Author | Marguerite Yourcenar |
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Original title | Le Coup de grâce |
Translator | Grace Frick |
Language | French |
Publisher | Éditions Gallimard |
Publication date | 1939 |
Publication place | France |
Published in English | 1957 |
Pages | 160 |
Coup de Grâce (French: Le Coup de grâce) is a 1939 novel in French by Marguerite Yourcenar. The narrative is a triangle drama set in the Baltics during the Russian Civil War (1917-1922).
Story
The novel begins with Erick von Lhomond, recently wounded during the Spanish Civil War, returning to Germany via Italy. Among other mercenaries, he begins to tell his war story, which dates back to the Bolshevik Revolution.
Although he had trained to join the German military during World War I, he was still too young to fight before the war ended. His father, having died at Verdun, left the family in debt. Between his need to fight and his family's need for money, he decides to join German forces fighting the Bolsheviks in Kurland in what is modern-day Latvia. Erick had spent the happiest times of his youth there with relatives in the home of the Count of Reval, which now served as a barracks for the fighters. Erick's childhood friend Conrad fights alongside him and Conrad's sister, Sophie helps to care for all of the soldiers.
Only a few years have passed since the happiness of his youth and Erick easily reconnects with Conrad. What he doesn't expect is the more mature attentions of Sophie. He continuously deflects her attentions, which become quite overt. He seems unwilling to be honest about the reasons for his dismissal of her advances—his feelings for Conrad. In the end, his time in that house, both as a child, and as a soldier was never about games or war, it was always about Conrad.
Analysis
Told only from Erick's perspective, we hear about his inner feelings and only the perceived feelings of those around him. His tendency toward solitude, largely brought on by the uncertainty of a future in war-worn Europe, kept him from sharing his feelings with those around him. It's a heartbreaking story of lost youth and lost love.
Erick's youth means that he doesn't really know what he feels. He refers to his 'indispensable vice' and how it 'is much less the love for boys, than for solitude.
Legacy
It was adapted into the 1976 film Coup de Grâce, directed by Volker Schlöndorff.
See also
References
- "Völker Schlondorff". Evene (in French). 31 January 1939. Retrieved 2012-03-07.
External links
- Coup de Grâce at the publisher's website (in French)
Marguerite Yourcenar | |
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