Imaginary Lives

Imaginary Lives
Author Marcel Schwob
Original title Vies imaginaires
Translator Lorimer Hammond
Country France
Language French
Publisher Bibliothèque-Charpentier (1896)
Publication date
1896
Published in English
1982
Media type Print

Imaginary Lives (original French title: Vies imaginaires) is a collection of twenty-two semi-biographical short stories by Marcel Schwob, first published in book form in 1896. Mixing known and fantastical elements, it was one of the first works in the genre of biographical fiction. The book is an acknowledged influence in Jorge Luis Borges's first book A Universal History of Infamy. Borges also translated the last story "Burke and Hare, Assassins" into Spanish.[1]

Most chapters had been published individually in the newspaper Le Journal between 1894 and 1985. For the collected edition he substituted "Vie de Morphiel, démiurge" with "Matoaka", which had appeared in 1893 in L'Echo de Paris and that he renamed "Pocahontas, princesse".[2]

Contents

Original title Title in English Protagonists
"Empédocle, Dieu supposé" "'Empedocles, Supposed God" Empedocles
"Erostrate, Incendiaire" "Erostate, Incendiary" Herostratus
"Cratès, Cynique" "Crates, Cynic" Crates of Thebes
"Septima, Incantatrice" "'Septima, Enchantress" Septima and other characters from a curse tablet[3]
"Lucrèce, Poète" "Lucretius, Poet" Lucretius
"Clodia, Matronne impudique" "Clodia, Impure Woman" Clodia
"Pétrone, Romancier" "Petronius, Romancier" Petronius
"Sufrah, Géomancien" "Sufrah, Geomancer" Sorcerer from the story of Aladdin
"Frate Dolcino, Hérétique" "Fra Dolcino, Heretic" Fra Dolcino
"Cecco Angiolieri, Poète haineux" "Cecco Angiolieri, Poet of Hate" Cecco Angiolieri
"Paolo Uccello, Peintre" "Paolo Uccello, Painter" Paolo Ucello
"Nicolas Loyseleur, Juge" "'Nicolas Loyseleur, Judge" One of the judges of Joan of Arc
'"Katherine la Dentellière, Fille amoureuse" "Katherine the Lacemaker, Girl of the Streets" Fictional lover of Casin Cholet[4]
"Alain le Gentil, Soldat" "Alain the Gentle, Soldier" Characters from the criminal registry of Saint-Martin-des-Champs[5]
"Gabriel Spenser, Acteur" "Gabriel Spenser, Actor" Gabriel Spenser
"Pocahontas, Princesse" "Pocahontas, Princess" Pocahontas
"Cyril Tourneur, Poète tragique" "Cyril Tourneur, Tragic Poet" Cyril Tourneur
"William Phips, Pêcheur de trésors" "William Phips, Treasure Hunter" William Phips
"Le Capitaine Kid, Pirate" "Captain Kidd, Pirate" William Kidd
"Walter Kennedy, Pirate illettré" "Walter Kennedy, Unlettered Pirate" Walter Kennedy
"Le Major Stede Bonnet, Pirate par humeur" "Major Stede Bonnet, Pirate by Fancy" Stede Bonnet
"MM. Burke et Hare, Assassins" "Mr. Burke and Mr. Hare, Assassins" Burke and Hare

References

  1. The King in the Golden Mask and Other Writings / by Marcel Schwob ; selected, translated, and introduced by Iain White. Manchester : Carcanet New Press, 1982. pp. 9-13
  2. Schwob, Marcel. Chroniques. Geneve: DROZ, 1981. p. 204
  3. Audollent, Auguste. Defixionum tabellae quotquot innotuerunt tam in Graecis orientatis quam in totius occidentis partibus praeter Atticas in corpore inscriptiomum edita, Paris: Alberti Fontemoig, 1904. Tablet 270
  4. Cholet is a character from Le Testament and Le Lais by François Villon; Katherine the Lacemaker was provably inspired by Katherine the Purse-seller. Villon, François. The Poems of François Villon. Hanover: University Press of New England, 1965.p.62, 224
  5. Tanon, L. Histoire des Justices des Anciennes Églises et Communautés Monastiques de Paris, Paris: Libraires-Éditeurs, 1883

Sources

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