Wormwood : a drama of Paris
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Bibliographic Information
Wormwood : a drama of Paris
(Broadview editions)
Broadview Press, c2004
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 406-407)
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Though disparaged by literary critics of her day, Marie Corelli was one of the most popular novelists of the late Victorian and Edwardian periods. Wormwood (1890) is a lurid tale of unrequited love, betrayal, vengeance, murder, suicide, and addiction. The novel recounts the degeneration of Gaston Beauvais, a promising young Parisian man who, betrayed by his fiancee and his best friend, falls prey to the seductive powers of absinthe. The impact of Gaston's debauchery and addiction on himself, his family, and his friends is graphically recounted in this important contribution to the literature of fin de siecle decadence.
This Broadview edition includes a critical introduction and a generous selection of contextualizing documents, including excerpts from Corelli's writings on art and literature, nineteenth-century degeneration theories, and clinical and artistic views on absinthe.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Marie Corelli: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
Corelli's Introductory Note
Wormwood: A Drama of Paris
Appendix A: Translations of French Poems and Songs in Wormwood
Charles Cros, "L'Archet" (1873)
Anonymous, "Le Pauvre Clerc"
Appendix B: Letters from Corelli to George Bentley about Wormwood
Appendix C: Reviews of Wormwood
From The Athenaeum (15 November 1890)
From the Pall Mall Gazette (27 November 1890)
From The Graphic (29 November 1890)
From The Academy (29 November 1890)
From Kensington Society, qtd. in Academy (13 December 1890)
From Literary World (17 January 1891)
From The Times (23 January 1891)
From The Spectator (28 February 1891)
From County Gentlewoman, qtd. in Academy(11 July 1891)
From Kent Carr, Miss Marie Corelli (1901)
Appendix D: Corelli on Literature and Art
Letter to George Bentley, 11 March 1877
Letter to George Bentley, 6 April 1877
From "'Imaginary Love'" (1905)
From "The 'Strong' Book of the Ishbosheth" (1905)
Appendix E: British Views of Naturalism
From W.S. Lilly, "The New Naturalism" (1885)
From H. Rider Haggard, "About Fiction" (1887)
From the National Vigilance Association, Pernicious Literature (1889)
Appendix F: Nineteenth-Century Degeneration Theories
From E. Ray Lankester, Degeneration: A Chapter in Darwinism (1880)
From Gina Lombroso-Ferrero, Criminal Man (1911)
Appendix G: Clinical and Artistic Views of Absinthe
Findings of Dr. Legrand, The Times (4 May 1869)
From the New York Times (12 December 1880)
Charles Cros, "Lendemain" (1873)
Arthur Symons, "The Absinthe-Drinker" (1892)
Ernest Dowson, "Absinthia Taetra" (1899)
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