The Dream by Zola

ConversazioniAuthor Theme Reads

Iscriviti a LibraryThing per pubblicare un messaggio.

The Dream by Zola

Questa conversazione è attualmente segnalata come "addormentata"—l'ultimo messaggio è più vecchio di 90 giorni. Puoi rianimarla postando una risposta.

1rebeccanyc
Gen 2, 2013, 4:30 pm

My review.

Unlike the other works of Zola's I've read so far, this one doesn't concentrate on broad social issues, but is centered on one girl and her struggles with love and religion. I read it because it was the next in Zola's recommended order of reading the Rougon-Macquart cycle; the girl, Angelique, is the abandoned, illegitimate daughter of Sidonie, the sister of Saccard in The Kill. And although the novel, like the rest of the cycle, takes place during the mid-19th century Second Empire, the tale harks back much more to medieval times and medieval ways of thinking.

Angelique is discovered, starving and faint, huddling in the doorway of St. Agnes, the cathedral in the town of Beaumont, by the Huberts, a childless couple who live in an ancient house built against the wall of the cathedral. The most recent in a family of embroiderers of church vestments, the Huberts take Angelique in as an apprentice. As she grows up, reading legends of virgin saints and martyrs, she develops a dream that a prince will marry her and take her away. When a handsome young man, who is not who he seems to be, appears in her life, she believes her dream is coming true. I don't want to give too much away but, needless to say, obstacles arise.

Aside from the plot, much of the novel is taken up with the details of hand embroidery (superseded in large part by mechanical methods at the time of the story), church architecture (also medieval), and the lives of female saints. (The edition I read, unlike the Penguin and Oxford World Classics editions of other book by Zola I've read, did not have notes, and I would have dearly loved them to help me understand terms of architecture, embroidery, and heraldry, as well as the lives of the saints.) Recurring themes include death, martyrdom, virginity as well as the inability to bear children, the contrast between the rituals and indeed luxury of the church and the poverty of the people who live in the old section of the town around the cathedral, and the difficulties of interaction among people of different classes.

With Zola's belief that families pass along behavioral traits genetically, the reader sees Angelique struggling with her "family" demons, struggling to give up her pride and stubbornness and submit to the rules of proper behavior, although one does not have to believe in the inheritance of acquired characteristics to believe that, after the traumas of her early life, Angelique would be angry and determined. As always, Zola is a great story teller who demonstrates his thorough investigations of the worlds he depicts (especially, in this case, the techniques and materials of hand embroidery), and who can create great set pieces as well as insights into human psychology. The characters of the Huberts, the young man, and his father, as well as Angelique, are fascinating, with those of the older people in particular rooted in tragedies of the past. Much of the drama in this book takes place internally, inside people's minds, inside the Huberts' house or the cathedral, rather than out in the world as in other Zola novels. This was an excellent book, and I enjoyed reading it, but I think I like the novels with greater social scope better.