This great unknown artist belonged to the kindly class of the self-
forgetting, who give their time and their soul to others, just as they
leave their gloves on every table and their
umbrella at all doors. His
hands were of the kind that are dirty as soon as washed. In short, his
old body, badly poised on its knotted old legs, proving to what degree
a man can make it the mere
accessory of his soul, belonged to those
strange
creations which have been
properly depicted only by a German,
--by Hoffman, the poet of that which seems not to exist but yet has
life.
Such was Schmucke,
formerly chapel-master to the Margrave of Anspach;
a
musicalgenius, who was now examined by a council of devotes, and
asked if he kept the fasts. The master was much inclined to answer,
"Look at me!" but how could he
venture to joke with pious dowagers and
Jansenist confessors? This apocryphal old fellow held such a place in
the lives of the two Maries, they felt such friendship for the grand
and simple-minded artist, who was happy and
contented in the mere
comprehension of his art, that after their marriage, they each gave
him an annuity of three hundred francs a year,--a sum which sufficed
to pay for his
lodging, beer, pipes, and clothes. Six hundred francs a
year and his lessons put him in Eden. Schmucke had never found courage
to
confide his
poverty and his aspirations to any but these two
adorable young girls, whose hearts were
blooming beneath the snow of
maternal rigor and the ice of
devotion. This fact explains Schmucke
and the girlhood of the two Maries.
No one knew then, or later, what abbe or pious spinster had discovered
the old German then
vaguely wandering about Paris, but as soon as
mothers of families
learned that the Comtesse de Granville had found a
music-master for her daughters, they all inquired for his name and
address. Before long, Schmucke had thirty pupils in the Marais. This
tardy success was manifested by steel buckles to his shoes, which were
lined with horse-hair soles, and by a more
frequent change of linen.
His artless
gaiety, long suppressed by noble and
decentpoverty,
reappeared. He gave vent to witty little remarks and
flowery speeches
in his German-Gallic patois, very observing and very
quaint and said
with an air which disarmed
ridicule. But he was so pleased to bring a
laugh to the lips of his two pupils, whose
dismal life his sympathy
had penetrated, that he would
gladly have made himself wilfully
ridiculous had he failed in being so by nature.
According to one of the nobler ideas of religious education, the young
girls always accompanied their master
respectfully to the door. There
they would make him a few kind speeches, glad to do anything to give
him pleasure. Poor things! all they could do was to show him their
womanhood. Until their marriage, music was to them another life within
their lives, just as, they say, a Russian
peasant takes his dreams for
reality and his
actual life for a troubled sleep. With the
instinct of
protecting their souls against the pettiness that threatened to
overwhelm them, against the all-pervading asceticism of their home,
they flung themselves into the difficulties of the
musical art, and
spent themselves upon it. Melody,
harmony, and
composition, three
daughters of heaven, whose choir was led by an old Catholic faun drunk
with music, were to these poor girls the
compensation of their trials;
they made them, as it were, a
rampart against their daily lives.
Mozart, Beethoven, Gluck, Paesiello, Cimarosa, Haydn, and certain
secondary
geniuses, developed in their souls a
passionate emotion
which never passed beyond the
chasteenclosure of their breasts,
though it permeated that other
creation through which, in spirit, they
winged their
flight. When they had executed some great work in a
manner that their master declared was almost
faultless, they embraced
each other in
ecstasy and the old man called them his Saint Cecilias.
The two Maries were not taken to a ball until they were sixteen years
of age, and then only four times a year in special houses. They were
not allowed to leave their mother's side without instructions as to
their
behavior with their partners; and so
severe were those
instructions that they dared say only yes or no during a dance. The
eye of the
countess never left them, and she seemed to know from the
mere
movement of their lips the words they uttered. Even the ball-
dresses of these poor little things were piously irreproachable; their
muslin gowns came up to their chins with an endless number of thick
ruches, and the sleeves came down to their wrists. Swathing in this
way their natural charms, this
costume gave them a vague resemblance
to Egyptian hermae; though from these blocks of
muslin rose enchanting
little heads of tender
melancholy. They felt themselves the objects of
pity, and
inwardly resented it. What woman, however
innocent, does not
desire to
excite envy?
No dangerous idea, unhealthy or even equivocal, soiled the pure pulp
of their brain; their hearts were
innocent, their hands were horribly
red, and they glowed with health. Eve did not issue more
innocent from
the hands of God than these two girls from their mother's home when
they went to the mayor's office and the church to be married, after
receiving the simple but terrible
injunction to obey in all things two
men with whom they were
henceforth to live and sleep by day and by
night. To their minds, nothing could be worse in the strange houses
where they were to go than the
maternalconvent.
Why did the father of these poor girls, the Comte de Granville, a wise
and
upright magistrate (though sometimes led away by politics),
refrain from protecting the
helpless little creatures from such
crushing despotism? Alas! by
mutual understanding, about ten years
after marriage, he and his wife were separated while living under one
roof. The father had taken upon himself the education of his sons,
leaving that of the daughters to his wife. He saw less danger for
women than for men in the
application of his wife's
oppressivesystem.
The two Maries, destined as women to
enduretyranny, either of love or
marriage, would be, he thought, less injured than boys, whose minds
ought to have freer play, and whose manly qualities would deteriorate
under the powerful compression of religious ideas pushed to their
utmost consequences. Of four victims the count saved two.
The
countess regarded her sons as too ill-trained to admit of the
slightest
intimacy with their sisters. All
communication between the
poor children was
thereforestrictly watched. When the boys came home
from school, the count was careful not to keep them in the house. The
boys always breakfasted with their mother and sisters, but after that
the count took them off to museums, theatres, restaurants, or, during
the summer season, into the country. Except on the
solemn days of some
family
festival, such as the
countess's birthday or New Year's day, or
the day of the
distribution of prizes, when the boys remained in their
father's house and slept there, the sisters saw so little of their
brothers that there was
absolutely no tie between them. On those days
the
countess never left them for an
instant alone together. Calls of
"Where is Angelique?"--"What is Eugenie about?"--"Where are my
daughters?" resounded all day. As for the mother's
sentiments towards
her sons, the
countess raised to heaven her cold and macerated eyes,
as if to ask
pardon of God for not having snatched them from iniquity.
Her exclamations, and also her reticences on the subject of her sons,
were equal to the most lamenting verses in Jeremiah, and completely
deceived the sisters, who
supposed their sinful brothers to be doomed
to perdition.
When the boys were eighteen years of age, the count gave them rooms in
his own part of the house, and sent them to study law under the
supervision of a
solicitor, his former secretary. The two Maries knew
nothing
therefore of
fraternity, except by theory. At the time of the
marriage of the sisters, both brothers were practising in provincial
courts, and both were detained by important cases. Domestic life in
many families which might be expected to be
intimate, united, and
homogeneous, is really spent in this way. Brothers are sent to a
distance, busy with their own careers, their own advancement,
occupied, perhaps, about the good of the country; the sisters are
engrossed in a round of other interests. All the members of such a
family live disunited, forgetting one another, bound together only by
some
feeble tie of memory, until, perhaps, a
sentiment of pride or
self-interest either joins them or separates them in heart as they
already are in fact. Modern laws, by multiplying the family by the
family, has created a great evil,--namely, individualism.
In the depths of this
solitude where their girlhood was spent,
Angelique and Eugenie seldom saw their father, and when he did enter
the grand
apartment of his wife on the first floor, he brought with
him a saddened face. In his own home he always wore the grave and