Paris. Bruno Schulz writes a letter to Wacław Czarski, where he shares his first impressions of his stay and recommends Ludwik Lille to him as a collaborator for Tygodnik Ilustrowany.
“Scary city and such women! I am devastated. A real debauched Babylon!”1 – Schulz sums up in a letter to Czarski* the first week of his stay in Paris. At that time, he was living with Lille*, about whom he would write to a friend of the editor of Tygodnik Ilustrowany* that he was “a painter, a great essayist and an art expert”2. He could, according to Schulz, “constantly or periodically send correspondence from Paris on all areas of life”3. This letter is probably Schulz’s way of repaying for Lille’s help4.
Based on the first sentence which reads: “I have been in Paris for a week”, Jerzy Ficowski set the date of the letter for 10 August5. However, since Schulz checked in at the Hotel Orient on the evening of July 31, it should be assumed that the letter was written two days earlier, on August 7 or 8, after moving to Lille’s.
See also: 1935, [winter 1934/1935*]. (sr) (transl. mw)