August 21, 1938, Sunday

Warsaw. In the 35th issue of Wiadomości Literackie Bruno Schulz’s short story The Comet is published with drawings by Egga Haardt. 

With Schulz’s consent, the text was illustrated without his drawings, which was exceptional. Until now, the writer made them himself. Egga van Haardt* created drawings in a style that was far different from Schulz’s. Although they had titles pointing to some elements of the world depicted in the story: At the table, The Moon, The Crazy Tłuja, Adela and the Counter Jumper Tłuja’s Sarabanda, Strange Father, Edward’s Death, Experiments with Uncle Edward, they were visual metaphors rather than illustrations. It seems that Schulz accepted the artist’s individual style. In a letter to Romana Halpern* he mentions: “Egga has already drawn illustrations for The Comet. I think it will be published soon”1. The story was published in book form only in 1957 in a volume containing The Cinnamon Shops, Sanatorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass and The Comet2, but without Egga van Haardt’s illustrations. (sr) (transl. mw

  • 1
    Letter from Bruno Schulz to Romana Halpern dated February 6, 1938, [in:] Bruno Schulz, Dzieła zebrane, volume 5: Księga listów, zebrał i przygotował do druku Jerzy Ficowski, uzupełnił Stanisław Danecki, Gdańsk 2016, p. 164.
  • 2
    Bruno Schulz, Sklepy cynamonowe. Sanatorium pod Klepsydrą. Kometa, Kraków 1957.