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Authors: Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

BOOK: Faust
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FAUST.

 
We bow in reverence to Him above.
1010
The Lord instructs and helps the helper.
 
        (
He walks on with
WAGNER.)

WAGNER.

 
What feelings you must feel, great man,
 
at the veneration of this crowd!
 
Happy you who may derive
 
such great advantage from your learning!
 
The fathers show you to their sons,
 
they all ask questions, push and hurry,
 
the music stops, the dancer pauses.
 
They stand in rows as you progress;
 
they wave and fling their caps up in the air
1020
and almost fall upon their knees
 
as if the Host were passing by.

FAUST.

 
A few more steps up to that rock,
 
then let us rest from our wanderings.
 
Here, deep in thought, I often sat alone
 
and racked myself with fast and prayer.
 
Rich in hope, and firm in faith,
 
with tears and sighs and wringing hands
 
I sought to wrest from the Lord in Heaven
 
the means to end the pestilence.
1030
The crowd’s acclaim now sounds like mockery.
 
Oh, could you read my inmost soul,
 
you’d find how little son and father
 
were worthy of the folk’s acclaim.
 
My father, man of darkling honor,
 
brooded about Nature’s sacred spheres
 
in deep sincerity, yet in peculiar fashion,
 
and with a crank’s obsessive zeal,
 
within a circle of adepts
 
ensconced himself in his black kitchen
1040
and sought to fuse two hostile elements, or more,
 
according to his endless recipes.
 
A daring wooer called Red Lion
 
was wedded to the Lily in a tepid bath;
 
both were exposed to open, searing flames
 
and driven hapless to another Bridal Chamber.
11
 
When thereupon in cheerful colors
 
the youthful Queen shone in her flask:
 
that was the medication; the patients died,
 
and no one asked: Did anyone get better?
1050
And so with our hellish potions
 
we raged about these plains and mountains
 
and were more deadly than the plague.
 
I myself administered the poison;
 
I saw thousands wilt, and now must live to see
 
how praise is heaped upon the shameless killers.

WAGNER.

 
How can you yield to such depression!
 
A worthy man can do no more
 
than execute with care and strict conformity
 
the art which was bequeathed to him.
1060
If one reveres his father as a youth,
 
one will accept his teachings eagerly,
 
and if you gain advances for your science,
 
your son may yet attain to higher goals.

FAUST.

 
Oh, happy he who still can hope in our day
 
to breathe the truth while plunged in seas of error!
 
What we don’t know is really what we need,
 
and what we know is of no use to us whatever!
 
But the radiance of this hour
 
must not be marred by gloomy thoughts.
1070
Mark the shimmering huts in green surroundings,
 
basking in the evening sunlight’s glow.
 
It fades and sinks away; the day is spent,
 
the sun moves on to nourish other life.
 
Oh, if I had wings to lift me from this earth,
 
to seek the sun and follow him!
 
Then I should see within the constant evening ray
 
the silent world beneath my feet,
 
the peaks illumined, and in every valley peace,
 
the silver brook flow into golden streams.
1080
No savage peaks nor all the roaring gorges
 
could then impede my godlike course.
 
Even now the ocean and its sun-warmed bays
 
appear to my astonished eyes.
 
When it would seem the sun has faded,
 
a newborn urge awakes in me.
 
I hurry off to drink eternal light;
 
before me lies the day, behind the night,
 
the sky above me, and the seas below.
 
A lovely dream; meanwhile the sun has slipped away.
1090
Alas, the spirit’s wings will not be joined
 
so easily to heavier wings of flesh and blood.
 
Yet every man has inward longings
 
and sweeping, skyward aspirations
 
when up above, forlorn in azure space,
 
the lark sends out a lusty melody;
 
when over jagged mountains, soaring over pines,
 
the outstretched eagle draws his circles,
 
and high above the plains and oceans
 
the cranes press onward, homeward bound.

WAGNER.

1100
I’ve had myself at times peculiar notions,
 
but never have I felt an urge like that.
 
One quickly has one’s fill of woods and meadows,
 
and I shall never envy birds their wings.
 
How differently the spirit’s higher pleasures
 
buoy us up through many books and pages!
 
Those wintry nights hold charm and beauty,
 
a blessed life warms every limb,
 
and ah! when we unroll a precious parchment,
 
the very skies come down to us.

FAUST.

1110
You’re conscious only of a single drive;
 
oh, do not seek to know the other passion!
 
Two souls, alas, dwell in my breast,
 
each seeks to rule without the other.
 
The one with robust love’s desires
 
clings to the world with all its might,
 
the other fiercely rises from the dust
 
to reach sublime ancestral regions.
 
Oh, should there be spirits roaming through the air
 
which rule between the earth and heaven,
1120
let them leave their golden haze and come to me,
 
let them escort me to a new and bright-hued life!
 
Ah yes, if I could have a magic cloak
 
to whisk me off to foreign lands
 
I should not trade it for the richest robes,
 
nor for the mantle of a king.

WAGNER.

 
Do not invoke the well-known troop
 
that floats and streams in murky spheres,
 
a source of myriad dangers for all men,
 
issuing from every corner of the globe.
1130
The sharp-toothed ghosts come from the north
 
and chill you with their arrow-pointed tongues;
 
they move up, dry as bone, from eastern skies
 
and suck in moisture from your lungs.
 
Those churning up from southern desert sands
 
heap fire upon fire on your skull,
 
while western gusts will quench your thirst,
 
then drown you and your fertile fields.
 
They listen gladly and are glad to do you harm
 
and readily obey because they like to cheat;
1140
they pretend to come to you from Heaven
 
and lisp like angels when they lie to you.
 
But let us leave. The world is turning gray,
 
the air grows chill and mists are seeping down!
 
We come to prize our home at night—
 
Why do you stop short and look so startled?
 
What arrests you in this fading light?

FAUST.

 
Do you see the jet-black dog traversing field and stubble?

WAGNER.

 
I saw him long ago; it did not seem important.

FAUST.

 
Observe him well! What do you take him for?

WAGNER.

1150
Why, for a poodle who, according to his kind,
 
sniffs out the footsteps of his absent master.

FAUST.

 
Observe the ample spiral turns
 
enclosing and racing ever closer!
 
Unless I’m wrong I see a trail of fire
 
follow swirling in his wake.

WAGNER.

 
I see a plain black poodle, and that’s all,
 
it must be just an optical illusion.

FAUST.

 
I think he’s softly weaving coils of magic
 
for future bondage round our feet.

WAGNER.

1160
He is confused and leaps about us filled with fear
 
at finding not his master but two strangers.

FAUST.

 
The circle tightens; now he’s near!

WAGNER.

 
You see? He’s no phantom but a dog.
 
He snarls and watches, crouching on his belly.
 
He wags his tail—all canine habits.

FAUST.

 
Come join with us. Come here! Come here!

WAGNER.

 
He is a poodly-foolish creature;
 
you stand still and he will wait for you;
 
you speak to him, he’ll nuzzle you.
1170
What you forget, he will retrieve for you;
 
he’ll jump into the water for your cane.

FAUST.

 
You may be right. I cannot find a trace
 
of any ghostly thing. It’s all his training.

WAGNER.

 
A simple dog well-trained to heed commands
 
may even earn a learned man’s affection.
 
Yes indeed, he quite deserves your favor
 
as a student and a fellow-scholar.
 
        (
They pass through the city gate
.)
FAUST’S STUDY

FAUST
(
entering with the poodle
)
.

 
Behind me, all the fields and meadows
 
lie wrapped in shade and deepest night;
1180
a holy and foreboding shudder
 
wakes the better soul in us.
 
The rush of turbulent desire sleeps,
 
and every hint of stressful action.
 
The love of mankind is astir,
 
the love of God is all about us.

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