Doctor
Faustus
In
Tudor Dynasty the `most nearly Satanic tragedy that can be found' is Doctor
Faustus tells the story of a certain doctor named `Faustus', meaning
`auspicious' becomes an avid follower of the Black Magic and his Temptations go
unabated as he desires the famous ‘Hellenic Beauty Helen’ for his company which
was unusual for Helen had long been dead. Faustus strikes a deal with
Mephistophilis “a servant to great Lucipher” that he will give his soul in
exchange for A Kiss from Helen;
Sweet Helen,
make me immortal with a kiss.--''[kisses
her]''
Her lips suck forth my soul: see, where it flies!--
Come, Helen, come, give me my soul again.
Her lips suck forth my soul: see, where it flies!--
Come, Helen, come, give me my soul again.
Mephistophilis
explains that Faustus must “buy my service with his soul” by signing a
contract:
But
Faustus, thou must bequeath it solemnly
And write a deed of gift with thine own blood,
For that security craves great Lucifer.
If thou deny it, I will back to hell.
And write a deed of gift with thine own blood,
For that security craves great Lucifer.
If thou deny it, I will back to hell.
Subsequently,
as Faustus draws blood and prepares to write the contract, Mephistophilis
reminds him once more to “Write it in a manner of a deed of gift”. It would
seem that this is not a “purchase” at all. As per Lucifer’s deal: “he will
spare him four and twenty years, / Letting him live in all voluptuousness,”
during which time he will have Mephistophilis as his personal servant “Having
thee ever to attend on me”. At the end he will give his soul over to Lucifer as
payment and spend the rest of time as one damned to Hell. This deal is to be
sealed in Faustus's own blood. After cutting his arm, the wound is divinely
healed and the Latin words "Homo, fuge!" (Fly, man!) then appear upon
it.
With blank verse and prose, Marlowe sets the story
in Wittenburg, Germany with Faustus selling his soul to the
devil. At the end of his twenty-four years, Faustus is filled with fear and he
becomes remorseful for his past actions, yet this comes too late. Marlowe
creates doubt about the freedom of Faustus's will early when Faustus asks the
Good Angel if it is too late to repent. The Good Angel replies: "ever too
late, if Faustus can repent". The issue is raised again:
What
art thou, Faustus, but a man condemn’d t o die?
Thy fatal time doth draw to final end;
Thy fatal time doth draw to final end;
When
fellow scholars find Faustus the next morning, he is torn limb from limb, with
his soul carried off to hell. Moreover, by magnifying his hero's aspirations
(never presume to be `great emperor of the world' or strive `to gain a Deity')
and sharply curtailing his realization (gains few of his grandiose dreams).
The
roots of Doctor Faustus lie deep in the fertile loam of
medieval legend. Faustus rejects God, and in doing so, effaces the
traditional theological idea that the soul is “on loan” from God, and thus not
his to give away. The stories surrounding magicians were typical Magus
legends, the hubristic magician, sought to purchase from St Peter the power of
the Holy Spirit. St Cyprian, performed many miraculous deeds and was eventually
converted, martyred and canonized. Theophilus introduced into the tradition the
diabolical blood pact. The entire drama thus occurs within the human psyche.
Faustus appreciate Divinity as useless because he feels that
all humans commit sin, and thus to have sins punishable by death complicates
the logic of Divinity. He dismisses it as "What doctrine call you this?
Que sera, sera" (What will be, shall be).
Doctor
Faustus adopts and alters the schema of
the morality play to its tragic format. The morality plays conclude with the
redemption of the often-erring hero, Marlowe's drama ends in a harrowing
denouement. Critics suggest that the religious controversies of the period
between Catholic/Anglican/Lutheran free will and Calvinist predestination
modify the play's moralitypsychomachia.
The
man who earlier exulted, `The emperor shall not live but by my leave', now
serves the emperor. In order to make his contract appear less threatening, he
convinces himself that hell is only a fable and confounds it in Elysium. When
Mephistopheles comes from hell to seize his `glorious soul' Faustus employs
fallacious reasoning to convince himself and ignores Mephistophilis’s
passionate warning
`to
leave these frivolous demands
Which strike a terror in my fainting soul' (I.III.83±84).
Which strike a terror in my fainting soul' (I.III.83±84).
Mephistophilis
also stress the appearance of Lucifer instead of Christ in answer to Faustus's
desperate plea, `Ah, Christ, my Saviour, | Seek to save distressed
Faustus' soul!', which reads, `Help to save distressed Faustus' soul!', as an
emblem of the absence of God or Christ and the presence of evil as the controlling
force of the play.
Doctor
Faustus questions why man is put on the
earth. We see in Faustus a man opposing and questioning the order of the cosmos
and railing against the confines of human knowledge. While the play shares many
of the characteristics of medieval morality plays it cannot be defined solely
in this way. Faustus can be seen as a tragic hero who through his thirst for
knowledge and his desire to go beyond the accepted wisdom of his time is
ultimately destroyed.
Faustus
appreciate Divinity as useless because he feels that
all humans commit sin, and thus to have sins punishable by death complicates
the logic of Divinity. He dismisses it as "What doctrine call you this?
Que sera, sera" (What will be, shall be). Marlowe also allows him to
confuse opposites and blur distinctions (he sees his necromantic books as
‘heavenly’ and, more damnably, he signs away his soul to Mephistophilis with
Christ’s last words on the cross” “Consummatum est,” “It is finished” or
“completed.”
“The
stars move still, time runs, the clock will
strike,
The devil will come, and Faustus must be damn’ed”
The devil will come, and Faustus must be damn’ed”
Here
Faustus both clings to his cleverness by quoting, out of context, an amorous
line from Ovid “Run slowly, slowly, horses of the night”
Doctor
Faustus is a Tamburlaine on
the intellectual level; his ambition for the ultimate knowledge; and if
knowledge for him means power, the same can be said in some degree of the view
implicit in the whole Bocanian tradition” But Faustus is not merely a man who
seeks the practical fruit of knowledge: symbolizing in his own behavior the
story of the Fall of Man through eating of the tree of knowledge. He had had a
less aspiring mind he would have been a better man: less imaginative, less
interesting, and less daring, he would also have been more virtuous. In the end
of the play he cries:
Adders
and Serpants, Let me breath a while
Ugly hell gape not, come not Lucifer,
I’ll burn my books,—ah, Mephistophilis.”
Ugly hell gape not, come not Lucifer,
I’ll burn my books,—ah, Mephistophilis.”
Here
we have the germ of a truly tragic situation—corruptio optima perrima, the
corruption of the best becomes the worst. Marlowe’s real difficulty comes when
he has to illustrate the kind of knowledge Faustus has obtained by his compact
with Mephistophilis and to present the kind of life he is now able to lead.
Marlowe was at loss to illustrate superhuman knowledge and power in concrete
dramatic situation. Milton, face with the problem of putting divine wisdom
into the mouth of God say what Milton had already been maintaining for some
time; Bernard Shaw, presenting inBack to Methusaleh his Ancients
who have achieved a wisdom beyond anything yet available to man, puts into
their mouths the views that Shah had been long arguing.
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