Hemingway, Ernest | Autograph letter draft, about the principles of good writing; "I wrote a book called The Sun Also Rises in six weeks"
08.12.2023 12:00UTC -05:00
Classic
Vendu
25400USD $ 25 400
Auctioneer | Sotheby´s |
---|---|
Lieu de l'événement | Etats-Unis, New York |
Archive
La vente aux enchères est terminée. Vous ne pouvez plus enchérir.
ID 1105469
Lot 22 | Hemingway, Ernest | Autograph letter draft, about the principles of good writing; "I wrote a book called The Sun Also Rises in six weeks"
Valeur estimée
$ 20 000 – 30 000
Autograph letter draft, to Josephine Ketcham Piercy, an instructor in the English Department at Indiana University, responding to her request for advice for her students about the principles of good writing
3 pages (280 x 217 mm) on 3 leaves of poor-quality typing paper, numbered [1-] 3, [Key West, ca. after 23 January 1929]; lightly browned, some marginal dampstaining and chipping, second page about 50 mm short at bottom, likely the result of Hemingway tearing away a rejected passage.
Josephine Ketcham Piercy was on the faculty of the English Department at Indiana University from 1926 until 1966. In 1929 she and Hemingway corresponded about his possibly contributing to the anthology she was compiling, Modern Writers at Work (New York: Macmillan, 1930), which collected samples illustrating the writing process, with commentaries, from authors including, in addition to Hemingway, Sherwood Anderson, Edith Wharton, Thornton Wilder, and Virginia Woolf. The present draft represents Hemingway’s initial response to her inquiry.
"I do not know any valuable advice to give your pupils about writing except to continue. I do not know of anyone who wrote prose well to start with; although there is a sort of completely articulate writing that is done by, usually, very young English writers. I should think that the danger of this would be that the young writer puts everything he or she knows into the first book and because he or she is able to express themselves it all the book, with the freshness of youth, is a success—. The young writer then becomes a professional writer and continues to write books although he or she never sees or learns anything more; being too busy writing to have anything happen to himself or herself. So perhaps it is good that it is usually very hard to learn to write.
"About practical advice; the only practical advice that I know is to write with pen or pencil and try to have each sentence make sense, to yourself at least. If it makes sense to you, and you are honest, it will eventually make sense to some one else. If you write by hand you will write slower.
"Some things are written at great speed but they need to be gone over slowly."
Hemingway then describes a personal experience with writing something "at great speed": "I wrote a book called The Sun Also Rises in six weeks—starting it on my birthday the 21st of July [1925] in Madrid and continuing on the train to Valencia, in Valencia each day during a week of bullfights, on the train again to Madrid, on the train to Hendaye, in a hotel there and finishing it the 6th of September in Paris. I did not look at it again until I re-wrote the first half of it in Austria in December. Took a trip to N.Y. and re-wrote the last half when I came back. The re-writing took six weeks. I was never satisfied with the book but could do nothing more about it. Two short stories The Killers and Today Is Friday I wrote on two summer days in Madrid during the 15th of May of one year [1926] when there was a snow storm and the bullfights were called off[.]"
A final version of this letter was sent to Piercy, along with a manuscript page of A Farewell to Arms, which Hemingway described as "an attempt to get a sentence right"; the letter and manuscript are both at the Lilly Library (Hanneman F19 & F73). Hemingway told Piercy that she could "use any story of mine you want," and she included "Cat in the Rain" in Modern Writers at Work, together with a long excerpt from the letter she received. The sent letter is quite different from the present draft, not mentioning the writing of The Sun Also Rises nor the two stories and with a number of revisions and changes of emphases—for instance, the draft endorses writing by hand, while the sent letter excoriates the typewriter.
The present draft (and the final letter) are dated by the editors of The Letters of Ernest Hemingway on the basis of his having cancelled in the final letter the comment that he has been "finishing the rewriting of book" as well as a reference to his "new book." This indicates that he wrote to Piercy after completing A Farewell to Arms, the revisions of which he completed on 22 January 1929, as he reported to other correspondents.
Artiste: | Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899 - 1961) |
---|---|
Catégorie maison de vente aux enchères: | Impressions, graphiques, livres |
Artiste: | Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899 - 1961) |
---|---|
Catégorie maison de vente aux enchères: | Impressions, graphiques, livres |
Adresse de l'enchère |
Sotheby´s 1334 York Avenue 10021 New York Etats-Unis | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aperçu |
| ||||||||||||||
Téléphone | +1 212 606 7000 | ||||||||||||||
Conditions d'utilisation | Conditions d'utilisation | ||||||||||||||
Heures d'ouverture | Heures d'ouverture
|
Plus du Créateur
Termes connexes
Questions fréquemment posées
Pour participer aux ventes aux enchères, vous devez d’abord, vous inscrire. Après la confirmation de l’adresse e-mail, complétez votre profil d’utilisateur en fournissant des renseignements personnels tels que votre prénom, nom de famille et l’adresse postale. Choisissez un lot qui vous intéresse et indiquez le montant maximum que vous voulez offir pour ce lot. Dès que vous confirmez votre choix, nous transférerons votre demande par voie électronique à la maison de ventes aux enchères appropriée. Si votre demande est acceptée, votre offre va participer aux ventes aux enchères. Vous pouvez vérifier le statut actuel de votre offre en tout temps dans votre cabinet personnel VIL sous l’onglet «Vos offres».
Les enchères sont réalisées par les maisons de ventes et chacune des maisons de ventes décrit ses conditions de vente. Vous pouvez voir les textes dans la rubrique «Information sur les ventes».
Les résultats des ventes aux enchères sont publiés dans quelques jours après la clôture de l’enchère. En haut de la page du site web VIL, vous trouverez l’onglet «Enchères». Cliquez sur cet onglet et naviguez vers la page des catalogues de ventes aux enchères où vous trouverez facilement l’onglet « Résultats des ventes ». Sur cet onglet, sélectionnez l’enchère qui vous intéresse et consultez l’état de vente du lot de votre choix.
Les informations sur les gagnants des enchères sont confidentielles. Le gagnant de l'enchère recevra une notification directe de la maison d'enchères responsable avec des instructions pour les mesures à prendre: une facture de paiement et la manière dont les marchandises ont été reçues.
Chacune de maisons de ventes aux enchères adhère à sa propre politique concernant les modes de paiement des lots remportés. Toutes les maisons de ventes aux enchères acceptent les virements bancaires; la plupart d’elles acceptent les paiements par carte de crédit. Dans un avenir très proche, vous trouverez des renseignements détaillés sous la rubrique «Information sur les ventes», à la page du catalogue et du lot.
Le mode de livraison du lot dépend de sa taille et ses dimensions. Les petits articles peuvent être livrés par la poste. Les objets plus grands sont expédiés par courrier. Les préposés à la livraison des maisons de ventes aux enchères vous proposeront différentes options selon votre cas.
Non. Les archives servent de référence pour l'étude des prix des enchères, des photographies et des descriptions d'œuvres d'art.