DREAM

PAUL CHARLES SMITH

The storyThe Lady of the House of Lovewas adapted from a radio play written by Carter for BBC

Radio 3 in 1976, and as a result isn’t a direct reimaging of any particular fairy tale, but it does

invoke ideas from Sleeping Beauty, Jack in the Beanstalk, and vampire folklore. It is about a

vampire Countess, the orphaned daughter of Nosferatu who lives in an abandoned village in

Romania in her castle, dressed in her dead mother’s wedding dress with only a caged bird for

company. She repeatedly draws cards from the tarot deck and the result is always the same:

wisdom, dissolution, and then death, and even though she tries to interpret them in different

ways it always amounts to the same. One day a young English soldier arrives in the town on

bicycle, exploring Europe before he has to report to the barracks, and on that day the tarot shows

her a card symbolising the hand of love and death. The Countess has survived thus far by

seducing men who came to the village, and when the soldier arrives in her castle she begins the

same game with him,“Suivez-moi. Je vous attendais. Vouz serez ma proie.” The solider is

inexperienced, but he is not afraid of the Countess because he does not believe in vampires. She

represents the old Europe, and he is the face of the new changing Europe where the supernatural

is replaced by the rational. She leads him into the bedroom where she intends to feed on him, but

she cuts herself on glass and while she is deep in thought looking at her blood, the solider kisses

her wound. The solider wakes in the morning to find her slumped at the table where she does her

readings dead with a single rose. He loves the village behind him on his bicycle, but takes the rose

where back at the barracks he places it in water to bring it back to life and succeeds, but there is

still something unholy about it despite its majesty. The next day after this he is sent to France to

fight in the Great War. As mentioned earlier, one of the main themes seems to be the new way of

Europe is the conquering of the old ways with reason, although ironically this leads to war. For a

story about seduction, the Countess seems rather desexualised and while the soldier is the virgin

she is uncomfortable doing something she should be experienced at. In a subversion of Sleeping

Beauty, instead of life the kiss brings death, although it is still compassion that provides the

female protagonist with her freedom.