DESBORDES-VALMORE Marceline (1786-1859)

Lot 109
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Estimation :
500 - 600 EUR
DESBORDES-VALMORE Marceline (1786-1859)
L.A.S. "Marceline Valmore", June 6, 1833, to PIERQUIN DE GEMBLOUX, Inspector of the Academy in Grenoble; 3 pages in-8, address. "If you were of a nature to cease to be good, I would be even sadder for everything that happens to me, because you could be unfair to me". She is stuck in Paris, sick "by fatigue of body and soul", and recounts the dismissal of her husband, Prosper VALMORE, from the Rouen theatre: "A theatrical hurricane broke Valmore's commitment in a quarter of an hour [...], it was in May that the theatre just opened. After a year of trial, favour, esteem, and often enthusiasm, two or three judges of this secret court threw the future of three or four families into a bowl of ponch, and Valmore, his father, me, and his children were the next day at the mercy of providence. It's horrible! Sent back without compensation, without forfeit, that very evening, when the madmen began to shout at their victims. There was a very honorable but useless uprising for Valmore, from all the indignant public who were screaming for it again. Everything was broken. There were whistlers rolled to their feet, chairs were thrown on the floor, it was frightening to death. The backdrop was an honest man in exile with his family. I got into the car that night to look for an asylum in Paris. [...] I am still in bed after great suffering or rather a state of immobility where I have vegetated fever with no memory, no precise idea of my fate." She sent her friend the volume of her Cries...
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