Book Description
Hugues Viane is a widower who has turned to the melancholy, decaying city of Bruges as the ideal location in which to mourn his wife and as a backdrop for the narcissistic wanderings of his disturbed spirit. He becomess obsessed with a young dancer whom he believes is the double of his beloved wife. The consequent drama leads Hugues to psychological torment and humiliation, culminating in a deranged murder. This 1892 work is a poets novel, dense, visionary and haunting. Bruges, the dead city, becomes a metaphor for Hugues' dead wife as he follows its mournful labyrinth of streets and canals in a cyclical promenade of reflection and allusion -- the ultimate evocation of Rodenbachs lifelong love affair with the enduring mystery and mortuary atmosphere of Bruges.
About the author
Georges Rodenbach (1855-1898) spent his creative years in Ghent and Paris where he rubbed shoulders with the foremost symbolists. A typical artist of the decadent period, he was anti-bourgeois, solitary aesthete, but his precise, delicate, existentially muscular poems are still relevant today.