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The Scaffold and Other Cruel Tales

von Auguste Villiers de L'Isle-Adam

Weitere Autoren: Brian Stableford (Adapter)

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In this collection of "Cruel Tales," we meet a unique and colorful cast of extraordinary characters such as Akedysseril the Queen of India, Mayeris the big game hunter who capured the sacred white elephant, Maryelle the courtesan, Catalina the gypsy toast of Santander, Mahoin the brigand, the murderous Doctor Hallidon, Grand Inquisitor Tomas de Torquemada and Tomolo Ke Ke the Antipodean who traversed the Earth. The Comte de Villiers de l'Isle Adam (1838-1889), pioneer of the Symbolist Movement, is known for his proto-science fiction works Axel (1885) and L'Eve Future (1886). He also wrote many "cruel tales," only a handful of which have ever been translated before this publication of The Scaffold. Poet Paul Verlaine called Villiers' works a "genial melange of irony, metaphysics and terror"and translator Brian Stableford dubs it "a bizarre literary landmark." Brian Stableford has published more than fifty novels and two hundred short stories. This book is the first English-language edition, and includes an authoritative introduction and historical notes.… (mehr)
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French dramatist, novelist and teller of tales, Auguste Villiers de L'Isle-Adam (1838-1889) was one of the most inventive, creative writers of the nineteenth century, Refusing to be pigeonholed, he placed a premium on imaginative, experimental storytelling, expanding his unique literary voice, a voice simultaneously behind and ahead of his time. As Brian Stableford notes in his introduction to this collection of over two dozen tales most peculiar and distinctive, "Villiers was always a writer who sought to avoid conventional themes and narrative frameworks; no matter how far his circumstances were reduced - and there were times when he went hungry for days - the one thing he was always determined to do was to write as no one had ever written before, experimenting with both narrative technique and subject matter." Below are snapshots from six of his extraordinary tales:

The Secret of the Scaffold
The famous Doctor Velpeau pays a visit to the cell of a condemned criminal, who, as it turns out, is also a medical man: Doctor Edmond-Desire Couty de la Pommerais. Since, as Doctor Velpeau explains, they are both men of science, a great benefit to society could be gained if he, Couty, would agree to give him, Velpeau, a special signal of awareness by blinking one eye after the fatal blow of the guillotine. When Couty hesitates, the good doctor asks Couty to think the matter over.

The next morning, prior to the condemned being led out to the scaffold, Doctor Velpeau returns. Thereupon seeing the esteemed physician, Couty exclaims: “I have been practicing – look! And while the order of execution was being read out, he held his right eyelid shut, while fixing the surgeon with the gaze of his wide-open left eye.” Now that’s Villiers-style black humor! -- in the name of science and progress, a doctor asks a man about to lose his life if he wouldn’t mind actively participating in a scientific experiment immediately after the guillotine chops off his head.

The Heroism of Doctor Hallidonhill
Villiers is a forerunner of the turn-of-the century literary Decadents, such as Joris-Karl Huysmans, Jean Lorrain, Octave Mirbeau, in his disdain for the positivist/scientific philosophy that was all the rage back in the late nineteenth century, a philosophy optimistically envisioning technology, science and modernism as the full flower of humanity and the savior of mankind.

In this tale, Doctor Hallidonhill will take any step necessary, no matter how ghastly or grisly, to contribute scientific and medical evidence for the improvement of mankind. Indeed, one of his patients walks into his office ravaged by nature: hacking, coughing, looking like a living skeleton. The good doctor proposes an exotic cure. Months later the patient, robust, radiating health, returns to thank Doctor Hallidonall, but his return proves to be a grave mistake; the patient has underestimated the doctor’s dedication to his practice above all else. This short tale could serve as the basis for a Philip K. Dick-style novel.


The Lovely Ardiane’s Secret
Here we have a tale where Villiers provides his own cynical twist to shatter the traditional notion that happiness flows from honesty and virtue. The young, innocent Ardiane, a Basque girl of humble origins, fall in love with a pale-skinned, bold-eyed virtuous guard by the name of Pier. Events transpire to bring the two lovers together -- they eventually marry and have a child. Ah, love; ah, romance. But wait – what exactly were the circumstances and events that transpired? Ardiane lays it all out to her Pier – she herself caused buildings to burn and neighbors to perish –all as a necessary step so she could meet and marry and have a child with Pier. Pier is initially horrified and turns against her, however, as Villiers writes: “But the Basque woman was so ardently beautiful that by five o’clock in the morning or thereabouts-too-persuasive desires having blinded the young man’s conscience little by little – her terrible campaign came to seem to him to be the endowments of a heroic heart. In brief, Pier Albrun weakened in the face of the delightful Ardiane Inferal- and forgave her.” Ah, love; ah, family!

The Elect of Dreams
Mediocre, uninspired, unartistic minds demand to see all, leaving nothing to the imagination; mediocre, uninspired, unartistic minds demand mechanical, naturalistic explanations, leaving nothing to the imagination. Such is the spirit of this charming Villiers tribute to a young poet, Alexis Dufrene, and the power of imagination to surpass all such mundane explanations.

The tale begins with Alexis in his garret joined by two friends, Breart, a painter and Nedonchel, a musician. These two friends hear a sound from an adjoining apartment and insist on seeing what is going on in there. Alexis blocks there way, exclaiming that beyond the door there is a king and his treasure and if they dare to enter and insist on seeing the resident of the apartment for themselves, they will never be real artists. The friends laugh, ignore his plea and barge right in. Alexis reflects: “Out of disdain for the Imaginary, which is the only reality for any artist, who knows how to command life to conform to it, they prefer to postpone their sensations until they can see what’s there.”

Continuing to value his imagination and dreams as if they were a treasure-chest of rare gems, later in the story, by a twist of great fortune, Alexis is handed a real treasure that enables the poet to travel to an exotic land and become a king. Meanwhile, what is the fate of his two friends? Villiers end the tale with these words: “Breart and Nedonchel are still in Paris. Both of them noble aesthetes, stay up late every evening in the depths of taverns haunted by the young writers of the future, to whom they strive to demonstrate, by means of theoretical conclusions that it is always necessary to see things as they are.” Indeed, Villiers pens this fairytale-like short story as a hymn to artistic imagination, which is most fitting since imagination was the author’s life-long polestar as he set about creating his own body of highly original writing.


That Mahoin!
Now here is a tale most cruel. A famous, infamous criminal is so unbelievably monstrous, so brutal, destructive, heinous, odious and wicked that when he is finally captured, his execution by guillotine draws thousands upon thousands of spectators, the entire town is too small to hold such a throng. But the public insists on seeing the spectacle. Men in the attics cut holes in the roofs and pop their heads out, eyes in the direction of the condemned man. Villiers writes: “Through the thousands of holes thus created thousands of talking but seemingly-decapitated heads appeared, directing their eyes towards the place of execution and fixing their gazes upon the bandit – without him being able for the moment, to comprehend where the bodies could be to which those heads belonged.” What happens next is a stroke (no pun intended) of storytelling genius. Thank you, Villiers de L’lsle-Adam!

Monsieur Redoux’s Phantasms
An odd tale. Upon leaving a dinner party in London where he is visiting, Monsieur Redoux, a corpulent businessman from Paris, finds himself in a wax museum. The museum is about to close, but in a fit of inspiration (or madness) Monsieur Redoux decides to stay among the wax figures since, after all, several of the wax figures are French Kings and Queens. As Villiers writes, “It was as if some kind of dark jester within his skull had suddenly shaken his bells- and he had not the slightest inclination to resist.”

One way of reading this tale is to see the author anticipating what psychologist Carl Jung termed the archetypes – the magician, the trickster, the king, the warrior, the lover – and how any one of these archetypes can overtake a personality as the trickster archetype overtakes the tale’s bourgeois Frenchman.

( )
  Glenn_Russell | Nov 13, 2018 |


French dramatist, novelist and teller of tales, Auguste Villiers de L'Isle-Adam (1838-1889) was one of the most inventive, creative writers of the nineteenth century, Refusing to be pigeonholed, he placed a premium on imaginative, experimental storytelling, expanding his unique literary voice, a voice simultaneously behind and ahead of his time. As Brian Stableford notes in his introduction to this collection of over two dozen tales most peculiar and distinctive, "Villiers was always a writer who sought to avoid conventional themes and narrative frameworks; no matter how far his circumstances were reduced - and there were times when he went hungry for days - the one thing he was always determined to do was to write as no one had ever written before, experimenting with both narrative technique and subject matter." Below are snapshots from six of his extraordinary tales:

The Secret of the Scaffold
The famous Doctor Velpeau pays a visit to the cell of a condemned criminal, who, as it turns out, is also a medical man: Doctor Edmond-Desire Couty de la Pommerais. Since, as Doctor Velpeau explains, they are both men of science, a great benefit to society could be gained if he, Couty, would agree to give him, Velpeau, a special signal of awareness by blinking one eye after the fatal blow of the guillotine. When Couty hesitates, the good doctor asks Couty to think the matter over.

The next morning, prior to the condemned being led out to the scaffold, Doctor Velpeau returns. Thereupon seeing the esteemed physician, Couty exclaims: “I have been practicing – look! And while the order of execution was being read out, he held his right eyelid shut, while fixing the surgeon with the gaze of his wide-open left eye.” Now that’s Villiers-style black humor! -- in the name of science and progress, a doctor asks a man about to lose his life if he wouldn’t mind actively participating in a scientific experiment immediately after the guillotine chops off his head.

The Heroism of Doctor Hallidonhill
Villiers is a forerunner of the turn-of-the century literary Decadents, such as Joris-Karl Huysmans, Jean Lorrain, Octave Mirbeau, in his disdain for the positivist/scientific philosophy that was all the rage back in the late nineteenth century, a philosophy optimistically envisioning technology, science and modernism as the full flower of humanity and the savior of mankind.

In this tale, Doctor Hallidonhill will take any step necessary, no matter how ghastly or grisly, to contribute scientific and medical evidence for the improvement of mankind. Indeed, one of his patients walks into his office ravaged by nature: hacking, coughing, looking like a living skeleton. The good doctor proposes an exotic cure. Months later the patient, robust, radiating health, returns to thank Doctor Hallidonall, but his return proves to be a grave mistake; the patient has underestimated the doctor’s dedication to his practice above all else. This short tale could serve as the basis for a Philip K. Dick-style novel.


The Lovely Ardiane’s Secret
Here we have a tale where Villiers provides his own cynical twist to shatter the traditional notion that happiness flows from honesty and virtue. The young, innocent Ardiane, a Basque girl of humble origins, fall in love with a pale-skinned, bold-eyed virtuous guard by the name of Pier. Events transpire to bring the two lovers together -- they eventually marry and have a child. Ah, love; ah, romance. But wait – what exactly were the circumstances and events that transpired? Ardiane lays it all out to her Pier – she herself caused buildings to burn and neighbors to perish –all as a necessary step so she could meet and marry and have a child with Pier. Pier is initially horrified and turns against her, however, as Villiers writes: “But the Basque woman was so ardently beautiful that by five o’clock in the morning or thereabouts-too-persuasive desires having blinded the young man’s conscience little by little – her terrible campaign came to seem to him to be the endowments of a heroic heart. In brief, Pier Albrun weakened in the face of the delightful Ardiane Inferal- and forgave her.” Ah, love; ah, family!

The Elect of Dreams
Mediocre, uninspired, unartistic minds demand to see all, leaving nothing to the imagination; mediocre, uninspired, unartistic minds demand mechanical, naturalistic explanations, leaving nothing to the imagination. Such is the spirit of this charming Villiers tribute to a young poet, Alexis Dufrene, and the power of imagination to surpass all such mundane explanations.

The tale begins with Alexis in his garret joined by two friends, Breart, a painter and Nedonchel, a musician. These two friends hear a sound from an adjoining apartment and insist on seeing what is going on in there. Alexis blocks there way, exclaiming that beyond the door there is a king and his treasure and if they dare to enter and insist on seeing the resident of the apartment for themselves, they will never be real artists. The friends laugh, ignore his plea and barge right in. Alexis reflects: “Out of disdain for the Imaginary, which is the only reality for any artist, who knows how to command life to conform to it, they prefer to postpone their sensations until they can see what’s there.”

Continuing to value his imagination and dreams as if they were a treasure-chest of rare gems, later in the story, by a twist of great fortune, Alexis is handed a real treasure that enables the poet to travel to an exotic land and become a king. Meanwhile, what is the fate of his two friends? Villiers end the tale with these words: “Breart and Nedonchel are still in Paris. Both of them noble aesthetes, stay up late every evening in the depths of taverns haunted by the young writers of the future, to whom they strive to demonstrate, by means of theoretical conclusions that it is always necessary to see things as they are.” Indeed, Villiers pens this fairytale-like short story as a hymn to artistic imagination, which is most fitting since imagination was the author’s life-long polestar as he set about creating his own body of highly original writing.


That Mahoin!
Now here is a tale most cruel. A famous, infamous criminal is so unbelievably monstrous, so brutal, destructive, heinous, odious and wicked that when he is finally captured, his execution by guillotine draws thousands upon thousands of spectators, the entire town is too small to hold such a throng. But the public insists on seeing the spectacle. Men in the attics cut holes in the roofs and pop their heads out, eyes in the direction of the condemned man. Villiers writes: “Through the thousands of holes thus created thousands of talking but seemingly-decapitated heads appeared, directing their eyes towards the place of execution and fixing their gazes upon the bandit – without him being able for the moment, to comprehend where the bodies could be to which those heads belonged.” What happens next is a stroke (no pun intended) of storytelling genius. Thank you, Villiers de L’lsle-Adam!

Monsieur Redoux’s Phantasms
An odd tale. Upon leaving a dinner party in London where he is visiting, Monsieur Redoux, a corpulent businessman from Paris, finds himself in a wax museum. The museum is about to close, but in a fit of inspiration (or madness) Monsieur Redoux decides to stay among the wax figures since, after all, several of the wax figures are French Kings and Queens. As Villiers writes, “It was as if some kind of dark jester within his skull had suddenly shaken his bells- and he had not the slightest inclination to resist.”

One way of reading this tale is to see the author anticipating what psychologist Carl Jung termed the archetypes – the magician, the trickster, the king, the warrior, the lover – and how any one of these archetypes can overtake a personality as the trickster archetype overtakes the tale’s bourgeois Frenchman.

( )
  GlennRussell | Feb 16, 2017 |
My reactions to reading this collection in 2004.

"Introduction", Brian Stableford -- Stableford puts Villiers’ Contes Cruels (Cruel Tales) in a personal and literary context. Published in 1883, just six years before Villiers’ death, Contes Cruels gave the shape to a type of story whose tone and frequent endings of bitter, revelatory irony influenced future horror writers. Not all of the stories in this collection come from that collection published in Villiers’ lifetime. Some were written afterward. With the collection’s publication, Villiers gave up trying to be a dramatist. Stableford talks about the possible reasons for Villiers’ erratic behavior and night haunting. (Stableford says his lodgings were so horrible, he probably just hated to go home.) Stableford has grouped the collection’s stories into various groups: the scaffold, the perils of progress, exotic adventures, gifts from beyond the grave, the travails of creative artistry, and the paradoxes of passion. (Villiers had an early interest in the occult but only a minority of his stories feature the supernatural.) Stableford sees Villiers as an author both behind and ahead of his time. He also talks about the inadequacies of previous English language translations of Villiers’ works.

"The Secret of the Scaffold" -- Stableford’s notes to this story say Villiers had a fascination with the guillotine and had seen several public executions with it. This story has a doctor convicted to death agreeing to help answer an old riddle -- does the brain’s consciousness survive after the separation of head from body. He agrees to blink his right eye three times if he remains conscious. However, in an example of Stableford’s observation that Villiers’ tales often feature curiosity frustrated, the severed head only blinks its right eye once. Stableford’s notes say that Villiers grafted the names of real people on to what was an urban legend that goes back to a convict’s execution in 1836 (the story is set in 1864). I’ve actually heard the story associated with a scientist executed during the French Revolution, specifically Antoine Lavoisier. However, an Internet search tells me that there is no contemporary evidence that he offered to perform one final experiment at his death. There is mention of something similar being done in 1905 -- after this story was written.

"That Mahoin!" -- Essentially this is a story built around a darkly humorous and incongruous image. When the notorious brigand Mahoin is executed, he goes to his death with his mouth agape because the last thing he sees is a town full of floating heads. The heads are actually protruding out of roofs and belong to the crowd come to see the execution.

"Monsieur Redoux's Phantasms" -- Psychological tale about a respectable bourgeois man -- almost obsessively given to weeding fancies out of his mind -- taking the place of the king in a wax museum display of Louis XVI’s execution. He gets “trapped” (he could actually have escaped at any time) in a guillotine for a few hours. Wisdom and a rapidly aged face are his rewards.

"The Jeu-des-Grâces" -- An observational tale of human nature as three young girls play a ring toss game with the wreaths honoring their dead father. Perhaps, Villiers, with his attack on the “cult of sensibility” in his tale “The Disquietor”, was simply commenting about how morbid, static reverence of the dead must give way, eventually (rightly or wrongly) to the joys of youth.

“The Heroism of Doctor Hallidonhill" -- I liked this story about a patient, in good health, who returns to visit the doctor who, not too long ago, shortly pronounced him terminally ill. The doctor, rather than celebrate his good luck or humbly rue his misdiagnosis or ask the man what he did to effect this reversal, shoots the ex-patient so he can perform an autopsy and find his secret. This story says something about the pitfalls and extremisms and disproportions a scientific mind can fall prey to when untethered to other concerns.

"The Love of the Natural" -- In his introduction to this collection, Stableford says that, in some ways, Villiers was ahead of his time and justifiably cites this story as a prime example. Villiers takes the French story of the pastoral Daphnis and Chloe and uses it as an ironical attack on the pollution and artificial substitutes of modern life. Specifically, Villiers mentions butter, ersatz cigars made from soaking paper in nicotine extract, artificial eggs (Stableford makes no comment on these so I don’t know if they really were around when this story was published in 1888.), chicory “coffee”, arsenic tainted wine, margarine, air polluted by locomotives, and deforestation by government order. Villiers ends by stating that, whereas Daphnis and Chloe were poor rustics, only the rich can now afford the natural life. A very modern complaint.

“Etna in One's Own Home" -- This is a very peculiar and interesting story. One is tempted to call it an early technothriller except it’s more of a speculative essay with dramatic elements than a story. It has no individual characters to speak of apart from simply anarchists. Basically, it’s a warning (the metaphor of the ostrich is used) that anarchists have the technological means, with a clever combination of modern explosives, other chemicals, and a cunning delivery system of glass arrows to wreck a great deal of damage and strike at major governmental centers. (This was at a time when anarchists were causing trouble -- the story is from 1886 -- and were making lots of threats.) It is very reminiscent of stuff from the 1970s about how easily terrorists could assemble atomic bombs. Part of the story is straight essay and part is dramatized dialogue and meetings of anarchists, part of it quotes a fictional anarchist instruction manual. (Despite the change in technology, another modern seeming story from Villiers in an age of global terrorism.) Another oddity is the tone. Villiers clearly doesn’t want the anarchists to succeed, is writing the piece as a wake up call, but, on some level, he sympathizes with the anarchists since he dedicates the story (he often dedicated his stories to a specific individual) to “the evil rich”.

"The Legend of the White Elephant" -- Tale of a man (Mayëris who also shows up in the Villiers’ story “Aux Chrétiens les Lions! (Throw the Christians to the Lions!”)) who leads an expedition to steal a sacred white elephant from the Burmese Empire and sell it to the London Zoological Garden. He smuggles the elephant out of Burma by dying it’s skin. Unfortunately, the dye doesn’t come off, and he doesn’t get paid the promised reward.

"Catalina" -- Strange tale of a man who goes on vacation from studying “German metaphysics” and has an unexpected nocturnal encounter with a giant snake in a hotel room. He gladly retreats from “new recreational excursions into the contigencies of the Phenomenal World.” I suspect there’s a witticism about Hegelian philosophy here that I didn’t catch.

"Tse-i-la's Adventure" -- A clever Oriental story which opens with a quote from the Sphinx: “Guess or I devour you”. It’s an ironical quote in the story’s context. The hero is a poor man who promises the local despot, Governor Tche-Tang, that he can grant him the ability to perceive treasonous thoughts in his subordinates’ minds as soon as they are conceived. He also says he can guarantee him a long, peaceful reign free from subversion. In exchange, he asks for riches, a title, and the governor’s daughter. As expected, the Governor threatens horrible torture for making a fraudulent promise. The hero has expected this. Alone, he reveals the secret. If the Governor kills Tse-i-la, he will be tacitly admitting no such power to foresee treason exists and fertilize such thoughts in the mind of his court. However, he, by granting Tse-i-la’s request, will put fear and uncertainty in his court. Why would he shower such rewards on Tse-i-la unless he delivered the goods? They will be so uncertain and fearful they will try their best to not even think of treason.

"Akedysseril" -- A surprising change of style for Villiers. This long story mixes lush, softly erotic prose with philosophizing about love. The terrible and bloody and attractive Indian Queen Akedysseril has a problem. A commoner who married a prince, she now runs a kingdom after his death. Good politics dictates she kill her brother-in-law Sedjnour and his beloved. However, she balks because she so respects their passion for each other; it reminds her of her love for her dead husband. So, she asks the local cult to figure out a way of killing the two through love, of manipulating them into killing themselves out of fear of losing their ecstatic union. The local head priest does. Akedysseril accuses him of great cruelty since he lets it be known to the two that they can have kingdoms of their own if they agree to marry others. Despondent and jealous, they are then reunited and sort of die of ecstasy (at least the cause of death is clearly stated and a fear of losing the joy of their delayed union after separation is seen as at least a motive of death). The chief priest tells Adedysseril she doesn’t really understand their minds because, however much she says she loved her dead prince, her thoughts and heart were already distracted by thoughts of political glory (she’s trying to unify India). At story’s end, she cries, for the first time in her life, at this revelation about herself.

"A Tale of the End of Summer" -- I didn’t really understand this story about two men, one a lifelong bachelor, one a widower, who seem to call famous women into existence via their imagination. How, exactly, this occurs is unclear as is whether the men consider themselves playing a whimsical game or are self-consciously bringing up ghosts. Not only was the plot unclear but so was the point.

"The Right of the Past" -- The story of how the ring of an imposter who styled himself Louis XVII came in to the possession of the Frenchmen who signs the armistice ending the Franco-Prussian War on January 12, 1871. In effect, we are invited to believe that France forsaking her royalty is ironically punished by having the ring of that royalty sign its humiliating surrender to Germany.

"The Stake" -- Not ever having been a Catholic, I’m not sure the ultimate significance of this story’s ending. Abbé Tussert is a disreputable deacon of the church, his clerical mark is a garb of scandal, his presence generates fear in the demi-mondain. At a gambling game of cards, out of money, he wagers the secret of the Church. He looses and reveals the secret: “... there is no purgatory”. This certainly disquiets the crowd he’s with. His mistress even -- “perhaps penitent” -- refuses his advances that night. Even I found the end a bit disquieting. It seems to imply no slack for sinners, that purgatory is some sort of last chance to clean up, a last chance that doesn’t really stand between you and immediate damnation to hell.

"The Celestial Adventure" -- I don’t know if the Sister Euphrasia mentioned at the beginning of this story is a real person, but the story relates the miraculous events involving a Jew, a flood, and his gift of gold -- given in gratitude to being saved by the ruins of an old Cavalry on a hill -- which wonderfully finds its way into Euphrasia’s hands at a critical time.

"Plagiarists of the Thunder" -- An allegory inspired by the disdain Parisians felt for composer Richard Wagner when he started out there (Villiers was a big and early fan) and plagiarism of some of the stories Villiers first told orally in salons. The allegory involves an island of parrots who go about their parrotting of various sounds, including the thunder, in the mistaken belief that impressions are a mark of talent. They try to imitate the thunder and don’t realize it is part of a greater thing which also contains lightening. Presumably, Villiers is commenting on hacks who skillfully imitate but don’t innovate or see crucial relationships.

"The Modern Legend" -- Another story about Villiers’ idol Richard Wagner. I can’t tell, from Stableford’s notes, how much of this story is fiction. It tells of a down and out Wagner encountering a merchant. Wagner self-confidently predicts that he will one day be proclaimed worldwide as a genius, the inventor of a new sort of music. The merchant thinks him mad, but he gives Wagner some money. Six months later he gets an anonymous sum of money. He doesn’t make the connection and merely ponders if the “madman” was locked up.

"Milton's Daughters" -- For someone who has not read John Milton’s Paradise Lost, this tale’s main interest was Villiers account (I have no idea how accurate) of Milton’s troubled relationship with his daughters (who don’t approve of the old regicide), his dictation to them, his belief that poetry must be spoken and felt, and his frustration that his extemporaneous versions are not promptly written down and are then forgotten. (Stableford implies that Villiers was probably sympathetic, given his tale spinning in salons, to Milton’s complaint.)

"The Elect of Dreams" -- Ironical, rather jokey story, about a writer who makes up a story about the poor, suicidal tenant next door. He claims he is an exiled king dying, alone, in a strange city, with his wealth beside. It turns out that something like this is true. The man leaves the writer his fortune and advises him to dump his two unimaginative colleagues (one a painter, one a musician). The story ends with the two ex-friends, still poor, holding on to the aesthetic judgment that one must always see things as they are. Of course, they didn’t, through a paradoxical failure of imagination, see the truth of the old man.

"The Lovely Ardiane's Secret" -- The up and coming Pier Albrun finds out that his success is because of the murders and arsons of his wife, Ardiane Inféral (pointedly described as a Basque). At first, he is appalled and tosses out the medal the town has awarded him for fighting a series of fires. But his conscience is “blinded” little by little. He comes to rationalize his wife’s crimes. Her victims, he thinks, would have died shortly in other ways and his newborn child needs him. He abandons “excessively rigid austerity”. Thus, Villiers concludes the story, “is not this denouement, for any serious and sincere mind, the most plausible?” This is Villiers in biting moralist mode.

"The Lovers of Toledo" -- Sardonic tale of the vagaries of love. Torquemada conducts an experiment where he unites two chaste lovers after a year’s separation. They are married, enjoy 48 hours of conjugal bliss, and wish it would never end. But, at the marriage banquet, they are stiff with each other and, in fact, live separately the rest of their lives, scared that there bliss is not replicable.

"Sister Natalia" -- Stableford says in his note this is a retelling of an old Spanish tale about a Franciscan nun who sneaks out of her convent, allows herself to be seduced by a man, bitterly repents after he leaves her, and sneaks back into the convent -- where she finds out her absence wasn’t even noticed (she was gone at least six months).

"The Schoolfriends" -- A couple of schoolmates become quasi-whores in French society, and the story seems to suggest they have better things to worry about than who is taking who’s “sweetheart” (or, as Villiers says, “unofficial pimp”).

"Sylvabel" -- Stableford’s notes say this is another old Spanish tale, specifically one of a new husband trying to break the will of his new wife. He fears she will disdain him so commits various acts of capricious violence (killing a favored horse and a favorite dog -- allegedly over interfering with his hunt) with the explanation that he tries to keep his temper in check, but sometimes fails. (Actually, he’s quite a gentle sort.) The woman is impressed -- but not by his cruelty. She knows his scam but is impressed he would sacrifice two favorite animals to do it and that he would persist so long in his sham when she is so derisive of him. Both are sure signs he loves her, and the couple lives happily ever after.

"Sublime Love" -- Rousseau-Latouche is a modern man with a very virtuous and learned wife. At first he likes that, and then it begins to disturb him. Eventually, he decides he wants to knock her off her moral heights and plots to tempt her with a young man who is also virtuous. But the two never do commit adultery, to his disgust. A rather refreshing story that asserts some people really are, sincerely and superiorly moral.

"The Better Love" -- A sardonic -- but truthful -- tale about the power of noble lies -- even if told for ignoble reasons. A man is inspired to all sorts of acts of heroism by the letters from his fiancé back in France. (He’s with the African Rifles.). He gets them for years. However, she has actually taken up another man and got a nasty venereal disease rather than lead the chaste, faithful life waiting for him. Yet, as Villiers says, what would be the point of telling him the truth. The man dies happy “because real happiness can only be found, in this world, within oneself.” His faith in his love, however misplaced, made him happy. ( )
1 abstimmen RandyStafford | Apr 6, 2014 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Auguste Villiers de L'Isle-AdamHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Stableford, BrianAdapterCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
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In this collection of "Cruel Tales," we meet a unique and colorful cast of extraordinary characters such as Akedysseril the Queen of India, Mayeris the big game hunter who capured the sacred white elephant, Maryelle the courtesan, Catalina the gypsy toast of Santander, Mahoin the brigand, the murderous Doctor Hallidon, Grand Inquisitor Tomas de Torquemada and Tomolo Ke Ke the Antipodean who traversed the Earth. The Comte de Villiers de l'Isle Adam (1838-1889), pioneer of the Symbolist Movement, is known for his proto-science fiction works Axel (1885) and L'Eve Future (1886). He also wrote many "cruel tales," only a handful of which have ever been translated before this publication of The Scaffold. Poet Paul Verlaine called Villiers' works a "genial melange of irony, metaphysics and terror"and translator Brian Stableford dubs it "a bizarre literary landmark." Brian Stableford has published more than fifty novels and two hundred short stories. This book is the first English-language edition, and includes an authoritative introduction and historical notes.

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