The Devil in a Forest
The Devil in a Forest is a short novel by Gene Wolfe about the conflict between Christianity and an earlier Pagan religion in Europe during the middle ages.[1][2] The hero of the story, Mark, is an adolescent, an orphan, and the apprentice to a weaver, very near a small holy Christian shrine. The shrine is within the King's Forest, the very small village where he lives is on the edge of the Forest.
During the course of the novel the village is occupied by both a brutal squad of the King's foresters, and a mob of the Pagan charcoal burners who eke out a living in the Forest.[2]
Wolfe explains, in an an author's note, that the novel was inspired by a few stanzas of the traditional Christmas Carol Good King Wencelas.[1] He describes the novel as an attempt to imagine what peasant life was like.
- Hither, page, and stand by me,
- If thou know'st it telling;
- Yonder peasant, who is he?
- Where and what his dwelling?
- Sire, he lives a good league hence,
- Underneath the mountain,
- Close against the forest fence,
- By Saint Agnes's fountain."
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References
- ^ a b Joan Gordon (1986). Gene Wolfe. Wildside Press. ISBN 9780893709563. http://books.google.ca/books?id=xE8PGh89rv8C&pg=PA43&lpg=PA43&dq=gene+wolfe+devil+forest&source=bl&ots=QitGpGLbJ1&sig=qtQyM6je3jQwvrUrDVr5oOV8W4c&hl=en&sa=X&ei=lkHwTpHhIOPv0gGO1-iGAg&ved=0CIYBEOgBMAs#v=onepage&q=gene%20wolfe%20devil%20forest&f=false. Retrieved 2011-12-20.
- ^ a b Paul de Bruijn. "Gene Wolfe, The Devil in a Forest". Rambles magazine. http://www.rambles.net/wolfe_devil.html. Retrieved 2011-12-20.