HUGO Victor (1802-1885)

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HUGO Victor (1802-1885)
Autograph letter signed to THÉODORE DE BANVILLE, Hauteville House in Guernsey, "14 March" [1866]; 1 page in-12, dry stamp with his initials, address on back. "Dear poet, it is a long time since anything from you came to me. I am accustomed to being absent from memory as well as from the fatherland. Yet I, who remember, love to remember. So I read with deep and cordial emotion your beautiful and charming stanzas in the excellent book by M. Charles Asselineau. Only poets like you can say so much with one word! the black laurel, how profound in this epithet See you soon, see you always. You know how I am yours. Victor Hugo." Victor Hugo is referring here to Theodore de Banville's poetic tribute to the Romantic poets Mutual admirers, the two poets never stopped reading and loving each other. In Banville's work, which forms a link between Romanticism and Parnassus, Hugo is omnipresent, in the form of allusions or parodies, since his first collection Les Cariatides (1842). Some of their collections even respond to each other: Banville's Odes funambulesques (1857) pay a parodic tribute to Hugo's Orientales (1829), to which the latter responds in a certain way in his Chansons des rues et des bois (1866). Banville, who met Hugo in the mid-1840s, was also a republican (though less committed), contributed to the Hugo fi ls' newspaper L'Événement, and published Les Exilés in 1867.
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