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APOLLINAIRE Guillaume (1880-1918)
The item was sold for 2 600 €
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APOLLINAIRE Guillaume (1880-1918)
AUTOGRAPH DIARY. NOTEBOOK OF VISITS. January-February-March-
April Villefranche, 1905. In-12, 106 pages. Unpulled, in a worn printed cover with missing pages. (Missing 2 leaves: 4/5 and 18/19 February). Boxing. Handwritten inscriptions in ink or graphite.
A moving day-to-day account of Apollinaire's life and work, this little notebook was covered by the poet with the most disparate notes.
It contains appointments, for example with Henri Delormel, perhaps for the preparation of their review, La Revue Immoraliste| but also the addresses of Picasso and Max Jacob on March 1, that of Rémy de Gourmont or Thadée Natanson. This diary also serves as an account book for his daily expenses. But the majority of the entries concern work notes of all kinds, and the notebook is used both right side up and upside down in a disorder which, on examination, is only apparent.
Reading notes and bibliographical notices follow one another.
Apollinaire is thus interested in imaginary alphabets (Adam's, Enoch's and Noah's alphabets), in a treatise on the invention of a universal language, in the New York Stock Exchange and in Russian loans. From the end, head to tail, 65 pages are devoted to the establishment of a "contemporary sautadic bibliography". Apollinaire lists dozens of French, English and German erotic works, which testify to his encyclopaedic knowledge in this field.
This set of notes is most likely one of the first milestones for L'Enfer de la Bibliothèque nationale.
A document of the greatest interest for the knowledge of Apollinaire's erotic work.
AUTOGRAPH DIARY. NOTEBOOK OF VISITS. January-February-March-
April Villefranche, 1905. In-12, 106 pages. Unpulled, in a worn printed cover with missing pages. (Missing 2 leaves: 4/5 and 18/19 February). Boxing. Handwritten inscriptions in ink or graphite.
A moving day-to-day account of Apollinaire's life and work, this little notebook was covered by the poet with the most disparate notes.
It contains appointments, for example with Henri Delormel, perhaps for the preparation of their review, La Revue Immoraliste| but also the addresses of Picasso and Max Jacob on March 1, that of Rémy de Gourmont or Thadée Natanson. This diary also serves as an account book for his daily expenses. But the majority of the entries concern work notes of all kinds, and the notebook is used both right side up and upside down in a disorder which, on examination, is only apparent.
Reading notes and bibliographical notices follow one another.
Apollinaire is thus interested in imaginary alphabets (Adam's, Enoch's and Noah's alphabets), in a treatise on the invention of a universal language, in the New York Stock Exchange and in Russian loans. From the end, head to tail, 65 pages are devoted to the establishment of a "contemporary sautadic bibliography". Apollinaire lists dozens of French, English and German erotic works, which testify to his encyclopaedic knowledge in this field.
This set of notes is most likely one of the first milestones for L'Enfer de la Bibliothèque nationale.
A document of the greatest interest for the knowledge of Apollinaire's erotic work.
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