“Metzengerstein: A Tale in Imitation of the German” follows the young Frederick, the last of the Metzengerstein family, who carries on a long-standing feud with the Berlifitzing family. Suspected of causing a fire that kills the Berlifitzing family patriarch, Frederick becomes intrigued with a previously unnoticed and untamed horse. Metzengerstein is punished for his cruelty when his own home catches fire and the horse carries him into the flame. Part of a Latin hexameter by Martin Luther serves as the story’s epigraph: Pestis eram vivus—moriens tua mors ero (“Living I have been your plague, dying I shall be your death”).
Alias Frederick, Baron of Metzengerstein |
Real Names/Alt Names Frederick, Baron of Metzengerstein |
Characteristics Royalty, Literary Characters, Realism and Victorian Age |
Creators/Key Contributors Harry Clarke, Edgar Allen Poe |
First Appearance “Metzengerstein: A Tale in Imitation of the German” in the Saturday Courier (January 14, 1832) |
First Publisher Saturday Courier |
Appearance List Collections: Tales of Mystery and Imagination (1923). |
Sample Read Tales of Mystery and Imagination [Internet Archive] |
Description “Metzengerstein: A Tale in Imitation of the German” follows the young Frederick, the last of the Metzengerstein family, who carries on a long-standing feud with the Berlifitzing family. Suspected of causing a fire that kills the Berlifitzing family patriarch, Frederick becomes intrigued with a previously unnoticed and untamed horse. Metzengerstein is punished for his cruelty when his own home catches fire and the horse carries him into the flame. Part of a Latin hexameter by Martin Luther serves as the story’s epigraph: Pestis eram vivus—moriens tua mors ero (“Living I have been your plague, dying I shall be your death”). |
Source Metzengerstein – Wikipedia |