32
edits
No edit summary |
|||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
==Commentary== | ==Commentary== | ||
"Everything that creates the yearning to escape from the monotony of daily life is romantic" (Walzel 3). | "Everything that creates the yearning to escape from the monotony of daily life is romantic" (Walzel 3). | ||
Faust's Study 1 is important to the rest of the story because this is where he invokes Mephisto into his home. Mephisto is disguised as a poodle, a black poodle. The meeting of the dog forshadows the end of the play when Faust says "I think I see him winding a magic snare, quietly, around our feet, a noose which he'll pull tight in the future, when the time is right" (543 l.935-938). | |||
==Study Questions== | ==Study Questions== |
edits