Mattie the Goose-boy (poem)
Mattie the Goose-boy, or Lúdas Matyi, is a
Plot
Prologue
Matyi, a young peasant boy, is trying to sell his
The first repayment
Three years after Matyi's punishment, Döbröghy begins building a castle for himself. The construction goes on very slowly, because of the lack of carpenters. Matyi dresses as an Italian architect-maestro, and he visits the construction site. He lures the lord and his servants to the nearby forest to gather wood for the structure. After ordering all the servants and guards to harvest the forest, he then lures Döbröghy away, ties him to a tree with a rope, and lashes him for the first time.
The second repayment
After being lashed, Dániel Döbröghy is being cured in his fancy new castle. He orders his soldiers to get him a real doctor, because he claims his wound isn't healing. The servants go to seek a doctor. Matyi dresses as a German battlefield medic, and he is brought to the lord and ordered to cure him. He sends the whole folk of the castle out to the nearby field to collect some special fictional herbs, playing into the ineptitude of the staff. While everybody is out harvesting, Matyi gives Döbröghy the second revenge. After that he frees the geese of the village, which formerly were imprisoned by the lord.
The third repayment
It's now winter and the date of the annual market. Döbröghy knows that Matyi will surely repay the punishment, so he keeps a garrison of guards with him at all times. Matyi instead makes a deal with a local horse rider boy, who lures the whole army away by loudly claiming to be the real Ludas Matyi. As they give chase, the real one stays behind with Döbröghy and dishes out his last third of the punishment.
Edification
The poem was an ironic advice to the lords of Hungary, not to penalize the peasants needlessly. It also emphasizes the intelligence of the poor.
Importance
Lúdas Matyi was the first folk hero in Hungarian literature who is victorious over his lord. The poem represented the relationship between nobility and the folk as well, and it emphasized the problems of the Hungarian agro-society in the late 18th century.
Much later the
The tale is a bent mirror to the Hungarian society.
Lúdas Matyi in the media
- 1867-1872 - A paper with the title: Ludas Matyi - The entertaining pictured Franz Joseph as the Crucified Jesus.
- 1922 - The first Lúdas Matyi film, directed by Alfréd Deésy.
- 1950 - Lúdas Matyi film, directed by Kálmán Nádasdy and László Ranódy. Starring: Imre Soós. Music for the film was composed by Ferenc Szabóand arranged as a suite for orchestra.
- 1945-1992 - The weekly paper Ludas Matyi was the only authorized Hungarian satiric paper during the communist era. Lúdas Matyi used irony and satire to portray the dictatorship and Hungarian society with all of its participants. The paper was extremely popular, and sold a record number of about 650,000 papers. It was allowed to publish surprisingly frank caricatures of politicians, military leaders and society, but was suspended between 25 October 1956 and 21 February 1957 during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and its aftermath.
- In the early times Lúdas Matyi notably included a "Down with Bureaucracy" feature with unusually sharp criticism of the system. Its outlook on foreign affairs was biased towards the Soviet view but was aimed towards humor rather than shrill propaganda. It included an ongoing weekly dialog between two opposing soldiers, the wise and humane "Ivan" and the hapless "Joe".
- The magazine also commented on the emerging sexual revolution with a mixture of sexist satire (the "Jucika" cartoon series being the notable example) and more balanced gender-equality advocacy.
- 1977 - Mattie the Goose-boy, an animated film by Attila Dargay[1]
- 1978-1979 – Over two years (and 24 issues) Ludas Matyi was one of the main characters in the monthly East German comic book magazine Mosaik. His first entrance was in issue 1/1978, last in 12/1979. Setting is the Habsburg monarchy in the beginning 18th century. Ludas Matyi is turned out to be a straying Kuruc characterised by shrewdness and masquerading as someone else to attain a goal.
References
- ^ "NetPiac - Lúdas Matyi (Rajzfilm) VHS". www.netpiac.hu. Archived from the original on 2005-12-28.