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ALRAUNE
By HANNS HEINZ
EWERS (The John Day Company; 1911/29)
ALRAUNE
is probably the late, great German author Hanns Heinz Ewers’
masterpiece. It’s certainly
the best volume of his Frank Braun trilogy, being the most focused and
concise, and with a welcome surfeit of the lengthy philosophical and
political digressions that characterized Braun’s exploits in THE
SORCERER’S APPRENTICE (1910) and VAMPIRE (1927).
Here the aloof, decadent Braun, a law student, initiates a heap of
trouble when one day he blithely suggests that his wealthy scientist uncle
artificially create a woman, as outlined in the legend of the fertility
powers of the mandrake (or alraune) root.
Braun’s uncle, Jacob ten Brinken, takes to the plan and, with his
nephew’s help, collects the semen of a condemned murderer, ejaculated at
the moment of execution. He
uses this to impregnate a prostitute appropriately monikered Alma Raune,
and Alraune is born.
Braun then disappears for over a hundred pages as Alraune grows up.
From the start she’s a problem child, inspiring her classmates to
torture animals in various horrific ways.
It seems she has psychic powers, and can compel people to commit
evil deeds with no tangible evidence that she herself did anything wrong.
This points up another peculiarity of Alraune: she doesn’t appear
to have much in the way of a soul.
Upon reaching adulthood, Alraune steps up her campaign of evil
influence. An androgynous
beauty, she drives several lovesick men to madness, ruin and death.
This culminates with her own creator Mr. ten Brinken, who becomes
amorously infatuated with Alraune and decimates himself and his family
fortune trying to woo her.
Reenter Frank Braun, now a full-fledged lawyer called upon by his
uncle’s will to be Alraune’s guardian.
In the gleefully amoral Braun it seems Alraune has finally met her
match--and an already smoldering tale catches fire.
The two quickly become inseparable, entering into a vividly
described sadomasochistic love affair that comes to involve brutality and
blood drinking. Braun,
who’s understandably harboring second thoughts about his newfound
“love”, learns of Alraune’s apparently supernatural predilections
when he spies her communing with the moon one night in a peculiarly
worshipful manner...
Hanns Heinz Ewers was always noted for his interest in aberrant
psychology, years before it became chic.
This unsurprisingly made his work quite controversial in its time,
particularly ALRAUNE, with its profane twisting of age-old Frankenstein
mythos. A characteristically
bold and unflinching work, it contains a veritable catalog of perversion:
sadomasochism, pedophilia, nymphomania and incest.
Ewers was also a master of decadent grotesquerie of a peculiarly
late nineteenth/early twentieth century variety.
(Oscar Wilde was a clear influence, as evinced by the distinctly
Aubrey Beardsley-esque black and white illustrations of Mahlon Blaine.) The text is packed with moments of show-stopping
outrageousness, including the nymphomaniacal Alma Raune’s lustful
stripping-down early on, in which she cries “Whoever
wants me may have me!”; the youthful Alraune forcing the master of
the ten Brinken household to prostate himself before her and kiss her
feet; the adult Alraune’s nude donkey ride; and the twisted sexuality of
the concluding chapters, which remain unrivalled in their ghastly
aberrance, and haven’t been properly dramatized in any of the numerous
film adaptations of the novel (which include the classic 1928 silent
version with Brigitte Helm and the Erich von Stroheim-headlined UNNATURAL
from 1953).
A large part of the novel’s
power is due to the fluid 1929 English translation by the famed novelist
and screenwriter Guy Endore (who also did the honors with Ewers’
VAMPIRE). The novel’s influence on Endore’s own writing, in
particular his legendary WEREWOLF OF PARIS, is undeniable.
But the fact remains that ALRAUNE itself has yet to be surpassed
for color, audaciousness and sheer perversity.
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