Undine by De la Motte Fouque ~~ adapted from the German by W L Courtney
Condition: Good. Leather bound 2nd Impression 1911 Illustrated presentation to Dorothy AR Bruce from Engineering Captain & Mrs FH Lister. Dorothy remains unclear but Engineering Captain Francis H Lister was staffed to Department of the Engineer in Chief of the Staff of the Admiralty Material Departments (Design, Inspection and Production) during World War I. Published by William Heinemann (London) and Doubleday Page & Co (New York) Rackham, Arthur (illustrator). One of the less common of Rackham's works and a beautiful example from the Golden Age of Illustration. It tells of a water-sprite, Undine, who can gain an immortal soul only through marriage to a mortal. The tale is ideally suited to Rackham's art nouveau style, capturing, as he does, both the tale's medieval chivalry and its roots in northern folklore. "It would seem unlikely that one of the most ethereal creatures to capture the imagination of translators and illustrators in the nineteenth-century should have been created by a Prussian officer and inspired by the writings of Paracelsus, the founder of the science of toxicology. Nevertheless, this was the pedigree of Undine, the heroine of Friedrich de la Motte Fouque's romance of the same name, who would inspire operas, ballets and numerous adaptations. Her elusive form can be glimpsed behind Hans Christian Andersen’s ‘The Little Mermaid’ and Dvořák’s Rusalka, a symbol of all that is mysteriously enchanting and ultimately unattainable" [Susan Halstead, Curator Czech and Slovak, British Library]. The legend had great cultural influence inspiring the English writer of the fairy realm, George MacDonald, to declare ‰ of all fairytales I know, I think Undine the most beautiful' .Part of the 15/- series of Rackham's Works
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