"MY DAUGHTER [GERMAINE DE STAËL] HAS THE PASSION OF PARIS AN - Lot 247

Lot 247
Go to lot
Estimation :
400 - 500 EUR
Result with fees
Result : 455EUR
"MY DAUGHTER [GERMAINE DE STAËL] HAS THE PASSION OF PARIS AN - Lot 247
"MY DAUGHTER [GERMAINE DE STAËL] HAS THE PASSION OF PARIS AND THE COMPLETE BOREDOM OF THE CANTON LÉMAN..." NECKER (Jacques). Autograph letter to François Coindet in Paris. S.l., "August 13" [1799]. 2 pp. small in-4 and one line, address on spine, red wax seal with monogram "GM", postal mark "Genève"; small tear due to opening without affecting text, a few small cracks at folds. 400 / 500 € "I know that ours has not perfected its friendliness since you left, and we still don't know what will become of us. The two great armies of Helvetia are still in the presence of each other without attacking each other, and no one can quite explain this inaction. [Masséna's French army and the Austro-Russian army of Archduke Charles and General Suvorov were facing each other around Zurich and would clash in September]. My daughter [Germaine de Staël] arrived in good health. She intends to return to Paris in mid-autumn, if the enemies, by the effect of a victory, approach this country. Her husband [former Swedish ambassador to France Erik Magnus Stael von Holstein] does not want to return to Sweden either, and yet, among many motives, the article of finance should direct their plans in a different way. This word finance makes me think of something you said in your letter. I have no doubt that your perfect wisdom will avert the circumstance you assume, but you [seem] to believe in the dispositions of your friends. I believe from many examples that spending in Paris always goes further than one calculates. I am replying directly to the letter you were kind enough to send me. Please accept the assurances of my faithful affection. Mlle Malingre must have given Desandie an account of the conversation she had with my daughter about him; and it seems to me that the route indicated is the best one to take; I won't repeat the same things so as not to write unnecessarily." On François Coindet, see no. 245 above.
My orders
Sale information
Sales conditions
Return to catalogue