This section contains 2,358 words (approx. 8 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “On High Heels Up Vesuvius,” in London Review of Books, July 21, 1994, p. 18.
In the following review, Brookner examines Colet's relationship with Gustave Flaubert as depicted in Rage and Fire.
In October 1879, Flaubert, then aged 57, invited Maupassant to dinner, informing him that there was a purpose behind this invitation. He wanted to burn some letters, and he did not want to do so alone. After a particularly good meal, Flaubert brought a heavy suitcase into his study and began to throw packets of letters into the fire: occasionally reading passages from them in his booming voice. This process went on until 4 a.m., not an unusual hour for Flaubert. (History does not relate whether Maupassant was equally alert.) One particularly thick bundle of letters contained a small package tied with a ribbon. This was seen to consist of a silk shoe, a rose and a woman's handkerchief, which...
This section contains 2,358 words (approx. 8 pages at 300 words per page) |