WARNING. The following letters are sexually explicit. Proceed with caution and have a lovely weekend.
In 1932, months after first meeting in Paris and despite both being married, celebrated Cuban diarist Anaïs Nin and controversial American novelist Henry Miller began a fiery love affair. The liaison would last for many years, a situation further intensified by the fact that Nin also had an openly discussed affair, albeit brief, with Miller’s then-wife, June, as their own romance grew. Such explosive conditions resulted in countless passionate love letters from both parties. These two were written prior to a heated few days at Nin’s home in France.
Saturday
Anaïs:
I think I have discovered a title for the book. How do you like either of these—“Tropic of Cancer” or “I Sing the Equator.” (2nd volume would be “Tropic of Capricorn.” The last book ought to be just “God.”)
This evening at sunset I lay on my couch and watched the clouds sailing by my window. You can see nothing but the clouds when you lie there and clouds are wonderful when they are punctured by cerulean blue. (Time and Space—what these things are beginning to mean to me. I’m just waking up!) There was one blue hole about eight lightyears away into which a sparrow dove. I was intoxicated by it. Why is it that distance in itself is so enchanting?
Sunday morning and no letter from Anaïs. Desperate. Is it possible you didn’t receive the big letters I mailed? One of them was sealed, the other was about of equal size-I think I have sent you about three thick ones, this will make the fourth.
[...]
When you return I am going to give you one literary fuck fest—that means fucking and talking and talking and fucking and a bottle of Anjou in between—or a Vermouth Cassis. Anaïs, I am going to open your very groins. God forgive me if this letter is ever opened by mistake. I can’t help it. I want you. I love you. You’re food and drink to me—the whole bloody machinery, as it were. Lying on top of you is one thing, but getting close to you is another. I feel close to you, one with you, you’re mine whether it is acknowledged or not. Every day I wait now is torture. I am counting them slowly, painfully. I don't know when you return—the 7th or the 15th? But make it as soon as you can. Be unselfish—yes, I am asking you to Make a sacrifice. I need you. This long Sunday—how will I ever get through it? It is just killing time. Tomorrow there may be a letter. Everything hangs on tomorrow. God, I want to see you in Louveciennes, see you in that golden light of the window, in your Nile-green dress and your face pale, as frozen pallor as of the night of the concert. Let the hair wave—expose it to the sun—let the color return. I love you as you are. I love your loins, the golden pallor, the slope of your buttocks, the warmth inside you, the juices of you. Anaïs, I love you so much, so much! I am getting tongue-tied. I am even crazy enough to believe that you might walk in on me unexpectedly. I am sitting here writing you with a tremendous erection. I feel your soft mouth closing over me, your leg clutching me tight, see you again in the kitchen here lifting your dress and sitting on top of me and the chair riding around over the kitchen floor, going thump, thump.
Henry
Achensee
August 6, 1932
Oh, Henry, I was so upset by your letter this morning. When it was given to me all the artificially pent-up feelings overwhelmed me. The very touch of the letter was as if you had taken me all into your arms. You know now what I felt when I read it. You said everything that would touch and win me and I was moist, and so impatient that I am doing everything to gain a day. I belong to you! We’re going to have a week such as we never dreamt yet. “The thermometer will burst.”
I want to feel again the violent thumping inside of me, the rushing, burning blood, the slow, caressing rhythm and the sudden violent pushing, the frenzy of pauses when I hear the raindrop sounds… how it leaps in my mouth, Henry. Oh, Henry, I can’t bear to be writing you—I want you desperately, I want to open my legs so wide, I’m melting and palpitating. I want to do things so wild with you that I don’t know how to say them.
Anaïs
These letters can be found in Letters of Note: Sex. Originally reprinted in Henry Miller: Letters to Anaïs Nin, copyright © 1965, Peter Owen Publishers. Reproduced by permission of the Anaïs Nin Trust.
I need to smoke a cigarette after that--and I don't even smoke.
I always feel a little sad when private letters like these are exposed to voyeuristic eyes. Feels like such a violation.