The Letter From Vincent van Gogh to Theo_029

Letter 029 Paris, 29 June 1875

Dear Theo,

I really want to know if you are leaving The Hague. Is that what you want, too? Do write me if it is yes or no? Provisionally I am staying here, and I probably will not go to Holland before the autumn.

In the first box that goes to The Hague you will find a little parcel for Helvoirt. Please forward it after looking at what’s in it. There are a few lithographs which I should like to see hanging in Father’s study,

next to the “Funeral Procession through the Cornfields,�by Van der Maaten. “An Old Huguenot,�by Anker �the lithograph of which is in the parcel �I have sold to Uncle Vincent, who was here a few days ago. He also bought a beautiful picture by Jacque, “Horses before a Plough in the Rain.�p style="line-height:25px;text-indent:32px"> I don’t know whether I have already written to you about it or not, but there has been a sale here of drawings by Millet. When I entered the hall of the Hôtel Drouot, where they were exhibited, I felt like saying, “Take off your shoes, for the place where you are standing is Holy Ground.�p style="line-height:25px;text-indent:32px"> You know that Millet lived at Gréville. Well, I do not know whether it was at Gréville or Granville that the man whom I told you of died. However this may be, I looked at Millet’s drawings of “The Rocks of Gréville�with extra care. There is now a picture of his at the Luxembourg, “The Church at Gréville.�À Dieu Vincent