Last week I was very busy with that
Raffaëlli exhibition, we stayed open until 10 o’clock in the evening.
1 Without that I would already have replied to your last letter. I hope that the area continues to please you and that your boarding-house
1r:2 is good. At
mère Siron’s in Barbizon
2 people paid 5 francs, or 4 francs 50 if they stayed there a long time, and it was excellent. When I was in Auvers I dined with my friend
Martin3 in an inn that was down below. There was the Oise there, I think, next some fields, the main road, and this inn was on this road. One ate extremely well there in those days, and not expensively.
4 I must come one time, and I’m very receptive to your proposal that I should come with
Jo and the
little one, for I feel quite emptied, and the countryside would do me good. But we must
1v:3 also see
Mother and Jo’s
parents. If I can have around 3 weeks’ holiday, we’d first go to you and then to Holland.
5 That would be at the beginning of August, probably. It would do us all a lot of good to spend a little time in the country. What you write about
Doctor Gachet interests me a great deal, I hope that you’ll become good friends with him. I’d very much like to have a friend who was a doctor, for at every turn one would like to know, especially for the little one, where illnesses come from. Fortunately he’s
1v:4 quite well, but a week ago we’d gone to St-Cloud,
6 and there we were caught unawares by torrential rain the like of which I’ve never seen. The café where we took refuge was flooded, there was a good foot of water. That and the jostling in the evening to get the train made us worried, but all he had was a heavy cold and Jo had nothing, although her milk would probably no longer have been good. That can happen with wet feet. A parcel arrived here, returned from St-Rémy, and I’m sending it to you.
Dr Peyron told me about it when asking for news of you.
7 We’ll be happy to have good news from you. If you were here the little one would smile nicely at you. How detached from all other preoccupations is the smile of a child. Good handshake, and warm regards from
Jo and the
little one.