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Faust: A Tragedy

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About This Book

A disillusioned scholar enters into a pact with a cynical supernatural agent, trading spiritual certainty for intensified experience and worldly knowledge. Their compact propels a sequence of episodes that range from intimate domestic tragedy to exuberant revelry, mythic spectacle, and dense philosophical dialogue. The drama moves between street-level consequences and lofty metaphysical debate, blending lyric passages, choral moments, and satiric observation. Recurring concerns include human striving, the limits of rational knowledge, moral responsibility, temptation, and the prospect of redemption through persistent effort. The multi-act structure culminates in a transcendent, ambiguous resolution that fuses personal fate with broader allegorical meaning.

About the Author

von Goethe, Johann Wolfgang portrait

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) was a German writer, statesman, and naturalist, widely regarded as one of the greatest figures in Western literature. His works span various genres, including poetry, drama, and prose, reflecting his deep engagement with the human experience and nature. Goethe is best known for his dramatic masterpiece "Faust," a profound exploration of ambition, desire, and redemption. His autobiographical work, "Autobiography: Truth and Fiction Relating to My Life," offers insights into his life and creative process. Goethe's contributions to literature and philosophy have left a lasting impact, influencing countless writers and thinkers across generations.

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