Marjory Fleming – from the 1909 edition of John Brown’s book
Marjory Fleming’s cousin Isabella Keith, a young woman in her early twenties, was in charge of her education from the end of 1809 to the summer of 1811. She showed herself an affectionate and careful teacher, always patient despite Marjory’s unruly behaviour and frequent bursts of anger. CONTINUE READING / CONTINUER LA LECTURE…
Sulamith Wülfing – Flower (1931) – from Pigtails in Paint
This is a beautiful and strange poem about a loved girl who seems to come from an outer world, maybe from dreams, or from a star, a spiritual bride descending on the bed of the desiring poet, and their mystical union mixes extasy with agony. Both erotic and esoteric, full of hidden meanings, these verses are difficult to interpret. The 1905 edition of the poem states that the title means: ‘One of the “Intelligences” of the Planet Venus.’ CONTINUE READING / CONTINUER LA LECTURE…
Portrait of Marjory Fleming during her last illness
Marjory Fleming was a Scottish child of the early 19th century, who died of meningitis one month before her ninth birthday and got posthumous fame from her writings: three journals, several poems and letters. CONTINUE READING / CONTINUER LA LECTURE…
Quand René Julliard fit paraître en septembre 1955 une plaquette hors commerce comprenant une sélection de poèmes et de lettres de Minou Drouet, une virulente polémique agita la presse pendant plusieurs mois, principalement sur leur authenticité ; nombreux affirmèrent qu’une enfant de 8 ans ne pouvait pas écrire avec autant de brio et d’intelligence. Plusieurs journaux (dont Elle) affirmèrent qu’il s’agissait d’une imposture, que sa mère (adoptive) était le réel auteur de ces textes. Cette controverse, en particulier ces accusations, heurtèrent profondément Minou. CONTINUE READING / CONTINUER LA LECTURE…
Navarana et Peter Freuchen à Thule (1916-1917) – Photo : Arktisk Institut
Le grand amour de Peter Freuchen fut sa première épouse, Navarana, une Inuit du Nord-Groenland. Quand il la rencontra, elle était encore pratiquement une enfant ; dans son livre de 1935, Arctic Adventure: My Life in the Frozen North, et celui édité en 1961 par sa veuve Dagmar, Peter Freuchen’s Book of the Eskimos, il la décrit comme une « petite fille ». Elle s’appelait alors Mequpaluk. Elle et sa mère avaient failli succomber à la faim suite à la mort de son père. Sa mère s’était remariée, mais son beau-père la négligeait. Elle était toujours habillée de vieux vêtements élimés, parfois faits d’assemblages de peaux de chien ; en cela son beau-père appliquait l’adage nord-groenlandais qui veut qu’une jeune femme soit habillée par son mari, et non par son père. Un jour un homme mauvais la viola, et au lieu de la plaindre, son beau-père ironisa sur son agresseur qui devait être bien bête pour s’en prendre à une fille pas encore faite, alors qu’il avait une excellente femme à la maison. CONTINUE READING / CONTINUER LA LECTURE…
Sarcophagus of a Roman girl – from classicalanthology.theclassicslibrary.com
The Latin Poet Martial (b. 38–41 AD, d. 102–104 AD), known for his ferocious satires in his Epigrams, also showed often in his writing a humane and compassionate personality, in particular towards the most powerless people: children and slaves. In particular Epigram 11.91 mourns a 7-year-old girl who died after having been disfigured by a horrible disease. The saddest thing is not death, but how it came. CONTINUE READING / CONTINUER LA LECTURE…
The collection Oracles, subtitled The Biography of an Art, consists of unpublished poems written by Crowley between 1886 and 1903. It was first published in 1905, then included in Volume II of The Collected Works of Aleister Crowley (1906), where the editor mentions:
Concerning the title Crowley writes, “The sense is of dead leaves drifting in the dusty cave of my mind.”
Northern royal albatross on the Otago Peninsula – from travel.nine.com.au
Eric Stenbock published in 1894 a collection of seven short studies, Studies of Death, subtitled Romantic Tales. As indicated by the title, most of these stories are macabre, ending in the death of some protagonists. For nearly a hundred years this book was quite forgotten, and almost unobtainable. In 1984, the Garland publishing house reprinted the 1894 edition, together with The Shadow of Death (1893), Stenbock’s third collection of poetry. Then in 1996 the Durtro publishing house (of David Tibet) reprinted Studies of Death, adding to it the short story “The Other Side: A Breton Legend,” which had originally been published separately in The Spirit Lamp (Vol. IV, No. 2, 6 June 1893, pages 52–68). CONTINUE READING / CONTINUER LA LECTURE…