The Wanderer's Necklace

The Wanderer's Necklace
Author H. Rider Haggard
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publication date
1914
The Wanderer's Necklace was reprinted in the April 1953 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries

The Wanderer's Necklace is a novel by H Rider Haggard.

Directly relates a little incident for a new textual. The "Wanderer's Necklace" is referenced by Seabury Quinn (1889-1947) in "The Curse of Everard Maundy" while investigating a pattern of several apparent suicides.

The relevance is to the author's repeated re-readings of "The Wanderer's Necklace." Seemingly random events (the suicides and the Wanderer Olaf's travels) actually correlate on a higher, spiritual plain riffed with the reincarnations of previous lives and their present consequences.

Olaf, a Norseman in the eighth century A.D., flees his homeland after challenging the Norse god Odin's right to a human sacrifice, travels to Constantinople (Istanbul, Turkey) to protect the Empress Irene Augusta from her son Constantine the Fifth and other enemies of the Eastern Roman Empire. From Byzantinum, to the pyramid tombs of Upper Egypt, Olaf becomes a traveling Christian who must reject the adulterous advances of Irene. Blinded as punishment for rejecting the Empress, Olaf's adventures are woven within the intrigues of the Eastern Roman Empire.

Olaf begins his recollections with a polar bear hunt, leading to his fame as a great hunter, to excavating his previous life's gravesite to recover the Necklace. The other half of the Necklace lies on a mummy reposing within a pharaoh's tomb in ancient Egypt. The adventure novel shows how these two separate events tie together past and present lives.

[1][2][3]

References

  1. "The Wanderer's Necklace.". The World's News. Sydney: National Library of Australia. 28 March 1914. p. 29. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  2. "ART AND LITERATURE.". The Mail. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 18 April 1914. p. 9. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  3. "RIDER HAGGARDS LATEST ROMANCE.". Western Mail. Perth: National Library of Australia. 1 May 1914. p. 48. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
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