Download The Oval Portrait by Edgar Allan Poe (.CBR)

The Oval Portrait by Edgar Allan Poe adapted by Pascal Somon.
Requirements: CBR Reader, 13.61 MB.
Overview: The Oval Portrait" is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe involving the disturbing circumstances surrounding a portrait in a chateau. It is one of his shortest stories, filling only two pages in its initial publication in 1842.

    The tale begins with an injured narrator (the story offers no further explanation of his or her impairment) seeking refuge in an abandoned mansion in the Apennines. The narrator spends his or her time admiring the paintings that decorate the strangely shaped room and perusing a volume, found upon a pillow, that describes them.

    Upon moving the candle closer to the book, the narrator immediately discovers a before-unnoticed painting depicting the head and shoulders of a young girl. The picture inexplicably enthralls the narrator "for an hour perhaps". After steady reflection, he or she realizes that the painting’s "absolute life-likeliness’ of expression is the captivating feature. The narrator eagerly consults the book for an explanation of the picture. The remainder of the story henceforth is a quote from this book — a story within a story.

    The book describes a tragic story involving a young maiden of "the rarest beauty". She loved and wedded an eccentric painter who cared more about his work than anything else in the world, including his wife. The painter eventually asked his wife to sit for him, and she obediently consented, sitting "meekly for many weeks" in his turret chamber. The painter worked so diligently at his task that he did not recognize his wife’s fading health, as she, being a loving wife, continually "smiled on and still on, uncomplainingly".

Genre: Comics, Fiction, Classic, Adaptation, Scanlation, Mature Reader.

    Image

The Oval Portrait

    Edgar Allan Poe story writer
    Pascal Somon arts pencils
    Published by Nuclea, 2001.
    Scanlation Team: SnipeIt & nuncio-BDS-DCP

      "The Oval Portrait" was first published as a longer version titled "Life in Death" in Graham’s Magazine in 1842. "Life in Death" included a few introductory paragraphs explaining how the narrator had been wounded, and that he had eaten opium to relieve the pain. Poe probably excised this introduction because it was not particularly relevant, and it also gave the impression that the story was nothing more than a hallucination. The shorter version, renamed "The Oval Portrait" was published in the April 26, 1845 edition of the Broadway Journal.

      The story inspired elements in the 1891 novel The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde. Five years before the novel’s publication, Wilde had praised Poe’s rhythmical expression. In Wilde’s novel, the portrait gradually reveals the evil of its subject rather than that of its artist.

      A similar plot is also used in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 1843 tale "The Birth-Mark".

      French film-maker Jean-Luc Godard cited passages from the story in his 1962 film Vivre sa vie. Many saw this as Godard acknowledging the complexities of using his then-wife Anna Karina in the leading role for his films.

Download Instructions:
http://ceesty.com/wLE7Gm — Edgar Allan Poe: The Oval Portrait (2001)




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