Faust (13 page)

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Authors: Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

BOOK: Faust
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MEPHISTOPHELES.

1760
For you there is no boundary nor measure.
 
As you are pleased to grasp at what you can
 
and, flitting by, to see what you can get,
 
I hope your pleasures may agree with you.
 
But start at once and don’t be shy!

FAUST.

 
I told you, I am not concerned with pleasure.
 
I crave corrosive joy and dissipation,
 
enamored hate and quickening despair.
 
My breast no longer thirsts for knowledge
 
and will welcome grief and pain.
1770
Whatever is the lot of humankind
 
I want to taste within my deepest self.
 
I want to seize the highest and the lowest,
 
to load its woe and bliss upon my breast,
 
and thus expand my single self titanically
 
and in the end, go down with all the rest.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
Believe you him who now for some millennia
 
has chewed this tough and wretched fare,
 
that from the cradle to the bier
 
no man digests the ancient dough!
1780
Believe the likes of me: the single whole
 
was fashioned for a god alone,
 
who dwells in everlasting, radiant glow
 
and relegated us to darkness;
 
and you must content yourselves with day and night.

FAUST.

 
I am determined though.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
                                                  Splendid words, for sure!
 
However, one thing worries me:
 
Art is long and time is fleeting.
 
It occurs to me that you might yet be taught.
 
Make your alliance with a poet,
1790
and let that gentleman think lofty thoughts,
 
and let him heap the noblest qualities
 
upon your worthy head:
 
a lion’s nerve,
 
a stag’s rapidity,
 
the fiery blood of Italy,
 
the constancy of northern man.
 
Then let him find the secret mortar
 
to combine nobility of soul with guile
 
and show you how to love with youthful fervor,
1800
according to a balanced plan.
 
I’d like myself to meet with such a person,
 
whom I would greet as Mr. Microcosm.

FAUST.

 
What am I, if I can never hope
 
to hold the crown of my humanity
 
which is the aim of all my senses?

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
You are—all things considered—what you are.
 
Put on a wig with myriad curls,
 
stalk about on foot-high stilts,
 
still what you are, you always must remain.

FAUST.

1810
I feel it, I have hoarded all the treasures,
 
the wealth of human intellect, in vain;
 
when at last I sit and ponder in my chair,
 
no fresh strength wells up within.
 
I am no hairbreadth taller than I was
 
nor any closer to infinity.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
Good sir, you clearly look upon these things
 
the way such things are usually looked upon;
 
we’ll have to find a shrewder method
 
and not wait until the joys of living flee.
1820
Who gives a damn! One’s hands and feet and toes,
 
one’s head and bottom are one’s own,
 
but if I seize and feel an alien thrill,
 
does it belong the less to me?
 
If I can buy six stallions for my stable,
 
is not then their strength my own?
 
I race along, I am a splendid specimen
 
as if two dozen legs were mine.
 
Go to it then! Leave off your ruminations,
 
and go with me into the teeming world!
1830
To waste your time in idle speculation
 
is acting like a beast that’s driven in a circle
 
by evil spirits on an arid moor
 
while all about lie fair and verdant fields.

FAUST.

 
How shall we begin?

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
                                                  We simply go away.
 
What kind of torture chamber is this place?
 
What kind of life is this you lead—
 
a bore for you, a nuisance for your pupils.
 
Go, leave that to the boob next door.
 
Why should you plague yourself with threshing straw?
1840
The best of what you hope to know
 
is something that you cannot tell the youngsters.
 
There—I hear one coming up the corridor.

FAUST.

 
I cannot bring myself to see him now.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
The boy has waited long and patiently;
 
he must not leave unsatisfied.
 
Quickly, let me take your cap and gown.
 
It should suit my person handsomely.
 
        (
He changes his clothes
.)
 
Now trust my wit to handle matters
 
in no more than fifteen minutes’ time.
1850
Meanwhile, prepare for our trip together.
 
(
Exit
FAUST
.)

MEPHISTOPHELES
(
in
FAUST
’s gown
)
.

 
If once you scorn all science and all reason,
 
the highest strength that dwells in man,
 
and through trickery and magic arts
 
abet the spirit of dishonesty,
 
then I’ve got you unconditionally—
 
then destiny endowed him with a spirit
 
that hastens forward, unrestrained,
 
whose fierce and overhasty drive
 
leapfrogs headlong over earthly pleasures.
1860
I’ll drag him through the savage life,
 
through the wasteland of mediocrity.
 
Let him wriggle, stiffen, wade through slime,
 
let food and drink be dangled by his lips
 
to bait his hot, insatiate appetite.
 
He will vainly cry for satisfaction,
 
and had he not by then become the devil’s,
 
he still would perish miserably.
 
        (
A
STUDENT
enters
.)

STUDENT.

 
I am only newly here.
 
I am full of humble expectation
1870
to greet and stand before the man
 
whose name all speak with veneration.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
You please me by your courtesy!
 
You see a man like many another.
 
Have you not cast about elsewhere?

STUDENT.

 
I beg you, sir, to take me on!
 
I have come here so full of fervor,
 
with pulsing blood and a supply of money.
 
My mother found it hard to let me go,
 
but I am out to gain some useful knowledge.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

1880
Well, yes, this is the very place for you to be.

STUDENT.

 
To tell the truth, I want to run away already:
 
within these walls and corridors
 
I feel no cheer or happiness at all.
 
The air is close and heavy;
 
there is no glimpse of shrubbery or trees,
 
and in the lecture hall and on the benches
 
I’m frightened out of all my senses.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
You are not yet acclimated.
 
Just as a child does not at first
1890
accept its mother’s breast quite willingly,
 
but soon imbibes its nourishment with zest,
 
you will feel a growing lust
 
when clinging to high wisdom’s bosom.

STUDENT.

 
I will clasp her neck with great delight.
 
But tell me, please, how I may reach that goal?

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
You must declare before proceeding
 
what special faculty you choose.

STUDENT.

 
I want to be a really learned man,
 
would like to comprehend
1900
what is on earth and up in heaven,
 
the things of nature and of science.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
I’m glad to say you’re on the proper trail,
 
but be careful not to be distracted.

STUDENT.

 
I’m with it with my heart and soul;
 
but I should also like, if possible,
 
some time for play and entertainment
 
on lovely summer holidays.

MEPHISTOPHELES.

 
Make use of time, it flits away so fast;
 
though you can save it by economy;
1910
wherefore, my worthy friend, I counsel you
 
to register in Logic first of all,
 
so your spirit will be neatly drilled
 
and tightly laced in Spanish boots;
19
 
and thus, along its winding path,
 
the thought will creep henceforth more circumspect,
 
instead of skipping to and fro,
 
and back and forth like a will-o’-the-wisp;
 
and you will labor many days
 
on what you once performed summarily—
1920
just as you ate and drank without constraint
 
you’ll do it now by “one!” and “two!” and “three!”
 
by sheer necessity. The living factory of thought
 
is like a master weaver’s masterpiece,
 
where one treadle plies a thousand strands,
 
the shuttles shoot this way and that,
 
the quivering threads flow unobserved,
 
one stroke effects a thousand ties.
 
But now philosophy comes in
 
and proves it never could be otherwise.
1930
If One is thus and Two is so,
 
then Three and Four must needs be so,
 
and if the first and second had not been,
 
the third and fourth could not occur.
 
All this is praised by students everywhere;
 
though none has yet become a weaver.
 
Who wants to see and circumscribe a living thing
 
must first expel the living spirit,
 
for then he has the separate parts in hand.
 
Too bad! the spirit’s bond is missing.
1940
The chemists call it
Encheiresis Naturae
20
 
and know not how they mock themselves.

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