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The Carlton Lake Collection contains approximately 350,000 items relating to French
art, literature, and music, spanning 1377-2000 (bulk 1895-1940). The majority of the
collection consists of papers of numerous French writers, musicians, and artists of
the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and includes manuscripts, correspondence,
photographs, artwork, music scores, and other materials. The collection is strongest
for the period known as the Belle Époque, (roughly
1895-1914) and for the years during and after World War I (especially the 1920s and
1930s). Among the earlier materials are Napoleonic-era letters. While the majority
of the materials were written in the French language, English, German, Russian, and
Spanish language materials are also present. |
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The Lake Collection is arranged into twelve series: I. Alphabetical (158 boxes); II.
Samuel Beckett (3 boxes); III. Jean Cocteau (11 boxes); IV. Françoise Gilot (9
boxes); V. Georges Hugnet (18.5 boxes); VI. Valentine Hugo (21 boxes); VII.
Librairie Dorbon-aîné (13 boxes); VIII. Pierre Louÿs (9 boxes); IX. Music (264
items); X. Henri-Pierre Roché (47 boxes); XI. Maurice Saillet (4 boxes); XII.
Gertrude Stein (9 boxes). |
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Among the numerous important literary and cultural figures and organizations
represented in the collection are Pierre Albert-Birot, Guillaume Apollinaire, Louis
Aragon, Antonin Artaud, Georges Bataille, Charles Baudelaire, Samuel Beckett,
André Breton, Albert Camus, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, René Char,
Paul Claudel, Jean Cocteau, Colette, Maurice Darantière, Marcel Duchamp, Editions
J.O. Fourcade, Paul Eluard, Léon-Paul Fargue, Paul Fort, Jean Genet,
André Gide, Françoise Gilot, Georges Hugnet, Valentine Hugo, Alfred Jarry,
Georges Jean-Aubry, James Joyce, Librairie Dorbon-aîné, Pierre
Louÿs, Stéphane Mallarmé, André Malraux, Henry Miller,
Pablo Picasso, Marcel Proust, Maurice Raynal, Arthur Rimbaud, Henri-Pierre
Roché, Maurice Saillet, Saint-John Perse, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry,
Jean-Paul Sartre, Gertrude Stein, Alice B. Toklas, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Paul
Valéry, Paul Verlaine, Emile Vuillermoz, and Emile Zola. |
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A number of significant musical scores, letters, conductor's notes, and other
manuscripts created by approximately one hundred composers are also found in the
Lake Collection. Among these composers are Georges Auric, Hector Berlioz, Ernest
Chasson, Claude Debussy, Paul Dukas, Gabriel Fauré, Franz Liszt, Maurice
Ravel, Albert Roussel, Camille Saint-Saëns, Erik Satie, Igor Stravinsky, and
Giuseppe Verdi. |
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Some of the highlights of the Lake Collection include: |
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Pierre Albert-Birot (1876-1967): the complete archive for the avant-garde review SIC
(1916-1919); contains maquettes, page proofs, tear sheets, manuscripts,
correspondence, and other original materials relating to Albert-Birot's founding and
editorship of the magazine. |
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Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918): manuscript of the prologue of Les Mamelles de Tirésias; letters, handwritten
notes, and other documents relating to the play and its production; manuscripts of
works written for his column "La Vie
anecdotique." |
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Louis Aragon (1897-1982): letters, manuscripts of poems and prose pieces, including
a
typescript of Le Cahier noir, a long and searching
"reflection on love" related to his novel, La Défense
de l'infini. |
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Antonin Artaud (1895-1948): significant correspondences with his publisher and other
friends reflecting his disintegration into mental illness. |
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Georges Bataille (1897-1962): manuscripts of two of his major works, L'Orestie and Dianus [Histoire de
rats. (Journal de Dianus)]. |
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Baudelaire, Charles (1821-1867): the proof sheet of "Les
Litanies de Satan" from Les Fleurs du mal
(1857), with extensive corrections in Baudelaire's hand; handwritten manuscript of
"La Charogne." |
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André Breton (1896-1966): manuscripts relating to the Surrealist movement,
including "13 études,"
"La Béauté sera convulsive ou ne sera
pas,"
"Automatisme de la variante," and "Lumière Noire." |
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Albert Camus (1913-1960): manuscripts and letters, including manuscript of Le Malentendu and corrected page proofs of Les Justes; and manuscript of Discours de Suède, Camus's acceptance speech of the Nobel Prize. |
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Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1894-1961): the complete manuscript of Guignol's Band and its sequel, Le
Pont de Londres, in combinations of handwritten manuscript, typescript,
and corrected typescript with handwritten additions, totaling 4,022 pages;
handwritten manuscript of Scandale aux abysses; also a
moving correspondence with his friend Mourlet covering the war years and
Céline’s exile in Denmark. |
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René Char (1907-1988): letters, including a large correspondence with
Valentine Hugo, intimate friend of most of the surrealists; manuscripts of many of
his major poems, including "Crésus" and "La Récolte injuriée." |
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Paul Claudel (1868-1955): manuscript of one of Claudel's essential works, Cinq grandes odes, which is eighty-eight pages. (Except
for the first ode, the original manuscript of which has never been found, this
manuscript is complete.) |
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Colette (1873-1954): manuscripts and letters of Sidonie Gabrielle Colette and her
husband Willy (Henri Gauthier-Villars) include the manuscript of her novel Chéri, as well as other manuscripts and
correspondence. |
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Paul Eluard (1895-1952): manuscripts of numerous poems; a handwritten manuscript of
definitions prepared by Eluard and Breton for the Dictionnaire
abrégé du surréalisme; letters, including a large,
important correspondence with his lifelong friend from childhood, the binder A. J.
Gonon. |
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Jean Genet (1910-1986): four heavily corrected draft versions of the play Haute Surveillance; complete manuscript of Genet's
masterpiece, Notre-Dame-des-Fleurs. |
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André Gide (1869-1951): manuscript and corrected typescript of Isabelle; handwritten manuscript in two notebooks of
Le Journal des Faux-monnayeurs; manuscript of L'École des femmes; an important correspondence with
Eugène Rouart of over 300 letters and accompanying documents. |
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Alfred Jarry (1873-1907): manuscripts for Léda, Le
Mousse, Par la taille, Le Moutardier du pape, and La Papesse Jeanne; letters and documents relating to Ubu Roi, including a correspondence with Lugné-Poe
in which Jarry proposes that Lugné-Poe produce the play. |
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Georges Jean-Aubry (1882-1950): a sizable portion of the papers of the versatile
critic of art, music, and literature. |
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Stéphane Mallarmé (1842-1898): handwritten letters to Villiers de
l'Isle-Adam, Huysmans, Coppée, Charles Morice, Edmund Gosse, John Payne, York
Powell, Edouard Dujardin, Félix Fénéon, Courteline, Henri
Cazalis, and Henry Roujon, among others, plus draft of a letter to Rimbaud's mother
Marie Catharine Rimbaud. |
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André Malraux (1901-1976): complete set of galley proofs for La Condition humaine, heavily corrected by Malraux and
with handwritten additions in his hand; complete handwritten manuscript of L'Espoir. |
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Marcel Proust (1871-1922): handwritten manuscript and proof fragments of À l'ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs, plus another proof
fragment, heavily revised; letters, in particular an interesting collection of
seventy-eight notes from Proust to his housekeeper Céleste Albaret. |
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Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891): collection of numerous documents relating to Rimbaud's
life and poetry, including manuscripts, letters, drawings, corrected proofs and
similar materials by Rimbaud's sister, Isabelle; his brother-in-law, Paterne
Berrichon, poet and artist; his teacher Georges Izambard, and other poets such as
Paul Verlaine, Stéphane Mallarmé, and Paul Claudel. |
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Saint-John Perse (Alexis Saint-Léger Léger, 1887-1975): corrected page
proofs of Éloges, the book that established
Saint-John Perse as a major poet; typescript, with handwritten emendations, of his
Nobel Prize acceptance speech. |
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Jean-Paul Sarte (1905-1980): manuscripts for over a dozen of his works, most of them
political in nature, including Joseph Lebon (synopsis
for a play based on the French Revolution), Liberté -
Egalité (philosophical and historical study of the French
Revolution); Questions de méthode, and L'Enfant et les
groupes. |
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Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901): papers from the family archive, consisting
of
nearly 400 handwritten letters by the artist, his mother, his grandmother, and other
members of the immediate family, depicting the daily environment of a large and
eccentric household constantly on the move from one family château to another, as
well as the artistic development of the young Lautrec. |
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Paul Valéry (1871-1945): manuscripts for numerous poems and prose pieces,
including a handwritten and typed manuscript for a discourse on history; a large
number of letters and correspondences, notably a group of personal letters to John
Middleton Murry in which Valéry discusses his feelings about poetry in
general, about his own work, and about other writers--among them Baudelaire, Poe,
and Gide--who interested him in particular; and another significant group of letters
to Georges Jean-Aubry |
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Series I. Alphabetical, 1718-2000 |
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This series is a single alphabetical sequence by creator name; for each creator,
materials are subdivided into manuscript works, outgoing and incoming letters, and
other materials. The materials present in the other category include a wide variety
of items, such address books, announcements, broadsides, calendars, catalogs,
certificates, clippings, contracts, collages, diaries, dossiers, drawings, ephemera,
financial records, funeral notices, insurance policies, invitations, journals, legal
papers, lists, menus, order forms, passports, photographs, postcards, posters,
production files, programs, proofs, quotations, receipts, record books, research
notes, scrapbooks, signs, telegrams, tickets, and visiting cards. |
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Series II. Samuel Beckett, 1947-2000 |
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The Samuel Beckett papers in the Carlton Lake Collection consist of manuscripts and
proofs of Beckett's works, letters to various correspondents, correspondence and
works associated with the authors of the first extensive bibliography of Beckett,
and a few third-party works. |
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The series is organized in four subseries: A. Works, 1951-1983; B. Outgoing
Correspondence, 1947-1989; C. John Fletcher, 1961-1989; and D. Works by Other
Authors and Miscellaneous, 1994, 2000. |
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Works are generally brief monologues and prose passages, in French or in English.
Beckett gave "8" the provisional title of The Way,
and in certain drafts, Beckett repositioned the "8"
to look like the infinity symbol. |
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Beckett's letters to Parisian journalist and novelist Georges Belmont are in French
and span nearly forty years. They primarily discuss Beckett's daily life, travels,
and what he was reading or viewing on the stage. The (English) correspondence to
former-convict-turned-actor Rick Cluchey is written almost entirely on postcards and
concerns the staging of Beckett's plays during the 1980s, both those in which
Cluchey was involved as well as other productions. The brief correspondence with
Marilyn Meeker of Grove Press is in English. The largest collection of letters are
those to Mania Péron, the widow of his friend Alfred Péron who was killed in World
War II. The correspondence, in French, covers almost forty years and includes many
references to his work. |
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Subseries C is composed of papers formerly belonging to scholar John Fletcher,
coauthor with Raymond Federman of Samuel Beckett: His Works and
His Critics; An Essay in Bibliography (1970). Included are the
manuscripts of three other works by Fletcher concerning Beckett: an unpublished
notebook and two subsequently published books, The Novels of Samuel Beckett (1964) and A Student's Guide to the Plays of Samuel Beckett (1978).
Correspondence in this subseries includes both incoming and outgoing letters.
Fletcher's correspondence with Beckett began with Beckett's helpful responses to
Fletcher's requests for information about his works, but over time the two men grew
to be close friends. Letters between Fletcher and Federman (mostly in English but
occasionally in French) concern both the bibliography they were jointly writing and
their respective academic careers and personal lives. Other correspondents in this
series (including Theodore Besterman, Nancy Cunard, Richard Ellmann, Hugh Ford,
Stuart Gilbert, Peggy Guggenheim, and Jacques Putman) were either materially
involved in the publication of the bibliography or were consulted in reference to
Beckett's life or works. |
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Subseries D contains a small scrap of music manuscript by Suzanne Beckett, who was
a
talented musician; Eoin O'Brien and Edith Fournier's "Some facts relating to the publication of
Samuel Beckett's Dream of Fair to Middling
Women", discussing the Black Cat Press's edition of the work; and
printed material from a Beckett festival in Scotland in 2000. |
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Series III. Jean Cocteau, 1905-1959 (bulk 1910-1928) |
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The personal and professional life of French poet, novelist, artist, playwright, and
filmmaker Jean Cocteau is reflected in the Carlton Lake collection of Cocteau's
manuscripts, correspondence, personal papers, notebooks, drawings, financial and
legal documents, and third-party papers. The collection is arranged in four
subseries: A. Works, 1910-1929 (6.5 boxes); B. Correspondence, 1913-1959 (2.5
boxes); C. Personal, 1908-1950 (1 box); and D. Third-Party Works and Correspondence,
1905-1925 (1 box). |
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The bulk of the collection is a large portion of Cocteau's personal archives that
was
sold without his permission to a French dealer in 1935. (For a detailed history of
the papers, see chapter nine of Lake's Confessions of a Literary Archaeologist.) Because the
papers went to the dealer in several small lots, it has not been possible to be
certain of Cocteau's original arrangement. Therefore, works have been arranged
alphabetically by title and correpondence alphabetically by correspondent. |
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Within the Works subseries are manuscripts or proofs of most of Cocteau's writings
until about 1928, a period that encompassed some of his best work, including Le Cap de Bonne-Espérance, Le coq et l'arlequin, Les enfants terribles, Le grand écart, Le livre blanc, Les mariés de la tour Eiffel, La noce massacrée, Le Potomak, and Thomas l'imposteur. Many of the manuscripts and notebooks
also contain drawings. Because the bulk of the archives predates Cocteau's
involvement with the cinema, that aspect of his work is largely not documented. |
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Within the Correspondence subseries, the folder of Cocteau's letters to Henri
Lefebvre is actually the dossier of Lefebvre's dealings with Cocteau and the sellers
of Cocteau's papers (this is the file referred to in Lake's Confessions by the title "Affaire Cocteau"). Cocteau's letters
which frequently concern his writing, his philosophy, and his personal life are,
like his works, sprinkled with drawings. Prominent among his correspondents are Jean
and Valentine Hugo, Max Jacob, Marie Laurencin, and Francis Poulenc. |
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The Personal subseries includes inscriptions from other authors to Cocteau on
tear-sheets, address books, an autograph book from the beginning of his career, and
various documents such as his birth certificate, plans for the decoration of his
apartment, and a menu from a dinner at Le Boeuf sur le Toit. |
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Among the Third-Party Works and Correspondence are letters from Cocteau's mother to
Valentine Hugo, and works by Raymond Radiguet as well as letters to him from various
correspondents. |
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Series IV. Françoise Gilot, 1944-1965 |
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The organization of the Françoise Gilot Collection respects the arrangement formally
imposed upon it by Carlton Lake. It is arranged into three subseries: A. Works,
1964-1965 (8 boxes); B. Correspondence, 1951-1957 (1 folder); and C. Pablo Picasso,
1944-1952 (2 boxes). |
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The bulk of the collection is comprised of drafts for the English and French editions
of Life with Picasso. These include the earliest
corrected typescript of the first draft, corrections primarily in the hand of
Carlton Lake. In addition, an untitled play that Gilot apparently wrote near the
beginning of her relationship with Picasso is also present. |
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Gilot and Lake used the documents present in the second and third subseries during
the writing of their book. Gilot writes of her return from her honeymoon with Luc
Simon in 1955 to find that Picasso had vacated their villa La
Galloise, and none of her possessions remained--apart from "the beds and
a few chairs, three boxes of papers stored in the attic--where no one, apparently,
had thought of looking--and that's all." Some of the letters have identifying
notations made in the hand of Carlton Lake. Several of them were recorded verbatim
in the book, while others demonstrate Gilot's restraint in what she revealed about
the family--notably concerning Paul Picasso's 1951 breakdown and family problems.
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The second subseries is represented by one folder of correspondence to Gilot from
the
art dealers Louise Leiris and Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. These letters document
Gilot's personal relationship with the dealers, as well as the preparations for her
1952 one-woman exhibition at the Galerie Louise Leiris. |
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The third subseries is devoted primarily to correspondence written to Pablo Picasso
during the years 1944-1952. While the letters are primarily arranged alphabetically
by author, some are often grouped by subject. For example, the folder containing
letters from Olga Picasso, also include letters written by third parties concerning
her. |
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These were artistically rich years for Picasso, when he began to experiment with
lithography and ceramics, and the letters from his secretary Jaime Sabartés
partially record this process. In addition, Picasso's relations with various
Communist organizations, as well as his 1948 trip to Poland, are documented by the
letters of several correspondents--notably those from Paul Eluard. |
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Picasso's personal life is reflected in the letters written to him by his children
Paul and Maya, by his first wife Olga, and his companions Marie-Thérèse Walter, Dora
Maar, Geneviève Laporte, and Françoise Gilot. In addition, several family photos are
included in the correspondence of Marie-Thérèse Walter. |
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Series V. Georges Hugnet, 1920-1971 |
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Handwritten and typed manuscripts, correspondence, printed material, photos,
collages, and artwork document Georges Hugnet's life and work from 1920-1971. The
materials are organized into four subseries: A. Works, 1929-1954 (0.5 boxes), B.
Letters, 1931-1971 (1 box), C. Recipient, 1920-1970 (15 boxes), and D. Other Papers,
1929-1967 (2 boxes). |
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The Works subseries is composed of original works by Georges Hugnet. Included in this
series is the handwritten manuscript for Non vouloir. |
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Letters written by Hugnet in Subseries B. are dominated by those to Germaine (Pied)
Hugnet, his first wife. |
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The Recipient subseries, forming the bulk of the papers, includes letters from Paul
Éluard, Marcelle Ferry, Valentine Hugo, Man Ray, Virgil Thomson, and Alice B.
Toklas, and richly demonstrates the friendships and business acquaintances of George
Hugnet. |
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The final subseries, Other Papers, contains artwork, building plans, personal
documents, printed materials, and documents written by other individuals, either as
works or correspondence. |
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Series VI. Valentine Hugo, 1872-1968 |
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Correspondence, manuscripts, notes, journals, diaries, artwork, legal, financial and
personal documents, photographs, printed material, and photocopies document the life
of Valentine Hugo from 1872-1968. The material is organized into four subseries: A.
Works, 1904-1965 (2.5 boxes), B. Letters, 1905-1968 (3.5 boxes), C. Recipient,
1902-1968 (9 boxes), and D. Other Papers (6 boxes), 1872-1968. |
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Included in the Works subseries are a number of drafts of articles and notes relating
to friends of Valentine Hugo such as Constantin Brancusi, Paul Éluard, Raymond
Radiguet, and Erik Satie. Also present are a number of manuscripts for radio
broadcasts written in the 1950s and 1960s about her early artistic career and
acquaintances. |
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Correspondence with Valentine's mother Zèlie Gross comprises almost two thirds of
the
Letters subseries and a substantial portion of the Recipient subseries. Other
notable correspondents in the Recipient subseries include Marie Laure, Romola
Nijinsky, and Andrè de Badet. Most of the materials in the Other Papers subseries
are Valentine's own personal papers, such as her passport and birth certificate, and
works or correspondence by other authors. A large part of materials in this
subseries involves Jean Hugo, Valentine's husband. His journals (1919-1924) and
correspondence with his family compose a large portion of Subseries D. Documents,
legal and personal, and works by Valentine's mother, Zèlie Gross, or father, Auguste
Gross form a portion of Subseries D. as well. Handwritten and photostat copies of
letters received by Valentine Hugo from Edgard Varèse and Erik Satie comprise a
segment of the Other Papers subseries. Some originals of the copied letters to
Valentine Hugo from Edgard Varèse are also located in Subseries C. Recipient. The
originals of the correspondence between Hugo and Satie can be found in the
third-party correspondence of Series V. Georges Hugnet. |
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Series VII. Librairie Dorbon-aîné, 1894-1954 |
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Correspondence, handwritten and typed manuscripts, proofs of creative works, music
manuscripts, printed material, and financial, legal and publicity records document
the work of bookseller and publisher Librairie Dorbon-aîné. The records are arranged
in three subseries: A. Correspondence, 1894-1954 (5 boxes), B. Works by Authors,
1907-1939 (7.5 boxes), and C. Business Records, 1909-1932 (0.5 boxes). All materials
within the subseries are arranged alphabetically by author and/or title except as
noted below. |
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Subseries A. Correspondence is subdivided into letters written and received by the
firm and a small group of personal correspondence received by Louis Dorbon. This
subseries documents the firm's business with authors and other publishers. Notable
correspondents include Maurice Darantière, Xavier Marcel Boulestin, and Ernest Benn
Ltd. |
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The bulk of the collection is comprised of Subseries B. Works by Authors, which
contains manuscripts of authors published by Librairie Dorbon-aîné. Among the
influential authors represented in these records are Xavier Marcel Boulestin,
Maurice Des Ombiaux, Claude Farrère, Camille Saint-Saëns, René Boylesve, Lemaître,
Claude Debussy, Francis de Miomandre, and comtesse de Noailles. All stages of the
publication process, as evidenced by the presence of original manuscripts, proofs
with corrections, and final proofs, are well documented within the Librairie
Dorbon-aîné records for some works such as Aspects sentimentaux du front Anglais (1917) and L'Amphitryon d'aujourd'hui: Introduction à la vie
gourmande (1936). Some unpublished works for musical projects are also
included in Subseries B. For example, two projects concerning Schumann and Beethoven
styled after Trois Manuscript par Chopin were created
but never published. Most of the music manuscripts from Caplet, Schmitt,
Roger-Ducasse, and Debussy were acquired for a deluxe illustrated album on
contemporary French music that was envisioned but never produced. Also present
within Subseries B. are proofs of an unpublished article detailing the founding of
Librairie Dorbon-aîné by Louis Dorbon and a few pieces of correspondence from Marc
Pincherle, an associate of Librairie Dorbon-aîné. |
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Subseries C. constitutes the smallest portion of the papers but provides crucial
information about the internal workings of the Librairie. Included in this subseries
are original designs for the Librairie Dorbon-aîné logo and a dossier of
subscription requests for Dorbon-aîné's elite book club, Les bibliophiles
fantaisistes. |
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Series VIII. Pierre Louÿs, 1839-1934 |
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Manuscripts, correspondence, and assorted personal and third-party papers make up
the
papers of the French poet and novelist Pierre Louÿs and shed considerable light on
his professional and private life. The collection is arranged in four subseries: A.
Works, 1880-1934 (3 boxes); B. Correspondence, 1891-1921 (5 boxes); C. Personal,
1891-1918 (.5 box); and D. Third-Party Works and Correspondence, 1839-1900 (.5
box). |
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Louÿs's entire career is represented in the Works subseries, from juvenilia to
posthumously published verse, although with more emphasis on his poetic than his
prose works. Included are several versions of the manuscript of his first book,
Astarte (1891), as well as numerous
iterations of one of his most important poems, "Pervigilium mortis." Also present are
Louÿs's manuscripts for a proposed work on Corneille that was turned down by
publishers who were not amused at having previously been hoaxed by his claim that
Les chansons de Bilitis was an authentic
ancient Greek manuscript. |
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Correspondence is the largest subseries in the collection. It is divided into
outgoing and incoming groups and arranged alphabetically by correspondent. The
largest single correspondence is with Louis Loviot, friend and fellow man of
letters. Other correspondents are Louÿs's half-brother Georges Louis, the historian
and novelist André Lebey, writer Claude Farrère, writer Natalie Clifford Barney,
actress and journalist Musidora, Wilde biographer Robert Harborough Sherard, and his
mistress Claudine Roland, whose letters are bound in a single volume together with
his letters to her. Also present is correspondence with Marthe Du Bert, a woman
whose fascination for Louÿs led her to impersonate a journalist, forge letters, and
concoct an imaginary lesbian relationship in order to attract Louÿs's attention. The
collection includes several of her forged letters as well as an untitled memorandum
by Louÿs (in the Works subseries) giving an account of the affair for possible legal
prosecution. |
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The Personal subseries contains items such as classroom notes, a pocket engagement
book, an admission card to view Egyptian monuments, and a copy of a newspaper left
by composer Camille Saint-Saëns on a café table, retrieved and documented by
Louÿs. |
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The Third-Party Works and Correspondence subseries includes the handwritten
manuscript of Natalie Clifford Barney's Tis: Cinq petits dialogues grecs, several manuscript poems
by André Lebey, and a published copy of Henri Legrand's 1839 book Los Angeles: Una hija, which is printed in a mock-Arabic
script that Louÿs claims, in a note laid in, to have deciphered. (In the Works
subseries there is also a folder of Louÿs's notes on Legrand.) |
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Series IX. Music, 1817-1987 (bulk 1870-1963) |
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The Carlton Lake Collection of Manuscripts encompasses a large number of mostly
French manuscript and printed musical works from the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. This series is arranged in two subseries: A. Manuscript Music, 1817-1947,
and B. Printed Music, 1920-1987. |
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Approximately one hundred composers are represented by works in the collection. The
earliest manuscripts are sketches for lieder by Carl Maria von Weber dating from
about 1817, and the most recent manuscript is Henri Sauguet's 1961 song, "Au pays." Printed items range from a
1920 edition of a portion of Florent Schmitt's incidental music for Antony and Cleopatra to Gavin Bryars's 1987 tribute to
Marcel Duchamp, "Prélude à la Rrose
(quoi?): 'Sot ne rit de la Rrose,
croit'." Printed works are usually present in the collection
because they were inscribed by the composer or they were kept among the papers of
the composer or lyricist. |
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The collection is strongest in early twentieth-century French classical music
manuscripts. Composers represented by significant holdings include Georges Auric,
Ernest Chausson, Henri Cliquet-Pleyel, Claude Debussy, Paul Dukas, Gabriel Fauré,
Hector Fraggi, Charles Gounod, Reynaldo Hahn, Paul Ladmirault, Raoul Laparra, Franz
Liszt, Jules Massenet, Federico Mompou, Jacques Offenbach, Maurice Ravel, Albert
Roussel, Camille Saint-Saëns, Erik Satie, Charles Seringès, Igor Stravinsky, and
Frank Turner. Especially important are the rich collections of works by Debussy,
Dukas, Fauré, Ravel, and Roussel. |
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Items of particular interest include the manuscript score from which Liszt conducted
the premiere of his Gaudeamus Igitur;
Stravinsky's orchestration of Chopin's Grand valse brilliante in Eb for the ballet Les sylphides; two songs by Franz Schubert; a copy by
Clara Schumann of Johannes Brahms's Twelve Songs and Romances for Female Voices; Debussy's
score for the ballet Khamma; Dukas's scores
for L'apprenti sorcier and La peri; Fauré's orchestral score for Masques et bergamasques; Ravel's manuscripts for Daphnis et Chloë, Gaspard de la nuit, L'heure espagnol, Introduction et allegro, Ma mère l'oye, Rapsodie espagnol, Shéhérazade, the piano trio, and Valses nobles et sentimentales, in addition to numerous
songs; Roussel's opera Aeneas, the ballet
Bacchus et Ariadne, the piano concerto,
Evocations, Le festin de l'araignèe, La naissance de la lyre, the opera-ballet Padmâvâti, Rapsodie flamande, and
Symphony no. 2, as well as many songs; and Satie's Relâche. |
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The Lake Collection as a whole offers myriad possibilities for enhancing the study
of
the scores by consulting other primary source materials within the collection. For
example, a fascinating exchange of letters between Chausson and Debussy in 1893-1894
discussing their creative struggles on Le Roi Arthus and Pelléas et Mélisande complement the scores and sketches
for these works. |
|
A note on terminology
|
|
This guide adopts the standard terminology for description of music as set out in
Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2d ed.
as follows: |
|
Close Score: A musical score giving all the parts on a minimum number of staves,
normally two, as with hymns. |
|
Condensed Score: A musical score giving only the principal musical parts on a minimum
number of staves generally organised by instrumental sections. |
|
Piano Score: A reduction of an orchestral score to a version for piano on two
staves. |
|
Score: A series of staves on which all the different instrumental and/or vocal parts
of a musical work are written, one under the other in vertical alignment, so that
the parts may be read simultaneously. |
|
Short Score: A sketch made by a composer for an ensemble work, with the main features
of the composition set out on a few staves. |
|
Vocal Score: A score showing all vocal parts, with accompaniment, if any, arranged
for keyboard instrument. |
|
Series X. Henri-Pierre Roché, circa 1886-1971 |
|
The Henri Pierre Roché Papers consist of manuscripts, typescripts, notebooks, notes,
clippings, correspondence, printed material, diaries, and financial and legal
documentation. The papers were originally acquired from Henri Pierre Roché's widow,
Denise Roché, who had begun to organize and arrange the papers herself, placing
groups of materials into paper folders or cardboard carriers and annotating the
containers as to title, date, or correspondent. Although the containers she provided
are housed with the collection, Denise Roché's overall structure of the material was
not preserved. The material is now arranged in five subseries: A. Works, B.
Correspondence, C. Carnets, D. Personal and Legal Papers, and E. Roché Family. |
|
Subseries A. Works |
|
Roché's works, both published and unpublished, are well represented in this group
of
papers, and they include novels, plays, short stories, poetry, translations, and
articles. Much of this material appears to be the beginning stages of works that
were never completed or published, and most titles consist of a few pages of
handwritten narrative, although the evolution of many works, particularly those that
were eventually published, is documented extensively. For example, material relating
to the novels Jules et Jim and Deux anglaises et le continent includes the correspondence
and diaries of some of the individuals who later appeared as characters in the
novels. This subseries also contains printed material relating to the works, such
as
reviews and advertisements, as well as additional correspondence regarding the work.
Other creative works about art are located in the Art sub-subseries of Subseries
D. |
|
Extensive handwritten notes and manuscripts, revised manuscripts, typescripts, tear
sheets from publications, clippings, publicity materials, correspondence, and
diaries are included in this subseries. Major works represented here include Deux anglaises et le continent, Jules et Jim, Don Juan et..., and La tunique jaune. The Works are arranged alphabetically by
title, and related correspondence, clippings, and publicity materials are located
with the corresponding work. |
|
Manuscript versions of both Deux anglaises et le
continent and Jules et Jim are
supplemented by correspondence and diaries written by individuals who were the
inspirations for characters in the novels. The group of papers relating to Deux anglaises et le continent includes correspondence
between H.-P. Roché and Margaret and Violet Hart, as well as a journal written by
Margaret Hart. This group also contains a journal by Roché that relates to his
relationship with the Hart girls. Similarly, documents regarding Jules et Jim include correspondence between Roché and
Franz and Helen Hessel. Additionally, Helen Hessel's diaries are housed here,
although due to their fragile condition, use of some of these diaries is restricted.
Finally, because both Deux anglaises et le
continent and Jules et Jim were made
into films by François Truffaut, the papers include items relating to the film
versions, such as clippings annotated by Roché and publicity material. |
|
Many items in the Works subseries appear as little more than a title and notes
scribbled across a page, and in those cases, the work has been filed alphabetically
by title. In some instances, one notebook or group of papers contains several
distinctive and separately titled works; these are filed alphabetically under the
first title of that group. In her arrangement of her husband's papers, Denise Roché
appears to have created a group entitled Poèmes, and another called Pensées. Her arrangement of these materials has been
preserved and they are filed as a group under the titles she provided. |
|
Subseries B. Correspondence |
|
Although correspondence can be found throughout the collection, the Correspondence
subseries is reserved for those letters not explicitly related to Roché's writing
projects. For the most part, the correspondence in Subseries B is between Henri
Pierre Roché and his two wives, Germaine Bonnard and Denise (Renard) Roché; however,
other correspondents are also represented, such as Georges Braque, Jean Cocteau,
Marcel Duchamp, Marie Laurencin, Pablo Picasso, Erik Satie, and Gertrude Stein. |
|
Roché's correspondence is divided into two categories: Letters (arranged
alphabetically by recipient) and Recipient (arranged alphabetically by author).
Correspondence between two individuals other than H.-P. Roché is included in the
Third-Party Correspondence sub-subseries. |
|
Correspondence between H.-P. Roché and Germaine Bonnard primarily relates to their
own relationship, but discussions of Roché's involvement with other women, including
Helen Hessel, are prevalent. Correspondence with Denise Roché is largely of the same
nature, although much of the later material revolves around the birth and upbringing
of their son Jean-Claude. |
|
Other noteworthy correspondents in this subseries include Euphemia Lamb, an English
woman with whom Roché had an affair, who at one time had been a model for the
painter Augustus John. Louise Bucking (Weisel) was another of his non-French lovers,
and she, along with Germaine Bayle, provided material for his work Don Juan et... . Letters from Jean-Claude Roché to his
father are also included in this subseries. Correspondence between Germain Bonnard
and Helen Hessel is part of the Third-Party Correspondence sub-subseries. |
|
Other correspondence can be found in the Works subseries and in the Art sub-subseries
of subseries D. |
|
Subseries C. Carnets |
|
Roché's daily agendas and diaries (referred to herein as "carnets"), which begin in 1901 and end in 1959, document various aspects
of his personal and professional life. Transcriptions of several carnets, through
1945, commissioned by film director François Truffaut, as well as a photocopy of one
carnet, accompany the collection. This subseries is arranged chronologically,
thereby integrating agendas, original carnets, and transcriptions of the same year
with each other. Unless authorized, only the transcriptions are available for
use. |
|
Carnets, agendas, and transcriptions document most of Roché's adult life in this
series. An avid diarist, Roché recorded and later reviewed most of his life
experiences. Much of the information contained in the carnets is described and
discussed in the 1991 Ransom Center catalog Henri Pierre Roché: An Introduction. All items are carnets
unless indicated otherwise. Numbers in parentheses indicate numbers written on the
original journals. Transcripts exist for many of the carnets. Because of their
fragile condition, access to the original carnets requires curatorial approval. |
|
Subseries D. Personal and Legal Papers |
|
Roché's interests in art, real estate, and his autobiography are well documented in
the Personal and Legal Papers subseries. This subseries is arranged into four
sub-subseries: 1. Art, 2. Autobiography, 3. Usha Villas, and 4. Personal
Documents. |
|
Various aspects of H.-P. Roché's art collection are documented in the Art
sub-subseries, although the art collection itself did not accompany the papers. This
sub-subseries contains notes, manuscripts, and published versions of articles
written by Roché about art, artists, and art collecting, as well as inventories,
records of sales, and exhibition catalogs for Roché's personal art collection. Some
of the material, especially that contained in the Migraine/Tella folders—created
during a sale of Garcia Tella's art owned by Roché to Michel Migraine—was generated
by his widow, Denise, and son, Jean-Claude Roché, after Henri Pierre Roché's
death. |
|
The documents contained in the Autobiography sub-subseries represent a project that
H.-P. Roché appears to have pursued for several years, perhaps in the hopes of
eventually publishing his own autobiography. They include notes that span more than
five decades, as well as very early journals, and essays concerning the
afterlife. |
|
The Usha Villas sub-subseries comprises primarily building plans and legal
documentation regarding real estate transactions. |
|
Documents relating to Roché's personal life, such as his passport, address books,
birth certificate, and obituaries are located in the final sub-subseries, Personal
Documents. |
|
Subseries E. Roché Family |
|
The last subseries contains materials relating to Roché's family. Journals;
correspondence; works; financial, legal, and medical records; and printed material
document the lives of Roché's mother Clara, his second wife, Denise, and his son
Jean-Claude. The Roché Family subseries is divided into sub-subseries corresponding
to each family member: 1. Clara Roché, 2. Denise Roché, and 3. Jean-Claude
Roché. |
|
Series XI. Maurice Saillet Collection of Sylvia Beach and
Shakespeare and Company, 1917-1976 |
|
This series embraces a significant group of materials documenting Beach's Paris
bookstore Shakespeare and Company, her activities as the first publisher of James
Joyce's Ulysses, and her personal life. The
collection contains a significant portion of her personal correspondence, a large
group of photographs, together with some business records and ephemera related to
Shakespeare and Company. The material remains in essentially Saillet's arrangement,
although a few of the folders have been moved to afford a better topical
arrangement. |
|
The collection represents the years 1917 to 1976, with most of the material covering
the years from 1919 to 1964. The Parisian literary scene of the 1920s, Adrienne
Monnier, James Joyce and other English-speaking authors, and Sylvia Beach herself
are the principal subjects. The large correspondence in the collection includes
numerous letters from Beach to Monnier and to Saillet. Among the many persons who
wrote to Saillet about Beach are Hélène Baltrusaitis, Bryher, Jackson Mathews, and
Charles Mauron. |
|
The Saillet collection is strongest in documenting Sylvia Beach's personal life,
especially her relationship with Monnier. The material relating to Shakespeare and
Company and to James Joyce is slighter but nevertheless noteworthy. It is arranged
into three subseries: A. Shakespeare and Company and James Joyce, B. Sylvia Beach,
C. Sylvia Beach and Maurice Saillet. |
|
The first subseries is arranged in two sub-subseries: A. Shakespeare and Co.,
1919-1947 (7 folders) and B. James Joyce, 1921-1935 (5 folders). The materials
comprising this subseries are fragmentary but even so of considerable value in
understanding Sylvia Beach's part in promoting Ulysses, as well as the role Shakespeare and Company
played in the cultural scene of between-the-wars Paris. |
|
The Shakespeare and Company sub-subseries contains, most significantly, the first
register of subscribers of the firm's lending library, beginning 17 November 1919.
Also present is a notebook entitled "Livres anglais" which records the
books of Shakespeare and Company that Monnier's Maison des Amis des Livres sold
after Beach's store was closed in December 1941. A list of subscribers reimbursed
by
Monnier on Beach's behalf during the wartime years is appended at the end of the
notebook. |
|
Also present are a large number of photographs made between 1919 and 1945 depicting
Shakespeare and Company, Beach, famous customers (Joyce, Hemingway, Dos Passos, and
Pound, among others), as well as an après liberation
party held in the fall of 1944 in Beach's apartment. |
|
The sub-subseries also contains a number of ephemeral items, including prospectuses
and invitations of Les Amis de Shakespeare and Company, a friends' group established
in the early 1930s to assist the firm in the deepening depression. |
|
The Joyce sub-subseries includes three manuscript fragments of Ulysses, the Beckett and Péron "Anna Lyvia Pluratself" translation in
galley proof, together with a list of subscribers for the novel maintained by Beach
in the months before its 1922 publication. Ephemeral materials include manifestoes
of support for Joyce and Ulysses and early
advertising matter. |
|
Materials relating to the Morel and Gilbert French translation of Ulysses include a chronology of publication in the hand of
Monnier, together with publishing ephemera and a facsimile of the subscribers' list
for the first French edition of 1929. |
|
Subseries B. Sylvia Beach documents her personal life seperate from her bookstore.
The major portion of the correspondence in the subseries is the 121 letters Beach
wrote to Adrienne Monnier between 1919 and 1955. A smaller number of letters from
Beach to others is included, as are letters (mostly typescript copies) from Monnier
to Beach. Other correspondents represented include Camilla Steinbrugge and D. H.
Lawrence; there are single letters from Robert McAlmon, André Gide, and Valéry
Larbaud. Correspondence (as well as other materials) relating to Beach's wartime
internment at Vittel includes six more letters from Beach to Monnier, as well as
letters to Monnier from Tudor Wilkinson, Katherine Dudley, and Françoise
Bernheim. |
|
A substantial number of photographs are found in the subseries documenting Beach's
visits to the Monnier family at Rocfoin, as well as to her own retreat at Les
Déserts in Savoy. Other photographs depict the travels and activities of her later
years. |
|
Sylvia Beach's own writing present in the collection include periodical articles,
translations, a manuscript of an article on Ezra Pound, and several "notes bibliographiques" on William Bird, William
Saroyan, and various French authors. Articles on Beach and obituaries complete the
subseries. |
|
Subseries C. documents the years after Shakespeare and Company closed its doors and
Adrienne Monnier died. Beach's extensive correspondence--134 letters--with Monnier's
former shop assistant forms the core of the subseries and gives a view of Beach's
activities and interests in the final two decades of her life. |
|
Also included is an extensive group of letters sent Saillet by a wide range of
persons about Beach after her 1962 death. These letters indicate the range of her
acquaintance: Hélène Baltrusaitis, Samuel Beckett, Cyril Connolly, Stuart Gilbert,
Maria Jolas, Jackson Mathews, Charles Mauron, Dorothy Pound, and Thornton Wilder,
among many others. |
|
The subseries concludes with a large group of photographs taken at the exhibition
"Les Années vingt" sponsored by the
United States Embassy in Paris in 1959. The exhibition used many of Sylvia Beach's
books, photographs, and other memorabilia in recreating the literary world of 1920s
Paris. |
|
Series XII. Gertrude Stein, 1914-1973 |
|
Manuscripts, correspondence, financial and legal documents, address books, and
personal papers make up the Gertrude Stein collection. The material was collected
by
Alice B. Toklas after Stein's death and includes a large amount of Toklas's incoming
correspondence. The collection is arranged in four subseries: A. Works, 1930-1945
(1
box); B. Correspondence, 1928-1946 (1 box); C. Personal Papers, 1914-1959 (1 box);
and D. Alice B. Toklas, 1920-1973 (bulk 1947-1967) (6 boxes). |
|
Stein's writings are represented by three titles in the Works subseries. Composition as Explanation was originally a lecture
delivered at Oxford and Cambridge in 1926; later that year it appeared in The Dial and in book form from Leonard and Virginia
Woolf's Hogarth Press. "From Dark to Day"
is a two-page depiction of couturier Pierre Balmain that appeared in Vogue in 1945. The dossier of items relating to the
publication of Before the Flowers of Friendship Faded Friendship
Faded documents not only various stages in Stein's creation of this
work, but also the conflicts between Stein and Georges Hugnet, whose collection of
French poems, Enfances, was originally to have been
published along with Stein's. The two disagreed over whether Stein's work was a
translation of Hugnet's or an original work loosely based on it and could not come
to an agreement on how the two authors should be credited in the book. Also included
are letters from composer Virgil Thomson, who had introduced them to each other in
1927, trying to reconcile their differences. |
|
The Correspondence subseries contains a large number of Stein's letters to Hugnet
from the period of their first acquaintance until their final break. Incoming
letters are concerned with matters of publication and include correspondence from
her American publisher, Random House, and her English agents, Pearn, Pollinger &
Higham, Ltd. (later known as David Higham Associates, Ltd.). All correspondence in
this and other subseries is arranged alphabetically by author or recipient. |
|
Among the Personal Papers are an address book, various contracts, and miscellaneous
financial records. Of particular interest in this subseries are documents concerning
Stein's art collection: two insurance policies (dated 1935 and 1938) with Lloyds of
London with itemized schedules and appraisals of the paintings, and three appraisals
made for Alice Toklas after Stein's death (1958 and undated). |
|
The largest subseries is devoted to Alice B. Toklas. It includes a few random pages
from autobiographical writings; a small number of letters to other correspondents,
either drafts or returned letters; an address book and other personal and financial
papers; and a large incoming correspondence from such writers as literary agent Mrs.
William Aspenwall Bradley, actor Sandy Campbell, historian Bernard Faÿ, Stein
scholar Donald C. Gallup, attorneys Edgar Allan Poe and Russell M. Porter, composer
Virgil Thomson, and writer Carl Van Vechten, who served as Stein's literary
executor. Many of these letters, mostly dating from the last few years of Toklas's
life, are filled with expressions of concern for the state of her health or her
misfortune in losing Gertrude Stein's art collection to the Stein family. Letters
to
Toklas's companion, Madeleine Charrière, have been interfiled with those to Toklas
herself, and a few of these letters are dated after Toklas's death. A peculiarity
of
this collection is that Toklas herself evidently made a practice of ripping up
letters once she had answered them; approximately one-third are torn into large
pieces. Fortunately, all the pieces have been preserved. Among the personal papers
are a very small number of recipes, some in Toklas's hand, and transcripts of
letters written by admirers of Stein on the occasion of the exhibit "Hommage à Gertrude Stein" organized in
1965 in Paris by the American Cultural Center. |