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Mysteries of Udolpho: Volume 4
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Renee
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May 12, 2015 04:05PM

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(view spoiler)
Since Radcliffe precedes Victorian Literature, the Victorian Web manager has not expanded material on her, as he explains in one link. Things feel fragmented as one jumps around the topics there, but, if interested, bits and pieces can be garnered from here:
http://www.victorianweb.org/previctor...

https://suite.io/ben-harry-wright/5k3...
"The Sublime and the Picturesque
"The sublime refers to the overwhelming sensation an observer may experience when confronted by powerful natural phenomena, such as vast mountain ranges, immense forests and stormy oceans. The concept originally emerged from the writings of Longinus, a Greek teacher of rhetoric in the 1st century, although it was considerably elaborated upon by Edmund Burke in his treatise A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757). These ideas influenced numerous writers, including Radcliffe, although her descriptions of wild and rugged landscapes also recall some of the dark and brooding paintings of the 17th century Italian artist Salvator Rosa."
Here is a link to paintings by Salvator Rosa at the National Gallery, London. Click on the image to enlarge.
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/art...
One sees fantasy, superstition, magic, and witchcraft invading the images.

"The desolate and foreboding Castle Udolpho presents a stark contrast to the picturesque environs of La Vallee, Emily's chateau in Gascony. The heroine's home is a rural idyll, the view from her room's windows overlooking 'groves of almond, palm-trees, flowering-ash, and myrtle' (p.3). In her descriptions of such picturesque scenes, Radcliffe was influenced by the paintings of the 17th century French artist Claude Lorrain.
"The Cult of Sensibility
"Sensibility refers to an individual's capacity to feel and the emotional depth with which they respond to their environment. It emerged in early 18th century philosophy, partially as a reaction to the rationalism of the Augustan age, although it was subsequently adopted by literature, featuring most notably in the works of Samuel Richardson, Laurence Sterne and Henry MacKenzie. Sensibility plays a significant role in Udolpho, performing an important function in how Radcliffe characterizes the people of her novel."
A slide show of the works of Lorrain. A bit time consuming and one must go through a few to get a guess at which may have influenced Radcliffe. Still, a pleasant diversion.
http://www.claudelorrain.org/slidesho...
For a quicker look at Claude Lorrain's work, but more about the man and his influences (I see fewer here that might have inspired the view in Gascony):
http://www.artble.com/artists/claude_...
In contrast/comparison, here are modern images, most photographic, of Gascony:
https://www.google.com/search?q=gasco...



But hopefully you'll be glad to have read it, Cindy. I felt much as you describe at the time I read it, but so often now I am glad to know what is being implied when "Udolpho" or "Radcliffe" is named -- and depending on context, it may be any number of different things.


LOL! Believe it or not, it does --- eventually.


Yep. Glad I read it. Glad it's over. ;-)

Good for reading by flickering candle and fireplace light?
Wonder if it tended to be read aloud or in solitary?

I do realize that the raft of the time for all things Romantic would make more palatable all the flowery poetry and overblown descriptions of nature.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Mysteries of Udolpho (other topics)The Mysteries of Udolpho (other topics)
A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Henry MacKenzie (other topics)Longinus (other topics)
Edmund Burke (other topics)