Faust: Faust's Study (1): Difference between revisions

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==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==
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