Vincent Van Gogh on Unrequited Love
The Complete Letters of Vincent van Gogh L72, Written Aug 2,1876 (NY Graphic Society, 1958), I:64.
To express my feelings for her [Kee], I said, "She, and no other." And
her "no, never, never" (niet, nooit, nimmer) was not strong enough to
make me give her up. I still had hope, and my love remained alive,
notwithstanding this refusal, which I thought was like a piece of ice
that would melt. But I could find no rest. The strain became unbearable
because she was alwys silent and I never received a word in answer.
Then I went to Amsterdam. There [her parents] told me, "When you are in
the house, Kee leaves it. She answers, 'Certainly not him' to your,
'she, and no other'". Your persistence is disgusting. I put my hand in
the flame of the lamp and said, "Let me see her for as long as I can
keep my hand in the flame"... no wonder that Teersteg perhaps noticed
my hand afterward. But I think they blew out the lamp and said, "You
will not see her." Well, it was too much for me, especially when they
spoke of my wanting to coerce her, and I felt that the crushing things
they said to me were unanswerable, and that my "she, and no other" had
been killed.
What is Love

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