Faust

Faust, or Doctor Faustus, a reputed professor of the black art, a native of Germany, who flourished in the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th century, and who is alleged to have made a compact with the devil to give up to him body and soul in the end, provided he endowed him for a term of years with power to miraculously fulfil all his wishes. Under this compact the devil provided him with a familiar spirit, called Mephistopheles, attended by whom he traversed the world, enjoying life and working wonders, till the term of the compact having expired, the devil appeared and carried him off amid display of horrors to the abode of penal fire. This myth, which has been subjected to manifold literary treatment, has received its most significant rendering at the hands of Goethe, such as to supersede and eclipse every other attempt to unfold its meaning. It is presented by him in the form of a drama, in two parts of five acts each, of which the first, published in 1790, represents “the conflicting union of the higher nature of the soul with the lower elements of human life; of Faust, the son of Light and Free-Will, with the influences of Doubt, Denial, and Obstruction, or Mephistopheles (q.v.), who is the symbol and spokesman of these; and the second, published in 1832, represents Faust as now elevated, by the discipline he has had, above the hampered sphere of the first, and conducted into higher regions under worthier circumstances.”

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Faust, Johannes * Fausta
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Fatimides
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Fauchet, Abbé
Faucit, Helen
Fauns
Fauntleroy, Henry
Faunus
Faure, François Felix
Faust, Johannes
Faust
Fausta
Faustina, Annia Galeri
Faustina, Annia, Junior
Faustulus
Favart, Charles Simon
Favonius
Favre, Jules Claude Gabriel
Fawcett, Henry
Fawkes, Guy
Fay, Andreas

Nearby

Faust in Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable