
| London, 30 March 1874 |
Dear Theo,
I have received your gift, included in a letter to me, of a guilder intended for the
purchase of a pair of cuff links. I
thank you very cordially, old man, but you should not have, I have more money than
necessary.
Thanks for the letter which I received this morning. I was very glad to hear that Mauve is
engaged to Jet Carbentus.
That is fine
I was pleased to hear that you are doing so well.
You have done well to read the book by Burger; you should devour books on art as much as
possible, especially The
Gazette de Beaux-Arts, etc. By all means try to get a good knowledge of pictures. That
picture by Apol we have
here now is good, but last year he painted the same subject and I thought it was better
and brighter than this one.
I am glad that you go to see Uncle Cor now and then; he has pictures and prints which you
can never see at the
house in The Hague.
I, too, am very busy just now and am glad of it, for that is what I want. À Dieu,
boy, keep in good spirits. I wish you
well. Greetings to Iterson.
Vincent