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The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter

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On arriving at a rural monastery, the monk Ambrosius meets a young girl, Benedicta. She is shunned by the local community for being the daughter of the local hangman, but Ambrosius is drawn into a dangerous sympathy with her, and in defiance of the community and his superiors, he starts spending time alone with her. But when her virtue is corrupted by an impetuous young man, the stage is set for a battle between heart, mind, body, spirit, the sins of the past, and redemption. Allegedly a rewriting from a lost German original, Ambrose Bierce's 1892 novel reads as a seamless, almost folktale-like masterpiece.

105 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1892

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806 people want to read

About the author

Ambrose Bierce

2,409 books1,296 followers
died perhaps 1914

Caustic wit and a strong sense of horror mark works, including In the Midst of Life (1891-1892) and The Devil's Dictionary (1906), of American writer Ambrose Gwinett Bierce.

People today best know this editorialist, journalist, and fabulist for his short story, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and his lexicon.

The informative sardonic view of human nature alongside his vehemence as a critic with his motto, "nothing matters," earned him the nickname "Bitter Bierce."

People knew Bierce despite his reputation as a searing critic, however, to encourage younger poet George Sterling and fiction author W.C. Morrow.

Bierce employed a distinctive style especially in his stories. This style often embraces an abrupt beginning, dark imagery, vague references to time, limited descriptions, the theme of war, and impossible events.

Bierce disappeared in December 1913 at the age of 71 years. People think that he traveled to Mexico to gain a firsthand perspective on ongoing revolution of that country.

Theories abound on a mystery, ultimate fate of Bierce. He in one of his final letters stated: "Good-bye. If you hear of my being stood up against a Mexican stone wall and shot to rags, please know that I think it is a pretty good way to depart this life. It beats old age, disease, or falling down the cellar stairs. To be a Gringo in Mexico--ah, that is euthanasia!"

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5 stars
216 (19%)
4 stars
457 (41%)
3 stars
338 (30%)
2 stars
71 (6%)
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12 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 148 reviews
Profile Image for Michael.
650 reviews134 followers
August 12, 2022
I thought I was picking up a story of forbidden passion and sundered lovers, but instead got a portrait of religious hypocrisy and, intensely depicted, narcissitic obsession and objectification of the "loved" person as a recepticle for the emotions of the protagonist. It's clear that Bierce has no sympathy for the actions of the main character, the monk Ambrosius, but neither is he portrayed as a stock, moustache-twirling gothic villain. In presenting the narrative from the single point of view of Ambrosius's diary, Bierce ran the risk of seeming to empathise with or justify the monk's self-absorbed fantasies, but he's too good a writer for that, thankfully.

How much of this sentiment is in the original German-language story by Richard Voss, which Bierce co-translated, I don't know, but in his introduction he states that he added much material of his own, as well as translating Voss.

Gothic conventions he did use include: perverse monks; febrile religious passions; peasant village life; wild, rugged mountain landscapes; the dead, and intimations of mortality and doom. All to good effect.
Profile Image for Katherine.
512 reviews3 followers
August 13, 2020
Realmente está nouvelle, yo diría que, es de apreciación, porque posee un ritmo pausado, pero no lento o aburrido, las descripciones que el autor crea de la época en la que está situada son inmejorables, logra desarrollar la sociedad y sus habitantes formidablemente.

Se va desarrollando una historia en la que las mejores intenciones son sus características principales, encontraremos un amor prohibido, un monje franciscano que recorre nuevos escenarios que lo asombran e intrigan, nuevas personas con las que vienen nuevas percepciones e incertidumbres de lo que es, de lo que siente y de lo que debería ser.

La obra está narrada en primera persona por el Monje Ambrosio la cual es, sin duda, atrapante y disfruté mucho de su evolución.
La historia es predecible, pero tiene un estilo narrativo muy agradable y absolutamente envolvente, con escenarios tan preciosos como oscuros, que ese factor en realidad no influye en lo muy buena y mucho que se puede disfrutar de su lectura.

Yo leí otra edición, pero esta tiene unas ilustraciones alucinantes y queda absolutamente recomendada, por tanto la historia en esta edición es de 5 estrellas absolutamente.
Profile Image for Coos Burton.
913 reviews1,570 followers
November 11, 2023
Una historia hermosamente diabólica y atmosférica que nos va conduciendo a un mundo de confusiones y delirios de un monje que se debate moral y filosóficamente sobre muchas cuestiones.
Profile Image for Michael.
271 reviews7 followers
May 29, 2012
I found this in an antique bookseller. Originally published in the late 19th century (my copy is a 1967 print), it tells a story of a young Franciscan monk in pre-enlightenment Germany, who takes pity on the local hangman’s daughter, a figure who by nature of her father’s occupation is a social outcast. At first, due to the reverential language of the tale, it seemed that it would be a tale of temptation and mutual redemption. By the end of the book, it turns into something quite different. Not for a moment lurid in any way, it is a beautifully written tale that some may interpret as a warning of the dangers of a celibate life. I read it differently. I saw it as a warning of misplaced affection and the dangers of obsession in any walk of life.

On the whole, it was short, enjoyable, and told its story with a delicacy rarely seen in modern books.
Profile Image for Litzy Martinez.
203 reviews18 followers
October 21, 2022
Me pareció un romance muy puro y solemne, muy dulce en muchos sentidos. Una profunda empatía creció de mi para este monje pecador desde el principio, desde su primer encuentro con Benedicta. La inocencia siempre me ha parecido una cualidad que hay que admirar, pero creo que esta vez terminó jugando en contra de la historia entera. Me hallé deseando con fervor que algo aconteciera para que Ambrose tuviese valor, rebeldía o simplemente algo menos de miedo al infierno como para hacer algo. ¡Algo! Algo real, carajo, no solo orar. Algo menos que detenerse a auto flagelarse, privarse de alimentos y del contacto del resto de la humanidad por una emoción tan buena y pura como la que le inundaba su mente llena de telarañas de iglesia.

A veces uno desea entrar en los libros y darle de cachetadas (o chanclazos, lo que se le ocurra en el momento a uno y sea más efectivo) al protagonista, aunque este te tome por un espíritu maligno, con tal de hacerlo espabilar y que las cosas no discurran por esos derroteros que tú ya sientes venir.

Me recordó al libro "De Amor y otros demonios" donde un clérigo y una chiquilla salvaje tienen una historia de amor tan... iba a decir pura y bonita, pero esos no son los adjetivos que se debería usar en cuanto a García Márquez. El hecho es que no pude evitar trazar un paralelismo entre ambas obras y pensar que existen múltiples similitudes dolorosas entre ambas historias, como sus finales, por ejemplo.

El final, que yo ya venteaba desde mediados de la obra, me ha dejado altamente descolocada y meditabunda. Es una obra prodigiosa, de eso no cabe la menor ni más mínima duda, salvo que siento que no se le ha hecho justicia en esta obra a los personajes de Ambrose y Benedicta, pero que se los ha dotado de un desarrollo increíble. El hecho de poder adentrarse en los pensamientos tan atronadores del monje, me ha parecido una locura. Ahora que lo pienso, luego de terminada la obra, pienso que era más susceptible de lo que imaginaba en un principio. Cómo si su final verdaderamente no fuese un arrebato de su autor (como lo califiqué inmediatamente lo acabé) y se hubieran plantado cuidadosamente guiños aquí y allá que entreveían que esta no era una historia blanca como ala de inmaculada paloma de campanario, sino pálida y mortecina como la faz de un cadáver en el patíbulo.

Fuera de todo eso, porque sino me detengo seguiré dándole vueltas al mismo tema, los escenarios son lo mejor del libro. Esas montañas, riscos traicioneros, el lago, la niebla, la nieve, la luna, el pueblo en lo alto con las personas felices. Su autor me ha embriagado de la helada paz que se respiraba en esos sitios y he disfrutado mucho durante su lectura. La idea simbólica de las Edelweiss, sin aroma pero de infinita y delicada belleza, eso también me ha parecido muy interesante... ojalá todo hubiera tenido un final diferente.
En La Gárgola se hablaba de que la esquizofrenia podía ser la razón de los éxtasis de los monjes de antaño. Delirio antes que verdadera revelación. Y quien sabe, porque si se leen algunas de estas visiones (no todas) se puede ver que hay cosas que pudieron llevar a la hoguera a muchos y al manicomio a muchos ahora.

Pues quien sabe, pero aquí, el delirio por las privaciones y emociones fuertes bien podría ser una razón para considerar muy concienzudamente.

Creo que esta obra me dejará pensando mucho, largo y tendido, por algunas días más.
Profile Image for Bob.
740 reviews58 followers
August 5, 2020
Solid 4 Stars, probably 4-1/2

This story is the longest by Ambrose Bierce I’ve read. That is not meant as a slight, I admire how much he makes one see and feel, while using only a few words. This is longer than the rest, but still packs more into it, than if someone else used 1000 pages. Love, lust, jealousy, cruelty, prejudice, and religious bigotry, are all packed into this really good story. The reader will have to decide about the ending, are we witnessing insanity or divine intervention.

The online copy I read was provided by the University of Virginia and was 156 pages in length.
Profile Image for Claudia Pastor.
330 reviews96 followers
November 25, 2025
Dios míooooo, ¡qué delicia de libro!!! Las descripciones crean una atmósfera increíble desde las primeras líneas hasta la última página y el lenguaje me resultó atrapante, sensible, hermosísimo.

La historia no se queda atrás: un joven franciscano llega a un monasterio alejado. Se entera de que el pueblo desprecia a una muchacha, Benedicta, por ser la hija del verdugo, y siente que ella no se merece tratos inhumanos que recibe. Esa compasión lo llevará por caminos inesperados.

Me mantuvo en suspense todo el tiempo. Una tremenda sorpresa esta lectura 🖤🖤🖤
2 reviews
July 25, 2012
The Monk and the Hangmans daughter by Ambrose Bierce. A short novel which is written in a first person diary from, its the diary of a young monk called Ambrosius. The story follows Ambrosius' pilgrimage and on his journey he meets the hangman's daughter. The rest of the story follows his subsequent meetings with her. Slowly he becomes obsessed with the girl, she is shunned from town (and the church) because of her fathers job and Ambrosius makes it his mission to save her soul not matter what the cost. The author is very good at describing the young monks views on the landscape and he really brings across the monks inner turmoil. A small cast of characters really help bring out the obsessive nature of the monk. What an ending!

Verdict? I loved it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Angela.
524 reviews43 followers
December 31, 2011
The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter is a short, but effective, novel written by the American author, Ambrose Bierce. It is written in the form of an undated diary, detailing the arrival in Berchtesgaden of three Franciscan monks, including the diary writer, Ambrosius. He goes on to tell of his first meeting with Benedicta, the hangman's daughter, and of his subsequent meetings and dealings with her.
The story is a tragic one, being "a battle between body and spirit, the sins of the past and the desire for redemption." I particularly enjoyed Bierce's descriptions of the scenery as seen through the eyes of the young monk, Ambrosius.
Profile Image for Octavio Villalpando.
530 reviews29 followers
January 30, 2017
Este es otro de esos libros que he comprado únicamente por el trabajo visual de Santiago Caruso, aunque me gusta mucho también el trabajo de Bierce. No lo había leído anteriormente "El monje y la hija del verdugo", aunque me daba la impresión de que no iba a ser algo típico a lo que ya he leído en el pasado del autor, y tuve razón. En esta ocasión, se trata de un relato más inscrito dentro de la tradición europea de esas viejas leyendas tomadas como base para una obra literaria. Esta en particular, puede inscribirse un poco dentro del género gótico, y es imposible que no recuerde obras como "El monje" de Mathew G. Lewis, y aunque no abunda tanto en el tema de la maldad, si trata acerca del tema del alma con buenas intenciones iniciales, pero que acaba sucumbiendo cuando se le presenta la primera tentación.

Está escrito en primera persona, así que nos es posible recorrer de primera mano los caminos que acaban en la tragedia que le acontece al Monje del relato, salpicado con unas descripciones que no desmerecen para nada las mejores obras del gótico, predisponiendo al lector al estado de ánimo ideal para testificar el descenso del protagonista hasta la sima más abyecta del pecado.

¿Y de las ilustraciones? Bueno, de esas no hay nada que decir, como siempre con el trabajo de Caruso, son magníficas y se nota el excelente trabajo al transcribir en forma visual las emociones contenidas en el relato.

Muy recomendable.
Profile Image for Mira.
163 reviews20 followers
November 10, 2022
Bierce's writing absolutely shines here!

Now, what's with Benedicta and her supposed brother?! Why neither of them said anything :|

And let me tell you, I'll be having nightmares tonight because this psychopath of an MC/narrator. Also, I can't be more pissed off at the whole religious institution and people in this novel if I tried. Hypocritical, judgemental bastards the lot of them...
Profile Image for G. Lawrence.
Author 50 books277 followers
September 12, 2015
The words are poetic, the subject as gothic as could be... I loved this book. Short, anything but sweet... dark, beautiful and haunting... Everything a reader could look for in a gothic fiction.
Profile Image for K. Sánchez.
92 reviews11 followers
March 29, 2024
(Mi segunda lectura de la obra, habiendo sido la primera hace unos 16 años, y me siguió pareciendo muy placentera). Considero el estilo de Bierce algo muy interesante para narrar historias que, desde otro punto de vista, podrían parecer pobres o simplonas.

Aquí (sin adelantos) se encuentra una preciosa y corta narración acerca del encuentro de un monje, ad portas de ser sacerdote, que es designado en un territorio que, de paso, da al autor mucho material para enriquecer la historia (la manera en que involucra la descripción del paisaje como elemento fundamental es algo realmente digno de resaltar). Todo se ve hermosísimo, y más al hacerse el lector desde el punto de vista del monje, quien, desde su fe profunda y abnegada, magnifica sus percepciones a partir de ello.

Y, ahora, súmenle la historia de su enamoramiento de la hija del verdugo del poblado al que llega, teniendo en cuenta lo problemático que esto podría llegar a ser no solo desde el punto de vista de sus votos como servidor de su dios, sino, también añadiéndole la complejidad de mostrar empatía por una mujer que, a ojos de la sociedad, no debía ser considerada digna desde el punto de vista de su religión.

Así, se desarrolla la historia entre estos puntos clave, que la hacen una lectura exquisita y que, además, pasa tan suavemente que se puede leer de una sola pasada.

Final inesperado, igualmente digno de admiración desde mi punto de vista. Y le sumo el impacto que dan las ilustraciones de esta edición que tuve el gusto de encontrar en una visita a la biblioteca.
Profile Image for Eleanor.
32 reviews1 follower
August 25, 2025
Piety, monks, mountains, forbidden desire, scary lakes, milkmaids and obsession - what more could you want ?!?
Profile Image for Hani Abdullah.
32 reviews7 followers
April 11, 2014
Asked by a contemporary to translate this novella to English (from yet another translation to German), Ambrose took it upon himself to add some of his own spice to the mix. Ironically, that very contemporary whom Ambrose was asked by, disclosed later that that original author had told him that the whole base of the story was from a manuscript he had found in a Franciscan monastery somewhere in Bavaria.

This is the first work of Ambrose that I have read. With the nature of Ambrose's contribution, it's hard to judge his writing style and choice of genre, when not knowing when it was it his words I was reading, or the translator to German's, or of the person initially thought to be the author, OR yet more of the original author whose manuscript was held by the Franciscan Bavarian monks. It certainly creates or some confusion.

The ambiguous history of the novella doesn't make clear the literary intention that the author/s had by writing/editing this piece. It also is unclear, when keeping in mind where the manuscript was held, whether at some instances the author/s intended sarcasm, or were quite genuine.

I did enjoy this 2-day read quite a lot. For some reason, one which I hope isn't to my disadvantage, I love reading novels that have in them detailed false narrations, and the slow degeneration of the mental and physical states of protagonist. Also found in Dostoevsky's works, this novel too did that well.

It's only around 70 pages, so it doesn't require much to experience.

Profile Image for Nickolas B..
367 reviews103 followers
October 5, 2015
Όμορφη ιστορία, μακριά όμως από ύφος του Μπηρς (φαντάσματα, μάγισσες κλπ κλπ)...

Μέσω της ιστορίας και της αφήγησης του Μοναχού Αμβρόσιου, ο συγγραφέας μιλάει για την θρησκεία, την πίστη, τον έρωτα και την λογική.

Νοήματα δοσμένα με απλό τρόπο, πανέμορφες περιγραφές και χαρακτήρες βγαλμένοι από παραδόσεις και θρύλους.
Ο συγγραφέας χτίζει, σε όλη την διάρκεια αυτού του μικρού διηγήματος, την πλοκή που θα οδηγήσει στην απόλυτη λύτρωση.
Εν τέλει διασκεδαστικό και ελαφρώς φιλοσοφημένο διήγημα.

3,5*
Profile Image for Roger Senra.
45 reviews1 follower
December 20, 2015
Un relato excelente, con una gran ambientacion gotica. Unos monjes son cambiados a un convento ubicado en lo alto de las montañas y alli, uno de ellos conoce a la marginada pero bellisima hija de un verdugo, la cual lo deja turbado desde el principio. Muy buenas descripciones del ambiente, de las costumbres de la epoca y tambien de los personajes. No hay que leerlo con expectativas de que sea un relato de terror, sino un relato de suspenso gotico.
Profile Image for Carolina Búho.
414 reviews10 followers
July 5, 2015
4.5/5

Hermosa edición, preciosas ilustraciones, traducción cuidadísima. Un relato sobrecogedor pero al mismo tiempo muy poético que te hace leerlo con una rapidez extraordinaria.
Profile Image for Tom.
704 reviews41 followers
April 27, 2017
A short yet poignant and beautifully written tale concerning the young Franciscan monk Ambrosius, who is torn apart by the conflict between the religious beliefs and instruction of his order and his blossoming love for the daughter of the local hangman, who is abhorred by the community.

In many ways this short novella exposes the duplicity and bigotry of religion, and the sheer cruelty and sadistic intent behind the dogma (or so I felt) of the Franciscans. Ambrosius is an innocent, used and scorned by the monks themselves and the local populace.

Bierce is an excellent writer and this is a very readable tale which I highly enjoyed. Wonderfully descriptive prose and very evocative imagery. You are drawn in by the torment and agonies of the narrator.

From the Oneworld Classics series.
Profile Image for Orçun Güzer.
Author 1 book56 followers
August 11, 2018
Yazarın önsözünden anladığım kadarıyla, bu hikâyenin kökeni Baverya Alplerindeki bir Fransisken Manastırı’nda bulunan el yazmasına dayanıyormuş. Richard Voss’un buna dayanarak yazdığı öyküden (muhtemelen “Der Mönch von Berchtesgaden” / 1891) yapılan çeviriyi, bir dostu düzeltmesi için Ambrose Bierce’a getirmiş, o da öyküyü genişletip detaylandırarak kendi uyarlamasını yapmış.

Şimdiye kadar Bierce’dan kötü bir şey okumadım, bu kısa romanda da bu kural bozulmadı. Sade üslubuyla ağır ağır felakete yaklaştığınızı hissettiren, Alman romantizmi tarzındaki bu kasvetli tarihsel hikâyeyi (17. yy) çok beğendim. Bierce’a özgü sert, alaycı ironi yok, ama gene son sayfada trajik bir sürpriz var.
Profile Image for Mark Barrett.
160 reviews2 followers
August 11, 2018
What a wonderful little read. A fairytale style at times - certainly at the start and with a sense of magic and whimsy brought about by referred-to legends and the imagination of e narrator.

The best aspect of this story is the naive voice that the narrator has adopted - always with an undertone which leaves you questioning his fallibility. Such great writing to have produced this.

The battle between earthly love and heavenly love within the narrating monk is superbly played out, and the ending does little to answer this eternal question.

A wonderfully disturbing quick read.
Profile Image for Yulia Otrishko.
70 reviews2 followers
January 6, 2025
Loved it! This short novel combined contemporary insights with a romantic setting and language that fooled me into thinking it's WAY older than 1966. We've got incredible landscapes, criticism of the church, unreliable and complex protagonist (does he notice the women because he's a creep or because he's objectively too young to sacrifice his life to the monastery?), great foreshadowing, and an ending full of twists. I'm sure the second reading would reveal even more details, which is cool since it takes so little time to read.
Profile Image for Artsalnov.
239 reviews8 followers
September 12, 2019
Слушал эту аудиокнигу и страдал!
Аброз, как ты мог вот так вот высраться с такой белибердой?!?!?
Невероятное нытьё, нытьё в квадрате, нет нытьё в кубе!
Все второсортные авторы курят в сторонке, особенно женские авторы про "лубовь" и выбор: "чувства vs. разум (долг, честь и пр.)"....
Ничего кроме желания набуцкать как чтеца, так и главного героя прям по самым щам!
Первосортный шлак.
Profile Image for Ananya M.
380 reviews22 followers
October 28, 2025
I loveee reading religious characters and books. Something about the stark difference between sin and salvation fascinates me. This book saw the monk (a complete narcissist btw) and his wavering faith when he realised he felt feelings of ‘human’ love and not simply love for god.
Things took a sharp turn in the last 10 pages 👀
Profile Image for Rania.
198 reviews8 followers
June 25, 2019
The eternal conflict between body and soul..
The conflict from which we should learn never to judge others unless we are in their shoes..
Profile Image for Ralph.
150 reviews
July 8, 2022
A wonder and a joy to read. Prior to this I had only read The Devils Dictionary and “An Occurance at Owl Creek”. The Monk and the Hangman’s Daughter remind me of Owl Creek with the surprise - the sting in the tail - striking twice for me in the end.
Profile Image for Joel Ackerman.
Author 2 books10 followers
February 21, 2023
A great book for showing the unreliable narrator, but also how people (and good characters) are neither all good nor all bad—both right and wrong about different things. Great story!
Profile Image for Libby.
95 reviews1 follower
August 9, 2025
religious folk really and truly are demented
Profile Image for Perry Whitford.
1,956 reviews77 followers
August 25, 2015
An inexperienced Franciscan monk called Ambrosius is sent on a mission to the mountain wilds near Salzburg, where he is immediately entranced by the arresting sight of a beautiful young maiden singing and dancing by the gallows of a recently hung man.

The girl turns out to be the hangman's daughter, Benedicta, chasing away the vultures from the swaying body. Father and daughter are treated like outcasts in the remote community, with Benedicta accused of harlotry. Ambrosius is convinced of her purity, but fears that his own feelings for her are less than chaste.

By rights this story should probably be credited to Adolphe de Castro, a longtime correspondent of H.P. Lovecraft. Ambrose Bierce certainly translated it for him and gave advice on the ending, but that may have been all. That said, de Castro himself claims to have found the tale written down in a German monastery.

Whomever authored it, it's not particularly well written, but it does contain one or two memorable scenes (such as the one described above) and a truly spine tingling ending which really elevates the entire story.

Oh, the dangers of enforced celibacy!



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