Broché. 1 volume. In-12. 37 pp. Couverture souple imprimée à rabats. Belle fraîcheur de papier. De rares rousseurs sur couverture. En bon état. Collection "PS". "Poésie 55". Cahiers bi-mensuels. N° 463.ÉDITION ORIGINALE sur papier d' édition.
Paper binding, 14 x 9,5 cm. Special numbered copy. In good condition. Text in French.
Language: French
Published by Imprimerie des Poetes, Paris, 1952
Seller: Snookerybooks, Philippolis, South Africa
Signed
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. Limited Edition. #2 of 500 copies. Inscribed by the poet to the South African prime minister DF Malan. Plastic protected wraps clean and undamaged. The Russian born Shedrow spent a good deal of his life in South Africa and published several volumes of verse in French. Very scarce. Inscribed by Author(s).
Published by Both on letterhead of A. Shedrow 'M.D. Paris M.R.C.S. Eng. L.R.C.P. London' with addresses of his residence and consultation rooms in Johannesburg. 8 and 24 February, 1958
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
US$ 207.52
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketEach letter 2pp., 12mo. Both in good condition, on lightly-aged paper. He starts the first letter by expressing 'great pride and immense joy' in sending 'my seventh book of French poems [.] According to the reviews, it is the best I ever wrote'. He continues with references to the recipient's 'short but memorable visit to Johannesburg', and to 'the uncomplimentary remarks passed by my confreres in Johannesburg', these being 'indeed compliments, for they indicate that I do not belong to them, in spite of our common profession. They are midgets, cretins, and waste of time to even mention them'. He continues by stating that he has lived for thirty years 'in the wilderness, in the game reserve', and that this has given him 'such a wonderful gift of writing poetry and getting away from the cruel mob'. The second letter responds to the recipient's report of his impression of the Shedrow's book, which brought him 'some sense of quietude and consolation, mingled with an element of purposelessness of life'. This, he explains, 'is what the poet like me finds in every corner of his daily life. He brings to the fore problems of life affecting each and every one of us, it intensifies the pain it evokes'. He continues with a long discussion of existential problems, referring to 'that dreadful feeling of helplessness and frustration in the face of human problems', and describing himself as a 'tormented soul [.] who went through purgatory and was so oft[en] misunderstood and ploughed a lonely and sad furrow'. The letter's valediction, in autograph, reads: 'I embrace you to my withered but always exalting heart | Yours | Adolphe'.
Seller: Antiquariaat Arine van der Steur / ILAB, Den Haag, Netherlands
Softcover, 19 x 13 cm. Text in French. Rare. Book in good condition. .