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On the day of his wedding, young Conrad is crushed to death by an monstrous helmet in the courtyard of his ancestral home. Determined to defy the mysterious prophecy foretelling the end of his line, Manfred, the capricious, tyrannical lord of the castle of Otranto, resolves to marry Conrad's betrothed himself, casting aside law, loyalty, and even his own wife. Yet as Manfred pursues his desperate ambitions, the castle becomes a stage for ominous apparitions, family secrets, and deadly betrayals, as the sins of the past erupt into the present. First published anonymously in 1764, claiming to be…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
On the day of his wedding, young Conrad is crushed to death by an monstrous helmet in the courtyard of his ancestral home. Determined to defy the mysterious prophecy foretelling the end of his line, Manfred, the capricious, tyrannical lord of the castle of Otranto, resolves to marry Conrad's betrothed himself, casting aside law, loyalty, and even his own wife. Yet as Manfred pursues his desperate ambitions, the castle becomes a stage for ominous apparitions, family secrets, and deadly betrayals, as the sins of the past erupt into the present. First published anonymously in 1764, claiming to be a translation of a 16th-century Italian manuscript, itself recounting a more ancient story, The Castle of Otranto is considered the first true Gothic novel. It unsettles as it delights, blending the grotesque with the sublime and the eerie with the absurd. Within its pages, readers encounter dank catacombs, portraits that step from their frames, a sanctimonious friar, and ghostly spectres gliding through moonlit halls. Yet beyond the vivid trappings of mediaeval chivalry and ominous atmosphere, Walpole infuses a sly playfulness into the narrative, bordering on self-parody, revealing his wry commentary on the literary conventions as well as his satire of the rigid, genteel norms and pretensions of the age.
Autorenporträt
Horace Walpole (1717-1797), the youngest scion of Britain's first Prime Minister, Sir Robert Walpole, was educated at Eton College and later King's College, Cambridge, where he formed a lifelong friendship with poet Thomas Gray. In his youth he embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe, which inflamed his ardour for art, history, and mediaeval architecture. The transformation of his home, Strawberry Hill, into a whimsical Gothic mansion replete with curiosities was the consummation of his antiquarian passions. Though oftentimes withdrawing from public life, he was a vigilant observer and remained engaged with the vibrant social and intellectual circles of his time, including the likes of Horace Mann. His vast epistolary legacy thus provides a vivid tableau of Georgian society, revealing his trenchant wit, caustic humour, and political acuity.