Showing posts with label Golgotha Dancers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golgotha Dancers. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2016

READ: The Golgotha Dancers, by Manly Wade Wellman

While I enjoy the holiday week, unearth my Harlan Ellison collection from my old room, and mull over the thoughts of the past week or so on Google+, I will be posting links to free pulp stories.  

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The Golgotha Dancers, by Manly Wade Wellman

I had come to the Art Museum to see the special show of Goya prints, but that particular gallery was so crowded that I could hardly get in, much less see or savor anything; wherefore I walked out again. I wandered through the other wings with their rows and rows of oils, their Greek and Roman sculptures, their stern ranks of medieval armors, their Oriental porcelains, their Egyptian gods. At length, by chance and not by design, I came to the head of a certain rear stairway. Other habitués of the museum will know the one I mean when I remind them that Arnold Böcklin's The Isle of the Dead hangs on the wall of the landing. 
I started down, relishing in advance the impression Böcklin's picture would make with its high brown rocks and black poplars, its midnight sky and gloomy film of sea, its single white figure erect in the bow of the beach-nosing skiff. But, as I descended, I saw that The Isle of the Dead was not in its accustomed position on the wall. In that space, arresting even in the bad light and from the up-angle of the stairs, hung a gilt-framed painting I had never seen or heard of in all my museum-haunting years. 
I gazed at it, one will imagine, all the way down to the landing. Then I had a close, searching look, and a final appraising stare from the lip of the landing above the lower half of the flight. So far as I can learn—and I have been diligent in my research—the thing is unknown even to the best-informed of art experts. Perhaps it is as well that I describe it in detail. 
It seemed to represent action upon a small plateau or table rock, drab and bare, with a twilight sky deepening into a starless evening. This setting, restrainedly worked up in blue-grays and blue-blacks, was not the first thing to catch the eye, however. The front of the picture was filled with lively dancing creatures, as pink, plump and naked as cherubs and as patently evil as the meditations of Satan in his rare idle moments. 
I counted those dancers. There were twelve of them, ranged in a half-circle, and they were cavorting in evident glee around a central object—a prone cross, which appeared to be made of two stout logs with some of the bark still upon them. To this cross a pair of the pink things—that makes fourteen—kneeling and swinging blocky-looking hammers or mauls, spiked a human figure. 
I say human when I speak of that figure, and I withhold the word in describing the dancers and their hammer-wielding fellows. There is a reason. The supine victim on the cross was a beautifully represented male body, as clear and anatomically correct as an illustration in a surgical textbook. The head was writhed around, as if in pain, and I could not see the face or its expression; but in the tortured tenseness of the muscles, in the slaty white sheen of the skin with jagged streaks of vivid gore upon it, agonized nature was plain and doubly plain. I could almost see the painted limbs writhe against the transfixing nails. 
By the same token, the dancers and hammerers were so dynamically done as to seem half in motion before my eyes. So much for the sound skill of the painter. Yet, where the crucified prisoner was all clarity, these others were all fog. No lines, no angles, no muscles—their features could not be seen or sensed. I was not even sure if they had hair or not. It was as if each was picked out with a ray of light in that surrounding dusk, light that revealed and yet shimmered indistinctly; light, too, that had absolutely nothing of comfort or honesty in it.
"Hold on, there!" came a sharp challenge from the stairs behind and below me. "What are you doing? And what's that picture doing?"

(Our art critic continues his story at the Gutenberg Project...) 

Friday, October 14, 2016

The Golgotha Dancers, by Manly Wade Wellman

"I sold my soul that I might paint a living picture." - "The Golgotha Dancers", Manly Wade Wellman
Summary: A man tours an art museum in search of The Isle of the Dead, but finds in its place another painting, named Golgotha.  The image of 12 cherubic demons dancing while two more drive spikes into a crucified man's hands captivates him.  A museum guard takes the painting down, as someone has sneaked the painting into the gallery.  On a whim, the unnamed man offers to take Golgotha home. The guard agrees, as it would hide all evidence of his negligence of his duties.

After hanging the painting in his room, the man falls asleep.  He wakes from a nightmare to find that the dancers from the painting are crowd around him.  They seize his arms and stretch him out in cruciform fashion.  As he lays pinned in his bed by the dancers, one raises a hammer high into the air, just like in the painting...

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"The Golgotha Dancers" first appeared in Weird Tales vol. 30, issue 4, making it a first run pulp short story.  Accounting for length and genre conventions, it shares much with Lester Dent's Master Pulp Formula, including multiple physical conflicts including one initiated by the narrator, a reliance on wit and skill to resolve the encounter, and a punchline at the end.  However, the character of Miss Dolby, a nurse who heard the commotion of the dancers and rushed to help the narrator, was not introduced in the first quarter of the story but at the half-way point.  Her growing involvement with the narrator and the mystery serves as a respite in the escalating stakes not found in Dent's formula.  In fact, she is a key character in the resolution, as her peril forces another confrontation with the dancers.  Her levelheadedness and skills with a knife ultimately contribute to the demonic dancers' undoing.

That said, Wellman is not merely duplicating this stock formula, but writing to his own.  Wellman's formula, as seen here and in his John the Balladeer stories, is to embed a clue into the mystery of the story, whether in the songs John learns or the inscription "I sold my soul that I might paint a living picture".  Evil can be fought but must be outwitted to be defeated.  The means for that defeat are always near, for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear, but it takes a special person to solve the puzzle.  In "The Golgotha Dancers", the narrator sees clearly that the painting is a living painting, while it took the doubtful Miss Dolby's wits to properly apply that knowledge into a solution. 

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An analysis of "The Golgotha Dancers" using the Five Pillars of Pulp shows:

Action -  The unnamed narrator wrestles in flesh and blood with the demonic dancers.

Impact - How the narrator escapes his fate is irreversible.  Also, standing against the dancers with Miss Dolby draws the two together.

Moral Peril - Although the associations with the crucifixion hill of Golgotha give the dancers actual hellish overtones, the peril that the narrator and Miss Dolby face is mortal, not moral or spiritual.  At no time did the narrator think of abandoning her to the dancers.

Mystery - From the man who sneaked Golgotha into the museum to the inscription written on its frame, mystery draws the narrator to the painting and a series of confrontations with the dancers.  While solving a particular facet of the mystery allows the narrator to survive his encounter with the dancers, questions about the methods used to create the living painting and the identity of the artist remain.

Romance - On my first read, the ending, where the narrator recognizes his love for Miss Dolby, felt out of place.  However, upon rereading, it is clear that her chance run-in to rescue him the first time led to a growing relationship prior to the final confrontation with the dancers.  The formality of the relationship obscured this fact on the quick read.

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"The Golgotha Dancers" can be found at Wikisource Amazon, and Project Gutenberg.