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Signed book, First edition

Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de SADE La fête de l'amitié. Manuscrit autographe complet et unique.

Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de SADE

La fête de l'amitié. Manuscrit autographe complet et unique.

S.n. , s.l. [1810-1812], in-8 (18,5x23,5cm), (1f.) 2 f. découpés (78f.), broché.


La Fête de l'amitié. Unique complete autograph manuscript [The Friendship's Party]
[Charenton asylum] n. d. [ca. 1810-1812], in-8: 18,5 x 23,5 cm , (1 f.) 2 f shaved (78 f.), original wrappers

The complete original manuscript of the last play by the Marquis de Sade, ruled in red throughout, comprising 78 leaves of 12 lines written recto and verso. This manuscript, like the other extant items from the Marquis, was dictated to a scribe and corrected by Sade himself. Two pages at the beginning of the notebook were excised before the text was written.
Contemporary pink paper wrappers, a few lacks to head and foot of spine. Ink title to upper cover “5/ La Fête de l'amitié” including a prologue and a vaudeville sketch entitled Hommage à la reconnaissance, these forming two acts of mixed prose, verse, and vaudeville. This title is incorrect, as shown by the first page, on which the following title appears: “La Fête de l'amitié. Prologue. Encadrant l'Hommage à la reconnaissance. Vaudeville en un acte.” Manuscript note by the Marquis to verso of upper cover, indicating the position he intended this work to occupy within his oeuvre.
Several manuscript corrections, annotations and deletions in Sade's hand, including a quote from his own work as prelude to the vaudeville: “On est des dieux l'image la belle quand on travaille au bonheur des humains. Hommage à la reconnaissance. [We are in the finest image of the gods when we work for the good of humanity. Homage to recognition.]”
“This piece, written by the Marquis in honor of the director of the Charenton Asylum, M. de Coulmiers, was played in the Charenton theatre between 1810 and 1812, approximately a year before the total ban on the plays there was introduced on the 6 May 1813. This late work is the only play of Sade's entire theatrical output at Charenton that has come down to us.”
The play is historic testimony of Sade's genuine respect – despite the inevitable tensions – for the director of his final home, whom the play lauds under the transparently anagrammatic name of Meilcour. But La Fête de l'amitié is also, by its very subject, a precious source of information on the progress of psychiatric medicine, just freeing itself from its repressive accoutrements in favor of new therapeutic methods, like the drama productions to which Sade contributed heavily and to which he here pays singular homage.
The piece is particularly Sadean in its approach of casting madness not in the negative form of an illness, but quite the opposite, through the character of the benevolent God Momus, the focal point in this atypical vaudeville.
Essentially, though the feast the play describes is a celebration in honor of the director of an asylum similar to Charenton located in ancient Athens, the central figure is the god of insanity himself, whose presence completely upends the relationship between the sane and the sick – much like with the players in the production itself, in which you couldn't distinguish the professional actors from the inmates of the asylum.
The whole production, including both song and dance, is made up of two plays – a prologue/epilogue, La Fête de l'amitié, followed by a vaudeville: Hommage à la reconnaissance, played by the same characters as the prologue. The complete production was played at the “festival for the Director.” Each dramatic layer is an allegorical variant on the real situation and there's no doubt that the actors, as they got deeper and deeper into the piece, were still playing their own parts. The work of a polished writer in full control of his subject and all the various dramatic and narrative tools, this seemingly frothy piece – by virtue of belonging to the literary genre of homage, which is very conventional and strictly codified – nonetheless contains the subversive elements so dear to the Marquis.
And it's also a man who has suffered the regular confiscation and destruction of the texts found in his room at Charenton that here offers up to all and sundry the deceptively innocent spectacle of insanity triumphant in a narrative that presents a veritable harem of women, euphemistically referred to in the cast of characters as “a group of young countrywomen.”
This, in itself, replaces the expression “of the same age”, which has been erased, being – perhaps – too explicit. These same young women go on to play the “nymphs” in the second piece, incorporated into the first.
Similarly, the dialogues are replete with textually ambivalent phrases which – given the way the play was presented – could hardly have escaped the attention of a contemporary audience, who were familiar with the Marquis and his reputation:
“Du zèle ardent que vous faites paraître, / à votre exemple ici nous sommes pénétrés, / Mais il excite en nous le désir de connaître [Your ardent zeal apparent / penetrates us all / and excites in us a desire to know]”; “si le métier n'a pas grande prétention, / Il est au moins fort agréable / Et le plus souvent préférable / à toute autre occupation [though devoid of lofty ambition, the profession / Is at least very pleasant / And more often than not / better than all other kinds of work].”
But leaving his plays on words aside, this play is above all one of the last, very rare personal relics of the Marquis, who was generally as discreet about himself in his writings as he was expansive in person with the world around him. Here, alongside the obvious figure of Meilcour, the author describes himself in the traits of the principal character in his comedy, Blinval.
“Essentially, the story of this itinerant troupe, made up of actors led by the distinguished Blinval, whose passion for the stage
led to him to the Bohemian step of taking to the road, recalls throughout the tumultuous youth of the Marquis, who took to the roads of Provence with his company in 1772, deeply scandalizing his mother-in-law.” (S. Dangeville).
Incidentally, we can see that names including the syllable “val” often recur in connection with characters who are more or less autobiographically inspired (Belval in L'Union des arts, Valcour in Aline et Valcour).
The most interesting thing in this character is not so much the references to Sade's past but to his contemporary situation at Charenton.
In deciding to live freely with Meilcour, Blinval reveals a Marquis whose presence at Charenton is for the first time experienced not as unjust imprisonment, with the impatient expectation of release, but as a positive accomplishment, freely chosen.
In fact, the entire play is shot through with this hidden feeling underlying the apparent frivolousness of the singing, with allusions to the omnipotence of this paternal figure: “ah! mon cher enfant, tu lui dois bien plus qu'à ta mère [ah, my dear child, you owe him far more than you do your mother]”. Other examples include a secret, not revealed but shared with Meilcour, and even the structure of the story within a story, consisting of a recursive image of the role of the actor, hiding behind successive masks. Blinval, played by Sade himself, takes on first the role of an actor and later a director in L'Hommage à la reconnaissance, all the while shielding himself from view until the final reveal.
The only piece written at Charenton and carefully preserved by the Marquis shows itself a literary testament written at the twilight of his life and presenting a Sade mollified and reconciled with himself and his divine madness through the action of his first and final passion: the theatre.
Provenance: family archives.                   

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