The charge of both children now resting
entirely in her hands, Madame Sand was enabled to
fulfill her desire of permanently removing her boy,
now fourteen years of age, from the college Henri IV.
Not only was she opposed to the general regime
and educational system pursued in French public schools
of this type, she felt persuaded of its special unsuitability
to her son, whose tastes and temperament were artistic,
like her own, and whose classical studies had been
repeatedly interrupted by illness. His delicate
health determined her to spend the winter of 1838-9
abroad with her family. Having heard the climate
and scenery of Majorca highly praised, she selected
the island for their resort; tempted herself by the
prospect of a few months absolute quiet, where, with
neither letters to answer, nor newspapers to read,
she would enjoy some rare leisure, which she proposed
to spend in studying history and teaching French to
her children.
Just at this time her friend and ardent
admirer, Frederic Chopin, was recovering from a chest
attack, the first presage of the illness that caused
his early death. The eminent pianist and composer
had also been recommended to winter in the South,
and greatly needed repose and change of air to recruit
him from the fatigues of the Parisian season.
It was arranged that the convalescent should make
one of the expedition to Majorca. He joined Madame
Sand and her children at Perpignan, and they embarked
for Barcelona, whence the sea-voyage to the island
was safely accomplished, the party reaching Palma,
the capital, in magnificent November weather, and
never suspecting how soon they would have cause to
repent their choice of a retreat.
But their practical information about
the island proved lamentably insufficient. With
the scenery, indeed, they were enraptured. “We
found,” says Madame Sand in her little volume,
Un Hiver a Majorque, published the following
year, “a green Switzerland under a Calabrian
sky, with all the solemnity and stillness of the East.”
But though a painter’s Elysium, Majorca was
wanting in the commonest comforts of civilized life.
Inns were non-existent, foreigners viewed and treated
with suspicion. The party thought themselves fortunate
in securing a villa some miles from Palma, furnished,
though scantily. “The country, nature,
trees, sky, sea, and mountains surpass all my dreams,”
she writes in the first days, “it is the promised
land; and as we have succeeded in housing ourselves
pretty well, we are delighted.”
The delight was of brief duration.
That Madame Sand’s manuscripts took a month
to reach the editor of the Revue des Deux Mondes;
that the piano ordered from Paris for Chopin took
two months to get to Majorca, were the least among
their troubles. A rainy season of exceptional
severity set in, and the villa quickly became uninhabitable.
It was not weatherproof. Chopin fell alarmingly
ill. Good food and medical attendance were hardly
to be procured for him; and finally, the villa proprietor,
having heard that his tenant was suffering from consumption an
illness believed to be infectious by the Majorcans gave
the whole party notice to quit. The invalid improving
somewhat, though still too weak to attempt the return
journey to France, Madame Sand transported her ambulance,
as she styled it, to some tolerable quarters she had
already discovered in the deserted Carthusian monastery
of Valdemosa “a poetical name and
a poetical abode,” she writes; “an admirable
landscape, grand and wild, with the sea at both ends
of the horizon, formidable peaks around us, eagles
pursuing their prey even down to the orange-trees
in our garden, a cypress walk winding from the top
of our mountain to the bottom of the gorge, torrents
over-grown with myrtles, palm-trees below our feet,
nothing could be more magnificent than this spot.”
Parts of the old monastic buildings
were dilapidated; the rest were in good order, being
frequented as a summer retreat by the inhabitants of
Palma. Now, in December, the Chartreuse was entirely
abandoned, except by a housekeeper, a sacristan and
a lone monk, the last offshoot of the community a
kind of apothecary, whose stock-in-trade was limited
to guimauve and dog-grass.
The rooms into which the travellers
moved had just been vacated by a Spanish family of
political refugees departing for France. These
lodgings were at least provided with doors, window-panes,
and decent furniture; but the luxury of chimneys was
unknown, and a stove, which had to be manufactured
at an enormous price on purpose for the party, is
described as “a sort of iron cauldron, that made
our heads ache and dried up our throats.”
Continuous stormy weather having suspended steam traffic
with the mainland, the visitors had no choice but to
remain prisoners some two months more, during which
the deluge went on with little intermission.
Still, to young and romantic imaginations
the island and life in the ex-monastery offered considerable
charm. Madame Sand and her children were delighted
with the unfamiliar vegetation, the palms, aloes, olives,
almond and orange trees, the Arab architecture, and
picturesque costumes. Valdemosa itself was splendidly
situated among the mountains, in a stone-walled garden
surrounded with cypress trees and planted with palms
and olives. In the morning, Madame Sand gave lessons
to the children; in the afternoon, they ran wild out
of doors whilst she wrote when the invalid
musician was well enough to be left. In the evenings
she and the young people went wandering by moonlight
through the cloisters, exploring the monkish cells
and chapels. Maurice had fortunately recovered
his health completely, but poor Chopin’s state,
aggravated by the damp weather and privations for
the difficulties in obtaining a regular supply of
provisions were immense remained throughout their stay a constant and terrible
cause of anxiety and responsibility to Madame Sand. From the islanders no
sort of help or even sympathy was forthcoming, and thievish servants and
extortionate traders were not the least of the annoyances with which the
strangers had to contend. In a letter to Francois Rollinat she gives a
graphic account of their misfortunes:
It has rightly been laid down as a
principle that where nature is beautiful and
generous, men are bad and avaricious. We had all
the trouble in the world to procure the commonest
articles of food, such as the island produces
in abundance; thanks to the signal dishonesty,
the plundering spirit of the peasants, who made us
pay for everything three times what it was worth,
so that we were at their mercy under the penalty
of dying of hunger. We could get no one
to serve us, because we were not Christians
[the travellers passed for being “sold
to the Devil” because they did not go to Mass],
and, besides, nobody would attend on a consumptive
invalid. However, for better for worse,
we were established.... The place was incomparably
poetical; we did not see a living soul, nothing disturbed
our work; after waiting two months, and paying three
hundred francs extra, Chopin had at last received
his piano, and delighted the vaults of his cell
with his melodies. Health and strength were
visibly returning to Maurice; as for me, I worked as
tutor seven hours a day: I sat up working
on my own account half the night; Chopin composed
masterpieces, and we hoped to put up with the
remainder of our discomforts by the aid of these compensations.
It was in the cells of Valdemosa that
Madame Sand completed her novel of Monastic life,
Spiridion, then publishing in the Revue des
Deux Mondes. “For heaven’s sake
not so much mysticism!” prayed the editor of
her, now and then; and assuredly those readers for
whom George Sand was simply a purveyor of passionate
romances, those critics who set her down in their
minds as exclusively a glorifier of mutinous emotion
and the apologist of lawless love, must have been
taken aback by these pages, in which she had devoted
her most fervent energies to tracing the spiritual
history, peu recreatif, as she dryly observes,
of a monk who, in the days of the decadence of the
monastic orders, retained earnestness and sincerity;
whose mind, revolted by the hypocrisy and worldliness
around him, passes through the successive stages of
heresy and philosophic doubt, and to whom is finally
revealed an eternal gospel, which lies at the core
of his old religion, but which later growths have stifled,
and which outlasts all shocks and changes, and is
to generate the religion of the future.
The compositions of Chopin above alluded
to, include the finest of his well-known Preludes,
which may easily be conceived of as suggested by the
strange mingling of contrasting impressions in the
Chartreuse. “Several of these Preludes,”
writes Madame Sand, “represent the visions that
haunted him of deceased monks, the sounds of funeral
chants; others are soft and melancholy; these came
to him in his hours of sunshine and health, at the
sound of the children’s laughter beneath the
window, the distant thrum of guitars and the songs
of the birds under the damp foliage; at the sight
of the pale little roses in bloom among the snow.”
The loneliness and melancholy beauty
of the spot, however congenial to the romance writer
or inspiring to the composer, were not the right tonics
for the nerves of the over-sensitive, imaginative invalid.
The care and nursing of Madame Sand made amends for
much, and by her good sense she saved him from being
doctored to death by local practitioners. But
his fortitude, which bore up heroically against his
personal danger, was not proof against the dreary
influences of Valdemosa in bad weather, the fogs,
the sound of the hurricane sweeping through the valley,
and bringing down portions of the dilapidated building,
the noise of the torrents, the cries of the scared
sea-birds and the roar of the sea.
The elevation of the Chartreuse made the climate peculiarly disagreeable at
this season. She writes on:
We lived in the midst of clouds, and
for fifty days were unable to get down into the
plains; the roads were changed to torrents, and we
saw nothing more of the sun. I should have thought
it all beautiful if poor Chopin could only have
got on. Maurice was none the worse.
The wind and the sea sung sublimely as they beat against
the rocks. The vast and empty cloisters cracked
over our heads. If I had been there when
I wrote the portion of Lelia that takes place
in the convent, I should have made it finer and truer.
But my poor friend’s chest got worse and
worse. The fine weather did not return....
A maid I had brought over from France, and who so far
had resigned herself, on condition of enormous
wages, to cook and do the housework, began to
refuse attendance, as too hard. The moment
was coming when after having wielded the broom and
managed the pot au feu, I was ready to
drop with fatigue for besides my work
as tutor, besides my literary labor, besides the continual
attention necessitated by the condition of my
invalid, I had rheumatism in every limb.
The return of spring was hailed as
offering a tardy release from their island. The
steamers were running again, and the party determined
to leave at all risks; for though Chopin’s state
was more precarious than ever, nothing could be worse
for him than to remain. They departed, feeling,
she admits, as though they were escaping from the tender
mercies of Polynesian savages, and once safely on board
a French vessel at Barcelona, they thankfully welcomed
the day that restored them to comfort and civilization,
and saw the end of an expedition that had turned out
in most respects so disastrous a fiasco.
They remained throughout April at
Marseilles, where Chopin, in the hands of a good doctor,
became convalescent. From Marseilles they made
a short tour in Italy, visiting Genoa and the neighborhood,
and returning to France in May, Chopin apparently
on the high road to complete recovery. It was
in the following year that his illness returned in
a graver form, and unmistakable symptoms of consumption
showed themselves. The life of a fashionable
pianist in Paris, the constant excitement, late hours,
and heavy strain of nervous exertion, were fatal to
his future chances of preserving his health; but it
was a life to which he had now become wedded, and
which he never willingly left, except for his long
annual visits to Nohant.
Madame Sand repeatedly contemplated
settling herself entirely in the country. She
had no love for Paris. “Parisian life strains
our nerves and kills us in the long run,” she
writes from Nohant to one of her correspondents.
“Ah, how I hate it, that centre of light!
I would never set foot in it again, if the people
I like would make the same resolution.”
And again, speaking of her “Black Valley, so
good and so stupid,” she adds, “Here I
am always more myself than at Paris, where I am always
ill, in body and in spirit.”
Paris, however, afforded greater facilities for her childrens education.
She had a strong desire to see her son an artist, and he was already studying
painting in Delacroixs studio. Also her income at this moment did not
suffice to enable her to live continuously at Nohant where, she frankly
confessed, she had not yet found out how to live economically, expected as she
was to keep open house, regarded as grudging and unneighborly if she did not
maintain her establishment on a scale to which her resources as yet were
unequal. Her expenses in the country she calculated as double those in
Paris, where, as she writes to M. Chatiron,
Everyone’s independence is admirable.
You invite whom you like, and when you don’t
wish to receive anyone you let the porter know you
are not at home. Yet I hate Paris in all
other respects. There I grow stout, and
my mind grows thin. You know how quiet and retired
my life there is, and I do not understand why
you tell me, as they say in the provinces, that
glory keeps me there. I have no glory, I have
never sought for it, and I don’t care a cigarette
for it. I want to breath fresh air and live
in peace. I am succeeding, but you see and
you know on what conditions.
Her Paris residence, a few seasons
later, she fixed in the Cour d’Orleans
Rue St. Lazare, in a block of buildings one-third of
which was occupied by herself and her family; another
belonged to her friend, Madame Marliani, wife of the
Spanish Consul, the third to Frederic Chopin.
With respect to Chopin’s long
and deep attachment to Madame Sand, and its requital,
concerning which so much has been written, there can
surely be no greater misstatement than to speak of
her as having blighted his life. This last part
of his life was indeed blighted, but by ill-health
and consequent nervous irritability and suffering;
but such mitigation as was possible he found for eight
years in the womanly devotion and genial society of
Madame Sand real benefits to one whose
strange and delicate individuality it was not easy
to befriend and which the breach that took
place between them shortly before his death should
not allow us to forget.
“Chopin,” observes Eugene
Delacroix, “belongs to the small number of those
whom one can both esteem and love.” Madame
Sand joined a sympathetic appreciation of the refinement
of his nature, and an enthusiastic admiration of his
genius feelings she shared with his numberless
female worshippers to a strength of character
that lent the support no other could perhaps so fully
have given, or that he would accept from no other,
to the fragile, nervous, suffering tone-poet.
Her sentiments towards him seem to resolve themselves
into a great tenderness rather than a passionate fervor a
placid affection for himself, and an adoration for
his music.
All the time their existences, so
far from having been united, flowed in different,
nay divergent channels. Chopin, the idol of Paris
society, moved constantly in the aristocratic and
fashionable world, from which Madame Sand lived aloof.
She for her part had heavy domestic cares and anxieties
that did not touch him, and with the political party
which was absorbing more and more of her energies
he had no sympathy whatever. Whether the cause
were the false start she had made at the outset by
her marriage, forbidding her the realization of a
woman’s ideal, the non-separation of the gift
of her heart from that of her whole life, or whether
that her masculine strength of intellect created for
her serious public interests and occupations, beside
which personal pleasures and pains are apt to become
of secondary moment, certain it appears that with
George Sand, as with many an eminent artist of the
opposite sex, such affaires de coeur were but
ripples on the sea of a large and active existence.
The year after her return from Majorca
was marked by her first appearance before the public
as a dramatic author. Although it was a line
in which she afterwards obtained successes, as will
be seen in a future chapter, the result of this initial
effort, Cosima, a five-act drama, was not encouraging.
It was acted at the Theatre Francais in the spring
of 1840, and proved a failure. It betrays no insufficient
sense of dramatic effect, nor lack of the means for
producing it, but decided clumsiness in the adaptation
of these means to that end. The plot and personages
recall those of Indiana, with the important
differences that the beau rôle of the piece
falls to the husband, and that the scene is transported
back to Florence in the Middle Ages an undoubted
error, as giving to a play essentially modern and French
in its complexities of sentiment and motive a strong
local coloring of a past time and another people,
making the whole seem unreal. It has a psychological
subject which Emile Augier or Dumas fils would
know how to handle dramatically; but as treated by
George Sand, we are perpetually being led to anticipate
too much in the way of action, to have our expectations
dissipated the next moment. A wet blanket of
disappointment on this head dampens any other satisfaction
that the merits of the play might otherwise afford.
Hitherto she had continued to write
regularly for the Revue des Deux Mondes.
As her revolutionary opinions became more pronounced,
they began to find utterance in her romances.
Her conversion by Michel had not only been complete,
but the disciple had outstripped the master. The
study of the communistic theories of Pierre Leroux
had familiarized her with the speculations in social
science of those who at this time were devoting their
attention to criticising the existing social organization,
and seeking, and sometimes imagining they had found,
the secret of creating a better. George Sand’s
strong admiration for the writings of Leroux, always
praised by her in the highest terms, strikes us now
as extravagant, but was shared to some extent by not
a few leading men of the time, such as Sainte-Beuve
and Lamartine. Her intellect had eagerly followed
this bold and earnest pioneer in new-discovered worlds
of thought; “I do not say it is the last word
of humanity, but, so far, it is its most advanced
expression,” she states of his philosophy.
The study of it had brought a clearness into her own
views, due, probably, much more to the action of her
own mind upon the novel ideas suggested than to the
lucidity of a system of social science as yet undetermined
in some of its main points.
She writes, when looking back on this period from a long distance of time,
After the despairs of my youth, I was
governed by too many illusions. Morbid scepticism
was succeeded in me by too much kindliness and
ingenuousness. A thousand times over I was duped
by dreams of an archangelic fusion of the opposing
forces in the great strife of ideas.
Her novel Horace, written for
the Revue des Deux Mondes, was rejected as
subversive of law and order by the editor,
except on condition of alterations which she declined
to make.
After this temporary rupture with
Buloz, Madame Sand’s services were largely appropriated
by the Revue Independante, a new journal founded
in 1840 by her friends Pierre Leroux and Louis Viardot,
in conjunction with whose names hers appears on the
title page as leading contributor. For this periodical
no theories could be too advanced, no fictitious illustrations
too audacious, and to its pages accordingly was Horace
transferred. Among the secondary characters in
this novel figure a young couple, immaculate otherwise
in principle and in conduct, but who as converts to
St. Simonism have dispensed with the ordinary legal
sanction to their union. Perhaps a more solid
objection to its insertion in the Revue des Deux
Mondes was the picture introduced of the emcute
of June 1832, painted in heroic colors. Both
these features, however, are purely incidental.
The main interest and the real strength of the book
lie in a remarkable study of character-development that
of the chief personage, Horace. It is a cleverly
painted portrait of a type that reappears, with slight
modifications, in all ages; a moral charlatan, who
half imposes on himself, and entirely for a while on
other people. A would-be hero, genius, and chivalrous
lover, he has none of the genuine qualities needed
for sustaining the parts. Nonchalant and inert
of temperament, he is capable of nothing beyond a
short course of successful affectation. The imposition
breaking down at last, he sinks helplessly into the
unheroic mediocrity of position and pretension for
which alone he is fit.
A veritable attempt at a Socialist
novel is the Compagnon du Tour de France written
in the course of 1840, which must surely be ranked
as one of the weakest of George Sand’s productions.
Exactly the converse of Horace may be said
of this book. In the former, those most repelled
by the revolutionary doctrines flashing out here and
there, will yet be struck and interested by the masterly
piece of character-painting that makes of the novel
a success. The utmost fanaticism for the ideas
ventilated in the Compagnon du Tour de France
can reconcile no reader to the dullness and unreality
of the story which make of it a failure. For
her socialism itself, as set forth in her writings,
dispassionate examination of what she actually inculcated,
leaves but little warrant, in the state of progress
now reached, for echoing the mighty outcry raised
against it at the time. No doubt she thought that
a complete reorganization of society on a new basis
was eminently to be desired. But what she definitely
advocated was, first, free education for the poor,
and secondly, some fairer adjustment of the relations
to each other of capital and labor. As to the
first, authority has already sanctioned her opinion;
the second question, if unsettled, has become a first
preoccupation with statesmen and philosophers of all
denominations in the present day.
With regard to the complete solution
of the problem, she leaves her socialist heroes, as
she herself felt, in doubt and perplexity. There
was something in the schemes and doctrines she conscientiously
approved, irreconcilable with her artist-nature a materialistic tendency which
clashed with her poetical instincts. When the stern demagogue Michel
denounced the whole tribe of artists as a corrupting influence, enervating to
the courage and will of a nation, she rose up energetically in defense of the
confraternity to which she was born:
Will you tell me, pray, what you mean,
with your declamations against artists?
Cry out against them as much as you please, but respect
art. Oh, you Vandal! I like that stern sectarian
who wants to dress Taglioni in a stuff-gown and
sabots, and set Liszt’s hands to
turn the machinery of a wine-press, and who yet, as
he lies on the grass, finds the tears come into
his eyes at the least linnet’s song, and
who makes a disturbance in the theatre to stop Othello
from murdering Malibran! The austere citizen would
suppress artists as social excrescences that
absorb too much of the sap; but this gentleman
is fond of vocal music, and so will spare the singers.
Let us hope that painters will find one among your
strong heads who appreciates painting, and won’t
wall up all studio windows. And as for the
poets, they are your cousins; and you don’t
despise their forms of language and their rhythmical
mechanism when you want to make an impression
on the idle crowd. You will go to them to
take lessons in metaphor, and how to make use of it.
Unfortunately for the cause of the
superiority of antiquity, whenever you go to
hear Berlioz’s Funeral March, the least
that can happen to you will be to confess that
this music is rather better than what they used
to give us in Sparta, when we served under Lycurgus;
you will think that Apollo, displeased to see us sacrificing
to Pallas exclusively, has played us a trick in giving
lessons to that Babylonian, so that by
the exercise of a magnetic and disastrous power
over us, he may lead our spirits astray.
And she would prove to the demagogue,
out of his own mouth, that everything cannot be reduced
to “bread and shoes all round,” as the
grand desideratum. Give these to men, it will
not suffice. The eloquent orator instinctively
seeks besides to impart “hallowed emotions and
mystic enthusiasm to those who toil and sweat he
teaches them to hope, to dream of God, to take courage
and lift themselves above the sickening miseries of
human conditions by the thought of a future, chimerical
it may be, but strengthening and sublime.”
For a period, however, she was too
fascinated by the new ideas to judge them, and she
straightway sought in her art a means of popularizing
them. “These ideas,” she writes in
a later preface to her socialist novel, Le Peche
de M. Antoine, “at which, as yet but a small
number of conservative spirits had taken alarm, had,
as yet, only really begun to sprout in a small number
of attentive, laborious minds. The government,
so long as no actual form of political application
was assumed, was not to be disquieted by theories,
and let every man make his own, put forth his dream,
and innocently construct his city of the future, by
his own fire-side, in the garden of his imagination.”
She was aware that her readers thought
her novels getting more and more tedious, in proportion
as she communicated to her fictitious heroes and heroines
the pre-occupations of her brain, and that she was
thus stepping out of the domain of art. But she
affirmed she could never help writing of whatever
was absorbing her thoughts and feelings at the moment,
and must take her chance of boring the public.
Fortunately for Le Peche de M. Antoine, nature
and human nature are here allowed to claim the larger
share of our attention, and philosophy is a secondary
feature. The scene is laid in the picturesque
Marche country on the confines of Berry, a day’s
journey from Nohant, and we are glad to linger with
her along the rocky banks of the Creuse, or among the
ruined castles of Crozant and Chateaubrun. The
novel contains much that is original and admirable
in the drawing of characters of the most opposite
classes.
Finally, in Le Meunier d’Angibault,
written as was the last-mentioned work some four or
five years later (1844-45), but which may be named
here, as making up with Le Compagnon du Tour de
France the trio of “socialist” novels,
the Tendenz does not interfere to the detriment
of the artistic plan of the book. In it the romantic
elements of the remote country nook she inhabited
are cleverly brought together, without departing too
widely from probability. The dilapidated castle,
the picturesque mill, the traditions of brigandage
two generations ago, all these were realities familiar
to her notice. The painting of the country and
country people is masterly; and there is not a passage
in the book to offend the taste of the most scrupulous
reader. Nor can it be justly impugned on the
ground of inculcating disturbing political principles.
The personages, in their preference of poverty and
obscurity to rank and wealth, may, in the judgment
of some, think and conduct themselves like chimerical
dreamers, but their actions, however quixotic, concern
themselves alone.
But, previous to either of the two
novels last named, she had presented the world with
a more ambitious work, whose merit was to compel universal
acknowledgment the most important, in fact,
she had produced for eight years.