“When I first gave Henry and June a big sum of money,” she wrote in her diary, late in November 1932, when the final act of Henry and June’s disintegrating marriage was being played out, during June’s ultimate sojourn in Paris, “and they spent it all in one night on drink, I was humanly hurt, but my understanding was disciplined. I gave because I wanted to—I gave them liberty at the same time. Otherwise I would not be giving, I would be taking.” Looking back on her first year with Henry Miller, she added this: “Later I gave love. . . . Henry used my love well, beautifully—he erected books with it.”