5 amongst others, since caring nothing about the guests, a night of intoxication, that is to say of courage, she hurled herself into the water of the Rhine. Sprite whose side-saddle plumes ruled the age of slit skirts, I deny the presence of this other one to dedicate my solitude to you, on this bridge edging the Bois de Boulogne, at dawn of a June day. I loved you so, you and the lady with the bare neck. I love you still, but I must admit that I loved the lady with the bare neck better. During my childhood, women displayed their breast only when going to a ball. In the first half of the year 1914, a lady citizen of Geneva prophesied that the cataclysms, that were to deafen my adolescence, would come because of the opening of the blouses on the Cote d’Azur. As she always wore a tight chemisette of black silk, her country stayed in margin of all disaster. As to the lady with the bare neck, she had anticipated by several years the fashionable ones of 1914. She too had a bad reputation. She was the most famous woman in the world, she was accused of having murdered her husband and her mother. We secretly bought the newspapers on her account. To tell the truth, in the eyes of my comrades, the most fascinating thing in this affair was the name of the valet, an astounding name sounding like an obscene word said in public. But no, I cared little about the valet. I liked the lady with the bare neck and I liked her because she was the lady with the bare neck. I was fully content with this passion. I deemed it abso lute and justified by the one reason which I gave to myself, ignorant as I was of the law of relativity: this glory of science, joy of social meetings, torment of hearts. The lady with the bare neck is the lady with the bare neck on the wall-paper in the room of my childhood. I would write this sentence with letters legible only to me. Thus I did away with ennui. I was eight and was the only one to take her defense without exhibitionism, without the hope of a little reward when the prison gates should open. I was seeing her still as the magazines revealed her: She was on the bench of the accused a very fragile little thing in a bundle of crepe. They pictured her full-face, or her head turned left or right, pale, her veil stronger than the muscles of her neck. At other times the grief on her forehead, would carry to her hands the symbols of her double mourning. But whatever her movements were, their whole mystery had only one pivot.