Faust: Night (1): Difference between revisions
(→Notes) |
(→Notes) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
[[Image:Ptolemaic.gif|Ptolemaic Universe|right|thumb]] | [[Image:Ptolemaic.gif|Ptolemaic Universe|right|thumb]] | ||
"And this strange book of secret lore by Nostradamus' own hand..." (line 189-190). Faust here is talking about reading one of the book of quatrains(a poem with four lines) written by Nostradamus. Nostradamus lived from 1503 to 1566 and was a physician. He is better known for being able to see into the future. | |||
==Commentary== | ==Commentary== |
Revision as of 16:01, 26 February 2006
Summary
Faust languishes in his study in a state of ennui. He has studied it all, received every degree, and still feels he knows nothing. All of this effort has lost him his "mirth" (l. 134). He has now turned to "magic" to do what science and philosophy could not: "penetrate the power / That holds the universe together" (ll. 147-148). This seems to suggest something ineffable, beyond human reason and control — perhaps magical, mysterious, dangerous, and evil?
Notes
"And this strange book of secret lore by Nostradamus' own hand..." (line 189-190). Faust here is talking about reading one of the book of quatrains(a poem with four lines) written by Nostradamus. Nostradamus lived from 1503 to 1566 and was a physician. He is better known for being able to see into the future.
Commentary
Study Questions
External Resources
Works Cited
< Prologue in Heaven | Faust Summary, Commentary, Notes | Outside the City Gate >