The Hill of Dreams

The Hill of Dreams is a semi-autobiographical novel by the Welsh writer Arthur Machen.

The Hill of Dreams
Cover of first edition
AuthorArthur Machen
CountryWales
LanguageEnglish
GenreAutobiographical novel
PublisherGrant Richards
Publication date
1907
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages329 pp

Plot summary

The novel recounts the life of a young man, Lucian Taylor, focusing on his dreamy childhood in rural Wales, in a town based on Caerleon. The Hill of Dreams of the title is an old Roman fort where Lucian has strange sensual visions, including ones of the town in the time of Roman Britain. Later, the novel describes Lucian's attempts to make a living as an author in London, enduring poverty and suffering in the pursuit of art and history.

Literary significance and criticism

The Hill of Dreams was little noticed on its publication in 1907 save in a glowing review by Alfred Douglas. It was actually written between 1895 and 1897 and has elements of the style of the decadent and aesthetic movement of the period, seen through Machen's own mystical preoccupations.

Lord Dunsany admired The Hill of Dreams and wrote an introduction to a 1954 reprint of the novel.[1] In Henry and June, Henry Miller tells Anaïs Nin about The Hill of Dreams.[2]

According to the Friends of Arthur Machen website, the novel is

almost undoubtedly Machen's most important and moving work. Lucian Taylor, the hero, is damned either through contact with an erotically pagan "other" world or through something degenerate in his own nature, which he thinks of as a "faun". He becomes a writer, and when he moves to London he becomes trapped by the increasing reality of the dark imaginings of this creature within him, which become increasingly real. Machen drew copiously on his own early years in Wales and London, and the book as a whole is an exploration through imagination of a potential fate which he personally avoided. One of the first explorations in fiction of the figure of the doomed artist, who is biographically so much a part of the decadent 1890s.[3]

gollark: You could say that about Düne.
gollark: I'm sure you're allowed them under the second amendment or something.
gollark: Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works. Anything that's invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it. Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things.
gollark: There's some Douglas Adams quote...
gollark: But they obviously define "technology" as "*new* technology", and don't include, say, the power grid.

References

  1. Joshi, S. T.; Schweitzer, Darrell (1993). Lord Dunsany: A Bibliography. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press. p. 139. ISBN 081082714X
  2. Nin, Anaïs (1986). Henry and June. San Diego: Harcourt. p. 127. ISBN 9780151400034
  3. "Arthur Machen's Writing: Annotated Bibliography". Friends of Arthur Machen. Retrieved 26 September 2014.


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