
Griseldis
The young Griseldis von Ronach arrives as a governess at Treuenfels Castle. There she finds the lonely Count Harr, suspected of poisoning his wife. She falls in love with him and decides to prove his innocence.
Griseldis is a novel by Hedwig Courths-Mahler from 1916/1917, a typical representative of her extensive production of trivial literature – a combination of romance, crime and Schauer-romantic novels. Courths-Mahler (1867–1950), one of the most prolific and widely read German writers with over 200 titles, here deals with the motif of fidelity and suffering known from the story of Griseldis from Boccaccio's Decameron, but places it in a contemporary (early 20th century) German aristocratic milieu.
The action takes place at the secluded Treuenfels Castle. Count Harro von Treuenfels is suspected of poisoning his capricious and unfaithful wife Alice, who is found dead in bed. She was poisoned by Indian poison that the count brought back from his travels. Although he is acquitted by the court due to lack of evidence, the entire society shuns him and considers him guilty. Only his little daughter Gilda and his cousin Beate, an old spinster who secretly loves him passionately, remain with him.
In such an atmosphere, a new governess arrives at the castle – young, beautiful, smart and cheerful Griseldis von Ronach, a poor free noblewoman who had to look for work after her father's death. She had already heard about Harro's story and fell in love with him through a photograph. From the first moment, she believes in his innocence and becomes a ray of sunshine in the gloomy castle. Harro soon falls in love with her, and Griseldis decides to actively tackle the murder mystery.
The novel skillfully combines a love story with a criminal investigation: Griseldis, guided by a dream, discovers secret passages in the castle, hidden shafts and old construction secrets. Gradually she reveals the real culprit... In the meantime, she struggles with social prejudices, Harro's self-doubt and her own feelings. As a true Courths-Mahler heroine, Griseldis is idealized: beautiful, moral, brave, loyal and ready to sacrifice.
The work is typical of the author – sentimental, with a clear division into good and evil characters, a happy ending and an emphasis on the triumph of love, loyalty and justice. Critics classify it as trivial literature, but readers adored it precisely for its escapism, the romantic atmosphere of the castles and the comforting message that good will ultimately triumph. The novel has seen several editions and was adapted into a TV movie in 1974 (with Sabine Sinjen in the lead role).
One copy is available
- Traces of patina
- The cover is missing





