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Works of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Page 223

by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Did you not see it? I cast down my eyes.

  FAUST

  Thou dost forgive my boldness, dost not blame

  The liberty I took that day,

  When thou from church didst lately wend thy way?

  MARGARET

  I was confused. So had it never been;

  No one of me could any evil say.

  Alas, thought I, he doubtless in thy mien,

  Something unmaidenly or bold hath seen?

  It seemed as if it struck him suddenly,

  Here’s just a girl with whom one may make free!

  Yet I must own that then I scarcely knew

  What in your favor here began at once to plead;

  Yet I was angry with myself indeed

  That I more angry could not feel with you.

  FAUST

  Sweet love!

  MARGARET

  Just wait awhile! [She gathers a star-flower and plucks off the leaves one after another.]

  FAUST

  A nosegay may that be?

  MARGARET

  No! It is but a game.

  FAUST

  How?

  MARGARET

  Go, you’ll laugh at me!

  [She plucks off the leaves and murmurs to herself.]

  FAUST

  What murmurest thou?

  MARGARET (half aloud)

  He loves me — loves me not.

  FAUST

  Sweet angel, with thy face of heavenly bliss!

  MARGARET (continues)

  He loves me — not — he loves me — not — [plucking off the last leaf with fond joy.

  He loves me!

  FAUST

  Yes!

  And this flower-language, darling, let it be

  A heavenly oracle! He loveth thee!

  Know’st thou the meaning of, He loveth thee?

  [He seizes both her hands.]

  MARGARET

  I tremble so!

  FAUST

  Nay! do not tremble, love!

  Let this hand-pressure, let this glance reveal

  Feelings, all power of speech above;

  To give oneself up wholly and to feel

  A joy that must eternal prove!

  Eternal! — Yes, its end would be despair,

  No end! — It cannot end!

  [MARGARET presses his hand, extricates herself, and runs away. He stands a moment in thought, and then follows her.]

  MARTHA (approaching)

  Night’s closing.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  Yes, we’ll presently away.

  MARTHA

  I would entreat you longer yet to stay;

  But ’tis a wicked place, just here about;

  It is as if the folk had nothing else to do,

  Nothing to think of too,

  But gaping watch their neighbors, who goes in and out;

  And scandal’s busy still, do whatsoe’er one may.

  And our young couple?

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  They have flown up there,

  The wanton butterflies!

  MARTHA

  He seems to take to her.

  And she to him. ’Tis of the world the way!

  A SUMMER-HOUSE

  [MARGARET runs in, hides behind the door, holds the tip of her finger to her lip, and peeps through the crevice.]

  MARGARET

  He comes!

  FAUST

  Ah, little rogue, so thou

  Think’st to provoke me! I have caught thee now!

  [He kisses her.]

  MARGARET (embracing him, and returning the kiss)

  Dearest of men! I love thee from my heart!

  [MEPHISTOPHELES knocks.]

  FAUST (stamping)

  Who’s there?

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  A friend!

  FAUST

  A brute!

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  ’Tis time to part.

  MARTHA (comes)

  Ay, it is late, good sir.

  FAUST

  Mayn’t I attend you, then?

  MARGARET

  Oh no — my mother would — adieu, adieu!

  FAUST

  And must I really then take leave of you?

  Farewell!

  MARTHA

  Good-bye!

  MARGARET

  Ere long to meet again!

  [Exeunt FAUST and MEPHISTOPHELES.]

  MARGARET

  Good heavens! how all things far and near

  Must fill his mind — a man like this!

  Abash’d before him I appear,

  And say to all things only, yes.

  Poor simple child, I cannot see

  What ’tis that he can find in me.

  [Exit.]

  FOREST AND CAVERN

  FAUST (alone)

  Spirit sublime! Thou gav’st me, gav’st me all

  For which I prayed! Not vainly hast thou turn’d

  To me thy countenance in flaming fire:

  Gavest me glorious nature for my realm,

  And also power to feel her and enjoy;

  Not merely with a cold and wondering glance,

  Thou dost permit me in her depths profound,

  As in the bosom of a friend to gaze.

  Before me thou dost lead her living tribes,

  And dost in silent grove, in air and stream

  Teach me to know my kindred. And when roars

  The howling storm-blast through the groaning wood,

  Wrenching the giant pine, which in its fall

  Crashing sweeps down its neighbor trunks and boughs,

  While hollow thunder from the hill resounds:

  Then thou dost lead me to some shelter’d cave,

  Dost there reveal me to myself, and show

  Of my own bosom the mysterious depths.

  And when with soothing beam, the moon’s pale orb

  Full in my view climbs up the pathless sky,

  From crag and dewy grove, the silvery forms

  Of by-gone ages hover, and assuage

  The joy austere of contemplative thought.

  Oh, that naught perfect is assign’d to man,

  I feel, alas! With this exalted joy,

  Which lifts me near, and nearer to the gods,

  Thou gav’st me this companion, unto whom

  I needs must cling, though cold and insolent,

  He still degrades me to myself, and turns

  Thy glorious gifts to nothing, with a breath.

  He in my bosom with malicious zeal

  For that fair image fans a raging fire;

  From craving to enjoyment thus I reel,

  And in enjoyment languish for desire.

  [MEPHISTOPHELES enters.]

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  Of this lone life have you not had your fill?

  How for so long can it have charms for you?

  ’Tis well enough to try it if you will;

  But then away again to something new!

  FAUST

  Would you could better occupy your leisure,

  Than in disturbing thus my hours of joy.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  Well! Well! I’ll leave you to yourself with pleasure,

  A serious tone you hardly dare employ.

  To part from one so crazy, harsh, and cross,

  Were not in truth a grievous loss.

  The live-long day, for you I toil and fret;

  Ne’er from his worship’s face a hint I get,

  What pleases him, or what to let alone.

  FAUST

  Ay truly! that is just the proper tone!

  He wearies me, and would with thanks be paid!

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  Poor Son of Earth, without my aid,

  How would thy weary days have flown?

  Thee of thy foolish whims I’ve cured,

  Thy vain imaginations banished.

  And but for me, be well assured,

  Thou from this sphere must soon have vanished.

  In
rocky hollows and in caverns drear,

  Why like an owl sit moping here?

  Wherefore from dripping stones and moss with ooze embued,

  Dost suck, like any toad, thy food?

  A rare, sweet pastime. Verily!

  The doctor cleaveth still to thee.

  FAUST

  Dost comprehend what bliss without alloy

  From this wild wand’ring in the desert springs? —

  Couldst thou but guess the new life-power it brings,

  Thou wouldst be fiend enough to envy me my joy.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  What super-earthly ecstasy! at night,

  To lie in darkness on the dewy height,

  Embracing heaven and earth in rapture high,

  The soul dilating to a deity;

  With prescient yearnings pierce the core of earth,

  Feel in your laboring breast the six-days’ birth,

  Enjoy, in proud delight what no one knows,

  While your love-rapture o’er creation flows —

  The earthly lost in beatific vision,

  And then the lofty intuition —

  (with a gesture)

  I need not tell you how — to close!

  FAUST

  Fie on you!

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  This displeases you? “For shame!”

  You are forsooth entitled to exclaim;

  We to chaste ears it seems must not pronounce

  What, nathless, the chaste heart cannot renounce.

  Well, to be brief, the joy as fit occasions rise,

  I grudge you not, of specious lies.

  But long this mood thou’lt not retain.

  Already thou’rt again outworn,

  And should this last, thou wilt be torn

  By frenzy or remorse and pain.

  Enough of this! Thy true love dwells apart,

  And all to her seems flat and tame;

  Alone thine image fills her heart,

  She loves thee with an all-devouring flame.

  First came thy passion with o’erpowering rush,

  Like mountain torrent, swollen by the melted snow;

  Full in her heart didst pour the sudden gush,

  Now has thy brooklet ceased to flow.

  Instead of sitting throned midst forests wild,

  It would become so great a lord

  To comfort the enamor’d child,

  And the young monkey for her love reward.

  To her the hours seem miserably long;

  She from the window sees the clouds float by

  As o’er the lofty city-walls they fly.

  “If I a birdie were!” so runs her song,

  Half through the night and all day long.

  Cheerful sometimes, more oft at heart full sore;

  Fairly outwept seem now her tears,

  Anon she tranquil is, or so appears,

  And love-sick evermore.

  FAUST

  Snake! Serpent vile!

  MEPHISTOPHELES (aside)

  Good! If I catch thee with my guile!

  FAUST

  Vile reprobate! go get thee hence;

  Forbear the lovely girl to name!

  Nor in my half-distracted sense

  Kindle anew the smouldering flame!

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  What wouldest thou! She thinks you’ve taken flight;

  It seems, she’s partly in the right.

  FAUST

  I’m near her still — and should I distant rove,

  Her I can ne’er forget, ne’er lose her love;

  And all things touch’d by those sweet lips of hers,

  Even the very Host, my envy stirs.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  ’Tis well! I oft have envied you indeed,

  The twin-pair that among the roses feed.

  FAUST

  Pander, avaunt!

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  Go to! I laugh, the while you rail;

  The power which fashion’d youth and maid

  Well understood the noble trade;

  So neither shall occasion fail.

  But hence! — A mighty grief I trow!

  Unto thy lov’d one’s chamber thou

  And not to death shouldst go.

  FAUST

  What is to me heaven’s joy within her arms?

  What though my life her bosom warms! —

  Do I not ever feel her woe?

  The outcast am I not, unhoused, unblest,

  Inhuman monster, without aim or rest,

  Who, like the greedy surge, from rock to rock,

  Sweeps down the dread abyss with desperate shock?

  While she, within her lowly cot, which graced

  The Alpine slope, beside the waters wild,

  Her homely cares in that small world embraced,

  Secluded lived, a simple artless child.

  Was’t not enough, in thy delirious whirl

  To blast the stedfast rocks!

  Her, and her peace as well,

  Must I, God-hated one, to ruin hurl!

  Dost claim this holocaust, remorseless Hell!

  Fiend, help me to cut short the hours of dread!

  Let what must happen, happen speedily!

  Her direful doom fall crushing on my head,

  And into ruin let her plunge with me!

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  Why how again it seethes and glows!

  Away, thou fool! Her torment ease!

  When such a head no issue sees,

  It pictures straight the final close.

  Long life to him who boldly dares!

  A devil’s pluck thou’rt wont to show;

  As for a devil who despairs —

  Nothing I find so mawkish here below.

  MARGARET’S ROOM

  MARGARET (alone at her spinning wheel)

  My peace is gone,

  My heart is sore,

  I find it never,

  And nevermore!

  Where him I have not,

  Is the grave; and all

  The world to me

  Is turned to gall.

  My wilder’d brain

  Is overwrought;

  My feeble senses

  Are distraught.

  My peace is gone,

  My heart is sore,

  I find it never,

  And nevermore!

  For him from the window

  I gaze, at home;

  For him and him only

  Abroad I roam.

  His lofty step,

  His bearing high,

  The smile of his lip,

  The power of his eye,

  His witching words,

  Their tones of bliss,

  His hand’s fond pressure,

  And ah — his kiss!

  My peace is gone,

  My heart is sore,

  I find it never,

  And nevermore.

  My bosom aches

  To feel him near;

  Ah, could I clasp

  And fold him here!

  Kiss him and kiss him

  Again would I,

  And on his kisses

  I fain would die.

  MARTHA’S GARDEN

  MARGARET and FAUST

  MARGARET

  Promise me, Henry!

  FAUST

  What I can!

  MARGARET

  How thy religion fares, I fain would hear.

  Thou art a good kind-hearted man,

  Only that way not well-disposed, I fear.

  FAUST

  Forbear, my child! Thou feelest thee I love;

  My heart, my blood I’d give, my love to prove,

  And none would of their faith or church bereave.

  MARGARET

  That’s not enough, we must ourselves believe!

  FAUST

  Must we?

  MARGARET

  Ah, could I but thy soul inspire!

  Thou honorest not the sacraments, alas!

  FA
UST

  I honor them.

  MARGARET

  But yet without desire;

  ’Tis long since thou hast been either to shrift or mass.

  Dost thou believe in God?

  FAUST

  My darling, who dares say?

  Yes, I in God believe.

  Question or priest or sage, and they

  Seem, in the answer you receive,

  To mock the questioner.

  MARGARET

  Then thou dost not believe?

  FAUST

  Sweet one! my meaning do not misconceive!

  Him who dare name,

  And who proclaim —

  Him I believe?

  Who that can feel,

  His heart can steel,

  To say: I believe him not?

  The All-embracer,

  All-sustainer,

  Holds and sustains he not

  Thee, me, himself?

  Lifts not the Heaven its dome above?

  Doth not the firm-set earth beneath us lie?

  And, beaming tenderly with looks of love,

  Climb not the everlasting stars on high?

  Do we not gaze into each other’s eyes?

  Nature’s impenetrable agencies,

  Are they not thronging on thy heart and brain,

  Viewless, or visible to mortal ken,

  Around thee weaving their mysterious chain?

  Fill thence thy heart, how large soe’er it be;

  And in the feeling when thou utterly art blest,

  Then call it, what thou wilt —

  Call it Bliss! Heart! Love! God!

  I have no name for it!

  ’Tis feeling all;

  Name is but sound and smoke

  Shrouding the glow of heaven.

  MARGARET

  All this is doubtless good and fair;

  Almost the same the parson says,

  Only in slightly different phrase.

  FAUST

  Beneath Heaven’s sunshine, everywhere,

  This is the utterance of the human heart;

  Each in his language doth the like impart;

  Then why not I in mine?

  MARGARET

  What thus I hear

  Sounds plausible, yet I’m not reconciled;

  There’s something wrong about it; much I fear

  That thou art not a Christian.

  FAUST

  My sweet child!

  MARGARET

  Alas! it long hath sorely troubled me,

  To see thee in such odious company.

  FAUST

  How so?

  MARGARET

  The man who comes with thee, I hate,

  Yea, in my spirit’s inmost depths abhor;

  As his loath’d visage, in my life before,

  Naught to my heart e’er gave a pang so great.

  FAUST

  Him fear not, my sweet love!

  MARGARET

  His presence chills my blood.

  Toward all beside I have a kindly mood;

  Yet, though I yearn to gaze on thee, I feel

  At sight of him strange horror o’er me steal;

  That he’s a villain my conviction’s strong.

 

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