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Monk and the Hangman's Daughter
Monk and the Hangman's Daughter | Ambrose Bierce
5 posts | 2 read | 5 to read
On arriving at a rural monastery, the monk Ambrosius meets a young girl, Benedicta. She is shunned by the local community for being the daughter of the local hangman, but Ambrosius is drawn into a dangerous sympathy with her, and in defiance of the community and his superiors, he starts spending time alone with her. But when her virtue is corrupted by an impetuous young man, the stage is set for a battle between heart, mind, body, spirit, the sins of the past, and redemption. Allegedly a rewriting from a lost German original, Ambrose Bierce's 1892 novel reads as a seamless, almost folktale-like masterpiece.
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review
AshleyHoss820
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Pickpick

A short story? novella? about a monk and his back-and-forth feelings about the hangman‘s daughter. A hangman‘s family was reviled by the townspeople, due to the nature of the job. They weren‘t allowed to be buried on consecrated ground, for instance. This book was so much more than I expected. December #BookSpin prompt: Litsy/GoodReads TBR

TheAromaofBooks Great progress!! 12mo
31 likes2 comments
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Bookwomble
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Pickpick

I thought I was picking up a story of forbidden passion and sundered lovers, but instead got a portrait of religious hypocrisy and, intensely depicted, narcissitic obsession and objectification of the "loved" person as a recepticle for the emotions of the protagonist. It's clear that Bierce has no sympathy for the actions of the main character, the monk, Ambrosius, but neither is he portrayed as a stock, moustache-twirling gothic villain. ??

Bookwomble In presenting the narrative from the single POV of Ambrosius's diary, Bierce ran the risk of seeming to empathise with or justify the monk's self-absorbed fantasies, but he's too good a writer for that, thankfully.

How much of this sentiment is in the original German-language story by Richard Voss, which Bierce co-translated, I don't know, but in his introduction he states he added much material of his own, as well a translating Voss.👇🏼
5y
Bookwomble Gothic conventions he did use include: perverse monks; febrile religious passions; peasant village life; wild, rugged mountain landscapes; the dead, and intimations of mortality and doom. All to good effect. 5y
13 likes2 comments
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Bookwomble
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My early evening in the garden sorted 📖🍸🎸

[Drunk-posting, as I've actually finished the cocktail and am lightly hammered 🔨- toffee rather than mjolnir, but definitely 'relaxed']

TrishB Sounds like a good plan 👍🏻 5y
BookishMe *burp* 🍹 5y
19 likes2 comments
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Bookwomble
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A mid-week day off work, and distancing/isolating in the garden with Bierce's novella of the forbidden love between the naïve monk, Ambrosius, and the even more naïveier hangman's daughter, Benedicta. Possible significance in those names? 🤔 I'll have to see.
Their first meeting beneath the gallows as Ambrosius guiltyly notes her charms while Benedicta shoos vultures away from a new-hanged corpse sets the tone for what's to come.

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erzascarletbookgasm
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Nothing to do with #stmartinsday except it involves a monk, though the monk in this story did not share his cloak with a beggar.

This is a retelling of a 1891 German novel/folktale. Brother Ambrosius, a Franciscan monk, takes an interest in a young woman who is shunned by the townsfolk, much to the disapproval of the monk‘s superiors.

#litsyclassics

Nebklvr Have not read anything by this author but remember reading he had a very strange life. 6y
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