FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290   291  
292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   >>  
behind a curtain. While he raises it and looks back_, FAUST _is seen, stretched upon an old-fashioned bed_) Lie there, ill-starred one! In love's chain, Full hard to loose, he captive lies! Not soon his senses will regain Whom Helena doth paralyze. (_Looking round_) Above, around, on every side I gaze, uninjured all remains: Dimmer, methinks, appear the color'd panes, The spiders' webs are multiplied, Yellow the paper, and the ink is dry; Yet in its place each thing I find; And here the very pen doth lie, Wherewith himself Faust to the Devil signed, Yea, quite dried up, and deeper in the bore, The drop of blood, I lured from him of yore-- O'erjoyed to own such specimen unique Were he who objects rare is fain to seek--; Here on its hook hangs still the old fur cloak, Me it remindeth of that merry joke, When to the boy I precepts gave, for truth, Whereon, perchance, he's feeding now, as youth. The wish comes over me, with thee allied, Enveloped in thy worn and rugged folds, Once more to swell with the professor's pride! How quite infallible himself he holds; This feeling to obtain your savants know; The devil parted with it long ago. [_He shakes the fur cloak which he has taken down; crickets, moths, and chafers fly out._] CHORUS OF INSECTS We welcome thy coming, Our patron of yore! We're dancing and humming, And know thee once more. Us singly, in silence, Hast planted, and lo! By thousands, oh Father, We dance to and fro. The rogue hides discreetly The bosom within; We looseskins fly rather Forth from the fur skin. MEPHISTOPHELES O'erjoyed I am my progeny to know! We're sure to reap in time, if we but sow. I shake the old fur-mantle as before, And here and there out flutters one or more.-- Above, around, hasten, beloved elves, In hundred thousand nooks to hide yourselves! 'Mid boxes there of by-gone time, Here in these age-embrowned scrolls, In broken potsherds, foul with grime, In yonder skulls' now eyeless holes! Amid such rotten, mouldering life, Must foolish whims for aye be rife. [_Slips into the fur mantle_.] Come shroud my shoulders as of yore! Today I'm principal once more; But useless 'tis, to bear the name: Where are the folk to recognize my claim? [_He pulls the bell, which emits a shrill penetrating sound, at which the halls shake and the doors spring open._] FAMULUS (_tottering up the long dark passage_) What a clamor! What a quaking! St
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290   291  
292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   >>  



Top keywords:

erjoyed

 

mantle

 

INSECTS

 
progeny
 
coming
 

crickets

 
chafers
 

CHORUS

 

dancing

 

Father


singly
 

silence

 

planted

 

thousands

 

MEPHISTOPHELES

 
humming
 

discreetly

 

looseskins

 

patron

 
recognize

useless

 
shroud
 

shoulders

 

principal

 

tottering

 

FAMULUS

 

passage

 
clamor
 

quaking

 

spring


penetrating

 

shrill

 

embrowned

 

beloved

 

hasten

 

hundred

 

thousand

 

scrolls

 

broken

 

mouldering


foolish

 

rotten

 

potsherds

 

yonder

 

skulls

 

eyeless

 
flutters
 

rugged

 

Dimmer

 

remains