La Peau de chagrin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
La Peau de chagrin (1831) is a philosophical fantasy novel by Honoré de Balzac. The title is often translated as The Wild-Ass's Skin. Plot summaryThe novel is about a man who discovers a powerful talisman in an old curiosity shop (originally published in 1831 after having been serialized in Parisian newspapers, this may be the first usage of that device). The talisman is in the form of an animal skin (a shagreen, the skin of an onager or "wild-ass"). It grants any wish, but shrinks slightly with each use, and the user is doomed to die when it shrinks to zero. The main character is originally profligate with his wishes, but is quickly reduced to an ascetic existence where he must try very hard not to want anything - his wish will be instantly granted, but might also kill him. There is a double-meaning in the original title which is lost in translation: it is a play on the words shagreen (the animal skin talisman) and chagrin, meaning in French a sense of grief (a much sadder regret than is implied by the English meaning of the word). Early in the novel, a character tries to explain to the main character his view of the dangers of the talisman (translated by Herbert J. Hunt):
Sigmund FreudSigmund Freud read La Peau de chagrin in its entirety in one sitting before requesting to his doctor and friend Max Schur to assist him in his suicide, as the pain he was enduring from his mouth cancer was unbearable. Freud knew that his chagrin only had one last wish left. See also
fr:La Peau de chagrin ka:შაგრენის ტყავი ru:Шагреневая кожа vi:Miếng da lừa |


