Edward Plunkett, known in
society and to his vast reading audience as Lord Dunsany, was one of the
masters of fantasy, producing more than sixty books in his lifetime at high
speed, his publishers generally content to print the first drafts that he sent
them exactly as they came in. He was an Anglo-Irish gentleman of the old
school, a hunter, the chess and pistol-shooting champion of
Ireland.But while he rode his fields, his mind was forever beyond the fields we
know, in Elfland or in a Carcassonne of the imaginal realm, where a witch
queen, terrible in her beauty
swims in a marble bath
through whose deeps a river tumbles, or lies all morning on the edge of it to
dry slowly in the sun, and watches the heaving river trouble the deeps of the
bath. It flows through the caverns of earth for further than she knows and
coming to light in the witch’s bath goes down through the earth again to its
own peculiar sea….When there is blood in the bath she knows there is war in the mountains.
Somewhere between here
and Elfland, Lord Dunsany came by an unhappy body engaged in a painful dialogue
with its soul. “The Unhappy Body” (his title for the tale) is tired; all it
wants is to sleep. The soul will not allow it to rest because it has an urgent
assignment for this body. Everywhere, the soul explains,
People’s dreams are
wandering afield, they pass the seas and mountains of faery, threading the
intricate passes led by their souls; they come to golden temples a-ring with a
thousand bells; they pass up steep streets lit by paper lanterns, where the
doors are green and small; they know their way to witches’ chambers and castles
of enchantment; they know the spell that brings them to the causeway along the
ivory mountains – on one side looking downward they behold the fields of their
youth and on the other lie the radiant plains of the future
.
But people forget their
dreams. From their dream awakenings, they go back to sleep, forgetting the
realms of magic and enchantment, and the causeway from which they can see into
past and future. The soul’s urgent assignment for the body is: “Arise and write
down what the people dream.”
The
body asks what reward it will receive for doing this. When told there is no
reward, the body declares, “Then I shall sleep.” But the soul rouses the body
with a song, and wearily the body takes up a pen and starts recording what the
soul wants it to preserve: a vision of dreamers rising above the roar and
distraction of the city to a shimmering mountain where they board the “galleons
of dreams” and sail through the skies in their chosen directions. The soul goes
on telling the dreams of all these travelers. But the body is tired and
mutinous; it cries out for sleep.
“You shall
have centuries of sleep,” the soul tells it, “but you must not sleep, for I
have seen deep meadows with purple flowers flaming tall and strange above the
brilliant grass, and herds of pure while unicorns…I will sing that song to you,
and you shall write it down.”
The body protests, Give
me one night’s rest.
Go on and
rest, the soul at last responds, in disgust. “I am tired of you. I am off.”
The soul
flies away. The undertakers come and lay the body in the earth. The wraiths of
the dead come at midnight to congratulate the body on its happy estate. “Now I
can rest,” says the body.
Ursula
LeGuin once said that Lord Dunsany is the worst temptation for the novice writer
of fantasy, and it must be conceded that his prose can be overly rich and
faery-infused. Yet A Dreamer’s Tales, where you will find these two
stories, is a book for the ages, and reminds us that in fantasy we can
sometimes the truth of our condition more clearly than in the roar of the city.
Quotations from Lord Dunsany, A
Dreamer’s Tales [1910] reprint: Holicong, PA: Wildside Press, 2002
Illustration: "Romance Comes Down Out of Hilly Woodland" by Sidney Sime for A Dreamer's Tales
1 comment:
Lord Dunsany was one of my love affairs when I was a young reader, and I have now been reminded of him twice in one week. He built a chamber in my young mind that will always be there; I should probably call that place Elfland. This particular story is apt in these days where the body can so easily be narcotized to sleep in the technological hive mind of the Matrix, refusing the call to the soul’s high adventure.
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