Read The Manuscript Found in Saragossa Online
Authors: Jan Potocki
THE MANUSCRIPT FOUND IN SARAGOSSA
âA Polish classic⦠constructed like a Chinese box of tales⦠It
reads like the most brilliant modern novel' â Salman Rushdie in
the
Guardian
âOne of the great masterpieces of European literature⦠this new
translation offers us the work as a whole in English for the first time,
in the dizzyingly elaborate form envisioned by the author's
extraordinary imagination' â Larry Wolff in
The New York Times
Book Review
âThe translation by Ian Maclean is crisp, lucid and unfussy⦠A
beautiful volume, underlining Potocki's forgotten masterpiece as a
work of real substance' â James Woodall in
The Times
âA picaresque ramble through Islam and the inquisition⦠This is
the stuff of reading on a grand scale, fiction of enduring splendour'
â David Hughes in the
Mail on Sunday
âImpossible to put down' - Katherine A. Powers in the
Boston Globe
âA bravura translation⦠the 100 or so stories told over 66 “Days”
are fantastic, ghostly, erotic, comic, ghoulish, philosophical and
Munchausenly tall' - David Coward in the
Sunday Telegraph
âThis volume is excellent value, two dozen fresh and ingenious tales
for the price of a novel' - Julian Duplain in the
Times
Literary Supplement
âAt its most magical
The Manuscript Found in Saragossa
reads like
The
Arabian Nights
, at its most italianate like something from
The
Decameron
⦠a masterwork of European romanticism' - Michael
Dirda in the
Washington Post Book World
âOne of the strangest books ever written can at last take its rightful
place in world literature' - Kola Krauze in the
Guardian
ABOUT THE AUTHOR AND TRANSLATOR
JAN POTOCKI
was born in Poland in 1761 into a very great aristocratic family, which owned vast estates. He was educated in Geneva and Lausanne, served twice in the army and spent some time as a novice Knight of Malta. During his lifetime he was an indefatigable traveller and travel-writer, an Egyptologist and pioneering ethnologist, an occultist and an historian of the pre-Slavic peoples. He was a political activist and probably a freemason, although he seems to have espoused a bafflingly wide range of political causes, some of them patriotic. Among his other exploits were an ascent in a balloon over Warsaw with the aeronaut Blanchard and the provision of the first free press in that city.
Potocki was proficient in many different languages, and his extensive travels led him through the Mediterranean, the Balkans, the Caucasus and China. He married twice (the first marriage ending in divorce) and had five children: scandalous rumours surrounded both of his marriages. In 1812 he retired to his estates in Poland, suffering from chronic ill health, melancholia and disillusionment. He committed suicide in 1815. Although the exact details of his end are uncertain, the most credible story is that he blew his brains out with a silver bullet, which was modelled from the knob of his sugar-bowl and first blessed by the castle chaplain.
IAN MACLEAN
is Reader in French at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of the Queen's College.
JAN POTOCKI
TRANSLATED BY IAN MACLEAN
PENGUIN BOOKS
in memoriam absentium
J. N. M. M. Â Â Â J. W. M. E. M. D. E. M. M. W. B. H.
PENGUIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 5TZ, England
Penguin Putnam Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA
Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Ringwood, Victoria, Australia
Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2
Penguin Books (NZ) Ltd, Private Bag 102902, NSMC, Auckland, New Zealand
Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England
First modern edition published in French 1989
This translation first published by Viking 1995
Published in Penguin Books 1996
13
Copyright © José Corti, 1992
This translation copyright © Ian Maclean, 1995
All rights reserved
The moral right of the translator has been asserted
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject
to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent,
re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's
prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in
which it is published and without a similar condition including this
condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
A Note on the Geographical Location
THE MANUSCRIPT FOUND IN SARAGOSSA
The story of Emina and her sister Zubeida
The story of the castle of Cassar Gomelez
The story of Pacheco the demoniac
The story of Alphonse van Worden
The story of Trivulzio of Ravenna
The story of Landulpho of Ferrara
The story of Thibaud de la Jacquière
The story of the fair maiden of the castle of Sombre
The story of Menippus of Lycia
The story of Athenagoras the philosopher
The story of Pandesowna, the gypsy chief
The story of Giulio Romati and the Principessa di Monte Salerno
The gypsy chief's story continued
Giulio Romati's story continued
Principessa di Monte Salerno's story
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
Maria de Torres's story continued
Maria de Torres's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Conde de Peña Vélez's story
Velásquez the geometer's story
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Duchess of Medina Sidonia's story
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Duchess of Medina Sidonia's story continued
The Marqués de Val Florida's Story
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Duchess of Medina Sidonia's story continued
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The story of the House of Soarez
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
Velásquez's ideas on religion
The Wandering Jew's story continued
Velásquez's account of his system
The Wandering Jew's story continued
Velásquez's account of his system continued
The Marqués de Torres Rovellas's story
The Marqués de Torres Rovellas's story continued
The story of Monsignor Ricardi and Laura Cerella, known as La Marchesa Paduli
The Marqués de Torres Rovellas's story continued
The Marqués de Torres Rovellas's story continued
The Marqués de Torres Rovellas's story continued
The Wandering Jew's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
Cornadez's story as told by Busqueros
The story of Diego Hervas told by his son, the reprobate pilgrim
The story of Diego Hervas continued
The story of Bias Hervas, the reprobate pilgrim
The gypsy chief's story continued
The reprobate pilgrim's story continued
The reprobate pilgrim's story continued
The Commander of Toralva's story
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The gypsy chief's story continued
The Great Sheikh of the Gomelez's story
The Great Sheikh of the Gomelez's story continued
The Great Sheikh of the Gomelez's story continued
The Great Sheikh of the Gomelez's story continued