Thursday, October 29, 2015

Folkloric Bluebeards and Strong Heroines

Reader Nectar Vam mentioned a version of Bluebeard in the comments of my last post that I had never heard of before. I haven't heard too many folkloric tales other than the Grimms' "Robber Bridegroom" and "Fitcher's Bird," so I did some digging.
"Bluebeard" by Jennie Harbour

From Terri Windling's Bluebeard article:
"In a Scandinavian version of this ballad, a nobleman's daughter is courted by a handsome, honey–tongued, false suitor who promises to take her to the fair if she meets him in the woods. Her father will not let her go, her mother will not let her go, her brothers will not let her go, but her confessor gives permission, provided she keeps hold of her virtue. She finds her suitor in the woods busy at work digging a grave. He says the grave is for his dog; but she protests that it is too long. He says the grave is for his horse; she says it is too small. He tells her the grave is meant for her, unless she consents to lie with him. Eight maidens has he killed before, and she shall be the ninth. Now the choice is hers — she must lose her virtue or her life. She chooses death, but advises her false suitor to remove his coat, lest her heart's blood spatter the fine cloth and ruin it. As he takes it off, she grabs the sword and strikes his head off "like a man." The head then speaks, instructing her to fetch a salve to heal the wound. Three times the girl refuses to do the bidding of a murderer. She takes the head, she takes his horse, she takes his dog, and rides back home — but as she goes, she encounters her suitor's mother, his sisters, his brothers. Each time they ask, "Where is thy true love?" Each time she answers, "Lying in the grass, and bloody is his bridal bed." (In some versions, the entire family is made up of robbers and she must kill them too.) She then returns to her father's court, receiving a hero's welcome there. But in other "murderous lover" ballads, the heroines are not so lucky. Some meet with graves at the bottom of the sea, others in cold rivers, leaving ghosts behind to sing the sorrowful song of their tragic end."
(emphasis mine)
"Bluebeard" by Harry Clarke

 How chilling! It's really a powerful warning about date rape, but I love that in this version, the heroine saves herself-she comes up with the solution and "strikes off his head like a man" (and is never condemned for curiosity, meeting her suitor in the woods, or killing him, but is respected and rewarded!!)

Another tale in which the heroine kills the Bluebeard figure all on her own, from the same article:
"May Colven" by Arthur Rackham

"In "May Colvin," False Sir John rides off with a nobleman's daughter he's promised to marry — but when they reach the sea, he orders the maiden to climb down from her horse, to take off her fine wedding clothes, and to hand over her dowry. "Here I have drowned seven ladies," says he, "and you shall be the eighth." May begs him, for the sake of modesty, to turn as she disrobes. And then she promptly pushes him in the water to his death."

I officially need to get Surlalune's collection of Bluebeard Tales From Around the World, one of the few books in that series I don't have yet! 

Also, as I was looking up the first tale mentioned here, I came across this old newspaper article from the Milwaukee Sentinel from December, 1931. The story begins on the front page with the headline, Three Relate Grave Digging of Bluebeard. It's easier to read the article on Harry Powers on wikipedia but it's also cool to read the old newspapers.  It's really horrible that, of all fairy tales, it seems like it's easiest to find real life equivalents to Bluebeard, but there have been a disturbing number of male serial killers who prey on females. From Wikipedia:

Mugshot of Harry F Powers-serial killer the newspapers dubbed "Bluebeard"


"Upon searching the home, police found the crime scene in four rooms located under the garage. Bloody clothing, hair, a burned bankbook and a small bloody footprint of a child were discovered. Citizens of the town began to arrive at the scene to watch the unraveling of the crimes Powers had committed. Police began to dig up a freshly filled-in ditch found on Powers' property, and the bodies of Asta Eicher, her children and Dorothy Lemke were uncovered. Evidence and autopsy results showed that the two girls and their mother were strangled to death while the young boy's head was beaten in with a hammer. Lemke was uncovered with a belt wrapped around her neck, with which she was strangled. Love letters were found in the trunk of Powers' automobile. He had written back to many women and had the intentions of stealing their money and killing them, just as with his most recent victims."

And guess what the name of the Sheriff who obtained the search warrant for his house was? Wilford B. Grimm.

11 comments:

  1. Two of my favorite tales fall under this type :) One is Marie Jolie, the Cajun version from J. J. Reneaux's book; the other is the Hungarian version, alternately called "the bird with the beautiful voice" or "the secret of the hundred rooms." I tell it around Halloween a lot, because it features a smart heroine, and is also an important warning about trusting handsome strangers. I am curious about the collection :)

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    1. Sounds intriguing! I still have a lot to learn about Bluebeard. Have you posted on these before?

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    2. No, not recently. Maybe I should... :)

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  2. Love the Scandinavian version, hadn't come across this before! The only versions I know are Perrault's and the Grimms' 'The Castle of Murder,' and Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber. I highly recommend her collection of fairy tales of the same title if you haven't already come across it, it's one of my favourite books (and that's saying something, considering the size of my shelve haha!) I think Bluebeard stories are some of the most chilling of all fairy tales, because they still resonate strongly in modern society. As you said, they're pretty much date-rape tales, and this kind of fear is still very apparent today. It's funny how people talk about having a 'fairy tale wedding' implying that they want it to be all glittery and pretty and princess-y nice. But in actualisation, if fairy tale weddings are like Bluebeard stories then it's something you definitely don't want!

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    1. Yeah for some reason, although I've read books about Bluebeard, I really haven't come across many folkloric versions of Bluebeard other than Grimms! Oh man it's high time I read Bloody Chamber again. I read it back in high school. It was also one of my first books I read that had sexual content in it-so my impressions of it at the time were mostly shock and I know I would appreciate the different aspects of it now.

      But yes-Amen to the fairy tale weddings comment! That ideal, shallow stereotype of fairy tales always bugs me, mostly because it's not even true at all!

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  3. I'm glad to be of service to you. If you need to know more fairy tales and their variants, here's this site

    http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/folktexts.html

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    1. Thanks! I've used the texts from tales on this site that I found while searching, but this is great to have the index with all of the tales in categories! I should add this to my link list...

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  4. Australia's true life Bluebeard was Frederick Deeming. He came here in the 1890s. He had a wife and four children back in England, whose bodies were found under the house when they started investigating. They'd found the body of a second wife under the house in Windsor, a suburb not far from where I live, when the owner was checking a horrible smell. He was about to marry a third time when he was caught. I read all about it when researching my children's book on crime, Crime Time. Okay, gory, but kids live gruesome! ;-)

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    1. Creepy! And, while part of me thinks, "you can't tell that to kids!" I have to remember that I also loved murder mysteries when I was younger. At least in that story they caught the killer and gave him justice!

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    2. Oh, yes, he was caught and tried. And he was so sure he'd be freed that he demanded they stopped messing around and get on with it. Boy, was he shocked when he was sentenced to death!

      I have five copies of Crime Time in my school library. They're all falling apart from being borrowed and read so many times. :-) Two primary school children approached me one day when they were doing an orientation at my school to tell me how much they had enjoyed the book. You can tell kids these stories if you tell them right.

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