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  1. Woland converses with the master, who says he has come “from the house of sorrows” and that he is “mentally ill.” Margarita begs Woland to “cure” the master. The master explains to Woland that his fellow patient at the clinic, Ivan Homeless, told him about their meeting at Patriarch’s Ponds.

  2. Aug 1, 2023 · The plot is intentionally baffling and scattered: Woland’s coming to the Soviet capital triggers a number of narratives that have no apparent connection to one another. Woland’s companions create mayhem in Moscow: Ivan Bezdomny is sent to a lunatic asylum, where he hears an inmate’s (the Master’s) story of his recent experiences.

  3. The The Master and Margarita quotes below are all either spoken by Woland or refer to Woland. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:

  4. “Is that hard for you to do, spirit of evil?” asks Matthew Levi. Woland asks why the master isn’t being taken “into the light”; Levi replies that “he does not deserve the light, he deserves peace. Woland agrees to make it happen and asks Levi to leave.

  5. Bulgakov has not simply created a Russian Faust or anti-Faust; instead, the Master displays that combination of creative gifts and failures of courage which Bulgakov must have observed...

  6. Further underscoring The Master's role as Bulgakov's shadow, The Master's title allegedly stems from a nickname that the United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union William Bullitt coined for Bulgakov.

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  8. God's request in giving the Master peace. Thus Margarita exclaims "Great Woland! His solution is so much better than anything I could have thought of!" (p. 376). Woland's nature will become clearer if we examine the broad conceptions of Satan as they occur in the Judeo-Christian tradition. We may trace three stages of development, corresponding