| 30 letters relate to Theo - mistress... | Excerpt length: shorter longer | |
| Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh (c. 3 March 1883) ... are necessary to
make it practical.
Your patient will cause you a great deal of expense; if you
can't send anything extra just now, I needn't stop working
because of that. Besides, not long ago you did send something
extra, so I want to emphasize that I should be able to pull
through if necessary. But I have a burning desire to push on,
and to make progress.
There is another thing spurring me on, namely that Rappard
is also working at top speed, more than he used to, and I want
to keep up with him, because then we'll get on better together,
and can profit more from each other's experience.
He has painted much more than I, and has drawn longer, but
we are both on just about the same level. I don't try to
compete with him as a painter, but I won't let him beat me in
drawing. I wish that in the future he and I should keep working
in the same direction, that is, types from the people, scenes
in a soup kitchen, hospital, etc. He has promised to come to
see me one of these... | Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh (11 March 1883) ... of the 9th of March, and for the
enclosed. Is your patient improving? I hope in this case
“no news is good news.”
If it has been as cold in Paris as it was here last week, it
cannot have agreed very well with her.
When you say that you sometimes wish we could talk together
more, about a variety of things in art, I for my part have that
longing continually, and sometimes very strongly.
So often I should like to know your opinion about this or
that, about some studies, etc., for instance, if they might be
of some use, or if it would be advisable, for some reason or
other, to go more deeply into them.
So often I should like to have some more information about
things on which you are better informed than I, and I should
like to know more about the state of things, I mean what kind
of work the painters are producing. One can write about it to
some extent, but writing takes time, and one cannot always get
to it, nor can one go enough into detail.
And just... | Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh (c. 21 March 1883) ... warm thanks for your letter and the enclosure. I was
glad to hear some more details about your patient, the more so
as the news seemed to be very favourable.
What you write about her influence on other people is very
charming. I believe such things are true, the influence exerted
by a good person is sometimes far reaching. Curiously enough,
it has been compared to leaven. Two good people - man and woman
combined - with the same intentions and object in life,
actuated by the same serious purpose, what couldn't they
accomplish!
I have often thought of that.
For, by co-operating, the power of goodness is not just
doubled, but multiplied many times, as by involution, to use a
mathematical term.
Well - your description of the house and its surroundings,
the cabstand, is very good; it has a more characteristic
setting than your other descriptions of the city; the cabstand
is excellent, can I have that personage with the red nose pose
for me someday?
I am glad you... | Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh (2 April 1883) ... friends. The thing is to keep on working.
I am glad your patient is progressing, though slowly. It is
beautiful spring weather here, the evenings are indescribably
beautiful. If the weather is the same in Paris, it will do her
good. Is she up already?
Today I have the old man again, and must go and get my
things ready.
This week I met Van der Weele again, and also expect him
here one of these days.
Probably you will be very busy with the Salon. I suppose you
can't tell me approximately when you will come to Holland yet,
can you? Have a good time, and if you have a moment to spare,
write me again. Adieu, with a handshake,
Yours sincerely, Vincent
Theo had lent some money to a cousin from the
Indies.
... | Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh (c. 11 April 1883) ... as ever, the former as well as the latter. I read
with interest what you wrote about your patient. The change in
circumstances brought about by her recovery has a more or less
critical side, because probably, and you expect it yourself, it
will raise opposition in some minds - but let's hope it won't.
How strange it is that it must be so. We ourselves see such a
thing as very simple and natural - something logical - and then
we are more or less astonished because others cannot find in
themselves the motives which make us act as we do. And one
would almost conclude that some people have cauterized certain
sensitive nerves within themselves - especially those which,
combined, are called conscience. Well, I pity them - in my
opinion they travel through life without a compass. One might
suppose that the love for humanity which is the foundation of
everything should be in every human being. But some pretend
that thee are better foundations. I'm not very curious to know
them; since the old... | << Previous Next >> 30 results found Showing matches 11 - 15 |