Je vous rend mille et mille grâces de vos manières, il n’i en a point de bonnes que vous n’ayez pour moi, excepté quand vous me demandez mon approbation.
Fair copy of a letter from Marie-Anne de Vichy-Chamrond, marquise Du Deffand to Voltaire, written from Paris and dated 14 March 1764.
Detailed Summary:
Marie-Anne de Vichy-Chamrond, marquise Du Deffand begins the letter by flattering Voltaire, noting that she asked several people who the first man of this century was and they all replied Voltaire (an answer she claims to have expected). She adds that he writes all genres charmingly and questions why he abandoned fables, offering him a fable on which he could write. The fable concerns a lion in Chantilly. Dogs that were usually thrown into the river were thrown instead to him. He strangled them all, except one whom he loved and started a family with. One day, the dog joined the lion’s tormentors, barking at him and biting his ears, so the lion strangled her. He quickly repented, carried her to their bed, and was consumed with the greatest sadness, but hopes of this sadness changing his character were dashed; he strangled without mercy any dog thrown to him. The Marquise notes that there are many morals to be drawn from this tale about ingratitude and the need to love. She then changes the subject, remarking that if she were given a choice between regaining her sight of having a thousandth part of his talents she would not know which to choose, before giving news of Madame de Pompadour’s health. The Marquise ends the letter by talking of her anger at the printing without consent of a letter send from Voltaire to herself. She promises Voltaire that anything he writes to her will not be taken from her hands, and that his letters will be put in order so that copies are never taken. She goes as far as to say that she will learn the letters by heart so that she does not have to read them.
The paper is watermarked with three different watermarks: text reading ‘Sebille van Ketel & Wassenbergh’; a shield with the initials ‘SKW’; and text reading ‘D&C Blauw’.
Countermark:
Binding:
Additional Comments:
The text is contained within frames of plummet. The binder’s blank flyleaves at the beginning and end are in c.19th wove paper. The binder has titled the collection: ‘Recueil de letters. Tome 1’.
Materiality Keywords:
Decorations:
Undecorated
Additions:
There are corrections and marginal notes scattered throughout. Additional pencil annotations have been added in a later hand.