FABRE D'ÉGLANTINE (Philippe -Fra nçois-Nazaire... - Lot 63 - Osenat

Lot 63
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FABRE D'ÉGLANTINE (Philippe -Fra nçois-Nazaire... - Lot 63 - Osenat
FABRE D'ÉGLANTINE (Philippe -Fra nçois-Nazaire Fabre , dit ). Manuscript autograph signed in 6 places, pp. 29, 40, 139, 194 (2 times) and 202, entitled "Diary of my journey of Troyes chés me, written to the dear friend of my heart, to the dear mistress of my soul, to the one in whom resides all my happiness, my life & my happiness. "Let it be: (1)-212 pp. of a writing of variable modules, in a small volume in-8 bound in green rigid parchment, red edges, used binding with old restorations, brown grief box with smooth spine partitioned by brown fillets with gilt title. "JOURNAL DE MON VOYAGE DE TROYES CHÉS MOI": a detailed account of the journey that took him from Troyes to Montbard, Semur-en-Auxois, Viteaux, Beaune, then Châlons-sur-Saône where, blocked by floods, he waited until he could embark for Lyon - he paints a mocking portrait of his fellow travellers on the boat. From Lyon, where he says he went to the Comédie, he continued by boat to Valence and the Pont-Saint-Esprit. The story is then interrupted before its author arrives in Carcassonne. A LOVE ENFLAMMED - AND INTERESTED - FOR HIS CHARACTER " CATAU " (CATHERINE) of Troyes. Fabre d'Églantine, who writes her letters "in blank", out of discretion, pours out his feelings for her here: "Farewell, farewell, my dear jewel, my precious jewel, my lovely jewel, my loves, my dear, my unique, my first, and my last loves, my life, my happiness, my being, my god, my everything, my dear everything, my precious everything, farewell and a thousand times farewell, I give you a thousand and thousand kisses, on your adorable mouth and on your charming heart. Farewell, my dear love, farewell, farewell, I love you for life... "(pp. 134-135). He also mentions some young ladies in Beaune and Valence who would be in love with him, saying they wanted to reassure his dear Catau in this respect, but probably rather to pique his jealousy. He speaks of the humiliation of poverty, of his "heart being able to believe itself
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