The Centaur, by Algernon Blackwood, 510 Classics
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The Centaur, by Algernon Blackwood, 510 Classics
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Algernon Henry Blackwood (1869-1951) was an English writer of tales of the supernatural. In his late thirties, Blackwood started to write horror stories. He was very successful, writing ten books of short stories and appearing on both radio and television to tell them. He also wrote fourteen novels and a number of plays, most of which were produced but not published. He was an avid lover of nature, and many of his stories reflect this. Although Blackwood wrote a number of horror stories, his most typical work seeks less to frighten than to induce a sense of awe. Good examples are the novels The Centaur (1911), which climaxes with a traveller's sight of a herd of the mythical creatures; and Julius LeVallon (1916) and its sequel The Bright Messenger (1921), which deal with reincarnation and the possibility of a new, mystical evolution in human consciousness. His best stories, such as those collected in the book Incredible Adventures (1914), are masterpieces of atmosphere, construction and suggestion.
The Centaur, by Algernon Blackwood, 510 Classics- Published on: 2015-10-15
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 9.00" h x .73" w x 6.00" l,
- Binding: Paperback
- 324 pages
About the Author Algernon Blackwood (1869-1951) was born into a well-to-do Kentish family. His parents, converts to a Calvinistic sect, led an austere life, ill-suited to their dreamy and sensitive son. During adolescence, he became fascinated by hypnotism and the supernatural and, on leaving university, studied Hindu philosophy and occultism. Later, he was to draw on these beliefs and experiences in his writing. Sent away to Canada at the age of twenty, his attempts at making a living were wholly unsuccessful and shortly after his return to England, he began to write. The Empty House and Other Ghost Stories, published in 1906, was followed by a series of psychic detective stories, featuring John Silence, 'physician extraordinary'. His reputation as one of the greatest exponents of supernatural fiction began to grow. Chiefly known for his ghost stories, Blackwood wrote in many different forms within the genre. His most personal works, however, are his 'mystical' novels, for example The Centaur, where he explores man's empathy with the forces of the universe. Blackwood also wrote children's fiction. A Prisoner in Fairyland was adapted into the play (later the musical), Starlight Express. Later in life, Blackwood turned to writing radio plays, and in 1947 he began a new career on BBC TV telling ghost stories. He received a knighthood in 1949.
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Most helpful customer reviews
25 of 35 people found the following review helpful. By Far The Biggest Influence In My Life Was...Nature By The Wingchair Critic Algernon Blackwood, the great British master of the short horror story and member of the Order of the Golden Dawn, published 'The Centaur' to great acclaim in 1911.Unlike the American horror writer H. P. Lovecraft, who championed Blackwood's work throughout his lifetime, Blackwood loved, admired, and respected nature: Blackwood was a romantic who enjoyed a mystical faith and philosophy concerning the natural world, a faith which is reflected in almost all of his stories.In his tales, trees and men fall in love with one another, fairies happily guide, misguide, or torment intrusive travelers, and other-dimensional creatures storm earth through gaps in reality or plunge down on hunters from the heavens. Even Blackwood's ghost stories typically suggest some mysterious law connecting the return of the dead with natural but little understood processes. Few writers other than Arthur Machen could portray 'daimonic reality' as well and as believably as Blackwood. But while The Centaur broadly addresses the supernatural, it is in no way a horror tale.When traveler O'Malley encounters an unusually robust, handsome, and virile man and his equally attractive young son while on a cruise, he becomes strangely enraptured, and is thrilled to learn that the two will be sharing his cabin for the duration of the voyage.O'Malley also notices that when observing the two men from a distance, they seem to oddly amalgamate into one larger being, or, at other times, an immense third presence seems to accompany them. Is it a trick of the light? Is O'Malley a lunatic, hallucinating, or experiencing repressed homosexual desire without realization?Since both father and son rarely speak and communicate largely with their charismatic smiles, pie-eyed O'Malley makes of them what he can and takes them in with his eyes a little more than seems respectable for a presumably heterosexual male: at night, O'Malley goes so far as to pull back the curtains and stare at their undressed bodies while they sleep.In one loaded episode, the father awakens to find O'Malley bending over him and devouring him with his eyes; unperturbed, the father sits up, points to the son, and together they stare at the son's naked chest beautifully rising and falling as the morning light comes up.Since everything suggests that O'Malley is erotically attracted to both men, and the father in some way enamored with his son, their cabin seems more like a blissful, somewhat humid den of unthwarted pedophilia and incest than the place of revelation and miracles Blackwood would like to have the reader believe it is.Also along for the voyage is the learned Dr. Stahl, who inexplicably has a great understanding of the two strangers and what they threaten.Blackwood allows himself almost a hundred labored and repetitive pages attempting to convey to the reader the secret Dr. Stahl attempts to put into words for O'Malley. The father and the son, as it happens, are not men in the sense that Stahl and O'Malley are men, but are earth spirits, emanations of mother nature, and, as such, two of the last beings of their kind in existence.Blackwood never finds the words to define and describe the two men's metaphysical nature clearly, so Dr. Stahl and O'Malley repeat the same precious discussion over and over, merely approaching it from a slightly different angle each time.As a struggling, often starving writer, Blackwood was frequently paid by the word, a fact that hasn't been forgotten by his critics.Many of his stories were indeed overwritten, though overwriting was something Blackwood raised almost to an art in many of his short pieces. Unfortunately, his novels, from 'A Prisoner In Fairyland' to 'The Centaur,' were another matter.Had 'The Centaur' been a short story of twenty pages, Blackwood could have conveyed exactly the same information, if, as written, to an equally unconvincing effect. In trying to outline his beliefs about the spiritual aspects of nature, Blackwood abandoned structure entirely and seemed to forget that he was attempting a dramatic narrative. Readers can obtain a much better outline of Blackwood's pantheistic philosophy by reading his short stories than can ever be obtained by reading 'The Centaur,' which is ultimately nothing but a vague, under confident, and winded New Age tract.Blackwood's short masterpiece, "May Day Eve," concerns a hardheaded traveler's uncomfortable but apparently necessary encounter with the fairies, beautifully expressing everything that 'The Centaur' attempts and fails to say.When the narrator, having suffered his illuminating but disorienting punishment in the wild, finally arrives at the friendly professor's door, the knowing professor shelters him briefly before tempting him with the knowledge that they have several hours of darkness yet to experience the miracles of the fairy world. Armed with the security his companion provides and a sudden new and courageous attitude about the possibilities inherent in reality, the narrator accepts the professor's invitation, and they disappear together into the night. He says, "And as we began to climb the hill together in silence I saw that the stars were clear overhead and that there was no mist, that the trees stood motionless without wind, and that beyond us on the summit of the hills there were lights dancing to and for, appearing and disappearing like the reflections of stars in water."
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Valued By Pluto in Capricorn The Centaur is for mystic pagan dreamers. It is for lovers of old things. It is for anyone drawn to centaurs, or anyone who haspretended to be one.The Centaur is for anyone who has had an interest in Ancient Greece, and anyone who feels something for that area of the world alittle further east.The way it is written, the book would never be published nowadays. It moves slowly, which makes it frustrating to try and read,but the effort is worth it.A series of revelations builds toward the end.The interactions of the characters, the situations and sensations are from the Otherworld.How did Algernon Blackwood know this stuff? Where did he get it?I am amazed.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. back to Eden By F. Daniel Algernon Blackwood's short stories are great. His novels not so much. He tried so hard to make the reader understand some metaphysical truth that generally eludes me. This novel's great revelation is pretty easy: back to simplicity & we'll make it back (or near) to the Garden of Eden. Blackwood's unveiling of this truth is anything but simple--more like repetitive, awkwardly circular reasoning, even condescending. The novel has some lovely vignettes that are worth wading through the muck: various descriptions of the sea; watching the boy sleep at the end of C. 7; C. 15; "On a certain spring morning I went out to walk," in C. 17; & so on, to the last scene of fog.
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