The pain of Dr. Faustas and Dr. Oruoko refers to some kind of pain in almost every article, whether it is physical or emotional pain. In a story like Aphra Behn's Oroonoko, physical pain is higher than any other grief and pain. But Dr. Faustus of Christopher Marlowe showed about the same pain, but in an emotional sense. This raises an interesting problem: one type of pain is more serious than the other. Pain can be measured. Whether it is physical or emotional, pain is discomfort.
In Christopher Marlowe 's Dr. Faust, Faust is the protagonist of Gothic. Typical features of Gothic hero are as follows. Marlow uses Faust as a person with these characteristics; but Faustus does not have all the features of an ideal Gothic hero. Faust is an ambitious personality. In the first chorus, he compared to Icarus, "When the wing of his wax is certainly beyond his reach", when he believed that he could fly away from Crete Island His wings melted when ambition reached his sun.
Sometimes I feel that I am cooperating with Dr. Faustas to answer scripts Marlow did not write. We have a faust like Ikaros: a stupid young man is too close to the sun to fly too high - its wings melt so he falls and drowns in the sea. But if Faust is Prometheus, not Muslim, that would be better. By helping humans resist Zeus like young gods in ancient gods? There is a humanitarian hero now: Titan who was tortured by Zeus did a good job for mankind! But Faust is not a humanitarian, it is certainly not a worldly humanist. Of course, nobody who claims to be the hero of the Renaissance will not pursue scientific thinking. This man is not a scientist
Marlow succeeded Dr. Faust 's beginning, cursed the contract, Dr. Faust' s end, the problem is in the middle. If the focus is wasted, sky, vanity! Vanity! The contract between Faustas and the devil, and then the middle of the drama will expand infinitely - clearly just something - the time between contract killing and curse. About a year or so, my colleagues bragged some of the troubles he did and I asked him "Well - how much would you like to sell your soul? He thought for a while - these 20 things without philosophy or theology - "I would not sell it. I may have a soul if there is a demon that wants my soul. Who is so angry? "This is common sense. Faustus is wise intelligently but it is very stupid.