"Valéry’s circle of contacts remains dazzling. He was intimate with leading poets and writers (Mallarmé, Gide, Rilke); he worked alongside Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Thomas Mann, Gabriele d’Annunzio, John Galsworthy and Stefan Zweig; he exchanged ideas with André Malraux, Jean Giraudoux, Colette and Paul Claudel (but also with George Meredith, Arnold Bennett, H. G. Wells and Aldous Huxley); his lectures at the Collège de France were an influence on Jacques Lacan, Roland Barthes, Michel Tournier, Yves Bonnefoy and Paul de Man. Who else with such a profile could also have had Einstein as trusted interlocutor and colleague, discussed atoms with Niels Bohr, or the crisis of representation in sciences with the likes of Paul Langevin and Émile Borel; compared notes with Ravel and Stravinsky, Degas and Picasso; collaborated with Bergson and Sir James Frazer; interacted with both Pétain and de Gaulle; interviewed Mussolini and crossed paths with an entire gallery of Europe’s interwar power-brokers? To say nothing of the cast list of princesses, duchesses, countesses and other denizens of the cosmopolitan, high-society Paris salons who provided the writer with dinners, contacts, funding, entertainment, country-seat vacationing, confidantes and lovers."
Recensão de Paul Gifford no Times Literary Supplement, sobre a nova biografia de Paul Valéry da autoria de Michel Jarrety.
Recensão de Paul Gifford no Times Literary Supplement, sobre a nova biografia de Paul Valéry da autoria de Michel Jarrety.
3 comentários:
acho optimo termos alguem que se de ao trabalho de ler e, para mais, partilhar, este tipo de textos/citacoes
pá, tu já viste a malta com que este gajo privava?
é do outro mundo.
de uli sequeira, um dia, se escreverá o mesmo.
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