FLAUBERT (Gustave). Autograph poetic manuscript... - Lot 73 - Osenat

Lot 73
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Estimation :
300 - 400 EUR
FLAUBERT (Gustave). Autograph poetic manuscript... - Lot 73 - Osenat
FLAUBERT (Gustave). Autograph poetic manuscript entitled "À une femme maigre". 4 verses occupying one p. in-4 oblong on a blue paper bifeuillet. A poem by Louis Bouilhet copied in Flaubert's hand. "What does your thin breast matter, O my beloved object? One is closer to the heart when the breast is flat! And I see like a blackbird in its cage locked up Love, between your bones, dreaming on one leg! "Gustave Flaubert published this poem in 1872 in the notes appended to the volume of Louis Bouilhet's Last Songs, under the title "À une jeune fille manquant de charme". He added the following remark: "Bouilhet had made many verses of this kind and saltier ones". In his preface, he indicated more generally that "there is nothing to prevent us from admitting that he excelled in epigrams, quatrains, acrostics, roundels, bouts-rimés and other 'joyeusetés' done for fun, as debauchery. He also did it out of indulgence [...] He had the gift of amusement, a rare thing in a poet. "Guy de MAUPASSANT quotes this quatrain in the tale "Nos Anglais", which he published in the newspaper Gil Blas on 10 February 1885, then in his collection Toine in January 1886. LOUIS BOUILHET, WHO GUSTAVE FLAUBERT CALLED "MY LITERARY CONSCIENCE", was one of his closest friends (he was also a friend of Guy de Maupassant). Curator of the Rouen library, he played an important role in advising him on his works. A writer himself, he wrote plays and poetry. After his death in 1869, Gustave Flaubert worked to serve his: he reworked a play found in the deceased's papers, Le Sexe faible, had another of his plays, Mademoiselle Aissé, performed and printed, and published his posthumous poems with a personal preface under the title Dernières chansons (1872).
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