George Sand went to Nohant without Chopin, ceased
to write to him, and thus the connection came to an
end. Of course, Chopin ought to have left her
before she had recourse to the “heroic means”
of kicking him, metaphorically speaking, out of doors.
But the strength of his passion for this woman made
him weak. If a tithe of what is rumoured about
George Sand’s amorous escapades is true, a lover
who stayed with her for eight years must have found
his capacity of overlooking and forgiving severely
tested. We hear on all sides of the infidelities
she permitted herself. A Polish friend of Chopin’s
informed me that one day when he was about to enter
the composer’s, room to pay him a visit, the
married Berrichon female servant of George Sand came
out of it; and Chopin, who was lying ill in bed, told
him afterwards that she had been complaining of her
mistress and husband. Gutmann, who said that
Chopin knew of George Sand’s occasional infidelities,
pretended to have heard him say when she had left
him behind in Paris: “I would overlook
all if only she would allow me to stay with her at
Nohant.” I regard these and such like stories,
especially the last one, with suspicion (is it probable
that the reticent artist was communicative on so delicate
a subject, and with Gutmann, his pupil and a much
younger man?), but they cannot be ignored, as they
are characteristic of how Chopin’s friends viewed
his position. And yet, tormented as he must have
been in the days of possession, crushed as he was
by the loss, tempted as he subsequently often felt
to curse her and her deceitfulness, he loved and missed
George Sand to the very end—even the day
before his death he said to Franchomme that she had
told him he would die in no other arms but hers (que
je ne mourrais que dans ses bras).
If George Sand had represented her separation from
Chopin as a matter of convenience, she would have
got more sympathy and been able to make out a better
case.
The friendship of Chopin [she writes in
Ma Vie] has never been for me a refuge in sadness.
He had quite enough troubles of his own to bear.
Mine would have overwhelmed him; moreover, he knew
them only vaguely and did not understand them at all.
He would have appreciated them from a point of view
very different from mine.
Besides Chopin’s illnesses became more frequent,
his strength diminished from day to day, and care
and attendance were consequently more than ever needful.
That he was a “detestable patient” has
already been said. The world takes it for granted
that the wife or paramour of a man of genius is in
duty bound to sacrifice herself for him. But
how does the matter stand when there is genius on
both sides, and self-sacrifice of either party entails
loss to the world? By the way, is it not very
selfish and hypocritical of this world which generally
does so little for men of genius to demand that women
shall entirely, self-denyingly devote themselves to
their gifted lovers? Well, both George Sand and
Chopin had to do work worth doing, and if one of them
was hampered by the other in doing it, the dissolution
of the union was justified. But perhaps this
was not the reason of the separation. At any
rate, George Sand does not advance such a plea.
Still, it would have been unfair not to discuss this
possible point of view.