The Woman and the Puppet explained

The Woman and the Puppet
Author:Pierre Louÿs
Title Orig:La Femme et le pantin
Country:France
Language:French
Pub Date:1898

The Woman and the Puppet is an 1898 novel by Pierre Louÿs.

Synopsis

During the carnival in Seville, the Frenchman André Stévenol meets and falls under the spell of Concepción 'Conchita' Pérez, a young Andalusian woman. His friend, don Mateo Diaz warns him off by describing his own history with the woman – a history of being repeatedly attracted and then rebuffed by her. Conchita continually flirted with other men to torture don Mateo. On each occasion he was made to feel guilty for his jealous thoughts and actions towards her, until he realised finally that he had been her puppet for fourteen months and in an explosion of passion he beat her. She then astonished him by declaring the violence a sign of the strength of his love and came to his bed. She was a virgin. Although the two then started living together, she continued her flirtatious behaviour towards other men and simultaneously became very possessive. Don Mateo left the country and travelled for a year to escape her.

The novel has a short epilogue, described as the moral of the piece. The Frenchman accidentally meets Conchita again, and they spend the night together. The next morning, as Conchita packs her bags for Paris, a note is received from don Mateo asking to be taken back into Conchita's good graces.[1]

Adaptation

An abridged version of the story in English is included in Woman and Puppet, Etc. (1908),[2] a collection of Louÿs works translated and/or adapted by G. F. Monkshood (William James Clarke), published by Greening & Co.

Opera adaptation

Film adaptations

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/26868 Source text
  2. https://archive.org/details/womanpuppetetc00louy Woman and Puppet, Etc.