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Eugène Manet and His Daughter in the Garden at Bougival

Eugène Manet and His Daughter in the Garden at Bougival ART AND IMAGES IN PSYCHIATRY SECTION EDITOR: JAMES C. HARRIS, MD Eugène Manet and His Daughter in the Garden at Bougival To catch the fleeting moment—anything, however small, a smile, a flower, a fruit—is an ambition still unfulfilled. 1(p5) Berthe Morisot URING THE SUMMER OF 1881, JULIE MANET’S PAR- to nurse and everyone wants me to go to sleep at night. How bleak this 3(p58) all is. Dear God, make Maman better. ents, Berthe Morisot (1841-1895) and Eugène Manet (1834-1892), moved to the Paris suburb On that same day Berthe wrote her last letter to Julie: D of Bougival on the Seine, 10 miles from the cen- My dearest little Julie, I love you as I die; I will love you when I’m dead; ter of Paris, believing that the climate there would be best for I beg of you, do not cry; this parting was inevitable. I would have liked her. Julie (1878-1966) was born on November 14, 1878; her to be with you until you married....Work hard and be good as you have then 37-year-old mother had married her father 3 years ear- always been; you have never caused me one sorrow in your little life....I lier. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png JAMA Psychiatry American Medical Association

Eugène Manet and His Daughter in the Garden at Bougival

JAMA Psychiatry , Volume 65 (12) – Dec 1, 2008

Eugène Manet and His Daughter in the Garden at Bougival

Abstract

ART AND IMAGES IN PSYCHIATRY SECTION EDITOR: JAMES C. HARRIS, MD Eugène Manet and His Daughter in the Garden at Bougival To catch the fleeting moment—anything, however small, a smile, a flower, a fruit—is an ambition still unfulfilled. 1(p5) Berthe Morisot URING THE SUMMER OF 1881, JULIE MANET’S PAR- to nurse and everyone wants me to go to sleep at night. How bleak this 3(p58) all is. Dear God, make Maman better. ents, Berthe Morisot (1841-1895) and Eugène...
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References (5)

Publisher
American Medical Association
Copyright
Copyright 2008 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS Restrictions Apply to Government Use.
ISSN
2168-622X
eISSN
2168-6238
DOI
10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2008.511
pmid
19047521
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ART AND IMAGES IN PSYCHIATRY SECTION EDITOR: JAMES C. HARRIS, MD Eugène Manet and His Daughter in the Garden at Bougival To catch the fleeting moment—anything, however small, a smile, a flower, a fruit—is an ambition still unfulfilled. 1(p5) Berthe Morisot URING THE SUMMER OF 1881, JULIE MANET’S PAR- to nurse and everyone wants me to go to sleep at night. How bleak this 3(p58) all is. Dear God, make Maman better. ents, Berthe Morisot (1841-1895) and Eugène Manet (1834-1892), moved to the Paris suburb On that same day Berthe wrote her last letter to Julie: D of Bougival on the Seine, 10 miles from the cen- My dearest little Julie, I love you as I die; I will love you when I’m dead; ter of Paris, believing that the climate there would be best for I beg of you, do not cry; this parting was inevitable. I would have liked her. Julie (1878-1966) was born on November 14, 1878; her to be with you until you married....Work hard and be good as you have then 37-year-old mother had married her father 3 years ear- always been; you have never caused me one sorrow in your little life....I lier.

Journal

JAMA PsychiatryAmerican Medical Association

Published: Dec 1, 2008

There are no references for this article.