All my books contain elements of
traditional storytelling. I thank both my Celtic ancestry and a
perceptive children’s librarian for providing me with a very early
passion for myth, legend, fairytale and folklore. Of my twelve novels,
three are loosely based on well known fairytales, and the others dip
frequently into the cauldron of story that we all share, borrowing
themes and motifs from its rich brew and, I hope, adding something new
each time to the nourishing contents. I’ll write more later on my use of
Beauty and the Beast as the framework for a gothic fantasy-romance for
adults, Heart’s Blood (Roc, 2009.) First let’s look at the history of
the fairytale itself.
According to fairytale scholar Jack Zipes,
the literary development of Beauty and the Beast starts with the Greek
myth of Cupid and Psyche, published by Roman writer Apuleius the second
century. This story was revived in seventeenth century France, where it
became immensely popular, inspiring various re-tellings including a
‘tragédie-ballet’ by Corneille and Molière.
Cupid and Psyche is a story about the
perils of female curiosity, and belongs to an oral storytelling
tradition featuring mysterious bridegrooms and inquisitive brides. Marry me, the young woman is told, share my bed, but don’t ever light the lamp after night falls.
When the curious woman inevitably falls victim to temptation, she loses
her husband and may or may not be allowed to win him back by performing
a gruelling quest. East of the Sun and West of the Moon is a wonderful
example of this kind of tale.
French writers of romances reworked the
tale of Cupid and Psyche in various ways, usually incorporating magical
transformations, wicked fairies and handsome princes. These tales had
the dual function of entertainment and instruction. As with most
re-tellings of traditional stories, whether oral or written, the new
versions were tailored to their time, culture and readership. In the
French romances, the emphasis shifts towards the female protagonist. She
must discover the importance of keeping her word, and learn which
virtues are most to be valued in a young woman. In addition, she learns
that a true hero practises the qualities of courtesy, honour and
self-restraint.
Gabrielle de Villeneuve’s elaborate,
extended tale of Beauty and the Beast, published in 1740, was the model
for most of the later versions. A simpler version, intended for a young
audience, was written by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont. Instead of
Psyche, who lets her curiosity get the better of her common sense, we
have Beauty, a model of daughterly loyalty, sweetness and self-denial.
Jack Zipes tells us that in Mme de Villeneuve’s version, Beauty is ready
to give up her claim to the Beast/Prince at the end of the story
because her own origins are too humble to make her a fit wife for him.
The fairies intervene and argue on her behalf, and then, in a real
cop-out of an ending, we discover that Beauty is actually adopted, and a
princess!
The story most of us are familiar with goes
something like this. There’s a widowed merchant with three daughters.
They’ve fallen on hard times, and have gone to live in the country where
they run a small farm. The two elder daughters are vain and lazy, and
spend all their time moaning about the loss of their wealth and status.
The youngest daughter, Beauty, is not only lovely to look at, but a
paragon of virtue who works hard and never complains despite the selfish
behaviour of her sisters. Elder siblings in traditional stories are
often shown as less than admirable, while the youngest is generally good
and beautiful, though sometimes naive.
Father hears that one of his ships, thought
to be lost at sea, has arrived safely in port. He heads off to retrieve
the cargo. Before he goes he asks the daughters what gifts they want
him to bring home for them. Sisters One and Two ask for jewels, silks
and so on. Beauty asks her father to bring her a rose.
On his way home Father is caught in a storm
in a forest and seeks shelter in a mysterious castle that seems
deserted. Despite the emptiness, lights are blazing and he finds a
delicious meal all set out, which he eats. He finds a cosy bed all
prepared, and he sleeps. In the morning he wanders into the garden and
finds roses blooming. Remembering Beauty’s request, he picks one, and a
fearsome Beast appears to tell him his life is forfeit. If not his own,
then that of one of his daughters. The Beast lets the father leave on
condition that either he or one of his daughters returns within a
certain period.
When she hears this, Beauty insists on
returning with her father, since it was her request for a rose that
caused the trouble. She persuades her father to leave her at the Beast’s
castle, and the Beast sends Father home with a chest of riches.
Over the next few months, Beauty is
provided with everything she wants, and the Beast comes to eat supper
with her every evening. Once Beauty realises the Beast is not fattening
her up to eat her, she befriends him, and realises over time that
despite his hideous appearance, he is a courteous, thoughtful and
charming companion. After some time, Beauty wants to visit her family
and the Beast allows her to go for one week. Her sisters, however,
conspire to keep her home for longer. They’re jealous of her fine
clothes and her happiness, and they are hoping the Beast will get
annoyed and devour her!
After ten days, Beauty dreams the Beast is
lying in the garden of his castle, almost dead. She is stricken by
remorse and realises she cares about him more than she realised. ‘It is
neither handsome looks nor intelligence that makes a woman happy. It is
good character, virtue, and kindness, and the Beast has all these good
qualities.’ (Mme Leprince de Beaumont.)
Beauty rushes back to the castle, finds her
dream was indeed true, splashes the Beast’s face with water and tells
him she loves him. The Beast disappears, to be replaced by a prince
‘more handsome than Eros himself.’ He explains that Beauty has just
undone a wicked witch’s spell, which prevented him from revealing either
his looks or his true intelligence until a girl came along who would
‘allow the goodness of my character to touch you.’ A good fairy praises
Beauty for preferring virtue over beauty and wit. Beauty and her prince
are married, and the two sisters are turned into statues that will stand
one at each side of the castle doors until they learn to recognise
their faults.
Maybe this tale has its origins in Cupid
and Psyche, but the Greek myth’s theme of feminine curiosity has
vanished completely from the Beauty and the Beast stories of Mme de
Villeneuve and Mme Leprince de Beaumont. The story is no longer about a
woman’s inability to respect her lover’s secrets, but has become a tale
of virtue and self-denial rewarded; a lesson in feminine behaviour,
eighteenth century style. Indeed, reading the Mme de Beaumont version
today I find myself rather surprised that I still love the story! Of
course, the wonderful magical elements remain, even if the moral lesson
is somewhat difficult for a contemporary readership to swallow.
When I used Beauty and the Beast as a
framework for my adult novel, Heart’s Blood, I saw the theme of the
story as acceptance: learning to accept others with all their flaws,
both physical and non-physical; and learning to accept, love and forgive
yourself, no matter what your weaknesses and faults. I altered various
elements of the story, notably to make my Beauty a less passive person.
In my story, both principal characters carry a weight of past trouble.
Anluan (Beast) has suffered a stroke in childhood, losing full use of
one arm and leg, and has fallen into depression after various family
crises. He sees himself as crippled, weak and impotent. Caitrin (Beauty)
is on the run from abusive relatives, and is barely holding herself
together after a breakdown. So we have a pair of wary, damaged
protagonists, each of whom must learn self-acceptance before he/she can
reach out to the other. Together they must face an external challenge of
massive proportions, as well as confronting their personal demons.
Anluan does not provide a splendid castle,
beautiful clothing and sumptuous meals for Caitrin, but he does provide
the two things she needs most: a safe place to stay, and paid work in
the craft she loves (she’s a scribe.) Caitrin is neither a great beauty
nor a paragon of feminine self-denial. Her sense of self-worth has taken
a battering. But she has one virtue that allows her to make a
difference: she sees every individual as worthy of love, no matter how
flawed. In reclaiming others, she finds herself.
I ditched the wicked fairy’s curse and the
magical transformation from beast to prince. I’ve always disliked
stories in which the hero or heroine must become physically perfect (and
wealthy / noble) before the happy ending can occur. For me, it is inner
beauty that counts, and the knowledge that everyone is worthy of love.
So my Beast has a disability at the start, and he still has it at the
end. But by the end, it no longer matters.
I did keep the parts of Beauty and the
Beast that I so loved in childhood. Heart’s Blood has a forbidden garden
and a rare flower; it has a cast of unusual retainers; it has magic
mirrors; it has a visit home and a precipitate return to face a
life-and-death crisis. It also has ghosts, Irish history, a library full
of ancient documents and a little occult magic. Beauty and the Beast it
isn’t. But the strong old bones of my favourite fairytale are there
throughout, giving my story its true heart.
And that’s what is so marvellous about
fairytales. They’re as ancient as the hills, but they never grow old. As
society and culture change, as our world becomes a place Apuleius and
Mme Leprince de Beaumont could never have dreamed possible, the wisdom
of those tales remains relevant to our lives. Because, of course, the
stories change with us. We tell them and re-tell them, and they morph
and grow and stretch to fit the framework of our time and culture, just
as they did when they were told around the fire after dark in times long
past. In this high-speed technological age, an age in which 140
characters are deemed sufficient to transmit a meaningful message, these
stories still have much to teach us. We would do well to listen.
Juliet Marillier was born and brought up in Dunedin, New Zealand, and now lives in
Western Australia. Her books have won many awards, including the
Aurealis (three times) the Sir Julius Vogel Award, and France’s Prix
Imaginales. She is a member of the druid order OBOD (the Order of Bards,
Ovates and Druids), and owns to ‘a lifelong love of traditional
stories’. She lives in a hundred year old cottage which she shares with a
small pack of waifs and strays.
Respect, courtesy, courage – the strength of sisterly love and family
ties – and a strong dose of the attractions and wild dangers of the
Otherworld and the woods. These seem to be some of the recurrent themes
of Juliet’s work. And her heroines – Jena of ‘Wildwood Dancing’, Caitrin
of ‘Heart’s Blood’
– are intelligent, hardworking, responsible, and brave. They may live
in apparently isolated villages or castles, they may enjoy dancing with
faerie princes, but they belong to the wider world, they acknowledge
links of trade and commerce. They value education, the chance to travel
and work. They are, in the best sense, civilized.
Juliet's latest book for young adults is Shadowfell, the first in a three-book series. Visit Juliet's website to find out more: http://www.julietmarillier.com/books/shadowfell.html or order from Amazon - you can do this via the Steel Thistles link, above, if you'd like to help this blog!
Picture credits: Beauty and the Beast by Walter Crane
Beauty and the Beast by Rene Cloke
One of my favourite stories as a child too. Wonderful information here, much for thought. Childrens stories have great depth. x
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