einst Homer gewählt,— Darf ich in fremde Klänge übertragen Das Alles, wo so Mancher schon gefehlt? Lass Deinen Geist in meiner Stimme klingen, Und was Du sangst, lass mich es Dir nachsingen! They hear no longer these succeeding measures, The souls, to whom my earliest songs I sang: Dispersed the friendly troop, with all its pleasures, And still, alas! the echoes first that rang! I bring the unknown multitude my treasures; Their very plaudits give my heart a pang, And those beside, whose joy my Song so flattered, If still they live, wide through the world are scattered. B.T. Again ye come, ye hovering Forms! I find ye, As early to my clouded sight ye shone! Shall I attempt, this once, to seize and bind ye? Still o’er my heart is that illusion thrown? Ye crowd more near! Then, be the reign assigned ye, And sway me from your misty, shadowy zone! My bosom thrills, with youthful passion shaken, From magic airs that round your march awaken. And grasps me now a long-unwonted yearning For that serene and solemn Spirit-Land: My song, to faint Aeolian murmurs turning, Sways like a harp-string by the breezes fanned. I thrill and tremble; tear on tear is burning, And the stern heart is tenderly unmanned. What I possess, I see far distant lying, And what I lost, grows real and undying. Of joyous days ye bring the blissful vision; The dear, familiar phantoms rise again, And, like an old and half-extinct tradition, 13 Faust MANA GER DRAMA TIC POET MERR Y-ANDRE W MANAGER DRAMATIC MERRY -ANDREW To get a ticket break their necks almost. This miracle alone can work the Poet On men so various: now, my friend, pray show it. MANA GER MANAGER You two, who oft a helping hand Have lent, in need and tribulation. Come, let me know your expectation Of this, our enterprise, in German land! I wish the crowd to feel itself well treated, Especially since it lives and lets me live; The posts are set, the booth of boards completed. And each awaits the banquet I shall give. Already there, with curious eyebrows raised, They sit sedate, and hope to be amazed. I know how one the People’s taste may flatter, Yet here a huge embarrassment I feel: What they’re accustomed to, is no great matter, But then, alas! they’ve read an awful deal. How shall we plan, that all be fresh and new,— Important matter, yet attractive too? For ’tis my pleasure-to behold them surging, When to our booth the current sets apace, And with tremendous, oft-repeated urging, Squeeze onward through the narrow gate of grace: By daylight even, they push and cram in To reach the seller’s box, a fighting host, And as for bread, around a baker’s door, in famine, POET Speak not to me of yonder motley masses, Whom but to see, puts out the fire of Song! Hide from my view the surging crowd that passes, And in its whirlpool forces us along! No, lead me where some heavenly silence glasses The purer joys that round the Poet throng,— Where Love and Friendship still divinely fashion The bonds that bless, the wreaths that crown his passion! Ah, every utterance from the depths of feeling The timid lips have stammeringly expressed,— Now failing, now, perchance, success revealing,— Gulps the wild Moment in its greedy breast; Or oft, reluctant years its warrant sealing, Its perfect stature stands at last confessed! What dazzles, for the Moment spends its spirit: What’s genuine, shall Posterity inherit. 14 Goethe MERR Y-ANDRE W MERRY -ANDREW Will finally, himself, his bit select: Who offers much, brings something unto many, And each goes home content with the effect, If you’ve a piece, why, just in pieces give it: A hash, a stew, will bring success, believe it! ’Tis easily displayed, and easy to invent. What use, a Whole compactly to present? Your hearers pick and pluck, as soon as they receive it! Posterity! Don’t name the word to me! If I should choose to preach Posterity, Where would you get contemporary fun? That men will have it, there’s no blinking: A fine young fellow’s presence, to my thinking, Is something worth, to every one. Who genially his nature can outpour, Takes from the People’s moods no irritation; The wider circle he acquires, the more Securely works his inspiration. Then pluck up heart, and give us sterling coin! Let Fancy be with her attendants fitted,— Sense, Reason, Sentiment, and Passion join,— But have a care, lest Folly be omitted! POET You do not feel, how such a trade debases; How ill it suits the Artist, proud and true! The botching work each fine pretender traces Is, I perceive, a principle with you. MANA GER MANAGER MANA GER MANAGER Chiefly, enough of incident prepare! They come to look, and they prefer to stare. Reel off a host of threads before their faces, So that they gape in stupid wonder: then By sheer diffuseness you have won their graces, And are, at once, most popular of men. Only by mass you touch the mass; for any Such a reproach not in the least offends; A man who some result intends Must use the tools that best are fitting. Reflect, soft wood is given to you for splitting, And then, observe for whom you write! If one comes bored, exhausted quite, Another, satiate, leaves the banquet’s tapers, 15 Faust Whence o’er the heart his empire free? The elements of Life how conquers he? Is’t not his heart’s accord, urged outward far and dim, To wind the world in unison with him? When on the spindle, spun to endless distance, By Nature’s listless hand the thread is twirled, And the discordant tones of all existence In sullen jangle are together hurled, Who, then, the changeless orders of creation Divides, and kindles into rhythmic dance? Who brings the One to join the general ordination, Where it may throb in grandest consonance? Who bids the storm to passion stir the bosom? In brooding souls the sunset burn above? Who scatters every fairest April blossom Along the shining path of Love? Who braids the noteless leaves to crowns, requiting Desert with fame, in Action’s every field? Who makes Olympus sure, the Gods uniting? The might of Man, as in the Bard revealed. And, worst of all, full many a wight Is fresh from reading of the daily papers. Idly to us they come, as to a masquerade, Mere curiosity their spirits warming: The ladies with themselves, and with their finery, aid, Without a salary their parts performing. What dreams are yours in high poetic places? You’re pleased, forsooth, full houses to behold? Draw near, and view your patrons’ faces! The half are coarse, the half are cold. One, when the play is out, goes home to cards; A wild night on a wench’s breast another chooses: Why should you rack, poor, foolish bards, For ends like these, the gracious Muses? I tell you, give but more—more, ever more, they ask: Thus shall you hit the mark of gain and glory. Seek to confound your auditory! To satisfy them is a task.— What ails you now? Is’t suffering, or pleasure? POET W MERR Y-ANDRE MERRY -ANDREW Go, find yourself a more obedient slave! What! shall the Poet that which Nature gave, The highest right, supreme Humanity, Forfeit so wantonly, to swell your treasure? So, these fine forces, in conjunction, Propel the high poetic function, As in a love-adventure they might play! 16 Goethe POET You meet by accident; you feel, you stay, And by degrees your heart is tangled; Bliss grows apace, and then its course is jangled; You’re ravished quite, then comes a touch of woe, And there’s a neat romance, completed ere you know! Let us, then, such a drama give! Grasp the exhaustless life that all men live! Each shares therein, though few may comprehend: Where’er you touch, there’s interest without end. In motley pictures little light, Much error, and of truth a glimmering mite, Thus the best beverage is supplied, Whence all the world is cheered and edified. Then, at your play, behold the fairest flower Of youth collect, to hear the revelation! Each tender soul, with sentimental power, Sucks melancholy food from your creation; And now in this, now that, the leaven works. For each beholds what in his bosom lurks. They still are moved at once to weeping or to laughter, Still wonder at your flights, enjoy the show they see: A mind, once formed, is never suited after; One yet in growth will ever grateful be. Then give me back that time of pleasures, While yet in joyous growth I sang,— When, like a fount, the crowding measures Uninterrupted gushed and sprang! Then bright mist veiled the world before me, In opening buds a marvel woke, As I the thousand blossoms broke, Which every valley richly bore me! I nothing had, and yet enough for youth— Joy in Illusion, ardent thirst for Truth. Give, unrestrained, the old emotion, The bliss that touched the verge of pain, The strength of Hate, Love’s deep devotion,— O, give me back my youth again! MERR Y ANDRE W MERRY ANDREW Youth, good my friend, you certainly require When foes in combat sorely press you; When lovely maids, in fond desire, Hang on your bosom and caress you; When from the hard-won goal the wreath Beckons afar, the race awaiting; When, after dancing out your breath, 17 Faust Seize every possible impression, And make it firmly your possession; You’ll then work on, because you must. Upon our German stage, you know it, Each tries his hand at what he will; So, take of traps and scenes your fill, And all you find, be sure to show it! Use both the great and lesser heavenly light,— Squander the stars in any number, Beasts, birds, trees, rocks, and all such lumber, Fire, water, darkness, Day and Night! Thus, in our booth’s contracted sphere, The circle of Creation will appear, And move, as we deliberately impel, From Heaven, across the World, to Hell! You pass the night in dissipating:— But that familiar harp with soul To play,—with grace and bold expression, And towards a self-erected goal To walk with many a sweet digression,— This, aged Sirs, belongs to you, And we no less revere you for that reason: Age childish makes, they say, but ’tis not true; We’re only genuine children still, in Age’s season! MANA GER MANAGER The words you’ve bandied are sufficient; ’Tis deeds that I prefer to see: In compliments you’re both proficient, But might, the while, more useful be. What need to talk of Inspiration? ’Tis no companion of Delay. If Poetry be your vocation, Let Poetry your will obey! Full well you know what here is wanting; The crowd for strongest drink is panting, And such, forthwith, I’d have you brew. What’s left undone to-day, To-morrow will not do. Waste not a day in vain digression: With resolute, courageous trust 18 Goethe PR OL OGUE IN HEA VEN PROL OLOGUE HEAVEN Against the rocks’ deep bases hurled, And both, the spheric race partaking, Eternal, swift, are onward whirled! THE L ORD THE HEA VENL Y HOST Afterwards LORD HEAVENL VENLY MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MICHAEL CHANGELS come forward.) (The THREE AR ARCHANGELS And rival storms abroad are surging From sea to land, from land to sea. A chain of deepest action forging Round all, in wrathful energy. There flames a desolation, blazing Before the Thunder’s crashing way: Yet, Lord, Thy messengers are praising The gentle movement of Thy Day. HAEL RAP RAPHAEL The sun-orb sings, in emulation, ‘Mid brother-spheres, his ancient round: His path predestined through Creation He ends with step of thunder-sound. The angels from his visage splendid Draw power, whose measure none can say; The lofty works, uncomprehended, Are bright as on the earliest day. THE THREE Though still by them uncomprehended, From these the angels draw their power, And all Thy works, sublime and splendid, Are bright as in Creation’s hour. GABRIEL And swift, and swift beyond conceiving, The splendor of the world goes round, Day’s Eden-brightness still relieving The awful Night’s intense profound: The ocean-tides in foam are breaking, 19 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES THE L ORD LORD Since Thou, O Lord, deign’st to approach again And ask us how we do, in manner kindest, And heretofore to meet myself wert fain, Among Thy menials, now, my face Thou findest. Pardon, this troop I cannot follow after With lofty speech, though by them scorned and spurned: My pathos certainly would move Thy laughter, If Thou hadst not all merriment unlearned. Of suns and worlds I’ve nothing to be quoted; How men torment themselves, is all I’ve noted. The little god o’ the world sticks to the same old way, And is as whimsical as on Creation’s day. Life somewhat better might content him, But for the gleam of heavenly light which Thou hast lent him: He calls it Reason—thence his power’s increased, To be far beastlier than any beast. Saving Thy Gracious Presence, he to me A long-legged grasshopper appears to be, That springing flies, and flying springs, And in the grass the same old ditty sings. Would he still lay among the grass he grows in! Each bit of dung he seeks, to stick his nose in. Hast thou, then, nothing more to mention? Com’st ever, thus, with ill intention? Find’st nothing right on earth, eternally? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES No, Lord! I find things, there, still bad as they can be. Man’s misery even to pity moves my nature; I’ve scarce the heart to plague the wretched creature. THE L ORD LORD Know’st Faust? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES The Doctor Faust? THE L ORD LORD My servant, he! 20 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES THE L ORD LORD Forsooth! He serves you after strange devices: No earthly meat or drink the fool suffices: His spirit’s ferment far aspireth; Half conscious of his frenzied, crazed unrest, The fairest stars from Heaven he requireth, From Earth the highest raptures and the best, And all the Near and Far that he desireth Fails to subdue the tumult of his breast. As long as he on earth shall live, So long I make no prohibition. While Man’s desires and aspirations stir, He cannot choose but err. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES My thanks! I find the dead no acquisition, And never cared to have them in my keeping. I much prefer the cheeks where ruddy blood is leaping, And when a corpse approaches, close my house: It goes with me, as with the cat the mouse. THE L ORD LORD Though still confused his service unto Me, I soon shall lead him to a clearer morning. Sees not the gardener, even while buds his tree, Both flower and fruit the future years adorning? THE L ORD LORD Enough! What thou hast asked is granted. Turn off this spirit from his fountain-head; To trap him, let thy snares be planted, And him, with thee, be downward led; Then stand abashed, when thou art forced to say: A good man, through obscurest aspiration, Has still an instinct of the one true way. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES What will you bet? There’s still a chance to gain him, If unto me full leave you give, Gently upon my road to train him! 21 Faust CHANGELS separate.) (Heaven closes: the AR ARCHANGELS MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Agreed! But ’tis a short probation. About my bet I feel no trepidation. If I fulfill my expectation, You’ll let me triumph with a swelling breast: Dust shall he eat, and with a zest, As did a certain snake, my near relation. MEP HIST OP HELES (solus) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I like, at times, to hear The Ancient’s word, And have a care to be most civil: It’s really kind of such a noble Lord So humanly to gossip with the Devil! THE L ORD LORD Therein thou’rt free, according to thy merits; The like of thee have never moved My hate. Of all the bold, denying Spirits, The waggish knave least trouble doth create. Man’s active nature, flagging, seeks too soon the level; Unqualified repose he learns to crave; Whence, willingly, the comrade him I gave, Who works, excites, and must create, as Devil. But ye, God’s sons in love and duty, Enjoy the rich, the ever-living Beauty! Creative Power, that works eternal schemes, Clasp you in bonds of love, relaxing never, And what in wavering apparition gleams Fix in its place with thoughts that stand forever! 22 Goethe That knowledge cuts me to the bone. I’m cleverer, true, than those fops of teachers, Doctors and Magisters, Scribes and Preachers; Neither scruples nor doubts come now to smite me, Nor Hell nor Devil can longer affright me. FIRST PART OF THE TRAGEDY I For this, all pleasure am I foregoing; I do not pretend to aught worth knowing, I do not pretend I could be a teacher To help or convert a fellow-creature. Then, too, I’ve neither lands nor gold, Nor the world’s least pomp or honor hold— No dog would endure such a curst existence! Wherefore, from Magic I seek assistance, That many a secret perchance I reach Through spirit-power and spirit-speech, And thus the bitter task forego Of saying the things I do not know,— That I may detect the inmost force Which binds the world, and guides its course; Its germs, productive powers explore, And rummage in empty words no more! NIGHT (A lofty-arched, narrow, Gothic chamber. FAUST UST, in a chair at his desk, restless.) FAUST I’ve studied now Philosophy And Jurisprudence, Medicine,— And even, alas! Theology,— From end to end, with labor keen; And here, poor fool! with all my lore I stand, no wiser than before: I’m Magister—yea, Doctor—hight, And straight or cross-wise, wrong or right, These ten years long, with many woes, I’ve led my scholars by the nose,— And see, that nothing can be known! O full and splendid Moon, whom I Have, from this desk, seen climb the sky So many a midnight,—would thy glow For the last time beheld my woe! 23 Faust Where God His human creature set, In smoke and mould the fleshless dead And bones of beasts surround me yet! Ever thine eye, most mournful friend, O’er books and papers saw me bend; But would that I, on mountains grand, Amid thy blessed light could stand, With spirits through mountain-caverns hover, Float in thy twilight the meadows over, And, freed from the fumes of lore that swathe me, To health in thy dewy fountains bathe me! Fly! Up, and seek the broad, free land! And this one Book of Mystery From Nostradamus’ very hand, Is’t not sufficient company? When I the starry courses know, And Nature’s wise instruction seek, With light of power my soul shall glow, As when to spirits spirits speak. Tis vain, this empty brooding here, Though guessed the holy symbols be: Ye, Spirits, come—ye hover near— Oh, if you hear me, answer me! Ah, me! this dungeon still I see. This drear, accursed masonry, Where even the welcome daylight strains But duskly through the painted panes. Hemmed in by many a toppling heap Of books worm-eaten, gray with dust, Which to the vaulted ceiling creep, Against the smoky paper thrust,— With glasses, boxes, round me stacked, And instruments together hurled, Ancestral lumber, stuffed and packed— Such is my world: and what a world! (He opens the Book, and perceives the sign of the Macrocosm.) Ha! what a sudden rapture leaps from this I view, through all my senses swiftly flowing! I feel a youthful, holy, vital bliss In every vein and fibre newly glowing. Was it a God, who traced this sign, With calm across my tumult stealing, My troubled heart to joy unsealing, With impulse, mystic and divine, And do I ask, wherefore my heart Falters, oppressed with unknown needs? Why some inexplicable smart All movement of my life impedes? Alas! in living Nature’s stead, 24 Goethe Earth-Spirit.) The powers of Nature here, around my path, revealing? Am I a God?—so clear mine eyes! In these pure features I behold Creative Nature to my soul unfold. What says the sage, now first I recognize: “The spirit-world no closures fasten; Thy sense is shut, thy heart is dead: Disciple, up! untiring, hasten To bathe thy breast in morning-red!” How otherwise upon me works this sign! Thou, Spirit of the Earth, art nearer: Even now my powers are loftier, clearer; I glow, as drunk with new-made wine: New strength and heart to meet the world incite me, The woe of earth, the bliss of earth, invite me, And though the shock of storms may smite me, No crash of shipwreck shall have power to fright me! Clouds gather over me— The moon conceals her light— The lamp’s extinguished!— Mists rise,—red, angry rays are darting Around my head!—There falls A horror from the vaulted roof, And seizes me! I feel thy presence, Spirit I invoke! Reveal thyself! Ha! in my heart what rending stroke! With new impulsion My senses heave in this convulsion! I feel thee draw my heart, absorb, exhaust me: Thou must! thou must! and though my life it cost me! (He contemplates the sign.) How each the Whole its substance gives, Each in the other works and lives! Like heavenly forces rising and descending, Their golden urns reciprocally lending, With wings that winnow blessing From Heaven through Earth I see them pressing, Filling the All with harmony unceasing! How grand a show! but, ah! a show alone. Thee, boundless Nature, how make thee my own? Where you, ye beasts? Founts of all Being, shining, Whereon hang Heaven’s and Earth’s desire, Whereto our withered hearts aspire,— Ye flow, ye feed: and am I vainly pining? (He seizes the book, and mysteriously pronounces the sign of the Spirit. A ruddy flame flashes: the Spirit appears in the flame.) (He turns the leaves impatiently, and perceives the sign of the 25 Faust Thee, superhuman, shakes? Thy soul’s high calling, where? Where is the breast, which from itself a world did bear, And shaped and cherished—which with joy expanded, To be our peer, with us, the Spirits, banded? Where art thou, Faust, whose voice has pierced to me, Who towards me pressed with all thine energy? He art thou, who, my presence breathing, seeing, Trembles through all the depths of being, A writhing worm, a terror-stricken form? SP IRIT SPIRIT Who calls me? FAUST (with averted head) Terrible to see! SP IRIT SPIRIT FAUST Me hast thou long with might attracted, Long from my sphere thy food exacted, And now— Thee, form of flame, shall I then fear? Yes, I am Faust: I am thy peer! FAUST SP IRIT SPIRIT Woe! I endure not thee! In the tides of Life, in Action’s storm, A fluctuant wave, A shuttle free, Birth and the Grave, An eternal sea, A weaving, flowing Life, all-glowing, Thus at Time’s humming loom ’tis my hand prepares The garment of Life which the Deity wears! SP IRIT SPIRIT To view me is thine aspiration, My voice to hear, my countenance to see; Thy powerful yearning moveth me, Here am I!—what mean perturbation 26 Goethe (Enter WAGNER GNER, in dressing-gown and night-cap, a lamp in his hand. FAUST turns impatiently.) FAUST Thou, who around the wide world wendest, Thou busy Spirit, how near I feel to thee! WAGNER SP IRIT SPIRIT (Disappears.) Pardon, I heard your declamation; ’Twas sure an old Greek tragedy you read? In such an art I crave some preparation, Since now it stands one in good stead. I’ve often heard it said, a preacher Might learn, with a comedian for a teacher. FAUST (overwhelmed) FAUST Not thee! Whom then? I, image of the Godhead! Not even like thee! Yes, when the priest comedian is by nature, As haply now and then the case may be. Thou’rt like the Spirit which thou comprehendest, Not me! WAGNER (A knock). Ah, when one studies thus, a prisoned creature, That scarce the world on holidays can see,— Scarce through a glass, by rare occasion, How shall one lead it by persuasion? O Death!—I know it—’tis my Famulus! My fairest luck finds no fruition: In all the fullness of my vision The soulless sneak disturbs me thus! 27 Faust Suggest their own delivery; And if thou’rt moved to speak in earnest, What need, that after words thou yearnest? Yes, your discourses, with their glittering show, Where ye for men twist shredded thought like paper, Are unrefreshing as the winds that blow The rustling leaves through chill autumnal vapor! FAUST You’ll ne’er attain it, save you know the feeling, Save from the soul it rises clear, Serene in primal strength, compelling The hearts and minds of all who hear. You sit forever gluing, patching; You cook the scraps from others’ fare; And from your heap of ashes hatching A starveling flame, ye blow it bare! Take children’s, monkeys’ gaze admiring, If such your taste, and be content; But ne’er from heart to heart you’ll speak inspiring, Save your own heart is eloquent! WAGNER Ah, God! but Art is long, And Life, alas! is fleeting. And oft, with zeal my critic-duties meeting, In head and breast there’s something wrong. How hard it is to compass the assistance Whereby one rises to the source! And, haply, ere one travels half the course Must the poor devil quit existence. WAGNER Yet through delivery orators succeed; I feel that I am far behind, indeed. FAUST FAUST Is parchment, then, the holy fount before thee, A draught wherefrom thy thirst forever slakes? No true refreshment can restore thee, Save what from thine own soul spontaneous breaks. Seek thou the honest recompense! Beware, a tinkling fool to be! With little art, clear wit and sense 28 Goethe WAGNER Of these one covets some slight apprehension. Pardon! a great delight is granted When, in the spirit of the ages planted, We mark how, ere our times, a sage has thought, And then, how far his work, and grandly, we have brought. FAUST Yes, of the kind which men attain! Who dares the child’s true name in public mention? The few, who thereof something really learned, Unwisely frank, with hearts that spurned concealing, And to the mob laid bare each thought and feeling, Have evermore been crucified and burned. I pray you, Friend, ’tis now the dead of night; Our converse here must be suspended. FAUST O yes, up to the stars at last! Listen, my friend: the ages that are past Are now a book with seven seals protected: What you the Spirit of the Ages call Is nothing but the spirit of you all, Wherein the Ages are reflected. So, oftentimes, you miserably mar it! At the first glance who sees it runs away. An offal-barrel and a lumber-garret, Or, at the best, a Punch-and-Judy play, With maxims most pragmatical and hitting, As in the mouths of puppets are befitting! WAGNER I would have shared your watches with delight, That so our learned talk might be extended. To-morrow, though, I’ll ask, in Easter leisure, This and the other question, at your pleasure. Most zealously I seek for erudition: Much do I know—but to know all is my ambition. WAGNER [Exit.] But then, the world—the human heart and brain! 29 Faust FAUST (solus) Faithful and gracious, We tenderly laid him: Linen to bind him Cleanlily wound we: Ah! when we would find him, Christ no more found we! That brain, alone, not loses hope, whose choice is To stick in shallow trash forevermore,— Which digs with eager hand for buried ore, And, when it finds an angle-worm, rejoices! Dare such a human voice disturb the flow, Around me here, of spirit-presence fullest? And yet, this once my thanks I owe To thee, of all earth’s sons the poorest, dullest! For thou hast torn me from that desperate state Which threatened soon to overwhelm my senses: The apparition was so giant-great, It dwarfed and withered all my soul’s pretences! CHOR US OF ANGELS CHORUS Christ is ascended! Bliss hath invested him,— Woes that molested him, Trials that tested him, Gloriously ended! I, image of the Godhead, who began— Deeming Eternal Truth secure in nearness— Ye choirs, have ye begun the sweet, consoling chant, Which, through the night of Death, the angels ministrant Sang, God’s new Covenant repeating? FAUST Why, here in dust, entice me with your spell, Ye gentle, powerful sounds of Heaven? Peal rather there, where tender natures dwell. Your messages I hear, but faith has not been given; The dearest child of Faith is Miracle. I venture not to soar to yonder regions Whence the glad tidings hither float; And yet, from childhood up familiar with the note, CHOR US OF WOMEN CHORUS With spices and precious Balm, we arrayed him; 30 Goethe We, his aspiring Followers, Him we miss; Weeping, desiring, Master, Thy bliss! To Life it now renews the old allegiance. Once Heavenly Love sent down a burning kiss Upon my brow, in Sabbath silence holy; And, filled with mystic presage, chimed the church-bell slowly, And prayer dissolved me in a fervent bliss. A sweet, uncomprehended yearning Drove forth my feet through woods and meadows free, And while a thousand tears were burning, I felt a world arise for me. These chants, to youth and all its sports appealing, Proclaimed the Spring’s rejoicing holiday; And Memory holds me now, with childish feeling, Back from the last, the solemn way. Sound on, ye hymns of Heaven, so sweet and mild! My tears gush forth: the Earth takes back her child! CHOR US OF ANGELS CHORUS Christ is arisen, Out of Corruption’s womb: Burst ye the prison, Break from your gloom! Praising and pleading him, Lovingly needing him, Brotherly feeding him, Preaching and speeding him, Blessing, succeeding Him, Thus is the Master near,— Thus is He here! CHOR US OF DISCIPLES CHORUS Has He, victoriously, Burst from the vaulted Grave, and all-gloriously Now sits exalted? Is He, in glow of birth, Rapture creative near? Ah! to the woe of earth Still are we native here. 31 Faust SECOND APPRENTICE II But then, it’s not a pleasant way. BEFORE THE CIT Y-GA TE CITY -GATE THE O THERS OTHERS (Pedestrians of all kinds come forth.) And what will you? SE VERAL APPRENTICES SEVERAL A THIRD Why do you go that way? As goes the crowd, I follow. OTHERS A FOUR TH FOURTH We’re for the Hunters’ lodge, to-day. Come up to Burgdorf? There you’ll find good cheer, The finest lasses and the best of beer, And jolly rows and squabbles, trust me! THE FIRST We’ll saunter to the Mill, in yonder hollow. A FIFTH You swaggering fellow, is your hide A third time itching to be tried? I won’t go there, your jolly rows disgust me! AN APPRENTICE Go to the River Tavern, I should say. 32 Goethe SER VANT -GIRL SERV ANT-GIRL No,—no! I’ll turn and go to town again. Come, Brother! we must see them to the benches. A strong, old beer, a pipe that stings and bites, A girl in Sunday clothes,—these three are my delights. ANO THER ANOTHER CITIZEN’S DA UGHTER DAUGHTER We’ll surely find him by those poplars yonder. Just see those handsome fellows, there! It’s really shameful, I declare;— To follow servant-girls, when they Might have the most genteel society to-day! THE FIRST That’s no great luck for me, ’tis plain. You’ll have him, when and where you wander: His partner in the dance you’ll be,— But what is all your fun to me? SECOND STUDENT (to the First) Not quite so fast! Two others come behind,— Those, dressed so prettily and neatly. My neighbor’s one of them, I find, A girl that takes my heart, completely. They go their way with looks demure, But they’ll accept us, after all, I’m sure. THE O THER OTHER He’s surely not alone to-day: He’ll be with Curly-head, I heard him say. THE FIRST A STUDENT No, Brother! not for me their formal ways. Quick! lest our game escape us in the press: Deuce! how they step, the buxom wenches! 33 Faust ANO THER CITIZEN ANOTHER The hand that wields the broom on Saturdays Will best, on Sundays, fondle and caress. On Sundays, holidays, there’s naught I take delight in, Like gossiping of war, and war’s array, When down in Turkey, far away, The foreign people are a-fighting. One at the window sits, with glass and friends, And sees all sorts of ships go down the river gliding: And blesses then, as home he wends At night, our times of peace abiding. CITIZEN He suits me not at all, our new-made Burgomaster! Since he’s installed, his arrogance grows faster. How has he helped the town, I say? Things worsen,—what improvement names he? Obedience, more than ever, claims he, And more than ever we must pay! THIRD CITIZEN BEGGAR (sings) Yes, Neighbor! that’s my notion, too: Why, let them break their heads, let loose their passions, And mix things madly through and through, So, here, we keep our good old fashions! Good gentlemen and lovely ladies, So red of cheek and fine of dress, Behold, how needful here your aid is, And see and lighten my distress! Let me not vainly sing my ditty; He’s only glad who gives away: A holiday, that shows your pity, Shall be for me a harvest-day! OLD WOMAN (to the Citizen’s Daughter) Dear me, how fine! So handsome, and so young! Who wouldn’t lose his heart, that met you? Don’t be so proud! I’ll hold my tongue, And what you’d like I’ll undertake to get you. 34 Goethe CITIZEN’S DA UGHTER DAUGHTER Calling to ruin. Stormy our life is; Such is its boon! Maidens and castles Capitulate soon. Bold is the venture, Splendid the pay! And the soldiers go marching, Marching away! Come, Agatha! I shun the witch’s sight Before folks, lest there be misgiving: ’Tis true, she showed me, on Saint Andrew’s Night, My future sweetheart, just as he were living. THE O THER OTHER She showed me mine, in crystal clear, With several wild young blades, a soldier-lover: I seek him everywhere, I pry and peer, And yet, somehow, his face I can’t discover. FAUST AND WAGNER FAUST SOLDIERS Released from ice are brook and river By the quickening glance of the gracious Spring; The colors of hope to the valley cling, And weak old Winter himself must shiver, Withdrawn to the mountains, a crownless king: Whence, ever retreating, he sends again Impotent showers of sleet that darkle In belts across the green o’ the plain. But the sun will permit no white to sparkle; Everywhere form in development moveth; He will brighten the world with the tints he loveth, Castles, with lofty Ramparts and towers, Maidens disdainful In Beauty’s array, Both shall be ours! Bold is the venture, Splendid the pay! Lads, let the trumpets For us be suing,— Calling to pleasure, 35 Faust WAGNER And, lacking blossoms, blue, yellow, and red, He takes these gaudy people instead. Turn thee about, and from this height Back on the town direct thy sight. Out of the hollow, gloomy gate, The motley throngs come forth elate: Each will the joy of the sunshine hoard, To honor the Day of the Risen Lord! They feel, themselves, their resurrection: From the low, dark rooms, scarce habitable; From the bonds of Work, from Trade’s restriction; From the pressing weight of roof and gable; From the narrow, crushing streets and alleys; From the churches’ solemn and reverend night, All come forth to the cheerful light. How lively, see! the multitude sallies, Scattering through gardens and fields remote, While over the river, that broadly dallies, Dances so many a festive boat; And overladen, nigh to sinking, The last full wherry takes the stream. Yonder afar, from the hill-paths blinking, Their clothes are colors that softly gleam. I hear the noise of the village, even; Here is the People’s proper Heaven; Here high and low contented see! Here I am Man,—dare man to be! To stroll with you, Sir Doctor, flatters; ’Tis honor, profit, unto me. But I, alone, would shun these shallow matters, Since all that’s coarse provokes my enmity. This fiddling, shouting, ten-pin rolling I hate,—these noises of the throng: They rave, as Satan were their sports controlling. And call it mirth, and call it song! PEASANT S, UNDER THE LINDEN-TREE EASANTS, (Dance and Song.) All for the dance the shepherd dressed, In ribbons, wreath, and gayest vest Himself with care arraying: Around the linden lass and lad Already footed it like mad: Hurrah! hurrah! Hurrah—tarara-la! The fiddle-bow was playing. He broke the ranks, no whit afraid, And with his elbow punched a maid, Who stood, the dance surveying: 36 Goethe OLD P EASANT PEASANT The buxom wench, she turned and said: “Now, you I call a stupid-head!” Hurrah! hurrah! Hurrah—tarara-la! “Be decent while you’re staying!” Sir Doctor, it is good of you, That thus you condescend, to-day, Among this crowd of merry folk, A highly-learned man, to stray. Then also take the finest can, We fill with fresh wine, for your sake: I offer it, and humbly wish That not alone your thirst is slake,— That, as the drops below its brink, So many days of life you drink! Then round the circle went their flight, They danced to left, they danced to right: Their kirtles all were playing. They first grew red, and then grew warm, And rested, panting, arm in arm,— Hurrah! hurrah! Hurrah—tarara-la! And hips and elbows straying. FAUST Now, don’t be so familiar here! How many a one has fooled his dear, Waylaying and betraying! I take the cup you kindly reach, With thanks and health to all and each. (The People gather in a circle about him.) And yet, he coaxed her soon aside, And round the linden sounded wide. Hurrah! hurrah! Hurrah—tarara-la! And the fiddle-bow was playing. OLD P EASANT PEASANT In truth, ’tis well and fitly timed, That now our day of joy you share, Who heretofore, in evil days, 37 Faust (He goes on with WAGNER GNER.) Gave us so much of helping care. Still many a man stands living here, Saved by your father’s skillful hand, That snatched him from the fever’s rage And stayed the plague in all the land. Then also you, though but a youth, Went into every house of pain: Many the corpses carried forth, But you in health came out again. WAGNER With what a feeling, thou great man, must thou Receive the people’s honest veneration! How lucky he, whose gifts his station With such advantages endow! Thou’rt shown to all the younger generation: Each asks, and presses near to gaze; The fiddle stops, the dance delays. Thou goest, they stand in rows to see, And all the caps are lifted high; A little more, and they would bend the knee As if the Holy Host came by. FAUST No test or trial you evaded: A Helping God the helper aided. ALL FAUST Health to the man, so skilled and tried. That for our help he long may abide! A few more steps ascend, as far as yonder stone!— Here from our wandering will we rest contented. Here, lost in thought, I’ve lingered oft alone, When foolish fasts and prayers my life tormented. Here, rich in hope and firm in faith, With tears, wrung hands and sighs, I’ve striven, The end of that far-spreading death FAUST To Him above bow down, my friends, Who teaches help, and succor sends! 38 Goethe WAGNER Entreating from the Lord of Heaven! Now like contempt the crowd’s applauses seem: Couldst thou but read, within mine inmost spirit, How little now I deem, That sire or son such praises merit! My father’s was a sombre, brooding brain, Which through the holy spheres of Nature groped and wandered, And honestly, in his own fashion, pondered With labor whimsical, and pain: Who, in his dusky work-shop bending, With proved adepts in company, Made, from his recipes unending, Opposing substances agree. There was a Lion red, a wooer daring, Within the Lily’s tepid bath espoused, And both, tormented then by flame unsparing, By turns in either bridal chamber housed. If then appeared, with colors splendid, The young Queen in her crystal shell, This was the medicine—the patients’ woes soon ended, And none demanded: who got well? Thus we, our hellish boluses compounding, Among these vales and hills surrounding, Worse than the pestilence, have passed. Thousands were done to death from poison of my giving; And I must hear, by all the living, The shameless murderers praised at last! Why, therefore, yield to such depression? A good man does his honest share In exercising, with the strictest care, The art bequeathed to his possession! Dost thou thy father honor, as a youth? Then may his teaching cheerfully impel thee: Dost thou, as man, increase the stores of truth? Then may thine own son afterwards excel thee. FAUST O happy he, who still renews The hope, from Error’s deeps to rise forever! That which one does not know, one needs to use; And what one knows, one uses never. But let us not, by such despondence, so The fortune of this hour embitter! Mark how, beneath the evening sunlight’s glow, The green-embosomed houses glitter! The glow retreats, done is the day of toil; It yonder hastes, new fields of life exploring; Ah, that no wing can lift me from the soil, Upon its track to follow, follow soaring! Then would I see eternal Evening gild 39 Faust WAGNER The silent world beneath me glowing, On fire each mountain-peak, with peace each valley filled, The silver brook to golden rivers flowing. The mountain-chain, with all its gorges deep, Would then no more impede my godlike motion; And now before mine eyes expands the ocean With all its bays, in shining sleep! Yet, finally, the weary god is sinking; The new-born impulse fires my mind,— I hasten on, his beams eternal drinking, The Day before me and the Night behind, Above me heaven unfurled, the floor of waves beneath me,— A glorious dream! though now the glories fade. Alas! the wings that lift the mind no aid Of wings to lift the body can bequeath me. Yet in each soul is born the pleasure Of yearning onward, upward and away, When o’er our heads, lost in the vaulted azure, The lark sends down his flickering lay,— When over crags and piny highlands The poising eagle slowly soars, And over plains and lakes and islands The crane sails by to other shores. I’ve had, myself, at times, some odd caprices, But never yet such impulse felt, as this is. One soon fatigues, on woods and fields to look, Nor would I beg the bird his wing to spare us: How otherwise the mental raptures bear us From page to page, from book to book! Then winter nights take loveliness untold, As warmer life in every limb had crowned you; And when your hands unroll some parchment rare and old, All Heaven descends, and opens bright around you! FAUST One impulse art thou conscious of, at best; O, never seek to know the other! Two souls, alas! reside within my breast, And each withdraws from, and repels, its brother. One with tenacious organs holds in love And clinging lust the world in its embraces; The other strongly sweeps, this dust above, Into the high ancestral spaces. If there be airy spirits near, ‘Twixt Heaven and Earth on potent errands fleeing, Let them drop down the golden atmosphere, 40 Goethe At night, one learns his house to prize:— Why stand you thus, with such astonished eyes? What, in the twilight, can your mind so trouble? And bear me forth to new and varied being! Yea, if a magic mantle once were mine, To waft me o’er the world at pleasure, I would not for the costliest stores of treasure— Not for a monarch’s robe—the gift resign. FAUST WAGNER Seest thou the black dog coursing there, through corn and stubble? Invoke not thus the well-known throng, Which through the firmament diffused is faring, And danger thousand-fold, our race to wrong. In every quarter is preparing. Swift from the North the spirit-fangs so sharp Sweep down, and with their barbéd points assail you; Then from the East they come, to dry and warp Your lungs, till breath and being fail you: If from the Desert sendeth them the South, With fire on fire your throbbing forehead crowning, The West leads on a host, to cure the drouth Only when meadow, field, and you are drowning. They gladly hearken, prompt for injury,— Gladly obey, because they gladly cheat us; From Heaven they represent themselves to be, And lisp like angels, when with lies they meet us. But, let us go! ’Tis gray and dusky all: The air is cold, the vapors fall. WAGNER Long since: yet deemed him not important in the least. FAUST Inspect him close: for what tak’st thou the beast? WAGNER Why, for a poodle who has lost his master, And scents about, his track to find. 41 Faust FAUST FAUST Seest thou the spiral circles, narrowing faster, Which he, approaching, round us seems to wind? A streaming trail of fire, if I see rightly, Follows his path of mystery. The circle narrows: he is near! WAGNER A dog thou seest, and not a phantom, here! Behold him stop—upon his belly crawl—His tail set wagging: canine habits, all! WAGNER It may be that your eyes deceive you slightly; Naught but a plain black poodle do I see. FAUST FAUST Come, follow us! Come here, at least! It seems to me that with enchanted cunning He snares our feet, some future chain to bind. WAGNER ’Tis the absurdest, drollest beast. Stand still, and you will see him wait; Address him, and he gambols straight; If something’s lost, he’ll quickly bring it,— Your cane, if in the stream you fling it. WAGNER I see him timidly, in doubt, around us running, Since, in his master’s stead, two strangers doth he find. 42 Goethe FAUST III No doubt you’re right: no trace of mind, I own, Is in the beast: I see but drill, alone. THE STUD Y STUDY WAGNER FAUST The dog, when he’s well educated, Is by the wisest tolerated. Yes, he deserves your favor thoroughly,— The clever scholar of the students, he! (Entering, with the poodle.) Behind me, field and meadow sleeping, I leave in deep, prophetic night, Within whose dread and holy keeping The better soul awakes to light. The wild desires no longer win us, The deeds of passion cease to chain; The love of Man revives within us, The love of God revives again. (They pass in the city-gate.) Be still, thou poodle; make not such racket and riot! Why at the threshold wilt snuffing be? Behind the stove repose thee in quiet! My softest cushion I give to thee. As thou, up yonder, with running and leaping Amused us hast, on the mountain’s crest, So now I take thee into my keeping, 43 Faust We pine and thirst for Revelation, Which nowhere worthier is, more nobly sent, Than here, in our New Testament. I feel impelled, its meaning to determine,— With honest purpose, once for all, The hallowed Original To change to my beloved German. A welcome, but also a silent, guest. Ah, when, within our narrow chamber The lamp with friendly lustre glows, Flames in the breast each faded ember, And in the heart, itself that knows. Then Hope again lends sweet assistance, And Reason then resumes her speech: One yearns, the rivers of existence, The very founts of Life, to reach. (He opens a volume, and commences.) ’Tis written: “In the Beginning was the Word.” Here am I balked: who, now can help afford? The Word?—impossible so high to rate it; And otherwise must I translate it. If by the Spirit I am truly taught. Then thus: “In the Beginning was the Thought” This first line let me weigh completely, Lest my impatient pen proceed too fleetly. Is it the Thought which works, creates, indeed? “In the Beginning was the Power,” I read. Yet, as I write, a warning is suggested, That I the sense may not have fairly tested. The Spirit aids me: now I see the light! “In the Beginning was the Act,” I write. Snarl not, poodle! To the sound that rises, The sacred tones that my soul embrace, This bestial noise is out of place. We are used to see, that Man despises What he never comprehends, And the Good and the Beautiful vilipends, Finding them often hard to measure: Will the dog, like man, snarl his displeasure? But ah! I feel, though will thereto be stronger, Contentment flows from out my breast no longer. Why must the stream so soon run dry and fail us, And burning thirst again assail us? Therein I’ve borne so much probation! And yet, this want may be supplied us; We call the Supernatural to guide us; If I must share my chamber with thee, Poodle, stop that howling, prithee! Cease to bark and bellow! 44 Goethe Back and forth hover, Under and over, And he’ll work himself out. If your aid avail him, Let it not fail him; For he, without measure, Has wrought for our pleasure. Such a noisy, disturbing fellow I’ll no longer suffer near me. One of us, dost hear me! Must leave, I fear me. No longer guest-right I bestow; The door is open, art free to go. But what do I see in the creature? Is that in the course of nature? Is’t actual fact? or Fancy’s shows? How long and broad my poodle grows! He rises mightily: A canine form that cannot be! What a spectre I’ve harbored thus! He resembles a hippopotamus, With fiery eyes, teeth terrible to see: O, now am I sure of thee! For all of thy half-hellish brood The Key of Solomon is good. FAUST First, to encounter the beast, The Words of the Four be addressed: Salamander, shine glorious! Wave, Undine, as bidden! Sylph, be thou hidden! Gnome, be laborious! Who knows not their sense (These elements),— Their properties And power not sees,— No mastery he inherits Over the Spirits. SP IRIT S (in the corridor) SPIRIT IRITS Some one, within, is caught! Stay without, follow him not! Like the fox in a snare, Quakes the old hell-lynx there. Take heed—look about! Vanish in flaming ether, Salamander! 45 Faust Pierced irredressibly! Flow foamingly together, Undine! Shine in meteor-sheen, Sylph! Bring help to hearth and shelf. Incubus! Incubus! Step forward, and finish thus! Behind the stove still banned, See it, an elephant, expand! It fills the space entire, Mist-like melting, ever faster. ’Tis enough: ascend no higher,— Lay thyself at the feet of the Master! Thou seest, not vain the threats I bring thee: With holy fire I’ll scorch and sting thee! Wait not to know The threefold dazzling glow! Wait not to know The strongest art within my hands! Of the Four, no feature Lurks in the creature. Quiet he lies, and grins disdain: Not yet, it seems, have I given him pain. Now, to undisguise thee, Hear me exorcise thee! Art thou, my gay one, Hell’s fugitive stray-one? The sign witness now, Before which they bow, The cohorts of Hell! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES (while the vapor is dissipating, steps forth from behind the stove, in the costume of a Travelling Scholar.) Why such a noise? What are my lord’s commands? With hair all bristling, it begins to swell. Base Being, hearest thou? Knowest and fearest thou The One, unoriginate, Named inexpressibly, Through all Heaven impermeate, FAUST This was the poodle’s real core, A travelling scholar, then? The casus is diverting. 46 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES The learned gentleman I bow before: You’ve made me roundly sweat, that’s certain! Part of that Power, not understood, Which always wills the Bad, and always works the Good. FAUST FAUST What is thy name? What hidden sense in this enigma lies? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES A question small, it seems, For one whose mind the Word so much despises; Who, scorning all external gleams, The depths of being only prizes. I am the Spirit that Denies! And justly so: for all things, from the Void Called forth, deserve to be destroyed: ‘Twere better, then, were naught created. Thus, all which you as Sin have rated,— Destruction,—aught with Evil blent,— That is my proper element. FAUST With all you gentlemen, the name’s a test, Whereby the nature usually is expressed. Clearly the latter it implies In names like Beelzebub, Destroyer, Father of Lies. Who art thou, then? FAUST Thou nam’st thyself a part, yet show’st complete to me? 47 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES That which to Naught is in resistance set,— The Something of this clumsy world,—has yet, With all that I have undertaken, Not been by me disturbed or shaken: From earthquake, tempest, wave, volcano’s brand, Back into quiet settle sea and land! And that damned stuff, the bestial, human brood,— What use, in having that to play with? How many have I made away with! And ever circulates a newer, fresher blood. It makes me furious, such things beholding: From Water, Earth, and Air unfolding, A thousand germs break forth and grow, In dry, and wet, and warm, and chilly; And had I not the Flame reserved, why, really, There’s nothing special of my own to show! The modest truth I speak to thee. If Man, that microcosmic fool, can see Himself a whole so frequently, Part of the Part am I, once All, in primal Night,— Part of the Darkness which brought forth the Light, The haughty Light, which now disputes the space, And claims of Mother Night her ancient place. And yet, the struggle fails; since Light, howe’er it weaves, Still, fettered, unto bodies cleaves: It flows from bodies, bodies beautifies; By bodies is its course impeded; And so, but little time is needed, I hope, ere, as the bodies die, it dies! FAUST FAUST I see the plan thou art pursuing: Thou canst not compass general ruin, And hast on smaller scale begun. So, to the actively eternal Creative force, in cold disdain You now oppose the fist infernal, Whose wicked clench is all in vain! Some other labor seek thou rather, Queer Son of Chaos, to begin! HIST OP HELES MEP OPHELES MEPHIST HISTOP And truly ’tis not much, when all is done. 48 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES If that prevents, how cam’st thou in to me? Could such a spirit be so cheated? Well, we’ll consider: thou canst gather My views, when next I venture in. Might I, perhaps, depart at present? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST Inspect the thing: the drawing’s not completed. The outer angle, you may see, Is open left—the lines don’t fit it. Why thou shouldst ask, I don’t perceive. Though our acquaintance is so recent, For further visits thou hast leave. The window’s here, the door is yonder; A chimney, also, you behold. FAUST Well,—Chance, this time, has fairly hit it! And thus, thou’rt prisoner to me? It seems the business has succeeded. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I must confess that forth I may not wander, My steps by one slight obstacle controlled,— The wizard’s-foot, that on your threshold made is. The poodle naught remarked, as after thee he speeded; But other aspects now obtain: The Devil can’t get out again. FAUST The pentagram prohibits thee? Why, tell me now, thou Son of Hades, 49 Faust FAUST FAUST Try, then, the open window-pane! One moment more I ask thee to remain, Some pleasant news, at least, to tell me. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES For Devils and for spectres this is law: Where they have entered in, there also they withdraw. The first is free to us; we’re governed by the second. Release me, now! I soon shall come again; Then thou, at will, mayst question and compel me. FAUST FAUST In Hell itself, then, laws are reckoned? That’s well! So might a compact be Made with you gentlemen—and binding,—surely? I have not snares around thee cast; Thyself hast led thyself into the meshes. Who traps the Devil, hold him fast! Not soon a second time he’ll catch a prey so precious. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES All that is promised shall delight thee purely; No skinflint bargain shalt thou see. But this is not of swift conclusion; We’ll talk about the matter soon. And now, I do entreat this boon— Leave to withdraw from my intrusion. An’t please thee, also I’m content to stay, And serve thee in a social station; But stipulating, that I may With arts of mine afford thee recreation. 50 Goethe FAUST Break from the sky! O that the darkling Clouds had departed! Starlight is sparkling, Tranquiller-hearted Suns are on high. Heaven’s own children In beauty bewildering, Waveringly bending, Pass as they hover; Longing unending Follows them over. They, with their glowing Garments, out-flowing, Cover, in going, Landscape and bower, Where, in seclusion, Lovers are plighted, Lost in illusion. Bower on bower! Tendrils unblighted! Lo! in a shower Grapes that o’ercluster Gush into must, or Flow into rivers Of foaming and flashing Wine, that is dashing Thereto I willingly agree, If the diversion pleasant be. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES My friend, thou’lt win, past all pretences, More in this hour to soothe thy senses, Than in the year’s monotony. That which the dainty spirits sing thee, The lovely pictures they shall bring thee, Are more than magic’s empty show. Thy scent will be to bliss invited; Thy palate then with taste delighted, Thy nerves of touch ecstatic glow! All unprepared, the charm I spin: We’re here together, so begin! SP IRIT S SPIRIT IRITS Vanish, ye darking Arches above him! Loveliest weather, Born of blue ether, 51 Faust Star of existent Rapture and Love! Gems, as it boundeth Down the high places, And spreading, surroundeth With crystalline spaces, In happy embraces, Blossoming forelands, Emerald shore-lands! And the winged races Drink, and fly onward— Fly ever sunward To the enticing Islands, that flatter, Dipping and rising Light on the water! Hark, the inspiring Sound of their quiring! See, the entrancing Whirl of their dancing! All in the air are Freer and fairer. Some of them scaling Boldly the highlands, Others are sailing, Circling the islands; Others are flying; Life-ward all hieing,— All for the distant MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES He sleeps! Enough, ye fays! your airy number Have sung him truly into slumber: For this performance I your debtor prove.— Not yet art thou the man, to catch the Fiend and hold him!— With fairest images of dreams infold him, Plunge him in seas of sweet untruth! Yet, for the threshold’s magic which controlled him, The Devil needs a rat’s quick tooth. I use no lengthened invocation: Here rustles one that soon will work my liberation. The lord of rats and eke of mice, Of flies and bed-bugs, frogs and lice, Summons thee hither to the door-sill, To gnaw it where, with just a morsel Of oil, he paints the spot for thee:— There com’st thou, hopping on to me! To work, at once! The point which made me craven Is forward, on the ledge, engraven. Another bite makes free the door: So, dream thy dreams, O Faust, until we meet once more! 52 Goethe FAUST (awaking) IV Am I again so foully cheated? Remains there naught of lofty spirit-sway, But that a dream the Devil counterfeited, And that a poodle ran away? THE STUD Y STUDY FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST A knock? Come in! Again my quiet broken? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES ’Tis I! FAUST Come in! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Thrice must the words be spoken. 53 Faust FAUST What from the world have I to gain? Thou shalt abstain—renounce—refrain! Such is the everlasting song That in the ears of all men rings,— That unrelieved, our whole life long, Each hour, in passing, hoarsely sings. In very terror I at morn awake, Upon the verge of bitter weeping, To see the day of disappointment break, To no one hope of mine—not one—its promise keeping:— That even each joy’s presentiment With wilful cavil would diminish, With grinning masks of life prevent My mind its fairest work to finish! Then, too, when night descends, how anxiously Upon my couch of sleep I lay me: There, also, comes no rest to me, But some wild dream is sent to fray me. The God that in my breast is owned Can deeply stir the inner sources; The God, above my powers enthroned, He cannot change external forces. So, by the burden of my days oppressed, Death is desired, and Life a thing unblest! Come in, then! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Thus thou pleasest me. I hope we’ll suit each other well; For now, thy vapors to dispel, I come, a squire of high degree, In scarlet coat, with golden trimming, A cloak in silken lustre swimming, A tall cock’s-feather in my hat, A long, sharp sword for show or quarrel,— And I advise thee, brief and flat, To don the self-same gay apparel, That, from this den released, and free, Life be at last revealed to thee! FAUST This life of earth, whatever my attire, Would pain me in its wonted fashion. Too old am I to play with passion; Too young, to be without desire. 54 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES And yet is never Death a wholly welcome guest. Omniscient am I not; yet much is known to me. FAUST FAUST O fortunate, for whom, when victory glances, The bloody laurels on the brow he bindeth! Whom, after rapid, maddening dances, In clasping maiden-arms he findeth! O would that I, before that spirit-power, Ravished and rapt from life, had sunken! Though some familiar tone, retrieving My thoughts from torment, led me on, And sweet, clear echoes came, deceiving A faith bequeathed from Childhood’s dawn, Yet now I curse whate’er entices And snares the soul with visions vain; With dazzling cheats and dear devices Confines it in this cave of pain! Cursed be, at once, the high ambition Wherewith the mind itself deludes! Cursed be the glare of apparition That on the finer sense intrudes! Cursed be the lying dream’s impression Of name, and fame, and laurelled brow! Cursed, all that flatters as possession, As wife and child, as knave and plow! Cursed Mammon be, when he with treasures To restless action spurs our fate! Cursed when, for soft, indulgent leisures, He lays for us the pillows straight! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES And yet, by some one, in that nightly hour, A certain liquid was not drunken. FAUST Eavesdropping, ha! thy pleasure seems to be. 55 Faust Be sung thereto! Cursed be the vine’s transcendent nectar,— The highest favor Love lets fall! Cursed, also, Hope!—cursed Faith, the spectre! And cursed be Patience most of all! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES These are the small dependants Who give me attendance. Hear them, to deeds and passion Counsel in shrewd old-fashion! Into the world of strife, Out of this lonely life That of senses and sap has betrayed thee, They would persuade thee. This nursing of the pain forego thee, That, like a vulture, feeds upon thy breast! The worst society thou find’st will show thee Thou art a man among the rest. But ’tis not meant to thrust Thee into the mob thou hatest! I am not one of the greatest, Yet, wilt thou to me entrust Thy steps through life, I’ll guide thee,— Will willingly walk beside thee,— Will serve thee at once and forever With best endeavor, And, if thou art satisfied, Will as servant, slave, with thee abide. CHOR US OF SP IRIT S (invisible) CHORUS SPIRIT IRITS Woe! woe! Thou hast it destroyed, The beautiful world, With powerful fist: In ruin ’tis hurled, By the blow of a demigod shattered! The scattered Fragments into the Void we carry, Deploring The beauty perished beyond restoring. Mightier For the children of men, Brightlier Build it again, In thine own bosom build it anew! Bid the new career Commence, With clearer sense, And the new songs of cheer 56 Goethe FAUST FAUST And what shall be my counter-service therefor? The There my scruples naught increases. When thou hast dashed this world to pieces, The other, then, its place may fill. Here, on this earth, my pleasures have their sources; Yon sun beholds my sorrows in his courses; And when from these my life itself divorces, Let happen all that can or will! I’ll hear no more: ’tis vain to ponder If there we cherish love or hate, Or, in the spheres we dream of yonder, A High and Low our souls await. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES The time is long: thou need’st not now insist. FAUST No—no! The Devil is an egotist, And is not apt, without a why or wherefore, “For God’s sake,” others to assist. Speak thy conditions plain and clear! With such a servant danger comes, I fear. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES In this sense, even, canst thou venture. Come, bind thyself by prompt indenture, And thou mine arts with joy shalt see: What no man ever saw, I’ll give to thee. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Here, an unwearied slave, I’ll wear thy tether, And to thine every nod obedient be: When There again we come together, Then shalt thou do the same for me. FAUST Canst thou, poor Devil, give me whatsoever? When was a human soul, in its supreme endeavor, 57 Faust Canst thou with rich enjoyment fool me, Let that day be the last for me! The bet I offer. E’er understood by such as thou? Yet, hast thou food which never satiates, now,— The restless, ruddy gold hast thou, That runs, quicksilver-like, one’s fingers through,— A game whose winnings no man ever knew,— A maid that, even from my breast, Beckons my neighbor with her wanton glances, And Honor’s godlike zest, The meteor that a moment dances,— Show me the fruits that, ere they’re gathered, rot, And trees that daily with new leafage clothe them! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Done! FAUST Such a demand alarms me not: Such treasures have I, and can show them. But still the time may reach us, good my friend. When peace we crave and more luxurious diet. And heartily! When thus I hail the Moment flying: “Ah, still delay—thou art so fair!” Then bind me in thy bonds undying, My final ruin then declare! Then let the death-bell chime the token. Then art thou from thy service free! The clock may stop, the hand be broken, Then Time be finished unto me! FAUST HELES MEP HIST OP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES When on an idler’s bed I stretch myself in quiet. There let, at once, my record end! Canst thou with lying flattery rule me, Until, self-pleased, myself I see,— Consider well: my memory good is rated. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES 58 Goethe FAUST No sacrifice shall he repent of ever. Nathless a parchment, writ and stamped with care, A spectre is, which all to shun endeavor. The word, alas! dies even in the pen, And wax and leather keep the lordship then. What wilt from me, Base Spirit, say?— Brass, marble, parchment, paper, clay? The terms with graver, quill, or chisel, stated? I freely leave the choice to thee. Thou hast a perfect right thereto. My powers I have not rashly estimated: A slave am I, whate’er I do— If thine, or whose? ’tis needless to debate it. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Then at the Doctors’-banquet I, to-day, Will as a servant wait behind thee. But one thing more! Beyond all risk to bind thee, Give me a line or two, I pray. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Why heat thyself, thus instantly, With eloquence exaggerated? Each leaf for such a pact is good; And to subscribe thy name thou’lt take a drop of blood. FAUST Demand’st thou, Pedant, too, a document? Hast never known a man, nor proved his word’s intent? Is’t not enough, that what I speak to-day Shall stand, with all my future days agreeing? In all its tides sweeps not the world away, And shall a promise bind my being? Yet this delusion in our hearts we bear: Who would himself therefrom deliver? Blest he, whose bosom Truth makes pure and fair! FAUST If thou therewith art fully satisfied, So let us by the farce abide. 59 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Blood is a juice of rarest quality. For you no bound, no term is set. Whether you everywhere be trying, Or snatch a rapid bliss in flying, May it agree with you, what you get! Only fall to, and show no timid balking. FAUST Fear not that I this pact shall seek to sever? The promise that I make to thee Is just the sum of my endeavor. I have myself inflated all too high; My proper place is thy estate: The Mighty Spirit deigns me no reply, And Nature shuts on me her gate. The thread of Thought at last is broken, And knowledge brings disgust unspoken. Let us the sensual deeps explore, To quench the fervors of glowing passion! Let every marvel take form and fashion Through the impervious veil it wore! Plunge we in Time’s tumultuous dance, In the rush and roll of Circumstance! Then may delight and distress, And worry and success, Alternately follow, as best they can: Restless activity proves the man! FAUST But thou hast heard, ’tis not of joy we’re talking. I take the wildering whirl, enjoyment’s keenest pain, Enamored hate, exhilarant disdain. My bosom, of its thirst for knowledge sated, Shall not, henceforth, from any pang be wrested, And all of life for all mankind created Shall be within mine inmost being tested: The highest, lowest forms my soul shall borrow, Shall heap upon itself their bliss and sorrow, And thus, my own sole self to all their selves expanded, I too, at last, shall with them all be stranded! HIST OP HELES MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Believe me, who for many a thousand year 60 Goethe The same tough meat have chewed and tested, That from the cradle to the bier No man the ancient leaven has digested! Trust one of us, this Whole supernal Is made but for a God’s delight! He dwells in splendor single and eternal, But us he thrusts in darkness, out of sight, And you he dowers with Day and Night. The Italian’s fiery blood, The North’s firm fortitude! Let him find for thee the secret tether That binds the Noble and Mean together. And teach thy pulses of youth and pleasure To love by rule, and hate by measure! I’d like, myself, such a one to see: Sir Microcosm his name should be. FAUST FAUST Nay, but I will! What am I, then, if ’tis denied my part The crown of all humanity to win me, Whereto yearns every sense within me? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES A good reply! One only fear still needs repeating: The art is long, the time is fleeting. Then let thyself be taught, say I! Go, league thyself with a poet, Give the rein to his imagination, Then wear the crown, and show it, Of the qualities of his creation,— The courage of the lion’s breed, The wild stag’s speed, Why, on the whole, thou’rt—what thou art. Set wigs of million curls upon thy head, to raise thee, Wear shoes an ell in height,—the truth betrays thee, And thou remainest—what thou art. 61 Faust FAUST Is like a beast on moorlands lean, That round and round some fiend misleads to evil plight, While all about lie pastures fresh and green. I feel, indeed, that I have made the treasure Of human thought and knowledge mine, in vain; And if I now sit down in restful leisure, No fount of newer strength is in my brain: I am no hair’s-breadth more in height, Nor nearer, to the Infinite, FAUST Then how shall we begin? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Good Sir, you see the facts precisely As they are seen by each and all. We must arrange them now, more wisely, Before the joys of life shall pall. Why, Zounds! Both hands and feet are, truly— And head and virile forces—thine: Yet all that I indulge in newly, Is’t thence less wholly mine? If I’ve six stallions in my stall, Are not their forces also lent me? I speed along, completest man of all, As though my legs were four-and-twenty. Take hold, then! let reflection rest, And plunge into the world with zest! I say to thee, a speculative wight We’ll try a wider sphere. What place of martyrdom is here! Is’t life, I ask, is’t even prudence, To bore thyself and bore the students? Let Neighbor Paunch to that attend! Why plague thyself with threshing straw forever? The best thou learnest, in the end Thou dar’st not tell the youngsters—never! I hear one’s footsteps, hither steering. FAUST To see him now I have no heart. 62 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Whose over-hasty impulse drave him Past earthly joys he might secure. Dragged through the wildest life, will I enslave him, Through flat and stale indifference; With struggling, chilling, checking, so deprave him That, to his hot, insatiate sense, The dream of drink shall mock, but never lave him: Refreshment shall his lips in vain implore— Had he not made himself the Devil’s, naught could save him, Still were he lost forevermore! So long the poor boy waits a hearing, He must not unconsoled depart. Thy cap and mantle straightway lend me! I’ll play the comedy with art. (He disguises himself.) My wits, be certain, will befriend me. But fifteen minutes’ time is all I need; For our fine trip, meanwhile, prepare thyself with speed! (A STUDENT enters.) [Exit FAUST UST.] STUDENT MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES A short time, only, am I here, And come, devoted and sincere, To greet and know the man of fame, Whom men to me with reverence name. ’S long mantle.) (In FAUST UST’S Reason and Knowledge only thou despise, The highest strength in man that lies! Let but the Lying Spirit bind thee With magic works and shows that blind thee, And I shall have thee fast and sure!— Fate such a bold, untrammelled spirit gave him, As forwards, onwards, ever must endure; MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Your courtesy doth flatter me: You see a man, as others be. Have you, perchance, elsewhere begun? 63 Faust STUDENT MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Receive me now, I pray, as one Who comes to you with courage good, Somewhat of cash, and healthy blood: My mother was hardly willing to let me; But knowledge worth having I fain would get me. All that depends on habitude. So from its mother’s breasts a child At first, reluctant, takes its food, But soon to seek them is beguiled. Thus, at the breasts of Wisdom clinging, Thou’lt find each day a greater rapture bringing. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES STUDENT Then you have reached the right place now. I’ll hang thereon with joy, and freely drain them; But tell me, pray, the proper means to gain them. STUDENT MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I’d like to leave it, I must avow; I find these walls, these vaulted spaces Are anything but pleasant places. Tis all so cramped and close and mean; One sees no tree, no glimpse of green, And when the lecture-halls receive me, Seeing, hearing, and thinking leave me. Explain, before you further speak, The special faculty you seek. STUDENT I crave the highest erudition; And fain would make my acquisition All that there is in Earth and Heaven, 64 Goethe In Nature and in Science too. Instead of shooting here and there, A will-o’-the-wisp in murky air. Days will be spent to bid you know, What once you did at a single blow, Like eating and drinking, free and strong,— That one, two, three! thereto belong. Truly the fabric of mental fleece Resembles a weaver’s masterpiece, Where a thousand threads one treadle throws, Where fly the shuttles hither and thither. Unseen the threads are knit together. And an infinite combination grows. Then, the philosopher steps in And shows, no otherwise it could have been: The first was so, the second so, Therefore the third and fourth are so; Were not the first and second, then The third and fourth had never been. The scholars are everywhere believers, But never succeed in being weavers. He who would study organic existence, First drives out the soul with rigid persistence; Then the parts in his hand he may hold and class, But the spiritual link is lost, alas! Encheiresin natures, this Chemistry names, Nor knows how herself she banters and blames! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Here is the genuine path for you; Yet strict attention must be given. STUDENT Body and soul thereon I’ll wreak; Yet, truly, I’ve some inclination On summer holidays to seek A little freedom and recreation. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Use well your time! It flies so swiftly from us; But time through order may be won, I promise. So, Friend (my views to briefly sum), First, the collegium logicum. There will your mind be drilled and braced, As if in Spanish boots ‘twere laced, And thus, to graver paces brought, ‘Twill plod along the path of thought, 65 Faust STUDENT To order rigidly adhere; Five hours a day, you understand, And when the clock strikes, be on hand! Prepare beforehand for your part With paragraphs all got by heart, So you can better watch, and look That naught is said but what is in the book: Yet in thy writing as unwearied be, As did the Holy Ghost dictate to thee! I cannot understand you quite. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Your mind will shortly be set aright, When you have learned, all things reducing, To classify them for your using. STUDENT STUDENT No need to tell me twice to do it! I think, how useful ’tis to write; For what one has, in black and white, One carries home and then goes through it. I feel as stupid, from all you’ve said, As if a mill-wheel whirled in my head! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES And after—first and foremost duty—Of Metaphysics learn the use and beauty! See that you most profoundly gain What does not suit the human brain! A splendid word to serve, you’ll find For what goes in—or won’t go in—your mind. But first, at least this half a year, Yet choose thyself a faculty! STUDENT I cannot reconcile myself to Jurisprudence. 66 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES So like the medicine, it baffles your detection. Hear, therefore, one alone, for that is best, in sooth, And simply take your master’s words for truth. On words let your attention centre! Then through the safest gate you’ll enter The temple-halls of Certainty. Nor can I therefore greatly blame you students: I know what science this has come to be. All rights and laws are still transmitted Like an eternal sickness of the race,— From generation unto generation fitted, And shifted round from place to place. Reason becomes a sham, Beneficence a worry: Thou art a grandchild, therefore woe to thee! The right born with us, ours in verity, This to consider, there’s, alas! no hurry. STUDENT Yet in the word must some idea be. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES STUDENT Of course! But only shun too over-sharp a tension, For just where fails the comprehension, A word steps promptly in as deputy. With words ’tis excellent disputing; Systems to words ’tis easy suiting; On words ’tis excellent believing; No word can ever lose a jot from thieving. My own disgust is strengthened by your speech: O lucky he, whom you shall teach! I’ve almost for Theology decided. MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST I should not wish to see you here misguided: For, as regards this science, let me hint ’Tis very hard to shun the false direction; There’s so much secret poison lurking in ‘t, STUDENT Pardon! With many questions I detain you. 67 Faust At once confide all others in you. To lead the women, learn the special feeling! Their everlasting aches and groans, In thousand tones, Have all one source, one mode of healing; And if your acts are half discreet, You’ll always have them at your feet. A title first must draw and interest them, And show that yours all other arts exceeds; Then, as a greeting, you are free to touch and test them, While, thus to do, for years another pleads. You press and count the pulse’s dances, And then, with burning sidelong glances, You clasp the swelling hips, to see If tightly laced her corsets be. Yet must I trouble you again. Of Medicine I still would fain Hear one strong word that might explain you. Three years is but a little space. And, God! who can the field embrace? If one some index could be shown, ‘Twere easier groping forward, truly. MEP HIST OP HELES (aside) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I’m tired enough of this dry tone,— Must play the Devil again, and fully. (Aloud) To grasp the spirit of Medicine is easy: Learn of the great and little world your fill, To let it go at last, so please ye, Just as God will! In vain that through the realms of science you may drift; Each one learns only—just what learn he can: Yet he who grasps the Moment’s gift, He is the proper man. Well-made you are, ’tis not to be denied, The rest a bold address will win you; If you but in yourself confide, STUDENT That’s better, now! The How and Where, one sees. MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST My worthy friend, gray are all theories, And green alone Life’s golden tree. 68 Goethe STUDENT STUDENT (reads) I swear to you, ’tis like a dream to me. Might I again presume, with trust unbounded, To hear your wisdom thoroughly expounded? Eritis sicut Deus, scientes bonum et malum. (Closes the book with reverence, and withdraws) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Follow the ancient text, and the snake thou wast ordered to trample! With all thy likeness to God, thou’lt yet be a sorry example! Most willingly, to what extent I may. STUDENT (F FAUST enters.) I cannot really go away: Allow me that my album first I reach you,— Grant me this favor, I beseech you! FAUST Now, whither shall we go? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Assuredly. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES (He writes, and returns the book.) As best it pleases thee. The little world, and then the great, we’ll see. With what delight, what profit winning, Shalt thou sponge through the term beginning! 69 Faust FAUST Be sure to have thy luggage light. A little burning air, which I shall soon prepare us, Above the earth will nimbly bear us, And, if we’re light, we’ll travel swift and clear: I gratulate thee on thy new career! Yet with the flowing beard I wear, Both ease and grace will fail me there. The attempt, indeed, were a futile strife; I never could learn the ways of life. I feel so small before others, and thence Should always find embarrassments. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES My friend, thou soon shalt lose all such misgiving: Be thou but self-possessed, thou hast the art of living! FAUST How shall we leave the house, and start? Where hast thou servant, coach and horses? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES We’ll spread this cloak with proper art, Then through the air direct our courses. But only, on so bold a flight, 70 Goethe BRANDER V Twice a swine! AUERBA CH’S CELL AR IN LEIPZIG UERBACH’S CELLAR FR OSCH FROSCH CAR OUSAL OF JOLL Y COMP ANIONS CAROUSAL JOLLY COMPANIONS You wanted them: I’ve given you mine. FR OSCH FROSCH I no one laughing? no one drinking? I’ll teach you how to grin, I’m thinking. To-day you’re like wet straw, so tame; And usually you’re all aflame. SIEBEL Turn out who quarrels—out the door! With open throat sing chorus, drink and roar! Up! holla! ho! BRANDER AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Now that’s your fault; from you we nothing see, No beastliness and no stupidity. Woe’s me, the fearful bellow! Bring cotton, quick! He’s split my ears, that fellow. FR OSCH FROSCH SIEBEL (Pours a glass of wine over BRANDER’S head.) There’s both together! When the vault echoes to the song, One first perceives the bass is deep and strong. 71 Faust FR OSCH FROSCH And so we’ll choose ourselves a Pope. You know the quality that can Decide the choice, and elevate the man. Well said! and out with him that takes the least offence! Ah, tara, lara da! FR OSCH (sings) FROSCH AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Soar up, soar up, Dame Nightingale! Ten thousand times my sweetheart hail! Ah, tara, lara, da! FR OSCH FROSCH SIEBEL The throats are tuned, commence! (Sings.) The dear old holy Roman realm, How does it hold together? No, greet my sweetheart not! I tell you, I’ll resent it. FR OSCH FROSCH My sweetheart greet and kiss! I dare you to prevent it! BRANDER (Sings.) A nasty song! Fie! a political song— A most offensive song! Thank God, each morning, therefore, That you have not the Roman realm to care for! At least, I hold it so much gain for me, That I nor Chancellor nor Kaiser be. Yet also we must have a ruling head, I hope, Draw the latch! the darkness makes: Draw the latch! the lover wakes. Shut the latch! the morning breaks. 72 Goethe SIEBEL There was a rat in the cellar-nest, Whom fat and butter made smoother: He had a paunch beneath his vest Like that of Doctor Luther. The cook laid poison cunningly, And then as sore oppressed was he As if he had love in his bosom. Yes, sing away, sing on, and praise, and brag of her! I’ll wait my proper time for laughter: Me by the nose she led, and now she’ll lead you after. Her paramour should be an ugly gnome, Where four roads cross, in wanton play to meet her: An old he-goat, from Blocksberg coming home, Should his good-night in lustful gallop bleat her! A fellow made of genuine flesh and blood Is for the wench a deal too good. Greet her? Not I: unless, when meeting, To smash her windows be a greeting! CHOR US (shouting) CHORUS As if he had love in his bosom! BRANDER BRANDER (pounding on the table) He ran around, he ran about, His thirst in puddles laving; He gnawed and scratched the house throughout. But nothing cured his raving. He whirled and jumped, with torment mad, And soon enough the poor beast had, As if he had love in his bosom. Attention! Hearken now to me! Confess, Sirs, I know how to live. Enamored persons here have we, And I, as suits their quality, Must something fresh for their advantage give. Take heed! ’Tis of the latest cut, my strain, And all strike in at each refrain! US CHOR CHORUS (He sings.) As if he had love in his bosom! 73 Faust AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER BRANDER The bald-pate pot-belly I have noted: Misfortune tames him by degrees; For in the rat by poison bloated His own most natural form he sees. And driven at last, in open day, He ran into the kitchen, Fell on the hearth, and squirming lay, In the last convulsion twitching. Then laughed the murderess in her glee: “Ha! ha! he’s at his last gasp,” said she, “As if he had love in his bosom!” FAUST AND MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES CHOR US CHORUS Before all else, I bring thee hither Where boon companions meet together, To let thee see how smooth life runs away. Here, for the folk, each day’s a holiday: With little wit, and ease to suit them, They whirl in narrow, circling trails, Like kittens playing with their tails? And if no headache persecute them, So long the host may credit give, They merrily and careless live. As if he had love in his bosom! SIEBEL How the dull fools enjoy the matter! To me it is a proper art Poison for such poor rats to scatter. BRANDER BRANDER Perhaps you’ll warmly take their part? The fact is easy to unravel, 74 Goethe AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Their air’s so odd, they’ve just returned from travel: A single hour they’ve not been here. Perhaps. FR OSCH FROSCH FR OSCH FROSCH You’ve verily hit the truth! Leipzig to me is dear: Paris in miniature, how it refines its people! Look out, I’ll smoke them now! SIEBEL MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) Who are the strangers, should you guess? Not if he had them by the neck, I vow, Would e’er these people scent the Devil! FR OSCH FROSCH FAUST Fair greeting, gentlemen! Let me alone! I’ll set them first to drinking, And then, as one a child’s tooth draws, with cleverness, I’ll worm their secret out, I’m thinking. They’re of a noble house, that’s very clear: Haughty and discontented they appear. SIEBEL Our thanks: we give the same. OP HELES from the side.) HIST (Murmurs, inspecting MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES In one foot is the fellow lame? BRANDER They’re mountebanks, upon a revel. 75 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES AL TMA YER (aside) ALTMA TMAYER Is it permitted that we share your leisure? In place of cheering drink, which one seeks vainly here, Your company shall give us pleasure. You have it now! he understands. SIEBEL AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER A knave sharp-set! A most fastidious person you appear. FR OSCH FROSCH FR OSCH FROSCH Just wait awhile: I’ll have him yet. No doubt ’twas late when you from Rippach started? And supping there with Hans occasioned your delay? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES If I am right, we heard the sound Of well-trained voices, singing chorus; And truly, song must here rebound Superbly from the arches o’er us. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES We passed, without a call, to-day. At our last interview, before we parted Much of his cousins did he speak, entreating That we should give to each his kindly greeting. FR OSCH FROSCH Are you, perhaps, a virtuoso? OSCH (He bows to FR FROSCH OSCH.) 76 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES There was a king once reigning, Who had a big black flea— O no! my wish is great, my power is only so-so. FR OSCH FROSCH AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Give us a song! Hear, hear! A flea! D’ye rightly take the jest? I call a flea a tidy guest. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES (sings) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES If you desire, a number. There was a king once reigning, Who had a big black flea, And loved him past explaining, As his own son were he. He called his man of stitches; The tailor came straightway: Here, measure the lad for breeches. And measure his coat, I say! SIEBEL So that it be a bran-new strain! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES BRANDER We’ve just retraced our way from. Spain, The lovely land of wine, and song, and slumber. But mind, allow the tailor no caprices: Enjoin upon him, as his head is dear, To most exactly measure, sew and shear, (Sings.) 77 Faust At once, whene’er they bite! So that the breeches have no creases! FR OSCH FROSCH MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Bravo! bravo! that was fine. In silk and velvet gleaming He now was wholly drest— Had a coat with ribbons streaming, A cross upon his breast. He had the first of stations, A minister’s star and name; And also all his relations Great lords at court became. SIEBEL Every flea may it so befall! BRANDER And the lords and ladies of honor Were plagued, awake and in bed; The queen she got them upon her, The maids were bitten and bled. And they did not dare to brush them, Or scratch them, day or night: We crack them and we crush them, At once, whene’er they bite. Point your fingers and nip them all! AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Hurrah for Freedom! Hurrah for wine! MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST CHOR US (shouting) CHORUS I fain would drink with you, my glass to Freedom clinking, If ‘twere a better wine that here I see you drinking. We crack them and we crush them, 78 Goethe SIEBEL AL TMA YER (aside) ALTMA TMAYER Don’t let us hear that speech again! They’re from the Rhine! I guessed as much, before. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Did I not fear the landlord might complain, I’d treat these worthy guests, with pleasure, To some from out our cellar’s treasure. Bring me a gimlet here! BRANDER SIEBEL What shall therewith be done? You’ve not the casks already at the door? Just treat, and let the landlord me arraign! AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER FR OSCH FROSCH Yonder, within the landlord’s box of tools, there’s one! And if the wine be good, our praises shall be ample. But do not give too very small a sample; For, if its quality I decide, With a good mouthful I must be supplied. MEP HIST OP HELES (takes the gimlet) HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST OSCH OSCH.) (To FR FROSCH Now, give me of your taste some intimation. 79 Faust FR OSCH FROSCH AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER How do you mean? Have you so many kinds? Ah! I perceive a juggler’s trick. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES (to BRANDER MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES BRANDER) The choice is free: make up your minds. And you? AL TMA YER (to FR OSCH ALTMA TMAYER FROSCH OSCH) BRANDER Aha! you lick your chops, from sheer anticipation. Champagne shall be my wine, And let it sparkle fresh and fine! FR OSCH FROSCH MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Good! if I have the choice, so let the wine be Rhenish! Our Fatherland can best the sparkling cup replenish. (bores: in the meantime one has made the wax stoppers, and plugged the holes with them.) HELES MEP HIST OP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES BRANDER (boring a hole in the edge of the table, at the place where FR OSCH sits) FROSCH What’s foreign one can’t always keep quite clear of, For good things, oft, are not so near; A German can’t endure the French to see or hear of, Get me a little wax, to make the stoppers, quick! 80 Goethe AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Yet drinks their wines with hearty cheer. With any—only satisfy our need. SIEBEL (After the holes have been bored and plugged) HIST OP HELES approaches his seat) (as MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES For me, I grant, sour wine is out of place; Fill up my glass with sweetest, will you? MEP HIST OP HELES (with singular gestures) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Grapes the vine-stem bears, Horns the he-goat wears! The grapes are juicy, the vines are wood, The wooden table gives wine as good! Into the depths of Nature peer,— Only believe there’s a miracle here! MEP HIST OP HELES (boring) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Tokay shall flow at once, to fill you! AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Now draw the stoppers, and drink your fill! No—look me, Sirs, straight in the face! I see you have your fun at our expense. ALL OP HELES MEP HIST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES (as they draw out the stoppers, and the wine which has been desired flows into the glass of each) O no! with gentlemen of such pretence, That were to venture far, indeed. Speak out, and make your choice with speed! With what a vintage can I serve you? O beautiful fountain, that flows at will! 81 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES SIEBEL But have a care that you nothing spill! (drinks carelessly: the wine spills upon the earth, and turns to flame) (They drink repeatedly.) Help! Fire! Help! Hell-fire is sent! ALL (sing) MEP HIST OP HELES (charming away the flame) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES As ‘twere five hundred hogs, we feel So cannibalic jolly! Be quiet, friendly element! (To the revellers) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES A bit of purgatory ’twas for this time, merely. See, now, the race is happy—it is free! SIEBEL FAUST To leave them is my inclination. What mean you? Wait!—you’ll pay for’t dearly! You’ll know us, to your detriment. OP HELES MEP HIST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FR OSCH FROSCH Take notice, first! their bestiality Will make a brilliant demonstration. Don’t try that game a second time upon us! 82 Goethe AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER I think we’d better send him packing quietly. (draws a stopper out of the table: fire flies in his face.) I burn! I burn! SIEBEL SIEBEL What, Sir! you dare to make so free, And play your hocus-pocus on us! ’Tis magic! Strike— The knave is outlawed! Cut him as you like! HIST OP HELES (They draw their knives, and rush upon MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES.) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES (with solemn gestures) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Be still, old wine-tub. False word and form of air, Change place, and sense ensnare! Be here—and there! SIEBEL Broomstick, you! You face it out, impertinent and heady? (They stand amazed and look at each other.) BRANDER AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Just wait! a shower of blows is ready. Where am I? What a lovely land! 83 Faust FR OSCH FROSCH SIEBEL Vines? Can I trust my eyes? What happened? SIEBEL AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER And purple grapes at hand! How? BRANDER FR OSCH FROSCH Here, over this green arbor bending, See what a vine! what grapes depending! Was that your nose I tightened? (He takes SIEBEL by the nose: the others do the same reciprocally, and raise their knives.) BRANDER (to SIEBEL SIEBEL) And yours that still I have in hand? MEP HIST OP HELES (as above) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Loose, Error, from their eyes the band, And how the Devil jests, be now enlightened! It was a blow that went through every limb! Give me a chair! I sink! my senses swim. UST:: the revellers start and separate.) (He disappears with FAUST 84 Goethe FR OSCH FROSCH FR OSCH FROSCH But what has happened, tell me now? And yet it seemed as I were drinking wine. SIEBEL BRANDER Where is he? If I catch the scoundrel hiding, He shall not leave alive, I vow. But with the grapes how was it, pray? AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER AL TMA YER ALTMA TMAYER Shall one believe no miracles, just say! I saw him with these eyes upon a wine-cask riding Out of the cellar-door, just now. Still in my feet the fright like lead is weighing. (He turns towards the table.) Why! If the fount of wine should still be playing? SIEBEL ’Twas all deceit, and lying, false design! 85 Faust HELES MEP HIST OP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES VI Once more, my friend, thou talkest sensibly. There is, to make thee young, a simpler mode and apter; But in another book ’tis writ for thee, And is a most eccentric chapter. WIT CHES’ KIT CHEN WITCHES’ KITCHEN (Upon a low hearth stands a great caldron, under which a fire is burning. Various figures appear in the vapors which rise from the caldron. An ape sits beside it, skims it, and watches lest it boil over. The he-ape, with the young ones, sits near and warms himself. Ceiling and walls are covered with the most fantastic witch-implements.) FAUST Yet will I know it. FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST Good! the method is revealed Without or gold or magic or physician. Betake thyself to yonder field, There hoe and dig, as thy condition; Restrain thyself, thy sense and will Within a narrow sphere to flourish; With unmixed food thy body nourish; Live with the ox as ox, and think it not a theft That thou manur’st the acre which thou reapest;— That, trust me, is the best mode left, Whereby for eighty years thy youth thou keepest! These crazy signs of witches’ craft repel me! I shall recover, dost thou tell me, Through this insane, chaotic play? From an old hag shall I demand assistance? And will her foul mess take away Full thirty years from my existence? Woe’s me, canst thou naught better find! Another baffled hope must be lamented: Has Nature, then, and has a noble mind Not any potent balsam yet invented? 86 Goethe FAUST Is rare and strange, howe’er you take it: The Devil taught the thing, ’tis true, And yet the Devil cannot make it. (Perceiving the Animals) See, what a delicate race they be! That is the maid! the man is he! (To the Animals) It seems the mistress has gone away? I am not used to that; I cannot stoop to try it— To take the spade in hand, and ply it. The narrow being suits me not at all. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Then to thine aid the witch must call. THE ANIMALS FAUST Carousing, to-day! Off and about, By the chimney out! Wherefore the hag, and her alone? Canst thou thyself not brew the potion? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES What time takes she for dissipating? That were a charming sport, I own: I’d build a thousand bridges meanwhile, I’ve a notion. Not Art and Science serve, alone; Patience must in the work be shown. Long is the calm brain active in creation; Time, only, strengthens the fine fermentation. And all, belonging thereunto, THE ANIMALS While we to warm our paws are waiting. 87 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES How findest thou the tender creatures? Then a great public you can show. FAUST THE HE-AP E HE-APE Absurder than I ever yet did see. HIST OP HELES (comes up and fawns on MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES) O cast thou the dice! Make me rich in a trice, Let me win in good season! Things are badly controlled, And had I but gold, So had I my reason. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Why, just such talk as this, for me, Is that which has the most attractive features! (To the Animals) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES But tell me now, ye cursed puppets, Why do ye stir the porridge so? How would the ape be sure his luck enhances. Could he but try the lottery’s chances! THE ANIMALS (In the meantime the young apes have been playing with a large ball, which they now roll forward.) We’re cooking watery soup for beggars. 88 Goethe THE HE-AP E HE-APE I’d know him and shame him. E , and lets her look through it.) (He runs to the SHE-AP SHE-APE The world’s the ball: Doth rise and fall, And roll incessant: Like glass doth ring, A hollow thing,— How soon will’t spring, And drop, quiescent? Here bright it gleams, Here brighter seems: I live at present! Dear son, I say, Keep thou away! Thy doom is spoken! ’Tis made of clay, And will be broken. Look through the sieve! Know’st thou the thief, And darest not name him? MEP HIST OP HELES (approaching the fire) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES And what’s this pot? HE-AP E AND SHE-AP E HE-APE SHE-APE The fool knows it not! He knows not the pot, He knows not the kettle! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST What means the sieve? Impertinent beast! THE HE-AP E (taking it down) HE-APE Wert thou the thief, 89 Faust THE HE-AP E HE-APE MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Take the brush here, at least, And sit down on the settle! Why, surely, if a God first plagues Himself six days, Then, self-contented, Bravo! says, Must something clever be created. This time, thine eyes be satiate! I’ll yet detect thy sweetheart and ensnare her, And blest is he, who has the lucky fate, Some day, as bridegroom, home to bear her. HIST OP HELES to sit down.) (He invites MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST HIST OP HELES (F MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES, FAUST gazes continually in the mirror. MEP stretching himself out on the settle, and playing with the brush, continues to speak.) (who during all this time has been standing before a mirror, now approaching and now retreating from it) What do I see? What heavenly form revealed Shows through the glass from Magic’s fair dominions! O lend me, Love, the swiftest of thy pinions, And bear me to her beauteous field! Ah, if I leave this spot with fond designing, If I attempt to venture near, Dim, as through gathering mist, her charms appear!— A woman’s form, in beauty shining! Can woman, then, so lovely be? And must I find her body, there reclining, Of all the heavens the bright epitome? Can Earth with such a thing be mated? So sit I, like the King upon his throne: I hold the sceptre, here,—and lack the crown alone. THE ANIMALS (who up to this time have been making all kinds of fantastic movements together bring a crown to MEPHISTOPHELES with great noise.) O be thou so good With sweat and with blood The crown to belime! 90 Goethe FAUST (as above) (They handle the crown awkwardly and break it into two pieces, with which they spring around.) My bosom burns with that sweet vision; Let us, with speed, away from here! ’Tis done, let it be! We speak and we see, We hear and we rhyme! MEP HIST OP HELES (in the same attitude) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST (before the mirror) One must, at least, make this admission— They’re poets, genuine and sincere. Woe’s me! I fear to lose my wits. (The caldron, which the SHE-AP SHE-APE E has up to this time neglected to watch, begins to boil over: there ensues a great flame, CH comes careering which blazes out the chimney. The WIT WITCH down through the flame, with terrible cries.) MEP HIST OP HELES (pointing to the Animals) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES My own head, now, is really nigh to sinking. THE WIT CH WITCH THE ANIMALS Ow! ow! ow! ow! The damnéd beast—the curséd sow! To leave the kettle, and singe the Frau! Accurséd fere! If lucky our hits, And everything fits, ’Tis thoughts, and we’re thinking! HIST OP HELES HELES.) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES (Perceiving FAUST and MEP What is that here? 91 Faust What hinders me from smiting now Thee and thy monkey-sprites with fell disaster? Hast for the scarlet coat no reverence? Dost recognize no more the tall cock’s-feather? Have I concealed this countenance?— Must tell my name, old face of leather? Who are you here? What want you thus? Who sneaks to us? The fire-pain Burn bone and brain! (She plunges the skimming-ladle into the caldron, and scatters HIST OP HELES flames towards FAUST UST,, MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES, and the Animals. The Animals whimper.) THE WIT CH WITCH O pardon, Sir, the rough salute! Yet I perceive no cloven foot; And both your ravens, where are they now? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES (reversing the brush, which he has been holding in his hand, and striding among the jars and glasses) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES In two! in two! There lies the brew! There lies the glass! The joke will pass, As time, foul ass! To the singing of thy crew. This time, I’ll let thee ‘scape the debt; For since we two together met, ’Tis verily full many a day now. Culture, which smooth the whole world licks, Also unto the Devil sticks. The days of that old Northern phantom now are over: Where canst thou horns and tail and claws discover? And, as regards the foot, which I can’t spare, in truth, ’Twould only make the people shun me; Therefore I’ve worn, like many a spindly youth, CH starts back, full of wrath and horror) (As the WIT WITCH Ha! know’st thou me? Abomination, thou! Know’st thou, at last, thy Lord and Master? 92 Goethe False calves these many years upon me. See, here’s the coat-of-arms that I am wearing! (He makes an indecent gesture.) THE WIT CH (dancing) WITCH THE WIT CH (laughs immoderately) WITCH Reason and sense forsake my brain, Since I behold Squire Satan here again! Ha! ha! That’s just your way, I know: A rogue you are, and you were always so. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Woman, from such a name refrain! MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) THE WIT CH WITCH My friend, take proper heed, I pray! To manage witches, this is just the way. Why so? What has it done to thee? THE WIT CH WITCH MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Wherein, Sirs, can I be of use? It’s long been written in the Book of Fable; Yet, therefore, no whit better men we see: The Evil One has left, the evil ones are stable. Sir Baron call me thou, then is the matter good; A cavalier am I, like others in my bearing. Thou hast no doubt about my noble blood: MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Give us a goblet of the well-known juice! But, I must beg you, of the oldest brewage; The years a double strength produce. 93 Faust THE WIT CH WITCH to serve as reading-desk, and to hold the torches. She then beckons FAUST to approach.) With all my heart! Now, here’s a bottle, Wherefrom, sometimes, I wet my throttle, Which, also, not the slightest, stinks; And willingly a glass I’ll fill him. FAUST (to MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES) Now, what shall come of this? the creatures antic, The crazy stuff, the gestures frantic,— All the repulsive cheats I view,— Are known to me, and hated, too. (Whispering) Yet, if this man without due preparation drinks, As well thou know’st, within an hour ‘twill kill him. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES O, nonsense! That’s a thing for laughter; Don’t be so terribly severe! She juggles you as doctor now, that, after, The beverage may work the proper cheer. He is a friend of mine, with whom it will agree, And he deserves thy kitchen’s best potation: Come, draw thy circle, speak thine adjuration, And fill thy goblet full and free! (He persuades FAUST to step into the circle.) THE WIT CH WITCH CH THE WIT WITCH (with fantastic gestures draws a circle and places mysterious articles therein; meanwhile the glasses begin to ring, the caldron to sound, and make a musical accompaniment. Finally she brings a great book, and stations in the circle the Apes, who are obliged (begins to declaim, with much emphasis, from the book) See, thus it’s done! 94 Goethe Make ten of one, And two let be, Make even three, And rich thou ‘It be. Cast o’er the four! From five and six (The witch’s tricks) Make seven and eight, ’Tis finished straight! And nine is one, And ten is none. This is the witch’s once-one’s-one! All ages have been taught the matter,— By Three and One, and One and Three, Error instead of Truth to scatter. They prate and teach, and no one interferes; All from the fellowship of fools are shrinking. Man usually believes, if only words he hears, That also with them goes material for thinking! THE WIT CH (continues) WITCH The lofty skill Of Science, still From all men deeply hidden! Who takes no thought, To him ’tis brought, ’Tis given unsought, unbidden! FAUST She talks like one who raves in fever. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST Thou’lt hear much more before we leave her. ’Tis all the same: the book I can repeat, Such time I’ve squandered o’er the history: A contradiction thus complete Is always for the wise, no less than fools, a mystery. The art is old and new, for verily What nonsense she declaims before us! My head is nigh to split, I fear: It seems to me as if I hear A hundred thousand fools in chorus. 95 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES THE WIT CH WITCH O Sibyl excellent, enough of adjuration! But hither bring us thy potation, And quickly fill the beaker to the brim! This drink will bring my friend no injuries: He is a man of manifold degrees, And many draughts are known to him. And much good may the liquor do thee! MEP HIST OP HELES (to the WIT CH MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES WITCH CH) Thy wish be on Walpurgis Night expressed; What boon I have, shall then be given unto thee. CH (The WIT WITCH CH, with many ceremonies, pours the drink into a cup; as FAUST sets it to his lips, a light flame arises.) THE WIT CH WITCH Down with it quickly! Drain it off! ‘Twill warm thy heart with new desire: Art with the Devil hand and glove, And wilt thou be afraid of fire? Here is a song, which, if you sometimes sing, You’ll find it of peculiar operation. CH breaks the circle: FAUST steps forth.) (The WIT WITCH MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) Come, walk at once! A rapid occupation Must start the needful perspiration, And through thy frame the liquor’s potence fling. The noble indolence I’ll teach thee then to treasure, And soon thou’lt be aware, with keenest thrills of pleasure, How Cupid stirs and leaps, on light and restless wing. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES And now, away! Thou dar’st not rest. 96 Goethe FAUST VII One rapid glance within the mirror give me, How beautiful that woman-form! STREET MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST MAR GARET (passing by) MARGARET No, no! The paragon of all, believe me, Thou soon shalt see, alive and warm. FAUST (Aside) Fair lady, let it not offend you, That arm and escort I would lend you! Thou’lt find, this drink thy blood compelling, Each woman beautiful as Helen! MAR GARET MARGARET I’m neither lady, neither fair, And home I can go without your care. [She releases herself, and exit.] FAUST By Heaven, the girl is wondrous fair! Of all I’ve seen, beyond compare; So sweetly virtuous and pure, 97 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES And yet a little pert, be sure! The lip so red, the cheek’s clear dawn, I’ll not forget while the world rolls on! How she cast down her timid eyes, Deep in my heart imprinted lies: How short and sharp of speech was she, Why, ’twas a real ecstasy! She, there? She’s coming from confession, Of every sin absolved; for I, Behind her chair, was listening nigh. So innocent is she, indeed, That to confess she had no need. I have no power o’er souls so green. (MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES enters) FAUST FAUST And yet, she’s older than fourteen. Hear, of that girl I’d have possession! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES How now! You’re talking like Jack Rake, Who every flower for himself would take, And fancies there are no favors more, Nor honors, save for him in store; Yet always doesn’t the thing succeed. Which, then? FAUST The one who just went by. FAUST Most Worthy Pedagogue, take heed! 98 Goethe As if you’d use, to get control, All sorts of tender rigmarole, And knead and shape her to your thought, As in Italian tales ’tis taught. Let not a word of moral law be spoken! I claim, I tell thee, all my right; And if that image of delight Rest not within mine arms to-night, At midnight is our compact broken. FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Without that, I have appetite. But think, the chances of the case! I need, at least, a fortnight’s space, To find an opportune occasion. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES But now, leave jesting out of sight! I tell you, once for all, that speed With this fair girl will not succeed; By storm she cannot captured be; We must make use of strategy. FAUST Had I but seven hours for all, I should not on the Devil call, But win her by my own persuasion. FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST Get me something the angel keeps! Lead me thither where she sleeps! Get me a kerchief from her breast,— A garter that her knee has pressed! You almost like a Frenchman prate; Yet, pray, don’t take it as annoyance! Why, all at once, exhaust the joyance? Your bliss is by no means so great 99 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES That you may see how much I’d fain Further and satisfy your pain, We will no longer lose a minute; I’ll find her room to-day, and take you in it. ’Tis too early yet. FAUST FAUST A gift for her I bid thee get! [Exit.] And shall I see—possess her? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES No! Unto a neighbor she must go, And meanwhile thou, alone, mayst glow With every hope of future pleasure, Breathing her atmosphere in fullest measure. Presents at once? That’s good: he’s certain to get at her! Full many a pleasant place I know, And treasures, buried long ago: I must, perforce, look up the matter. [Exit.] FAUST Can we go thither? 100 Goethe VIII FAUST (after a moment’s silence) Leave me alone, I beg of thee! EVENING A SMALL, NEA TL Y KEPT NEATL TLY CHAMBER MEP HIST OP HELES (prying about) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Not every girl keeps things so neat. MAR GARET MARGARET (plaiting and binding up the braids of her hair) I’d something give, could I but say Who was that gentleman, to-day. Surely a gallant man was he, And of a noble family; And much could I in his face behold,— And he wouldn’t, else, have been so bold! [Exit] FAUST (looking around) O welcome, twilight soft and sweet, That breathes throughout this hallowed shrine! Sweet pain of love, bind thou with fetters fleet The heart that on the dew of hope must pine! How all around a sense impresses Of quiet, order, and content! This poverty what bounty blesses! What bliss within this narrow den is pent! MEP HIST OP HELES F AUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FA (He throws himself into a leathern arm-chair near the bed.) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Receive me, thou, that in thine open arms Departed joy and pain wert wont to gather! How oft the children, with their ruddy charms, Hung here, around this throne, where sat the father! Come in, but gently: follow me! 101 Faust Perchance my love, amid the childish band, Grateful for gifts the Holy Christmas gave her, Here meekly kissed the grandsire’s withered hand. I feel, O maid! thy very soul Of order and content around me whisper,— Which leads thee with its motherly control, The cloth upon thy board bids smoothly thee unroll, The sand beneath thy feet makes whiter, crisper. O dearest hand, to thee ’tis given To change this hut into a lower heaven! And here! Is there a magic vapor here? I came, with lust of instant pleasure, And lie dissolved in dreams of love’s sweet leisure! Are we the sport of every changeful atmosphere? And if, this moment, came she in to me, How would I for the fault atonement render! How small the giant lout would be, Prone at her feet, relaxed and tender! (He lifts one of the bed-curtains.) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES What sweetest thrill is in my blood! Here could I spend whole hours, delaying: Here Nature shaped, as if in sportive playing, The angel blossom from the bud. Here lay the child, with Life’s warm essence The tender bosom filled and fair, And here was wrought, through holier, purer presence, The form diviner beings wear! Be quick! I see her there, returning. FAUST Go! go! I never will retreat. MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES MEP HIST OP And I? What drew me here with power? How deeply am I moved, this hour! What seek I? Why so full my heart, and sore? Miserable Faust! I know thee now no more. Here is a casket, not unmeet, Which elsewhere I have just been earning. Here, set it in the press, with haste! 102 Goethe I swear, ‘twill turn her head, to spy it: Some baubles I therein had placed, That you might win another by it. True, child is child, and play is play. To the lecture-hall you were forced to go,— As if stood before you, gray and loath, Physics and Metaphysics both! But away! [Exeunt.] FAUST MAR GARET (with a lamp) MARGARET I know not, should I do it? It is so close, so sultry, here! (She opens the window) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Ask you, pray? Yourself, perhaps, would keep the bubble? Then I suggest, ‘twere fair and just To spare the lovely day your lust, And spare to me the further trouble. You are not miserly, I trust? I rub my hands, in expectation tender— And yet ’tis not so warm outside. I feel, I know not why, such fear!— Would mother came!—where can she bide? My body’s chill and shuddering,— I’m but a silly, fearsome thing! (She begins to sing while undressing) There was a King in Thule, Was faithful till the grave,— To whom his mistress, dying, A golden goblet gave. (He places the casket in the press, and locks it again.) Now quick, away! The sweet young maiden to betray, So that by wish and will you bend her; And you look as though Naught was to him more precious; He drained it at every bout: 103 Faust His eyes with tears ran over, As oft as he drank thereout. When came his time of dying, The towns in his land he told, Naught else to his heir denying Except the goblet of gold. He sat at the royal banquet With his knights of high degree, In the lofty hall of his fathers In the Castle by the Sea. There stood the old carouser, And drank the last life-glow; And hurled the hallowed goblet Into the tide below. He saw it plunging and filling, And sinking deep in the sea: Then fell his eyelids forever, And never more drank he! (She opens the press in order to arrange her clothes, and perceives the casket of jewels.) I locked the press, most certainly. ’Tis truly wonderful! What can within it be? Perhaps ’twas brought by some one as a pawn, And mother gave a loan thereon? And here there hangs a key to fit: I have a mind to open it. What is that? God in Heaven! Whence came Such things? Never beheld I aught so fair! Rich ornaments, such as a noble dame On highest holidays might wear! How would the pearl-chain suit my hair? Ah, who may all this splendor own? (She adorns herself with the jewelry, and steps before the mirror.) Were but the ear-rings mine, alone! One has at once another air. What helps one’s beauty, youthful blood? One may possess them, well and good; But none the more do others care. They praise us half in pity, sure: To gold still tends, On gold depends All, all! Alas, we poor! How comes that lovely casket here to me? 104 Goethe IX FAUST Thy head is out of order, sadly: It much becomes thee to be raving madly. PR OMENADE PROMENADE (F UST, walking thoughtfully up and down. To him F A UST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES.) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES By all love ever rejected! By hell-fire hot and unsparing! I wish I knew something worse, that I might use it for swearing! FAUST What ails thee? What is’t gripes thee, elf? A face like thine beheld I never. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I would myself unto the Devil deliver, If I were not a Devil myself! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Just think, the pocket of a priest should get The trinkets left for Margaret! The mother saw them, and, instanter, A secret dread began to haunt her. Keen scent has she for tainted air; She snuffs within her book of prayer, And smells each article, to see If sacred or profane it be; So here she guessed, from every gem, That not much blessing came with them. “My child,” she said, “ill-gotten good Ensnares the soul, consumes the blood. Before the Mother of God we’ll lay it; With heavenly manna she’ll repay it!” But Margaret thought, with sour grimace, “A gift-horse is not out of place, And, truly! godless cannot be The one who brought such things to me.” A parson came, by the mother bidden: 105 Faust He saw, at once, where the game was hidden, And viewed it with a favor stealthy. He spake: “That is the proper view,— Who overcometh, winneth too. The Holy Church has a stomach healthy: Hath eaten many a land as forfeit, And never yet complained of surfeit: The Church alone, beyond all question, Has for ill-gotten goods the right digestion.” FAUST And Margaret? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Sits unrestful still, And knows not what she should, or will; Thinks on the jewels, day and night, But more on him who gave her such delight. FAUST A general practice is the same, Which Jew and King may also claim. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Then bagged the spangles, chains, and rings, As if but toadstools were the things, And thanked no less, and thanked no more Than if a sack of nuts he bore,— Promised them fullest heavenly pay, And deeply edified were they. FAUST The darling’s sorrow gives me pain. Get thou a set for her again! The first was not a great display. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES O yes, the gentleman finds it all child’s-play! 106 Goethe FAUST X Fix and arrange it to my will; And on her neighbor try thy skill! Don’t be a Devil stiff as paste, But get fresh jewels to her taste! THE NEIGHBOR’S HOUSE MAR THA (solus) MARTHA MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Yes, gracious Sir, in all obedience! [Exit FAUST UST.] God forgive my husband, yet he Hasn’t done his duty by me! Off in the world he went straightway,— Left me lie in the straw where I lay. And, truly, I did naught to fret him: God knows I loved, and can’t forget him! Such an enamored fool in air would blow Sun, moon, and all the starry legions, To give his sweetheart a diverting show. (She weeps.) [Exit.] Perhaps he’s even dead! Ah, woe!— Had I a certificate to show! MAR GARET (comes) MARGARET Dame Martha! 107 Faust MAR THA MARTHA MAR THA (adorning her) MARTHA Margaret! what’s happened thee? O, what a blessed luck for thee! MAR GARET MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET I scarce can stand, my knees are trembling! I find a box, the first resembling, Within my press! Of ebony,— And things, all splendid to behold, And richer far than were the old. But, ah! in the streets I dare not bear them, Nor in the church be seen to wear them. MAR THA MARTHA You mustn’t tell it to your mother! ’Twould go to the priest, as did the other. MAR GARET MARGARET MAR THA MARTHA Yet thou canst often this way wander, And secretly the jewels don, Walk up and down an hour, before the mirror yonder,— We’ll have our private joy thereon. And then a chance will come, a holiday, When, piece by piece, can one the things abroad display, A chain at first, then other ornament: Thy mother will not see, and stories we’ll invent. Ah, look and see—just look and see! MAR GARET MARGARET Whoever could have brought me things so precious? That something’s wrong, I feel suspicious. 108 Goethe (A knock) MEP HIST OP HELES (aside to her) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Good Heaven! My mother can that have been? It is enough that you are she: You’ve a visitor of high degree. Pardon the freedom I have ta’en,— Will after noon return again. MAR THA (peeping through the blind) MARTHA ’Tis some strange gentleman.—Come in! MAR THA (aloud) MARTHA MEP HIST OP HELES enters.) (MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Of all things in the world! Just hear— He takes thee for a lady, dear! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES That I so boldly introduce me, I beg you, ladies, to excuse me. GARET (Steps back reverently, on seeing MAR MARGARET GARET.) MAR GARET MARGARET I am a creature young and poor: The gentleman’s too kind, I’m sure. The jewels don’t belong to me. For Martha Schwerdtlein I’d inquire! MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST MAR THA MARTHA I’m she: what does the gentleman desire? Ah, not alone the jewelry! The look, the manner, both betray— Rejoiced am I that I may stay! 109 Faust MAR THA MARTHA MAR GARET MARGARET What is your business? I would fain— Therefore I’d never love, believe me! A loss like this to death would grieve me. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I would I had a more cheerful strain! Take not unkindly its repeating: Your husband’s dead, and sends a greeting. Joy follows woe, woe after joy comes flying. MAR THA MARTHA MAR THA MARTHA Relate his life’s sad close to me! Is dead? Alas, that heart so true! My husband dead! Let me die, too! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MAR GARET MARGARET Ah, dearest dame, let not your courage fail! In Padua buried, he is lying Beside the good Saint Antony, Within a grave well consecrated, For cool, eternal rest created. MEP HIST OP HELES OPHELES MEPHIST HISTOP MAR THA MARTHA Hear me relate the mournful tale! He gave you, further, no commission? 110 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Yes, one of weight, with many sighs: Three hundred masses buy, to save him from perdition! My hands are empty, otherwise. You well deserve a speedy marriage-offer: You are so kind, compassionate. MAR GARET MARGARET MAR THA MARTHA O, no! As yet, it would not do. What! Not a pocket-piece? no jewelry? What every journeyman within his wallet spares, And as a token with him bears, And rather starves or begs, than loses? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Madam, it is a grief to me; Yet, on my word, his cash was put to proper uses. Besides, his penitence was very sore, And he lamented his ill fortune all the more. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES If not a husband, then a beau for you! It is the greatest heavenly blessing, To have a dear thing for one’s caressing. MAR GARET MARGARET The country’s custom is not so. MAR GARET MARGARET MEP HIST OP HELES OPHELES MEPHIST HISTOP Alack, that men are so unfortunate! Surely for his soul’s sake full many a prayer I’ll proffer. Custom, or not! It happens, though. 111 Faust MAR THA MARTHA MAR THA MARTHA Continue, pray! He lied! What! On the brink of death he slandered? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I stood beside his bed of dying. ’Twas something better than manure,— Half-rotten straw: and yet, he died a Christian, sure, And found that heavier scores to his account were lying. He cried: “I find my conduct wholly hateful! To leave my wife, my trade, in manner so ungrateful! Ah, the remembrance makes me die! Would of my wrong to her I might be shriven!” In the last throes his senses wandered, If I such things but half can judge. He said: “I had no time for play, for gaping freedom: First children, and then work for bread to feed ‘em,— For bread, in the widest sense, to drudge, And could not even eat my share in peace and quiet!” MAR THA MARTHA MAR THA (weeping) MARTHA Had he all love, all faith forgotten in his riot? My work and worry, day and night? The dear, good man! Long since was he forgiven. MEP HIST OP HELES OPHELES MEPHIST HISTOP MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST “Yet she, God knows! was more to blame than I.” Not so: the memory of it touched him quite. Said he: “When I from Malta went away My prayers for wife and little ones were zealous, And such a luck from Heaven befell us, 112 Goethe We made a Turkish merchantman our prey, That to the Soldan bore a mighty treasure. Then I received, as was most fit, Since bravery was paid in fullest measure, My well-apportioned share of it.” MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES But see! He’s dead therefrom, at last. Were I in your place, do not doubt me, I’d mourn him decently a year, And for another keep, meanwhile, my eyes about me. MAR THA MARTHA MAR THA MARTHA Say, how? Say, where? If buried, did he own it? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Who knows, now, whither the four winds have blown it? A fair young damsel took him in her care, As he in Naples wandered round, unfriended; And she much love, much faith to him did bear, So that he felt it till his days were ended. MAR THA MARTHA The villain! From his children thieving! Even all the misery on him cast Could not prevent his shameful way of living! Ah, God! another one so dear As was my first, this world will hardly give me. There never was a sweeter fool than mine, Only he loved to roam and leave me, And foreign wenches and foreign wine, And the damned throw of dice, indeed. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Well, well! That might have done, however, If he had only been as clever, And treated your slips with as little heed. I swear, with this condition, too, I would, myself, change rings with you. 113 Faust MAR THA MARTHA MAR GARET MARGARET The gentleman is pleased to jest. Farewell! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MAR THA MARTHA I’ll cut away, betimes, from here: She’d take the Devil at his word, I fear. A moment, ere we part! I’d like to have a legal witness, Where, how, and when he died, to certify his fitness. Irregular ways I’ve always hated; I want his death in the weekly paper stated. GARET (To MAR MARGARET GARET) How fares the heart within your breast? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MAR GARET MARGARET What means the gentleman? MEP HIST OP HELES (aside) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Yes, my good dame, a pair of witnesses Always the truth establishes. I have a friend of high condition, Who’ll also add his deposition. I’ll bring him here. Sweet innocent, thou art! MAR THA MARTHA (Aloud.) Good Sir, pray do! Ladies, farewell! 114 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES XI And this young lady will be present, too? A gallant youth! has travelled far: Ladies with him delighted are. A STREET FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MAR GARET MARGARET Before him I should blush, ashamed. FAUST How is it? under way? and soon complete? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Before no king that could be named! MAR THA MARTHA Behind the house, in my garden, then, This eve we’ll expect the gentlemen. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Ah, bravo! Do I find you burning? Well, Margaret soon will still your yearning: At Neighbor Martha’s you’ll this evening meet. A fitter woman ne’er was made To ply the pimp and gypsy trade! FAUST Tis well. 115 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST Yet something is required from us. If you’ve naught better, then, I’ll tear your pretty plan! FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES One service pays the other thus. Now, there you are! O holy man! Is it the first time in your life you’re driven To bear false witness in a case? Of God, the world and all that in it has a place, Of Man, and all that moves the being of his race, Have you not terms and definitions given With brazen forehead, daring breast? And, if you’ll probe the thing profoundly, Knew you so much—and you’ll confess it roundly!— As here of Schwerdtlein’s death and place of rest? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES We’ve but to make a deposition valid That now her husband’s limbs, outstretched and pallid, At Padua rest, in consecrated soil. FAUST Most wise! And first, of course, we’ll make the journey thither? FAUST Thou art, and thou remain’st, a sophist, liar. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Sancta simplicitas! no need of such a toil; Depose, with knowledge or without it, either! HIST OP HELES MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Yes, knew I not more deeply thy desire. 116 Goethe For wilt thou not, no lover fairer, Poor Margaret flatter, and ensnare her, And all thy soul’s devotion swear her? Is that a devilish lying game? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST And yet I’m right! And from my heart. FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES ’Tis very fine! Thine endless love, thy faith assuring, The one almighty force enduring,— Will that, too, prompt this heart of thine? Mark this, I beg of thee! And spare my lungs henceforth: whoever Intends to have the right, if but his tongue be clever, Will have it, certainly. But come: the further talking brings disgust, For thou art right, especially since I must. FAUST Hold! hold! It will!—If such my flame, And for the sense and power intense I seek, and cannot find, a name; Then range with all my senses through creation, Craving the speech of inspiration, And call this ardor, so supernal, Endless, eternal and eternal,— 117 Faust XII GARDEN ’S arm. MAR THA and (MAR MARGARET UST’S MARTHA MAR GARET on FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES walking up and down.) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MAR GARET MARGARET I feel, the gentleman allows for me, Demeans himself, and shames me by it; A traveller is so used to be Kindly content with any diet. I know too well that my poor gossip can Ne’er entertain such an experienced man. MAR GARET MARGARET Don’t incommode yourself! How could you ever kiss it! It is so ugly, rough to see! What work I do,—how hard and steady is it! Mother is much too close with me. [They pass.] MAR THA MARTHA And you, Sir, travel always, do you not? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST Alas, that trade and duty us so harry! With what a pang one leaves so many a spot, And dares not even now and then to tarry! A look from thee, a word, more entertains Than all the lore of wisest brains. MAR THA MARTHA (He kisses her hand.) In young, wild years it suits your ways, This round and round the world in freedom sweeping; But then come on the evil days, 118 Goethe And so, as bachelor, into his grave a-creeping, None ever found a thing to praise. Is oft mere vanity and narrowness. MAR GARET MARGARET MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES How so? I dread to see how such a fate advances. FAUST MAR THA MARTHA [They pass.] Ah, that simplicity and innocence ne’er know Themselves, their holy value, and their spell! That meekness, lowliness, the highest graces Which Nature portions out so lovingly— MAR GARET MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET Yes, out of sight is out of mind! Your courtesy an easy grace is; But you have friends in other places, And sensibler than I, you’ll find. So you but think a moment’s space on me, All times I’ll have to think on you, all places! Then, worthy Sir, improve betimes your chances! FAUST FAUST No doubt you’re much alone? Trust me, dear heart! what men call sensible 119 Faust MAR GARET MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET Yes, for our household small has grown, Yet must be cared for, you will own. We have no maid: I do the knitting, sewing, sweeping, The cooking, early work and late, in fact; And mother, in her notions of housekeeping, Is so exact! Not that she needs so much to keep expenses down: We, more than others, might take comfort, rather: A nice estate was left us by my father, A house, a little garden near the town. But now my days have less of noise and hurry; My brother is a soldier, My little sister’s dead. True, with the child a troubled life I led, Yet I would take again, and willing, all the worry, So very dear was she. I brought it up, and it was fond of me. Father had died before it saw the light, And mother’s case seemed hopeless quite, So weak and miserable she lay; And she recovered, then, so slowly, day by day. She could not think, herself, of giving The poor wee thing its natural living; And so I nursed it all alone With milk and water: ’twas my own. Lulled in my lap with many a song, It smiled, and tumbled, and grew strong. FAUST The purest bliss was surely then thy dower. FAUST MAR GARET MARGARET An angel, if like thee! But surely, also, many a weary hour. I kept the baby’s cradle near My bed at night: if ‘t even stirred, I’d guess it, And waking, hear. And I must nurse it, warm beside me press it, 120 Goethe And oft, to quiet it, my bed forsake, And dandling back and forth the restless creature take, Then at the wash-tub stand, at morning’s break; And then the marketing and kitchen-tending, Day after day, the same thing, never-ending. One’s spirits, Sir, are thus not always good, But then one learns to relish rest and food. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES [They pass.] I mean, have you not felt desire, though ne’er so slightly? MAR THA MARTHA MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Yes, the poor women are bad off, ’tis true: A stubborn bachelor there’s no converting. I’ve everywhere, in fact, been entertained politely. The proverb says: One’s own warm hearth And a good wife, are gold and jewels worth. MAR THA MARTHA MAR THA MARTHA MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I meant to say, were you not touched in earnest, ever? It but depends upon the like of you, And I should turn to better ways than flirting. HELES MEP HIST OP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MAR THA MARTHA One should allow one’s self to jest with ladies never. Speak plainly, Sir, have you no one detected? Has not your heart been anywhere subjected? 121 Faust MAR THA MARTHA To my impertinence befitting, As the Cathedral thou wert quitting? Ah, you don’t understand! MAR GARET MARGARET MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I’m sorry I’m so blind: But I am sure—that you are very kind. [They pass.] FAUST And me, thou angel! didst thou recognize, As through the garden-gate I came? I was confused, the like ne’er happened me; No one could ever speak to my discredit. Ah, thought I, in my conduct has he read it— Something immodest or unseemly free? He seemed to have the sudden feeling That with this wench ‘twere very easy dealing. I will confess, I knew not what appeal On your behalf, here, in my bosom grew; But I was angry with myself, to feel That I could not be angrier with you. FAUST MAR GARET MARGARET Sweet darling! Did you not see it? I cast down my eyes. MAR GARET MARGARET FAUST Wait a while! And thou forgiv’st my freedom, and the blame 122 Goethe (She plucks a star-flower, and pulls off the leaves, one after the other.) FAUST What murmurest thou? FAUST MAR GARET (half aloud) MARGARET Shall that a nosegay be? He loves me—loves me not. MAR GARET MARGARET FAUST No, it is just in play. Thou sweet, angelic soul! FAUST MAR GARET (continues) MARGARET How? Loves me—not—loves me—not— (plucking the last leaf, she cries with frank delight:) MAR GARET MARGARET He loves me! Go! you’ll laugh at me. (She pulls off the leaves and murmurs.) FAUST Yes, child! and let this blossom-word For thee be speech divine! He loves thee! 123 Faust Ah, know’st thou what it means? He loves thee! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Ay! we must away. (He grasps both her hands.) MAR GARET MARGARET MAR THA MARTHA I’m all a-tremble! I’d ask you, longer here to tarry, But evil tongues in this town have full play. It’s as if nobody had nothing to fetch and carry, Nor other labor, But spying all the doings of one’s neighbor: And one becomes the talk, do whatsoe’er one may. Where is our couple now? FAUST O tremble not! but let this look, Let this warm clasp of hands declare thee What is unspeakable! To yield one wholly, and to feel a rapture In yielding, that must be eternal! Eternal!—for the end would be despair. No, no,—no ending! no ending! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Flown up the alley yonder, The wilful summer-birds! MAR THA (coming forward) MARTHA MAR THA MARTHA The night is falling. He seems of her still fonder. 124 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES XIII And she of him. So runs the world away! A GARDEN-ARBOR (MAR MARGARET MAR GARET comes in, conceals herself behind the door, puts her finger to her lips, and peeps through the crack.) MAR GARET MARGARET He comes! FAUST (entering) Ah, rogue! a tease thou art: I have thee! (He kisses her.) MAR GARET MARGARET (clasping him, and returning the kiss) Dearest man! I love thee from my heart. (MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES knocks) 125 Faust FAUST (stamping his foot) FAUST Who’s there? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES May I not, then, upon you wait? MAR GARET MARGARET My mother would—farewell! A friend! FAUST FAUST A beast! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Ah, can I not remain? Farewell! MAR THA MARTHA Tis time to separate. MAR THA (coming) MARTHA Adieu! MAR GARET MARGARET Yes, Sir, ’tis late. And soon to meet again! HIST OP HELES OPHELES HELES.] [Exeunt FAUST and MEP MEPHIST HISTOP 126 Goethe MAR GARET MARGARET Dear God! However is it, such A man can think and know so much? I stand ashamed and in amaze, And answer “Yes” to all he says, A poor, unknowing child! and he— I can’t think what he finds in me! [_Exit_. XIV FOREST AND CA VERN CAVERN FAUST (solus) Spirit sublime, thou gav’st me, gav’st me all For which I prayed. Not unto me in vain Hast thou thy countenance revealed in fire. Thou gav’st me Nature as a kingdom grand, With power to feel and to enjoy it. Thou Not only cold, amazed acquaintance yield’st, But grantest, that in her profoundest breast I gaze, as in the bosom of a friend. The ranks of living creatures thou dost lead Before me, teaching me to know my brothers In air and water and the silent wood. And when the storm in forests roars and grinds, The giant firs, in falling, neighbor boughs And neighbor trunks with crushing weight bear down, And falling, fill the hills with hollow thunders,— Then to the cave secure thou leadest me, Then show’st me mine own self, and in my breast The deep, mysterious miracles unfold. And when the perfect moon before my gaze 127 Faust Comes up with soothing light, around me float From every precipice and thicket damp The silvery phantoms of the ages past, And temper the austere delight of thought. That nothing can be perfect unto Man I now am conscious. With this ecstasy, Which brings me near and nearer to the Gods, Thou gav’st the comrade, whom I now no more Can do without, though, cold and scornful, he Demeans me to myself, and with a breath, A word, transforms thy gifts to nothingness. Within my breast he fans a lawless fire, Unwearied, for that fair and lovely form: Thus in desire I hasten to enjoyment, And in enjoyment pine to feel desire. FAUST Would there were other work for thee! To plague my day auspicious thou returnest. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Well! I’ll engage to let thee be: Thou darest not tell me so in earnest. The loss of thee were truly very slight,— comrade crazy, rude, repelling: One has one’s hands full all the day and night; If what one does, or leaves undone, is right, From such a face as thine there is no telling. (MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES enters.) FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Have you not led this life quite long enough? How can a further test delight you? ’Tis very well, that once one tries the stuff, But something new must then requite you. There is, again, thy proper tone!— That thou hast bored me, I must thankful be! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Poor Son of Earth, how couldst thou thus alone 128 Goethe Have led thy life, bereft of me? I, for a time, at least, have worked thy cure; Thy fancy’s rickets plague thee not at all: Had I not been, so hadst thou, sure, Walked thyself off this earthly ball Why here to caverns, rocky hollows slinking, Sit’st thou, as ‘twere an owl a-blinking? Why suck’st, from sodden moss and dripping stone, Toad-like, thy nourishment alone? A fine way, this, thy time to fill! The Doctor’s in thy body still. To grub with yearning force through Earth’s dark marrow, Compress the six days’ work within thy bosom narrow,— To taste, I know not what, in haughty power, Thine own ecstatic life on all things shower, Thine earthly self behind thee cast, And then the lofty instinct, thus— FAUST FAUST What fresh and vital forces, canst thou guess, Spring from my commerce with the wilderness? But, if thou hadst the power of guessing, Thou wouldst be devil enough to grudge my soul the blessing. Shame on thee! MEP HIST OP HELES HISTOP OPHELES MEPHIST A blessing drawn from supernatural fountains! In night and dew to lie upon the mountains; All Heaven and Earth in rapture penetrating; Thyself to Godhood haughtily inflating; (With a gesture:) at last,— daren’t say how—to pluck the final flower! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Yes, thou findest that unpleasant! Thou hast the moral right to cry me “shame!” at present. One dares not that before chaste ears declare, Which chaste hearts, notwithstanding, cannot spare; And, once for all, I grudge thee not the pleasure Of lying to thyself in moderate measure. But such a course thou wilt not long endure; 129 Faust Already art thou o’er-excited, And, if it last, wilt soon be plighted To madness and to horror, sure. Enough of that! Thy love sits lonely yonder, By all things saddened and oppressed; Her thoughts and yearnings seek thee, tenderer, fonder,— mighty love is in her breast. First came thy passion’s flood and poured around her As when from melted snow a streamlet overflows; Thou hast therewith so filled and drowned her, That now thy stream all shallow shows. Methinks, instead of in the forests lording, The noble Sir should find it good, The love of this young silly blood At once to set about rewarding. Her time is miserably long; She haunts her window, watching clouds that stray O’er the old city-wall, and far away. “Were I a little bird!” so runs her song, Day long, and half night long. Now she is lively, mostly sad, Now, wept beyond her tears; Then again quiet she appears,—Always love-mad. FAUST Serpent! Serpent! MEP HIST OP HELES (aside) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Ha! do I trap thee! FAUST Get thee away with thine offences, Reprobate! Name not that fairest thing, Nor the desire for her sweet body bring Again before my half-distracted senses! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES What wouldst thou, then? She thinks that thou art flown; And half and half thou art, I own. FAUST Yet am I near, and love keeps watch and ward; 130 Goethe Though I were ne’er so far, it cannot falter: I envy even the Body of the Lord The touching of her lips, before the altar. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES ’Tis very well! My envy oft reposes On your twin-pair, that feed among the roses. FAUST Away, thou pimp! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES You rail, and it is fun to me. The God, who fashioned youth and maid, Perceived the noblest purpose of His trade, And also made their opportunity. Go on! It is a woe profound! ’Tis for your sweetheart’s room you’re bound, And not for death, indeed. FAUST What are, within her arms, the heavenly blisses? Though I be glowing with her kisses, Do I not always share her need? I am the fugitive, all houseless roaming, The monster without air or rest, That like a cataract, down rocks and gorges foaming, Leaps, maddened, into the abyss’s breast! And side-wards she, with young unwakened senses, Within her cabin on the Alpine field Her simple, homely life commences, Her little world therein concealed. And I, God’s hate flung o’er me, Had not enough, to thrust The stubborn rocks before me And strike them into dust! She and her peace I yet must undermine: Thou, Hell, hast claimed this sacrifice as thine! Help, Devil! through the coming pangs to push me; What must be, let it quickly be! Let fall on me her fate, and also crush me,— One ruin whelm both her and me! 131 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Again it seethes, again it glows! Thou fool, go in and comfort her! When such a head as thine no outlet knows, It thinks the end must soon occur. Hail him, who keeps a steadfast mind! Thou, else, dost well the devil-nature wear: Naught so insipid in the world I find As is a devil in despair. XV MAR GARET ’S R OOM MARGARET GARET’S ROOM MAR GARET MARGARET (at the spinning-wheel, alone) My peace is gone, My heart is sore: I never shall find it, Ah, nevermore! Save I have him near. The grave is here; The world is gall And bitterness all. My poor weak head Is racked and crazed; My thought is lost, My senses mazed. My peace is gone, My heart is sore: 132 Goethe I never shall find it, Ah, nevermore! And kiss his mouth, To heart’s desire, And on his kisses At last expire! To see him, him only, At the pane I sit; To meet him, him only, The house I quit. His lofty gait, His noble size, The smile of his mouth, The power of his eyes, And the magic flow Of his talk, the bliss In the clasp of his hand, And, ah! his kiss! My peace is gone, My heart is sore: I never shall find it, Ah, nevermore! My bosom yearns For him alone; Ah, dared I clasp him, And hold, and own! 133 Faust XVI MAR THA ’S GARDEN MARTHA THA’S MAR GARET F AUST MARGARET FA MAR GARET MARGARET FAUST Leave that, my child! Thou know’st my love is tender; For love, my blood and life would I surrender, And as for Faith and Church, I grant to each his own. MAR GARET MARGARET That’s not enough: we must believe thereon. Promise me, Henry!— FAUST FAUST Must we? What I can! MAR GARET MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET How is’t with thy religion, pray? Thou art a dear, good-hearted man, And yet, I think, dost not incline that way. Would that I had some influence! Then, too, thou honorest not the Holy Sacraments. FAUST I honor them. 134 Goethe MAR GARET MARGARET Desiring no possession ’Tis long since thou hast been to mass or to confession. Believest thou in God? FAUST My darling, who shall dare “I believe in God!” to say? Ask priest or sage the answer to declare, And it will seem a mocking play, A sarcasm on the asker. MAR GARET MARGARET Then thou believest not! FAUST Hear me not falsely, sweetest countenance! Who dare express Him? And who profess Him, Saying: I believe in Him! Who, feeling, seeing, Deny His being, Saying: I believe Him not! The All-enfolding, The All-upholding, Folds and upholds he not Thee, me, Himself? Arches not there the sky above us? Lies not beneath us, firm, the earth? And rise not, on us shining, Friendly, the everlasting stars? Look I not, eye to eye, on thee, And feel’st not, thronging To head and heart, the force, Still weaving its eternal secret, Invisible, visible, round thy life? Vast as it is, fill with that force thy heart, And when thou in the feeling wholly blessed art, Call it, then, what thou wilt,— Call it Bliss! Heart! Love! God! I have no name to give it! Feeling is all in all: The Name is sound and smoke, Obscuring Heaven’s clear glow. 135 Faust MAR GARET MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET All that is fine and good, to hear it so: Much the same way the preacher spoke, Only with slightly different phrases. I’ve long been grieved to see That thou art in such company. FAUST FAUST How so? The same thing, in all places, All hearts that beat beneath the heavenly day— Each in its language—say; Then why not I, in mine, as well? MAR GARET MARGARET To hear it thus, it may seem passable; And yet, some hitch in’t there must be For thou hast no Christianity. MAR GARET MARGARET The man who with thee goes, thy mate, Within my deepest, inmost soul I hate. In all my life there’s nothing Has given my heart so keen a pang of loathing, As his repulsive face has done. FAUST FAUST Nay, fear him not, my sweetest one! Dear love! 136 Goethe MAR GARET MARGARET FAUST I feel his presence like something ill. I’ve else, for all, a kindly will, But, much as my heart to see thee yearneth, The secret horror of him returneth; And I think the man a knave, as I live! If I do him wrong, may God forgive! Foreboding angel that thou art! MAR GARET MARGARET There must be such queer birds, however. It overcomes me in such degree, That wheresoe’er he meets us, even, I feel as though I’d lost my love for thee. When he is by, I could not pray to Heaven. That burns within me like a flame, And surely, Henry, ’tis with thee the same. MAR GARET MARGARET FAUST Live with the like of him, may I never! When once inside the door comes he, He looks around so sneeringly, And half in wrath: One sees that in nothing no interest he hath: ’Tis written on his very forehead That love, to him, is a thing abhorréd. I am so happy on thine arm, So free, so yielding, and so warm, And in his presence stifled seems my heart. There, now, is thine antipathy! FAUST MAR GARET MARGARET But I must go. 137 Faust FAUST It will not harm her, when one tries it? Ah, shall there never be A quiet hour, to see us fondly plighted, With breast to breast, and soul to soul united? FAUST If ’twould, my love, would I advise it? MAR GARET MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET Ah, if I only slept alone! I’d draw the bolts to-night, for thy desire; But mother’s sleep so light has grown, And if we were discovered by her, ’Twould be my death upon the spot! Ah, dearest man, if but thy face I see, I know not what compels me to thy will: So much have I already done for thee, That scarcely more is left me to fulfil. HIST OP HELES (Enter MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HELES.) [Exit.] FAUST Thou angel, fear it not! Here is a phial: in her drink But three drops of it measure, And deepest sleep will on her senses sink. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES The monkey! Is she gone? FAUST GARET MAR MARGARET Hast played the spy again? What would I not, to give thee pleasure? 138 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST I’ve heard, most fully, how she drew thee. The Doctor has been catechised, ’tis plain; Great good, I hope, the thing will do thee. The girls have much desire to ascertain If one is prim and good, as ancient rules compel: If there he’s led, they think, he’ll follow them as well. Abortion, thou, of filth and fire! FAUST Thou, monster, wilt nor see nor own How this pure soul, of faith so lowly, So loving and ineffable,— The faith alone That her salvation is,—with scruples holy Pines, lest she hold as lost the man she loves so well! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES And then, how masterly she reads physiognomy! When I am present she’s impressed, she knows not how; She in my mask a hidden sense would read: She feels that surely I’m a genius now,— Perhaps the very Devil, indeed! Well, well,—to-night—? FAUST What’s that to thee? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Thou, full of sensual, super-sensual desire, A girl by the nose is leading thee. Yet my delight ‘twill also be! 139 Faust XVII MAR GARET MARGARET How so? AT THE FOUNT AIN FOUNTAIN LISBETH MAR GARET and LISBETH With pitchers. MARGARET LISBETH Hast nothing heard of Barbara? MAR GARET MARGARET No, not a word. I go so little out. LISBETH It’s true, Sibylla said, to-day. She’s played the fool at last, there’s not a doubt. Such taking-on of airs! It stinks! She’s feeding two, whene’er she eats and drinks. MAR GARET MARGARET Ah! LISBETH And so, at last, it serves her rightly. She clung to the fellow so long and tightly! That was a promenading! At village and dance parading! As the first they must everywhere shine, And he treated her always to pies and wine, And she made a to-do with her face so fine; So mean and shameless was her behavior, She took all the presents the fellow gave her. 140 Goethe ’Twas kissing and coddling, on and on! So now, at the end, the flower is gone. MAR GARET MARGARET LISBETH He’d be a fool! A brisk young blade Has room, elsewhere, to ply his trade. Besides, he’s gone. The poor, poor thing! MAR GARET MARGARET LISBETH Dost pity her, at that? When one of us at spinning sat, And mother, nights, ne’er let us out the door She sported with her paramour. On the door-bench, in the passage dark, The length of the time they’d never mark. So now her head no more she’ll lift, But do church-penance in her sinner’s shift! That is not fair! LISBETH If him she gets, why let her beware! The boys shall dash her wreath on the floor, And we’ll scatter chaff before her door! [Exit.] MAR GARET (returning home) MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET He’ll surely take her for his wife. How scornfully I once reviled, When some poor maiden was beguiled! More speech than any tongue suffices I craved, to censure others’ vices. Black as it seemed, I blackened still, 141 Faust And blacker yet was in my will; And blessed myself, and boasted high,— And now—a living sin am I! Yet—all that drove my heart thereto, God! was so good, so dear, so true! XVIII DONJON (In a niche of the wall a shrine, with an image of the Mater Dolorosa. Pots of flowers before it.) MAR GARET MARGARET (putting fresh flowers in the pots) Incline, O Maiden, Thou sorrow-laden, Thy gracious countenance upon my pain! The sword Thy heart in, With anguish smarting, Thou lookest up to where Thy Son is slain! Thou seest the Father; Thy sad sighs gather, And bear aloft Thy sorrow and His pain! Ah, past guessing, Beyond expressing, 142 Goethe The pangs that wring my flesh and bone! Why this anxious heart so burneth, Why it trembleth, why it yearneth, Knowest Thou, and Thou alone! XIX NIGHT Where’er I go, what sorrow, What woe, what woe and sorrow Within my bosom aches! Alone, and ah! unsleeping, I’m weeping, weeping, weeping, The heart within me breaks. The pots before my window, Alas! my tears did wet, As in the early morning For thee these flowers I set. Within my lonely chamber The morning sun shone red: I sat, in utter sorrow, Already on my bed. Help! rescue me from death and stain! O Maiden! Thou sorrow-laden, Incline Thy countenance upon my pain! STREET BEFORE MAR GARET ’S DOOR MARGARET GARET’S VALENTINE (a soldier, MAR GARET ’S brother) MARGARET GARET’S When I have sat at some carouse. Where each to each his brag allows, And many a comrade praised to me His pink of girls right lustily, With brimming glass that spilled the toast, And elbows planted as in boast: I sat in unconcerned repose, And heard the swagger as it rose. And stroking then my beard, I’d say, Smiling, the bumper in my hand: “Each well enough in her own way. But is there one in all the land Like sister Margaret, good as gold,— One that to her can a candle hold?” Cling! clang! “Here’s to her!” went around The board: “He speaks the truth!” cried some; “In her the flower o’ the sex is found!” 143 Faust And all the swaggerers were dumb. And now!—I could tear my hair with vexation. And dash out my brains in desperation! With turned-up nose each scamp may face me, With sneers and stinging taunts disgrace me, And, like a bankrupt debtor sitting, A chance-dropped word may set me sweating! Yet, though I thresh them all together, I cannot call them liars, either. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I’m like a sentimental tom-cat, rather, That round the tall fire-ladders sweeps, And stealthy, then, along the coping creeps: Quite virtuous, withal, I come, A little thievish and a little frolicsome. I feel in every limb the presage Forerunning the grand Walpurgis-Night: Day after to-morrow brings its message, And one keeps watch then with delight. But what comes sneaking, there, to view? If I mistake not, there are two. If he’s one, let me at him drive! He shall not leave the spot alive. FAUST FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Meanwhile, may not the treasure risen be, Which there, behind, I glimmering see? FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES How from the window of the sacristy Upward th’eternal lamp sends forth a glimmer, That, lessening side-wards, fainter grows and dimmer, Till darkness closes from the sky! The shadows thus within my bosom gather. Shalt soon experience the pleasure, To lift the kettle with its treasure. I lately gave therein a squint— Saw splendid lion-dollars in ‘t. 144 Goethe FAUST (Sings to the cither.) Not even a jewel, not a ring, To deck therewith my darling girl? What dost thou here In daybreak clear, Kathrina dear, Before thy lover’s door? Beware! the blade Lets in a maid. That out a maid Departeth nevermore! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I saw, among the rest, a thing That seemed to be a chain of pearl. The coaxing shun Of such an one! When once ’tis done Good-night to thee, poor thing! Love’s time is brief: Unto no thief Be warm and lief, But with the wedding-ring! FAUST That’s well, indeed! For painful is it To bring no gift when her I visit. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Thou shouldst not find it so annoying, Without return to be enjoying. Now, while the sky leads forth its starry throng, Thou’lt hear a masterpiece, no work completer: I’ll sing her, first, a moral song, The surer, afterwards, to cheat her. VALENTINE (comes forward) Whom wilt thou lure? God’s-element! Rat-catching piper, thou!—perdition! To the Devil, first, the instrument! To the Devil, then, the curst musician! 145 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES VALENTINE The cither’s smashed! For nothing more ’tis fitting. That, too! VALENTINE MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES There’s yet a skull I must be splitting! Of course. MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) VALENTINE Sir Doctor, don’t retreat, I pray! Stand by: I’ll lead, if you’ll but tarry: Out with your spit, without delay! You’ve but to lunge, and I will parry. I think the Devil must fight! How is it, then? my hand’s already lame: MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) VALENTINE Thrust home! Then parry that! VALENTINE (jails) MEP HIST OP HELES OPHELES MEPHIST HISTOP O God! Why not? ’tis light. 146 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES PEOPLE Now is the lubber tame! But come, away! ’Tis time for us to fly; For there arises now a murderous cry. With the police ‘twere easy to compound it, But here the penal court will sift and sound it. Here lies one dead already—see! MAR THA (coming from the house) MARTHA The murderers, whither have they run? [Exit with FAUST UST.] MAR GARET (coming out) MARGARET MAR THA (at the window) MARTHA Who lies here? Come out! Come out! PEOPLE MAR GARET (at the window) MARGARET ’Tis thy mother’s son! Quick, bring a light! MAR GARET MARGARET MAR THA (as above) MARTHA Almighty God! what misery! They swear and storm, they yell and fight! 147 Faust VALENTINE I’m dying! That is quickly said, And quicker yet ’tis done. Why howl, you women there? Instead, Come here and listen, every one! (All gather around him) My Margaret, see! still young thou art, But not the least bit shrewd or smart, Thy business thus to slight: So this advice I bid thee heed— Now that thou art a whore indeed, Why, be one then, outright! MAR GARET MARGARET My brother! God! such words to me? VALENTINE In this game let our Lord God be! What’s done’s already done, alas! What follows it, must come to pass. With one begin’st thou secretly, Then soon will others come to thee, And when a dozen thee have known, Thou’rt also free to all the town. When Shame is born and first appears, She is in secret brought to light, And then they draw the veil of night Over her head and ears; Her life, in fact, they’re loath to spare her. But let her growth and strength display, She walks abroad unveiled by day, Yet is not grown a whit the fairer. The uglier she is to sight, The more she seeks the day’s broad light. The time I verily can discern When all the honest folk will turn From thee, thou jade! and seek protection As from a corpse that breeds infection. Thy guilty heart shall then dismay thee. When they but look thee in the face:— Shalt not in a golden chain array thee, Nor at the altar take thy place! Shalt not, in lace and ribbons flowing, Make merry when the dance is going! But in some corner, woe betide thee! Among the beggars and cripples hide thee; And so, though even God forgive, 148 Goethe On earth a damned existence live! Now through the slumber of the grave I go to God as a soldier brave. MAR THA MARTHA (Dies.) Commend your soul to God for pardon, That you your heart with slander harden! VALENTINE Thou pimp most infamous, be still! Could I thy withered body kill, ’Twould bring, for all my sinful pleasure, Forgiveness in the richest measure. MAR GARET MARGARET My brother! This is Hell’s own pain! VALENTINE I tell thee, from thy tears refrain! When thou from honor didst depart It stabbed me to the very heart. 149 Faust XX And stirreth not and quickens Something beneath thy heart, Thy life disquieting With most foreboding presence? CA THEDRAL CATHEDRAL SER VICE GAN and ANTHEM SERVICE VICE, OR ORGAN ANTHEM. MAR GARET among much people: the EVIL SP IRIT be(MAR MARGARET SPIRIT GARET hind MAR MARGARET GARET.) IRIT EVIL SP SPIRIT HOW otherwise was it, Margaret, When thou, still innocent, Here to the altar cam’st, And from the worn and fingered book Thy prayers didst prattle, Half sport of childhood, Half God within thee! Margaret! Where tends thy thought? Within thy bosom What hidden crime? Pray’st thou for mercy on thy mother’s soul, That fell asleep to long, long torment, and through thee? Upon thy threshold whose the blood? MAR GARET MARGARET Woe! woe! Would I were free from the thoughts That cross me, drawing hither and thither Despite me! CHOR US CHORUS Diesira, dies illa, Solvet soeclum in favilla! (Sound of the organ.) EVIL SP IRIT SPIRIT Wrath takes thee! The trumpet peals! The graves tremble! And thy heart 150 Goethe From ashy rest To fiery torments Now again requickened, Throbs to life! The vaulted arches Crush me!—Air! EVIL SP IRIT SPIRIT MAR GARET MARGARET Would I were forth! I feel as if the organ here My breath takes from me, My very heart Dissolved by the anthem! Hide thyself! Sin and shame Stay never hidden. Air? Light? Woe to thee! CHOR US CHORUS Quid sum miser tunc dicturus, Quem patronem rogaturus, Cum vix Justus sit securus? CHOR US CHORUS Judex ergo cum sedebit, Quidquid latet, ad parebit, Nil inultum remanebit. MAR GARET MARGARET I cannot breathe! The massy pillars Imprison me! EVIL SP IRIT SPIRIT They turn their faces, The glorified, from thee: The pure, their hands to offer, Shuddering, refuse thee! Woe! 151 Faust CHOR US CHORUS XXI Quid sum miser tune dicturus? WALPUR GIS-NIGHT ALPURGIS-NIGHT MAR GARET MARGARET THE HAR TZ MOUNT AINS HARTZ MOUNTAINS AINS. Neighbor! your cordial! (She falls in a swoon.) District of Schierke and Elend. HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST MEP MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES DOST thou not wish a broomstick-steed’s assistance? The sturdiest he-goat I would gladly see: The way we take, our goal is yet some distance. FAUST So long as in my legs I feel the fresh existence. This knotted staff suffices me. What need to shorten so the way? Along this labyrinth of vales to wander, Then climb the rocky ramparts yonder, Wherefrom the fountain flings eternal spray, 152 Goethe Is such delight, my steps would fain delay. The spring-time stirs within the fragrant birches, And even the fir-tree feels it now: Should then our limbs escape its gentle searches? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Indeed? he’d like mankind to imitate! Now, in the Devil’s name, go straight, Or I’ll blow out his being’s flickering spark! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES WILL-O’-THE-WISP I notice no such thing, I vow! ’Tis winter still within my body: Upon my path I wish for frost and snow. How sadly rises, incomplete and ruddy, The moon’s lone disk, with its belated glow, And lights so dimly, that, as one advances, At every step one strikes a rock or tree! Let us, then, use a Jack-o’-lantern’s glances: I see one yonder, burning merrily. Ho, there! my friend! I’ll levy thine attendance: Why waste so vainly thy resplendence? Be kind enough to light us up the steep! You are the master of the house, I mark, And I shall try to serve you nicely. But then, reflect: the mountain’s magic-mad to-day, And if a will-o’-the-wisp must guide you on the way, You mustn’t take things too precisely. FAUST HIST OP HELES, WILL-O’-THE-WISP UST,, MEP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES, (in alternating song) We, it seems, have entered newly In the sphere of dreams enchanted. Do thy bidding, guide us truly, That our feet be forwards planted In the vast, the desert spaces! See them swiftly changing places, Trees on trees beside us trooping, WILL-O’-THE-WISP My reverence, I hope, will me enable To curb my temperament unstable; For zigzag courses we are wont to keep. 153 Faust And the fire-flies wink and darkle, Crowded swarms that soar and sparkle, And in wildering escort gather! And the crags above us stooping, And the rocky snouts, outgrowing,— Hear them snoring, hear them blowing! O’er the stones, the grasses, flowing Stream and streamlet seek the hollow. Hear I noises? songs that follow? Hear I tender love-petitions? Voices of those heavenly visions? Sounds of hope, of love undying! And the echoes, like traditions Of old days, come faint and hollow. Hoo-hoo! Shoo-hoo! Nearer hover Jay and screech-owl, and the plover,— Are they all awake and crying? Is’t the salamander pushes, Bloated-bellied, through the bushes? And the roots, like serpents twisted, Through the sand and boulders toiling, Fright us, weirdest links uncoiling To entrap us, unresisted: Living knots and gnarls uncanny Feel with polypus-antennae For the wanderer. Mice are flying, Thousand-colored, herd-wise hieing Through the moss and through the heather! Tell me, if we still are standing, Or if further we’re ascending? All is turning, whirling, blending, Trees and rocks with grinning faces, Wandering lights that spin in mazes, Still increasing and expanding! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Grasp my skirt with heart undaunted! Here a middle-peak is planted, Whence one seeth, with amaze, Mammon in the mountain blaze. FAUST How strangely glimmers through the hollows A dreary light, like that of dawn! Its exhalation tracks and follows The deepest gorges, faint and wan. Here steam, there rolling vapor sweepeth; 154 Goethe Here burns the glow through film and haze: Now like a tender thread it creepeth, Now like a fountain leaps and plays. Here winds away, and in a hundred Divided veins the valley braids: There, in a corner pressed and sundered, Itself detaches, spreads and fades. Here gush the sparkles incandescent Like scattered showers of golden sand;— But, see! in all their height, at present, The rocky ramparts blazing stand. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Has not Sir Mammon grandly lighted His palace for this festal night? ’Tis lucky thou hast seen the sight; The boisterous guests approach that were invited. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Under the old ribs of the rock retreating, Hold fast, lest thou be hurled down the abysses there! The night with the mist is black; Hark! how the forests grind and crack! Frightened, the owlets are scattered: Hearken! the pillars are shattered. The evergreen palaces shaking! Boughs are groaning and breaking, The tree-trunks terribly thunder, The roots are twisting asunder! In frightfully intricate crashing Each on the other is dashing, And over the wreck-strewn gorges The tempest whistles and surges! Hear’st thou voices higher ringing? Far away, or nearer singing? Yes, the mountain’s side along, Sweeps an infuriate glamouring song! FAUST WIT CHES (in chorus) WITCHES How raves the tempest through the air! With what fierce blows upon my neck ’tis beating! The witches ride to the Brocken’s top, The stubble is yellow, and green the crop. There gathers the crowd for carnival: 155 Faust Sir Urian sits over all. VOICE And so they go over stone and stock; The witch she——s, and——s the buck. O’er the Ilsen-stone. I peeped at the owl in her nest alone: How she stared and glared! A VOICE VOICE Alone, old Baubo’s coming now; She rides upon a farrow-sow. Betake thee to Hell! Why so fast and so fell? CHOR US CHORUS VOICE Then honor to whom the honor is due! Dame Baubo first, to lead the crew! A tough old sow and the mother thereon, Then follow the witches, every one. She has scored and has flayed me: See the wounds she has made me! WIT CHES (chorus) WITCHES A VOICE The way is wide, the way is long: See, what a wild and crazy throng! The broom it scratches, the fork it thrusts, The child is stifled, the mother bursts. Which way com’st thou hither? 156 Goethe WIZ ARDS (semichorus) WIZARDS BO TH CHOR USES BOTH CHORUSES As doth the snail in shell, we crawl: Before us go the women all. When towards the Devil’s House we tread, Woman’s a thousand steps ahead. OTHER SEMICHOR US SEMICHORUS We do not measure with such care: Woman in thousand steps is theft. But howsoe’er she hasten may, Man in one leap has cleared the way. The wind is hushed, the star shoots by. The dreary moon forsakes the sky; The magic notes, like spark on spark, Drizzle, whistling through the dark. VOICE (from below) Halt, there! Ho, there! VOICE (from above) Who calls from the rocky cleft below there? VOICE (from above) Come on, come on, from Rocky Lake! VOICE (from below) Aloft we’d fain ourselves betake. We’ve washed, and are bright as ever you will, Yet we’re eternally sterile still. VOICE (below) Take me, too! take me, too! I’m climbing now three hundred years, And yet the summit cannot see: Among my equals I would be. 157 Faust BO TH CHOR USES BOTH CHORUSES Bears the broom and bears the stock, Bears the fork and bears the buck: Who cannot raise himself to-night Is evermore a ruined wight. Then lower, and on the ground alight; And far and wide the heather press With witchhood’s swarms of wantonness! (They settle down.) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES HALF-WIT CH (below) HALF-WITCH So long I stumble, ill bestead, And the others are now so far ahead! At home I’ve neither rest nor cheer, And yet I cannot gain them here. They crowd and push, they roar and clatter! They whirl and whistle, pull and chatter! They shine, and spirt, and stink, and burn! The true witch-element we learn. Keep close! or we are parted, in our turn, Where art thou? CHOR US OF WIT CHES CHORUS WITCHES FAUST (in the distance) To cheer the witch will salve avail; A rag will answer for a sail; Each trough a goodly ship supplies; He ne’er will fly, who now not flies. Here! MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES BO TH CHOR USES BOTH CHORUSES When round the summit whirls our flight, What! whirled so far astray? Then house-right I must use, and clear the way. Make room! Squire Voland comes! Room, gentle rabble, room! 158 Goethe Here, Doctor, hold to me: in one jump we’ll resume An easier space, and from the crowd be free: It’s too much, even for the like of me. Yonder, with special light, there’s something shining clearer Within those bushes; I’ve a mind to see. Come on! well slip a little nearer. FAUST Spirit of Contradiction! On! I’ll follow straight. ’Tis planned most wisely, if I judge aright: We climb the Brocken’s top in the Walpurgis-Night, That arbitrarily, here, ourselves we isolate. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES But see, what motley flames among the heather! There is a lively club together: In smaller circles one is not alone. FAUST There fire and whirling smoke I see. They seek the Evil One in wild confusion: Many enigmas there might find solution. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES But there enigmas also knotted be. Leave to the multitude their riot! Here will we house ourselves in quiet. It is an old, transmitted trade, That in the greater world the little worlds are made. I see stark-nude young witches congregate, And old ones, veiled and hidden shrewdly: On my account be kind, nor treat them rudely! The trouble’s small, the fun is great. I hear the noise of instruments attuning,— Vile din! yet one must learn to bear the crooning. Come, come along! It _must_ be, I declare! I’ll go ahead and introduce thee there, Thine obligation newly earning. That is no little space: what say’st thou, friend? Look yonder! thou canst scarcely see the end: A hundred fires along the ranks are burning. They dance, they chat, they cook, they drink, they court: Now where, just tell me, is there better sport? Better the summit, I must own: 159 Faust FAUST GENERAL Wilt thou, to introduce us to the revel, Assume the part of wizard or of devil? Say, who would put his trust in nations, Howe’er for them one may have worked and planned? For with the people, as with women, Youth always has the upper hand. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I’m mostly used, ’tis true, to go incognito, But on a gala-day one may his orders show. The Garter does not deck my suit, But honored and at home is here the cloven foot. Perceiv’st thou yonder snail? It cometh, slow and steady; So delicately its feelers pry, That it hath scented me already: I cannot here disguise me, if I try. But come! we’ll go from this fire to a newer: I am the go-between, and thou the wooer. (To some, who are sitting around dying embers:) Old gentlemen, why at the outskirts? Enter! I’d praise you if I found you snugly in the centre, With youth and revel round you like a zone: You each, at home, are quite enough alone. MINISTER They’re now too far from what is just and sage. I praise the old ones, not unduly: When we were all-in-all, then, truly, Then was the real golden age. PAR VENU ARVENU We also were not stupid, either, And what we should not, often did; But now all things have from their bases slid, Just as we meant to hold them fast together. AUTHOR Who, now, a work of moderate sense will read? 160 Goethe Such works are held as antiquate and mossy; And as regards the younger folk, indeed, They never yet have been so pert and saucy. No gems, that have not brought a maid to shame; No sword, but severed ties for the unwary, Or from behind struck down the adversary. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES (who all at once appears very old) I feel that men are ripe for Judgment-Day, Now for the last time I’ve the witches’-hill ascended: Since to the lees my cask is drained away, The world’s, as well, must soon be ended. Gossip! the times thou badly comprehendest: What’s done has happed—what haps, is done! ‘Twere better if for novelties thou sendest: By such alone can we be won. FAUST HUCKSTER-WIT CH HUCKSTER-WITCH Ye gentlemen, don’t pass me thus! Let not the chance neglected be! Behold my wares attentively: The stock is rare and various. And yet, there’s nothing I’ve collected— No shop, on earth, like this you’ll find!— Which has not, once, sore hurt inflicted Upon the world, and on mankind. No dagger’s here, that set not blood to flowing; No cup, that hath not once, within a healthy frame Poured speedy death, in poison glowing: Let me not lose myself in all this pother! This is a fair, as never was another! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES The whirlpool swirls to get above: Thou’rt shoved thyself, imagining to shove. 161 Faust FAUST FAUST But who is that? Those two, the old one with the young one sitting, They’ve danced already more than fitting. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Note her especially, Tis Lilith. No rest to-night for young or old! They start another dance: come now, let us take hold! FAUST FAUST (dancing with the young witch) Who? A lovely dream once came to me; I then beheld an apple-tree, And there two fairest apples shone: They lured me so, I climbed thereon. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Adam’s first wife is she. Beware the lure within her lovely tresses, The splendid sole adornment of her hair! When she succeeds therewith a youth to snare, Not soon again she frees him from her jesses. THE F AIR ONE FAIR Apples have been desired by you, Since first in Paradise they grew; And I am moved with joy, to know That such within my garden grow. 162 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES (dancing with the old one) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES A dissolute dream once came to me: Therein I saw a cloven tree, Which had a————————; Yet,——as ’twas, I fancied it. THE OLD ONE I offer here my best salute Unto the knight with cloven foot! Let him a—————prepare, If him—————————does not scare. PR OKT OP HANT ASMIST PROKT OKTOP OPHANT HANTASMIST Accurséd folk! How dare you venture thus? Had you not, long since, demonstration That ghosts can’t stand on ordinary foundation? And now you even dance, like one of us! FAUST (dancing) O, everywhere on him you fall! When others dance, he weighs the matter: If he can’t every step bechatter, Then ’tis the same as were the step not made; But if you forwards go, his ire is most displayed. If you would whirl in regular gyration As he does in his dull old mill, He’d show, at any rate, good-will,— Especially if you heard and heeded his hortation. PR OKT OP HANT ASMIST PROKT OKTOP OPHANT HANTASMIST You still are here? Nay, ’tis a thing unheard! Vanish, at once! We’ve said the enlightening word. The pack of devils by no rules is daunted: We are so wise, and yet is Tegel haunted. To clear the folly out, how have I swept and stirred! Twill ne’er be clean: why, ’tis a thing unheard! THE F AIR ONE FAIR THE F AIR ONE (dancing) FAIR Then cease to bore us at our ball! Why does he come, then, to our ball? 163 Faust PR OKT OP HANT ASMIST PROKT OKTOP OPHANT HANTASMIST FAUST I tell you, spirits, to your face, I give to spirit-despotism no place; My spirit cannot practise it at all. Ah! in the midst of it there sprang A red mouse from her mouth—sufficient reason. (The dance continues) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Naught will succeed, I see, amid such revels; Yet something from a tour I always save, And hope, before my last step to the grave, To overcome the poets and the devils. That’s nothing! One must not so squeamish be; So the mouse was not gray, enough for thee. Who’d think of that in love’s selected season? FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Then saw I—. He now will seat him in the nearest puddle; The solace this, whereof he’s most assured: And when upon his rump the leeches hang and fuddle, He’ll be of spirits and of Spirit cured. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES What? UST, who has left the dance:) (To FAUST Wherefore forsakest thou the lovely maiden, That in the dance so sweetly sang? FAUST Mephisto, seest thou there, Alone and far, a girl most pale and fair? 164 Goethe She falters on, her way scarce knowing, As if with fettered feet that stay her going. I must confess, it seems to me As if my kindly Margaret were she. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Let the thing be! All thence have evil drawn: It is a magic shape, a lifeless eidolon. Such to encounter is not good: Their blank, set stare benumbs the human blood, And one is almost turned to stone. Medusa’s tale to thee is known. FAUST Forsooth, the eyes they are of one whom, dying, No hand with loving pressure closed; That is the breast whereon I once was lying,— The body sweet, beside which I reposed! Unto each man his love she seems to be. FAUST The woe, the rapture, so ensnare me, That from her gaze I cannot tear me! And, strange! around her fairest throat A single scarlet band is gleaming, No broader than a knife-blade seeming! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Quite right! The mark I also note. Her head beneath her arm she’ll sometimes carry; Twas Perseus lopped it, her old adversary. Thou crav’st the same illusion still! Come, let us mount this little hill; The Prater shows no livelier stir, And, if they’ve not bewitched my sense, I verily see a theatre. What’s going on? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Tis magic all, thou fool, seduced so easily! SER VIBILIS SERVIBILIS ‘Twill shortly recommence: 165 Faust A new performance—’tis the last of seven. To give that number is the custom here: ’Twas by a Dilettante written, And Dilettanti in the parts appear. That now I vanish, pardon, I entreat you! As Dilettante I the curtain raise. XXII WALPUR GIS-NIGHT ’S DREAM ALPURGIS-NIGHT GIS-NIGHT’S OBER ON AND TIT ANIA OBERON TITANIA ANIA’’s GOLDEN WEDDING MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES When I upon the Blocksberg meet you, I find it good: for that’s your proper place. INTERMEZZ O INTERMEZZO MANA GER MANAGER Sons of Mieding, rest to-day! Needless your machinery: Misty vale and mountain gray, That is all the scenery. HERALD That the wedding golden be. Must fifty years be rounded: But the Golden give to me, When the strife’s compounded. 166 Goethe OBER ON OBERON Spirits, if you’re here, be seen— Show yourselves, delighted! Fairy king and fairy queen, They are newly plighted. PUCK Cometh Puck, and, light of limb, Whisks and whirls in measure: Come a hundred after him, To share with him the pleasure. Learn how we were mated! If your pairs would loving be, First be separated! TIT ANIA TITANIA If her whims the wife control, And the man berate her, Take him to the Northern Pole, And her to the Equator! OR CHESTRA. TUT TI ORCHESTRA. TUTTI TI. Fortissimo. ARIEL Ariel’s song is heavenly-pure, His tones are sweet and rare ones: Though ugly faces he allure, Yet he allures the fair ones. Snout of fly, mosquito-bill, And kin of all conditions, Frog in grass, and cricket-trill,— These are the musicians! SOL O SOLO OBER ON OBERON Spouses, who would fain agree, See the bagpipe on our track! ’Tis the soap-blown bubble: 167 Faust Hear the schnecke-schnicke-schnack Through his nostrils double! SP IRIT OWING INT O FORM SPIRIT IRIT,, JUST GR GRO INTO Spider’s foot and paunch of toad, And little wings—we know ‘em! A little creature ‘twill not be, But yet, a little poem. A LIT TLE COUPLE LITTLE Little step and lofty leap Through honey-dew and fragrance: You’ll never mount the airy steep With all your tripping vagrance. INQ UISITIVE TRA VELLER INQUISITIVE TRAVELLER Is’t but masquerading play? See I with precision? Oberon, the beauteous fay, Meets, to-night, my vision! OR THODO X ORTHODO THODOX Not a claw, no tail I see! And yet, beyond a cavil, Like “the Gods of Greece,” must he Also be a devil. NOR THERN AR TIST NORTHERN ARTIST I only seize, with sketchy air, Some outlines of the tourney; Yet I betimes myself prepare For my Italian journey. PURIST My bad luck brings me here, alas! How roars the orgy louder! And of the witches in the mass, But only two wear powder. YOUNG WIT CH WITCH Powder becomes, like petticoat, 168 Goethe A gray and wrinkled noddy; So I sit naked on my goat, And show a strapping body. MA TR ON MATR TRON We’ve too much tact and policy To rate with gibes a scolder; Yet, young and tender though you be, I hope to see you moulder. LEADER OF THE BAND Fly-snout and mosquito-bill, Don’t swarm so round the Naked! Frog in grass and cricket-trill, Observe the time, and make it! WEA THER COCK (towards one side) THERCOCK WEATHER Society to one’s desire! Brides only, and the sweetest! And bachelors of youth and fire. And prospects the completest! WEA THER COCK (towards the other side) WEATHER THERCOCK And if the Earth don’t open now To swallow up each ranter, Why, then will I myself, I vow, Jump into hell instanter! XENIES Us as little insects see! With sharpest nippers flitting, That our Papa Satan we May honor as is fitting. HENNINGS How, in crowds together massed, They are jesting, shameless! They will even say, at last, That their hearts are blameless. MUSA GETES MUSAGETES Among this witches’ revelry 169 Faust His way one gladly loses; And, truly, it would easier be Than to command the Muses. CI-DE VANT GENIUS OF THE A GE CI-DEV AGE The proper folks one’s talents laud: Come on, and none shall pass us! The Blocksberg has a summit broad, Like Germany’s Parnassus. INQ UISITIVE TRA VELLER INQUISITIVE TRAVELLER Say, who’s the stiff and pompous man? He walks with haughty paces: He snuffles all he snuffle can: “He scents the Jesuits’ traces.” CRANE Both clear and muddy streams, for me Are good to fish and sport in: And thus the pious man you see With even devils consorting. WORLDLING Yes, for the pious, I suspect, All instruments are fitting; And on the Blocksberg they erect Full many a place of meeting. DANCER A newer chorus now succeeds! I hear the distant drumming. “Don’t be disturbed! ’tis, in the reeds, The bittern’s changeless booming.” DANCING-MASTER How each his legs in nimble trip Lifts up, and makes a clearance! The crooked jump, the heavy skip, Nor care for the appearance. GOOD FELL OW FELLO The rabble by such hate are held, 170 Goethe To maim and slay delights them: As Orpheus’ lyre the brutes compelled, The bagpipe here unites them. DOGMA TIST DOGMATIST I’ll not be led by any lure Of doubts or critic-cavils: The Devil must be something, sure,— Or how should there be devils? IDEALIST This once, the fancy wrought in me Is really too despotic: Forsooth, if I am all I see, I must be idiotic! REALIST This racking fuss on every hand, It gives me great vexation; And, for the first time, here I stand On insecure foundation. SUP ERNA TURALIST SUPERNA ERNATURALIST With much delight I see the play, And grant to these their merits, Since from the devils I also may Infer the better spirits. SCEPTIC The flame they follow, on and on, And think they’re near the treasure: But Devil rhymes with Doubt alone, So I am here with pleasure. LEADER OF THE BAND Frog in green, and cricket-trill. Such dilettants!—perdition! Fly-snout and mosquito-bill,— Each one’s a fine musician! THE ADR OIT ADROIT Sans souci, we call the clan 171 Faust Of merry creatures so, then; Go a-foot no more we can, And on our heads we go, then. THE A WKW ARD AWKW WKWARD Once many a bit we sponged, but now, God help us! that is done with: Our shoes are all danced out, we trow, We’ve but naked soles to run with. WILL-O’-THE WISPS From the marshes we appear, Where we originated; Yet in the ranks, at once, we’re here As glittering gallants rated. SHOO TING-ST AR TING-STAR SHOOTING-ST THE HEA VY FELL OWS HEAVY FELLO Room! and round about us, room! Trodden are the grasses: Spirits also, spirits come, And they are bulky masses. PUCK Enter not so stall-fed quite, Like elephant-calves about one! And the heaviest weight to-night Be Puck, himself, the stout one! ARIEL If loving Nature at your back, Or Mind, the wings uncloses, Follow up my airy track To the mount of roses! Darting hither from the sky, In star and fire light shooting, Cross-wise now in grass I lie: Who’ll help me to my footing? 172 Goethe OR CHESTRA ORCHESTRA XXIII pianissimo Cloud and trailing mist o’erhead Are now illuminated: Air in leaves, and wind in reed, And all is dissipated. DREAR Y DA Y DREARY DAY A FIELD FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES FAUST In misery! In despair! Long wretchedly astray on the face of the earth, and now imprisoned! That gracious, ill-starred creature shut in a dungeon as a criminal, and given up to fearful torments! To this has it come! to this!—Treacherous, contemptible spirit, and thou hast concealed it from me!—Stand, then,—stand! Roll the devilish eyes wrathfully in thy head! Stand and defy me with thine intolerable presence! Imprisoned! In irretrievable misery! Delivered up to evil spirits, and to condemning, unfeeling Man! And thou hast lulled me, meanwhile, with the most insipid dissipations, hast concealed from me her increasing wretchedness, and suffered her to go helplessly to ruin! 173 Faust MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES She is not the first. Now we are already again at the end of our wits, where the understanding of you men runs wild. Why didst thou enter into fellowship with us, if thou canst not carry it out? Wilt fly, and art not secure against dizziness? Did we thrust ourselves upon thee, or thou thyself upon us? FAUST Dog! Abominable monster! Transform him, thou Infinite Spirit! transform the reptile again into his dog-shape? in which it pleased him often at night to scamper on before me, to roll himself at the feet of the unsuspecting wanderer, and hang upon his shoulders when he fell! Transform him again into his favorite likeness, that he may crawl upon his belly in the dust before me,—that I may trample him, the outlawed, under foot! Not the first! O woe! woe which no human soul can grasp, that more than one being should sink into the depths of this misery,—that the first, in its writhing deathagony under the eyes of the Eternal Forgiver, did not expiate the guilt of all others! The misery of this single one pierces to the very marrow of my life; and thou art calmly grinning at the fate of thousands! FAUST Gnash not thus thy devouring teeth at me? It fills me with horrible disgust. Mighty, glorious Spirit, who hast vouchsafed to me Thine apparition, who knowest my heart and my soul, why fetter me to the felon-comrade, who feeds on mischief and gluts himself with ruin? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Hast thou done? 174 Goethe FAUST MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES Rescue her, or woe to thee! The fearfullest curse be upon thee for thousands of ages! And the danger to which thou wilt expose thyself? Know that the guilt of blood, from thy hand, still lies upon the town! Avenging spirits hover over the spot where the victim fell, and lie in wait for the returning murderer. MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I cannot loosen the bonds of the Avenger, nor undo his bolts. Rescue her? Who was it that plunged her into ruin? I, or thou? (F FAUST looks around wildly.) Wilt thou grasp the thunder? Well that it has not been given to you, miserable mortals! To crush to pieces the innocent respondent—that is the tyrant-fashion of relieving one’s self in embarrassments. FAUST FAUST That, too, from thee? Murder and death of a world upon thee, monster! Take me thither, I say, and liberate her! MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I will convey thee there; and hear, what I can do! Have I all the power in Heaven and on Earth? I will becloud the jailer’s senses: get possession of the key, and lead her forth with human hand! I will keep watch: the magic steeds are ready, I will carry you off. So much is in my power. Take me thither! She shall be free! 175 Faust FAUST XXIV Up and away! NIGHT OP EN FIELD OPEN FAUST and MEP HIST OP HELES speeding onward on (F MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES black horses.) FAUST What weave they there round the raven-stone? MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES I know not what they are brewing and doing. FAUST Soaring up, sweeping down, bowing and bending! 176 Goethe MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES XXV A witches’-guild. DUNGEON FAUST They scatter, devote and doom! FAUST (with a bunch of keys and a lamp, before an iron door) MEP HIST OP HELES MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES On! on! A shudder, long unfelt, comes o’er me; Mankind’s collected woe o’erwhelms me, here. She dwells within the dark, damp walls before me, And all her crime was a delusion dear! What! I delay to free her? I dread, once again to see her? On! my shrinking but lingers Death more near. (He grasps the lock: the sound of singing is heard inside.) My mother, the harlot, Who put me to death; My father, the varlet, Who eaten me hath! Little sister, so good, Laid my bones in the wood, In the damp moss and clay: 177 Faust Then was I a beautiful bird o’ the wood; Fly away! Fly away! (He takes hold of the fetters to unlock them.) MAR GARET (on her knees) MARGARET FAUST (unlocking) She does not dream her lover listens near; That he the rattling chain, the rustling straw, can hear. (He enters.) Who, headsman! unto thee such power Over me could give? Thou’rt come for me at midnight-hour: Have mercy on me, let me live! Is’t not soon enough when morning chime has run? (She rises.) MAR GARET (hiding herself on the pallet) MARGARET Woe! woe! They come. O death of bitterness! MAR GARET (throwing herself before him) MARGARET Art thou a man, then pity my distress! And I am yet so young, so young! And now Death comes, and ruin! I, too, was fair, and that was my undoing. My love was near, but now he’s far; Torn lies the wreath, scattered the blossoms are. Seize me not thus so violently! Spare me! What have I done to thee? Let me not vainly entreat thee! I never chanced, in all my days, to meet thee! FAUST FAUST Thy cries will wake the guards, and they will seize thee! Shall I outlive this misery? FAUST (whispering) Hush! hush! The hour is come that frees thee. 178 Goethe MAR GARET MARGARET Now am I wholly in thy might. But let me suckle, first, my baby! I blissed it all this livelong night; They took ‘t away, to vex me, maybe, And now they say I killed the child outright. And never shall I be glad again. They sing songs about me! ’tis bad of the folk to do it! There’s an old story has the same refrain; Who bade them so construe it? Seeketh a path His prey to discover! FAUST (aloud) Margaret! Margaret! MAR GARET (attentively listening) MARGARET That was the voice of my lover! FAUST (falling upon his knees) (She springs to her feet: the fetters fall off.) Here lieth one who loves thee ever, The thraldom of thy woe to sever. Where is he? I heard him call me. I am free! No one shall enthrall me. To his neck will I fly, On his bosom lie! On the threshold he stood, and Margaret! calling, Midst of Hell’s howling and noises appalling, Midst of the wrathful, infernal derision, I knew the sweet sound of the voice of the vision! MAR GARET (flinging herself beside him) MARGARET O let us kneel, and call the Saints to hide us! Under the steps beside us, The threshold under, Hell heaves in thunder! The Evil One With terrible wrath 179 Faust FAUST MAR GARET MARGARET ’Tis I! Delay, now! So fain I stay, when thou delayest! MAR GARET MARGARET (Caressing him.) ’Tis thou! O, say it once again! FAUST (Clasping him.) ’Tis he! ’tis he! Where now is all my pain? The anguish of the dungeon, and the chain? ’Tis thou! Thou comest to save me, And I am saved!— Again the street I see Where first I looked on thee; And the garden, brightly blooming, Where I and Martha wait thy coming. FAUST (struggling to leave) Come! Come with me! Away, now! If longer here thou stayest, We shall be made to dearly rue it. MAR GARET MARGARET Kiss me!—canst no longer do it? My friend, so short a time thou’rt missing, And hast unlearned thy kissing? Why is my heart so anxious, on thy breast? Where once a heaven thy glances did create me, A heaven thy loving words expressed, And thou didst kiss, as thou wouldst suffocate me— Kiss me! Or I’ll kiss thee! 180 Goethe (She embraces him.) MAR GARET MARGARET Ah, woe! thy lips are chill, And still. How changed in fashion Thy passion! Who has done me this ill? Thou wilt unloose my chain, And in thy lap wilt take me once again. How comes it that thou dost not shrink from me?— Say, dost thou know, my friend, whom thou mak’st free? (She turns away from him.) FAUST Come! come! The night already vanisheth. FAUST Come, follow me! My darling, be more bold: I’ll clasp thee, soon, with warmth a thousand-fold; But follow now! ’Tis all I beg of thee. MAR GARET (turning to him) MARGARET And is it thou? Thou, surely, certainly? FAUST ’Tis I! Come on! MAR GARET MARGARET My mother have I put to death; I’ve drowned the baby born to thee. Was it not given to thee and me? Thee, too!—’Tis thou! It scarcely true doth seem— Give me thy hand! ’Tis not a dream! Thy dear, dear hand!—But, ah, ’tis wet! Why, wipe it off! Methinks that yet There’s blood thereon. Ah, God! what hast thou done? Nay, sheathe thy sword at last! Do not affray me! 181 Faust FAUST FAUST O, let the past be past! Thy words will slay me! If thou feel’st it is I, then come with me! MAR GARET MARGARET MAR GARET MARGARET Out yonder? No, no! Thou must outlive us. Now I’ll tell thee the graves to give us: Thou must begin to-morrow The work of sorrow! The best place give to my mother, Then close at her side my brother, And me a little away, But not too very far, I pray! And here, on my right breast, my baby lay! Nobody else will lie beside me!— Ah, within thine arms to hide me, That was a sweet and a gracious bliss, But no more, no more can I attain it! I would force myself on thee and constrain it, And it seems thou repellest my kiss: And yet ’tis thou, so good, so kind to see! FAUST To freedom. MAR GARET MARGARET If the grave is there, Death lying in wait, then come! From here to eternal rest: No further step—no, no! Thou goest away! O Henry, if I could go! FAUST Thou canst! Just will it! Open stands the door. 182 Goethe MAR GARET MARGARET I dare not go: there’s no hope any more. Why should I fly? They’ll still my steps waylay! It is so wretched, forced to beg my living, And a bad conscience sharper misery giving! It is so wretched, to be strange, forsaken, And I’d still be followed and taken! ’Tis struggling still! Save it! Save it! FAUST Recall thy wandering will! One step, and thou art free at last! FAUST MAR GARET MARGARET I’ll stay with thee. If the mountain we had only passed! There sits my mother upon a stone,— I feel an icy shiver! There sits my mother upon a stone, And her head is wagging ever. She beckons, she nods not, her heavy head falls o’er; She slept so long that she wakes no more. She slept, while we were caressing: Ah, those were the days of blessing! MAR GARET MARGARET Be quick! Be quick! Save thy perishing child! Away! Follow the ridge Up by the brook, Over the bridge, Into the wood, To the left, where the plank is placed In the pool! Seize it in haste! ’Tis trying to rise, FAUST Here words and prayers are nothing worth; I’ll venture, then, to bear thee forth. 183 Faust MAR GARET MARGARET No—let me go! I’ll suffer no force! Grasp me not so murderously! I’ve done, else, all things for the love of thee. Now over each neck has quivered The blade that is quivering over mine. Dumb lies the world like the grave! FAUST FAUST O had I ne’er been born! The day dawns: Dearest! Dearest! MEP HIST OP HELES (appears outside) MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES MAR GARET MARGARET Day? Yes, the day comes,—the last day breaks for me! My wedding-day it was to be! Tell no one thou has been with Margaret! Woe for my garland! The chances Are over—’tis all in vain! We shall meet once again, But not at the dances! The crowd is thronging, no word is spoken: The square below And the streets overflow: The death-bell tolls, the wand is broken. I am seized, and bound, and delivered— Shoved to the block—they give the sign! Off! or you’re lost ere morn. Useless talking, delaying and praying! My horses are neighing: The morning twilight is near. MAR GARET MARGARET What rises up from the threshold here? He! he! suffer him not! What does he want in this holy spot? He seeks me! 184 Goethe FAUST VOICE (from above) She is saved! Thou shalt live. MAR GARET MARGARET MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) Hither to me! Judgment of God! myself to thee I give. (He disappears with FAUST UST.) MEP HIST OP HELES (to FAUST MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES UST) Come! or I’ll leave her in the lurch, and thee! VOICE (from within, dying away) Henry! Henry! MAR GARET MARGARET Thine am I, Father! rescue me! Ye angels, holy cohorts, guard me, Camp around, and from evil ward me! Henry! I shudder to think of thee. HELES MEP HIST OP MEPHIST HISTOP OPHELES She is judged! 185 To return to the Electronic Classics Series, go to http://www2.hn.psu.edu/faculty/jmanis/jimspdf.htm To return to the Goethe page, go to http://www2.hn.psu.edu/faculty/jmanis/goethe.htm