

QUENEAU Raymond.
MANUSCRIT autograph, "It is in the meadows of the Police
Montée"..., [ca. 1925-1929]| 3 pages small in-4 (20.7 x 23 cm) and 1 page in-8.
A delightful surrealist, erotic-burlesque tale.
It tells the adventures of L'Argent and his mistress Afraouse Murepoix, with Doctor Colinquipose.
"It is in the meadows of the Police Montée that one can meet L'Argent every day, accepting with his bloody hands the sweetness of a walk imposed by Doctor Colinquipose, concerned with hygiene. Afraouse Murepoix is his mistress, in name, for in reality they have never made love together| she has given him the gift of a pretty ring made of pederast sperm and a dozen ties, silk and fawn, carnival nudity of a cinched chest. L'Argent asked his old friend Colinquipose to put platinum testicles and an iridium penis on him| the operation was a great success and he is no longer a slave to his sex, he laughs at it alone, no longer washes his feet of it, and he married Afraouse to a narcotic banker accustomed to solitary morals. [...] Afraouse gets naked, takes a bath, and then the train to the nearest town, where charming young men offer her joys and distractions, from cream cakes to rides on wooden horses, and nights together on mattresses covered with white sheets and placed on four-legged furniture called beds.
This text appears to be unpublished| it was not collected among the "Surrealist Texts" in Volume I of Queneau's Complete Works in the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, Gallimard, 1989. It comes from the archives of André BRETON.
PROVENANCE André Breton| sale André Breton, 42, rue Fontaine (11-12 April 2003, n°2093).
MANUSCRIT autograph, "It is in the meadows of the Police
Montée"..., [ca. 1925-1929]| 3 pages small in-4 (20.7 x 23 cm) and 1 page in-8.
A delightful surrealist, erotic-burlesque tale.
It tells the adventures of L'Argent and his mistress Afraouse Murepoix, with Doctor Colinquipose.
"It is in the meadows of the Police Montée that one can meet L'Argent every day, accepting with his bloody hands the sweetness of a walk imposed by Doctor Colinquipose, concerned with hygiene. Afraouse Murepoix is his mistress, in name, for in reality they have never made love together| she has given him the gift of a pretty ring made of pederast sperm and a dozen ties, silk and fawn, carnival nudity of a cinched chest. L'Argent asked his old friend Colinquipose to put platinum testicles and an iridium penis on him| the operation was a great success and he is no longer a slave to his sex, he laughs at it alone, no longer washes his feet of it, and he married Afraouse to a narcotic banker accustomed to solitary morals. [...] Afraouse gets naked, takes a bath, and then the train to the nearest town, where charming young men offer her joys and distractions, from cream cakes to rides on wooden horses, and nights together on mattresses covered with white sheets and placed on four-legged furniture called beds.
This text appears to be unpublished| it was not collected among the "Surrealist Texts" in Volume I of Queneau's Complete Works in the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, Gallimard, 1989. It comes from the archives of André BRETON.
PROVENANCE André Breton| sale André Breton, 42, rue Fontaine (11-12 April 2003, n°2093).
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