Love and Life: An Old Story in Eighteenth Century Costume
Transcriber’s note: There are numerous examples throughout this text of words appearing in alternate spellings: madame/madam, practise/ practice, Ladyship/ladyship, &c. We can only wonder what the publisher had in mind. I have left them unchanged.—D.L.
The first edition of this tale was put forth without explaining the old fable on which it was founded—a fable recurring again and again in fairy myths, though not traceable in the classic world till a very late period, when it appeared among the tales of Apuleius, of the province of Africa, sometimes called the earliest novelist. There are, however, fragments of the same story in the popular tales of all countries, so that it is probable that Apuleius availed himself of an early form of one of these. They are to be found from India to Scandinavia, adapted to the manners and fancy of every country in turn, Beauty and the Beast and the Black Bull of Norroway are the most familiar forms of the tale, and it seemed to me one of those legends of such universal property that it was quite fair to put it into 18th century English costume.
Some have seen in it a remnant of the custom of some barbarous tribes, that the wife should not behold her husband for a year after marriage, and to this the Indian versions lend themselves; but Apuleius himself either found it, or adapted it to the idea of the Soul (the Life) awakened by Love, grasping too soon and impatiently, then losing it, and, unable to rest, struggling on through severe toils and labours till her hopes are crowned even at the gates of death. Psyche, the soul or life, whose emblem is the butterfly, thus even in heathen philosophy strained towards the higher Love, just glimpsed at for a while.
Christians gave a higher meaning to the fable, and saw in it the Soul, or the Church, to whom her Bridegroom has been for a while made known, striving after Him through many trials, to be made one with Him after passing through Death. The Spanish poet Calderon made it the theme of two sacred dramas, in which the lesson of Faith, not Sight, was taught, with special reference to the Holy Eucharist.
Charlotte M. Yonge
LOVE AND LIFE
An Old Story in Eighteenth Century Costume
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
LOVE AND LIFE.
CHAPTER I. A SYLLABUB PARTY.
CHAPTER II. THE HOUSE OF DELAVIE.
CHAPTER III. AMONG THE COWSLIPS.
CHAPTER IV. MY LADY’S MISSIVE.
CHAPTER V. THE SUMMONS.
CHAPTER VI. DISAPPOINTED LOVE.
CHAPTER VII. ALL ALONE.
CHAPTER VIII. THE ENCHANTED CASTLE.
CHAPTER IX. THE TRIAD.
CHAPTER X. THE DARK CHAMBER.
CHAPTER XI. A VOICE FROM THE GRAVE.
CHAPTER XII. THE SHAFTS OF PHOEBE.
CHAPTER XIII. THE FLUTTER OF HIS WINGS.
CHAPTER XIV. THE CANON OF WINDSOR.
CHAPTER XV. THE QUEEN OF BEAUTY.
CHAPTER XVI. AUGURIES.
CHAPTER XVII. THE VICTIM DEMANDED.
CHAPTER XVIII. THE PROPOSAL.
CHAPTER XIX. WOOING IN THE DARK.
CHAPTER XX. THE MUFFLED BRIDEGROOM.
CHAPTER XXI. THE SISTERS’ MEETING.
CHAPTER XXII. A FATAL SPARK.
CHAPTER XXIII. WRATH AND DESOLATION.
CHAPTER XXIV. THE WANDERER.
CHAPTER XXV. VANISHED.
CHAPTER XXVI. THE TRACES.
CHAPTER XXVII. CYTHEREA’S BOWER.
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE ROUT.
CHAPTER XXIX. A BLACK BLONDEL.
CHAPTER XXX. THE FIRST TASK.
CHAPTER XXXI. THE SECOND TASK.
CHAPTER XXXII. LIONS.
CHAPTER XXXIII. THE COSMETIC.
CHAPTER XXXIV. DOWN THE RIVER.
CHAPTER XXXV. THE RETURN.
CHAPTER XXXVI. WAKING.
CHAPTER XXXVII. MAKING THE BEST OF IT.