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Doctor Faustus_ Plot Summary
Students' Academy
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1 year ago
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00:00
Dr. Faustus Introduction
00:03
Dr. Faustus or The Tragic History of the Life and Death of Dr. Faustus by Christopher Marlowe
00:09
was first performed in 1592. This Elizabethan tragedy is based on German stories about the
00:16
title character Faust, that was first performed sometime between 1588 and Marlowe's death
00:22
in 1593.
00:25
Two different versions of the play were published in the Jacobean era, several years later.
00:31
Plot Summary
00:33
The play opens with a prologue. Faustus and his story is introduced by the chorus. Faustus
00:39
is described as being base of stock, but he is able to become a doctor. During this opening,
00:46
the reader also gets a first clue to the source of Faustus's downfall. Faustus's tale is likened
00:52
to that of Icarus, who flew too close to the sun and fell to his death when the sun
00:57
melted his waxen wings. This is a hint to Faustus's end as well as bringing to the reader's
01:03
attention the idea of hubris, excessive pride, which is represented in the Icarus story,
01:10
and ultimately Faustus. Faustus comments that he has reached the end of every subject he
01:15
has studied. He appreciates logic as being a tool for arguing.
01:20
Divine as being unvalued unless it allowed raising the dead and immortality, law as being
01:26
upstanding and above him.
01:28
Divinity is useless because he feels that all humans commit sin, and thus to have sins
01:33
punishable by death complicates the logic of divinity.
01:37
He dismisses it as what doctrine call you this? Que sera, sera, what will be, shall
01:44
be.
01:45
He calls upon his servant Wagner to bring forth Valdez and Cornelius, two famous magicians.
01:52
After Valdez and Cornelius teach Faustus how to summon a devil, two angels, the good angel
01:58
and the bad angel, appear to Faustus and dispense their own perspective of his interest in Satan.
02:05
Though Faustus is momentarily dissuaded, proclaiming, How am I glutted with conceit of this? He
02:11
is apparently won over by the possibilities magic offers to him.
02:16
Valdez declares that if Faustus devotes himself to magic, he must vow not to study anything
02:21
else and points out that great things are indeed possible with someone of Faustus's
02:26
standing.
02:27
Faustus's absence is noted by two scholars who are less accomplished than Faustus himself.
02:33
They request that Wagner reveal Faustus's present location, a request which Wagner haughtily
02:39
denies.
02:41
The two scholars worry about Faustus falling deep into the art of magic and leave to inform
02:46
the king.
02:48
Faustus summons a devil, in the presence of Lucifer and other devils although Faustus
02:53
is unaware of it.
02:55
After creating a magic circle and speaking an incantation through which he revokes his
03:00
baptism, Faustus sees a demon, who is the representative of the devil himself, named
03:05
Mephistopheles appear before him.
03:09
Faustus is unable to tolerate the hideous looks of the demon and commands it to change
03:13
its appearance.
03:15
Faustus, seeing the obedience of the demon, by changing its form, takes pride in his skill.
03:22
He tries to bind the demon to his service but is unable to because Mephistopheles already
03:27
serves Lucifer, the prince of devils.
03:30
Mephistopheles also reveals that it was not Faustus's power that summoned him but rather
03:35
his adjuration of scriptures that results in the devil coming to claim his soul.
03:42
Mephistopheles introduces the history of Lucifer and the other devils while indirectly telling
03:46
Faustus that hell has no circumference and is more of a state of mind than a physical
03:51
location.
03:53
Faustus inquires into the nature of hell lead to Mephistopheles saying, Oh, Faustus, leave
03:59
these frivolous demands, which strikes a terror to my fainting soul.
04:04
Using Mephistopheles as a messenger, Faustus strikes a deal with Lucifer.
04:09
He is to be allotted twenty-four years of life on earth, during which time he will have
04:14
Mephistopheles as his personal servant.
04:17
At the end he will give his soul over to Lucifer as payment and spend the rest of time as one
04:22
damned to hell.
04:23
This deal is to be sealed in Faustus's own blood.
04:27
After cutting his arm, the wound is divinely healed and the Latin words homo, fugue, man,
04:33
fly, then appear upon it.
04:36
Despite the dramatic nature of this divine intervention, Faustus disregards the inscription
04:42
with the assertion that he is already damned by his actions thus far and therefore left
04:46
with no place to which he could flee.
04:50
Mephistopheles brings calls to break the wound open again, and thus Faustus is able to take
04:55
his oath that was written in his own blood.
04:58
Wasting His Skills
05:00
Faustus begins by asking Mephistopheles a series of science-related questions.
05:06
However, the demon seems to be quite evasive and finishes with a Latin phrase, per inno
05:11
equalem motem respectotes, through unequal motion with respect to the whole thing.
05:18
This sentence has not the slightest scientific value, thus giving the impression that Mephistopheles
05:23
is untrustworthy.
05:25
After good and evil angels return to Faustus, the good angel urges him to repent and revoke
05:31
his oath to Lucifer.
05:33
This is the largest fault of Faustus throughout the play, he is blind to his own salvation.
05:39
Though he is told initially by Mephistopheles to leave these frivolous demands, Faustus
05:44
remains set on his soul's damnation.
05:47
Lucifer brings to Faustus the personification of the seven deadly sins.
05:52
Faustus fails to see them as warnings and ignores them.
05:56
From this point until the end of the play, Faustus does nothing worthwhile, having begun
06:02
his pact with the attitude that he would be able to do anything.
06:05
Instead, he merely uses his temporary powers for practical jokes.
06:11
Realizing that he gave up his soul for no good reason, Faustus appears to scholars and
06:16
warns them that he is damned and will not be long on the earth.
06:20
He gives a speech about how he is damned and eventually seems to repent for his deeds.
06:25
Mephistopheles comes to collect his soul, and the reader is told that he exits back
06:30
to hell with him.
06:32
At the end of the play, devils carry Faustus off the stage.
06:36
In the later B text of the play, there is a subsequent scene 8th where the three scholars
06:41
discover his remains strewn about the stage.
06:45
They state that Faustus was damned, one scholar declaring that the devils have torn him asunder.
06:51
20.
06:52
Mephistopheles says to Faustus in the 8th text what are thou, Faustus, but a man condemned
06:58
to die.
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