Rapunzel
by Kate Forsyth
by Kate Forsyth
Rapunzel is
one of the most mysterious and enduring of all fairytales, telling the
story of a young girl sold to a witch by her parents for a handful of
bitter green herbs.
The
witch locked her in a tower deep in the forest and visited her by
commanding, ‘Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair, so I may climb the
golden stair’. One day a prince, entranced by Rapunzel’s singing, called
up the same rhyme to the imprisoned girl who lowered her hair to him.
He climbed up to her room and they fell in love at first sight. Before
the prince can help her escape, the witch discovers their tryst and
banishes Rapunzel to the wilderness where she gives birth to twins (who
are later cut from the story by the Grimm Brothers who found the babies
hard to explain to a young audience). The prince is cast down from the
tower and blinded by thorns, but Rapunzel finds him and her tears
miraculously heal his eyes so they can live happily ever after.
I have been fascinated by the Rapunzel tale ever since I was a child myself, and I've just published a novel called Bitter Greens which retells the fairytale as a historical novel set in Venice and northern Italy in the 17th century and France in the 18th century.
When
I was two years old, I was savaged by a dog and ended up with terrible
head injuries that resulted in meningitis (infection of the membranes
that surround the brain) and encephalitis (a life-threatening
inflammation of the brain). I was very ill for months, spending most of
that year in hospital and ending with dreadful scars all over my head
(thankfully most of them are hidden by my hair). I had half of one ear
torn off and my left tear duct was destroyed, and with it my ability to
control my tears. My eye wept all the time.
As
a result, I was in and out of hospital for the next six or seven years,
half-blind and racked with fever. I used to lie in my hospital bed, all
alone in an empty children’s ward at the Sydney Eye Hospital, staring with my one good eye out the window. All I could see was a high green hill, crowned with an ancient Moreton Bay
fig tree and the sandstone wall of the Art Gallery of NSW. It looked
like a castle. I used to imagine myself galloping away over the hill, on
my way to marvellous adventures.
I
think my fascination with Rapunzel began with my own entrapment in that
lonely hospital ward. Again and again I write about people imprisoned
in towers and dungeons, longing to be rescued. It is a recurring motif
in my novels, most recently in my fantasy adventure for children, The Wildkin’s Curse,
which tells the story of a wildkin princess kept captive in an
impossibly tall crystal tower, telling stories to try and free herself.
I
love the story of Rapunzel because of the ardent love affair between
the imprisoned girl and the prince who rescues her, and because of the
miraculous healing of the prince’s eyes by Rapunzel’s tears. Rapunzel
begins as a powerless child-like victim but by the end of the story she
has become a magical agent of healing and redemption.
Most people think that Rapunzel was first told by the Grimm Brothers in the early 19th century, but in fact it is a much older story than that.
There
are numerous Maiden in Tower stories in cultures all around the world,
so many it has its own classification in the Aarne-Thompson fairytale
motif index, Type 310. The first may well be from Christian iconography,
with the story of Saint Barbara, a virtuous young girl locked in a
tower by her father in the 3rd century. She was tortured for
her beliefs, but all her wounds were miraculously healed overnight and
in the end she was beheaded by her own father, who was then struck by
lightning and killed.
The very first time the motif of the ‘hair ladder’ appeared in a fairy story was in a 10th
century Persian tale told by Ferdowsi (932-1025 AD), in which a woman
in a harem offers to lower her hair to her lover, Zal, so he can climb
up to her. He is afraid he might hurt her and so throws up a rope
instead.
The ‘hair ladder’ reappears in the story, Petrosinella, in the mid 17th century, as part of a collection of literary fairy tales told by a Florentine writer, Giambattista Basile. His collection, Lo cunto de li cunti (The
Tale of Tales), was first published in 1634-36 and told the story of a
princess who could not laugh. Various storytellers gathered to tell her
stories in the hope they can amuse her, including one who tells the
story of a girl, Petrosinella (Little Parsley), who is given up to an
ogress after her mother steals parsley from the ogress’s garden. The
ogress locks Petrosinella up in a tower in the forest, using her hair as
a ladder to access the building. Petrosinella escapes with the help of a
prince who heard her singing, overcoming the ogress by casting three
magical acorns behind her that turn into obstacles that impede the witch
and ultimately devour her.
Sixty years later, the story appears again, this time in France.
It is told by a woman writer, Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de la Force,
who has been banished to a convent after displeasing the king, Louis
XIV, at his glittering court in Versailles.
Locked away in a cloister, much like Rapunzel is in her tower,
Charlotte-Rose was among the first writers to pen a collection of
literary fairy tales and one of the world’s first historical novelists.
Published under a pseudonym, Madame X, Charlotte-Rose’s tales became
bestsellers and she was eventually able to buy her release.
In Persinette,
her version of the tale, the mother conceives an insatiable longing for
parsley which her husband steals for her from a sorceress’s garden.
Caught by the sorceress, he promises her his unborn daughter who the
sorceress collects at the age of seven. Persinette is raised by the
sorceress until she is twelve and then locked away in her tower (though
the sorceress treats her gently and brings the child everything she
could possibly want.) In time she becomes a woman; the prince hears her
singing and chants the rhyme so he can climb up the ladder of hair to
her room, where he seduces her (“he became bolder and proposed to marry
her right then and there, and she consented without hardly knowing what
she was doing. Even so, she was able to complete the ceremony” is how
Charlotte-Rose rather coyly describes his seduction.)
Persinette
becomes pregnant as a result, and in her naivety betrays herself to the
sorceress when she complains about her dress growing tighter. The Grimm
brothers later changed this to Rapunzel complaining about how much
heavier the witch is than her prince - which at a single stroke makes
Rapunzel seem extremely stupid.
Then
Charlotte-Rose changes the ending so that the prince is blinded,
Persinette bears twins in the wilderness, and then heals her lover’s
eyes with her redemptive tears. The sorceress continues to torment them,
until the young couple’s courage and tender love for each other move
her to mercy and she magically returns them to the prince’s loving
family.
This story was then retold in Germany
by the German author Friedrich Schulz, which is almost identical to
Charlotte-Rose’s story except that he changed the girl’s name to
Rapunzel, perhaps because it is prettier than parsley. A rapunzel plant
is a type of wild rampion. It was then retold by the Grimm Brothers in
their 1812 fairytale collection, becoming less powerful, dark and sexy
with each edition until we have the tale that most children know today
(soon to be retold once again, and released as a Disney cartoon.)
It
is Charlotte-Rose and her version which provide the inspiration for my
book. She was a fascinating woman – strong-willed, intelligent and
fiercely independent – who once rescued her lover from imprisonment by
going into his parent’s castle with a travelling troupe of performers
disguised as a dancing bear! How could I not write a book about her?
Kate Forsyth is the bestselling author of over twenty titles for children and adults. Her first book was named a Best First Novel of 1998 by Locus Magazine, and since then she’s been shortlisted for many awards, including a CYBIL Award in the US and the Surrey Book of the Year award in Canada. In 2007, five of her Chain of Charms series were jointly awarded the 2007 Aurealis Award for Children’s Fiction. Visit her website here: http://www.kateforsyth.com.au/
Illustrations of Rapunzel by Frank Cowper, Arthur Rackham and Kay Nielsen
Kate Forsyth is the bestselling author of over twenty titles for children and adults. Her first book was named a Best First Novel of 1998 by Locus Magazine, and since then she’s been shortlisted for many awards, including a CYBIL Award in the US and the Surrey Book of the Year award in Canada. In 2007, five of her Chain of Charms series were jointly awarded the 2007 Aurealis Award for Children’s Fiction. Visit her website here: http://www.kateforsyth.com.au/
Illustrations of Rapunzel by Frank Cowper, Arthur Rackham and Kay Nielsen
This is beautifully written and informative! Well done Kate!
ReplyDeleteWow Charlotte-Rose seems to have lived in a fairy tale of her own - or at least an all action romcom. Doesn't it make our everyday world seem rather dull?
ReplyDelete