Augustus John mentioned in letters from Swanage in the summer of 1900 to his fellow artist friends Sir William Rothenstein (1872- 1945) and Michel Hewitt Salaman (1879-1971), two years after they had been at the Slade School of Fine Art together, that he had begun a colossal canvas of Dr Faust on the Brocken; representing Walpurgis Night for which this wash drawing must be a study.
Saint Walpurga's Day, celebrating the devout Devonian nun, coincides with May Day, the eve of which was associated with the orgies of witches and, peculiarly, called Walpurgis Night. The Brocken or Blocksberg, the highest point of the Harz Mountains, was regarded as the centre of the witches' sabbath revelries. Goethe used the Walpurgis Night theme in Faust, and in this picture John depicts Mephistopheles and Faust taking part in the orgy. In 1913 it was given by the artist's teacher at the Slade, Henry Tonks (1862 - 1937), to the Contemporary Art Society to be presented to the Tate Gallery, which it was in 1917.