![]() Cover of the 1900 Brentano's edition | |
| Author | Théophile Gautier |
|---|---|
| Translator | Lafcadio Hearn |
| Genre | Fantasy,Historical fiction,short stories |
| Publisher | Richard Worthington |
Publication date | 1882 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (hardcover) |
| Pages | ix, 321 pp |
One of Cleopatra's Nights and Other Fantastic Romances is a collection offantasy short stories byThéophile Gautier, selected from hisNouvelles andRomans et Contes and translated from the French byLafcadio Hearn.[1] The translation was Hearn's first book, and is considered one of the best English translations of Gautier.[2] It was first published in hardcover by Richard Worthington in 1882, and reprinted in 1886, 1888, 1890 and 1891; later reprint editions were issued by H. W. Hagemann (1894) andBrentano's in 1899, 1900, 1906, 1910, 1915, and 1927. The first British edition was published by MacLaren and Co. in 1907.[citation needed] The work was reprinted in 1999 byWildside Press, a trade paperback edition with page count matching the original.[3]
Lin Carter considered reissuing the collection as a volume in theBallantine Adult Fantasy series, but this project was not realized.[4]
Copyright for the work has expired, so it now resides in thepublic domain. The text in various editions is available viaProject Gutenberg,Internet Archive,HathiTrust, orGoogle Books.
In his introduction to the collection, translatorLafcadio Hearn wrote that the stories "afford in the original many excellent examples of that peculiar beauty of fancy and power of painting with words which made Gautier the most brilliant literary artist of his time," and asserted, "At least three of the stories we have attempted to translate rank among the most remarkable literary productions of the century" (though he did not specify which three).[5]
E. F. Bleiler praised the collection for possessing the "glamour and fascination of the past, told with a fine mixture of sentimentality and horror."[6]
In his "Memorial Verses on the Death of Théophile Gautier",[7]Swinburne referenced "One of Cleopatra's Nights":
And that great night of love more strange than this,
When she that made the whole world's bale and bliss
Made king of all the world's desire a slave,
And killed him in mid kingdom with a kiss…
In the same poem, Swinburne also referenced "Clarimonde":
The love that caught strange light from death's own eyes,
And filled death's lips with fiery words and sighs,
And half asleep let feed from veins of his
Her close red warm snake's mouth, Egyptian-wise…

Une nuit de Cléopâtre, an opera in three acts byVictor Massé with a libretto byJules Barbier based on "One of Cleopatra's Nights," premiered in 1885. The opera is referenced, unfavorably, inProust'sSwann's Way (1913).
Cleopatra's Night, a short opera in two acts by American composerHenry Kimball Hadley with a libretto byAlice Leal Pollock based on "One of Cleopatra's Nights," premiered at theMetropolitan Opera on January 31, 1920. The opera was revived the following season, and was broadcast on NBC radio in 1929.Henry T. Finck proclaimed it the best of ten American operas that had so far appeared at the Met.
"The Mummy's Foot" was adapted as part of theNBC Television anthology seriesYour Show Time, airing February 11, 1949.[8] "One of Cleopatra's Nights" was adapted as part of the Spanish anthology seriesHora once, airing June 17, 1971.[9] "Omphale: A Rococo Story" was adapted as part of the French anthology seriesSoftly from Paris, airing May 20, 1988.[10] "Clarimonde" was adapted as part of the anthology seriesThe Hunger, airing March 20, 1998.[11]