Tag: fairy tales

  • Pentameron

    Pentameron

    Il Pentamerone: The Oldest Known Collection of Fairy Tales

    Il Pentamerone (also known as Lo cunto de li cunti, or The Tale of Tales) is little-known outside academic circles, yet it is foundational to many popular fairy tales. Published in the 17th century, it predates Perrault’s Tales of Mother Goose and the Brothers Grimm’s Children’s and Household Tales, thereby setting the stage for classic fairy-tale literature.

    Understanding Il Pentamerone’s special place in history requires context about its era and Basile’s intent. Its importance lies in its role as the cornerstone of the evolution of fairy-tale storytelling.

    Indeed, some of the oldest versions of well-known tales, including Rapunzel, Cinderella, and The Beauty and the Beast, can be found in The Pentameron.

    The Book

    One of the most popular books in the 15th and 16th centuries was definitely Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron. It presents 100 stories, each told by one of 10 people over 10 days.

    How the Tales Came to Be Told by Warwick Goble (left) and The Goat-Faced Girl by Henry Justice Ford (right)

    Such a framed format, with fictional people telling fictional tales, was popular for centuries and reached its peak with the publication of Galland’s Arabian Nights at the beginning of the 18th century. Gianbattista Basile chose the same format but decided to write 50 stories, not 100, as in the Decameron. This logically leads to the unofficial name Pentameron. Another important influence was Giovanni Francesco Straparola’s The Pleasant Nights, perhaps the first collection of written fairy tales (though it contains other types of stories as well). Some of the plots that appear later in Basile’s book were already present in The Pleasant Nights. Straparola’s major contribution to the then nonexistent genre was the structure of the tales. It was revolutionary in that it presented the possibility of climbing the social ladder thanks to magic. Straparola introduced a so-called rags-to-riches plot.

    Basile, who likely held a higher social position than Straparola (whose life is shrouded in mystery), preferred a different kind of plot. The main character starts out as a prince, rich merchant, or similar member of the upper class, but loses this position due to circumstances beyond his or her control, such as war, illness, or accident.

    But through the story, the fallen star regains his or her position, which may be even higher at the end of the story. Such a plot was definitely less problematic for the target audience than Straparola’s.

    Yet just like Straprola, Basile didn’t want to risk – he never published his stories. They were printed only several years after his death, when his sister brought the manuscripts to the printers.

    Portraits of Giambattista Basile and his sister Nicoletta

    Basile’s Tale of Tales was published in two volumes: the first in 1534 and the second in 1536. Not even his sister dared to use the author’s real name, so the book was published under the pseudonym Gian Alesio Abbatutis.

    The style of narration is typical baroque with numerous unnecessary descriptions, which soon made the tales unfit for the new times, and they were almost forgotten until Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm discovered them in the translation of one of their colleagues, Felix Liebrecht.

    They praised the book as the first collection of national fairy tales in history. Its famous collection contains recognizable plots of many well-known tales. One of the reasons for staying unknown to a wider audience was the language of Pentamerone. It was written in Neapolitan dialect with numerous vulgarisms and many elements unsuitable for sensitive ears.

    Parsley (left), Three Enchanted Princes (middle) by Warwick Goble, and The Serpent Prince by Edmund Dulac (right)

    The Stories

    The Pentamerone starts with a frame story about Princess Zoza, who was unable to laugh. Her father finally manages to make her laugh, but she offended an old lady who put a spell on Zoza. She can marry a prince only if she fills a jug with her tears in three days. Just before the jug was filled, Zoza fell asleep, her slave stole it, and ended the task instead of her. The slave marries the prince, becomes pregnant, and demands to hear stories for her amusement. Ten storytellers, including Zoza (in disguise), told her five stories each, and one of them discloses a slave’s fraud. She is punished (cruelly), and Zoza finally gets her husband.

    Among the told stories, we can find many of the first known written versions of popular fairy tales like Rapunzel (Parsley), Snow White (The Young Slave), Brother and Sister (Nennillo and Nennella), Diamonds and Toads (The Two Cakes), King Thrushbeard (Pride Punished) … Despite the subtitle (Stories for Little Ones) these tales were obviously not meant for kids. They are full of themes more fitting for yellowback literature, such as unfaithful spouses, treacherous servants, and evil neighbors. They are also the first written collection of fairy tales, most of which have plots present in many countries. This makes the Pentamerone a very special literary treasure.

    Il Pentamerone, illustrations by George Cruikshank

    Some of the biting sharpness of the original Pentamerone was lost through translations. Actually, most of the book was heavily censored. For example, the first English translation (Taylor, 1848) included only 30 stories instead of 50 because the general public deemed Basile’s humor unacceptable. The second edition of Taylor’s translation in 1912 kept only 12 stories! But thanks to the widow of Richard Burton, famous translator of the Arabian Nights, English still got a complete book in 1893, three years after his death. However, the second edition of this book in 1927 was heavily censored, a fact that the editors briefly explained as ‘some corrections.’The best available translation today is probably by Nancy Canepa. It is a direct translation from the Neapolitan dialect, featuring all 50 stories, and is backed by extensive research. It’s definitely not a children’s book, but an important document from which everybody can learn a lot about the literature, our society, and ourselves.

    The Movie

    The Tale of Tales (Il racconto dei racconti) is a movie extravaganza by Matteo Garrone, with Salma Hayek, Shirley Henderson, Vincent Cassel, Toby Jones, John C. Reilly, and other movie stars. The book comprises three tales: The Enchanted Doe, The Flea, and The Flayed Old Lady, enriched with elements from other fairy tales in the Pentamerone.

    The Enchanted Snake (left) and The Myrtle (right) by Warwick Goble

    The movie is a unique creation with exotic settings, costumes, and music. Still, the plots and specific scenes may be a bit too gruesome for the general audience. The movie’s earnings (less than $6 million), despite its $12 million budget, reflect this concern. However, it will likely become a classic, a must-see for every film enthusiast willing to explore film beyond its ordinary limits. (And over two hours in length.) Beware: it’s R-rated for nudity and violence.

    Giving Credit to the Original

    The Pentameron, also known as The Tale of Tales, is arguably the most important book most people haven’t heard of. It introduced a so-called restoration plot into the story. In combination with fantastic elements, this plot forms the basis not only of fairy tales, but also of a significant portion of fiction in general.

    The Enchanted Snake (left) and The Goat-Faced Girl (right) by Henry Justice Ford

    The giants like Madame d’Aulnoy, Charles Perrault, Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, but also J. R. R. Tolkien or J. K. Rowling all profited on this base, and it’s only fair to put the name of Giambattista Basile in the same group.

  • Madame d’Aulnoy – the Mother of Fairy Tales?

    Madame d’Aulnoy – the Mother of Fairy Tales?

    Who Was Marie-Catherine Le Jumel d’Aulnoy?

    Her date of birth is unknown. Madame d’Aulnoy was born Marie-Catherine Le Jumel in Barneville-la-Bertrand, Normandy, around 1650, into one of the oldest and most respected families of Normandy. Her mother was about 16 years old.

    Young Madame d’Aulnoy

    Being the only child, she was raised by her grandmother as an heiress. When, at about 11 or 12, she had a baby brother, her parents switched to plan B: they sent her to a nunnery. In those days, nobility didn’t spend too much precious time with their own children.

    Madame d’Aulnoy Fairy Tales covers by Clinton Peters (left) and Gordon Browne (right)

    Marie-Catherine wasn’t happy about the idea, so she persuaded her father to find her a husband. At about 15 years of age, she married Baron d’Aulnoy. He was a heavy drinker, gambler, and abuser. He also had financial difficulties and was at least three decades older than his bride.

    Portrait of Baroness d’Aulnoy

    The young Baroness gave birth to three girls (two died soon after birth) in the first three years of her arranged marriage. She had at least one lover. With the help of her mother and two gentlemen, she entered into a conspiracy against her husband. He was subsequently accused of treason. Baron d’Aulnoy was cleared of accusations, and both false witnesses were executed. Madame d’Aulnoy had to flee Paris.

    Blue Bird by Clinton Peters (left) and Warwick Goble (right)

    We can only speculate what happened to her in the next few decades. She probably spent some time traveling. It is possible that she lived in Spain and England for several years. There are even rumors that she became an international spy, but we have no hard evidence to rely on.

    The Invisible Prince (left) and Prince Cherry (right) by Warwick Goble

    While d’Aulnoy’s memoirs mention another (illegitimate) daughter, a son, a new husband, several lovers (another widely accepted practice of the time), it is very hard to say what really happened. Facts in her writings are always fused with imagination.

    She was involved in another conspiracy, resulting in the beheading of her friend Madam Angelique Tiquet. Because her brother died young, Marie-Catherine inherited a fortune after all. It is clear she lived in Paris from 1690 to 1701, when she died.

    Hind in the Wood by Brinsley Le Fanu (left), Walter Crane (middle), and Warwick Goble (right)

    Mme d’Aulnoy’s works

    Memoirs from Spain and England brought immediate fame to Comtesse d’Aulnoy, as she signed her literary works. They were written in the fashion of the time. This means plenty of vivid descriptions of exotic places and rituals, with little attention paid to the facts.

    Fair Goldilocks by Clinton Peters

    Her memoirs have many elements of novels with long imaginary passages. Even fairy tales are woven into the narrative’s basic framework . The first fairy tale written by Madame d’Aulnoy (The Island of Happiness) was published in 1690, a year before Charles Perrault’s Tales of Mother Goose. Her first collection was published only a few months after Perrault’s.

    Princess Belle-Etoile by Clinton Peters (left) and Walter Crane (right)

    If we can say that Perrault is the father of a fairy tale as a literary genre, she is the one who coined the term ‘fairy tales’ (French: ‘contes de fées’, which actually means ‘tales of fairies’). Thanks to the huge influence of her salon, she can be credited as the mother of the genre. Her fairy tales were obviously influenced by folklore, with a dominant theme of animal brides or bridegrooms. It is likely that she was introduced to them through Straparola’s The Facetious Nights and Basile’s Pentamerone rather than through oral tradition.

    Madame d’Aulnoy, mother of the fairy tale

    None of Madame d’Aulnoy’s works was written for children. They were actually all penned as romantic novels, sometimes formed as travelogues, often with fantastical elements, and always in a conversational tone with a live audience in mind.

    The White Cat by Thomas Derrick (left) and Warwick Goble (right)

    Historical context of d’Aulnoy’s fairy tales


    Despite the fact that her works were internationally popular in the 17th and 18th centuries, all of them are nearly forgotten today for at least three reasons:

    Bee and Orange Tree (left) and Prince Sprite(right) by Gordon Browne

    1. Fairy tales became popular material for collectors (the brothers Grimm being the most famous of all) who presented them as a part of the cultural heritage of certain nations, in times when nations were not yet fully formed. These collections were written by scholars who wanted facts, not imagination.
    2. The genre entered mass production during the 19th century. As with any business, this was a world of power, dominance, and competition. In short, a world for men. Yet, d’Aulnoy’s fairy tales were still printed then. With the rising demand for educational messages (like in one of her literary successors, Madam Le Prince de Beaumont), they slowly vanished from the bookshelves.
    3. The narrative style of d’Aulnoy fell out of favor. When the audience expanded to include lower classes with less free time, readers started to prefer more ‘to the point’ written stories. Her fairy stories are pretty lengthy (from 12 to 44 printed pages each), and her narration lacked the dramatic suspense we are still used to today.

    The Yellow Dwarf by Gordon Browne (left) and Walter Crane (right)

    While the fairy tales of Madame d’Aulnoy will probably never gain global popularity again, they represent an important milestone in the development of the genre and literature in general. They are full of emotion and have many complex, powerful female characters. She deserves a place right next to another master of storytelling: Hans Christian Andersen.

  • Oscar Wilde: Fairy Tales

    Oscar Wilde: Fairy Tales

    Oscar Wilde’s fairy tales – illustrated

    Oscar Wilde was a world-renowned playwright, but many people are unaware of his fairy tales. He wrote two books for them, one for each of his sons. Interesting, isn’t it? Oscar Wilde believed fairy tales are essential for raising children, but he wasn’t satisfied with the existing classic works by the Grimm Brothers, Charles Perrault, Madame d’Aulnoy, and others. Still, he obviously wasn’t indifferent to fairy tales by Hans Christian Andersen. We can find many similarities between the fairy tales of both authors.

    Oscar Wilde read fairy tales to his sons, and we can also speculate that his writing was also influenced by his wife Constance, a productive editor, translator, and writer. This makes Wilde’s fairy tales a family project!

    Oscar Wilde’s list of fairy tales is short. He wrote only nine, and they were published in two separate books, which are both collectible items today. Some of these fairy tales were also published together with Wilde’s works for an adult audience, especially with The Picture of Dorian Gray. Another hint that they were not necessarily made for children is some illustrations which, by today’s standards, were ‘not suitable for work.’ Don’t worry, we didn’t include any of them. Before we delve into each story, we’ll present them with summaries of all fairy tales. Let’s first look at the tales collected in Wilde’s initial volume.

    The Happy Prince and Other Tales

    The book was first published in 1888, just before Cyril Wilde’s (who used the surname Holland for most of his life) third birthday. It includes five fairy tales, beginning with the title story.

    The Happy Prince: summary

    Illustration: Spencer Baird Nichols

    This is one of the most well-known and popular fairy tales by Oscar Wilde. The story begins in the Palace of Sans-Souci, where the prince lived a happy but futile life of pleasures. Only after his death, when his statue was put on a pedestal, did he see all the misery, poverty, and injustice in his town.


    The Happy Prince was covered with gold leaves, there were precious stones in place of his eyes, and his sword was decorated with a ruby. With the help of a swallow, the Happy Prince then literally gives himself part by part to poor people until he is left with nothing. Because ‘he was no longer beautiful, he was no longer useful,’ councilors ordered the melting of the statue.
    The swallow, who was so eager to help the prince, didn’t fly south in time and froze to death. So councilors also decided to proclaim, ‘No bird is allowed to die here.’


    In the ending scene, God orders them to bring him the most valuable things from town, and the angels bring him a statue heart made of lead and a dead bird.


    The Nightingale and the Rose – The summary

    Illustration: Charles Robinson

    The tale of Rose and Nightingale is one of selflessness and the ridiculousness of some of the things we all do in life.


    This fairy tale starts with a student who wants to impress a princess. He discovered that she likes red roses, and he wants to give her a perfect red rose. The problem is that there are no red roses in the garden. So a nightingale makes a deal with a white rose, and they will together create the most beautiful red rose ever.


    The bird sings every day, even though the rose’s thorn slowly pierces its heart, and sings the most beautiful songs of life, even though it’s really losing its heart. They succeed, but the bird dies. The princess says, “I’m afraid it won’t go with my dress.”


    All the sacrifices didn’t help, and the student concludes that love is too impractical, so he shall study Philosophy.

    The Selfish Giant by Oscar Wilde

    Illustration: Charles Robinson

    The story of the Selfish Giant is a story about altruism. Here is a summary:


    Giant has a beautiful garden with all sorts of flowers and fruits growing in it, and while he was on a visit (for several years), children from the neighborhood started to play in this garden. When he returned, he kicked the kids out. But!


    Winter came into the garden, and it stays in for the full year. Only when the giant let the children back in did the garden begin to look like a garden again. The crucial part is meeting with one child who was too small to reach up to the tree, and the giant helps him to get there.


    Children once again visited the garden, and the trees were in full bloom. But the little child didn’t come back until the very end of the giant’s life. That’s when we learned that the child was Jesus.

    The Devoted Friend by Oscar Wilde

    Illustration: Jacomb Hood

    This fairy tale bears a slight resemblance to Andersen’s “Little Claus and Big Claus.” Here we have a rich man and a poor man, too, but the poor one doesn’t win in the end. In fact, he dies after exploitation and a series of misfortunes.


    A rich miller and a poor gardener are friends, or at least they are supposed to be. Miller visits the gardener every day and picks his most beautiful flowers.


    He never gives him any money. After a long winter, the gardener was almost starved to death (the miller didn’t want to bother inviting him into his warm house full of stuff because he didn’t want to spoil him).


    Then the miller promised to give the gardener his old wheelbarrow in exchange for more services.


    Ultimately, the gardener passed away during one of his “missions” before he could acquire a wheelbarrow, which was rendered useless and inoperable. The miller realizes that he is only concerned with his wheelbarrow and will never provide any assistance to anyone.

    The Remarkable Rocket

    Illustration: Charles Robinson

    There are many ways in which Remarkable Rocket is like Oscar Wilde’s life. It is a story about a rocket waiting to explode in its full glitter and beauty, like Wilde, most of whose life promised much more than it actually showed.


    In the end, the rocket explodes when nobody sees or hears her, like Wilde died lonely and almost forgotten.

    Illustration: Walter Crane

    A House of Pomegranates

    The book came out in 1891, when Oscar Wilde’s second son, Vyvyan (like his older brother, he used the surname Holland for most of his life), was almost five years old. There are only four fairy tales in this book. We’ll present them in the order they were published.

    The Birthday of the Infanta

    Illustration: Jessie Marion King

    This is the only Wilde’s fairy tale with a woman in the title (a rocket is not considered a human being). But she, the female equivalent of the Happy Prince (when he was still alive), a spoiled child, as Oscar Wilde himself was in many ways, is not the main character.

    The protagonist of the narrative is a crippled, unattractive boy who was discovered in the forest and purchased from his father solely for the purpose of entertaining the princess through dancing (the term “infantas” refers to the daughters of Spanish and Portuguese kings, and “infant” means child). She was delighted with his appearance, and he, naïve as he was, believed she really liked him.


    When he hears that he will dance again after the break, he starts dreaming about how they will become friends. Then he strayed into the palace and, for the first time, saw his unattractive image in the mirror. Boy realizes the unpleasant truth. Princess never liked him. She was only laughing at him.


    This literally breaks his heart, and he dies just when the princess enters. Her statement? “Those who come to play with must not have hearts!”

    The Star-Child

    Illustration: Spencer Baird Nichols

    Of all of Wilde’s works, the Star-Child story most closely resembles traditional fairy tales. It tells us about a boy found in the woods who denies his mother when he is found because he is beautiful and she is not.


    After a series of tests and a lot of repentance, we got the classic transformation and happy ending, but Wilde would not be Wilde without an addition: Star-Child becomes a king (good one) only for a few years. Then he died, and the next king was evil.

    The Young King

    Illustration: Spencer Baird Nichols

    In this Oscar Wilde fairy tale, a young man is born into the king’s only daughter’s covert marriage. There were all sorts of rumors about the boy’s father and what happened to him and the princess who vanished soon after the birth. The boy was raised by commoners, and the king, who was dying, wanted his grandson back.


    The story starts when the young prince waits for his coronation. He is supposed to dress in the most precious clothes, but in his dreams, he sees so much suffering caused in the search for perfect fabric, perfect pearls, and so on, he decides he will go to church dressed like a shepherd. In the church, a miracle happens.
    This child made the selfish giant change his mind.

    The Fisherman and His Soul

    Illustration: Jessie Marion King

    Wilde’s fairy tale, The Fisherman and His Soul, is a story about a man who falls in love with a mermaid. If he wants to join her, he should get rid of his soul.


    He asks a witch for help, and after some delay, she tells him what to do. The problem is that his soul doesn’t want to leave. And when it does, they agreed the fisherman will return to the seaside every year just in case he changes his mind.


    In many ways, this fairy tale resembles Andersen’s Little Mermaid, but is written from a different point of view and with a different message. While in Andersen’s story the soul was the ultimate goal, Wilde presents it as useless and corrupted. His sympathies are clearly on the side of the soulless creatures of the ocean.

    Reflecting on these stories, we are led to consider: do the fairy tales of Oscar Wilde echo Andersen’s stories?


    Some experts say the fairy tales in both books he wrote are maybe the best example of Wilde’s mastery of the language. His vivid landscape descriptions, emotional portrayals, flawless dialogues, and critiques of the social system are united to form captivating narratives that leave a profound and enduring impression on the minds of readers, despite the absence of explicit moral messages.


    Wilde’s fairy tales present his view on life, not how it should be, but how it is, with a lot of pathos but also a lot of hope, which can probably be compared with only one fairy tale author: Hans Christian Andersen, whose language was much simpler and down-to-earth. If we can easily find folk stories that inspired Andersen, with Wilde, things are more complicated.


    His tales contain traditional themes (a prince on a quest, the children in the forest, a conflict between good and evil), but there are also clear references to other works. The Faustian deal, perfectly written in Picture of Dorian Gray, is also present in The Fisherman and His Soul, a brilliant rewriting of Little Mermaid, one of the saddest fairy tales by H. C. Andersen, but in even darker tones.


    Andersen’s fairy tales are reflected in all of Wilde’s fairy tales; sometimes this is less obvious and sometimes more so. Both writers are very religious and use a lot of humor and emotion in their writing.


    In Wilde’s fairy tales, Andersen’s melancholy is replaced with cynicism, and Andersen’s irony at Wilde’s works turns into sarcasm. If we can still find a search for the place in the society in Andersen’s tales, Wilde’s tales are extremely individualistic.
    It is certainly no coincidence that The Happy Prince and Other Tales (1888) and House of Pomegranates (1891) were written and published right after the births of his sons. Cyril was born in 1885, and Vyvyan in 1886, but they were not written with these kids specifically in mind. They talk to every child in the world, and the adults can benefit from them, too. Maybe even more.
    Because everybody should, just like the Happy Prince, sooner or later get out of the palace ‘where sorrow is not allowed to enter.’

    Some similarities between Oscar Wilde’s and Hans Christian Andersen’s lives and works
    they both:

    • preferred talking to writing,
    • preferred theater to books,
    • wrote fairy tales with a lot of emotions, criticism of society, and without happy endings,
    • achieved high popularity in the highest circles, but were essentially unhappy in private life,
    • wrote with a lot of irony, bitterness, and sarcasm in their works,
    • wrote their works for children with their parents in mind,
    • died due to the consequences of their falls a few years before.

    So, share the article online, pin the images, read the fairy tales, and help keep Oscar Wilde’s legacy alive.