Faust: A Summerhouse: Difference between revisions
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==Summary== | ==Summary== | ||
Faust and Margarete share a kiss and are rudely interrupted by Mephistopeles and Marthe. Margarete is scared because she doesn’t know what her mother will think of her. She states this by saying, “My mother would-Farewell”(Macneice 102)! She then runs away from Faust. Mephistopeles taunts Faust by throwing up in his face that he was proverbially, “caught in the act” with his new young love. | Faust and Margarete share a kiss and are rudely interrupted by Mephistopeles and Marthe. Margarete is scared because she doesn’t know what her mother will think of her. She states this by saying, “My mother would-Farewell” (Macneice 102)! She then runs away from Faust. Mephistopeles taunts Faust by throwing up in his face that he was proverbially, “caught in the act” with his new young love. | ||
==Commentary== | ==Commentary== |
Revision as of 06:52, 1 March 2006
Summary
Faust and Margarete share a kiss and are rudely interrupted by Mephistopeles and Marthe. Margarete is scared because she doesn’t know what her mother will think of her. She states this by saying, “My mother would-Farewell” (Macneice 102)! She then runs away from Faust. Mephistopeles taunts Faust by throwing up in his face that he was proverbially, “caught in the act” with his new young love.
Commentary
Gretchen seems to have good morals and a strong christian belief. But despite her morals Dieckmann states, "In contrast to her sentimental lover, she is , in Schiller's sense, "naive" (Dieckmann 53). She is in a sense forced into Faust strange belief system. Her life has been circumscribed but 'natural'- at least if compared to Faust's (Smeed 63).
Notes
Work Cited
Dieckmann, Liselotte. Goethe’s Faust: A Critical Reading. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1972.
Macneice, Louis. Goethe’s Faust. New York: Oxford UP, 1971.
Smeed, J.W. Faust in Literature. New York: Oxford UP, 1971.