The house painting decorator, Diana, left a short time ago. She and
Carol concluded on three colors, a very light beige for the hallway upstairs,
three hall closets, living and dining rooms; light gray for kitchen, family
room and study, and for the two remaining two bedrooms, a very light yellow (same
as the master). The garage interior is to be painted white. - Amorella
2129 hours. We spent time looking for a focused on
shades and blinds store, not many here and about, it seems. We look at one
tomorrow.
You spent part of an hour working on relaying brick below the south
hose connection and you also wrapped another painting. Tomorrow morning a
fellow is coming to have a look-see at the interior for painting. - Amorella
2134 hours. Hopefully,
they will begin soon. After that we get the carpets cleaned. Beyond that it is
continuing to straighten up the outside before cold weather sets in. We have
time, but these chores must be done this next month.
You posted a BBC article about Faust on your FB page. Drop it
in here then I will comment. - Amorella
** **
BBC - Culture
"What the Myth of Faust Can Teach Us"
The legend of a man selling his soul to the devil ‘seems to
have particular resonance at times of moral crisis’, writes Benjamin Ramm.
· By
Benjamin Ramm
26 September 2017
“Politicians
promise you heaven before an election and give you hell after,” wrote the
anarchist Emma Goldman. The experience of the legendary Doctor Faustus, who
sells his soul to the demon Mephistopheles in return for worldly knowledge and
pleasure, has been treated as a metaphor for unholy political pacts. It may
even shed light on our own populist moment, from Brexit to the election of
Donald Trump. Why does this 500-year-old folk legend resonate in times of
crisis, and why does it continue to haunt the Western imagination?
The legend is
loosely based on the life of Johann Georg Faust (c 1480–1540), an alchemist and
practitioner of necromancy, a form of ‘black magic’. A chapbook speculating on
his infamous exploits circulated in the late 16th Century, inspiring
Christopher Marlowe’s play The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor
Faustus, first performed in London around 1592. At approximately the same time,
the legend of Pan Twardowski, a sorcerer who sold his soul to the devil, began
to take root in Polish folklore.
The most influential interpretation of the Faust legend was
written by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832). The project dominated his
intellectual life: the first part of his dramatic poem, Faust, appeared in
1808; the second part was completed in 1831, the year before his death. With
the exception of Frankenstein, published by Mary Shelley in 1818, it is difficult
to think of a more enduring modern legend – both stories reflect unease about
the dawning of a new world, full of possibility and anxiety.
The Faust
legend has penetrated every cultural space, including classical music and opera
(Schubert, Wagner, Berlioz), fiction (Bulgakov, Turgenev, Wilde), poetry
(Pushkin, Byron, Heine), and drama (Havel, Mamet, Gertrude Stein), as well as
ballet, sculpture and painting. The folklore has suffused popular culture, from
The Simpsons to Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody. It has been the subject of dozens of
films, musicals, fairy tales, video games, graphic novels, comics and manga.
The legend
seems to have particular resonance at times of moral crisis. Mephisto (1936), a
novel by Klaus Mann, offers a thinly-veiled portrait of an actor who
ingratiates himself with the Nazi regime in order to advance his career. This
‘devils-bargain’ (teufelspakt)
helps him become Germany’s most celebrated actor, but when he plays
Mephistopheles in a production of Faust, he realises that he is acting the
wrong part – he has become Faust, morally compromised with evil.
Mann’s father
Thomas wrote the most notable post-war treatment of the legend, Doktor Faustus
(1948), which the author described as “the novel of my epoch”. The protagonist
is a composer who renounces love in exchange for heightened creative powers,
which he acquires by infecting himself with syphilis: as Mann wrote in a
précis, “The poison works as intoxication, stimulant, inspiration; transports
of exaltation allow him to create wonderful works of genius”. Based in part on
the life story of Nietzsche, the novel explores how nihilism and primitivism
usurp bourgeois culture. In the dying embers of the Third Reich, the
physiological, mental and spiritual degradation of Mann’s protagonist becomes a
metaphor for Germany’s moral corruption.
Fascists and finance
The
temptations of fascism dominate 20th-Century Faustian parables, most notably
Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s play The Visit (1956), in which townspeople are offered
a bribe to murder one of their fellow citizens. The corrupting influence of
money is also a theme of Stephen Vincent Benét’s short story The Devil and
Daniel Webster (1936), written at the height of the Great Depression, in which
a beleaguered farmer sells his soul for seven years of prosperity. His lawyer
tries to argue that the buyer is a foreign imposter, but the devil proclaims he
was present at America’s birth: “When the first wrong was done to the first
Indian, I was there. When the first slaver put out for the Congo, I stood on
her deck” – an inspiration for the Rolling Stones’ song Sympathy for the Devil.
Perhaps
inevitably, the theme of demonic bribery has been the subject in electoral
propaganda. An intriguing example is an unaired
broadcast by the
Conservative party in the run-up to the 1997 UK general election. The premise
of the five-minute film is unsubtle: Tony Blair is Faust, encouraged to deceive
the electorate by a spin-doctor of the ‘dark arts’, Peter Mandelson. The
broadcast was cancelled at the last moment on the insistence of Prime Minister
John Major, as he feared its negativity would damage his own party and that the
analogy would offend Blair, a devout Christian.
Despite its
theological underpinning, the Faust legend has thrived in secular consumer
societies, particularly in a culture of instant gratification. From credit
cards to fast food, we opt for immediate pleasure even in the knowledge that it
brings long-term pain. Faustus states that the only God he serves is his “own
appetite”, and Goethe’s Mephistopheles offers him the opportunity to “sample
every possible delight… grasp at what you want!” In David Luke’s lyrical translation:
Your palate
also shall be sated,
Your nostrils sweetly stimulated,
Your sense of touch exhilarated.
Your nostrils sweetly stimulated,
Your sense of touch exhilarated.
The Faust
legend gained traction at a time when the ‘closed’ medieval world was being
cleaved open by a new mercantile culture. Karl Marx identified the influx of
gold from the New World as the dawn of capitalism, a system he compares to a
sorcerer who is no “longer able to control the powers of the underworld he has
called up”. This system necessitates exploitation and colonisation, and
Marlowe’s Faustus sounds like the giddy first capitalist:
I’ll have them
fly to India for gold,
Ransack the ocean for orient pearl,
And search all corners of the new-found world
For pleasant fruits and princely delicates.
Ransack the ocean for orient pearl,
And search all corners of the new-found world
For pleasant fruits and princely delicates.
Faustus
embarks on a grand tour, meeting the Pope in Rome, the German Emperor Charles,
and the spirits of Alexander the Great, Darius of Persia, and Helen of Troy (to
whom he waxes lyrical: “Was this the face that launched a thousand ships?”). It
is a dazzling if ultimately unfulfilling excursion: “A great show! Yes, but
only a show”. The doctor finds that “riches, pleasures, pomps . . .” cannot
stave off his spiritual malaise – a sentiment shared in the 1999 poem Mrs.
Faust, written by Carol Ann Duffy: “I grew to love the lifestyle, / not the
life”.
Goethe’s major
innovation is the introduction of Margareta (also referred to as Gretchen),
whose story provides the most poignant episode of the drama. Faust pursues her,
seduces her, and then – unwittingly – destroys her and her family.
Mephistopheles guides his hand but Faust’s actions are unbearably his own (the
demon goads him: “Who was it who ruined her? I, or you?”). The Gretchen story
has become a powerful cultural motif, inspiring elegies such as Byron’s:
Her faults
were mine – her virtues were her own –
I loved her, and destroy’d her!...
If I had never lived, that which I love
Had still been living; had I never loved,
That which I love would still be beautiful.
I loved her, and destroy’d her!...
If I had never lived, that which I love
Had still been living; had I never loved,
That which I love would still be beautiful.
Faust tells
Gretchen: “My sweet, believe me, what’s called intellect / Is often shallowness
and vanity”, and almost every iteration of the legend underscores this
disenchantment: it is Byron’s Manfred who discerns “the fatal truth, / The Tree
of Knowledge is not that of Life”. Intellectual pursuits have isolated Faust,
and failed to provide him with wisdom: “The very thing one needs one does not
know / And what one knows is needless information”. Even when the quest for
knowledge is successful, it conjures up dark forces, as in Frankenstein.
Compromising circumstances
Faust casts
aside his scholarship in order to become a man of action, redrafting the
opening of the Book of Genesis: “In the beginning was the Deed”.
Part Two of Goethe’s drama charts Faust’s attempt to forge the world in his own
image. It is a distinctly Enlightenment project: Faust will create a new
civilisation by taming the wild forces of nature, whose unproductivity fills
him with anxiety (“This drives me near to desperate distress! / Such elemental
power unharnessed, purposeless!”). His project is beyond human scale and
insensitive to human needs, but it is all in the name of progress and “the
masses’ bold, industrious will”.
As the critic Marshall Berman points out, this ambitious
scheme of modern development is intolerant of those who do not acquiesce to the
plan. Faust learns that an elderly couple, Baucis
and Philemon, wish to remain in their remote cottage and refuse to be
bought off. The couple’s quiet contentment is a rebuke to Faust’s will to
power: he is infuriated by their resistance (“Their stubbornness, their
opposition / Ruins my finest acquisition”), and he orders their land to be
seized.
The ecological and human cost of this insatiable appetite for
expansion is evident in the 21st Century. Climate change is perhaps the most
fitting contemporary analogy for the Faustian bargain – decades of rapid
economic growth for an elite, followed by grave global consequences for
eternity. Similarly, the temptation of nuclear energy has been described in
Faustian terms: those “powers of the underworld” unleashed, with the potential
of fuelling – and destroying – the planet.
Technology has
highlighted our daily Faustian choices: who reads the “terms and conditions”?
Smartphones make our attention spans fleeting, and we are like Faust, who
promises to part with his soul if ever he lingers to savour an experience (“If
ever I to the moment shall say: / Beautiful moment, do not pass away!”).
Goethe’s epic ends with Faust envisioning the completion of a project that
would liberate not only his workers, but also himself from “restless activity”.
“Every notable
historical era will have its own Faust,” wrote Kierkegaard. Our challenge today
is that, to some extent, we are all in a Faustian bind. We are plagued by
politicians offering easy answers to complex problems – especially when those
easy answers are empty promises. The legend warns us to be wary of the cult of
the ego, the seductions of fame and the celebration of power. These are hollow
triumphs, and short-lived; indeed, “what good will it be for a man if he gains
the whole world, yet forfeits his soul?”
Selected and
edited from - http://www.bbc dot com/culture/story/20170907-what-the-myth-of-faust-can-teach-us?ocid=ww.social
dot link.facebook
[In copying
couldn't get the margins to agree. Sorry about that.]
** **
Worth repeating: "The legend warns us to be wary of the cult of
the ego, the seductions of fame and the celebration of power. These are hollow
triumphs, and short-lived; indeed, 'What good will it be for a man if he gains
the whole world, yet forfeits his soul?'" - Amorella
2217 hours. These are words I hold as true, not
belief. Strange, that I do because I question most everything; I always appear
to have my doubts. I cannot tell if an Angel is real or a manifestation of the
heartanmind. The repeated words ring true, nonfiction. If I were given the
whole world as a gift, I would reject it for such reasoning. - rho
I, the Amorella, agree. You would reject it from soul and heart and
mind. In that order.
2225 hours. Why would you state this order with soul first, Amorella?
Because, your soul, young man is defiant to the point it would stand up
to G-D directly. - Amorella
2227 hours. Those words are a little overboard I
cannot imagine such.
Your soul, as everyone else's, is beyond imagination in this blog. Post.
- Amorella
2230 hours. You leave me without further thought or
imagination.
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