Showing posts with label Lord Dunsany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lord Dunsany. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2013

"The Madness of Andelsprutz" by Lord Dunsany

"The Madness of Andelsprutz" by Lord Dunsany  (1912, 4 pages)


Irish Short Story Month Year Three
March 1 to March 31




"All these souls if cities that were dead spoke that night on the mountain to my city and soothed her, until at last she muttered of war no longer, and her eyes stared wildly no more, but she hid her face in her hands and for some while wept softly. At last she arose, and walking slowly and with bended head, and leaning upon Ilion and Carthage, went mournfully eastwards; and the dust of her highways swirled behind her as she went, a ghostly dust that never turned to mud in all that drenching rain. And so the souls of the cities led her away, and gradually they disappeared from the mountain, and the ancient voices died away in the distance."


Edward Plunkett (1878 to 1957, Dublin) was the 18th Baron of Dunsany.   Under the pen name of "Lord Dunsany" he wrote over 60 books including novels, plays,  and collections of essays.   It is for his 100s of stories set in the heritage occult world of Old Ireland that he is remembered and loved.   He  greatly influenced many of the best know writers of "fantasy tales" such as H. P. Lovecraft,  J. R. Tolkien and Jorge Borges.    

Born into considerable wealth into a very famous family of high achievers, he was far from one of the idol rich.    He was at one time the chess and the pistol champion of Ireland.   (Not a man to challenge to a mental or a pistol match!)   He worked with W. B. Yeats and Lady Gregory in the Irish Theater.   He served in the second  Boer war and in WWI he was a captain, serving for a time in the trenches at his own request.

He was a major figure in the Irish Literary revival and was given an honorary doctors degree by Trinity College in Dublin for his contributions to Irish Culture. 


Maybe the work and world of Edward Plunkett, the 18th Baron of Dunsany is one that has been left behind.    Maybe people stopped being interested in reading stories of the glory of ancient Ireland replete with magical creatures and fabulous cities and things of great wonder.   Maybe there is too much repudiation of the developments of the modern world underlying his work.    Maybe there is even jealousy of his great inherited wealth and dislike of the Anglo-Irish roots of the family money.   He is never mentioned in the 800 plus pages of Inventing Ireland:  The Literature of the Modern Nation by Declan Kiberd.  


Modest Family Home
Last year I read a story by Lord Dunsany "The Kin of the Elf Folk" during ISSW2 that I totally loved.  I do not to this day see why it is not listed among the great short stories of the world and why it seems to be included in no anthology of Irish short stories.   Maybe people are turned off by the references to mystical beings and such but below the surface of this story is a brilliant account of much that really is wrong with the modern world.    I have read a number of his other stories and I do see many are kind of laments about the past and I do see that the life style and world of Lord Dunsany was one where birth rank meant everything and de facto in Ireland that worked out meaning you had to be Anglo-Irish to matter even if you screamed your Irish heritage to the world.

"The Madness of Andelsprutz" is not a modern literary short story.  It is very much a tale lamenting the ancient pass and strongly suggesting the best days of mankind are over.   The "plot" of the story sounds silly but if you give yourself over to the prose style of the author you can somehow see back eons to a time when cities had souls and when it meant something to be from a place you could be proud to call your home, when knowledge not ignorance was celebrated.   Read some of his short works before you scoff.   A man finds himself in the city of Andelsprutz.  Thirty years ago the city was conquered  by foreign invaders.    The soul of the city and its people kept hoping the empire of which it was once a part would come back and retake it but one day the soul of the city just gives up.  The narrator witnesses it leave and he follows it for three days, with no food and little water until he sees a great coming together of the souls of once great cities.  Most of the names of the cities are creations but Carthage is there.  He sees the souls of the cities comforting that of Andelsprutz.   I really like the prose style of this story:


"And the great shadowy form that was the soul of Andelsprutz went away muttering to the mountains, and there I followed her—for had she not been my nurse? Yes, I went away alone into the mountains, and for three days, wrapped in a cloak, I slept in their misty solitudes. I had no food to eat, and to drink I had only the water of the mountain streams. By day no living thing was near to me, and I heard nothing but the noise of the wind, and the mountain streams roaring. But for three nights I heard all round me on the mountain the sounds of a great city: I saw the lights of tall cathedral windows flash momentarily on the peaks, and at times the glimmering lantern of some fortress patrol. And I saw the huge misty outline of the soul of Andelsprutz sitting decked with her ghostly cathedrals, speaking to herself, with her eyes fixed before her in a mad stare, telling of ancient wars. And her confused speech for all those nights upon the mountain was sometimes the voice of traffic, and then of church bells, and then of bugles, but oftenest it was the voice of red war; and it was all incoherent, and she was quite mad."


You can read this story here if you like.



Wednesday, March 14, 2012

"The Kith of the Elf Folk" by Edward Plunkett, Lord Dunsany

"The Kith of the Elf Folk" by Edward Plunkett, ( Lord Dunsany), 1910, 22 pages



MARCH 13 TO MARCH 31
Paranormal Day
Tales of The Wild Folk



Please consider joining us for Irish Short Story Week Year Two, March 12 to March 31.   All you need do is post on one short story by an Irish author and send me a comment or an e mail and I will include it in the master post at the end of the challenge.  

George V became King in 1910.  Japan annexes Korea.  Howard's End is published.  Jean Genet is born.


Edward Plunkett (1878 to 1957, Dublin) was the 18th Baron of Dunsany.   Under the pen name of "Lord Dunsany" he wrote over 60 books including novels, plays,  and collections of essays.   It is for his 100s of stories set in the heritage occult world of Old Ireland that he is remembered and loved.   He  greatly influenced many of the best know writers of "fantasy tales" such as H. P. Lovecraft,  J. R. Tolkien and Jorge Borges.    

Born into considerable wealth into a very famous family of high accomplishers, he was far from one of the idol rich.    He was at one time the chess and the pistol champion of Ireland.   (Not a man to challenge to a mental or a pistol match!)   He worked with W. B. Yeats and Lady Gregory in the Irish Theater.   He served in the second  Boer war and in WWI he was a captain, serving for a time in the trenches at his own request.
He was a major figure in the Irish Literary revival and was given an honorary doctors degree by Trinity College in Dublin for his contributions to Irish Culture.


My first encounter with the writings of Lord Dunsany was in December of last year when I read and posted on his very well done short story, "Ghosts".

"The Kith of Elf Folk" is just a totally wonderful story, beautifully written with the power to draw you completely into the world it creates.   In fact when I finished it I felt almost like an American Idol judge and wanted to yell out "Lord Dunsany, you have made it to Irish Short Week!"    I did like this story so much that it did give me a really feeling of happiness to have experienced it.


The story is about a "Wild Thing", a two foot tall or so marsh person that can seen only by people born right at dusk, that is kin to the Elfs.   I laughed when I heard that cats could see the wild things but dogs could not!

"The wild things are somewhat human in appearance, only all brown of skin and barely two feet tall.   Their ears are pointed like the squirrel's, only far larger, and they leap to prodigious heights.   They live all day under deep pools in the loneliest marshes but at night they come up to dance.   Each Wild Thing has over its head a Marsh light, which moves when the Wild Thing does, they have no souls and cannot die, and are of the kith of the Elf folk".


One of the female Wild things wants to have a soul so she could worship God and know the meaning of music and see the inner beauty of the marshes and to imagine paradise.    She brings her desire to the oldest of the Wild Things.   The kith of the Wild Thing (kin) heard of her sorrow and fashioned a soul for her which she accepted knowing the price she will pay.   She is at once transformed into a beautiful young woman.

Now it gets really interesting and I will just tell a bit of the plot.   The girl is taken in by a local family who think she may have mental problems of some kind as she is far from normal.   They put her to work in a factory right out of the satanic mills of William Blake.   She is given the name Mary Jane Rush.   Mary Jane begins to experience deeply the beauty of the world and the love of God.   Mary has the worse kind of job working in a spinning factory.   The noise of the machines is overwhelming.   The city was ugly in the day time and only after dark could Mary Jane see any beauty.   Everyday is the same.   Mary Jane decides she wants to get rid of her soul and go back to being a wild thing.   She knows the only way to do this is to give her soul to a human who does not have one.

One days Mary Jane is so overwhelmed with sadness while in factory that she breaks into song in an amazingly beautiful voice.  An opera director happens to be walking by and he sends her to school to learn to sing for the stage and she is soon the toast of  Dublin.

The story does not end here but I will tell no more of the plot.  I did love the ending and thing you will also.

I have thought about this story a bit more.   I wonder if the Wild Things are the people of Ireland and the humans the English?

"The Kith of the Elf Folk" is a tremendously fun story and a first rate work of art.

You can download this story from Manybooks.   It is in his The Sword of Welleran and other Stories.  






Mel u

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