The good angel tells Faustus that if he truly repents nothing will happen to him, and he will gain God’s forgiveness. The Evil angel tells him he is already damned and tells him about what will happen to him if he repents, making it seem like there is no way out. Faustus is a victim of free will, and then his decision affected his fate. He felt the need to be intellectually superior over everyone, and called Lucifer on his own and made his decision from then. His fear of Lucifer and hell stopped him from asking for God’s forgiveness, even though the angel told him if he truly repented nothing would happen to him. In the quotation, he is saying even if he tried to repent, God would deny …show more content…
Free will is often something people at this time are seeking, and that is what Faustus receives. After he makes the decision to change his destiny on his own, an example of free will, his fate changes completely. At the beginning of the story, Faustus and Mephastophillis are conversing and Faustus tells him that he doesn’t believe hell is real, he thinks it is a fable. After this moment when hell was presented to him, his fate completely changed. At the end of the story Faustus makes a speech before his life ends and he then understands the terrible choice he made 24 years ago. He sees what is beyond Earth, and gets his wish. This quotation explains the curse, and talks about how Satan has deprived anyone of joy. “ Let Faustus live in hell a thousand