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Hieroglyphic Tales

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About This Book

The volume collects a series of short, fantastical narratives presented as ancient inscriptions with a mock-serious framing voice and comic prefatory notes. Stories range from absurd adventures and grotesque transformations to playful parodies of epic and pastoral conventions, blending whimsy, irony, and learned allusion. The tone alternates between mock-heroic grandeur and sly social satire, skewering pretensions of scholarship and fashionable taste. Lightweight fables, framed anecdotes, and rhetorical flourish create a pastiche that foregrounds artifice and humor rather than realistic characterization or moral certainty.

About the Author

Walpole, Horace portrait

Horace Walpole

Horace Walpole (1717-1797) was an English writer, art historian, and politician, best known for his contributions to Gothic literature and his role in the development of the novel. He is often credited with popularizing the Gothic genre through his seminal work, "The Castle of Otranto," which is considered the first Gothic novel. Walpole's extensive correspondence, particularly in his "Letters of Horace Walpole," provides valuable insights into 18th-century society and politics. His historical writings, such as "Historic Doubts on the Life and Reign of King Richard the Third," reflect his keen interest in history and its interpretation. A prominent figure in the cultural life of his time, Walpole's legacy continues to influence literature and art.

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