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Essay / Comparison of Faust books and films - 1275
Here Faust continues to pray to God, which has been compared to the Great Cry of Egypt, seeking help to relieve and cure the suffering caused by the plague to his peers, but nothing happened. Faust met a boy who was asking for help due to his mother's dying condition. He was unable to heal the woman who eventually died and became a cause of disappointment for Faust. This scene was not part of Goethe's story. Faust's disappointment comes from a different reason, as read in the story, as he is quite dissatisfied with the limits of human knowledge. Furthermore, he believes that his achievements are useless and bring him no earthly rewards, so he plans to redirect his studies of magic in the hopes of achieving ultimate knowledge. He reads the book of Nostradamus, summons the spirits of the earth and speaks to them, but the spirit tells Faust that he could not see him and denies their kinship. The moral of the story is that the important characteristic of all existence and natural laws is that of tireless, determined and admiring effort, and that man can only find his meaning and his place in life by striving to achieve something and participate, whatever the moment. provokes the universe, in which the film presents that Faust, discouraged, threw his books, including the Bible, into the fire. He suddenly saw a book showing the procedures for making a deal with the devil believing that faith will not save them. He followed the procedures given in the book and suddenly the spirit of darkness surrounded him wherever he went. Faust has made a 24-hour pact with the devil in which Mephistopheles, the devil, will serve Faust. Here, Faust agreed to work on behalf of the devil. The devil transformed him from an old man to a young man, bringing back his youth. On the other hand, Goethe's play shows that a black dog followed Faust and brought him home with