Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Jurgen: A Comedy of Justice


    Prev Next



      Produced by Suzanne L. Shell, Charles Franks and the OnlineDistributed Proofreading Team. With thanks to the McCainLibrary, Agnes Scott College.

      JURGEN

      _A Comedy of Justice_

      By

      JAMES BRANCH CABELL

      1922

      _"Of JURGEN eke they maken mencioun, That of an old wyf gat his youthe agoon, And gat himselfe a shirte as bright as fyre Wherein to jape, yet gat not his desire In any countrie ne condicioun."_

      TO

      BURTON RASCOE

      Before each tarradiddle, Uncowed by sciolists, Robuster persons twiddle Tremendously big fists.

      "Our gods are good," they tell us; "Nor will our gods defer Remission of rude fellows' Ability to err."

      So this, your JURGEN, travels Content to compromise Ordainments none unravels Explicitly ... and sighs.

      * * * * *

      "Others, with better moderation, do either entertain the vulgarhistory of Jurgen as a fabulous addition unto the true and authenticstory of St. Iurgenius of Poictesme, or else we conceive the literalacception to be a misconstruction of the symbolical expression:apprehending a veritable history, in an emblem or piece of Christianpoesy. And this emblematical construction hath been received by mennot forward to extenuate the acts of saints."

      --PHILIP BORSDALE.

      "A forced construction is very idle. If readers of _The HighHistory of Jurgen_ do not meddle with the allegory, the allegorywill not meddle with them. Without minding it at all, the whole isas plain as a pikestaff. It might as well be pretended that wecannot see Poussin's pictures without first being told the allegory,as that the allegory aids us in understanding _Jurgen_."

      --E. NOEL CODMAN.

      "Too urbane to advocate delusion, too hale for the bitterness ofirony, this fable of Jurgen is, as the world itself, a book whereineach man will find what his nature enables him to see; which givesus back each his own image; and which teaches us each the lessonthat each of us desires to learn."

      --JOHN FREDERICK LEWISTAM.

      * * * * *

      _CONTENTS_

      A FOREWORD: WHICH ASSERTS NOTHING

      I WHY JURGEN DID THE MANLY THING

      II ASSUMPTION OF A NOTED GARMENT

      III THE GARDEN BETWEEN DAWN AND SUNRISE

      IV THE DOROTHY WHO DID NOT UNDERSTAND

      V REQUIREMENTS OF BREAD AND BUTTER

      VI SHOWING THAT SEREDA IS FEMININE

      VII OF COMPROMISES ON A WEDNESDAY

      VIII OLD TOYS AND A NEW SHADOW

      IX THE ORTHODOX RESCUE OF GUENEVERE

      X PITIFUL DISGUISES OF THRAGNAR

      XI APPEARANCE OF THE DUKE OF LOGREUS

      XII EXCURSUS OF YOLANDE'S UNDOING

      XIII PHILOSOPHY OF GOGYRVAN GAWR

      XIV PRELIMINARY TACTICS OF DUKE JURGEN

      XV OF COMPROMISES IN GLATHION

      XVI DIVERS IMBROGLIOS OF KING SMOIT

      XVII ABOUT A COCK THAT CROWED TOO SOON

      XVIII WHY MERLIN TALKED IN TWILIGHT

      XIX THE BROWN MAN WITH QUEER FEET

      XX EFFICACY OF PRAYER

      XXI HOW ANAITIS VOYAGED

      XXII AS TO A VEIL THEY BROKE

      XXIII SHORTCOMINGS OF PRINCE JURGEN

      XXIV OF COMPROMISES IN COCAIGNE

      XXV CANTRAPS OF THE MASTER PHILOLOGIST

      XXVI IN TIME'S HOUR-GLASS

      XXVII VEXATIOUS ESTATE OF QUEEN HELEN

      XXVIII OF COMPROMISES IN LEUKE

      XXIX CONCERNING HORVENDILE'S NONSENSE

      XXX ECONOMICS OF KING JURGEN

      XXXI THE FALL OF PSEUDOPOLIS

      XXXII SUNDRY DEVICES OF THE PHILISTINES

      XXXIII FAREWELL TO CHLORIS

      XXXIV HOW EMPEROR JURGEN FARED INFERNALLY

      XXXV WHAT GRANDFATHER SATAN REPORTED

      XXXVI WHY COTH WAS CONTRADICTED

      XXXVII INVENTION OF THE LOVELY VAMPIRE

      XXXVIII AS TO APPLAUDED PRECEDENTS

      XXXIX OF COMPROMISES IN HELL

      XL THE ASCENSION OF POPE JURGEN

      XLI OF COMPROMISES IN HEAVEN

      XLII TWELVE THAT ARE FRETTED HOURLY

      XLIII POSTURES BEFORE A SHADOW

      XLIV IN THE MANAGER'S OFFICE

      XLV THE FAITH OF GUENEVERE

      XLVI THE DESIRE OF ANAITIS

      XLVII THE VISION OF HELEN

      XLVIII CANDID OPINIONS OF DAME LISA

      XLIX OF THE COMPROMISE WITH KOSHCHEI

      L THE MOMENT THAT DID NOT COUNT

      A FOREWORD

      _"Nescio quid certe est: et Hylax in limine latrat."_

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2025