In Faust, two plays by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe depict human tragedy by Margaret's role. The main character, Faust, loves Margaret's life and destroys it with the help of Mephistopheres. Mephistopheles is one of seven archangels thrown from heaven. Margaret is also known as Gretchen in the play. She is a simple, discreet girl living with her mother and is from the lower class. Margaret has a simple religious belief and is proved to know good and evil.
In the first part, Mephistopheles eventually led to Faust through experience, and this experience eventually established a friendly relationship with Gretchen, an innocent young woman. Gretchen and her family were destroyed by Mephistopheles 'fraud and Faust' s desire. Although Gretchen is saved, Faust is shameful, so the first part of the story ends in Faust's tragedy. The second part begins with the spirit of the earth, forgives Faust (and the rest of mankind) and enters the fable. Faust and his devil manipulated through the political world and the classical gods world and met Troy Helen (a beautiful body). Finally, Faust truly trained the power and nature of war and experienced a moment of strange happiness.
During the negotiations, Faust used Mephistopheles in various ways. In many versions of the story, especially in Goethe's plays, Mephistopheres helped Faust seduce a beautiful innocent girl named Gretchen. Knowing this sinister behavior, she was murdered by drowning a child. But Gretchen 's innocence eventually rescued her and went to heaven after the execution. In Goethe's interpretation Faust saved Faust by combining constant effort and Gretchen's eternal feminine form with God's appeal. But in the early story, Faust was an irrevocable corruption, believing that his sins could not be tolerated; when the words were over, the devil took him to hell.
Faust: a character defined by his interactive character. In the first part of 'Faust' by John Wolfgang von Goethe, Faust is a famous person of self-induced tragedy. Characters such as Mephistopholes, Wagner, Gretchen, etc. suggest the emotions, impulses, needs, and desires that many people may face in their lifetime. Goethe's story about Faust shows an interesting path that people can go to in common. This story appeals to everyone who reads it. It shows that loneliness and unreal emotions are eternal and come in many forms. Desire is shaped by Gretchen, Mephisto's temptation and Wagner's past. Each character is comically depicting fragments of Faust puzzle. All these stories look like very complex fairy tales