Under the Hill; or, The Story of Venus and Tannhäuser: In Which Is Set Forth an Exact Account of the Manner of State Held by Madam Venus, Goddess & Meretrix, Under the Famous Horselberg, and Containing the Adventures of Tannhäuser in that Place, His Journeying to Rome, and Return to the Loving Mountain
From Author Wars - https://authorwars.com/publications/under-the-hill-or-the-story-of-venus-and-tannhauser-in-which-is-set-forth-an-exact-account-of-the-ma-120511.html
Overview:
- Title: Under the Hill; or, The Story of Venus and Tannhäuser: In Which Is Set Forth an Exact Account of the Manner of State Held by Madam Venus, Goddess & Meretrix, Under the Famous Horselberg, and Containing the Adventures of Tannhäuser in that Place, His Journeying to Rome, and Return to the Loving Mountain
- Author: Aubrey Beardsley, John Glassco
- Year: 1959
- Publisher: Olympia Press (Paris)
- Pages: 123
- Binding: Hardcover
- Type: Novel
- Title Reference: Under the Hill; or, The Story of Venus and Tannhäuser: In Which Is Set Forth an Exact Account of the Manner of State Held by Madam Venus, Goddess & Meretrix, Under the Famous Horselberg, and Containing the Adventures of Tannhäuser in that Place, His Journeying to Rome, and Return to the Loving Mountain
- Notes: Limited to 3,000 numbered copies. This is a perverse, slightly erotic novel, written in a baroque and ornate manner as befit the Mauve Decade. It was begun in the 1890s and left uncompleted in manuscript form by Aubrey Beardsley, the celebrated Victorian illustrator and public character in the circle of Oscar Wilde who was associated with both the Yellow Book coterie and with Art Nouveau. A couple of expurgated chapters were published in the 1890s in a magazine called The Savoy and, as the years passed, various other people wrote further chapters to and/or revised the original version. In 1959, The Olympia Press, the Parisian publisher of English-language pornography for a number of years, produced this edition, an expensive, cloth-bound book with many illustrations by Bearsley and a long introduction (October, 1958) concerning the history of the work by John Glassco, a fairly well-known Canadian poet. Glassco also greatly expanded the original work and, apparently, brought it to the conclusion that Beardsley had originally planned for it, as shown by his notes. It is an erotic retelling, at least in part, of the story of Tannhauer and his encounter with Venus and her entourage "Under the Hill" in Venusberg.