He seems to stumble constantly, but his heart drives him onward. Every time, something goes wrong; and yet—from wall to wall, from fall to fall—he still sees the light, again and again. He feels the depth of nature’s embrace and, at the same time, the abyss. He embraces his higher ideals but also the devil. His inner contentment is repeatedly shaken by unexpected drama.
Does Faust only fail? To those who expect triumphant spiritual fulfillment in Faust, his struggle may seem futile and painful. But isn’t human life, at its core, exactly the same? Characterized by the stamp of imperfection? Always unfinished? Isn’t imperfection—even in success—the very essence of what it means to be human? Dissonance and friction, downfall and ascent, harmony and communion form the intensity of human life.
Faust appears as a representative of humanity. He navigates his destiny from imperfection to imperfection. But we find perfection reflected in these imperfections: first, the awakening of the spiritual self at Gretchen’s side; then the unfolding of moral imagination, of the life spirit, at the imperial court; and finally, the realization of moral technique, of spirit man, as a civilizing force inspired by Helena.
Through all his missteps, Faust may appear all too human. Yet in this fully lived humanity, he traces the characters of a perfected spiritual path. Perfection shines through his imperfection.
Translation Laura Liska
Image Faust and Mephisto. Photo: Laura Pfaehler

