FAUST (Illustrated & Translated into English in the Original Meters). Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

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FAUST (Illustrated & Translated into English in the Original Meters) - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


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      THE LORD and THE HEAVENLY HOST

       AFTERWARDS MEPHISTOPHELES

      (THE THREE ARCHANGELS COME FORWARD.)

      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.

      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,

       Against the rocks’ deep bases hurled,

       And both, the spheric race partaking,

       Eternal, swift, are onward whirled!

      MICHAEL

      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.

      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.

      MEPHISTOPHELES

      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.

      THE LORD

      Hast thou, then, nothing more to mention?

       Com’st ever, thus, with ill intention?

       Find’st nothing right on earth, eternally?

      MEPHISTOPHELES

      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 LORD

      Know’st Faust?

      MEPHISTOPHELES

      The Doctor Faust?

      THE LORD

      My servant, he!

      MEPHISTOPHELES

      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.

      THE 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?

      MEPHISTOPHELES

      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!

      THE LORD

      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.

      MEPHISTOPHELES

      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 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.

      MEPHISTOPHELES

      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.

      THE 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;

      


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