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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
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Hubert's Arthur (Paperback)
Frederick Rolfe, Baron Corvo; Edited by Kristin Mahoney
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R876
Discovery Miles 8 760
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Taking as its point of departure the alleged inaccuracy of the
chronicles of Matthew Paris, "Hubert's Arthur" presents an
alternative retelling of English history from the point of view of
Hubert de Burgh. In Hubert's narrative, which begins with an
account of the struggle for succession in the wake of King Richard
Lionheart's death, young Duke Arthur of Brittany does not die at
the hands of King John, but instead ascends to the throne. Hubert
relates Arthur's adventures as he combats the wily John, fights in
the Crusades, and wages battle against the treacherous Simon de
Montfort, before facing perhaps his greatest challenge when his
reign is threatened by the crucifixions of young Christian
boys.
Penned by the brilliant but eccentric Frederick Rolfe (who
styled himself Baron Corvo) whilst he was starving and homeless in
a self-imposed exile in Venice, "Hubert's Arthur," first published
posthumously in 1935, is one of the strangest and most remarkable
novels of the twentieth century. Filled with action and suffused
throughout with Rolfe's characteristic humor, the novel is notable
for its blatant homoeroticism, its savage anti-Semitism, and its
shockingly graphic violence. This edition features a new scholarly
introduction by Kristin Mahoney, who also provides detailed
annotations to help guide readers through Rolfe's labyrinth of
historical and literary references and his unique vocabulary of
archaic words, some of which have not been used since the sixteenth
century.
"Mahoney's introduction to "Hubert's Arthur" is excellent
advocacy for the virtues and importance of the work. With notes in
the text up to this standard, the edition will not only contribute
importantly to scholarship on Rolfe, but also help forge new
understanding of the values of his age." - Prof. Edmund Miller,
Long Island University
Frederick Rolfe, who early in his career also published under the
name "Baron Corvo," became famous for his "Hadrian the Seventh"
(1904), in which an Englishman is unexpectedly elected Pope, and
later became infamous for his writings on his love for Venetian
boys. But it was with the "Toto" stories, first published in John
Lane's fin de siecle literary journal "The Yellow Book," that Corvo
achieved his first and most widespread authorial success. In these
tales, an Italian peasant youth ingenuously recounts to his English
master six poignant and often funny stories dealing with Heaven,
saints, morality, and religion. First published in volume form in
1898 and long out of print, "Stories Toto Told Me" remains one of
the most remarkable achievements of one of the strangest and most
talented of English writers. This edition includes a new
introduction and extensive annotations by Edmund Miller."
The author of this unusual work was one of the most enigmatic,
eccentric of English writers. He lived and died in poverty, and was
as unscrupulous in grasping for money as were the Borgias he wrote
about in their grasping for power. He spent his adult life eluding
bill collectors and landlords, begging money from friends or
strangers, composing fanatically belligerent notes to publishers
demanding funds they had allegedly promised him, and extorting
money from hapless benefactors whose faith in him proved most often
to be unfounded. Nevertheless, he produced several books of
superior quality which are sui generis in their vitality, color,
and individuality. The present work is an example. It is by no
means a work of objective, rigorously documented scholarship; it
teems with Corvo's personal hypotheses, prejudices, and grudges. It
steadfastly examines every accusation that has ever been made
against the Borgias. Yet it conjures up a picture of Renaissance
Italy which may not be historically accurate in every detail, but
which vibrates with the spirit of the age. The book is broad in
scope, relating to the movements of the Borgia Family during the
whole of its career as the ruling house of Italy. In a style that
is by turn lyric, dramatic, humorous, sonorous and epigrammatic,
Corvo traces the lives of Alonso Borgia (who became Pope Calixtus
III), Roderigo Borgia (later Pope Alexander VI), the redoubtable
Cesare Borgia and his heralded sister Lucrezia, and other lesser
known but equally interesting figures of the Borgia clan. The
narrative is spiced with illuminating anecdotes, curious lore, and
little-known sidelights in connection with the people and events of
that incomparable era.Some of the most absorbing passages are those
in which Corvo interrupts the narrative to reflect on such matters
as calumny (all charges against the Borgias come under this
heading), the loneliness of the popes, the classic learning of the
Renaissance, the superiority of the 16th-century methods and mores
to 20th-century ones, and many other subjects he feels constrained
to remark upon. Perhaps the most engrossing chapter of all is the
one which examines the matter of poisoning in the light of the
superstitions that were still alive during the Borgia era.
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