Doctor Faustus
By: Christopher Marlowe
Plot
Overview
Doctor Faustus, a
well-respected German scholar, grows dissatisfied with the limits of
traditional forms of knowledge logic, medicine, law, and religion and decides
that he wants to learn to practice magic. His friends Valdes and Cornelius instruct
him in the black arts, and he begins his new career as a magician by summoning
up Mephastophilis, a devil. Despite Mephastophilis’s warnings about the
horrors of hell, Faustus tells the devil to return to his master, Lucifer, with
an offer of Faustus’s soul in exchange for twenty-four years of service from
Mephastophilis. Meanwhile, Wagner, Faustus’s servant, has picked up some
magical ability and uses it to press a clown named Robin into his service.
Mephastophilis returns to Faustus
with word that Lucifer has accepted Faustus’s offer. Faustus experiences some
misgivings and wonders if he should repent and save his soul; in the end,
though, he agrees to the deal, signing it with his blood. As soon as he does
so, the words “Homo fuge,” Latin for “O man, fly,” appear branded on his arm.
Faustus again has second thoughts, but Mephastophilis bestows rich gifts on him
and gives him a book of spells to learn. Later, Mephastophilis answers all of
his questions about the nature of the world, refusing to answer only when
Faustus asks him who made the universe. This refusal prompts yet another bout
of misgivings in Faustus, but Mephastophilis and Lucifer bring in
personifications of the Seven Deadly Sins to prance about in front of Faustus,
and he is impressed enough to quiet his doubts.
Armed with his new powers and
attended by Mephastophilis, Faustus begins to travel. He goes to the pope’s
court in Rome, makes himself invisible, and plays a series of tricks. He
disrupts the pope’s banquet by stealing food and boxing the pope’s ears.
Following this incident, he travels through the courts of Europe, with his fame
spreading as he goes. Eventually, he is invited to the court of the German
emperor, Charles V (the enemy of the pope), who asks Faustus to allow him to see
Alexander the Great, the famed fourth-century b.c. Macedonian king
and conqueror. Faustus conjures up an image of Alexander, and Charles is
suitably impressed. A knight scoffs at Faustus’s powers, and Faustus chastises
him by making antlers sprout from his head. Furious, the knight vows revenge.
Meanwhile, Robin, Wagner’s clown,
has picked up some magic on his own, and with his fellow stablehand, Rafe, he
undergoes a number of comic misadventures. At one point, he manages to summon
Mephastophilis, who threatens to turn Robin and Rafe into animals (or perhaps
even does transform them; the text isn’t clear) to punish them for their
foolishness.
Faustus then goes on with his
travels, playing a trick on a horse-courser along the way. Faustus sells him a
horse that turns into a heap of straw when ridden into a river. Eventually,
Faustus is invited to the court of the Duke of Vanholt, where he performs
various feats. The horse-courser shows up there, along with Robin, a man named
Dick (Rafe in the A text), and various others who have fallen victim to
Faustus’s trickery. But Faustus casts spells on them and sends them on their
way, to the amusement of the duke and duchess.
As the twenty-four years of his
deal with Lucifer come to a close, Faustus begins to dread his impending death.
He has Mephastophilis call up Helen of Troy, the famous beauty from the ancient
world, and uses her presence to impress a group of scholars. An old man urges
Faustus to repent, but Faustus drives him away. Faustus summons Helen again and
exclaims rapturously about her beauty. But time is growing short. Faustus tells
the scholars about his pact, and they are horror-stricken and resolve to pray
for him. On the final night before the expiration of the twenty-four years,
Faustus is overcome by fear and remorse. He begs for mercy, but it is too late.
At midnight, a host of devils appears and carries his soul off to hell. In the
morning, the scholars find Faustus’s limbs and decide to hold a funeral for
him.
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