Villa Diodati – birthplace of Sci-Fi (and modern Fantasy)

That old villas are spooky places is known to everybody. All of us remember creepy stories from our childhood, and there is an entire movie tradition built on this trope – a quick look at IMDB would easily prove it – at least from the  Amityville horror series in the 70s onwards there is an endless supply of them.  However, not many of these places can pride themselves with becoming the birthplace of something unique in speculative fiction. Let alone to more than one. But that’s exactly what Villa Diodati, on the shores of Geneva’s Lake, is about.

From Finden's Landscape & Portrait Illustrations to the Life and Works of Lord Byron, vol. 2 (London: John Murray, 1832).

From Finden’s Landscape & Portrait Illustrations to the Life and Works of Lord Byron, vol. 2 (London: John Murray, 1832).

This lovely mansion got  a (in)famous name for just one night in 1816, when George Gordon Byron invited some  friends over to his residence. One of them was a good friend of his, the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. He was accompanied by his lover, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin (his future spouse, better known to the posterity as Mary Shelley) and her stepsister, Claire Clairmont, also Byron’s mistress and mother of his daughter Allegra. There was also another guest worth mentioning, John Polidori, Byron’s personal doctor. In that night of an impossibly rainy June, the group, probably inspired by Fantasmagoriana, a collection of horror stories, allegedly decided to run a horror competition, where each of them had to contribute their own original piece.  A lot has been speculated about what exactly took place . There are a few stories and anecdotes (this one I found especially delectable http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/books/2013/09/what-if-byron-and-the-shelleys-had-live-tweeted-from-the-villa-diodati/),  and you can even watch some of them, in the vivid interpretation of Ken Russell;  his film Gothic, with Gabriel Byrne as Byron, and Shelley played by a young Julian Sand, is all centred on this episode, like an old Greek tragedy observing the three canons of unity of time, place and action.  In any case, we will probably never know what exactly happened. What we know for sure it what that night brought us: one of the first sci-fi story ever, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, an amazing book so many people make reference to and yet so few have actually read.

Frankenstein, 1818 edition

Frankenstein, 1818 edition

In The Detached Retina: Aspects of SF and Fantasy, Brian Aldiss calls Mary Shelley’s story “the first SF books ever written”, that stands alone from the previous Gothic novels in a clear way, making a point about being “scientific-speculative one” (http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=N1WWSRVeOC8C&pg=PA78&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false, p. 79). 

And what about the other participants? They did contributed something, but definitively more in line with the Romantic zeitgeist: Shelley wrote A Fragment of a Ghost Story, published posthumously as the Journal at Geneva (including ghost stories) and happily forgotten soon after by the majority. More fortune had Fragment of a Novel,  a vampire horror story written by Lord Byron and published in his Mazeppa in 1819. But for creepy stuff it is Dr. Polidori the one most of us still remember. While SF purists will not award him too much credit, he was by all means the creator of another very popular genre, the vampire fantasy novels.  His short story The Vampyre, published in 1819, portrayed a sensual and seductive vampire named Lord Ruthven, a paper-thin disguise for Lord Byron himself and certainly reminding in some aspects of Anne Rice’s Lestat de Lioncourt exquisite charme.

Not bad, isn’t it, for a placid and beautiful  villa. You may actually wonder why it was blessed (or haunted, if we follow Chuck Palahniuk – see the homonymous book, which also features Villa Diodati) by such a peculiar destiny. 

Hauntedcvr

Maybe the answer can be found in some previous guests, more than one century before Byron’s party. It is said that Charles Diodati, his rightful owner, in 1639 had welcomed a friend in that same house  (http://knarf.english.upenn.edu/Places/diodati.html) – a friend whose spirit seemed to have haunted that place, Mary Shelley and her novel so many years later. Another writer, otherwise responsible for the most enthralling Lucifer ever. His name? Obviously, John Milton, the author of Paradise Lost.

Gustave Dore, Paradise Lost

Gustave Dore, Paradise Lost

6 Comments

  1. lynnsbooks

    What a great piece – I really enjoyed it! Thanks
    I have read Frankenstein, I didn’t realise (or if I did I had clearly forgotten) that Byron had written a vampire novel – have you read it? Was it good?
    Lynn 😀

    Reply
    1. Stephen P. Bianchini

      Hello Lynn, thanks! To be precise actually Byron hasn’t written one himself, but he has clearly inspired his doctor-Polidori- to write one… It is worth a reading, if anything for the protagonist (an almost-perfect Lord Byron). I would definitively advise the movie though. Gothic by Ken Russell is a classic nowadays and Gabriel Byrne perfect as Byron 😀

      Reply
      1. lynnsbooks

        Sorry, didn’t phrase that very well – the Polidori one sounds really creepy (and I’ve just picked up a copy for Kindle which is free on Amazon so thanks for that) – I was really referring to the snippet above ‘a vampire horror story written by Lord Byron’. Shouldn’t have said novel – i’m guessing this was just a short story?
        Just checked out a trailer for that film – creepy looking!
        Lynn 😀

        Reply
        1. Stephen P. Bianchini

          Yes, now I understand 🙂 Indeed, Byron’s one is a short piece, and it was included in the Mazeppa.
          In case you want to have a look, here a couple of links: https://archive.org/details/mazeppaapoem02byrogoog (the whole Mazeppa) and http://www.sff.net/people/DoyleMacdonald/l_frag.htm. They both seem working, and the first one is also available in mobi format. I read the Mazeppa in high school and never again afterwards, so maybe it’s worth for me too a fresh look. But for what I remember, Polidori’s makes for a better read.

          Reply
  2. lynnsbooks

    Thanks for the links. I’m confess that I’m a bit of a heathen when it comes to poetry and very rarely read it! I read the Fragment of a Novel – and now I want more!! Will definitely read the Polidori.
    Thanks 😀
    Lynn

    Reply
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