Based on Irving's three-month stay in the palace in 1829, Tales of the Alhambra is presented as a series of traveloguish essays and historical sketches, although they really have more to do with his grand ideas about lost Moorish glories than any realities of medieval Andalusia. This was the book that cemented the Alhambra's romantic reputation in the minds of the Anglophone reading public. It was my endeavor scrupulously to depict its half Spanish, half Oriental character its mixture of the heroic, the poetic, and the grotesque to revive the traces of grace and beauty fast fading from its walls to record the regal and chivalrous traditions concerning those who once trod its courts and the whimsical and superstitious legends of the motley race now burrowing among its ruins. Tales of the Alhambra is a collection of essays, verbal sketches, and stories.Ĭare was taken to maintain local coloring and verisimilitude so that the whole might present a faithful and living picture of that microcosm, that singular little world into which I had been fortuitously thrown and about which the external world had a very imperfect idea. The Tales of the Alhambra : a series of tales and sketches of the Moors and Spaniards was published in May 1832, Consisting of a series of essays and short fiction pieces, it was referred to as his "Spanish Sketch Book." In 1851 Irving wrote the "Author's Revised Edition", also titled Tales of the Alhambra.
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