SAINT EXUPÉRY, Antoine de

Lot 476
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1000 - 1500 EUR
SAINT EXUPÉRY, Antoine de
Autograph draft of a letter to Lewis Galantière. [circa November 1941]. 1 p. in-4, watermarked American "Hammermill Bond" paper. Speaking to his American translator, Lewis Galantière, the novelist, who has just undergone an operation, gives news of his health. "I'm feeling a little better, I'm going to go home. I'll probably leave on Saturday or Sunday. I definitely loathed California. Thank you very much for your note, but you're wrong when you talk about nerves. I have been subject for ten years (it was bearable as long as it was rare) to violent bouts of fever that have gradually increased in intensity and frequency. These characteristic bouts began each time with a half-hour of teeth chattering and shivering - just like malaria - and then stabilized between 104 and 105.5 [degrees Fahrenheit]. But no analysis has ever found any trace of malaria. These were the world's most common infectious outbreaks, although their origin was unknown. One conclusive proof was the action of sulfonamide, which was a clear-cut test of my accesses. It is likely that without this drug I would have been exhausted long ago. " We find these concerns, with very similar formulations, in two letters published in La Pléiade. Writing tests on the back. PROVENANCE: Anonymous sale, lot 380 (Paris, 16 May 2012). BIBLIOGRAPHY: Complete Works, Pléiade, II, letters n° 2 and 3, p. 992 and 994. Small tear in the upper left corner, without damage to the text.
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