• Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 93: Autograph album containing 29 autograph letters signed by each president from Washington to Coolidge, 1785-1945.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 166: Franz Schubert, Autograph Musical Manuscript, fragment from Die Taucher, 1813.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 111: Thomas Jefferson, holograph plat drawing: map of field near Monticello, 1790s.
    Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 208: George Sand, Autograph Manuscript Signed, draft of her one-act play, Francia, ca. 1872.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 218: Walt Whitman, Manuscript Signed, draft of three complete poems from Leaves of Grass, 1891.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 8: James Dean, Photograph Signed and Inscribed, still from Giant, 1955.
    Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 20: John Lennon, Typescript Signed, interview discussing Paul, Linda, and Yoko, 1971.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 215: Mark Twain, engraved portrait Signed, "Mark Twain / SL. Clemens," 1890s.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 81: Vaslav Nijinsky, reproduction of an artwork by Léon Bakst Inscribed and Signed, 1916.
    Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 73: Malcolm X, The Harvard Crimson Signed and Inscribed: his street address and phone number, 1961.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 11: Lou Gehrig, Photograph Signed and Inscribed, ca. 1939.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 153: George Gershwin, Photograph Signed and Inscribed, portrait by Renato Toppo.
  • Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Presentation Copy of a Whitman "Holy Grail." Whitman, Walt. $10,000-$15,000.
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Endymion in Original Boards. Keats, John. $8,000-
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Association Copy of the Privately Printed Edition of The Tale of Peter Rabbit. Potter, Beatrix. $8,000-$12,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Christina Rossetti's Own Copy of Her First Book. Rossetti, Christina G. $8,000-$12,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: The Borden Copy of The Life of Merlin in an Elaborate Binding by Riviere. Heywood, Thomas, Translator. $6,000-$8,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Arion Press. Whitman, Walt, Leaves of Grass. $4,000-$6,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Call It Sleep in the First State Jacket. Roth, Henry. $2,000-$3,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Steinbeck's Best-Known Work. Steinbeck, John. $2,000-$3,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: A Fine Jewelled Binding Signed by Sangorski & Sutcliffe. Sangorski, Francis. $40,000-$60,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: The Complete Tales of Beatrix Potter: A Complete Set of First Editions. Potter, Beatrix. $2,000-$3,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Kelmscott Shelley. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. The Poetical Works. $3,000-$5,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Inscribed by Martin Luther King Jr. King, Martin Luther, Jr. $3,000-$5,000
  • Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 75. The Second Printed Map of the North American Continent - Full Contemporary Color (1593) Est. $35,000 - $40,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 37. Schedel's Ancient World Map with Fantastic Humanoid Creatures (1493) Est. $16,000 - $18,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 104. Important Revolutionary War Plan of Battle of Quebec in Contemporary Color (1776) Est. $4,000 - $4,750
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 43. Mercator's Map of the North Pole - the First Printed Map Devoted to the Arctic (1606) Est. $2,750 - $3,500
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 237. Rare and Striking Bird's-Eye View of Lawrence, Kansas (1880) Est. $2,000 - $2,500
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 10. Rare Map from Atlas Maior with Representations of the Seasons in Contemporary Color (1662) Est. $14,000 - $17,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 374. Bunting's Map of Europe Depicted as the Queen of the World (1589) Est. $2,000 - $2,400
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 590. Willem Blaeu's Magnificent Carte-a-Figures Map of Asia (1634) Est. $2,750 - $3,500
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 647. The Earliest and Most Decorative Map of the East Coast of Africa (1596) Est. $3,000 - $3,750
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 710. Ruscelli's Complete, Third Edition Atlas with 65 Maps (1574) Est. $9,500 - $11,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 696. Superb Hand-Colored Image of the Adoration of the Shepherds (1502) Est. $800 - $950
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Rare Book Monthly

Articles - July - 2025 Issue

The Severed Head of Princess Lamballe Bouncing from Book to Book

Mort de la princesse de Lamballe – Faivre (1908)

Mort de la princesse de Lamballe – Faivre (1908)

Princess Lamballe was Queen Marie-Antoinette’s close friend, who was put to death during the Révolution. After reading about her terrible execution, I decided to follow her bouncing severed head from book to book. 

First bounce: Cléry’s Journal de ce qui s'est passé à la tour du Temple pendant la captivité de Louis XVI Roi de France (Londres, 1798).*

Cléry was serving Louis XVI during his incarceration at the Temple prison in Paris. On September 3, 1793, he was having dinner with the warden and his wife: “We had just seated when a head stuck on a spade appeared at the window. The warden’s wife screamed; the murderers thought it was the Queen’s voice, and we could hear the frenetic laughter of the barbarians. Assuming His Majesty was having diner, they displayed their trophy so it couldn’t be missed; it was Princess Lamballe’s head; although covered with blood it wasn’t disfigured; her blonde and curly hair was floating around the spade.” Cléry saw the head again a few minutes later: “Looking through the window, I saw Princess Lamballe’s head for the second time; the man who carried it was standing on the debris of the houses that had been destroyed to isolate the Temple. Another man next to him, was waving his sword with the heart of this unfortunate princess stuck at the point of it.” She was close to Marie-Antoinette yet Lamballe was never involved in politics. Authoritative French historian Michelet writes: “We know the kind Princess had little conversation, and no idea whatsoever; she was somehow boring. She was a nice woman, and a mediocre one; born to be depending on someone, to obey, suffer and die.

Second bounce: Hue’s Dernieres années du règne et de la vie de Louis XVI (Paris, 1814). **

Hue also served Louis XVI at the Temple prison. Lamballe used to sleep in the room below his at the Temple for a while. “Her head,” he says, “was stuck on a spade and carried around town and then under the windows of the Temple. Her dead body was dragged in the streets.” Does it sound ugly? Well, third bounce:

Mercier’s Le Nouveau Paris (Paris, 1790).*** Lamballe’s last moment: as she was about to be carried outside the courtroom, “several voices raised in the room, begging for mercy; there was a moment of general silence, and the murderers froze for a while—and suddenly hit her several times! She fell in a pool of her own blood, and they cut off her head, her breasts; her body was opened up, her heart was torn away; they stuck her head on a pike and they took it around Paris, dragging her body behind them. One of those monsters cut her genitals off, and wore them as a moustache.”

** www.rarebookhub.com/articles/3613

*** rarebookhub.com/articles/3843

Fourth bounce: Mme Guénard’s Mémoires historiques de la Princess de Lamballe. Got a copy of the 4th edition, printed in Paris in 1815—just as Monarchy had been temporarily restored.

 

It’s a 2-volume book that comes with a frontispiece showing the reputedly beautiful princess with her blonde hair. The early part of her life is indeed quite tedious—let’s jump to the conclusion. Lamballe is 40. Her rich father in law, the Duke of Penthièvre, has bribed several people among those who attend her trial—he wants to save her. As she’s stepping outside to be executed, they advise her to shout: “Vive la nation!” Had she compiled, she was saved. But she steps into a pool of fresh blood at this precise moment, and takes a glimpse at the piled fresh corpses in the yard: “What an abomination!” she cries. Miss Guénard (a.k.a Élisabeth Brossin de Méré) writes: “The crowd mistook this cry for her rejection of the nation. She looked around her, realized what was going on and whispered: “I’m lost.” Those were her last words.” She faints as they drag her into the yard, where her father in law’s satellites beg for her mercy—and almost obtain it. But during this fleeting moment, “one of the monsters decided to (...) take off her hat with the point of his sword. But as he was drunk, as they all were, he bruised her above her eyebrow and her blood spilled as her beautiful blonde hair were falling on her shoulder.” It sparks things off. “The said Charlat hit her with a log, and then twenty cannibals finished her off with their spades.” Her body is thrown at the corner of Rue St Antoine, where the “cannibals” tear her clothes off. She’s a beautiful woman, and an unreachable one for the men, who are now revenging on her sexual attributes... including her hair. “How can I write that the said Grison severed the head from this beautiful body; this charming head he took to a nearby wine seller and dropped it on the counter, forcing the owner to drink with him and his sad fellows. Shall I depict the same Grison, cutting off a breast that had remained so perfectly shaped? Or Charlat, disembowelling her body to tear off her heart, and taking it to the same wine seller? The poor man was unable to hide his repulse, and they dragged him outside, threw him onto a pile of corpses and forced him to shout: Vive la nation!” Miss Guénard doesn’t mention it but our jolly old fellows then went to a hairdresser, whom they forced to prepare the severed head. The poor man washed its hair and powdered its face. That’s why Cléry says that the head, “although covered with blood (...), wasn’t disfigured.

 

What kind of world is that? Had all the people of Paris turned mad? Actually, most of them were like our poor hairdresser: horrified NPCs (non playable characters) in a wicked game played by “sixty to eighty individuals on the payroll of the most horrible men.” Indeed, this wild bunch was constituted of nine men only, when it reached the Temple. The guards refused to let them in although the mob had started to gather around. So after a while, they left the stick head on the gate the Palais Royal—the Duc d’Orléans, who had plotted against his cousin Louis XVI from the start, was inside. He saw Lamballe’s head and whispered: “Had she listened to me, this wouldn’t have happened.” Off they went, dragging Lamballe’s remains through Paris for hours. Penthièvre’s satellites followed them all the way, trying to retrieve the body from them. “But those monsters kept an eye on their prey like fierce animals,” Guénard says. In Les Halles, a butcher named Allègre “chopped the heart and offered it to the mob. Everybody volunteered to eat it. “It will be eaten by the dogs, then!” That’s when Lamballe’s humiliated body was finally thrown into a common pit, where “it was never possible to identify it.” It was then carried away with hundreds of unknown corpses to the plain of Mont-Rouge, outside Paris, where it was buried. Last bounce? Well...

 

Last bounce: the footnote of the last page of Miss Guénard’s book.

One of Penthièvre’s satellites followed the “cannibals”, “until they threw the princess’ remains on a pile of corpses, near Châtelet; he got hold of the Princess’ head, but couldn’t identify her body. He secretly kept the head at his place for 24 hours before taking it to Vernon, where the Duke of Penthièvre placed it in his family tomb.” But there’s a last bounce: “I give more details about it in my biography of the Duke of Penthièvre, to be found at Lerouge’s, bookseller in the Rue du commerce.” I felt sick at that point, and let this blonde hair go its way, feeling as if it was bound to bounce forever and ever, from street to street, book to book... The bloody curse of Princess Lamballe.

 

 

Thibault Ehrengardt

 

Rare Book Monthly

  • Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Darwin (Charles). Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands, 1st edition, 1844. £4,000 to £6,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Rashleigh (Philip). Specimens of British Minerals, 2 parts in 1, 1797 & 1802. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Murchison (Roderick Impey). The Silurian System, 1st edition, 1839. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Darwin (Charles). The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs, 1st edition, 1842. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Darwin (Charles). Geological Observations on South America, 1st edition, 1846. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Sowerby (James). The Mineral Conchology of Great Britain, 6 volumes, 1812-29. £2,000 to £3,000.
    Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Emerson (William). Cyclomathesis: or an Easy Introduction to ... Mathematics, 10 vols. in 9, 1770. £1,500 to £2,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Robinson (Thomas). New observations on the Natural History of This World of Matter, 1696. £800 to £1,200.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Aquinas (Thomas). [Summa Theologica], Secunda Parte, Venice, 1496. £700 to £1,000.
    Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Parfit (Cliff). Tesuki Washi. Handmade Papers of Japan, 1981-1988. £400 to £600.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Herbert (Thomas). A Relation of some yeares Travaile... Into Afrique and the greater Asia, 1634. £800 to £1,200.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Lindbergh (Charles A.). The Spirit of St. Louis, 1955, signed. £200 to £300.
  • Doyle, Nov. 5: The Director's copy of the first edition of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, inscribed by Beckett. $7,000 to $10,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: Don McLean's personal test pressing of American Pie before mass production, gifted in 1971. $8,000 to $12,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The important and extensive archive of original fashion photographs of model Dorothy Rice, 1945-58. $20,000 to $30,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: A Charles Adams theater advertisement. $8,000 to $12,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: A Small Patinated Bronze Bust of Marlene Dietrich. $800 to $1,200.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: Marlene Dietrich Studio Photograph. $100 to $200.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The very large and uncommon British Quad for Hitchcock's The Birds. $500 to $800.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: An Original Crystal "Sputnik" from the 1966 Met Opera Chandelier. $3,000 to $5,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The rare poster from the first American performances of Endgame, 1958. $1,000 to $1,500.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The original Coconut Grove Playhouse poster for Waiting for Godot, possibly unique. $3,000 to $5,000.
  • Sotheby's
    Fine Books, Manuscripts & More
    Available for Immediate Purchase
    Sotheby’s: William Shakespeare. The Temple Shakespeare. Housed in Custom Bookcase. $6,365.
    Sotheby’s: Frederick Douglass. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, Boston: Anti-Slavery Office, 1845. $14,000.
    Sotheby’s: Charles Dickens. A Christmas Carol. London: William Heinemann, 1915. $2,900.
    Sotheby’s: F. Scott Fitzgerald. First Edition Set, Including This Side of Paradise, The Great Gatsby, and others. Charles Scribner's Sons. 1920 – 1941. $24,180.
    Sotheby’s: Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson], John Tenniel. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland First Edition. Macmillan & Co., 1866. $15,000.

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