Faust: Walpurgis Night's Dream; or Oberon and Titania's Golden Wedding
Summary
Mephistopheles takes Faust to see the allegorical intermezzo "Oberon and Titania's Golden Wedding". Oberon and Titania were separated for fifty years. After the years had passed they reunited and had a golden wedding. During the wedding the Orchestra begins to play loudly and a soloist begins to sing. An inquiring traveler thought it was fake, because they thought Oberon had been long dead and buried. While on the other side, a young witch showed up naked oh her goat trying to show off her strapping figure. The men started to crowd around the witch and the conductor had to tell them to back off. The orchestra starts playing soft, "The shrouding mists and thick-massed clouds lighten in the dawn, the wind stirs leaves, it rattles reeds, and all is scattered, gone" (I. 4244-4247).
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External Resources
Historical and Literary Refrences
Works Cited
- Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von. Faust, Part 1. The Norton Anthology of Western Literature. Vol. 2. 8th Ed. Trans. Martin Greenberg. Sarah Lawall, et al, eds. New York: W.W. Norton, 2006. [All primary text citations are taken from this edition unless otherwise noted.]
- Synopsis on Faust