You Must Change Your Life (40 page)

Read You Must Change Your Life Online

Authors: Rachel Corbett

BOOK: You Must Change Your Life
12.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

25
   
“enormous quantity”:
Weaver Santaniello,
Nietzsche, God, and the Jews
. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2012, 32.

25
   
“Thou goest”:
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche,
Thus Spake Zarathustra, a Book for All and None
. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1908, 87.

27
   
“gentle dreamy”:
LP, 68.

27
   
“no back”:
LP, 60.

27
   
“the famous writer”:
RR, 23.

27
   
“Yesterday was not” . . . “I can think”:
RAS, 3-4.

27
   
“must not”. . . “manly grace”:
LB, 68-69.

27
   
“style of gentle”:
Julia Vickers,
Lou von Salomé: A Biography of the Woman Who Inspired Freud, Nietzsche and Rilke
. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2008, 111.

27
   
“fling themselves”:
LYP, 55.

28
   
“pageboy”:
Quoted in Angela Livingstone,
Salomé: Her Life and Work
. East Sussex, UK: M. Bell Limited, 1984, 109.

28
   
“his mother or”:
LP, 113.

28
   
“I am still soft”:
BT, 88.

28
   
“your very name”:
Quoted in Simon Karlinsky,
Marina Tsvetaeva: The Woman, Her World, and Her Poetry
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Archive, 1985, 163.

29
   
“What!”:
RR, 96.

29
   
“made a dragon”:
J. F. Hendry,
The Sacred Threshold: A Life of Rainer Maria Rilke
. Manchester, UK: Carcanet New Press, 1983, 32.

30
   
“LAID IN THE HANDS”:
Rainer Maria Rilke and Lou Andreas-Salomé,
The Correspondence
. Translated by Edward Snow and Michael Winkler. New York and London: W. W. Norton, 2006, 157.

30
   
“[Y]ou took my”:
BT, 91.

30
   “
Put out my eyes”:
With permission—Rainer Maria Rilke,
Poems from The Book of Hours
. Translated by Babette Deutsch. New York: New Directions, 1975, 37.

30
   
“be more by”:
Julia Vickers,
Lou von Salomé: A Biography of the Woman Who Inspired Freud, Nietzsche and Rilke
. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2008, 142.

31
   
“go away” . . . “I would be capable”:
Quoted in Daniel Bullen,
The Love Lives of the Artists: Five Stories of Creative Intimacy
. Berkeley, CA: Counterpoint, 2013, 33.

CHAPTER THREE

32
   
“terribly hideous” . . . “seemed so dreadful”:
Quoted in Robert K. Wittman and John Shiffman,
Priceless
. New York: Broadway Books, 2011, 37.

33
   
“There are a thousand voices”:
Quoted in Victor Frisch and Joseph T. Shipley,
Auguste Rodin
. Frederick A. Stokes, 1939, 410.

34
   
“There is nothing ugly”:
Auguste Rodin, Paul Gsell,
Art: Conversations with Paul Gsell
. Oakland: University of California Press, 1984, 19.

34
   
“The mask determined” . . . “It was the first”:
Albert E. Elsen,
In Rodin's Studio
. New York: Phaidon, 1980, 157.

35
   
“She didn't have”:
RSG, 48.

35
   
“tough as a cannon ball”:
FG, 618

35
   
“I had put” . . . “she attached herself”:
RSG, 48–49.

35
   
“It is necessary”:
To Clara Westhoff, September 5, 1902. [Rilke's letter quoted Rodin in French,
parce qu'il faut avoir une femme
.]

36
   
“unknown”:
RSG, 49.

36
   
“Dinant is picturesque”:
FG, 93.

36
   
“Hold on!”:
FG, 95.

36
   
“not directly of his works”:
FG, 95.

37
   
“the great magician”:
Catherine Lampert,
Rodin: Sculpture & Drawings
. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1986, 13.

37
   
“study rather than”:
Quoted in T. H. Bartlett, “Auguste Rodin,”
American Architect and Architecture
, volume 25. March 2, 1889, 99.

37
   
“in the absolute”:
RP, 3.

38
   
“I am literally”:
RSG,110.

38
   
“a very rare”:
Jacques De Caso and Patricia B. Sanders,
Rodin's Sculpture
. San Francisco: Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, 1977, 44.

40
   
“with a fury”:
Quoted in Albert E. Elsen,
Rodin's Art: The Rodin Collection of Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Center of Visual Arts at Stanford University
. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003, 21.

40
   
“like an egg”:
Quoted in Marie-Pierre Delclaux,
Rodin: A Brilliant Life
. Paris: Musée Rodin, 2003, 114.

40
   
“his feet” . . . “The fertile”:
Albert E. Elsen,
Rodin's Art: The Rodin Collection of Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Center of Visual Arts at Stanford University
. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003, 175.

41
   
“whole body”:
AR, 49.

41
   
“It is my door”:
Albert E. Elsen,
The Gates of Hell by Auguste Rodin
. Redwood City, CA: Stanford University Press, 1985, 60.

42
   
“mishmash” . . . “a man of”:
Edmond De Goncourt and Jules de Goncourt,
Paris and the Arts, 1851–1896: From the Goncourt Journal
. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1971, 234.

42
   
“Your favourite qualities”:
Odile Ayral-Clause,
Camille Claudel: A Life
. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2002, 67.

43
   
“Have pity”:
RSG, 184.

43
   
“rapid and luminous”:
Odile Ayral-Clause,
Camille Claudel: A Life
. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2002, 50.

44
   
“He's not proud”:
Quoted in Alex Danchev,
Cézanne: A Life
. New York: Pantheon Books, 2012, 281.

45
   
“I merely”:
Stefan Zweig,
The World of Yesterday: An Autobiography
. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1964, 149.

45
   
“Zola of sculpture” . . . “touched by”:
Frederick Lawton,
The Life and Work of Auguste Rodin
. New York: C. Scribner's, 1907, 247.

46
   
“hit me like a”:
FG, 233.

47
   
“This young nude”:
Quoted in Angelo Caranfa,
Camille Claudel: A Sculpture of Interior Solitude
. Plainsboro, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1999, 103.

47
   
“her soul, genius”:
Quoted in John R. Porter, “The Age of Maturity or Fate.”
Claudel and Rodin: Fateful Encounter
. Paris: Musée Rodin, 2005, 193.

47
   
“I am so” . . . “millionaire”:
Angelo Caranfa,
Camille Claudel: A Sculpture of Interior Solitude
. Plainsboro, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1999, 28.

CHAPTER FOUR

48
   
“Behind those walls” . . . “the great emporium”:
Janine Burke,
The Sphinx on the Table: Sigmund Freud's Art Collection and the Development
. New York: Bloomsbury, 2009, 74.

50
   
“Napoleon” . . . “wilderness of”:
Quoted in Asti Hustvedt,
Medical Muses: Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century Paris
. London: A&C Black, 2012, 12–15.

50
   
“Charcot was perfectly”:
Ernest Jones,
Sigmund Freud: Life and Work: The young Freud, 1856–1900
. London: Hogarth Press, 1953, 228.

50
   
“a man who sees”:
Quoted in Peter Gay,
Freud: A Life for Our Time
. New York: W. W. Norton, 2006, 51.

51
   
“whitewash” . . . “screaming”:
Max Simon Nordau,
Degeneration
. New York: D. Appleton, 1895, 28.

51
   
“Does an inspired” . . . “I had to”:
Albert E. Elsen,
In Rodin's Studio
. New York: Phaidon, 1980, 183.

52
   
“Help me” . . . “I did not”:
RP, 94.

53
   
“absolutely beautiful”:
Quoted in Sylvie Patin,
Monet: The Ultimate Impressionist
. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1993, 142.

53
   
“goregous”:
Quoted in RSG, 317.

53
   
“the hope that in”:
Quoted in “Rodin and Monet,” Musée Rodin Educational Files.

54
   
“I have made”:
FG, 384.

54
   
“financial disaster”:
RP, 94.

54
   
“Motor cars” . . . “When Rodin's”:
RSG, 384.

55
   
“Like Rembrandt”:
William G. Fitzgerald, “A Personal Study of Rodin.” In
The World's Work: A History of Our Time
, volume 11. New York: Doubleday, Page, 1905, 6818–6834.

55
   
“Once you had seen”:
FG, 406.

58
   
“Unfortunately I won't” . . . “then I'll ask”:
DF, 53.

58
   
“Smaller men”:
FG, 406.

59
   
“If Paris”:
William G. Fitzgerald, “A Personal Study of Rodin.” In
The World's Work: A History of Our Time
, volume 11. New York: Doubleday, Page, 1905, 6818–6834.

59
   
“royal road”:
Sigmund Freud,
The Interpretation of Dreams
. Translated by James Strachey. New York: Basic Books, 2010, 604.

60
   
“a phantasmagoria”:
Walter Benjamin, “Paris, Capital of the Nineteenth Century.” In
Walter Benjamin and the Demands of History
, Michael P. Steinberg. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1996, 139.

61
   
“There's not even”:
FG, 411.

62
   
“Where is his head?” . . . “Don't you know”:
Isadora Duncan,
My Life
. New York: W. W. Norton, revised and updated edition, 2013, 55.

62
   
“the most modern” . . . “literally epoch-making”:
RP, 104.

62
   
“I was there” . . . “has captured”:
PMB, 185, 192.

CHAPTER FIVE

64
   
“How large the”:
DYP, 163.

64
   
“I place great trust” . . . “Here I can”:
DYP, 175.

65
   
“contrived” . . . “labored”:
DYP, 143.

65
   
“a difficult” . . . “battle of”
: PMB, 198.

66
   
“beautiful dark face”
DYP, 155–156.

66
   
“I shake hands”:
DYP, 146.

66
   
“sickening”:
DYP, 155–156.

66
   
“disfigured”:
DYP, 157.

66
   
“half held in thrall”:
Daniel Joseph Polikoff,
In the Image of Orpheus
. Wilmette, IL: Chiron Publications, 2011, 202

67
   
“The Russian journey”:
DYP, 195.

67
   
“we made toward”:
DYP, 168.

67
   
“blond painter”:
DYP, 151.

67
   
“a delusion”:
AR, 18.

68
   
“my speeches with”:
To Clara Westhoff, November 18, 1900.

68
   

I
wanted to be the wealthy” . . . “the most insignificant”:
BT, 117.

68
   
“maiden”:
Common reference throughout DYP.

68
   
“Clara W.”:
PMB, 496.

68
   
“have his welfare” . . . “be guided”:
PMB, 242.

69
   
“Cooking, cooking” . . . “You know”:
PMB, 255.

69
   
“I no longer seem” . . . “I have to first”:
PMB, 265.

69
   
“last appeal” . . . “worst hour”:
RAS, 41–42.

69
   
“sink like suns into”:
To Clara Westhoff, October 23, 1900.

70
   
“the meaning of”:
To Julie Weinmann, June 25, 1902.

70
   
“the beautiful biblical”:
DF, 113.

71
   
“Life has become”:
To Julie Weinmann, June 25, 1902.

71
   
“little creature”:
To Countess Franziska von Reventlow, April 11, 1902.

71
   
“so very housebound” . . . “I now have everything”:
PMB, 267.

71
   
“I don't know” . . . “please, please”:
PMB, 268–269. (Note: Becker's misspelling of Rilke's name as “Reiner” may have been an intentional double entendre, alluding to his pretension: “Reiner” is the German word for “pure.”)

72
   
“rejoice” . . . “I consider”:
PMB, 270.

Other books

A Whispered Darkness by Vanessa Barger
Get the Salt Out by Ann Louise Gittleman, Ph.D., C.N.S.
Forgiven by Janet Fox
Inkdeath by Cornelia Funke
The Lord's Right by Carolyn Faulkner
Knaves' Wager by Loretta Chase
Shuck by Daniel Allen Cox
Flicker by Anya Monroe