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5934FANTASIO. Année 1912 (N° 131-154). Paris, Félix Juven éditeur, 1912. Fort in-4, demi-reliure toile, à coins.
11932Poésie 41, N°5, août-septembre 1941. In-12, broché.
5469Catalogue in-4° broché. Très propre.
1969RO20226547L'Or du Temps. 1969. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 246 + CXX pages. Quelques planches d'illustrations en noir et blanc en fin d'ouvrage. Signet conservé.. . . . Classification Dewey : 94.41-Editions numérotées (gros tirage)
1972RO30349352Gallimard. 1972. In-12. Broché. Etat passable, Couv. défraîchie, Dos plié, Intérieur frais. 190 pages. Pages 17 à 30 manquantes. Quelques illustrations en noir et blanc dans le texte. Quelques annotations à l'encre dans le texte. Nombreuses pages de texte désolidarisées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 841-Poésie
1983RO20226991Gallimard. 1983. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 190 pages. Nombreuses illustrations en noir et blanc dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 841-Poésie
1953R300323007Le club du meilleur livre. 1953. In-8. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Coiffe en tête abîmée, Intérieur acceptable. 169 + 17 pages. Avec rhodoïd.. . . . Classification Dewey : 841-Poésie
2013RO30326530Gallimard/ Nrf. 2013. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 190 pages. Quelques coupures de presse. Quelques illustrations en noir et blanc, dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 840-Littératures des langues romanes. Littérature française
100.974Paris, Gallimard, 1955. 12 x 19, 332 pp., broché, bon état.
1954RO30327487Du Seuil. 1954. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Rousseurs. 190 pages. nombreuses illustrations en noir et blanc, dans et hors texte. Ex-libris à l'encre en page de titre. Coupures de presse.. . . . Classification Dewey : 928-Ecrivains
1952268801952 PARIS, Gallimard, NEF - 1952 - Ed. originale numéroté sur vélin labeur - In-8 - Broché - 123 pages + Table - bon exemplaire - Envoi rapide et soigné - R&éf. 26880
1917642691917. Fine. circa 1917-1918 22.30 x 27.60 cm une feuille sous chemise et étui A remarkable autograph poem of youth by André Breton dedicated to Guillaume Apollinaire entitled «Décembre». 20 verses in ink on vergé d'Arches paper composed in December 1915. This manuscript was copied between March 1917 and the beginning of 1918. This poem is presented in a chemise and case with paper boards decorated with abstract motifs the spine of the chemise in green morocco pastedowns and endpapers of beige suede a sheet of flexible plexiglass protecting the poem case lined with green morocco piece of green paper with caption «poème autographe» to bottom of upper cover of case the whole by Thomas Boichot. Key poem of the author's pre-Dadaist period it formed part of the set of 7 manuscript poems by Breton known as coll. X. in the uvres complètes d'André Breton volume I in La Bibliothèque de la Pléiade Gallimard 1988 p. 1071. Thiese poems of his juvenilia are carefully copied out in black ink on watermarked vergé paper. The small collection was addressed to his circle of friends and writers most notably including Valéry Apollinaire Théodore Fraenkel and his brother in arms André Paris. They were later published in his first collection Mont de piété which appeared in June 1919 published by Au Sans Pareil established not long before by his friend René Hilsum. The precise dating of this set of autograph poems is made possible by the composition of the final poem in the set «André Derain» written on 24 March 1917 which provides a definitive terminus post quem. An earlier version of the poem «Age» dedicated to Léon-Paul Fargue appears in our collection under its original name «Poème». Dated by the author 19 February 1916 the day of his 20th birthday and composed 10 days previously according to his letters it was not retitled and reworked until its publication in July 1918 in Les Trois Roses. Judging by the similarities to things published before this last poem the seven autograph poems were probably written during 1917 or at the beginning of 1918 while Breton was doing his residency in Val-de-Grâce and where significantly he made the acquaintance of Louis Aragon. The poems that make up Mont de piété represent a rare and valuable insight into his youthful influences at the dawn of his joining the Dada movement and his discovery of automatic writing. Quite short and sometimes sibylline one detects Symbolist highlights borrowed from Mallarmé whom he rediscovered at poetry mornings in the théâtre Antoine and the Vieux-Colombier accompanied by his schoolfriend Théodore Fraenkel. During the first month of the War Breton also dedicated himself to Rimbaud plunging into Les Illuminations the only work he carried with him in the confusion and haste that followed the outbreak of war. From his readings of Rimbaud were born the poems «Décembre» «Age» and «André Derain» while he borrowed Apollinaire's muse Marie Laurencin to whom he dedicated «L'an suave». The author's poetic inheritance was particularly marked by Paul Valéry with whom he corresponded from 1914. Valéry played a considerable role in the writing of the poems of Mont de piété with the advice he gave the young poet. Admiring his disciple's audacity who addressed each of these poems to him he characterized the poem «Façon» 1916 thus: «The theme language scope meter everything is new in the style the manner of the future» Letter of June 1916 uvres complètes d'André Breton vol. I in La Bibliothèque de la Pléiade Gallimard 1988 p. 1072. These essential buds of Breton's youth were written between his seventeenth and twenty-third year. Taken by surprise in Lorient by the declaration of war he became a military nurse serving in several hospitals and on the front during the Meuse offensive. In Nantes he met Jacques Vaché who inspired him to undertake a project of collective writing as well as encouraging him to have illustrated the future col hardcover
19931906Paris Maeght 1993 Une feuille 31 x 44 cm. pliée en deux, imprimée en huit couleurs et signée sur la pierre. D'une manière quelque peu déstructurée (lettres de taille variable, elle représente un quatrain du poème d'Apollinaire Vitam impendere amori "Encore un printemps de passé / Je songe à ce qu'il eut de tendre / Adieu saison qui finissez / Vous nous reviendrez aussi tendre"
191083024Paris 1910. Fine. Paris 13 novembre 1910 14.50 x 19 cm une feuille Autograph letter from Paul Léautaud addressed to Guillaume Apollinaire. One page written in black ink with some crossed-out words. unknown
191083024Paris 13 novembre 1910 | 14.50 x 19 cm | une feuille
72132Paris, Gallimard, 1948. 12 x 19, 156 pp., broché, non coupé, bon état.
1975RO80246942Gallimard. 1975. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 117 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 840.091-XX ème siècle
101.893Paris, Louis-Michaud, 1910. 12 x 19, 224 pp., 44 illustrations et portraits, broché, bon état.
1987RO30328922J-C Lattès. 1987. In-16. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 119 pages. Couverture velours. Notes à l'encre sur le 1er contre-plat. Culs-de-lampe monochromes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 840.8-Anthologies, recueils
1987R240150728JCLattès. 1987. In-12. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 119 pages. Plats et dos en velour.. . . . Classification Dewey : 841-Poésie
12875A. Philadelphia, 1944 - In-12 broché, 127 pp. Edition pirate non mise dans le commerce tirée à 300 exemplaires (N° 105) réservés aux souscripteurs. Couverture imprimée en rouge. Coiffes avec légère restauration sans manque de papier légères traces de pliures sur la couverture sans gravité.
Padova, Scuola di Perfezionamento in Lingue e Letterature straniere dell'Univiversità di Padova, 1982, in-8, br., pp. (38). Con una tavola a colori. Estratto con invio autografo dell'autore a C. Cordié.
100.972Paris, Gallimard, 1949. 12 x 19, 156 pp., broché, bon état.
191875931Paris 1918. Fine. Paris s. d. ca 1918 13.30 x 21 cm 2 pages sur un feuillet Unpublished autograph letter signed by Guillaume Apollinaire addressed to Max Jacob. Two pages written in black ink on a sheet with the letterhead of the Chamber of Deputies. Folds inherent to mailing. Unpublished letter concerning the deputy Charles Régismanset then Director at the Ministry of Colonies: ""Veux-tu dire à ton ami que Régismanset m'a prié de te faire savoir que son cas ne comportait point d'atténuation au point de vue des sous-vêtements militaires."" ""La colonie a écrit en personne et émettant l'avis le plus défavorable car la maison en question a bénéficié pour l'heure d'une démobilisation importante."" ""These 'colonies' are hardly distant. He is seconded to Rue Oudinot to the office of Minister Henri Simon who was pleased to be able to assist a poet he had long admired. His duties are rather vague. Assigned to the Press Service he oversees the Bulletin d'Informations coloniales et étrangères occasionally contributing discreetly a task that leaves him sufficient freedom for his own work. His direct superior Charles Régismanset himself a writer calls upon him whenever a 'bushman' passing through might provide information on Bambara customs or Guinean witch doctors."" Pierre-Marcel Adéma Guillaume Apollinaire ""Viens tout de même me voir dirait le père Janvier qui doit pour le moins parler aussi bien que le père de Victor Hugo surtout viens avant janvier et toujours plus haut Excelsior viens j'ai quelque chose d'éditorial à te dire."" unknown
191875931Paris s. d. [ca 1918] | 13.30 x 21 cm | 2 pages sur un feuillet