“Nightmare Tales” is a collection of nine short horror stories. They were written from 1876 to 1891, and originally published in various magazines. The stories are rather unremarkable in themselves, except for one thing: the author is none other than Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, the founder and first leader of the Theosophical Society. The collection was published the year after Blavatsky´s death (or shall we say departure). It´s freely available at the website of the “Pasadena” branch of Theosophy. I´ve read them in a Swedish translation which I picked up at a very respectable venue (I was surprised).
While the short
stories aren´t “bad” as in bad-bad, they feel unfinished, although it´s possible
that 19th century magazines habitually published tales of this sort.
If so, Blavatsky simply adapted to the genre. Most of the stories are about Spiritualist
séances gone dangerously wrong. All the usual “Gothic” tropes are there,
including mysterious castles, journeys through the Balkans, Hungarian Gypsies,
and so forth. Blavatsky was a Russian, so a few horror tropes that are perhaps
more fitting to that nation are included, such as Siberian shamans. A strong belief
in reincarnation shines through. So does the author´s ethnic prejudices: two of
the bad guys are Jewish, one of them an extremely obnoxious brothel madam! Sometimes,
evil people or skeptics who dabble in the occult get severely punished by the
inexorable law of karma, but some villains actually get away with it. I suspect
most of the stories are for entertainment only, rather than edifying morality
tales.
A certain
amount of mischievous humor shines through in some of the tales. The old grey-haired
man on Svalbard in “From the Polar Lands: A Christmas Story” is presumably
Santa Claus! “The Legend of the Blue Lotus” retells a Hindu legend with obvious
anti-Biblical allusions added (Blavatsky hated Abrahamic religion). Blavatsky´s
extreme pessimism is evident in “Karmic Visions”. The most serious story is “A
Bewitched Life”, about a vain skeptic who gets possessed by demons after rejecting
a Shinto purification ritual.
Not sure
what to say about “Nightmare Tales” in general, but it does raise at least some
eyebrows that the founder of a New Religious Movement with some kind of soteriological
message also penned quasi-Gothic fiction!
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