She is still a young woman and extremely jovial. She continues speaking with a great deal of animation to someone who seems to be a workman of her acquaintance and who listens to her, apparently, with delight. We too engage her in conversation. Extremely cultivated, she has no objection to Nietzsche, and Rimbaud. Quite spontaneously she even mentions the surrealists and Louis Aragon's Paysan de Paris, which she has been unable to finish, the variations on the word Pessimism having thrown her off. All her remarks indicate a great revolutionary faith. Upon my request, she gives me her poem which I had found in the book and a few others as well, all of which I had found in the book and a few others as well, all of which are interesting.
(It's better to create than destroy what's unnecessary)
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Nadja - pg. 55
Labels: Andre Bréton, Artur Rimbaud, Frederick Nietzsche, Louis Aragon
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