לכל אורכו של יום סתיו אטום, אפל ואילם, תחת עננים נמוכים-לדכא, חציתי לבדי, רכוב על סוס, כברת-ארץ שממה מאין כמותה, ולבסוף מצאתי עצמי, בנטות צללי הערב, נוכח בית אשר אפוף-התוגה. אינני יודע איך קרה הדבר - אך ברגע שבו נחו עיני על המבנה, צער שאין לשאתו פלש אל רוחי. אני אומר שאין לשאתו, כי אי אפשר היה להקהל את ההרגשה באמצעות אחת מאותן המיות-לב מענגות-למחצה, משום הפיוט שבהן, שעל ידן מסתגלת הנפש אפילו למחזותיהם הקשים ביותר של השומם או הנורא. התבוננתי על הנוף הנפרש לפני - על הבית עצמו, ועל תוויה הפשוטים של הנחלה - על הקירות הקודרים - על החלונות הפעורים בעיניים ריקות - על שיחי הגומא שרקבם גדל פרע - ועל גזעיהם הלבנים של כמה עצים אכולים - כאשר רוחי נתנונה בשפל שאין מושלו על פני האדמה מלבד מוצאי חלומו של זולל האופיום - הנפילה המרה אל היומיום - נפילתה המחרידה של ההינומה. לבי כרע במרה, קפא בקרה - המחשבה נרבצה בשוממות חסרת-תקנה אשר שוב לא היה בכוחו המדרבן של הדמיון להקימה אל הנשגב. מה הדבר - עצרתי כדי לחשוב - מה הדבר שכך מרט את עצבי במראיתו של בית אשר? המסתורין נותר חתום, ובה-במידה לא יכולתי ליצירי-הצללים שצבאו עלי בשרעפי. נאלצתי לסגת אל המסקנה הלא-מספקת, כי צירופים מסוימים של עצמים טבעיים פשוטים ביותר מתייחדים, מעבר לכל ספק, בכוח להשפיע עלינו בדרך זו, אך ניתוחו של כוח זה חורג מעומקה של השגתנו. אפשר, הגיתי, שדי יהיה בסידור שונה של תווי הנוף, של פרטי התמונה, כדי לחולל תמורה ביכולתה להלך נכבאים על רואיה, ושמא אף לבער יכולת זו מכול וכול. רעיון זה דחק בי לנהוג את סוסי אל שפתו התלולה של אגם שחור ושמנוני שהשתרע זוהר וחף-מאדווה לצד הבית, ולהתבונן מטה ובאברי צמרמורת, רוגשת אף יותר מקדמותה, על מראותיהם הערוכים-מחדש, ההפוכים, של שיח-הגומא האפור, וגדמי העצים האיומים, והחלונות הפעורים כעיניים ריקות.
אדגר אלן פו (1809-1849) - מאבות הסיפורת הגותית במאה התשע עשרה, חלוץ הסיפור הבלשי, המדע הבדיוני והמותחן הפסיכולוגי. יצירתו היתה מקור השראה לזרמים אמנותיים מרכזיים כדוגמת הסימבוליזם והסוריאליזם, ומוסיפה להסעיר קוראים, יוצרים והוגים עד היום.
"Dogs they danced. DANCED! Could it then be possible? Alas, thought I, my dancing days are over! Thus it is ever."
"IF! Distressing monosyllable! what world of mystery, and meaning, and doubt, and uncertainty is there involved in thy two letters!"
"And presently they took to dancing the Mazurka, and I think it was the figure V. who performed the most to my satisfaction. She was evidently a lady of breeding."
This is a second part of a two parter that started with “How To Write A Blackwood Article”. Hold onto your seats while reading or listening to this one.
3 Stars. Bizarre to say the least. Horror and science fiction in Poe's inimitable style. The lead character and narrator is a woman with the strange name of Psyche Zenobia. But an enjoyable read if you can deal with the bizarre. There's a little display of Poe's disposition to adorn the early pages with exotic synonyms signifying nothing. He does digress into other languages without translation in a few places - his need to exhibit his skills isn't completely hidden. This came out in 1838 and racism glaringly surfaces. Psyche has a black, elderly man of short stature, Pompey, in her retinue, possibly a slave - although the story takes place in Edina, an older name for Edinburgh at about the time the 1834 Abolition of Slavery Act for the UK and the Empire including Canada was coming into force. Out for a walk, she, her dog and Pompey, her order of listing, climb the stairs of the steeple in one of the city's Gothic cathedrals (11th to 15th centuries). There's a small peephole in the clock at the top through which she can observe the city. Without giving it away, keep an eye on that clock! She didn't. Neither did Pompey nor Diana the poodle. (Fe2023/De2025)
This one was too quirky for me; so this is not my favourite Poe story, but I still think these are great lines: 'Vanny Buren, tan escondida Query no te senty venny Pork and pleasure, delly morry Nommy, torny, darry, widdy!'
(It so happened that I knew the lines before I read the story; and this is something I say to myself when the going gets tough. Vanny Buren, pork and pleasure).
4.5 Stars rounded up to 5 Stars "Although treated as two separate stories A Predicament and How To Write A Blackwood Article were originally published together with A Predicament originally titled A Scythe of Time [Believe me this makes a lot more sense] and offered as an example of a Blackwood article produced by following the directions in the companion piece. The combined works contain Poe's only use of a female narrator. As a parody of the typical Blackwood tale, [a British magazine which aside from essays also printed a good deal of horror fiction] uses psychological mannerisms to elaborate a great show of learning, and is centered on a protagonist isolated by a bizarre turn of events." Sova, Dawn B. (2001). Edgar Allan Poe, A to Z : the essential reference to his life and work. New York: Checkmark Books. (200) An unbelievably silly parody that reached its mark masterfully.
After reading A Predicament, I felt like I needed more information to write a good review. I read some of the Goodreads reviews, looked up the Wikipedia article on the story, and visited the story again, this time on audiobook. It turns out that I failed to retain a lot of what the story contained. I had previously read How To Write A Blackwood Article, but didn't realize A Predicament was its sequel. I still can't make any real connections between the two other than they are both bizarre and absurd in a dark comedic way. Perhaps Blackwood explains why A Predicament is written the way it is.
I did find that visiting the story the second time was more enjoyable than the first. This was because I had a better understanding of what was going on. I even had a little chuckle this time when Pompey refused to save Zenobia because of her name-calling. The fact that Zenobia remains conscious after being decapitated stays true to Poe's bizarre narrative. Her eyeballs popping out and decapitation are some of the gory details Poe is known for. However, my experience has been that his more well-known stories are generally better and that his "deep-cuts" are not always as great.
It's entirely possible I didn't "get" A Predicament (I didn't realize, for instance, it is the sequel to How to Write a Blackwood Article, and apparently, neither did many of the other reviewers here). It didn't grab me, which is much less than I'd want to say about a Poe story, but it ended up being true about a distressing lot of them. I appreciate Poe's dark-comedic sense of humor, his sinister prose, and his tortured window into the troubled psyche. But I found as I undertook to read his entire bibliography of work that his well-known stories are, for the most part, his only truly great works. He has a few obscure ones I really like (such as his Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, but THAT falls apart in the last act), but a lot of his "deep cuts" did not pay off for me. Stick to the greatest hits. Sorry, Edgar.
A direct follow-up to "How to Write a Blackwood Article", this short story displays, yet again, the failure of Poe's humor to translate well to modern times (I am assuming, perhaps incorrectly, that it worked better when originally written). The "heroine" (and I use the term loosely) from Blackwood puts herself into a life-threatening predicament and describes her own death in some detail.
Мисля, че може да се зачете като хорър, в който участва напълно не с всичкия си идиот, който е послушал съвет от напушен писател xD Госпожа Психея дава всичко от себе си да спази инструкциите за постигане на хубав разказ за "Блакуд". Дава ама наистина всичко...
Zenobia takes all of the advice from "How to Write a Blackwood Article" and applies it liberally.
I know that it's supposed to be funny and the 1-star is not for the writing. The writing was quite engaging, I could hardly tear my eyes away.
No, the 1-star is because this disturbed me on a deep level. I don't want to give away any of the story, I went in not knowing anything about it and I believe that is best. Like The Black Cat this Poe story is going to stick with me, and not in a good way.
Some people found it funny, but I just didn't. It was too descriptive and horrific for me to laugh.
Read HOW TO WRITE A BLACKWOOD ARTICLE before you read this story!
This was hands-down the funniest thing I’ve read in a long time. I don’t remember the last time a story made me laugh out loud but it happened with this EA Poe gem. I’m fairly certain I’ll be revisiting Blackwood Article & Predicament many times in the future.
Spoiler: the joke is that it’s absurd on purpose, he’s satirizing contemporary horror literature.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This was a horrifying and hilarious read. I listened to this short story on librivox.org and found myself playing it over again. The story is completely satirical, but you can't help but wonder if the mind does go through a whirlwind of absurdity and deep thought while facing death.
Only funny, I imagine, if read in concert with Poe's other tale "How to Write a Blackwood Article," which explains how it is done, this being the result of the doing. I found it very amusing. I found Psyche Zenobia a winning character!