I really love collections of writers' letters - I'e spent many a happy hour poking through collections of letters from the likes of Steinbeck, Fitzgerald, Wolff, Nabokov, Ken Tynan and others. (Journals are fun, too.) It's one of the things I fear we may lose in this age of the tossed off one-liner e-mail - although if any of you have ever had the pleasure of corresponding with Ed, you'll know he may well be our last bulwark against such a day. At any rate, TLS looks at letters to Yeats and Pound from Iseult Gonne.
These letters are despatches from a life that should have been a novel. Iseult Gonne was born in 1894, the illegitimate daughter of Lucien Millevoye, a journalist and right-wing politician in the French Third Republic, and Maud Gonne, the great unrequited love of W. B. Yeats’s early life. Iseult’s very conception was dictated by Maud’s powerful sense of mysticism and tragedy: an earlier child, Georges, had died in infancy, and Maud believed he could be reincarnated if she conceived a child at the grandiose tomb she had erected for him at Samois-sur-Seine, a resolution she apparently carried through, though her relationship with Millevoye soon foundered. Iseult’s destiny was marked out. She grew up in her mother’s houses in Paris and on the Normandy coast; when Maud’s career as a political organizer and public goddess of extremist Irish nationalism took her to Ireland, Iseult was looked after by a series of devoted friends and retainers, but her bond with her tempestuous, magnetic mother survived through periods of exasperation and estrangement. Her pet name for Maud (which also concealed their real relationship) was “Moura”, an anagram of “amour”.
Since you mentioned Fitzgerald, I assume you've read Dear Scott, Dear Max, then? One of my favorites.
Sarte's and de Beauvoir's are pretty interesting and illuminating too.
Posted by: Brian | April 16, 2004 at 09:10 AM
George Bernard Shaw's collection of letters are wonderful as well. They -- did I mention they run four volumes? -- are wonderfully edited, with plenty of explanatory footnotes and commentary.
Dorothy Sayers' letters are pretty good too, especially when she's explaining CofE doctrine or defending her religion.
Posted by: Bill Peschel | April 16, 2004 at 04:59 PM