persons and their dress, Actors unpaid their service bringing. What dreams
beguile you on your poet's
height? What puts a full house in a merry mood?
More closely view your patrons of the night! The half are cold, the half are
rude. One, the play over, craves a game of cards; Another a wild night in
wanton joy would spend. Poor fools the muses' fair regards. Why court for
such a paltry end? I tell you, give them more, still more 'tis all I ask, Thus you
will ne'er stray widely from the goal; Your
audience seek to mystify cajole; To
satisfy them - that's a harder task. What ails thee? art en
raptured or
distressed?
Poet
Depart!
elsewhere another servant choose What! shall the bard his godlike
power abuse? Man's loftiest right, kind nature's high bequest, For your mean
purpose basely sport away? Whence comes his
mastery o'er the human
breast, Whence o'er the elements his sway, But from the
harmony that,
gushing from his soul, Draws back into his heart the
wondrous whole? With
careless hand when round her
spindle, Nature Winds the
interminable thread
of life; When 'mid the clash of Being every creature Mingles in harsh
inextricable
strife; Who deals their course unvaried till it falleth, In rhythmic
flow to music's measur'd tone? Each
solitary note whose
genius calleth, To
swell the
mighty choir in
unison? Who in the raging storm sees passion
low'ring? Or flush of
earnest thought in evening's glow? Who every
blossom in
sweet spring - time flowering Along the loved one's path would strow? Who,
Nature's green familiar leaves entwining, Wreathe's glory's
garland, won on
every field? Makes sure Olympus,
heavenly powers combining? Man's
mightyspirit, in the bard reveal'd!
Merryman
Come then, employ your lofty
inspiration, And carry on the poet's avocation,
Just as we carry on a love affair. Two meet by chance, are pleased, they
linger there, Insensibly are link'd, they
scarce know how; Fortune seems now
propitious,
adverse now, Then come
alternaterapture and
despair; And 'tis a
true
romance ere one's aware. Just such a drama let us now
compose. Plunge
boldly into life - its depths disclose! Each lives it, not to many is it known,
'Twill interest wheresoever seiz'd and shown; Bright pictures, but obscure
their meaning: A ray of truth through error gleaming, Thus you the best elixir
brew, To charm mankind, and edify them too. Then youth's fair
blossoms
crowd to view your play, And wait as on an
oracle; while they, The tender
souls, who love the melting mood, Suck from your work their melancholy
food; Now this one, and now that, you deeply stir, Each sees the
working of
his heart laid bare. Their tears, their
laughter, you command with ease, The
lofty still they honour, the illusive love. Your finish'd gentlemen you ne'er can
please; A growing mind alone will
grateful prove.
Poet
Then give me back youth's golden prime, When my own spirit too was
growing, When from my heart th' unbidden rhyme Gush'd forth, a fount for
ever flowing; Then
shadowy mist the world conceal'd, And every bud sweet
promise made, Of wonders yet to be reveal'd, As through the vales, with
blooms inlaid, Culling a thousand flowers I stray'd. Naught had I, yet a rich
profusion! The
thirst for truth, joy in each fond
illusion. Give me unquell'd
those
impulses to prove; Rapture so deep, its
ecstasy was pain, The power of
hate, the
energy of love, Give me, oh give me back my youth again!
Merryman
Youth, my good friend, you certainly require When foes in battle round are
pressing, When a fair maid, her heart on fire, Hangs on your neck with fond
caressing, When from afar, the victor's crown, To reach the hard - won goal
inciteth; When from the whirling dance, to drown Your sense, the night's
carouse inviteth. But the familiar chords among Boldly to sweep, with graceful
cunning, While to its goal, the verse along Its winding path is
sweetly running;
This task is yours, old gentlemen, to - day; Nor are you
therefore less in
reverence held; Age does not make us
childish, as folk say, It finds us
genuinechildren e'en in eld.
Manager
A truce to words, mere empty sound, Let deeds at length appear, my friends!
While idle compliments you round, You might
achieve some useful ends. Why
talk of the
poetic vein? Who hesitates will never know it; If bards ye are, as
ye
maintain, Now let your
inspiration show it. To you is known what we
require, Strong drink to sip is our desire; Come, brew me such without delay!
To -
morrow sees
undone, what happens not to - day; Still forward press,
nor ever tire! The possible, with
steadfast trust, Resolve should be the
forelock grasp; Then she will ne'er let go her clasp, And labours on, because
she must.
On German boards, you're well aware, The taste of each may have full sway;
Therefore in bringing out your play, Nor scenes nor
mechanism spare!
Heaven's lamps employ, the greatest and the least, Be
lavish of the stellar
lights, Water, and fire, and rocky
heights, Spare not at all, nor birds, nor
beast, Thus let creation's ample
sphere Forthwith in this our narrow booth
appear, And with
considerate speed, through fancy's spell, Journey from
heaven,
thence through the world, to hell!
Prologue In Heaven
The Lord, The Heavenly Hosts. Afterwards Mephistopheles.
The three Archangels come forward
Raphael
The Sun, in ancient guise, competing With brother
spheres in rival song, With
thunder - march, his orb completing, Moves his predestin'd course along; His
aspect to the powers supernal Gives strength, though
fathom him none may;
Transcending thought, the works
eternal Are fair as on the primal day.
Gabriel
With speed, thought baffling, unabating, Earth's splendour whirls in circling
flight; Its Eden -
brightness alternating With
solemn, awe - inspiring night;
Ocean's broad waves in wild
commotion, Against the rocks' deep base are
hurled; And with the
spheres, both rock and ocean Eternally are swiftly
whirled.
Michael
And tempests roar in emulation From sea to land, from land to sea, And
raging form, without cessation, A chain of
wondrousagency, Full in the
thunder's path careering, Flaring the swift destructions play; But, Lord, Thy
servants are revering The mild
procession of thy day.
The Three
Thine
aspect to the powers supernal Gives strength, though
fathom thee none
may; And all they works,
sublime,
eternal, Are fair as on the primal day.
Mephistopheles
Since thou, O Lord, approachest us once more, And how it fares with us, to
ask art fain, Since thou hast kindly welcom'd me of yore, Thou see'st me also
now among thy train. Excuse me, fine harangues I cannot make, Though all
the
circle look on me with scorn; My pathos soon thy
laughter would awake,
Hadst thou the laughing mood not long forsworn. Of suns and worlds I
nothing have to say, I see alone mankind's self - torturing pains. The little
world - god still the self - same stamp retains, And is as
wondrous now as on
the primal day. Better he might have fared, poor wight, Hadst thou not given
him a gleam of
heavenly light; Reason, he names it, and doth so Use it, than
brutes more brutish still to grow. With deference to your grace, he seems to
me Like any long - legged
grasshopper to be, Which ever flies, and flying
springs, And in the grass its ancient ditty sings. Would he but always in the
grass repose! In every heap of dung he thrusts his nose.
The Lord
Hast thou
naught else to say/ Is blame In coming here, as ever, thy sole aim?
Does nothing on the earth to thee seem right?
Mephistopheles
No, Lord! I find things there, as ever, in sad
plight. Men, in their evil days,
move my
compassion; Such sorry things to
plague is nothing worth.
The Lord
Know'st thou my servant, Faust?
Mephistopheles
The doctor?
The Lord
Right.
Mephistopheles
He serves thee truly in a
wondrous fashion. Poor fool! His food and drink are
not of earth. An
inwardimpulse hurries him afar, Himself half
conscious of his
frenzied mood; From heaven claimeth he the fairest star, And from the earth
craves every highest good, And all that's near, and all that's far, Fails to allay
the
tumult in his blood.
The Lord
Though in
perplexity he serves me now, I soon will lead him where more light
appears; When buds the
sapling, doth the
gardener know That flowers and
fruit will deck the coming years.
Mephistopheles