Faust: Out Walking: Difference between revisions

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In line 2623, Mehisto is refering to the wooden horse that entered Troy and captured it; "Why look a gift horse, in the mouth?."(582).
In line 2623, Mehisto is refering to the wooden horse that entered Troy and captured it; "Why look a gift horse, in the mouth?."(582).
Faust does not limit himself to power in any way: " he increases it through his seduction of Gretchen" (Van Der Laan).


==Commentary==
==Commentary==
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==Works Cited==
==Works Cited==
Barbler, Jules & Carre, Michel.  Fasut. ''Opera News''.  (2005)


Bohm, Arnd.  ''Goethe'' and Patriarchy: ''Faust'' and the Fates of Desire.  ''Seminar--A Journal of Germanic Studies''.  (2005).


Champagne, Roland A.  An Etical Model in a Postmodern ''Faust'': The Daemonic Parody of the Politics of Friendship in Thomas  Mann's Doctor Faustus.  ''Style''.  (2000)
Champagne, Roland A.  An Etical Model in a Postmodern ''Faust'': The Daemonic Parody of the Politics of Friendship in Thomas  Mann's Doctor Faustus.  ''Style''.  (2000)