Most of Merimee's letters were to a lady whose identity remains an enigma to this day. The dozens of letters that he wrote to her survived and were published after his death as Letters to the Unknown. The proceeds from the publications paid for a Mass for his soul. If sentimentality is your drug of choice, savor The Unknown of our time.
We can almost -- but not quite -- recognize her. | |
Her head begins to turn, but never does traverse entirely. |
We know all about her: how silky her braid is and how the garments cling to her. | |||
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Her eyes are bright. We still cannot see the entire face. |
Divorced from the cognizance of the Lady's identity, a romantic can appreciate the shape and grace as an abstraction, with neither lust nor predjudice. Hey, waaaait a moment! Had not Bernard Shaw claimed in Pygmalion that appreciation of someone's grace and talent cannot be purely intellectual? That would be for you to decide. |
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Just one realm remains mostly unexplored by the lovers' imagination. It is the nasty realm of the everyday, where that wildest fantasy of your mate may be that you would do the dishes without being asked. |
This unabashedly lecherous page follows a fine tradition: to justify
nudity, refer to some classical prototype. How properly Victorian |