but convincing; in fact, her defence is extremely
weak. She does not even tell us that she did
not make use of Chopin as a model. That she drew
a caricature and not a portrait will hardly be accepted
as an excuse, nay, is sure to be regarded as the very
head and front of her offending. But George Sand
had extraordinarily naive notions on this subject,
notions which are not likely to be shared by many,
at least not by many outside the fraternities of novelists
and dramatists. Having mentioned, in speaking
of her grand-uncle the Abbe de Beaumont, that she
thought of him when sketching the portrait of a certain
canon in Consuelo, and that she had very much exaggerated
the resemblance to meet the requirements of the romance,
she remarks that portraits traced in this way are
no longer portraits, and that those who feel offended
on recognising themselves do an injustice both to the
author and themselves. “Caricature or idealisation,”
she writes, “it is no longer the original model,
and this model has little judgment if it thinks it
recognises itself, if it becomes angry or vain on
seeing what art or imagination has been able to make
of it.” This is turning the tables with
a vengeance; and if impudence can silence the voice
of truth and humanity, George Sand has gained her
case. In her account of the Lucrezia Floriani
incident George Sand proceeds as usual when she is
attacked and does not find it more convenient simply
to declare that she will not condescend to defend
herself—namely, she envelops the whole
matter in a mist of beautiful words and sentiments
out of which issues—and this is the only
clearly-distinguishable thing—her own saintly
self in celestial radiance. But notwithstanding
all her arguments and explanations there remains the
fact that Liszt and thousands of others, I one of
them, read Lucrezia Floriani and were not a moment
in doubt that Chopin was the prototype of Prince Karol.
We will not charge George Sand with the atrocity of
writing the novel for the purpose of getting rid of
Chopin; but we cannot absolve her from the sin of
being regardless of the pain she would inflict on
one who once was dear to her, and who still loved
her ardently. Even Miss Thomas, [footnote:
In George Sand, a volume of the “Eminent Women
Series.”] who generally takes George Sand at
her own valuation, and in this case too tries to excuse
her, admits that in Lucrezia Floriani there was enough
of reality interwoven to make the world hasten to identify
or confound Chopin with Prince Karol, that Chopin,
the most sensitive of mortals, could not but be pained
by the inferences which would be drawn, that “perhaps
if only as a genius he had the right to be spared
such an infliction,” and that, therefore, “one
must wish it could have appeared in this light to Madame
Sand.” This is a mild way of expressing
disapproval of conduct that shows, to say the least,
an inhuman callousness to the susceptibilities of
a fellow-being. And to speak of the irresistible