Pyat, were, so to speak, the literary apprentices of
Delatouche, who not only was much older than they,
having been born in 1785, but had long ago established
his reputation as a journalist, novelist, and dramatic
writer. The first work which Madame Dudevant
produced was the novel “Rose et Blanche”;
she wrote it in collaboration with Jules Sandeau,
whose relation to her is generally believed to have
been not only of a literary nature. The novel,
which appeared in 1831, was so successful that the
publishers asked the authors to write them another.
Madame Dudevant thereupon wrote “Indiana”,
but without the assistance of Jules Sandeau.
She was going to have it published under the nom de
plume Jules Sand, which they had assumed on the occasion
of “Rose et Blanche.” But Jules Sandeau
objected to this, saying that as she had done all
the work, she ought to have all the honour. To
satisfy both, Jules Sandeau, who would not adorn himself
with another’s plumes, and the publishers, who
preferred a known to an unknown name, Delatouche gave
Madame Dudevant the name of George Sand, under which
henceforth all her works were published, and by which
she was best known in society, and generally called
among her friends. “Valentine” appeared,
like “Indiana,” in 1832, and was followed
in 1833 by Lelia. For the first two of these
novels she received 3,000 francs. When Buloz
bought the Revue des deux Mondes, she became one of
the contributors to that journal. This shows
that a great improvement had taken place in her circumstances,
and that the fight she had to fight was not a very
hard one. Indeed, in the course of two years
she had attained fame, and was now a much-praised and
much-abused celebrity.
All this time George Sand had, according to agreement,
spent alternately three months in Paris and three
months at Nohant. A letter written by M. Dudevant
to his wife in 1831 furnishes a curious illustration
of the relation that existed between husband and wife.
The accommodating spirit which pervades it is most
charming:—
I shall go to Paris; I shall not put
up at your lodgings, for I do not wish to inconvenience
you any more than I wish you to inconvenience me
(parceque je ne veux pas vous gener, pas plus que
je ne veux que vous me geniez).
In August, 1833, George Sand and Alfred de Musset
met for the first time at a dinner which the editor
Buloz gave to the contributors to the Revue des deux
Mondes. The two sat beside each other. Musset
called on George Sand soon after, called again and
again, and before long was passionately in love with
her. She reciprocated his devotion. But
the serene blissfulness of the first days of their
liaison was of short duration. Already in the
following month they fled from the Parisian surroundings
and gossipings, which they regarded as the disturbers
of their harmony. After visiting Genoa, Florence,
and Pisa, they settled at Venice. Italy, however,
did not afford them the hoped-for peace and contentment.