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Charles Robert Maturin's well-known novel, Melmoth the Wanderer
(1820), occupies a high-point in Gothic literature. Lurid, vivid,
sacrilegious, paranoid, anti-Catholic, painfully tortuous and
gleefully drawn out in its depictions of suffering, its title
character tries to find victims miserable enough to take over his
bargain with "the enemy of mankind." Maturin displayed his talents
of "darkening the gloomy" by interweaving tales of Melmoth's
intended victims: the Englishman Stanton, ensnared into an insane
asylum; the Spaniard Moncada, trapped in monasteries and prisons of
the Inquisition; Immalee, an innocent child of nature; Elinor, a
Puritan maiden crossed in love, blighted by cruel deception. All
are confronted with Melmoth's icy seductions. Maturin's uncanny
aptitude for alternating vertiginous intensity with brooding
melancholy and despair leads the reader to a dark side of the
psyche where the heavy price paid for redemption often tests human
fortitude and conviction beyond the limits of endurance.
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Women (Hardcover)
Charles Robert Maturin
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R1,532
Discovery Miles 15 320
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Women; or, Pour et Contre, was Maturin's fourth novel, published in
1818. A work of deep emotional intensity, Maturin wished to
concentrate on "common life." But he does so with uncommon
psychological penetration for its time, while detailing the painful
romantic attractions of two fascinating women-Eva, a deeply
religious and innocent girl, and the intellectually superior,
talented, and popular Zaira-to the same man, De Courcy. While also
satirizing evangelical Christianity (with more good humor than he
treats Catholicism in his most famous work, Melmoth the Wanderer)
and the intellectual pretensions of high culture and society, it
is, to quote Alaric Watts, its "profound and philosophic
melancholy," "its terrible researches into the deepest abysses of
the human heart," and its fine characterization of the two women,
that makes Women; or, Pour et Contre a novel second only to
Melmoth, and in many ways superior to it, while demonstrating the
wide literary range of this remarkable Irish novelist.
The Wild Irish Boy (1808) was Charles Robert Maturin's second
novel. Set in Ireland and England, the story follows the adventures
of Ormsby Bethel, a young Irishman of uncertain ancestry, as he
navigates through the temptations of high life, the intrigues of
swindlers, gamblers, and fast women, and his own uncertainties
about his place in the societies of both countries. Combining
features of the silver fork novel, coming-of-age story, and to some
degree (in scenes of Irish life) the national novel, The Wild Irish
Boy is an entertaining tale full of unexpected twists and turns,
extravagant scenes of fashionable excess, misguided and dangerous
passions, and long-held secrets with dire consequences: riches and
ruin, both moral and financial. Among the colorful characters is
the too-fascinating Lady Montrevor, cultured, ingenious, and
enigmatic, who adds a dimension of excitement and intrigue that
contributes to making The Wild Irish Boy a novel rich with
conflicting social and moral viewpoints.
Charles Robert Maturin's last novel, The Albigenses (1824), a
historical romance of the early 13th century, is a rich tale of the
conflict between the Catholic church and the Albigenses, a
heretical sect centered in Languedoc. Its historical background
does little to inhibit Maturin's strong penchant for extravagant
scenes of violence, horror, and vivid evocations of nature at its
least benign. His many characters people a well-plotted story of
impressive density-the heroine, Genevieve, kind hearted, bold, true
to her creed; the ruthless bishop of Toulouse; churchmen and women,
of varying degrees of piety; maniacal harridans, formidable
outlaws, and knights in armor. The Albigenses received, in general,
better reviews than most of his other works, mainly because of its
relatively reduced emphasis on blasphemous doings, but the
reputation of Melmoth the Wanderer soon overshadowed it. This new
edition of The Albigenses aspires to renew interest in the Irish
master's final elaborate and engrossing tale.
The three plays of Charles Robert Maturin, produced in London
between 1816 and 1819, document Maturin s attempts at theatrical
success. His first three novels were not popular, but his luck
improved with Bertram (1816), which ran for twenty-two nights. Even
with this success in hand, Manuel (1817) and Fredolfo (1819) failed
completely, partly through the sabotage of indifferent actors and a
fickle public. A posthumous play, Osmyn, the Renegade, had slightly
better luck, but only fragments remain. Few if any plays of this
period, when public tastes valued excess and melodrama over
literary quality, are performed or read today. The reader of
Maturin s novels, however, will find in his plays ample evidence of
the wild Romantic imagination that fueled his novels. The
rhetorical vigor common to all his works revealed perhaps its most
unfettered expression in the plays.
Charles Robert Maturin's first novel, Fatal Revenge; or, The Family
of Montorio, was published in 1807. Maturin's dark tale of the
brothers Ippolito and Annibal Montorio is a complexly plotted
adventure, full of "strong and vigorous fancy, with great command
of language," according to Sir Walter Scott. Maturin's relish for
the gothic and horrid, so brilliantly exploited in his masterpiece
of 1820, Melmoth the Wanderer, here makes its first appearance, and
the themes that haunted the later novel find their initial
expression in Fatal Revenge. Maturin's unique talents of "darkening
the gloomy, and of deepening the sad; of painting life in extremes,
and representing those struggles of passion when the soul trembles
on the verge of the unlawful and the unhallowed," make Fatal
Revenge a compelling essay into the twilight world of the late
gothic novel, one in which both innocence and evil are ultimately
unable to triumph over the forces that overwhelm them.
The Milesian Chief, Maturin's third novel (1812), is the first of
his novels to be set almost entirely in Ireland. After the 1800 Act
of Union, the political and social turmoil caused by rebellion in
the name of Irish independence disrupts the splendid fortunes of
the talented and beautiful Armida, Italian-bred and English-born,
who falls in love with Connal, last of an ancient Irish dynasty and
leader of a desperate army of rebels. As she follows Connal's dire
path, her exquisite if emotionally sterile life of art and music is
transformed into an adventure in the wilds of western Ireland, the
huts of the poor, bloody battlefields, rocky shores, and cavern
hideouts, as English forces gradually draw closer to defeating the
rebels. The sense of dread that overwhelms the characters and the
entire countryside in their struggles against enemies, military as
well as personal, is echoed in the passion of Armida and Connal,
and enhanced by Maturin's vivid gothic touches.
Melmoth the Wanderer is a dark Faustian tale in the gothic style.
It is the story of a man who sells his soul to the devil for an
extra 150 years of life, a pact he can get out of only if he
persuades another soul to take his place. Melmoth travels to the
depths of human misery and despair in the attempt to find someone
desperate enough to make such a devilish bargain. This work was a
huge hit in the nineteenth century and highly innovative for its
time, as it tells its story as a series of flashbacks and embedded
tales, with different narrators and viewpoints. It is full of
extravagant prose, convoluted plotting and archaic language -
totally different to a modern novel, but highly rewarding to the
dedicated reader. This is a new, unabridged edition (not a scan) of
the original four-volume novel of 1820 from Benediction Classics.
Stanton was thinking thus, when all power of thought was suspended,
by seeing two persons bearing between them the body of a young, and
apparently very lovely girl, who had been struck dead by the
lightning. Stanton approached, and heard the voices of the bearers
repeating, "There is none who will mourn for her "
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