The two correct answers in my opinion are A & C.
So, Dr. Faustus is an embodiment of curiosity gone wild. His blase attitude towards humanistic science is, however, some kind of a scientific decadence: he casts away philosophy and law, to embrace magic, as a relic of medieval obsession over mysticism. In this regard, he is a subversion of the Renaissance Man. He thinks he has already learned all there was to learn about this world, so now he yearns for another kind of knowledge - esoteric, otherworldly, knowledge that isn't exactly a knowledge because you don't have to study long and hard for it, you just have to sell your soul to Lucifer.
Rest and sleep are the two things he says gives him pleasure.
I really love your poem..... i think that its very original and you dont need more than that....but here are a few things you could write...
you tell me im nothing but im something
you tell me i am useless but i and useful
its impossible to bring me down yet it might be possible to bring you down