the great Scotchman’s definition is inadequate,
but nothing is more false than the popular notion
that the great authors throw off their works with
the pleasantest ease, that creation is an act of pure
enjoyment. Beethoven’s sketch-books tell
a different story; so do also Balzac’s proof-sheets
and the manuscripts of Pope’s version of the
Iliad and Odyssey in the British Museum. Dr. Johnson
speaking of Milton’s MSS. observed truly:
“Such reliques show how excellence is acquired.”
Goethe in writing to Schiller asks him to return certain
books of “Wilhelm Meister” that he may
go over them A
few times before sending
them to the press. And on re-reading one of
these books he cut out one third of its contents.
Moreover, if an author writes with ease, this is not
necessarily a proof that he labours little, for he
may finish the work before bringing it to paper.
Mozart is a striking instance. He has himself
described his mode of composing—which was
a process of accumulation, agglutination, and crystallisation—in
a letter to a friend. The constitution of the
mind determines the mode of working. Some qualities
favour, others obstruct the realisation of a first
conception. Among the former are acuteness and
quickness of vision, the power of grasping complex
subjects, and a good memory. But however varied
the mode of creation may be, an almost unvarying characteristic
of the production of really precious and lasting artwork
is ungrudging painstaking, such as we find described
in William Hunt’s “Talks about Art":—“If
you could see me dig and groan, rub it out and start
again, hate myself and feel dreadfully! The people
who do things easily, their things you look at easily,
and give away easily.” Lastly and briefly,
it is not the mode of working, but the result of this
working which demonstrates genius.
As Chopin disliked the pavilion in the Rue Pigalle,
George Sand moved with her household in 1842 to the
quiet, aristocratic-looking Cite (Court or Square)
d’Orleans, where their friend Madame Marliani
arranged for them a vie de famille. To get to
the Cite d’Orleans one has to pass through two
gateways—the first leads from the Rue Taitbout
(close to the Rue St. Lazare), into a small out-court
with the lodge of the principal concierge; the second,
into the court itself. In the centre is a grass
plot with four flower-beds and a fountain; and between
this grass plot and the footpath which runs along
the houses extends a carriage drive. As to the
houses which form the square, they are well and handsomely
built, the block opposite the entrance making even
some architectural pretensions. Madame Sand’s,
Madame Marliani’s, and Chopin’s houses,
which bore respectively the numbers 5, 4, and 3, were
situated on the right side, the last-mentioned being
just in the first right-hand corner on entering from
the out-court. On account of the predilection
shown for it by artists and literary men as a place
of abode, the Court d’Orldans has not inaptly