The Women of the French Salons by Amelia Ruth Gere Mason - HTML preview

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concealed by her coif, she combined a noble presence with great

kindliness of manner. She usually wore somber colors and fine laces,

for which she had great fondness. Her youth was long past when she came

before the world, and that sense of fitness which always distinguished

her led her to accept her age seriously and to put on its hues. The

"dead-leaf mantle" of Mme. de Maintenon was worn less severely perhaps,

but it was worn without affectation. Diderot gives us a pleasant glimpse

of her at Grandval, where they were dining with Baron d'Holbach. "Mme.

Geoffrin was admirable," he wrote to Mlle. Volland. "I remark always the

noble and quiet taste with which this woman dresses. She wore today a

simple stuff of austere color, with large sleeves, the smoothest and

finest linen, and the most elegant simplicity throughout."

In her equanimity and her love of repose she was a worthy disciple

of Fontenelle. She carefully avoided all violent passions and all

controversies. To her lawyer, who was conducting a suit that worried

her, she said, "Wind up my case. Do they want my money?

I have some, and

what can I do with money better than to buy tranquillity with it?" This

aversion to annoyance often reached the proportions of a very amiable

selfishness. "She has the habit of detesting those who are unhappy,"

said the witty Abbe Galiani, "for she does not wish to be so, even by

the sight of the unhappiness of others. She has an impressionable heart;

she is old; she is well; she wishes to preserve her health and her

tranquillity. As soon as she learns that I am happy she will love me to

folly."

But her generosity was exceptional. "Donner et pardonner" was her

device. Many anecdotes are related of her charitable temper. She had

ordered two marble vases of Bouchardon. One was broken before reaching

her. Learning that the man who broke it would lose his place if it were

known, and that he had a family of four children, she immediately sent

word to the atelier that the sculptor was not to be told of the loss,

adding a gift of twelve francs to console the culprit for his fright.

She often surprised her impecunious friends with the present of some bit

of furniture she thought they needed, or an annuity delicately bestowed.

"I have assigned to you fifteen thousand francs," she said one day to

the Abbe Morellet; "do not speak of it and do not thank me." "Economy is

the source of independence and liberty" was one of her mottoes, and she

denied herself the luxuries of life that she might have more to spend in

charities. But she never permitted any one to compromise her, and often

withheld her approbation where she was free with her purse. To do all

the good possible and to respect all the convenances were her cardinal

principles. Marmontel was sent to the Bastille under circumstances that

were rather creditable than otherwise; but it was a false note, and

she was never quite the same to him afterwards. She wept at her own

injustice, schemed for his election to the Academy, and scolded him for

his lack of diplomacy; but the little cloud was there.

When the Sorbonne

censured his Belisarius her friendship could no longer bear the strain,

and, though still received at her dinners, he ceased to live in her

house.

Her dominant passion seems to have been love of consideration, if a calm

and serene, but steadily persistent, purpose can be called a passion. No

trained diplomatist ever understood better the world with which he had

to deal, or managed more adroitly to avoid small antagonisms. It was

her maxim not to create jealousy by praising people, nor irritation by

defending them. If she wished to say a kind word, she dwelt upon good

qualities that were not contested. She prided herself upon ruling her

life by reason. Sainte-Beuve calls her the Fontenelle of women, but it

was Fontenelle tempered with a heart.

This "foster-mother of philosophers" evidently wished to make sure of

her own safety, however matters might turn out in the next world. She

had a devotional vein, went to mass privately, had a seat at the Church

of the Capucins, and an apartment for retreat in a convent. During her

last illness the Marquise de la Ferte-Imbault, who did not love her

mother's freethinking friends, excluded them, and sent for a confessor.

Mme. Geoffrin submitted amiably, and said, smiling, "My daughter is like

Godfrey of Bouillon; she wishes to defend my tomb against the infidels."

Into the composition of her salon she brought the talent of an artist.

We have a glimpse of her in 1748 through a letter from Montesquieu.

She was then about fifty, and had gathered about her a more or less

distinguished company, which was enlarged after the death of Mme. de

Tencin, in the following year. She gave dinners twice a week--one on

Monday for artists, among whom were Vanloo, Vernet, and Boucher; and one

on Wednesday for men of letters. As she believed that women were apt

to distract the conversation, only one was usually invited to dine with

them. Mlle. de Lespinasse, the intellectual peer and friend of these

men, sat opposite her, and aided in conducting the conversation into

agreeable channels. The talent of Mme. Geoffrin seems to have consisted

in telling a story well, in a profound knowledge of people, ready tact,

and the happy art of putting every one at ease. She did not like heated

discussions nor a too pronounced expression of opinion.

"She was

willing that the philosophers should remodel the world,"

says one of her

critics, "on condition that the kingdom of Diderot should come without

disorder or confusion." But though she liked and admired this very free

and eloquent Diderot, he was too bold and outspoken to have a place at

her table. Helvetius, too, fell into disfavor after the censure which

his atheistic DE L'esprit brought upon him; and Baron d'Holbach was

too apt to overstep the limits at which the hostess interfered with her

inevitable "Voila qui est bien." Indeed, she assumed the privilege

of her years to scold her guests if they interfered with the general

harmony or forgot any of the amenities. But her scoldings were very

graciously received as a slight penalty for her favor, and more or

less a measure of her friendship. She graded her courtesies with fine

discrimination, and her friends found the reflection of their success

or failure in her manner of receiving them. Her keen, practical mind

pierced every illusion with merciless precision. She defined a popular

abbe who posed for a bel esprit, as a "fool rubbed all over with wit."

Rulhiere had read in her salon a work on Russia, which she feared might

compromise him, and she offered him a large sum of money to throw it

into the fire. The author was indignant at such a reflection upon

his courage and honor, and grew warmly eloquent upon the subject. She

listened until he had finished, then said quietly, "How much more do you

want, M. Rulhiere?"

The serene poise of a character without enthusiasms and without

illusions is very well illustrated by a letter to Mme.

Necker. After

playfully charging her with being always infatuated, never cool and

reserved, she continues:

"Do you know, my pretty one, that your exaggerated praises confound

me, instead of pleasing and flattering me? I am always afraid that your

giddiness will evaporate. You will then judge me to be so different from

your preconceived opinion that you will punish me for your own mistake,

and allow me no merit at all. I have my virtues and my good qualities,

but I have also many faults. Of these I am perfectly well aware, and

every day I try to correct them.

"My dear friend, I beg of you to lessen your excessive admiration.

I assure you that you humiliate me; and that is certainly not your

intention. The angels think very little about me, and I do not trouble

myself about them. Their praise or their blame is indifferent to me, for

I shall not come in their way; but what I do desire is that you should

love me, and that you should take me as you find me."

Again she assumes her position of mentor and writes:

"How is it possible

not to answer the kind and charming letter I have received from you?

But still I reply only to tell you that it made me a little angry. I see

that it is impossible to change anything in your uneasy, restless, and

at the same time weak character."

Horace Walpole, who met her during his first visit to Paris, and before

his intimacy with Mme. du Deffand had colored his opinions, has left a

valuable pen-portrait of Mme. Geoffrin. In a letter to Gray, in 1766, he

writes:

"Mme. Geoffrin, of whom you have heard much, is an extraordinary woman,

with more common sense than I almost ever met with, great quickness in

discovering characters, penetrating and going to the bottom of them,

and a pencil that never fails in a likeness, seldom a favorable one.

She exacts and preserves, spite of her birth and their nonsensical

prejudices about nobility, great court and attention.

This she acquires

by a thousand little arts and offices of friendship, and by a freedom

and severity which seem to be her sole end for drawing a concourse to

her. She has little taste and less knowledge, but protects artisans

and authors, and courts a few people to have the credit of serving her

dependents. In short, she is an epitome of empire, subsisting by rewards

and punishments."

Later, when he was less disinterested, perhaps, he writes to another

friend: "Mme. du Deffand hates the philosophers, so you must give them

up to her. She and Mme. Geoffrin are no friends; so if you go thither,

don't tell her of it--Indeed you would be sick of that house whither

all the pretended beaux esprits and false savants go, and where they are

very impertinent and dogmatic."

The real power of this woman may be difficult to define, but a glance

at her society reveals, at least partly, its secret.

Nowhere has the

glamour of a great name more influence than at Paris. A few celebrities

form a nucleus of sufficient attraction to draw all the world, if

they are selected with taste and discrimination. After the death of

Fontenelle, d'Alembert, always witty, vivacious, and original, in spite

of the serious and exact nature of his scientific studies, was perhaps

the leading spirit of this salon. Among its constant habitues were

Helvetius, who put his selfishness into his books, reserving for his

friends the most amiable and generous of tempers; Marivaux, the novelist

and dramatist, whose vanity rivaled his genius, but who represented only

the literary spirit, and did not hesitate to ridicule his companions the

philosophers; the caustic but brilliant and accomplished Abbe Morellet,

who had "his heart in his head and his head in his heart;" the severe

and cheerful Mairan, mathematician, astronomer, physician, musical

amateur, and member of two academies, whose versatile gifts and courtly

manners gave him as cordial a welcome in the exclusive salon at the

Temple as among his philosophical friends; the gay young Marmontel, who

has left so clear and simple a picture of this famous circle and

its gentle hostess; Grimm, who combined the SAVANT and the courtier;

Saint-Lambert, the delicate and scholarly poet; Thomas, grave and

thoughtful, shining by his character and intellect, but forgetting the

graces which were at that time so essential to brilliant success; the

eloquent Abbe Raynal; and the Chevalier de Chastellux, so genial, so

sympathetic, and so animated. To these we may add Galiani, the smallest,

the wittiest, and the most delightful of abbes, whose piercing insight

and Machiavellian subtlety lent a piquant charm to the stories with

which for hours he used to enliven this choice company; Caraccioli,

gay, simple, ingenuous, full of Neapolitan humor, rich in knowledge and

observation, luminous with intelligence and sparkling with wit; and the

Comte de Crentz, the learned and versatile Swedish minister, to whom

nature had "granted the gift of expressing and painting in touches of

fire all that had struck his imagination or vividly seized his soul."

Hume, Gibbon, Walpole, indeed every foreigner of distinction who visited

Paris, lent to this salon the eclat of their fame, the charm of their

wit, or the prestige of their rank. It was such men as these who gave it

so rare a fascination and so lasting a fame.

A strong vein of philosophy was inevitable, though in this circle of

diplomats and litterateurs there were many counter-currents of opinion.

It was her consummate skill in blending these diverse but powerful

elements, and holding them within harmonious limits, that made the

reputation of the autocratic hostess. The friend of savants and

philosophers, she had neither read nor studied books, but she had

studied life to good purpose. Though superficial herself, she had the

delicate art of putting every one in the most advantageous light by a

few simple questions or words. It was one of her maxims that "the way

not to get tired of people is to talk to them of themselves; at the same

time, it is the best way to prevent them from getting tired of you."

Perhaps Mme. Necker was thinking of her when she compared certain women

in conversation to "light layers of cotton wool in a box packed with

porcelain; we do not pay much attention to them, but if they were taken

away everything would be broken."

Mme. Geoffrin was always at home in the evening, and there were simple

little suppers to which a few women were invited. The fare was usually

little more than "a chicken, some spinach, and omelet."

Among the most

frequent guests were the charming, witty, and spirituelle Comtesse

d'Egmont, daughter of the Duc de Richelieu, who added to the vivacious

and elegant manners of her father an indefinable grace of her own, and a

vein of sentiment that was doubtless deepened by her sad little romance;

the Marquise de Duras, more dignified and discreet; and the beautiful

Comtesse de Brionne, "a Venus who resembled Minerva."

These women, with

others who came there, were intellectual complements of the men; some

of them gay and not without serious faults, but adding beauty, rank,

elegance, and the delicate tone of esprit which made this circle so

famous that it was thought worth while to have its sayings and doings

chronicled at Berlin and St. Petersburg. Perhaps its influence was the

more insidious and far reaching because of its polished moderation. The

"let us be agreeable" of Mme. Geoffrin was a potent talisman.

Among the guests at one time was Stanislas Poniatowski, afterwards King

of Poland. Hearing that he was about to be imprisoned by his creditors,

Mme. Geoffrin came forward and paid his debts. "When I make a statue

of friendship, I shall give it your features," he said to her; "this

divinity is the mother of charity." On his elevation to the throne he

wrote to her, "Maman, your son is king. Come and see him." This led to

her famous journey when nearly seventy years of age. It was a series of

triumphs at which no one was more surprised than herself, and they were

all due, she modestly says, "to a few mediocre dinners and some petits

soupers." One can readily pardon her for feeling flattered, when the

emperor alights from his carriage on the public promenade at Vienna and

pays her some pretty compliments, "just as if he had been at one of our

little Wednesday suppers." There is a charm in the simple naivete with

which she tells her friends how cordially Maria Theresa receives her at

Schonbrunn, and she does not forget to add that the empress said she had

the most beautiful complexion in the world. She repeats quite naturally,

and with a slight touch of vanity perhaps, the fine speeches made to

her by the "adorable Prince Galitzin" and Prince Kaunitz, "the first

minister in Europe," both of whom entertained her. But she would have

been more than a woman to have met all this honor with indifference. No

wonder she believes herself to be dreaming. "I am known here much better

than in the Rue St. Honore," she writes, "and in a fashion the most

flattering. My journey has made an incredible sensation for the last

fifteen days." To be sure, she spells badly for a woman who poses as the

friend of litterateurs and savants, and says very little about anything

that does not concern her own fame and glory. But she does not cease to

remember her friends, whom she "loves, if possible, better than ever."

Nor does she forget to send a thousand caresses to her kitten.

A messenger from Warsaw meets her with everything imaginable that can

add to the comfort and luxury of her journey, and on reaching there

she finds a room fitted up for her like her own boudoir in the Rue

St. Honore. She accepts all this consideration with great modesty and

admirable good sense. "This tour finished," she writes to d'Alembert,

"I feel that I shall have seen enough of men and things to be convinced

that they are everywhere about the same. I have my storehouse of

reflections and comparisons well furnished for the rest of my life. All

that I have seen since leaving my Penates makes me thank God for having

been born French and a private person."

The peculiar charm which attracted such rare and marked attentions to

a woman not received at her own court, and at a time when social

distinctions were very sharply defined, eludes analysis, but it seems

to have lain largely in her exquisite sense of fitness, her excellent

judgment, her administrative talent, the fine tact and penetration which

enabled her to avoid antagonism, an instinctive knowledge of the art of

pleasing, and a kind but not too sensitive heart. These qualities are

not those which appeal to the imagination or inspire enthusiasm. We

find in her no spark of that celestial flame which gives intellectual

distinction. In her amiability there seems to be a certain languor of

the heart. Her kindness has a trace of calculation, and her friendship

of self-consciousness. Of spontaneity she has none. "She loved nothing

passionately, not even virtue," says one of her critics.

There was a

certain method in her simplicity. She carried to perfection the art of

savoir vivre, and though she claimed freedom of thought and action, it

was always strictly within conventional limits.

She suffered the fate of all celebrities in being occasionally attacked.

The role assigned to her in the comedy of "The Philosophers" was not a

flattering one, and some criticisms of Montesquieu wounded her so deeply

that she succeeded in having them suppressed. She did not escape the

shafts of envy, nor the sneers of the grandes dames who did not relish

her popularity. But these were only spots on the surface of a singularly

brilliant career. Calm, reposeful, charitable, without affectation or

pretension, but not untouched by ennui, the malady of her time, she held

her position to the end of a long life which closed in 1777.

"Alas," said d'Alembert, who had been in the habit of spending his

mornings with Mlle. de Lespinasse until her death, and his evenings with

Mme. Geoffrin, "I have neither evenings nor mornings left."

"She has made for fifty years the charm of her society,"

said the Abbe

Morellet. "She has been constantly, habitually virtuous and benevolent."

Her salon brought authors and artists into direct relation with

distinguished patrons, especially foreigners, and thus contributed

largely to the spread of French art and letters. It was counted among

"the institutions of the eighteenth century."

CHAPTER XIII. ULTRA-PHILOSOPHICAL SALONS--MADAME

D'EPINAY

_Mme. de Graffigny--Baron d'Holbach--Mme. d'Epinay's Portrait of

Herself--Mlle. Quinault--Rousseau--La Chevrette--Grimm--

Diderot--The

Abbe Galiani--Estimate of Mme. d'Epinay_

A few of the more radical and earnest of the philosophers rarely, if

ever, appeared at the table of Mme. Geoffrin. They would have brought

too much heat to this company, which discussed everything in a light

and agreeable fashion. Perhaps, too, these free and brilliant spirits

objected to the leading-strings which there held every one within

prescribed limits. They could talk more at their ease at the weekly

dinners of Baron d'Holbach, in the salons of Mme.

Helvetius, Mme. de

Marchais, or Mme. de Graffigny, in the Encyclopedist coterie of Mlle. de

Lespinasse, or in the liberal drawing room of Mme.

d'Epinay, who held

a more questionable place in the social world, but received much good

company, Mme. Geoffrin herself included.

Mme. de Graffigny is known mainly as a woman of letters whose life had

in it many elements of tragedy. Her youth was passed in the brilliant

society of the little court at Luneville. She was distantly related

to Mme. du Chatelet, and finally took refuge from the cruelties of a

violent and brutal husband in the "terrestrial paradise"

at Cirey. La

belle Emilie was moved to sympathy, and Voltaire wept at the tale of

her sorrows. A little later she became a victim to the poet's sensitive

vanity. He accused her of sending to a friend a copy of his "Pucello,"

an unfinished poem which was kept under triple lock, though parts of it

had been read to her. Her letters were opened, her innocent praises were

turned against her, there was a scene, and Cirey was a paradise no more.

She came to Paris, ill, sad, and penniless. She wrote

"Les Lettres

d'une Peruvienne" and found herself famous. She wrote

"Cenie," which was

played at the Comedie Francaise, and her success was established. Then

she wrote another drama. "She read it to me," says one of her friends;

"I found it bad; she found me ill-natured. It was played; the public

died of ennui and the author of chagrin." "I am convinced that

misfortune will follow me into paradise," she said. At all events, it

seems to have followed her to the entrance.

Her salon was more or less celebrated. The freedom of the conversations

may be inferred from the fact that Helvetius gathered there the

materials for his "De l'Esprit," a book condemned by the Pope, the

Parliament, and the Sorbonne. It was here also that he found his

charming wife, a niece of Mme. de Graffigny, and the light of her house

as afterwards of his own.

A more permanent interest is attached to the famous dinners of Baron

d'Holbach, where twice a week men like Diderot, Helvetius, Grimm,

Marmontel, Duclos, the Abbe Galiani and for a time Buffon and Rousseau,

met in an informal way to enjoy the good cheer and good wines of this

"maitre d'hotel of philosophy," and discuss the affairs of the universe.

The learned and free-thinking baron was agreeable, kind, rich, and

lavish in his hospitality, but without pretension. "He was a man simply

simple," said Mme. Geoffrin. We have many pleasant glimpses of his

country place at Grandval, with its rich and rare collections, its

library, its pictures, its designs, and of the beautiful wife who turned

the heads of some of the philosophers, whom, as a rule, she did not like

overmuch, though she received them so graciously. "We dine well and a

long time," wrote Diderot. "We talk of