Unabridged Audiobook
This version of Faustus is from the Quarto edition of 1604, which is a substantially shorter version than the longer, 1616 edition. To me (not a scholar on Marlowe, but a lover of his verse), the two versions seem fairly similar for the first 2-3 acts. But this (1604) version has a very different Act IV and V, and I love this edition better, because it has the 'Helen' speech and Faustus's pleas as in the last hour he is about to be dragged to Hell. (The 'Helen' speech is where Faustus has the devil bring him Helen, the greatest beauty in the world, the cause of the Trojan War: 'Helen make me immortal with thy lips'. 'her lips suck forth my soul'; the last hour of his damnation includes 'Lente, Lente, curitae noctis equis -- run slowly, slowly, you horses of the night'). The 1618 version has more slapstick and develops the anti-papal farce at greater length. (Marlowe died in the 1590s; so both editions are long after his death.)
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