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Zastrozzi

Zastrozzi: A Romance is a Gothic novel by Percy Bysshe Shelley first published in 1810 in London by George Wilkie and John Robinson anonymously, with only the initials of the author's name, as "by P.B.S.". The first of Shelley's two early Gothic novellas, the other being St. Irvyne, outlines his atheistic worldview through the villain Zastrozzi[1] and touches upon his earliest thoughts on irresponsible self-indulgence and violent revenge. An 1810 reviewer wrote that the main character "Zastrozzi is one of the most savage and improbable demons that ever issued from a diseased brain".

Zastrozzi
Title page from first edition
AuthorPercy Bysshe Shelley
PublishedGeorge Wilkie and John Robinson, 1810
Pages119 (2002 edition)
ISBN9781843910299
OCLC50614788

Shelley wrote Zastrozzi at the age of seventeen[2] while attending his last year at Eton College,[3] though it was not published until later in 1810 while he was attending University College, Oxford.[4] The novella was Shelley's first published prose work.

In 1986, the novel was released as part of the Oxford World's Classics series by Oxford University. Nicole Berry translated the novel in a French edition in 1999. A German translation by Manfred Pfister was published in 2007.

Major characters edit

  • Pietro Zastrozzi, an outlaw who seeks revenge against Verezzi, his half-brother
  • Verezzi, Il Conte, imprisoned by Zastrozzi
  • Julia, La Marchesa de Strobazzo, intended wife of Verezzi
  • Matilda, the Contessa di Laurentini, seduces Verezzi in plan devised by Zastrozzi
  • Bernardo, servant to Zastrozzi
  • Ugo, servant to Zastrozzi
  • Ferdinand Zeilnitz, servant to Matilda
  • Bianca, servant to Zastrozzi
  • Claudine, old woman in Passau, shelters Verezzi
  • The Monk
  • The Inquisitor
  • The Superior, a judge

Epigraph edit

The epigraph on the title page of the novel is from Paradise Lost (1667) by John Milton, Book II, 368–371:

—That their God
May prove their foe, and with repenting hand
Abolish his own works—This would surpass
Common revenge.
Paradise Lost.

Plot edit

Pietro Zastrozzi, an outlaw, and his two servants, Bernardo and Ugo, disguised in masks, abduct Verezzi from the inn near Munich where he lives and take him to a cavern hideout. Verezzi is locked in a room with an iron door. Chains are placed around his waist and limbs and he is attached to the wall.

Verezzi is able to escape and to flee his abductors, running away to Passau in Lower Bavaria. Claudine, an elderly woman, allows Verezzi to stay at her cottage. Verezzi saves Matilda from jumping off of a bridge. She befriends him. Matilda seeks to persuade Verezzi to marry her. Verezzi, however, is in love with Julia. Matilda provides lodging for Verezzi at her castle or mansion estate near Venice. Her tireless efforts to seduce him are unsuccessful.

Zastrozzi concocts a plan to torture and to torment Verezzi. He spreads a false rumour that Julia has died, exclaiming to Matilda: "Would Julia of Strobazzo's heart was reeking on my dagger!" Verezzi is convinced that Julia is dead. Distraught and emotionally shattered, he then relents and offers to marry Matilda.

The truth is revealed that Julia is still alive. Verezzi is so distressed at his betrayal that he kills himself. Matilda kills Julia in retaliation. Zastrozzi and Matilda are arrested for murder. Matilda repents. Zastrozzi, however, remains defiant before an inquisition. He is tried, convicted, and sentenced to death.

Zastrozzi confesses that he sought revenge against Verezzi because Verezzi's father had deserted his mother, Olivia, who died young, destitute, and in poverty. Zastrozzi blamed his father for the death of his mother, who died before she was thirty. Zastrozzi sought revenge against not only his own father, whom he murdered, but also against "his progeny for ever", his son Verezzi. Verezzi and Zastrozzi had the same father. By murdering his own father, Zastrozzi only killed his corporeal body. By manipulating Verezzi into committing suicide, however, Zastrozzi confessed that his objective was to achieve the eternal damnation of Verezzi's soul based on the proscription of the Christian religion against suicide. Zastrozzi, an outspoken atheist, goes to his death on the rack rejecting and renouncing religion and morality "with a wild convulsive laugh of exulting revenge".[5]

Reception edit

The Gentleman's Magazine, regarded as the first literary magazine, published a favourable review of Zastrozzi in 1810: "A short, but well-told tale of horror, and, if we do not mistake, not from an ordinary pen. The story is so artfully conducted that the reader cannot easily anticipate the denouement." The Critical Review, a conservative journal with a "reactionary aesthetic agenda", on the other hand, called the main character Zastrozzi "one of the most savage and improbable demons that ever issued from a diseased brain." The reviewer dismissed the novella: "We know not when we have felt so much indignation as in the perusal of this execrable production. The author of it cannot be too severely reprobated. Not all his 'scintillated eyes,' his 'battling emotions,' his 'frigorific torpidity of despair'... ought to save him from infamy, and his volume from the flames."[6]

Zastrozzi was republished in 1839 in The Romancist and Novelist's Library: The Best Works of the Best Authors, Volume 1, No. 10, published in London by John Clements.[7]

The novel contains psychological and autobiographical components. Eustace Chesser, in Shelley and Zastrozzi (1965), analysed the novella as a complex psychological thriller: "When I first came across Zastrozzi I was immediately struck by its resemblance to the dream material with which every psychoanalyst is familiar. It was not a story told with the detachment of a professional writer for the entertainment of the public. Whatever the conscious intention of the young Shelley, he was in fact, writing for himself. He was opening the floodgates of the unconscious and allowing its fantasies to pour out unrestrainedly. He was betraying, unwittingly, the emotional problems that agitated his adolescent mind."[8]

Real experiences and actual people were projected on fictional events and characters. Subconscious conflicts are resolved in the writing process. Patrick Bridgwater, in Kafka, Gothic and Fairytale (2003), argued that the novella anticipated Franz Kafka's work in the twentieth century.[9]

Stylistically, the novella reveals several flaws. The most striking flaw is missing chapters, although some critics and editors[6] have argued that Shelley intended this omission as a prank. At about one hundred pages, Zastrozzi is shorter than novel-length, which prevents a more thorough and complete development of the characters. In the middle sections of the novella, moreover, there is not enough variation in the setting.[6] There is a primary focus on Verezzi and Matilda at the exclusion of the other characters and at the expense of the plot development. Shelley also experiments with word selection and structure which tends to slow down the flow of the story.[6]

Adaptations edit

 
2018 DVD release of the 1986 TV mini-series.

In 1977, Canadian playwright George F. Walker wrote a successful play adaptation called "Zastrozzi, The Master of Discipline" based on the Shelley novella. The play was based on a plot summary of Shelley's work, but in and of itself was something "rather different from the novel," in the author's words. The play has repeatedly been revived and was part of the 2009 season of the Stratford Shakespeare Festival.[10] Walker's play retains all the major characters of the Shelley novella, the core plot, and the moral and ethical issues relating to revenge and retribution and atheism. The play has been in continuous production worldwide since it was published in 1977.

In 1986, Channel Four Films in Britain produced a four-part television mini-series of the Shelley novella as Zastrozzi, A Romance, adapted and directed by David G. Hopkins and produced by Lindsey C. Vickers and David Lascelles, shown on Channel Four. The series was also shown on American television on PBS in a version by WNET on the "Channel Crossings" program.[11] Mark McGann played Verezzi, Tilda Swinton played Julia, Hilary Trott played Matilda, Max Wall was the Priest, while Zastrozzi was played by newcomer Geff Francis. The production consisted of four 52-minute episodes. In 1990, Jeremy Isaacs named the dramatisation of Zastrozzi as one of the 10 programmes of which he was most proud during his tenure as Channel 4's chief executive.[12]

The entire four-part miniseries Zastrozzi, A Romance was released on DVD on two discs on 8 October 2018 in the UK.

Similarities to Frankenstein edit

There are similarities between Zastrozzi and Frankenstein in terms of imagery, style, themes, plot structure and character development. Phillip Wade noted how the allusions to John Milton's Paradise Lost are present in both novels:[13]

"Shelley's earlier characterization of Zastrozzi with his 'lofty stature' and 'dignified mein and dauntless composure' clearly owed much to Milton's Satan, as did that of Wolfstein in St. Irvyne, described as having a 'towering and majestic form' and 'expressive and regular features ... pregnant with a look as if woe had beat to earth a mind whose native and unconfined energies had aspired to heaven.' In this second romance Shelley had also pictured a character 'whose proportions, gigantic and deformed, were seemingly blackened by the inerasable traces of the thunderbolts of God.' This kind of description, so patently imitative of Milton's characterization of Satan, is as evident in Frankenstein as it is in Shelley's juvenile romances."

He described a scene in Zastrozzi that is repeated in Frankenstein:

"To give an example: in Zastrozzi there is a scene played in a conventional Alpine setting. A lightning storm, properly terrifying, rattles from crag to crag. And there Matilda: 'Contemplated the tempest which raged around her. The battling elements paused, an uninterrupted silence, deep, dreadful as the silence of the tomb, succeeded. Matilda heard a noise -- footsteps were distinguishable, and looking up, a flash of lightning disclosed to her view the towering form of Zastrozzi. His gigantic figure was again involved in pitchy darkness, as the momentary lightning receded. A peal of crashing thunder again madly rattled over the zenith, and a scintillating flash announced Zastrozzi's approach, as he stood before Matilda.'

He found that the "identical" scene is replicated in Frankenstein:[14]

"The identical scene occurs in Frankenstein, with Victor Frankenstein finding himself in the Alps during an electrical storm: 'I watched the storm, so beautiful yet terrific ... This noble war in the sky elevated my spirits; I clasped my hands, and exclaimed aloud, "William, dear angel! this is thy funeral, this is thy dirge!' As I said these words, I perceived in the gloom a figure ... A flash of lightning illuminated the object, and discovered its shape plainly to me, its gigantic stature ... instantly informed me it was the wretch, the filthy demon, to whom I had given life.'"

He concluded that both books show Shelley's use of Miltonic themes:

"Granted, storm scenes are not unusual in Romantic literature; one need only recall Byron's Childe Harold. But the Miltonic image of a titanic Satan silhouetted by fires in the pitchy blackness of Hell bears the unmistakable mark of Shelley's influence."

Stephen C. Behrendt noted that the plan for getting revenge upon God in Zastrozzi, as referenced in the epigraph, "anticipates the guerilla warfare that the Creature will wage on Victor Frankenstein":

"Speaking to the assembly of fallen angels in Hell, Beelzebub is proposing a means of achieving revenge against God. His plan calls for attacking God by sabotaging the creatures most dear to him, Adam and Eve, so that an angry and regretful God will condemn them to destruction, a scheme that anticipates the guerilla warfare that the Creature will wage on Victor Frankenstein in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein."[15]

Jonathan Glance compared the dream in Frankenstein with that in Zastrozzi: "The final and closest analogue to Victor Frankenstein's dream occurs in Percy Shelley's Zastrozzi (1810)." Matilda's reaction is described: "At one point she imagined that Verezzi, consenting to their union, presented her his hand: that at her touch the flesh crumbled from it, and, a shrieking spectre, he fled from her view".[16]

Shelley's later prose fiction edit

In 1811, Shelley wrote a follow-up novella to Zastrozzi called St. Irvyne; or, The Rosicrucian, A Romance, about an alchemist who sought to impart the secret of immortality, published by John Joseph Stockdale, at 41 Pall Mall, in London, which relied more on the supernatural than did Zastrozzi, which was imbued with Romantic realism.

The principal fictional prose writings of Shelley are Zastrozzi, St. Irvyne, The Assassins, A Fragment of a Romance (1814), an unfinished novella about a morality-driven sect of zealots determined to kill the tyrants and oppressive dictators in the world, The Coliseum[17] (1817), Una Favola (A Fable), written in Italian in 1819, and The Elysian Fields: A Lucianic Fragment (1818), which presents fictional fantasy with political commentary.[18] The chapbooks Wolfstein; or, The Mysterious Bandit (1822) and Wolfstein, the Murderer; or, The Secrets of a Robber's Cave (1830) were condensed versions of St. Irvyne. A True Story was attributed to him from the 1820 Indicator by Leigh Hunt, which is similar to the poem The Sunset (1816). Shelley also wrote the preface and contributed at least 4,000–5,000 words to the Gothic novel Frankenstein (1818) by his wife Mary Shelley.[19] There is a continuing debate about how much he wrote of the novel. In 2008, he was given co-writer or collaborator status in publications of the novel from Random House, Oxford University Press, and University of Chicago Press.[20][21][22][23]

References edit

  1. ^ Percy Bysshe Shelley, Academy of American Poets
  2. ^ Early Shelley: Vulgarisms, Politics, and Fractals, Romantic Circles
  3. ^ Sandy, Mark (7 July 2001). "Percy Bysshe Shelley". The Literary Encyclopedia. The Literary Dictionary Company. Retrieved 8 January 2007.
  4. ^ Percy Bysshe Shelley Biography, Poem of Quotes.com
  5. ^
  6. ^ a b c d Shelley, Percy Bysshe. Zastrozzi: A Romance; St. Irvyne, or, The Rosicrucian: A Romance. Edited, with an Introduction and Notes by Stepehen C. Behrendt. Peterborough, Ontario, Canada: Broadview Press, 2002
  7. ^ The Romancist, and Novelist's Library: The Best Works of the Best Authors, Volume 1, No. 10, 1839, page 145.
  8. ^ Chesser, Eustace. Shelley and Zastrozzi: Self-Revelation of a Neurotic. London: Gregg/Archive, 1965. Eustace Chesser: "The story itself had the incoherence of a dream because that is just what it was – a day dream in which our conscious conflicts were worked out in disguise."
  9. ^ Bridgwater, Patrick. Kafka, Gothic and Fairytale. NY: Rodopi, 2003. Patrick Bridgwater: "Zastrozzi is more interesting than it is generally allowed: ... it comes into its own when considered side by side with Kafka's work."
  10. ^ Stratford Festival. Past Productions. 2009. Zastrozzi.
  11. ^ O'Connor, John J. "TV View: 'Channel Crossings' Brings Sense of Surprise", 2 November 1986, New York Times. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  12. ^ Furse, John. "David Hopkins: Filmmaker with a passion for all things independent," The Guardian, 15 June 2004. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
  13. ^ Wade, Phillip. "Shelley and the Miltonic Element in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein." Milton and the Romantics, 2 (December 1976), 23-25. A scene from Zastrozzi is re-invoked in Frankenstein.
  14. ^ Mary Shelley's Reading. Romantic Circles. She read Zastrozzi in 1814.
  15. ^ Shelley, Percy Bysshe. Zastrozzi and St. Irvyne. Edited by Stephen C. Behrendt. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986, p. 59.
  16. ^ Glance, Jonathan. (1996). "'Beyond the Usual Bounds of Reverie'? Another Look at the Dreams in Frankenstein." Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, 7.4: 30–47.
  17. ^ Binfield, Kevin. "May they be divided never: Ethics, History, and the Rhetorical Imagination in Shelley's The Coliseum," Keats Shelley Journal, 46, 1997, pages 125-147.
  18. ^ Shelley, Percy Bysshe. Shelley's Prose: Or, The Trumpet of a Prophecy. Edited, with an Introduction and Notes by David Lee Clark. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 1954.
  19. ^ Robinson, Charles E. "Percy Bysshe Shelley's Text(s) in Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's Frankenstein", in The Neglected Shelley edited by Alan M. Weinberg and Timothy Webb.London and New York: Routledge, 2015, pp. 117-136.
  20. ^ Rosner, Victoria. "Co-Creating a Monster." The Huffington Post, 29 September 2009. "Random House recently published a new edition of the novel Frankenstein with a surprising change: Mary Shelley is no longer identified as the novel's sole author. Instead, the cover reads 'Mary Shelley (with Percy Shelley).'"
  21. ^ Shelley, Mary, with Percy Shelley. The Original Frankenstein. Edited and with an Introduction by Charles E. Robinson. Oxford: The Bodleian Library, 2008. ISBN 1-85124-396-8 ISBN 978-1851243969
  22. ^ Murray, E.B. "Shelley's Contribution to Mary's Frankenstein," Keats-Shelley Memorial Bulletin, 29 (1978), 50-68.
  23. ^ Rieger, James, edited, with variant readings, an Introduction, and, Notes by. Frankenstein, Or the Modern Prometheus: The 1818 Text. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1982. Rieger concluded that Percy Bysshe Shelley's contributions are significant enough to regard him as a "minor collaborator": "His assistance at every point in the book's manufacture was so extensive that one hardly knows whether to regard him as editor or minor collaborator. ... Percy Bysshe Shelley worked on Frankenstein at every stage, from the earliest drafts through the printer's proofs, with Mary's final 'carte blanche to make what alterations you please.' ... We know that he was more than an editor. Should we grant him the status of minor collaborator?"

Sources edit

  1. Cameron, Kenneth Neill (1950). The Young Shelley: Genesis of a Radical. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 0-374-91255-6.
  2. Lauritsen, John. The Man Who Wrote Frankenstein. Dorchester, MA: Pagan Press, 2007.
  3. de Hart, Scott D. Shelly Unbound: Discovering Frankenstein's True Creator. Port Townsend, WA, U.S.: Feral House, 2013. Also as Shelley Unbound: Uncovering Frankenstein's True Creator.
  4. Chesser, Eustace. Shelley and Zastrozzi: Self-Revelation of a Neurotic. London: Gregg/Archive, 1965. Eustace Chesser: "The story itself had the incoherence of a dream because that is just what it was – a day dream in which our conscious conflicts were worked out in disguise."
  5. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. Zastrozzi. With a Foreword by Germaine Greer. London: Hesperus Press, 2002. Germaine Greer: "The whole novel treats a love that still dare not speak its name, the love of a juvenile for adult women."
  6. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. Zastrozzi: A Romance; St. Irvyne, or, The Rosicrucian: A Romance. Edited, with an Introduction and Notes by Stepehen C. Behrendt. Peterborough, Ont., Canada: Broadview Press, 2002.
  7. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. Zastrozzi and St. Irvyne. (The World's Classics). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986.
  8. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Edited by Harry Buxton Forman, 8 volumes. London: Reeves and Turner, 1880.
  9. Rajan, Tilottama. "Promethean Narrative: Overdetermined Form in Shelley's Gothic Fiction." Shelley: Poet and Legislator of the World, ed. Betty T. Bennett and Stuart Curran (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995), 240–52, 308–9.
  10. Zimansky, Curt R. (1981). "Zastrozzi and The Bravo of Venice: Another Shelley Borrowing." Keats-Shelley Journal, 30, pp. 15–17.
  11. Frosch, Thomas R. Shelley and the Romantic Imagination: A Psychological Study. University of Delaware Press, 2007.
  12. Bridgwater, Patrick. Kafka, Gothic and Fairytale. Rodopi, 2003. Patrick Bridgwater: "Zastrozzi is more interesting than it is generally allowed: ... it comes into its own when considered side by side with Kafka's work."
  13. Hughes, A.M.D. (1912). Shelley's Zastrozzi and St. Irvyne. Modern Language Review.
  14. Hughes, A.M.D. The Nascent Mind of Shelley. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1947.
  15. Seed, David. (1984). "Mystery and Monodrama in Shelley's Zastrozzi." Dutch Quarterly Review, 14.i, pp. 1–17.
  16. Day, Aidan. Romanticism. NY: Routledge, 1996.
  17. Shepherd, Richard Herne, ed. The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley: From the Original Editions. London: Chatto and Windus, 1888.
  18. Crook, Nora and Derek Guiton. Shelley's Venomed Melody. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986.
  19. Bonca, Teddi Chichester. Shelley's Mirrors of Love: Narcissism, Sacrifice, and Sorority. NY: SUNY Press, 1999.
  20. Clark, Timothy. (1993). "Shelley's 'The Coliseum' and the Sublime." Durham University Journal, 225–235.
  21. Duffy, Cian. (2003). "Revolution or Reaction? Shelley's 'Assassins' and the Politics of Necessity." Keats-Shelley Journal, Vol. 52, pp. 77–93.
  22. Duffy, Cian. Shelley and the Revolutionary Sublime. Cambridge University Press, 2005.
  23. Clark, Timothy. Embodying Revolution: The Figure of the Poet in Shelley. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989.
  24. Kiley, Brendan. "Zastrozzi: Percy Shelley’s Murder-Revenge Camp." The Stranger, Seattle, WA, 28 October 2009.
  25. Barker, Jeremy M. "The Balagan's Zastrozzi Delivers Sex & Violence Without a Pesky Purpose." The Sun Break, 12 October 2009.
  26. "Zastrozzi and the Price of Passion." Viva Victoriana, 9 September 2009.
  27. Glance, Jonathan. (1996). "'Beyond the Usual Bounds of Reverie'? Another Look at the Dreams in Frankenstein." Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, 7.4: 30–47. "Mary Shelley's journal indicates she read ... not long before composing Frankenstein ... Zastrozzi in 1814." There are "analogous" dream images and themes in both works: "The final and closest analogue to Victor Frankenstein's dream occurs in Percy Shelley's Zastrozzi (1810)."
  28. Simpkins, Scott. "Encoding Masculinity in the Gothic Novel: Shelley's Zastrozzi." California Semiotic Circle Conference, January 1997, Berkeley, CA.
  29. Neilson, Dylan. "Zastrozzi: Master of Stage". The Gauntlet, 27 January 2005.
  30. Halliburton, David G. (Winter, 1967). "Shelley's 'Gothic' Novels." Keats-Shelley Journal, Vol. 16, pp. 39–49.
  31. "Shelley's Novels." The New York Times, 28 November 1886.
  32. Sigler, David. "The Act of Objectification in P.B. Shelley‟s Zastrozzi." International Conference on Romanticism (ICR), Towson University, Baltimore, MD, October 2007.
  33. Young, A. B. (1906). "Shelley and M.G. Lewis." Modern Language Review, 1: pp. 322–324.
  34. Rich, Frank. "Stage: Serban Directs 'Zastrozzi' at the Public." New York Times, 18 January 1962.
  35. Simpkins, Scott. "Tricksterism in the Gothic Novel." The American Journal of Semiotics, 1 January 1997.
  36. Cottom, Daniel. "Gothic Pathologies: The Text, The Body and The Law." Studies in Romanticism, 22 December 2000.
  37. Hagopian, John V. (1955). "A Psychological Approach to Shelley's Poetry." American Imago, 12: 25–45.
  38. Livingston, Luther S. "First Books Of Some English Authors: Percy Bysshe Shelley." The Bookman, XII, 4, December 1900.
  39. Lovecraft, H. P. "Supernatural Horror in Literature." The Recluse, No. 1 (1927), 23–59.
  40. Wade, Phillip. "Shelley and the Miltonic Element in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein." Milton and the Romantics, 2 (December 1976), 23-25. A scene from Zastrozzi is re-invoked in Frankenstein.

External links edit

  •   Zastrozzi, A Romance public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Online edition of Zastrozzi on the Project Gutenberg website.
  • The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley, Volume 1
  • "A British Adaptation of Shelley's Zastrozzi", New York Times, 16 October 1986
  • Zastrozzi, A Romance (1986) – UK television mini-series on IMDB.

zastrozzi, romance, gothic, novel, percy, bysshe, shelley, first, published, 1810, london, george, wilkie, john, robinson, anonymously, with, only, initials, author, name, first, shelley, early, gothic, novellas, other, being, irvyne, outlines, atheistic, worl. Zastrozzi A Romance is a Gothic novel by Percy Bysshe Shelley first published in 1810 in London by George Wilkie and John Robinson anonymously with only the initials of the author s name as by P B S The first of Shelley s two early Gothic novellas the other being St Irvyne outlines his atheistic worldview through the villain Zastrozzi 1 and touches upon his earliest thoughts on irresponsible self indulgence and violent revenge An 1810 reviewer wrote that the main character Zastrozzi is one of the most savage and improbable demons that ever issued from a diseased brain ZastrozziTitle page from first editionAuthorPercy Bysshe ShelleyPublishedGeorge Wilkie and John Robinson 1810Pages119 2002 edition ISBN9781843910299OCLC50614788 Shelley wrote Zastrozzi at the age of seventeen 2 while attending his last year at Eton College 3 though it was not published until later in 1810 while he was attending University College Oxford 4 The novella was Shelley s first published prose work In 1986 the novel was released as part of the Oxford World s Classics series by Oxford University Nicole Berry translated the novel in a French edition in 1999 A German translation by Manfred Pfister was published in 2007 Contents 1 Major characters 2 Epigraph 3 Plot 4 Reception 5 Adaptations 6 Similarities to Frankenstein 7 Shelley s later prose fiction 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksMajor characters editPietro Zastrozzi an outlaw who seeks revenge against Verezzi his half brother Verezzi Il Conte imprisoned by Zastrozzi Julia La Marchesa de Strobazzo intended wife of Verezzi Matilda the Contessa di Laurentini seduces Verezzi in plan devised by Zastrozzi Bernardo servant to Zastrozzi Ugo servant to Zastrozzi Ferdinand Zeilnitz servant to Matilda Bianca servant to Zastrozzi Claudine old woman in Passau shelters Verezzi The Monk The Inquisitor The Superior a judgeEpigraph editThe epigraph on the title page of the novel is from Paradise Lost 1667 by John Milton Book II 368 371 That their God May prove their foe and with repenting hand Abolish his own works This would surpass Common revenge Paradise Lost Plot editPietro Zastrozzi an outlaw and his two servants Bernardo and Ugo disguised in masks abduct Verezzi from the inn near Munich where he lives and take him to a cavern hideout Verezzi is locked in a room with an iron door Chains are placed around his waist and limbs and he is attached to the wall Verezzi is able to escape and to flee his abductors running away to Passau in Lower Bavaria Claudine an elderly woman allows Verezzi to stay at her cottage Verezzi saves Matilda from jumping off of a bridge She befriends him Matilda seeks to persuade Verezzi to marry her Verezzi however is in love with Julia Matilda provides lodging for Verezzi at her castle or mansion estate near Venice Her tireless efforts to seduce him are unsuccessful Zastrozzi concocts a plan to torture and to torment Verezzi He spreads a false rumour that Julia has died exclaiming to Matilda Would Julia of Strobazzo s heart was reeking on my dagger Verezzi is convinced that Julia is dead Distraught and emotionally shattered he then relents and offers to marry Matilda The truth is revealed that Julia is still alive Verezzi is so distressed at his betrayal that he kills himself Matilda kills Julia in retaliation Zastrozzi and Matilda are arrested for murder Matilda repents Zastrozzi however remains defiant before an inquisition He is tried convicted and sentenced to death Zastrozzi confesses that he sought revenge against Verezzi because Verezzi s father had deserted his mother Olivia who died young destitute and in poverty Zastrozzi blamed his father for the death of his mother who died before she was thirty Zastrozzi sought revenge against not only his own father whom he murdered but also against his progeny for ever his son Verezzi Verezzi and Zastrozzi had the same father By murdering his own father Zastrozzi only killed his corporeal body By manipulating Verezzi into committing suicide however Zastrozzi confessed that his objective was to achieve the eternal damnation of Verezzi s soul based on the proscription of the Christian religion against suicide Zastrozzi an outspoken atheist goes to his death on the rack rejecting and renouncing religion and morality with a wild convulsive laugh of exulting revenge 5 Reception editThe Gentleman s Magazine regarded as the first literary magazine published a favourable review of Zastrozzi in 1810 A short but well told tale of horror and if we do not mistake not from an ordinary pen The story is so artfully conducted that the reader cannot easily anticipate the denouement The Critical Review a conservative journal with a reactionary aesthetic agenda on the other hand called the main character Zastrozzi one of the most savage and improbable demons that ever issued from a diseased brain The reviewer dismissed the novella We know not when we have felt so much indignation as in the perusal of this execrable production The author of it cannot be too severely reprobated Not all his scintillated eyes his battling emotions his frigorific torpidity of despair ought to save him from infamy and his volume from the flames 6 Zastrozzi was republished in 1839 in The Romancist and Novelist s Library The Best Works of the Best Authors Volume 1 No 10 published in London by John Clements 7 The novel contains psychological and autobiographical components Eustace Chesser in Shelley and Zastrozzi 1965 analysed the novella as a complex psychological thriller When I first came across Zastrozzi I was immediately struck by its resemblance to the dream material with which every psychoanalyst is familiar It was not a story told with the detachment of a professional writer for the entertainment of the public Whatever the conscious intention of the young Shelley he was in fact writing for himself He was opening the floodgates of the unconscious and allowing its fantasies to pour out unrestrainedly He was betraying unwittingly the emotional problems that agitated his adolescent mind 8 Real experiences and actual people were projected on fictional events and characters Subconscious conflicts are resolved in the writing process Patrick Bridgwater in Kafka Gothic and Fairytale 2003 argued that the novella anticipated Franz Kafka s work in the twentieth century 9 Stylistically the novella reveals several flaws The most striking flaw is missing chapters although some critics and editors 6 have argued that Shelley intended this omission as a prank At about one hundred pages Zastrozzi is shorter than novel length which prevents a more thorough and complete development of the characters In the middle sections of the novella moreover there is not enough variation in the setting 6 There is a primary focus on Verezzi and Matilda at the exclusion of the other characters and at the expense of the plot development Shelley also experiments with word selection and structure which tends to slow down the flow of the story 6 Adaptations edit nbsp 2018 DVD release of the 1986 TV mini series In 1977 Canadian playwright George F Walker wrote a successful play adaptation called Zastrozzi The Master of Discipline based on the Shelley novella The play was based on a plot summary of Shelley s work but in and of itself was something rather different from the novel in the author s words The play has repeatedly been revived and was part of the 2009 season of the Stratford Shakespeare Festival 10 Walker s play retains all the major characters of the Shelley novella the core plot and the moral and ethical issues relating to revenge and retribution and atheism The play has been in continuous production worldwide since it was published in 1977 In 1986 Channel Four Films in Britain produced a four part television mini series of the Shelley novella as Zastrozzi A Romance adapted and directed by David G Hopkins and produced by Lindsey C Vickers and David Lascelles shown on Channel Four The series was also shown on American television on PBS in a version by WNET on the Channel Crossings program 11 Mark McGann played Verezzi Tilda Swinton played Julia Hilary Trott played Matilda Max Wall was the Priest while Zastrozzi was played by newcomer Geff Francis The production consisted of four 52 minute episodes In 1990 Jeremy Isaacs named the dramatisation of Zastrozzi as one of the 10 programmes of which he was most proud during his tenure as Channel 4 s chief executive 12 The entire four part miniseries Zastrozzi A Romance was released on DVD on two discs on 8 October 2018 in the UK Similarities to Frankenstein editThere are similarities between Zastrozzi and Frankenstein in terms of imagery style themes plot structure and character development Phillip Wade noted how the allusions to John Milton s Paradise Lost are present in both novels 13 Shelley s earlier characterization of Zastrozzi with his lofty stature and dignified mein and dauntless composure clearly owed much to Milton s Satan as did that of Wolfstein in St Irvyne described as having a towering and majestic form and expressive and regular features pregnant with a look as if woe had beat to earth a mind whose native and unconfined energies had aspired to heaven In this second romance Shelley had also pictured a character whose proportions gigantic and deformed were seemingly blackened by the inerasable traces of the thunderbolts of God This kind of description so patently imitative of Milton s characterization of Satan is as evident in Frankenstein as it is in Shelley s juvenile romances He described a scene in Zastrozzi that is repeated in Frankenstein To give an example in Zastrozzi there is a scene played in a conventional Alpine setting A lightning storm properly terrifying rattles from crag to crag And there Matilda Contemplated the tempest which raged around her The battling elements paused an uninterrupted silence deep dreadful as the silence of the tomb succeeded Matilda heard a noise footsteps were distinguishable and looking up a flash of lightning disclosed to her view the towering form of Zastrozzi His gigantic figure was again involved in pitchy darkness as the momentary lightning receded A peal of crashing thunder again madly rattled over the zenith and a scintillating flash announced Zastrozzi s approach as he stood before Matilda He found that the identical scene is replicated in Frankenstein 14 The identical scene occurs in Frankenstein with Victor Frankenstein finding himself in the Alps during an electrical storm I watched the storm so beautiful yet terrific This noble war in the sky elevated my spirits I clasped my hands and exclaimed aloud William dear angel this is thy funeral this is thy dirge As I said these words I perceived in the gloom a figure A flash of lightning illuminated the object and discovered its shape plainly to me its gigantic stature instantly informed me it was the wretch the filthy demon to whom I had given life He concluded that both books show Shelley s use of Miltonic themes Granted storm scenes are not unusual in Romantic literature one need only recall Byron s Childe Harold But the Miltonic image of a titanic Satan silhouetted by fires in the pitchy blackness of Hell bears the unmistakable mark of Shelley s influence Stephen C Behrendt noted that the plan for getting revenge upon God in Zastrozzi as referenced in the epigraph anticipates the guerilla warfare that the Creature will wage on Victor Frankenstein Speaking to the assembly of fallen angels in Hell Beelzebub is proposing a means of achieving revenge against God His plan calls for attacking God by sabotaging the creatures most dear to him Adam and Eve so that an angry and regretful God will condemn them to destruction a scheme that anticipates the guerilla warfare that the Creature will wage on Victor Frankenstein in Mary Shelley s Frankenstein 15 Jonathan Glance compared the dream in Frankenstein with that in Zastrozzi The final and closest analogue to Victor Frankenstein s dream occurs in Percy Shelley s Zastrozzi 1810 Matilda s reaction is described At one point she imagined that Verezzi consenting to their union presented her his hand that at her touch the flesh crumbled from it and a shrieking spectre he fled from her view 16 Shelley s later prose fiction editIn 1811 Shelley wrote a follow up novella to Zastrozzi called St Irvyne or The Rosicrucian A Romance about an alchemist who sought to impart the secret of immortality published by John Joseph Stockdale at 41 Pall Mall in London which relied more on the supernatural than did Zastrozzi which was imbued with Romantic realism The principal fictional prose writings of Shelley are Zastrozzi St Irvyne The Assassins A Fragment of a Romance 1814 an unfinished novella about a morality driven sect of zealots determined to kill the tyrants and oppressive dictators in the world The Coliseum 17 1817 Una Favola A Fable written in Italian in 1819 and The Elysian Fields A Lucianic Fragment 1818 which presents fictional fantasy with political commentary 18 The chapbooks Wolfstein or The Mysterious Bandit 1822 and Wolfstein the Murderer or The Secrets of a Robber s Cave 1830 were condensed versions of St Irvyne A True Story was attributed to him from the 1820 Indicator by Leigh Hunt which is similar to the poem The Sunset 1816 Shelley also wrote the preface and contributed at least 4 000 5 000 words to the Gothic novel Frankenstein 1818 by his wife Mary Shelley 19 There is a continuing debate about how much he wrote of the novel In 2008 he was given co writer or collaborator status in publications of the novel from Random House Oxford University Press and University of Chicago Press 20 21 22 23 References edit Percy Bysshe Shelley Academy of American Poets Early Shelley Vulgarisms Politics and Fractals Romantic Circles Sandy Mark 7 July 2001 Percy Bysshe Shelley The Literary Encyclopedia The Literary Dictionary Company Retrieved 8 January 2007 Percy Bysshe Shelley Biography Poem of Quotes com Zastrozzi by Percy Bysshe Shelley The University of Adelaide Australia a b c d Shelley Percy Bysshe Zastrozzi A Romance St Irvyne or The Rosicrucian A Romance Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Stepehen C Behrendt Peterborough Ontario Canada Broadview Press 2002 The Romancist and Novelist s Library The Best Works of the Best Authors Volume 1 No 10 1839 page 145 Chesser Eustace Shelley and Zastrozzi Self Revelation of a Neurotic London Gregg Archive 1965 Eustace Chesser The story itself had the incoherence of a dream because that is just what it was a day dream in which our conscious conflicts were worked out in disguise Bridgwater Patrick Kafka Gothic and Fairytale NY Rodopi 2003 Patrick Bridgwater Zastrozzi is more interesting than it is generally allowed it comes into its own when considered side by side with Kafka s work Stratford Festival Past Productions 2009 Zastrozzi O Connor John J TV View Channel Crossings Brings Sense of Surprise 2 November 1986 New York Times Retrieved 4 April 2018 Furse John David Hopkins Filmmaker with a passion for all things independent The Guardian 15 June 2004 Retrieved 4 June 2017 Wade Phillip Shelley and the Miltonic Element in Mary Shelley s Frankenstein Milton and the Romantics 2 December 1976 23 25 A scene from Zastrozzi is re invoked in Frankenstein Mary Shelley s Reading Romantic Circles She read Zastrozzi in 1814 Shelley Percy Bysshe Zastrozzi and St Irvyne Edited by Stephen C Behrendt Oxford Oxford University Press 1986 p 59 Glance Jonathan 1996 Beyond the Usual Bounds of Reverie Another Look at the Dreams in Frankenstein Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 7 4 30 47 Binfield Kevin May they be divided never Ethics History and the Rhetorical Imagination in Shelley s The Coliseum Keats Shelley Journal 46 1997 pages 125 147 Shelley Percy Bysshe Shelley s Prose Or The Trumpet of a Prophecy Edited with an Introduction and Notes by David Lee Clark Albuquerque NM University of New Mexico Press 1954 Robinson Charles E Percy Bysshe Shelley s Text s in Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley s Frankenstein in The Neglected Shelley edited by Alan M Weinberg and Timothy Webb London and New York Routledge 2015 pp 117 136 Rosner Victoria Co Creating a Monster The Huffington Post 29 September 2009 Random House recently published a new edition of the novel Frankenstein with a surprising change Mary Shelley is no longer identified as the novel s sole author Instead the cover reads Mary Shelley with Percy Shelley Shelley Mary with Percy Shelley The Original Frankenstein Edited and with an Introduction by Charles E Robinson Oxford The Bodleian Library 2008 ISBN 1 85124 396 8 ISBN 978 1851243969 Murray E B Shelley s Contribution to Mary s Frankenstein Keats Shelley Memorial Bulletin 29 1978 50 68 Rieger James edited with variant readings an Introduction and Notes by Frankenstein Or the Modern Prometheus The 1818 Text Chicago and London University of Chicago Press 1982 Rieger concluded that Percy Bysshe Shelley s contributions are significant enough to regard him as a minor collaborator His assistance at every point in the book s manufacture was so extensive that one hardly knows whether to regard him as editor or minor collaborator Percy Bysshe Shelley worked on Frankenstein at every stage from the earliest drafts through the printer s proofs with Mary s final carte blanche to make what alterations you please We know that he was more than an editor Should we grant him the status of minor collaborator Sources editCameron Kenneth Neill 1950 The Young Shelley Genesis of a Radical New York Macmillan ISBN 0 374 91255 6 Lauritsen John The Man Who Wrote Frankenstein Dorchester MA Pagan Press 2007 de Hart Scott D Shelly Unbound Discovering Frankenstein s True Creator Port Townsend WA U S Feral House 2013 Also as Shelley Unbound Uncovering Frankenstein s True Creator Chesser Eustace Shelley and Zastrozzi Self Revelation of a Neurotic London Gregg Archive 1965 Eustace Chesser The story itself had the incoherence of a dream because that is just what it was a day dream in which our conscious conflicts were worked out in disguise Shelley Percy Bysshe Zastrozzi With a Foreword by Germaine Greer London Hesperus Press 2002 Germaine Greer The whole novel treats a love that still dare not speak its name the love of a juvenile for adult women Shelley Percy Bysshe Zastrozzi A Romance St Irvyne or The Rosicrucian A Romance Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Stepehen C Behrendt Peterborough Ont Canada Broadview Press 2002 Shelley Percy Bysshe Zastrozzi and St Irvyne The World s Classics Oxford Oxford University Press 1986 Shelley Percy Bysshe The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley Edited by Harry Buxton Forman 8 volumes London Reeves and Turner 1880 Rajan Tilottama Promethean Narrative Overdetermined Form in Shelley s Gothic Fiction Shelley Poet and Legislator of the World ed Betty T Bennett and Stuart Curran Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1995 240 52 308 9 Zimansky Curt R 1981 Zastrozzi and The Bravo of Venice Another Shelley Borrowing Keats Shelley Journal 30 pp 15 17 Frosch Thomas R Shelley and the Romantic Imagination A Psychological Study University of Delaware Press 2007 Bridgwater Patrick Kafka Gothic and Fairytale Rodopi 2003 Patrick Bridgwater Zastrozzi is more interesting than it is generally allowed it comes into its own when considered side by side with Kafka s work Hughes A M D 1912 Shelley s Zastrozzi and St Irvyne Modern Language Review Hughes A M D The Nascent Mind of Shelley Oxford Clarendon Press 1947 Seed David 1984 Mystery and Monodrama in Shelley s Zastrozzi Dutch Quarterly Review 14 i pp 1 17 Day Aidan Romanticism NY Routledge 1996 Shepherd Richard Herne ed The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley From the Original Editions London Chatto and Windus 1888 Crook Nora and Derek Guiton Shelley s Venomed Melody Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1986 Bonca Teddi Chichester Shelley s Mirrors of Love Narcissism Sacrifice and Sorority NY SUNY Press 1999 Clark Timothy 1993 Shelley s The Coliseum and the Sublime Durham University Journal 225 235 Duffy Cian 2003 Revolution or Reaction Shelley s Assassins and the Politics of Necessity Keats Shelley Journal Vol 52 pp 77 93 Duffy Cian Shelley and the Revolutionary Sublime Cambridge University Press 2005 Clark Timothy Embodying Revolution The Figure of the Poet in Shelley Oxford Oxford University Press 1989 Kiley Brendan Zastrozzi Percy Shelley s Murder Revenge Camp The Stranger Seattle WA 28 October 2009 Barker Jeremy M The Balagan s Zastrozzi Delivers Sex amp Violence Without a Pesky Purpose The Sun Break 12 October 2009 Zastrozzi and the Price of Passion Viva Victoriana 9 September 2009 Glance Jonathan 1996 Beyond the Usual Bounds of Reverie Another Look at the Dreams in Frankenstein Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 7 4 30 47 Mary Shelley s journal indicates she read not long before composing Frankenstein Zastrozzi in 1814 There are analogous dream images and themes in both works The final and closest analogue to Victor Frankenstein s dream occurs in Percy Shelley s Zastrozzi 1810 Simpkins Scott Encoding Masculinity in the Gothic Novel Shelley s Zastrozzi California Semiotic Circle Conference January 1997 Berkeley CA Neilson Dylan Zastrozzi Master of Stage The Gauntlet 27 January 2005 Halliburton David G Winter 1967 Shelley s Gothic Novels Keats Shelley Journal Vol 16 pp 39 49 Shelley s Novels The New York Times 28 November 1886 Sigler David The Act of Objectification in P B Shelley s Zastrozzi International Conference on Romanticism ICR Towson University Baltimore MD October 2007 Young A B 1906 Shelley and M G Lewis Modern Language Review 1 pp 322 324 Rich Frank Stage Serban Directs Zastrozzi at the Public New York Times 18 January 1962 Simpkins Scott Tricksterism in the Gothic Novel The American Journal of Semiotics 1 January 1997 Cottom Daniel Gothic Pathologies The Text The Body and The Law Studies in Romanticism 22 December 2000 Hagopian John V 1955 A Psychological Approach to Shelley s Poetry American Imago 12 25 45 Livingston Luther S First Books Of Some English Authors Percy Bysshe Shelley The Bookman XII 4 December 1900 Lovecraft H P Supernatural Horror in Literature The Recluse No 1 1927 23 59 Wade Phillip Shelley and the Miltonic Element in Mary Shelley s Frankenstein Milton and the Romantics 2 December 1976 23 25 A scene from Zastrozzi is re invoked in Frankenstein External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Zastrozzi nbsp Zastrozzi A Romance public domain audiobook at LibriVox Online edition of Zastrozzi on the Project Gutenberg website The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume 1 A British Adaptation of Shelley s Zastrozzi New York Times 16 October 1986 Zastrozzi A Romance 1986 UK television mini series on IMDB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zastrozzi amp oldid 1195277031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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