Questo sito usa cookie di analytics per raccogliere dati in forma aggregata e cookie di terze parti per migliorare l'esperienza utente.
Leggi l'Informativa Cookie Policy completa.

Libri antichi e moderni

Vivien Renée

Le feu et la glace. Ensemble de deux lettres autographes signées "Paule" et "Pauline" adressée à Natalie Clifford Barney : "Lorely - Undine - Viviane - reçois mon coeur entre tes mains étranges - et si douces !"

1905

5175,00 €

Feu Follet Librairie

(Paris, Francia)

Parla con il Libraio

Metodi di Pagamento

Dettagli

Anno di pubblicazione
1905
Luogo di stampa
s.l.|[Londres]
Autore
Vivien Renée
Formato
12,4x16,7cm
Soggetto
Lettres autographes & Manuscrits|Manuscrits littéraires
Descrizione
une feuille
Copia autografata
Prima edizione

Descrizione

- s.l. [Londres] s.d. [25 juillet 1905], 12,4x16,7cm, 4 pages sur un double feuillet et 2 pages 1/2 sur un double feuillet. - Ice and fire: Set of two handwritten letters signed "Paule" and "Pauline" addressed to Natalie Clifford Barney: « Lorely - Undine - Viviane - reçois mon cœur entre tes mains étranges - et si douces ! » « Il m'est impossible de te revoir ! » [London 25 July 1905] | 12,4 x 16,7 cm | 4 pages on a double leaf and 2 pages 1/2 on a double leaf Two handwritten letters signed «Paule» and «Pauline» addressed to Natalie Clifford Barney and written in black ink on a double leaf with a silver purple header and the address 3 rue Jean-Baptiste Dumas. On the letter signed «Pauline», the address at the top is crossed out with a line of ink. Transverse fold from having been sent. Skillful romantic contrast from the virtuoso Renée Vivien, who, in turn Paule and Pauline, orchestrates her romantic relationships before her run away to Lesbos. Several years after an extraordinary break-up, during which Natalie Clifford Barney tried to win back the Muse aux violettes, the latter finally fell back into her arms. The first letter, signed "Paule" is very sensual: "I have thought of you so deeply and with such softness since you left! And I see you again, in your dress shimmering with opals, magical and prestigious. Yesterday's spell has regained its eternal power over me. It is now three o'clock in the morning and I am not sleeping at all and I am thinking of you, intensely. and I bitterly consider that one evening when you were beside me, foolishly, a stupid fatigue went through me. While this night when I am alone, I cannot sleep." We discover at the turn of a sentence that this missive, written in haste, is completely secret: "Don't be surprised, beautiful, to receive any day an icy letter telling you that I am going to Holland with my friend and whoever. My friend has demanded that I write you this letter, she is very worried, very nervous, about you. Please don't be mad with me when you receive this letter, I had to write it to calm and reassure my friend. Once again, forgive me!" The "friend" in question is none other that the baroness Hélène de Zuylen, with whom Renée maintained a stable relationship since her break-up with l'Amazone in 1901. The "Brioche", as Natalie calls her, who tried by all means to save Renée from the torments of her heart, even asks her to write "an icy letter" to her rival. This false letter, in a very different tone from the first, seems to have been written directly under her dictation: "After you left, I thought a lot about everything that had just happened, and I can only repeat to you what I have already told you: it is impossible for me to see you again, under any circumstances. The nervous disorder of which I am now suffering and of which only you are the cause, demands the utmost tranquility in the interest of my health, and I beg you to refrain, in the future, from any attempt at getting together, which, I warn you in advance, will be absolutely useless. You will see, from this letter, that I am in Holland, with my friend, as I told you. We go out together, among the calm landscapes, a charming rest. Farewell, Natalie, and remember that you were the sole cause of everything that happened. Pauline" However, a third muse occupies all of Renée's thoughts: the young Ottoman Kérimé Turkhan-Pacha, with whom she has maintained an intense and regular correspondence for a year. Several days later, she left France with Natalie for Mytilene (Lesbos) and took the opportunity to escape and finally meet her Bosphorus sultana for the very first time. A very beautiful testimony of Renée Vivien's ubiquity in love. Precious and very rare letters from Sappho 1900 to l'Amazone. It is at the end of 1899 and through Violette Shillito that Renée Vivien - then Pauline Tarn - met Natalie Clifford Barney "this American woman softer than a scarf, whose sparkling face shines with golden hair,
Logo Maremagnum it