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A00579 The historye of the damnable life and deserued death of Doctor Iohn Faustus Newly imprinted, and in conuenient places, imperfect matter amended: according to the true coppy printed at Franckfort, and translated into English by P.F. Gent. P. F., Gent. 1618 (1618) STC 10713; ESTC S115007 74,183 80

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neuer satisfied in thy minde but alwayes bringest me anew Yet I pray thée this once qd Faustus doe me so much fauour as to tell me the truth in this matter and hereafter I will be no more so earnest with thée the spirit was altogether against it but yet once more he would abide him well said the spirt to Faustus what demandest thou of me Faustus said I would gladly know of thée if thou wert a man in manner and for●e as I am what wouldst thou doe to please both God and man whereat the spirit smiled saying My Faustus if I were a man as thou art and that God had adorned me with those guifts of nature as thou once hadst euen so long as the breath of God were by and within mée would I humble my selfe vnto his Maiestie endeauouring in all that I could to kéepe his commandements praise him and glorifie him that I might continue in his fauour so were I sure to enioy the eternall ioy and felicitie of his kingdome Faustus said but that I haue not done No thou saist true qd Mephostophiles thou hast not done it but thou hast denyed the Lord thy maker which gaue thée the breath of life spéech hearing sight and all other thy reasonable sences that thou mightest vnderstand his will and pleasure to liue to the glory and honour of his name and to the aduancement of thy body and soule him I say being thy maker hast thou denyed and defied yea wickedly thou hast applyed that excellent guift of thy vnderstanding and giuen thy soule to the deuill therfore giue none the blame but thine owne self will thy proud and aspiring minde which hath brought thée into the wrath of God and vtter damnation This is most true qd Faustus but tell me Mephostophiles wouldst thou be in my case as I am now yea saith the spirit and with that fetcht a great sigh for yet would I so humble my selfe that I would win the fauour of God Then said D. Faustus it were time inough for me if I amended True said Mephostophiles if it were not for thy great sinnes which are so odious and detestable in the sight of God that it is too late for thée for the wrath of God resteth vpon thée Leaue off qd Faustus and tell me my question to my greater comfort Here followeth the second part of Doctor Faustus his life and practises vntill his end Chap. 17. DOctor Faustus hauing receiued deniall of his spirit to be resolued any more in such like questions propounded forgot all good workes and fell to be a Kalender-maker by the helpe of his spirit and also u● short time to be a good Astronomeror Astrologian he had learned so perfectly of his Spirit the course of the Sunne Moone and Starres that he had the most famous name of all the Mathem atiques that liued in his time as may well appeare by his workes dedicated vnto sundry Dukes and Lords for be did nothing without the aduice of his spirit which learned him to presage of matters to come which haue come to passe since his death The like praise won he with his Kalenders and Almanacks making for when he presaged of any thing operation and alteration of the weather or Elements as winde rame fogs snow haile moyst dry warme colde thunder lightning it fell so duely out as if an Angell of heauen had forewarned it He did not like the vnskilfull Astronomers of our time that set in Winter cold moyst airy frosty and in the Dog-dayes hot dry thunder fire and such like but he set in all his workes day and haure when where and how it should dappen If any wonderfull thing were at hand as mortalitie famine plague or warres he would set the time and place in true and iust order when it should come to passe A question put forth by Doctor Faustus to his Spirit concerning Astronomy Chap. 18. NOw Faustus falling to practice and making his Prognestications he was doutfull in many points wherefore he called vnto him mephostophiles his Spirit saying I finde the ground of this science very difficult to attaine vnto for when that I conferre Astronomia and Astrologia as the Mathematicians and ancient writers haue left in memorye I finde them to barry and very much to disagree wherefore I pray thée to teach me the truth in this matter to whome his spirit answered Faustus thou shalt knowe that the practicioners or speculators or at least the first inuenters of these Artes haue done nothing of themselues certaine whereupon thou maist attaine to the true prognosticating or presaging of things concerning the heauens or of the influence of the planets for if by chaunce some one Mathematician or Astronomer hath left behinde him any thing worthy of memory they haue so blinded it with Enigmaticall wordes blinde Characters and such obscure s●gures that it is impossible for an earthly man to attaine to the knowledge thereof without the ayde of some spirit or els the speciall guift of God for such are the hidden works of God from men yet doe we spirits that die and fléete in all Elements know such and there is nothing to be done or by the heauens pretended but we know it except onely the day of Doome Wherefore Faustus learne of me I will teach thée the course recourse of ♄ ♃ ♀ ☉ ☿ and ☾ the cause of winter and summer the exaltation and declination of the Sunne and Ecclipse of the Moone the distance and height of the Poles and euery fixed starre the nature and operation of the Elements fire ayre water and earth and all that is contained in them yea herein there is nothing hidden from me but onely the filthy essence which once thou hadst Faustus at liberty but now Faustus thou hast lost it past recouery wherefore leauing that which wil not be again had learn now of me to make thunder lightning haile snow and raine the cloudes to rent the earth and craggy rocks to shake and split in sunder the Seas to swell rore and ouer-run their markes knowest not thou that the déeper the Sunne shines the hotter he pierces so the more thy Art is famous whilest thou art héere the greater shall be thy name when thou art gone Knowest not thou that the earth is frozen cold and dry the water running cold and moist the ayre flying hot and moist the fire consuming hot and dry Yea Faustus so must thy heart be inflamed like the fire to mount on high learne Faustus to flie like my sel●● as swift as thought from one kingdome to another to sit at Princes tables to eate their dain tiest fare to haue thy pleasure of their Ladyes wiues and concubines to vse all their iewels and costly robes as thinges belonging vnto thée and not vnto them learne of me Faustus to runne through walles doores and gates of stone and yron to créepe into the earth like a Worme to swim in the water like a fish to fly in the ayre like a Bird
his own mouth which we haue likewise from the same séede which was only planted by God in Adam which wind breth or spirit when he had receiued he was liuing and mouing on earth for it was ordayned of God for his habitation but she heauens are the habitation of the Lord and like as I shewed before of the hubble or confused Chaos made of water and sope through the wind breath of man is turned round and caryed with euery winde euen so the Firmament wherein the Sunne and the rest of the planets are fixed moued turned and caried with the winde breath and spirit of God for the heauens and firmaments are mooueable as the Chaos but the Sunne is fixed in the firmament And further my good School-fellow I was thus nigh the heauens where me thought euery planet was but as half the earth and vnder the firmament ruled the spirits in the aire as I came down I looked vpon the world and the heauens and me thought that the earth was inclosed in comparison within the firmament as the yolke of an Egge within the white me thought that the whole length of the earth was not a span long and the water was as if it had bin twice as broad and as long as the earth euen thus at the eight daies end came I home againe and fell asléepe and so I continued sléeping thrée dayes thrée nightes together and the first houre I awaked I fell fresh againe to my Kalender and haue made them in right ample maner as you know and to satisfie your request for that you writ vnto me I haue in consideration of our olde friendship had at the vniuersitie of Wittenberge declared vnto you my heauenly voyage wishing no worse vnto you then vnto my selfe that is that your minde were as mine in all respectes Dixi. Doctor Faustus the Astrologian How Doctor Faustus made his iourney through the principall and most famous lands in the world DOctor Fau. hauing ouer-run fiftéene yeares of his appointed time he tooke vpon him a iourney with full pretence to sée the whole world and calling his Spirit Mephostophiles vnto him he said Thou knowest that thou art bound to me vpon conditions to performe and fulfill my desire in all thinges wherefore my pretence is to visite the whole face of the earth visible and inuisible when it pleaseth me therefore I enioyne and commaund thée to the same Wherevpon Mephostophiles answered I am ready my Lord at thy command and forthwith the spirit changed himselfe into the likenesse of a flying horse saying Faustus sit vp I am ready Doctor Faustus loftily fate vpon him and forwards they went Faustus came through many a Land and Prouince as Pauonia Austria Germania Bohemia Slesia Saxony Missene During Franckland Shawblandt Byerlandt Styria Carinthia Poland Litaw Liesland Prussia Denmarke Muscouia Tartaria Turkie Persia Cathai Alexandria Barbaria Ginney Peru the straightes Magenelanes India all about the frozen Zone and Terra Incognita Nona Hispaniola the Iles of Terzera Mederi Saint Michaels the Canaries and the Tenorifocie into Spaine the maine land Portugall Italie Campania the Kingdome of Naples the Iles of Sicilia Malta maioris minoria to the Knightes of the Rhodes Candie or Creet Ciprus Corinthe Switzerland France Freesland Westphalia Zeland Holland Brabant and all the 17 prouinces in Netherland England Scotland Ireland all America Island the out Iles of Scotland the Orchades Norway the Bishopricke of Breame and so home again all these kingdoms prouinces countries he passed in 25 daies in which time he saw very little that delighted his mind wherefore he took little rest at home burning in desire to sée more at large to behold the secretes of each Kingdome he set forwards againe on his iourney vpon his swift horse Mephostophiles came to Trent for that he chiefly desired to sée this towne and the monuments thereof but there he saw not many wouders except one faire pallace that belonged vnto the Bishop and also a mighty large castle that was built of brick with 3 walls 3 great trenches so strong that it was impossible for any princes power to win it then he saw a Church wherin was buried Simeon the Bishop Popo their tombes are of most sumptuous Marble stone closed and ioyned together with great bars of yron frō whence he departed to Paris where he liked well the Academie and what place or kingdom soeuer fel to his mind the same he visited He came from Paris to Mentz where the riuer of Maine fals into the Rhine notwithstanding he taried not long there but went into Campania in the kingdome of Neapolis in which he saw an innumerable sort of Cloisters Nunries and Churches great high houses of stone the stréets faire large and straight foorth from one end of the towne to the other as a line and all the pauement of the Citty was of bricke and the more it rayned in the towne the fairer the stréetes were there saw he the tombe of Virgill and the high way that he cut through the mighty hill of stone in one night the whole length of an English mile when he saw the number of Gallies Argozis that lay there at the citty head the wind-mill that stood in the water the castle in the water and the houses aboue the water where vnder gallies might ride most safely from raine or wind then he saw the Castle on the hill euer the towne and many monuments therein also that hill called Vesuuius wheron groweth all the Gréekish wine most pleasant swéet Oliues From thence he came to Venice whereas he wondered not a little to sée a Citty so famously built standing in the Sea where through euery stréete the water came into such largenesse that great ships and barkes might passe from one stréete to another hauing yet a way on both sides the water whereon men and horse might passe He maruailed also how it was possible so much virtuall to be found in the towne and so good cheape considering that for a whole league nothing grew néere the same He wondred not a little at the fairenesse of S. Matkes place and the sumptuous Church standing thereon called S. Marke how all the pauement was set with coloured stones and all the Roode or loft of the Church double gilded ouer Leauing this he came to Padua beholding their manner of their Academie which is called the mother or nurse of Christendome there he heard the Doctors and sawe the most monuments in the Towne entred his name in the Vniuersitie of the Germane Nation and wrote himselfe Doctor Faustus the vnsatiable speculator then saw he the worthiese monument in the world for a Church named S. Anthonies cloister which for the pinacles thereof and the contriuement of the Church hath not the like in Christendome This towne is fenced about with thrée mighty walles of stone and earth betwixt the which runneth goodly ditches of water twice euery 24. houres passeth boates
the soule but he was in all his opinions doubtfull without faith or hope and so he continued Another disputation betwixt Doctor Faustus and his Spirit of the power of the Deuill and his enuy to man-kinde Chap. 14. AFter Doctor Faustus had a while pondred and sorrowed with himselfe of his wretched estate he called againe Mephostophiles vnto him commanding him to tell him the iudgement rule power attempts tyrannie and temptation of the deuill and why he was moued to such kinde of liuing whereupon the spirit answered to his question that thou demaundst of me will turne thée to no small discontentment therefore thou shouldest not haue desired me of such matters for it toucheth the secrets of our Kingdome although I cannot deny to resolue thy request Therefore know thou Faustus that so soone as my Lord Lucifer fell from heauen he became a mortall enemy both to God and man and hath vsed as now he doth all māner of tyranny to the destruction of man as is manifest by diuers examples one falling suddainly dead another hangs himselfe another drownes himselfe others stab themselues others vnlawfully dispaire and so come to vtter confusion The first man Adam that was made perfect to the similitude of God was by my L. pollicy the whole decay of man yea Faustus in him was the beginning and first tyranny of my Lord Lucifer to man the like did he with Caine the same with the children of Israell when they worshiped strange Gods and fell to whordome with strange women the like with Saul so did he by the seauen husbands of her that after was the wife of Tobias likewise Dagon our fellow brought to destruction 50000. men wherupon the Arke of God was stolne and Belial made Dauid to number his men whereupon were slains 60000. also he deceiued King Salomon that worshiped the Gods of the heathen and there are such spirits innumerable that can come by men and tempt them driue them to sinne and weaken their beliefe for we rule the hearts of Kings and Princes stirring them vp to warre and blood shed and to this intent doe we spread our selues throughout all the world as the vtter enemies of God and his sonne Christ yea and all that worship them and that thou knowest by thy selfe Faustus how we haue dealt by thée To this said Faustus then thou didst also beguile me I did what I could to help thée forward for so soone as I sawe how thy hart did dispise thy degrée taken in diuinity didst study to search know the secrets of our kingdome then did I enter into thée giuing thée diuers foule filthy cogitations pr●●king thée forward in thine intent perswading thée thou couldst neuer attaine to thy desire till thou hadst the helpe of some deuill and when thou wast delighted in this then tooke I roote in thée so firmly that thou gauest thy selfe to vs both body soule which thou canst not deny Hereat answerd Faustus Thou saist true I cannot deny it Ah woe is me most miserable Faustus how haue I bene deceiued had I not had a desire to know too much I had not bene in this case for hauing studyed the liues of the holy Saints Prophets and therby thought to vnderstand sufficient heauenly matters I thought my selfe not worthy to be called Doctor Faustus if I should not also know the secrets of hell and be associated with the furious Fiendes thereof now therfore must I be rewarded accordingly Which spéeches being vttred Faustus went very sorowfully away from his Spirit How Doctor Faustus desired againe of his Spirit to knowe the secrets paynes of hell whether those damned deuils their company might euer come into the fauour loue of God againe Chap. 15. DOctor Faustus was euer pondering with him-selfe how he might get loose from so damnable an end as he had giuen himselfe vnto both of soule and body but his repentance was like to that of Cain and Iudas he thought his sins greater then God could forgiue hereupō resting his mind he lookt vp to heauē but saw nothing therein for his hart was so possessed of the deuill that he could thinke of nought els but of hell and the paynes thereof Wherefore in all the haste he calleth vnto him his Spirit Mephostophiles desiring him to tell him some more of the secrets of hell what paynes the damned were in and how they were tormented whether the damned soules might get againe the fauour of God and so be released out of their torments or not whereupon the Spirit answered My Faustus thou maist well leaue to question any more of such matters for they will but disquiet thy minde I pray thée what meanest thou thinkest thou through these thy fantasies to escape vs No for if thou shouldst clime vp to heauen there to hide thy self yet would I thrust thée downe againe for thou art mine and thou belongst vnto our societie therefore swéete Faustus thou wilt repent this thy foolish demand except thou be content that I shall tell thée nothing Quoth Faustus ragingly I will know or I will not liue wherefore dispatch and tell me to whom Mephostophiles answered Faustus it is no trouble vnto me at all to tell thée and therefore sith thou forcest me thereto I will tell thée thinges to the terrour of thy soule if thou wilt abide the hearing Thou wilt haue me to tell thée of the secrets of Hell and of the paines thereof know Faustus that hell hath many figures semblances and names but it cannot be named nor figured in such sort vnto the liuing that are damned as it is to those that are dead and doe both sée and féele the torments thereof for hell is said to be deadly out of the which came neuer any to life againe but one but he is nothing for thée to reckon vpon hell is blood thirsty and is neuer satisfied hell is a vally into the which the damned soules fall for so soone as the soule is out of mans body it would gladly goe to the place from whence it came and climeth vp aboue the highest hills euen to the heauens where being by the Angells of the first Mobile denyed entertainment in consideration of their euill life spent on the earth they fall into the déepest pit or valley which hath no bottome into a perpetuall fire which shall neuer bée quenched for like as the Flint throwne into the water looseth not his vertue neither is his fire extinguished euen so the hellish fire is vnquenchable and euen as the flint stone in the fire burned red hot and consumeth not so likewise the damned soules in our hellish fire are euer burning but their paines neuer diminishing Therefore is hell called the euerlasting paine in which is neither hope nor mercy So it is called vtter darkenesse in which we sée neither the light of the Sunne Moone nor Starre and were our darkenesse like the darknesse of the night yet were there hope of mercy but ours is
perpetuall darkenesse cleane exempt from the face God Hell hath also a place within it called Chasma out of the which issueth all manner of thunders lightnings with such shrikings and waylings that oftentimes the very Deuils themselues stand in feare thereof for one while it sendeth forth winds with excéeding snow haile and raine congraling the water into Ice with the which the damned are frozen gnash their teeth howle and cry and yet cannot dye Other whiles it sendeth foorth most horrible hot mistes or fogges with flashing flames of fire and Brimstone wherein the sorrowfull soules of the damned lye broiling in their reiterated torments yea Faustus hell is called a prison wherein the damned lie continually bound it is called Pernicies and Exitium death destruction hurtfulnesse mischiefe a mischance a pittifull and an euill thing world without ●nd We haue also with vs in hell a ladder reaching of excéeding height as though the toppe of the same would touch the heauens on which the damned ascend to seeke the blessing of God but through their infidelity when they are at the very highest degrée they fall downe againe into their former miseries complaining of the heate of that vnquenchable fire yea sweete Faustus so must thou vnderstand of hell the while thou art so desirous to know the secrets of our Kingdome And marke Faustus hell is the nurse of death the heate of all fire the sh●dow of heauen and earth the obliuion of all goodnesse the paines vnspeakable the griefes vnremouable the dwelling of deuils Dragons Serpents Adders Toades Crocodiles and all manner of venomo us and noysome creatures the puddle of sinne the stinking fogge ascending from the st●gian Lake brimstome pitch and all manner of vncleane mettals the perpetuall and vnquenchable fire the end of whose miseries was neuer purposed by God yea yea Faustus thou saiest I shall I must nay I will tell thée the secrets of our kingdome for thou buyest it dearely and thou must and shalt be pertaker of our torments that as the Lord God said neuer shall cease for Hell the womans belly and the earth are neuer satisfied there shalt thou abide horrible torments trembling gnashing of téeth houling crying burning fréezing melting swiming in a laborinth of miseries scalding smoaking in thine eyes stinking in thy nose horsenes of thy spéech deafenes of thine eares trembling of thine handes biting thine owne tongue with paine thy heart crushed as in a presse thy bones broken the diuels tossing firebrands vpon thée yea thy whole carcasse tossed vpon muck for is from one deuill to another yea Faustus then wilt thou wish for death and he will fly from thee thine vnspeakable torments shall be euery day augmented more and more for the greater the sinne the greater is the punishment how likest thou this my Faustus a resolution answerable to thy request Lastly thou wilt haue me tell thée that which belongeth onely to God which is if it be possible for the damned to come againe in to the fauour of God or not why Faustus thou knowest that this is against thy promise for what shouldst thou desire to know that hauing alreadie giuen thy soule to the deuill to haue the pleasure of this world and to know the secrets of hell therefore art thou damned and how canst thou then came againe to the fauour of God Wherefore I directly answere no for whomsoeuer GOD hath forsaken and throwne into hell must there abide his wrath and indignation in that vnquenchable fire where is no hope nor mercy to be looked for but abiding in perpetuall paines world without end for euen as much it auaileth thée Faustus to hope for the fauour of God againe as Luciser himselfe who indéed although he and we all haue a hope yet it is to small auaile and taketh none effect for out of that place God will neither heare crying nor sighing if he doe thou shalt haue as little remorse as Diues Caine or Iudas had what hel●eth the Emperour King Prince Duke Earle Baron Lord Knight Squire or Gentleman to cry for mercy being there Nothing for if on earth they would not be tyrants and selfe willed rich with couetousnes proude with pompe gluttons drunkards whoeremongers back biters robbers murtherers blasphemers and such like then were there some hope to be looked for therefore my Faustus as thou commest to hell with these quallities thou maist say with Caine My sins are greater then can be forgiuen goe hang thy selfe with Iudas and lastly be content to suffer torments with Diues Therefore know Faustus that the damned haue neither end nor time appointed in the which they may hope to be released for if there were any such hope that they by throwing one drop of water out of the Sea in a day vntill it were dry or if there were an heape of Sand as high as from the earth to the heauens that a bird carrying away but one corne in a day at the end of this so long labour that yet they might hope at the last God would haue mercy on them they would be comforted but now there is no hope that God once thinkes vpon them or that their howlings shall euer be heard yea so vnpossible it is for thée to hide thy selfe from God as vnpossible for thée to remoue the Mountaines or to empty the Sea or to tell the drops of raine that haue fallen from heauen vntill this day or to tell what there is most in the world yea and for a Camel to goe thorough the eye of a néedle euen so vnpossible it is for thée Faustus and the rest of the damned to come againe into the fauour of God and thus Faustus hast thou heard my last sentence and I pray thée how dost thou like it But know this that I counsell thée to let me be vnmolested hereafter with such disputations or else I will vexe thée euery limbe to thy small contentment Doctor Faustus departed from his spirit very pensiue and sorrowfull laying him on his bed altogether doubtfull of the grace and fauour of God wherefore he fell into fantasticall cogitations faine he would haue had his soule at libertie againe but the deuill had so blinded him and taken such déepe roote in his heart that he could neuer thinke to craue Gods mercy or if by chance he had any good motion straight wayes the deuill would thrust in a faire Lady into his chamber which fell to kissing and dalliance with him through which meanes he threw his godly motion in the winde going forward still in his wicked practises to the vtter ruine both of his body and soule Another question put foorth by Doctor Faustus to his Spirit Mephostophiles of his owne estate Chap. 16. DOctor Faustus being yet desirous to heare more strange things called his spirit vnto him saying By Mephos●ophi●es I haue yet another sute vnto thée which I pray thée deny me not to resolue me of Faustus qd the spirit I am loath to reason with thee any further for thou art
Dithican he was a short théefe in forme of a Feasant with shining feathers and toure féete his necke was grée●e his body re● and his féete blacke The last was called Brachus with foure short féete like a Hedge hog yellow and gréene the vpper side of his body was browne and the belly like blew flames of fire the taile red like the taile of a Monkey The rest of the deuils were in forme of vnsensible beasts as Swine Harts Beares Woolfes Apes Buffes Goates Antlops Elephants Dragons Horses Asses Lyons Cats Snakes Loades and all manner of vgly odious Serpents and wormes yet came in such sort that euery one at his entry into the Hall made their reuerence vnto Lucifer and so tooke their places standing in order as they came vntill they had filled the whole Hall wherewith sodainly fell a most horrible thunder-clap that the house shooke as though it would haue fallen to the ground vpon which euery monster had a muck forke in his hand holding them towards Faustus as though they would haue run at tilt at him which when Faustus perceiued he thought vpon the wordes of Mephostophiles when he told him how the soules in hell were tormented being cast from deuill to deuill vpon mucke-forkes he thought verily to haue béene tormented there of them in like sort But Lucifer perceiuing his thought spake to him My Faustus how likest thou this crew of mine quoth Faustus why came not you in another manner of shape Lucifer replyed we cannot change our hellish forme we haue shewed our selues héere as we are there yet can we blinde mens eyes in such sort that when we will we repaire vnto them as if we were men or Angels of light although our dwelling be in darkenes Then said Faustus I like not so many of you together whereupon Lucifer commanded them to depart except 7. of the principali forthwith they presently vanished which Faustus perceiuing he was somewhat better comforted and spake to Lucifer where is my seruant Mephostophiles let me see if he can doe the like whereupon came a fierce Dragon flying and spitting fire round about the house and comming towards Lucifer made reuerence and then changed himselfe to the forme of a Frier saying Faustus what wilt thou Faustus said I will that thou teach me to transforme my selfe in like sort as thou and the rest haue done then Lucifer put foo●●h his paw and gaue Faustus a booke saying hold doe what thou wilt which hée looking vpon straight wayes changed himselfe into a hogge then into a Worme then into a Dragon and finding this for his purpose it liked him well Quoth he to Lucifer and how commeth it that so many filthy formes are in the world Lucifer answered they are ordained of God as plagues vnto men and so shalt thou be plagued quoth he wher 's vpon came Scorpions Waspes Emits Bées and Enats which fell to stinging and b●t●ng him and all the whole house was f●●led with a most horrible stinking fogge insomuch that Faustus saw nothing but still was tormented wherefore he cryed for helpe saying Mephostophiles my faithfull seruant where art thou helpe helpe I pray thée hereat the spirit answering nothing but Lucifer himselfe said ho ho ho Faustus how likest thou the creation of the world and incontinent it wes cleare againe and the diuels and all the filthy cattell were vanished onely Faustus was left alone séeing nothing but hearing the swéetest musicke that euer he heard before at which he was so rauished with delight that he forgot his feares hée was in before and it repented him that he had séene no more of their pastime How Doctor Faustus desired to see hell and of the manner how he was vsed therein Chap. 20. DOctor Faustus bethinking how his time went away and how hee had spent eight yeares thereof he ment to spend the rest to his better contentment intending quite to forget any such motions as might offend the deuill any more wherefore on a time he called his Spirit Mephostophiles and said vnto him bring thou hither vnto mee thy Lord Lucifer or Behall he brought him notwithstanding one that was called Belzebub the which asked Faustus his pleasure Quoth Faustus I would know of thoe if I may see hell and take a view thereof That thou shalt said the diuell and at midnight I will fetch thée W●ll night being come Doctor Faustus awaited very diligently for the comming of the diuell to fetch him and thinking that he tarryed all too long hee went to the window where he pulled open a cazement and looking into the Element he saw a cloude in the North more blacke darker and obscure then all the rest of the skie from whence the winde blew most horrible right into Faustus his chamber and filled the whole house with smoke that Faustus was almost smothered hereat fell an excéeding thunder clap and withall came a great rugged blacke Beare all cu●led and vpon his backe a chaire of beaten gold and spake to Faustus saying sit vp and away with me and Doctor Faustus that had so long abode the smoake wisht rather to be in hell then there got on the diuell and so they went together But marke how the diuell blinded him and made him beléeue they carryed him into hell for he carryed him into the ayre where Faustus fell into a sound sléepe as if he had sate in a warme water or bath at last they came to a place which burneth continually with flashing flames of fire and brimstone where aut issued an excéeding mighty clap of thunder with so horrible a noise that Faustus awaked but the deuill went foorth on his way and carried Faustus thereinto yet notwithstanding howsoeuer it burnt D. Faustus self no more heate then as it were the glimps of the Sunne in May there heard he all manner of musicke to welcome him but saw none playing on them it pleased him well but he durst not aske for he was forbidden it before To méete the deuill and the guest that came with him came 3. other vgly deuils the which ranne backe againe before the Beare to make the way against whome there came running an excéeding great Hart which would haue thrust Faustus out of his chaire but being defended by the other thrée deuils the Hart was put to the repulse thence going on their way Faustus looked and beholde there was nothing but Snakes and all manner of venemous beasts about him which were excéeding great vnto the which Snakes came many Storkes and swallowed vp all the whole multitude of Snakes that they left not one which when Faustus saw he maruailed greatly but procéeding further on their hellish dayage there came foorth of an bollow cliffe an excéeding great flying Bull the which with such a force hit Faustus his chaire with his head and hornes that he turned Faustus and his Beare ouer and ouer so that the Beare vanished away whereat Faustus began to cry oh woe is me that euer I came héere for he thought