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Don Juan the Triumph. This play is fictional, but Don Juan is a known character for over at least from the 1600s' in literature. Andrew Lloyd Webber The Phantom of the Opera's Don Juan The Triumph is told in his point of view and his success in seducing the woman that he wants and desires.

You have come here

In pursuit of your deepest urge

In pursuit of that wish which till now has been silent...

Silent

I have brought you

That our passions may fuse and merge

In your mind you've already succumbed to me, dropped all defenses

Completely succumbed to me Now you are here with me

No second thoughts

You've decided

Decided.

The Point of No Return.

Don Juan is a rogue and a libertine who takes great pleasure in seducing women and (in most versions) enjoys fighting their men. Later, in a graveyard, Don Juan encounters a statue of Don Gonzalo, the dead father of a girl he has seduced, Doña Ana de Ulloa, and impiously invites the father to dine with him; the statue gladly accepts. The father's ghost arrives for dinner at Don Juan's house and in turn invites Don Juan to dine with him in the graveyard. Don Juan accepts and goes to the father's grave, where the statue asks to shake Don Juan's hand. When he extends his arm, the statue grabs hold and drags him away to Hell.

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14y ago

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