YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY FORMED BY James Abraham Hillhouse, BA. 1749 James Hillhouse, BA. 1773 James Abraham Hillhouse, B.A. 1808 James Hillhouse, BA. 1875 Removed 1942 from the Manor Mouse in Sachem's Wood GIFT OF GEORGE DUDLEY SEYMOUR JEAN FRANCOIS MILLET, 1846-47. [Frontispiece, JEAN FRANCOIS MILLET Ibis Xife an& letters JULIA CARTWRIGHT (Mrs. Henry Ady) • / ' Author of " Sacharissa," "Madame," " The Pilgrim's Way," etc., ele. " II faut pouvoir faire servir le trivial a l'expression du sublime, c'est li la vraie force." — J. F. Millet CHEAP EDITION LONDON SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO., Lm. NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1910 First Edition . . September 1896 Second Edition . September igaz Cheap Edition . . July 1910 TAg,\T 3" "l 6? r\c Printed by Hazdl, Watson & Vinty, Ld., London and Aylesbury. PREFACE THE world moves on so fast and new phases of art succeed each other with such surprising rapidity in the present day, that to many ears the name of Jean Francois Millet may have a remote and antiquated sound. Only twenty years have passed since the great peasant- painter died. But he has already taken his place among the classics, and the enormous prices that are paid for his works in England and America, as well as in France, prove how fully his genius is now recognised. He stands supreme among his contemporaries as the first painter of humanity who gave expression to modern ideas in noble and enduring form, and whose work will live when the passing fashions and momentary fancies of the day are forgotten. The life of Millet was partly written by his friend, Alfred Sensier, and completed and published after the author's death by M. Paul Mantz, in the year 1881. Sensier began his work during the painter's lifetime, and his book con tains a large number of letters and recollections from Millet's own pen. These, we need hardly say, are of the utmost value and interest. But the book itself has long been out of print, and is chiefly known to English readers by the abridged translation, made by an American writer, which originally appeared in Scribners Magazine, and was afterwards published by Macmillan. Of late years many other important contributions to the subject have been made by French and American writers who were person ally acquainted with Millet, and whose recollections reveal IV PREFACE him under new and different aspects. As long ago as September, 1876, Mr. Edward Wheelwright published a most interesting account of his intercourse with the Bar- bizon painter in the Atlantic Monthly, and in 1889, another American artist, Mr. Wyatt Eaton, gave the world some valuable recollections of Millet during the last years of his life in the Century Magazine. Still more recently, Mr. T. H. Bartlett has published two papers in Scribner's Maga zine (1890), giving further particulars of the painter's life at Barbizon, and including twenty-seven letters, or fragments of letters, which did not appear in Sensier's book. Many of these are of especial value, and help to explain passages in Millet's career which had been hitherto involved in obscurity. Other letters have appeared in different French periodicals, and M. Piedagnel has written a charming account of a visit which he paid to Millet in 1864, in his little volume of Souvenirs de Barbizon. Two papers on Millet's early life and his later years at Barbizon by the painter's own brother, Pierre Millet, were also published in the Century Magazine for January, 1893, and April, 1894. A monograph on the art of Millet from the pen of the well-known writer, M. Yriarte, appeared in the Biblio- thique a" Art Moderne (Paris, 1885), and an admirable essay on the painter has been written by M. Charles Bigot in his Peintres Francois Contemporains (Paris, 1888). Among English writers who have treated the same subject we may name Mr. David Croal Thomson, whose excellent articles on Millet in the Magazine of Art have been re printed in his book on the " Barbizon School " (1889), and Mr. William Ernest Henley, who has done more than any living writer to make the great French master's work known in this country. His "Early Life of Millet" in the Cornhill for 1882 attracted considerable attention at the time, and his biographical introduction to a volume of Twenty-two Woodcuts and Etchings, reproduced in fac- PREFACE V simile (1881), is one of the ablest essays that has ever been written on the subject. The biographical facts and letters which have been col lected from these different sources, have been supplemented by a variety of information received from members of his family and personal friends, which helps to fill up the out line and complete the picture. One by one the men and women who were his contemporaries are dropping out, and it becomes the more important -to collect these scattered memories before the generation which knew Millet has quite passed away. The smallest details which throw light on the character and genius of such a man are precious, and every incident in his life deserves to be remembered. For in Millet's case the man and the artist were closely bound together, and his art was in a special manner the outcome of his life. Himself a peasant of peasants, he has illustrated the whole cycle of the life of the fields in a series of immortal pictures. " Man goeth forth to his labour until the evening "is the text of all his works. The impressions which he has recorded are those which he received himself, in the days when he laboured with his own hands in the fields of his father's home — the only side of life, he often said, with which he was really familiar. But his theme was new and strange, and be cause the young Norman artist dared to take an indepen dent line, and paint the subjects which appealed to him, he had to face, not only the prejudice* of an ignorant public, but the scorn and hatred of the official world. We have only to turn back to the journals and periodicals of those days, and study old volumes of La Gazette des Beaux- Arts, to see how fierce was the opposition which he had to encounter. His finest masterpieces were rejected by the jury of the Salon, and the pictures which now fetch their thousands were sold for a few pounds to buy bread for his children. But, pitiful as the story is, it is none the VI PREFACE less noble and inspiring. His sufferings saddened his days and shortened the number of his years, but they did not crush his spirit or weaken the message that he had to give. On the whole, we may count him more fortunate than many whose lives have been spent in happier conditions ; for he worked in obedience to a deep and unchanging con viction, and clung in his darkest hours with despairing tenacity to the principles for which he had ventured all. "A peasant I was born, and a peasant I will die ! " he cried; " I will say what I feel, and paint things as I see them." Apart from his artistic genius, Millet's personality is one of rare charm. He had all the courage and independence of his Norman ancestors, together with their simple faith and goodness. But although a peasant by birth and edu cation, he was a man of remarkable culture. He had read widely, and thought deeply, and was gifted not only with a poetic imagination of the highest order, but with fine literary instincts. His letters are full of grave and preg nant sentences, his conversation surprised men of letters by its terseness and originality. And if the natural melan choly of his nature was deepened by the hardships which he endured, and the persecution to which he was exposed, a deep undercurrent of hope runs alike through his life and through his art. The sense of tears may be felt in all that he ever painted, but it is lightened throughout by the radiance of the divine hope that cheers the poet's dream. He belongs to " the great company of grief," who have stamped their thoughts on the heart of this generation, who learnt in suffering what they taught in song, and who, out of the seeming failures of a short and sorrowful life, have reared the fabric of an art that will live for all time. J. C. PREFACE TO NEW EDITION OlNCE the first publication of this book fourteen years ^ ago, a valuable contribution to the biography of Millet has been made in the shape of a volume entitled "J. F. Millet and Rustic Art" (Eliot Stock, 1898) by the late Mr. Henry Naegely, who knew the great painter person ally and was intimately acquainted with his son Francois. Many interesting details regarding Millet's home life, his principles and practice of art, are given in this volume, and the information thus supplied has enabled me to correct several inaccuracies in my own work. To the author's kindness I also owe the autograph letter which is printed in the Appendix. CONTENTS PART I PAGE Greville, 1814-1837 * PART II Paris, 1837-1849 . 4* PART III Barbizo^ 1849-1875 . 97 PART IV 1875-1895 -359 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1. Portrait of Millet Froniispkce 2. Le Semeur (The Sower) . . . To face page no 3. Les Glaneuses (The Gleaners) . . „ 175 4. The Angelus (From the Pastel in the Forbes Collection) . . . . „ 204 5. La Nuee de Corbeaux (The Flight of Crows) ....... „ 225 6. La Jeune Berg ere (The Young Shep herdess) „ 262 7. Le Retour (The Return) ... „ 332 8. Les Lavandieres (The Washerwomen). „ 380 PART I GREVILLE 1814— 1837 " Oh ! encore un coup, comme je suis de mon endroit." — J. F. Millet. THE life of Millet falls naturally into three divisions. The first part contains the story of his early youth and education in his native village of Greville. The second includes the twelve years of his stay in Paris, and training as an artist. The third corresponds with his residence at Barbizon, where he spent the last twenty- six years of his life, and where all his great works were painted. Each period has its peculiar interest and im portance. First we see him as the child growing up in Ms peasant-home, and receiving those impressions which were to last during his whole life-time. Then we follow him through the struggles of his Lehr- and Wanderjahre, and watch the painful steps by which he served his apprenticeship to art and life. Finally, we see him go forth as the complete and finished master to give his message to the world. There can be no doubt which is the most attractive part of the story. The •days of youth, before we enter on the storm and stress of the battle of life, are naturally pleasant to look back upon. And in Millet's case this part of the story is more than commonly interesting and instructive. j 'Ppr the circumstances of his birth and childhood had a remarkable share in shaping the bent of his genius. To -the early influences of his peasant-home, he owed the strength of his character and convictions; and in the ¦country scenes amidst which he was born and bred, he ibund the inspiration which governed his whole career. 4 J. F. MILLET Although after the first eighteen years of his life he was never again at his native place excepting for a short visit, nothing could ever weaken the memory of these first im pressions, and to the end of his life he remained the peasant of Greville. " Oh ! once more, how I belong to my native soil!" he exclaimed, when in 1871, three years before his death, he paid his last visit to Normandy ;, and no truer word was ever spoken. Jean Francois Millet was born on the 4th of October, 1814, at Gruchy, a small hamlet of Greville, a village ten miles west of Cherbourg, in the department of La Manche,. and at the north-west extremity of that narrow strip of coast which runs out into the English Channel to end in the steep headland of La Hague. A wild and rugged coast it is, bristling with granite rocks and needles, and stern and desolate to the sailor's eye as he sails along its perilous shores, but pleasant and fruitful enough in land : a country of rolling down and breezy moorland,,. where, quaint old church-towers of grey stone stand on the hill-tops, and low roofs cluster among the apple- orchards and grass meadows in the sheltered valleys. The whole district has a special interest for Englishmen,. as the cradle of some of our older families, and many of these villages, like Greville itself, still bear the names of the barons who sailed of old with the Conqueror to found a new kingdom on the shores of Britain. Gruchy itself is a straggling street of houses in a hollow on the top of the cliffs, a few hundred yards from the sea. On one side rise grey boulders clad with bracken, brightened here and there with patches of golden gorse or purple heather, through which we can look down on the waves breaking in foam on the rocky shore below,. and catch a glimpse of the mountain sheep cropping the short grass. On the other are orchards, and pastures, with oak and elm trees bent into fantastic shapes by the HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 5 wind, and deep winding lanes with high hedges, such as we see in Kent or Sussex. The house where the painter was born is still standing. It is the last of a row of four houses, built of huge blocks of rough grey stone, and_ thatched with straw. An old vine with gnarled stem grows up the wall, and on a block of granite let in over the door we read the words :— - * " Ici est ne le Peintre Jean Francois Millet, le 4 Octobre, i 8 14." The house has been divided of late years, but a portion is still occupied by the widow of Millet's younger brother. Little is changed since the painter's days. The quaint old well, with the hive-shaped roof and flight of steps, which figures in more than one of Millet's drawings, is still standing, and the ivy which he begged might be spared when he gave up his share in the old home still grows thickly over the worn, grey stones. The large kitchen within, the wooden dresser and settle and the great open fireplace, are all the same as they were in Francois' childhood. Upstairs we are shown the room where he was born, and some etchings and early draw ings from his hand. Close by is a low wall which he helped to build, and a barn-door on which he roughly scrawled the figure of a grinning , devil with a pitch fork. Beyond is the douet, or washing-place, where the women of Gruchy still beat their linen with the big, round stones in the pathway. And as. we stand at this lonely spot, where briars and ivy grow tangled together hoover crumbling walls, we can look down across the fields, where ' the painter sowed and reaped, to the wide stretch of sea and the far horizon which filled his young soul with dreams. The wild and desolate aspect of the coast has left its stamp upon the people of the district. These bleak moors 6 J. F. MILLET and rugged cliffs, the abiding presence of the sea, and the frequent shipwrecks on that perilous shore have made them familiar from childhood with thoughts of death, and with the nearness of the unseen world. Even now they are a primitive and God-fearing race ; frugal and thrifty in their ways, strong to bear the hardships of their daily lot, and faithful to their ideas of right and wrong. Much. more was this the case eighty years ago, when in those troubled days, at the close of Napoleon's wars, Jean Francois Millet first saw the light in the old, grey house facing the rising sun at the end of Gruchy street. Here, after the patriarchal fashion of the place, three generations lived under the same roof. Jean Louis, the painter's father, came of a good old yeoman stock, and united in his person the qualities of two remarkably vigorous peasant races, the Millets of Greville and the Jumelins of Saint Germain-le-Gaillard, a village in the Vallee Hochet, fifteen or sixteen miles distant. Nicolas Millet, the painter's grandfather, had been dead some fifteen years, but his widow, Louise Jumelin, shared her son's home and brought up his children. Jean Louis himself was a tall, slight man, with soft black eyes, long dark curling hair, and beautiful hands. A singularly refined and gentle soul, his tastes and sympathies were of a dis tinctly artistic nature, although his life was spent in tilling the fields. He loved music, had a fine voice himself, and taught the village choir so well that people came from all parts of the countryside to hear the singing in Greville church. For their use he made a collection of simple Gre gorian chants, several of which his son preserved, wn'^«#£ff in a hand worthy of a mediaeval scribe. T.- ."* 2fe~"rnodelled in clay, carved flowers and animals in v food, and was never tired of studying the forms of treeyP s and plants. "See how fine these are," he would sr- JHy to his little son they went out to work, taking up^S 1Ca blade or two of as HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 7 grass in his hand. And again, "Look what a tall and well-shaped tree that one is — as beautiful as a flower!" And when they were looking out of the window together, he would say, " Look how well that house lies half buried in the field ! It seems to me that it ought to be drawn in this way." His gentle, thoughtful nature endeared him to all. At his approach rude jests were silenced, and unseemly laughter died away. "Hush!" some one would say, if a coarse joke were made in his presence; "here comes Millet." One day, as little Francois stood at his father's side, watching the setting sun sink into the waves, the glory of the scene stirred him to enthusiastic admiration, and he poured out his heart in an ecstasy of childish rapture. Jean Louis took his cap off reverently and said, " My son, it is God." The boy neyer forgot that word. Jean Louis had married young by the express wish of his parents, who feared to see their only son torn from his home and forced to serve in the wars of Napoleon. But since newly married men were exempt from military service at that time, and Jean Louis was attached to a well-born maiden in the neighbouring village of Ste. Croix, both families agreed in hurrying on the union of the young people, who were married in 181 1. The object of the young man's choice was a fair young girl named Aimee Henriette Adelaide Fleury du Perron, a member of an old yeoman family, who had known better days. Millet re membered hearing his mother speak of the fine house in which her parents lived, with its massive granite build ings and large courtyard shaded by tall trees. She herself was a simple and devout soul like her husband, whose time and thoughts were divided between her children and the field-work in which she took her share. At the same time, her letters to her son show that she was by no 8 J. F. MILLET means devoid of intelligence or education, and it is a mistake to suppose, as some writers have done, that she was a mere household drudge. To the end of her life she kept her youthful air and graceful and refined appear ance. She was always well dressed, her son Pierre tells us, and had a marked preference for bright colours and gaily-flowered china. Like a good mother she was especi ally anxious for her children's material welfare, and did her best to keep up the position of the family in the eyes of the world. Millet was tenderly attached to his mother, and has left us a good likeness of this patient and loving woman in his Cueilleuse d" Haricots, where Aimee Millet is seen gathering beans in front of her home at Gruchy. But it was the grandmother, Louise Jumelin, who played the chief part in Millet's earliest recollections. A woman of strong character and deep feeling, stern in her ideas of duty, but gifted with a boundless capacity for loving, Louise Jumelin was an interesting and striking per sonality. The members of her family had all of them made their mark in the world. One brother was a monk, another a chemist of some repute in Paris, a third had spent some years as a planter in Guadeloupe, but in Mil let's childish recollection, his chief distinction lay in the fact that he had once walked to Paris on foot in two days and nights. Another brother, a miller in the neighbour hood of Greville, was a great reader, and studied Mon taigne and Pascal, the philosophers of the last century, and the writers of Port Royal, during his leisure moments. Her old sister, Bonne, was devoted to the Millet children, and Bonnette, as they called her, remained one of the painter's fondest recollections to his dying day. Louise Jumelin herself had inherited the strong head and warm heart of her family. She had all their religious fervour and no small share of culture. She took the saints as her HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 9 model and carried out her ideal in every detail of daily life. Nothing would ever induce her to swerve a step from what she held to be right ; and if she was in any ' doubt she went at once, in her simple faith, to consult the village cur6. But this mystic vein of piety was blended with an ardent love of natural beauty, and the fire of her zeal for God was tempered with the tenderest human love and pity. "Hers was a beautiful religion,' says Millet, "for it gave her strength to love so well and so un selfishly. The saintly woman was always ready to help * others, to excuse their faults, to pity and relieve them." And his brother Pierre,, who was many years younger, . tells us, in his recollections of his grandmother, that her aged face wore an expression of Christian goodness which agreed perfectly with her character. Such was the remarkable woman to whom the care of the painter's childhood was entrusted, after the Norman custom, in order that the mother might be left free to work in the fields, and tend the sheep and cattle on her husband's farm. He was the second child, but eldest boy of Jean Louis' family, and his birth was accordingly welcomed with joy by his grandmother, who was proud of her first grandson, and looked on him from the first as her especial property. She it was who held him at the baptismal font and gave him the name of Francois, after the Saint of Assisi, on whose fete-day he* was born — Francis, who called the birds his brothers and sisters, and praised God for the sun and stars and all living, creatures. No more fitting patron could have been chosen for the great peasant painter, and no better or holier influence could have watched over his early years than that of this good grandmother. He remembered how she used to rock him in her arms, and sing him to sleep with songs of old Normandy. On bright spring mornings she would rouse him from his slumbers, saying, as she bent over him in IO J. F. MILLET her high, white linen cap, " Wake up, my little Francis I The birds have long been singing the glory of our good God." As the boy grew older, she taught him to see the hand of a great and loving Father in all the wonders of sea and shore, and to dread a wrong action more than death itself. And in so doing she laid the foundation of that moral uprightness and simple faith which marked the character of the man. To the end of her life she followed him with her prayers and counsels, and long after she was dead Millet recalled her words and cherished her memory with the tenderest affection. Another aged relative to whom Millet always said he owed much was his great-uncle, the Abbe Charles Millet, a priest of the diocese of Avranches, who had been forced to hide himself in his brother's house during the Revolution. He had steadily refused to take the oath to the Constitution, and had in consequence narrowly escaped with his life. When the Reign of Terror was over, he lived on at Gruchy with his brother and nephew, inhabiting a room over the old stone well, opposite the house. He taught Jean Louis to read, and acted by turns as parish priest and field- labourer. " He might often be seen," writes Sensier, " reading his breviary on the upper - pastures overlooking the sea, or else guiding the plough, or carrying blocks of granite to rear walls round the family acres. If he had a furrow to plough, or a garden to hoe, he put his breviary into his pocket, tucked his cassock into his girdle, and went to work with goodwill." But whether at home or abroad little Francois was the good Abbe's constant com panion. He taught the boy to read, and watched over his early years with the most anxious affection. But he died when his great-nephew was only seven years old, and the event made a profound impression on the thoughtful child. HIS LIFE AND LETTERS II There was yet one other member of the little house hold at Gruchy who played an important part in Francois' life. This was his sister Emilie, the eldest of Jean Louis' eight children. She was a girl of sweet and gentle dis position, much beloved by all her family, and especially by her brother Francois, to whom she bore a marked resemblance. She was the favourite companion of the painter's boyhood, and treasured up stories of his sayings and doings, which she loved to repeat in after years. In her eyes Francois was always a remarkable child, unlike other children in his ways and thoughts. Francois, who was eighteen months younger, looked up to Emilie as a cherished elder sister, and made a charming drawing of her sitting at her spinning-wheel, in the white linen cap, homespun skirt, and sabots of the Norman peasant-girl. The affection between the brother and sister lasted to the end of their lives, and survived many years of trial and separation. When in 1866 Emilie, who had become the wife of a neighbouring farmer, named LeTevre, fell dangerously ill, Millet hastened to Greville without delay, and has left a touching account of her death in his letters. 12 J. F. MILLET I II N later years, Millet often spoke of his boyhood, and loved to recall each little incident of these youthful days upon which he looked back as the happiest time of his life. At Sensier's request he wrote out several pages of his earliest recollections, which are so full of interest, and give so vivid a picture of his childish memories, that we quote them word for word : — " I remember being awakened one morning by voices in the room where I slept. There was a whizzing sound which made itself heard between the voices now and then. It was the sound of spinning- wheels, and the voices were those of women spinning and carding wool. The dust of the room danced in a ray of sunshine which; shone through the high narrow window that lighted the room. Is often saw the sunshine produce the same effect again, as the house faced east. In one corner of the room there was a large bed,: covered by a counterpane with broad red and brown stripes, which hung down to the floor. There was also a large brown cupboard against the wall, between the feet of the bed and the window. All this comes back to me as in a vague, a very vague, dream. If I were asked to recall in the faintest degree the faces of those poor spinners, all my efforts would be in vain, for although I grew up before they died, I only remember their names because I heard them afterwards spoken of in my family. One of them was my old great-aunt Jeanne. The other was a spinner by profession, who often came to the house, and was called Colombe Gamache. " This is the oldest of all my memories. I must have been very little when I received that impression, and it was a long time before I became conscious of any more distinct images. I only remember confused impressions, such as the sound of steps ^ml and going m the house, the cackle of geese in the ya^ h° Growing HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 13 of the cock, the swing of the flail in the barn, and similar noises which fell on my ears constantly and produced no particular emotion. "There is a little fact which stands out more clearly. The Commune invested in some new bells : two of the old ones had been melted down to make guns, and the third had been broken, as I heard afterwards. My mother had the curiosity to go and see the new bells, which were placed in the church to be baptized before they were hung in the tower, and took me with her. She was accompanied by a girl named Julie Lecacheux, whom I knew very well afterwards. I remember how much I was impressed at finding myself in so vast a place as the church, which seemed even more immense than our barn, and how the beauty of the big windows with their lozenge-shaped panes struck my imagination. We saw the bells, all three resting on the ground,' and they also appeared enor mous, since they were much bigger than I was ; and then (what no doubt fixed the scene in my mind) Julie Lecacheux, who held a very big key in her hand— probably that of the church— began to strike the largest bell, which rang loudly, filling me with wonder and ad miration. I have never forgotten the sound of that key on the bell. " I had an old great-uncle who was a priest. He was very fond of me, and took me about everywhere with him. Once he took me to a house where he often went. The lady of the house was aged, and lives in my mind as the type of a lady of the old regime. She caressed me, gave me a slice of bread and honey, and into the bargain a fine peacock's feather. I remember how good that honey tasted, and how beautiful the feather seemed ! I had already been filled with wonder on entering the yard at the sight of two peacocks perched on a big tree, and I could not forget the fine eyes on their long tails ! "My great-uncle sometimes took me to Eculleville, a little hamlet of Greville. The house to which he took me was a sort of chateau, known as the mansion of Eculleville. There was a maid named Fanchon. The owner, whom I never knew, had a taste for rare trees, and had planted some pines. You would have to go a long way in our neighbourhood before you could find so many together. Fanchon sometimes gave me some pine-cones, which filled me with delight. " This poor great-uncle was so afraid of any harm happening to me that he was miserable if I was not at his side. This I had been often told ; but as I by this time was able to run, on one occasion 14 J. F. MILLET I escaped with some other boys, and climbed down the rocks to the sea-shore. After trying in vain to find me, he ended by coming down to the sea, and caught sight of me bending over the pools left by the retreating tide, trying to catch tadpoles. He called me in so terrified a voice, that I jumped up without delay, and saw him on the top of the cliffs beckoning to me to return at once. I did not let him call twice, for his look frightened me ; and if I could have found any other way than the path at the top of which he was awaiting me, I would have taken it. But the steepness of the cliff forced me to take this path. When I had reached the top, and was out of danger, he flew into a violent rage. He took up his three- cornered hat and began to strike me with it ; and as the cliff was still very steep on the way back to the village, and my little legs could not carry me very fast, he followed me, beating me, with a face as red as a turkey-cock. So he pursued me all the way to the house, saying with each blow of his hat, ' There ! I will help you to get home ! ' This filled me with great dread of the three-cornered hat. My poor uncle on his part had the most frightful nightmare all the following night, and kept waking up every minute in terror, crying out that I was falling over the cliff. Since I was not old enough to appreciate a tenderness which took the form of blows, this was by no means the only alarm which I gave him. It appears that once- during mass I chattered with some other children. He coughed^ as a sign to stop me, but I soon began again. Then he came down the church, and taking me by the arm, made me kneel down under the lamp in the middle of the choir. I do not know how it happened,| for I never in all my life had the least wish to resist punishment, but somehow I caught my foot in his surplice and tore it. Over whelmed with horror at this act of impiety, he left me without giving me the intended penance, and returned to his place, where he re mained, more dead than alive, until the end of mass. I had no notion what a crime I had committed, and was very much surprised : when, on our return from mass, my great-uncle began with emotion to tell the whole family what an abominable outrage I had com mitted on his person— an act, in fact, little short of sacrilege. Such a crime, committed against a priest, made him prophesy fearful things of my future. It would be impossible to paint the conster nation of the whole family. For my part, I could not understand why I had suddenly become an object of horror, and my dismay was great. There, however, my recollections of this unhappy affair end HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 1 5 Time has dropped his veil over that, as over other things, and I can not remember if I was ever further punished. " This I remember hearing about my great-uncle, who was the brother of my paternal grandfather. He had been a labourer in his youth, and had become a priest rather late in life. I think he had a small parish at the time of the Revolution. I know that he was persecuted at that time, and I have heard how a party of men came to search my grandfather's house, when he was hidden there. They prosecuted their search in thejnost brutal fashion; but being of an ingenious turn of mind, he managed to make a hiding-place which communicated with his bed, where he took refuge when his enemies came. One day they arrived so unexpectedly that his bed had not yet had time to get cold, and when they were told that he was gone, they exclaimed, ' He was here just now ; the bed is still warm, but he has managed to escape ! ' And all the while he could hear them talking. In their fury they turned the whole house upside down, and then went away. "My uncle said mass, when he could, in the house; and I have still the leaden chalice which he used. After the Revolution he lived on with his brother, and held the office of Vicar of the parish. Every morning he went to church to say mass ; after breakfast he went to work in the fields, and almost always took me with him. When we reached the field, he took off his cassock, and set to work in shirt-sleeves and breeches. He had the strength of Hercules. Some great walls which he built to support a piece of sloping ground are still standing, and are likely to last for many years to come. These walls are very high, and are built of immense stones. They give one an impression of Cyclopean strength; I have heard both my grandmother and father say that he would allow no one to help him to lift even the heaviest stones, and there are some which would require the united strength of five or six ordinary men with levers to move them. fer— " He had an excellent heart. Hel jht the poor children of the village, whose parents could not serf ^ them to school, for the love of God. He even gave them simps! Latin lessons. This excited the jealousy of his fellow-priests, who complained of him to the Bishop of Coutances. I once found, among some old papers, a rough draft of a letter which he addressed in self-defence to the bishop, saying that he lived at home with his peasant brother, and that in the Commune there were some poor children who had no 1 6 J. F. MILLET sort of instruction. He had therefore decided to teach them as much as he could, out of pity, and begged the bishop, for the love of God, not to prevent these poor children from learning to read. I believe the bishop at length consented to let him have his own way — a truly generous permission ! "As he grew old my great-uncle became very heavy, and often walked faster than he wished. I remember how often he used to say, ' Ah ! the head bears away the limbs.' At his death I was about seven years old. It is very curious to recall these early im pressions, and to see how ineffaceable is the mark which they leaves^ upon the mind. "My childhood was cradled with tales of ghosts and weird stories, which impressed me profoundly. Even to-day I take interest in all those kind of subjects. Do I believe in them or not ? I hardly know. On the day of my great-uncle's funeral I heard them speaking in mysterious terms of his burial. They said that ' some heavy stones, covered with bundles of hay, must be placed at the head of the coffin, for that would give the robbers trouble. Their tools would get caught in the hay, and would break on the stones, so that it would be impossible to hook up the head, and pull the body out of the grave.' I afterwards learnt the meaning of this mysterious language. From the day of the funeral several friends, and the servant of the house, who were given hot cider to drink, spent each night, armed with guns and any other weapons they could find, keeping watch at the grave where my great-uncle had been buried. This guard was kept up for about a month. After that, they said, there was no more danger. The meaning of all these precautions was, that there were men about who made a profession of digging up dead bodies for the use of doctors. Whenever any" one died in the Commune, they would come at night to steal the body. Their practice was to take a long screw, and, working through the ground and the lid of the coffin, hook up the head of the dead man, and so draw out the body without disturbing the earth on the surface. They had been met leading the corpse covered - over with a mantle, supporting it in their arms, and speaking to him as if he were a drunken man, telling him to stand up. At othei times they have been seen on horseback, carrying the dead man in the saddle, with the arms tied round the rider's waist, and always,: covered up with a great cloak, but often the feet of the corpse could be seen below. Some months before the death of my great-uncle I HIS LIFE AND LETTERS I J had been sent to school, and I remember well that on the day he died, the maidservant was sent to bring me home, lest at so solemn a moment I should be seen playing on the road. Before I went to school I had begun to learn my letters, and, perhaps, to spell, for the other children thought me already very clever. God knows what they called clever ! " My first arrival at school was for the afternoon class. When I reached the court, where the children were at play outside, the first thing that I did was to fight. The bigger children, to whose care I had been trusted, were proud of bringing a child to school who was only six and a half, but who already knew his letters ;'and I was so big and strong, that they assured me there was not one boy of my age, or even of seven, who could beat me. There were no other children there under seven; they were determined to prove the truth of this assertion, and at once brought up a boy who was supposed to be one of the strongest, and made us fight. I must confess that we had no very good reasons for disliking one another, and that the fight was of a mild nature. But they had a way of putting you on your mettle. A stalk of straw was laid on one boy's shoulder, and the other was told : ' I bet you dare not knock that straw off ! ' and for fear of being thought a coward you knocked it off. The other boy naturally would not submit to such an insult, and the fight began in good earnest. The big boys excited the one whose side they had taken, and the combatants were not parted until one of the two was victorious. The straw was tried in my case. I was the strongest, and covered myself with glory. My partisans were exceedingly proud of me, and said : 'Millet is only six and a half, and he has thrashed a boy of more than seven years old ! ' " In this way Francois made his first acquaintance with school life. He wrote well and easily from dictation, probably, as he says, because he read constantly, and the words and sentences were fixed in his eyes, rather than in his mind. But he could not learn by heart, and spent his time in making capital letters of antique type, and drawing over his copybooks when he ought to have been learning his lessons. He was hopelessly bad at sums, and always declared that he never could get beyond c 1 8 J. F. MILLET simple addition. Subtraction and other rules were utterly beyond him, and all his reckoning was done in his head, after a fashion of his own. But he read every book that he could lay hands upon, and watched the clouds and the waves, the shapes and colours of the objects about^ him, and pondered them in his heart. Nature herself became his teacher, and in her own way she taught him lessons which he could not have learnt from any other. HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 19 III AT twelve years old Francois was prepared for his first communion, and went with his comrades to be catechised in the church of Greville. His thoughtful answers attracted the notice of Abbe Herpent, the young vicar of the parish, who offered to teach him Latin, saying that it might help him to become a priest or a doctor. But the boy declined his offer with thanks. "I do not wish to be either," he replied, with decision. " I mean to stay at home with my parents." "Well, then, I will teach you all the same," said the young priest. Francois made no further objection and joined the class which was held daily at the Abbess house. He learnt to construe the Epitome Historic Sacra and the Selectee e Profanis, and if he did not always under stand the grammar, was invariably quick to seize the meaning of a difficult passage. One day a discussion arose over the myth of Argus. The Vicar insisted that on the death of Argus, Juno had given him the eyes of her favourite bird, the peacock. Francois, on the contrary, declared that Juno had given the peacock the eyes of Argus, and pointed to the peacock's tail as a proof of his argument. The kind Abbe smiled at the little fellow's ¦obstinacy, and said that the question must be referred to bis superior, the Cur6 of Greville, but upon further re flection came to the conclusion that Francois was right, and wisely dropped the subject. He did his pupil a greater service by introducing him to Virgil, which he 20 J. F. MILLET read partly in French and partly in Latin, in the old edition of Abbe Desfontaines. The Bucolics and Georgics were a revelation to this peasant child. They opened his eyes to the beauty and meaning of a hundred things, in nature, and made him understand the life of the fields in a way that he had never done before. From that moment Virgil became one of the strongest influences. of his life — a book to be ranked next to the Bible in his. affections. Certain lines took hold of his imagination- with strange power, and to his dying day he never forgot the thrill of emotion which ran through him when he read the words: " Majoresque cadunt altis de montibus umbrae." Even at this early age, the impressions of which Millet was conscious were all of a serious nature. The sighing of the wind in the oaks and apple-trees, the vast gloom of the church on a winter's night, the weird tales of ghosts and body-snatchers that haunted the village, were the things which struck his childish fancy. He loved the old elm-tree in his father's garden, "gnawed by the windi and bathed in aerial space." The tall laurel with its. shining green leaves seemed to him worthy of the Sun-god Apollo. Above all, the sea filled him with an awful sense of the majesty of nature and the littleness of man. He was never tired of listening to the sound of the waves. breaking upon the rocks, never weary of gazing over the wide stretch of boundless sea that seemed to him to speak of the infinite. The terrible storms that broke upon that iron-bound coast made a profound impression upon his. sensitive nature. There was one especially which he never forgot, and of which he has left us a vivid description. " It was All Saints' Day. In the morning we saw that the sea. was rough, and people said there would be trouble. The whole HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 21 parish came to church. In the middle of mass a man rushed in, all dripping with salt water. It was an old sailor, well known for his courage in all the country-side. He began to say that he had come up from the beach, and had seen several vessels which the wind was driving upon the rocks, where they would certainly be wrecked. 'We must go to their help at once,' he said aloud, 'and I have come to tell all those who are willing to go with me, that there is only just time to put out to sea, if we are to try and save them.' Fifty men volunteered to go at once, and followed the old sailor without a word. We descended the cliffs to the beach, and there we saw a terrible sight : several vessels rushing, one after the other, at fearful speed, upon our rocks. Our men put three boats out to sea, but before they had rowed ten strokes one boat sank, another was upset by a huge breaker, while a third was thrown upon the beach. Happily no one on board perished, and all our men reached the shore safely ; but it was plain that our boats could be of no use to the unhappy souls at sea. Meanwhile the vessels came rapidly nearer until they were only a few yards from the black rocks, •covered with cormorants. The first had lost its masts, and looked like a great rolling mass. We all saw it advancing, and no one dared speak a word. It seemed to me, child that I was, as if death were playing with a handful of men, who were about to be crushed or engulfed in her cruel grasp. Suddenly an immense wave rose up like a raging mountain, caught the vessel and carried it towards the beach. Then another, yet more immense, dashed it against a rock on the water's edge. There was an awful crash, then another, and in one moment the ship filled with water and was dashed in pieces. The sea was strewn with wreckage, with planks, masts and drowning men. Many tried to swim and sank. Our men threw themselves into the waves, and with the old sailor at their head made desperate efforts to save the poor fellows. Some were rescued, but many more were drowned or dashed to pieces on the rocks. The sea threw up hundreds of corpses, as well as quantities of cargo. For many days afterwards our people picked up these sad fragments on the beach, and stowed them away in their cellars, all damaged as they were by the salt water. But this was not all. A second vessel approached. Its masts were gone. Every one on board was as sembled on the crowded deck. We saw them all on their knees, and in their midst a man in black in the act of blessing them. Then a wave, as big as the cliffs, rolled her towards us. We seemed to 22 J. F. MILLET hear another crash, as in the case of the first ship, but this one stood firm and did not move. The waves beat against her sides in vain. She stood as it were turned to stone. Every one made for land, for she was only two gunshots from the shore. One of our boats was- made fast alongside, and filled with people instantly. Another boat, belonging to the ship, put off at the same time, boxes and planks were thrown into the sea, and in half an hour every one was safe on shore. This last ship was saved by a strange chance. The bowsprit and forepart had been wedged in between two rocks, and the wave that dashed her on the reefs had saved her by miracle. This ship was English and the man whom we saw blessing his companions was a bishop. They were taken to the village and from there to Cherbourg. We soon hurried back to the beach. The third ship was thrown on the rocks and dashed to pieces. No one was saved this time, and the bodies of the unhappy crew were thrown up on the sand. Then came a fourth, fifth and sixth vessel, all of which were lost with their crew and cargo alike, upon the rocks. The tempest was furious. The wind was so violent that it could not be resisted. It stripped the houses of their roofs and tore off the thatch. So fierce was the gale that many birds, even the seagulls, which are used to storms, perished in the whirlwind. " The night was spent in trying to protect our own houses. Some of us laid big stones upon the roofs, others fastened ladders and poles to the roofs to secure them. The trees were bent to the ground, their boughs cracked and broke. All the fields were covered with branches and leaves. It was a terrible scene. "The next morning, All Saints' Day, the men of the village came back to the beach. It was covered with dead bodies and wreckage which were brought together and laid at the foot of the rocks. Other vessels came into sight and were all dashed to pieces on our coast. So great was the desolation, it seemed as if the end of the world had come. Not one was saved. The rocks shivered them as if they had been glass, and cast the fragments over the cliffs. "As I was passing by a hollow in the cliff, I saw a large sail spread, as I thought, over a bale of merchandise. I lifted the sail and saw a heap of corpses. I was so frightened that I ran home, and found my mother and grandmother on their knees, praying for the shipwrecked sailors. " The third day, one other vessel came. This time some of the crew were saved. About ten men were brought off the rocks, all HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 23 bruised or wounded. They were carried to Gruchy and nursed during more than a month, and after that taken to Cherbourg. But these unfortunate men were not yet saved from the sea. They embarked on a boat that was going to the Havre. A storm got up and they were all lost. " As for the dead, all the horses in the village were employed, during the first week, in bearing the corpses to the churchyard. They were buried in unconsecrated ground, and I was told they were not good Christians. " A few days after that, I picked up on the sand a small piece of carved wood, which must have belonged to one of the vessels which had been wrecked on our coast. When my mother saw it, she scolded me well, and making the sign of the cross, told me to take it back to the place where I had found it and to ask God's pardon for my theft. This I did at once, feeling much ashamed of my action. " Since that time I have seen many tempests at my home, but no other has ever left so awful a picture of destruction upon my mind, or so vivid an impression of the littleness of man and of the power of the sea." The horrors of that week might well have impressed any child, but perhaps few could have given so clear and exact a record of the shipwreck thirty or forty years afterwards. But it was already plain to more than one observing eye that Francois Millet was no ordinary child. When his first teacher, Abbe Herpent, left Greville for the neighbouring village of Heauville, he asked Jean Louis Millet to allow the boy to accompany him and go on with his lessons. Francois left home sadly enough, and felt in his exile "like Ovid among the Scythians." At the end of four or five months he came back to Gruchy for the New Year, and begged so hard to be allowed to stay at home, that the plan was abandoned. Fortunately, the new vicar, Abbe Jean Lebrisseux, under took to continue the child's education. He was as good as his word, and proved the best and kindest of friends 24 J- F. MILLET to Francois. He lent him books, helped him to read. Virgil, and explained the Psalms to him. More than. this, he encouraged the shy, thoughtful boy to talk freely upon all subjects. Francois poured out his heart to him, and told him how he loved to watch the sea and the sky, and how full of wonder and mystery the visible world about him seemed. The good Abbe listened with kindly interest, but as he heard the child talk and saw that he was altogether unlike his comrades, he trembled to think of his future lot, and said with a sigh : " Ah ! my poor child, you have a heart that will give you trouble. You do not know how much you will have to suffer." In after years these words often came back to Millet's mind, and he owned that Abbe Lebrisseux had been all too true a prophet. Others shared the good priest's surprise, when they heard the lad talk of his favourite books. His great-uncle had left him a few theological books, and his grandmother had inherited several volumes of the Fathers and of the Port Royal writers from her brother, the miller of the Vallee Hochet. Francois, who devoured every book that he could lay hands on, became thoroughly well versed in the Lives of the Saints, the Confessions of St. Augustine, and the writings of Bossuet, Fenelon, and Pascal. The Letters of St. Jerome were one of his favourite studies, and he knew Virgil and the Vulgate by heart. The verses of the Bible, he often said, seemed to him in those days " like gigantic monuments." One day a professor from Versailles paid a visit to Greville, and attracted by Francois' thoughtful face, ques tioned him about his studies. The boy's answers pleased him so much that he took him for a long walk in the fields, and encouraged him to open his heart freely on other subjects. The simple eloquence of Francois' language amazed him. " Go on, my boy, go on as you have begun," HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 25 he said, when they parted ; and he told his friends that he had found a Norman peasant-child whose soul was poetry itself. But life at Gruchy was hard, and all hands were needed on the little farm. As the eldest son of a large family, Francois was soon called to leave his books and help his father and mother in their field work. With his own hands the future artist of the Travaux des Champs sowed and reaped the corn, thrashed and winnowed the grain, mowed the grass and turned the hay, ploughed the ground and tended the flocks in the sheep meadows along the seashore. Another form of labour which Millet has illus trated in his drawings, was the gathering of varech, the seaweed with which the Greville peasants manured their stony soil. After a violent storm beds of seaweed were left upon the beach, and the whole village would hasten to the shore armed with long rakes to collect the varech, and bring it up the cliffs on their mules and ponies. Some of the Greville men were in the pay of the smug glers, who at that time carried on a profitable trade along the coast. But the Millets would never have anything to do with them. "We never tasted that bread. It would have made my grandmother too miserable." On winter evenings the men sat round the fire, mend ing their tubs or making baskets and chairs, while the women were busy spinning wool and flax, for clothes and tools were all made in the village. As they worked, they sang old songs and told weird tales of ghosts and hobgoblins that were handed down from one generation to another. In Millet's home, the old traditions of hos pitality were practised in a truly patriarchal fashion. If a beggar passed that way, he had no need to ask leave to enter the house. The door was always open, and Francois remembered the stately curtsey with which his grandmother invited the poorest tramp to sit 26 J- F. MILLET down by the fire. Often these beggars brought her the latest news of her own family, and came to Gruchy straight from the farm of the Jumelins, where they met with the same hospitable treatment. When Francois and his brothers grumbled because the beggars took up the largest share of the fire, the old lady told them to remember that they at least were warmly clad, while these poor people were all in rags. When supper was laid, she waited upon her guests first, and talked pleasantly with them, mingling good advice and religious exhortation with her remarks. " Whom the Lord loveth, He chasteneth," she would often say; "if you have to suffer here, God will not forget you when you appear before Him." In those hard times whole families were often reduced to beggary, and troops of children would come round crying, " Give us bread, of your charity, for the love of God." They were never sent empty away from the Millets' house, and Francois remembered how his grandmother would send him and his brothers with large baskets, filled with hunches, of bread, to feed these hungry wayfarers, " to teach them," she said, " to be charitable." On Sundays after mass, at which Francois often officiated as server, or incense-bearer, his father kept open house, and liked to sit down to dinner with all his relations and friends. Afterwards, the village lads often went on ex peditions to Cherbourg or other places in the neighbour hood, and then Francois would shake off his dreamy ways and become the life of the party. His clever talent for mimicry made him popular with his companions, and there was one boy named Antoine, who was his inseparable friend. But, as a rule, he preferred to shut himself up in a bedroom or empty barn on Sunday afternoons, and read some favourite author, or else copy the prints out of the old family Bible. He was still, as his sister Emilie said, "unlike other boys." Not even his love for her HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 2"J could induce him to pay attention to his personal ap pearance, or care about fine clothes. In vain she com plained that the girls of the village laughed at his shabby jackets ; he only shrugged his shoulders, and said he liked old clothes best. All the same he was a favourite with most of them, and there was a general impression that Francois would some day become a remarkable man. So the lad grew up without a thought of leaving home, or a wish to lead any other existence than this to which he was born and bred. To the last he always declared that country life was, in his opinion, the only really en viable one. And no doubt this peasant-life, as it was lived at Greville in those days, retained a great measure of its primeval charm. The burden of daily toil was lightened by a sense of honest pride and independence, by the pleasures of out-door labour and the strong ties of family affection. The work might be hard and the fare scanty, but there was neither squalor nor vice to be ashamed of, neither dirt nor rags to hide. The simple- minded peasants bore the hardships and monotony of their daily lot without a murmur, and met death as calmly as they went out to work. And the secret of their quiet courage and uncomplaining patience lay in that humble and devout faith, that unshaken trust in a merciful God, and firm belief in a world beyond the grave, which had its roots deep down in the old order. In their patriarchal simplicity and Puritan virtue, these Norman peasants were not unlike the Scottish Presbyterians in their Highland homes ; but there was a more picturesque element in their religion, together with a certain freedom and largeness, the result of a long inheritance of Catholic traditions. And, in the natural order of things, out of this life of plain living and high thinking, there sprang the great poem of peasant-life which was this painter's 28 J. F. MILLET message to the world. The Sower and the Reape||' the Gleaners and the Angelus, are pages out of the same story. Millet's peasants are men and women of Norman birth, the cut of their clothes, the shape of their tools is that which he had seen and known from his childhood. And the sentiment that inspired these great works, the inborn consciousness of the dignity of labour and its eternal meaning, the ever-present sense of the mysteries of nature and the close relation of man with the infinite, had been learnt by the painter under his father's roof, in the home of his ancestors on the Norman shore. In after years, these scenes of his youth were never long absent from his thoughts. When he lay dying, the vision of his own green fields floated before his eyes, and one of. the last pictures which he painted was that of the old grey church at Greville, with the crosses mark ing the graves of his fathers under the tall poplar trees, and the pale blue sea beyond. HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 29 IV THE genius of Millet revealed itself in his early years by remarkable powers of memory and observation. The child's passionate love of nature and his thoughtful mind, the seriousness of his impressions and the poetry of his soul were evident to all, but some time passed before the artistic faculty within him took any definite shape. His sister Emilie remembered how once, when Francois was a child of four or five, his father asked his little ones what professions they would choose when they grew up, upon which the boy replied with decision, " I mean to make pictures of men." By degrees the vague longings of the boy's heart, his wonder and delight in all living things, began to find expression. The sight of some old engravings in an illustrated Bible first moved him to take up his pencil, and before long he tried his hand at drawing the objects around him. During the noonday rest, while his father slumbered on a couch at his side, Francois studied the -landscape from the window. He sketched the garden and the stakes, the sheep and cattle that were feeding in the pastures and the fields, with their wide horizon of sea and sky. Often Jean Louis, waking from his sleep, would get up and take a peep at the drawing on which the boy was engaged and return softly to his place without dis turbing him, well pleased to see this new development of his son's powers. One clever sketch which Francois made of three men riding donkeys, who passed through Greville on market 30 J. F. MILLET days, was placed in the window of the blacksmith's shop, where it attracted the notice of these personages, who were all eager to know the name of the artist, who had taken their portraits. After this, the boy made several drawings of Bible subjects, one of which, the Ten Wise and Foolish Virgins, was especially admired by his family and neighbours. But no one thought of making him an artist, and he himself never dreamt of leaving home or of following any profession save that of his father's, until one Sunday when he was about eighteen. That day, as he came back from church, the bent figure of an aged peasant who was going slowly home struck his fancy, and taking up a piece of charcoal he drew an exact likeness of the old man upon the wall. The foreshortening of the figure was so good, the movements and attitude were so exactly given, that his parents recognised the portrait at once. Every one laughed, but Jean Louis was deeply moved and pondered seriously over the matter. He had long watched the lad's growing talent, and now he felt that the moment had come when it would be wrong to hinder its progress. A family conclave was held, and the subject was seriously discussed by the elders. Francois was consulted, and owned that he would like to be a painter. Then his father turned to him with a kindness which the youth never forgot, and said gently, — " My poor Francois, I see that this idea has taken hold of you. I should like to have sent you long ago to learn this trade of a painter, which people say is such a fine thing, but it was impossible. You are the eldest of my boys, and I could not do without you ; but now that your brothers are growing up, I will no longer hinder you from learning what you are so anxious to know. We will go to Cher bourg and see if you have reajly enough talent to be able to earn a living." HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 3 1 That simple and touching little speech settled the ques tion. Soon afterwards, the father and son went to Cherbourg, and, by the advice of a neighbour, called upon an artist named Bon Dumoucel, but generally known as Mouchel, who had been a pupil of David, and gave lessons. Francois took with him as specimens of his work two drawings which he had lately finished. One represented a shepherd playing on the flute at the foot of a tree, while his comrade stood listening to the music on a grassy slope where the sheep were feeding. The shepherds wore the short vest and sabots of the Greville peasants, and the background was the apple-orchard close to Millet's home. The other drawing was taken from a parable in St. Luke's Gospel, and represented a peasant standing at the door of his house, on a starry night, in the act of giving a loaf of bread to his neighbour, who was taking it eagerly from his hands. Underneath were the words of the text in the Vulgate version, — " Etsi non dabit illi surgens eo quod amicus ejus sit, propter improbitatem tamen ejus surget, et dabit illi quot- quot habet necessarios." "Though he will not rise and give him, because he is his friend, yet because of his importunity he will rise and give him as many as he needeth." This is the drawing which Millet kept all his life in his atelier at Barbizon and of which he said to Sensier: "You know my first drawing; it is still hanging in my atelier. That was done in .my old home, without the help of a master, without a model or a guide. I have never worked in any other way ; but as far as expression goes, I do not know that I can do better to-day." And Sensier, who had been familiar with this sketch of Millet's youth during thirty years and more, describes it as the work of a man who had already grasped the great issues 32 J. F. MILLET of art, its effects and resources— a drawing, in fact, which" might have been the work of an old master. The Cherbourg artist saw at a glance the originality and merit of the country lad's productions. "You are laughing at me," he said roughly. "You don't mean to tell me that this young man made those drawings by himself! " " Yes, certainly," replied Jean Louis gravely. " I saw him make them myself." "I don't believe it," returned Mouchel. "I see that the method is awkward, but as for the composition — I repeat, it is impossible." Both father and son insisted with so much energy that the drawings were the unaided work of Francois that in the end the incredulous artist was compelled to believe them. Turning to Jean Louis, he exclaimed : " Well, then, all I can say is, you will be damned for having kept him so long at the plough, for your boy has the making of a great painter in him." And he agreed on the spot to take Francois as his pupil. So at eighteen, the lad of Greville left his peasant- home to follow this new calling, and, like Giotto of old, the painter of the Sower and the Angelus was taken straight from the sheepfolds. - His first teacher, Mouchel, was a very singular per- _ sonage. He led the life of a hermit in a cottage outside ' the town, had a passion for animals, and spent hours with a pet pig whose language he pretended to under stand. He painted altar-pieces which he gave to the churches of the villages round, and began large can vases which he never finished. But he had a sincere love of art and was a devoted admirer of Rembrandt and the Dutch masters. The best proof of his wisdom was the advice which he gave his new pupil: "Draw what you like," he said to young Millet- HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 33 " choose anything of mine that you like to copy ; follow your own inclination, and above all go to the Museum." Millet followed this advice exactly. He spent some two months with Mouchel, copying engravings and drawing from casts, and then finding that his eccentric teacher gave him no further hints, set to work to copy pictures in the Museum at Cherbourg. The town gallery con tained several good paintings by Dutch and Flemish masters, and during the time of his apprenticeship at Cherbourg Millet copied many of these, including a Magdalen by Van der Weyden, an Entombment by Van Mol, and the fragment of an Assumption by' Philippe de Champagne. His own talent began to attract the atten tion of the leading citizens in Cherbourg. He entered the lists in a drawing competition and carried off the prize given by the Town Council. But when he had spent about a year in Cherbourg the course of his studies was rudely interrupted. He was at work in the picture gallery, when a servant arrived from Gruchy with the news of his father's sudden and dangerous illness. The young painter hurried home to find the parent he loved so well dying of brain fever. Jean Louis was already unconscious, but in his intervals of lucidity he recognised his beloved son, and would take no food or medicine saving from his hand. He repeatedly told him what great hopes he had formed of his future, and how much he wished to live to see him a famous artist. And once, a day or two before the end, he said with a sigh, " Ah ! Francois, I had hoped that we might one day have seen Rome together!" He died on the 29th of November, 1835, leaving his whole family in tears, and Francois" worn out with .grief and weariness. His youngest child was only a year old at the time. The care of the family and the. management of the farm now devolved upon Francois. For a while he D 34 J- F. MILLET struggled bravely to take his father's place, but he was sick at heart and could not feel happy in the changed and saddened home. And then, too, art had taken hold of him and would not let him go back to the old life. He had drunk of the waters of Castaly and could not forget the taste of that enchanted stream. His grandmother noticed the lad's restlessness and soon discovered its cause. She remembered how anxious Jean Louis had been about his son's future, and resolved that no hindrance should be put in the boy's way. A message reached Gruchy to the effect that the notables of Cher bourg hoped that he would persevere in his artistic career. Commissions were promised him if he would return, and an opening was offered him in the studio of the foremost painter in the town, Langlois de Chevreville. This de cided the 'brave old grandmother. The will of her dead son was sacred, and must be followed. " My Francois," she said, " we must bow to the will of God. Your father, my Jean Louis, said you were to be a painter. Obey him and go back to Cherbourg." His mother was of the same mind, and Millet went back to Cherbourg, to resume his artistic education early in the spring of 1836. On the recommendation of the Mayor, he was admitted into Langlois' studio, where he worked assiduously during the next six months. His new master had studied in Paris under Gros, and after some years of travel in Greece and Italy had settled down at Cherbourg, where he became professor of drawing at the college, until his death in 1846. Like Mouchel, he recognised Millet's talent at once, and saw that he could teach him little. But he gave him drawings of Gros, and copies of the Louvre pictures to study, and sent him back to work in the Museum. There the young artist made a finished drawing of a large Adoration of the Magi, a picture six feet wide and eight feet high. He HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 35 also helped Langlois on two large altar-pieces which he was painting in the Church of the Holy Trinity, and tried his hand at portraits and designs of his own inven tion. He spent his evenings in reading,* and devoured all the books which he could lay hands upon, from the Almanach boiteux of Strasbourg to Paul de Koch's novels. A young friend of his, M. Feuardent, who was, like himself, a native of Greville, and whose son afterwards married Millet's eldest daughter, was at this time a clerk in a library at Cherbourg. Through him Millet obtained access to the chief libraries of the town and read Homer and Shakespeare, Walter Scott and Byron, Milton's Paradise Lost and Goethe's Faust, the ballads of .Schiller and the songs of Beranger. Among modern French writers, Chateaubriand and Victor Hugo appealed to him with especial force. In Atala and Reni he found a regret for the past, a touching recollection of home and family, and at the same time, a bitter sense of the miseries of life, which expressed his OAvn feelings, while Victor Hugo's great poem-pictures of the sea and sky stirred the depths of his soul. He often said that these lines were as inspiring as the language of the old Prophets, and wished that a collection of his poems on nature could be placed in the hands of every child in the national schools. Victor Hugo's description of the awful grandeur of the sea recalled those terrible scenes which he had witnessed on that All Saints' night at Greville, and he was often heard repeating aloud: " Oh ! combien de marins perdus dans les nuits noires 1 O flots, que vous savez de lugubres histoires ! Flots cruels, redoutds des meres a genoux ! Vous vous les racontez en montant les marees, Et c'est ce qui vous fait ces voix ddsesperees Que vous avez le soir, quand vous venez vers nous ! " 36 J. F. MILLET Milton was another poet who impressed him deeply, although he could only read his great epics in a French translation, as in later years he was to read Dante. Scott was another of his favourite authors, and of all the Waverley novels the one he read the most often was Red* gauntlet. The weird figure of Wandering Willie, " born within the hearing of the roar of Solway, among the eternal sublimity of its rocky sea-shores and stormy waves," had the same fascination for him as it had for John Ruskin, with whom Millet had more than one point in common. Langlois, meanwhile, watched his pupil's development " with the surprise of a hen who has hatched an eagle." He felt that this village genius deserved a wider sphere and larger opportunities than he could find in the- narrow limits of a country town ; and fired with the wish to send the young artist to Paris, he addressed the following petition to the Town Council of Cherbourg: "August 19th, 1836,, " Gentlemen, — "I have the honour to beg you to examine three drawings which I have placed in your Council Hall. Those drawings are the unassisted work of my pupil, Francois Millet, of the Commune of Greville, and are the best proof of his decided taste for art, and rare talent. Many of you, gentlemen, are already acquainted with this young man. It was at your recommendation that he was placed under my charge. During the last. six months his progress . has been constant and rapid. In a few more days there will be nothing that I can tell him or show him. -My pupil de serves a wider sphere than our town, and better schools and models than we can give him. In short, he requires the advantages of Paris, if he is to learn historical painting, to which high vocation he is doubtless called among the number of the panel electi. But, alas! young Millet has no resources, excepting his religious tone of art, high character, and excellent education, together with the esteem in which his family is held. HIS LIFE. AND LETTERS 37 " The son of a widow, he is the eldest of eight children under age, and his mother's farm barely suffices to maintain this numerous and honourable family, in spite of the most careful economy. This being the case, I beg of you, gentlemen, in the interest of my country, if not to adopt young Millet, at least to give him the present help which he needs, and to recommend him to the General Council of the Department, in order that he may obtain the favour of the Minister of the Interior during his studies in Paris, where I think he ought to be sent before the end of the year. "Young Millet would require a sum of at least five or six hundred francs to begin his studies at Paris. But, gentlemen, you may be. very sure, however little you may be able to do for him, your efforts will not fail to bear fruit, and the success of your protege will eventually prove his claim to the protection of the Government. " Allow me, gentlemen, for once, to lift the veil of the future, and to promise you a place in the memory of mankind, if you help in this manner to endow our ' country with another great man. "Hoping that my petition will meet with a happy result, both for the sake of my pupil and my own, I beg you to believe in our thankfulness, and to remain assured that ingratitude is never found among those whose life is devoted to the study of Beauty and of Truth. I remain, gentlemen, with the highest and most profound consideration, "Your devoted servant, " Langlois." Historical Painter and sometime Pensioner of V Ecole des Beaux Arts in Greece and Italy. The language of Langlois' request does credit to his generosity and foresight, although his pupil's fame was not to be won in the field of historic painting, which was in his eyes the only sphere worthy of the young artist's genius. The Town Councillors of Cherbourg, to do them justice, met his proposal in the same generous spirit, and unani mously voted young Millet a grant of 600 francs. The 38 J. F. MILLET Council General of La Manche, to whom he was recom mended by the Mayor, was less liberal, and began by refusing to give any help. This annoyed the Town Councillors, who pointed out that after all Millet was not a native of Cherbourg, and threatened to withdraw the promised subsidy. After protracted discussions, in 1838, the Council General of the Department agreed to give , the painter an allowance of 600 francs, and the Town Council voted another 400 francs for his support. But ten councillors voted against the grant, and the motion would have been lost if- it had not been for the courage of Millet's constant friend the Mayor, who gave a casting vote in his favour. The pension, however, was only once paid in full. The following year it was reduced to 300 francs, and, at the end of two years, altogether withdrawn. For the present, however, all was well. The first in stalment of the sum voted by the Town Council was paid down in the following January, and Millet went home to take leave of his friends before he started on his journey to Paris. That moment wTas a memorable one in the young artist's life. The step that he was about to take seemed a very grave one in the eyes of the whole village, most of all in those of his mother and grandmother, who looked on Paris as another Babylon, ' and feared to let their beloved child go forth alone to face the corruptions of the great and wicked world. But loyal to his dead father's wish, they brought out their small store of carefully hoarded savings, and, with many prayers and tears, sent him off on his journey. "Remember the virtues of your ancestors," were his grandmother's last words. " Remember how I promised, at the baptismal font, that you would renounce the devil and all his works, and know, my dear child, that I had rather hear that you were dead than that you had been unfaithful to the laws of God." HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 39 Millet's own heart was full, and he left home with strangely mingled feelings. He was sad at bidding fare well to home and friends, and he felt some remorse at leaving these poor women to struggle alone for their living. But he longed to see Paris, which in his eyes seemed the centre of the world, the El Dorado of his dreams. He was eager to learn his trade, and to become great and famous in his turn. Above all, he longed to see the old masters and the noble works of art of which he had heard so much. And with 600 francs in his pocket, he felt as if all the treasures of the Arabian Nights were his, and he had nothing to do but to follow in the path that led to fame and fortune. " I thought all the time of my mother and grandmother, de prived of the help of my youth and strong arm. It gave me a pang to think of them left weak and failing at home, when I might have been the staff of their old age; but their hearts were too full of motherly love for them to allow me to give up my profession for their sakes. And then youth has not all the sen sitiveness of riper years, and a demon within seemed to push me towards Paris. I was ambitious to see and learn all that a painter ought to know. My Cherbourg masters had not spoilt me in this respect during my apprenticeship. Paris seemed to me the centre of knowledge, and a museum of all great works. "I started with my heart very full, and all that I saw on the road and -in Paris itself made me still sadder. The wide straight roads, the long lines of trees, the flat plains, the rich grass-pastures filled with cattle, seemed to me more like stage decorations than actual nature. And then Paris— black, muddy, smoky Paris — made the most painful and discouraging impression upon me. It was on a snowy Saturday evening in January that I arrived there. The light of the street lamps was almost extinguished by the fog. The immense crowd of horses and carriages crossing and pushing each other, the narrow streets, the air and smell of Paris seemed to choke my head and heart, and almost stifled me. I was seized with an uncontrollable fit of sobbing. I tried to get the better of my feelings, but they were too strong for me, and I could only 40 J. F. MILLET : HIS LIFE AND LETTERS stop my tears by bathing my face with water at a fountain in the street. The sensation of freshness revived my courage. I stopped before a print-seller's window and looked at his pictures, while I munched my last Gruchy apple. The plates which I saw did not please me : there were groups of half-naked grisettes, women bathing and dressing, such as Deve"ria and Maurin then drew, and, in my eyes, seemed only fit for milliners' and perfumers' advertisements. "Paris appeared to me dismal and insipid. I went to an hotel garni, where I spent my first night in one continual nightmare. I saw again my native village, and our house, looking very sad and lonely. I saw my grandmother, mother and sister, sitting there spinning, weeping, and thinking of me, and praying that I might escape from the perdition of Paris. Then the old demon appeared again, and showed me a vision of magnificent pictures so beautiful and dazzling that they seemed to glow with heavenly splendour, and finally melt away in a celestial cloud. "But my awakening was more earthly. My room was a dark and suffocating hole. I got up and rushed out into the air. The light had come back and with it my calmness and force of will. But the sadness remained, and the words of Job rose to my lips : ' Let the day perish wherein I was born and the night in which it was said, There is a man-child conceived.' " PART II PARIS 1837— 1849 " L'Art n'est pas une pavtie de plaisir. C'est un combat, un engrenage qui broie. . . . Je ne suis pas un philosophe, je ne veux pas suppri- mer la douleur, ni trouver une formule qui me rende stoiique et indif ferent. La douleur est, peut-Stre, ce qui fait le plus fortement exprimer les artistes." —J. F. Millet. J. F. MILLET : HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 43 nnHERE is an interesting portrait of Millet at this ¦*¦ period of his life which gives us a good idea of the young painter when, at the age of twenty-two, he came to Paris, on the 31st of January, 1837. The young artist is represented in a white blouse, holding a small pipe in his hand. His long black locks fall in thick waves about his temples and on his neck. The large brown eyes are full of poetry and tenderness. The features are delicate and refined; the expression grave and thoughtful; but the broad forehead and square jaw already give signs of a power which time was to develop more fully. It is impossible to look at this portrait with out recalling the words of the good priest of Greville: " Ah ! my poor child, you do not know how much you will have to suffer! " Certainly this gentle and dreamy youth was little fitted to make his way alone in the world, in a great and crowded city, where he was a complete stranger. The very sight of the crowded streets and hurrying throng of men, the noise and bustle, bewildered him, while the dirt and misery he saw oppressed his soul with melancholy. No wonder his heart sank within him, and he pined for the pure air and green fields of his home, for the familiar faces and kindly words which used to meet him at every step ! He was the most unpractical of men, unable to cast up the simplest sum, and alto gether ignorant of the ways of the world. And to make matters worse, he was proud and sensitive to a fault. 44 J- F. MILLET He shrank from intercourse with strangers, had a horror of being patronised, and was so shy and awkward that he did not dare to ask his way in the streets for fear of being laughed at. His first impression of Paris had been a disagreeable one, but his dislike of his new surround ings had been tempered by wonder and curiosity. "So I greeted Paris," he writes, "not with curses, but with a terror that arose from my incapacity to understand its material or spiritual life, and at the same time with a great wish and longing to see the pictures of those famous masters, of whom I had heard so much and seen, as yet, so little." But as he became familiar with Paris life, its atmo sphere grew more and more- distasteful to him. This serious and earnest young thinker, brought up by God-, fearing parents in his country home, accustomed to soli tary communings with nature under the starlit sky and by the wild seashore, and fed upon the Bible and writers of Port Royal, looked with instinctive horror at the licence and affectation of Parisian art. This reader of Virgil and Milton, whose whole soul worshipped truth, and whose natural taste led him to all that was sublime and heroic, recoiled from the brilliant emptiness and theatrical display of the romantic painters. He turned away with sickening disgust alike from the trivialities of contemporary art, and from the painted faces which he met in the streets. As ill-luck would have it, his first experience of lodgings and landladies proved singularly unfortunate. Yet his Cherbourg friends had donet their best to help their young countryman, and had supplied him with letters of introduction which ought to have been of use. But by his own account, it must be con fessed, he threw away more than one opportunity. First of all, he presented himself at the door of a maker of fans, who offered to take him en pension, but HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 45 the conditions which he made did not meet with Millet's views, and he declined his proposals rather than submit to any restriction on his freedom. Monsieur L , to whom he next addressed himself, seemed to him a grave and sensible man; and since he made no tiresome con ditions, Millet entered his house as a lodger, and was given a clean little room, on the fifth floor, looking out on the roofs and chimneys of an inner court. But Mon sieur L had a wife — a contingency for which Millet had not bargained — who certainly managed to make things- very disagreeable for her lodger. The following graphic account of his experiences in her household was dictated. by him to his biographer: "When I found myself in this little attic, with its marble chimney- piece and narrow window, I began to realize the cramped and dreary life of Paris, and I went to bed full of regret for my coun try home, where air and light and space were given without mea sure. Yet I managed to sleep. The next morning the maid told me dttjeuner was served. I went down, and in a room covered with oil-cloth squares, as smooth and polished as ice, I found a table also covered with oil-cloth, on which my breakfast* was laid. This consisted of a portion of fromage de Brie, a roll, a few wal nuts, and quarter of a bottle of wine. It seemed to me a meal hardly fit for a child. I was hungry enough to eat it all, but I thought to myself, ' If I leave nothing on my plate, I shall be- looked upon as an ill-bred glutton ; but if I am content with half rations, I shall die of hunger.' But in the end regard for my repu tation prevailed over my good appetite, and I went out famished. As this Carthusian meal was repeated every morning, I was al ways famished,, and could only appease the pangs of hunger by going to dine in the streets with a cab-driver who had recognised me as a fellow-countryman, and had taken me with him into a wine-shop. " I soon found that life at Monsieur L 's was very difficult, Madame L was an ill-tempered woman, who was never tired of trying to induce me to go with her to see the fine sights of Paris, the gay ballet-dancers and students' balls. She reproached. 46 J. F. MILLET me constantly for my clumsy manners and shyness ; this made me uncomfortable in the house, and I was only happy on the quays. One day I went to the Chaumiere, but the dances of that rollick ing company disgusted me. Of the two, I -certainly preferred the boisterous joy of our country-folk, and of the tipsy fellows , at home. " In the evening I returned to my cold and bare garret, and the next morning I went back to the Louvre. On arriving from Cherbourg, I had given Madame L charge of the box that held my clothes, together with my few hundreds of francs. At the end of a month, I found that I had spent about fifty francs in dinners and prints ; so one morning I asked Madame L to let me have five francs. She replied by making a terrible scene, and told me that if our accounts were made up I should certainly be in her debt, and that the services which she and her husband had rendered me greatly exceeded the sum which I had placed in her hands. 'I am well aware that I owe Monsieur L a great deal,' was the reply which I ventured to make, ' but a debt of that kind is not paid in money.' And I then threw down the five francs which she had brought me on the table, saying, ' At least now we are quits, madame.' That day I left the house with no thing but the clothes which I wore on my back, and thirty sous in my pocket. For the next three days I took shelter in a working man's lodging, where they gave me credit, but I had to take care that my meals did not exceed my unfortunate thirty sous. I expected Mon sieur L to come and give me an explanation. He did send me a letter, in which he said that he much regretted to hear what had happened, but that after this, I must understand that he could not ask me to return ; he would not, however, cease to regard me •with esteem, and hoped to see me still and to indemnify me for the loss which I had suffered owing to his wife's injustice. At his re quest I went to see him at his office. He renewed his protestations, but gave me nothing ¦ his wife was the mistress, and he himself -was powerless. But three months afterwards, he did pay my lodging — a sum of about fifty francs. After this Madame L , hearing that I went to see her husband, desired him to have nothing more to do with me. He obeyed very reluctantly, and begged me to give up my visits in order not to displease his wife. That was all the help and protection I got from Monsieur L • but some time afterwards he was seized with remorse. A year later I fell ill, and was HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 47 at death's door. A violent fever deprived me of consciousness, and I lay in a profound lethargy for twenty-one days. When I woke, I found myself lying in bed in the country, under the trees, and sur rounded by strangers. By degrees my senses returned, and I slowly recovered strength. I found that I was staying with a friend of Monsieur L , who had removed me to Herblay, near Montmor ency. I was well nursed there. It was in June, at haymaking time, and the first day that I took a walk in the garden I tried to mow the grass, but fell down in a fainting fit. This weakness troubled me greatly. I felt that I was no longer fit to be a country labourer, and the thought was very humiliating. I hurried indoors, overcome with grief, but in a few weeks I became quite well. It was Mon sieur L who did me this service. How and wherefore, I do not know to this day, for I never saw him again. "I often tried to account for Madame L 's strange con duct and her violent passion, but I never could succeed. At length, one day, I met her servant, and this is what he said to me : ' Ah ! monsieur, you were too innocent ! You did not see what was happening. Madame is always reading bad books. Her occu pations are strange, indeed, for a lady. I used to find Faublas and other novels by her bedside. And,' he added with a laugh, ' perhaps you disturbed her readings ! ' " The man's remark opened Millet's eyes. He under stood that, " like' Joseph, he had met with Potiphar's wife at the opening, of his career." One of his Cherbourg .friends, probably his master, Langlois, had given him a recommendation to M. George, an official of the Luxembourg Gallery. Millet called at his house the first week that he was in Paris and delivered the letter. M. George received him kindly, and asked what he could do for him, upon which Millet unrolled the large cartoon which he had copied from Jordaens' picture at Cherbourg. George showed it with an expres sion of surprise to some other artists who were with him, and one of them exclaimed: "We did not know there was any one in the provinces who could draw as well ! " M. George proceeded to offer to introduce Millet 48 J. F. MILLET ; to other artists, and said he would show him the picture galleries, and help him to enter the Ecole des Beaux Arts. " You must go in for the competitions," he said kindly, " and at this pace you will soon succeed." Millet thanked him and wished him good-morning, leaving his drawing in M. George's hands. He intended to return and avail himself of the professor's kind offers. But then he remembered what he had heard of the Ecole des Beaux Arts, of the competitions there, and of the regular course required of students who entered the school. The prospect alarmed him not a little. He shrank from the prospect of the constraint which would be imposed upon him, and from the thought of entering the lists with strangers who were far cleverer and quicker than himself. M. George's very kindness frightened him. He felt afraid of incurring obligations which he could not discharge, and made up his mind that he would not call upon him again. He did not even attempt to re cover his cartoon, which, however, was returned to him some weeks later. Langlois had advised his pupil to enter the atelier of Paul Delaroche, at that, time the foremost of the Romantic school of painters, and, as Millet found, the most popular master in Paris. But what he saw and heard of Dela- roche's art did not encourage him to approach him, and some weeks passed before he could bring himself to take the final step. Meanwhile, he had already found his way to the Louvre, and thus describes his first visit to the old masters which he had longed to see : " During the first days after my arrival in Paris, my fixed idea was to find out the gallery of old masters. I started early one morning with this intention, but as I did not dare ask my way, for fear of being laughed at, I wandered at random through the streets, hoping, I suppose, that the Musee would come to meet me ! I lost myself HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 49 several days running in this fruitless search. During my wanderings one day I came across Notre Dame for the first time. It seemed to me less fine than the Cathedral of Coutances. I thought the Luxembourg a fine palace, but too regularly beautiful — the work, as it were, of a coquettish and mediocre builder. At length, I hardly know how, I found myself on the Pont Neuf, where I saw a magnificent pile, which, from the descriptions which had been given me, I supposed must be the Louvre. Without delay I turned my steps there and climbed the great staircase with a beating heart and the hurried steps of a man who feels that the one great wish of his life is about to be fulfilled. My hopes were not disappointed. I seemed to find myself in a world of friends, in the midst of my own kinsfolk. My dreams were at length realized. For the next month the old masters were my only occupation in the day-time. I devoured them all : I studied them, analysed them, and came back to them continually. The Primitives attracted me by their admir able expression of sweetness, holiness, and fervour, The great Italians fascinated me by their mastery and charm of composition. There were moments when the arrows of St. Sebastian seemed to pierce me, as I looked at the martyr of Mantegna. The masters of that age have an incomparable power. They make you feel in turn the joys and the pains which thrill their souls. But when I saw that drawing of Michelangelo's representing a man in a swoon, I felt that was a different thing. The expression of the relaxed muscles, the planes, and the modelling of that form exhausted by physical suffering gave me a whole series of impressions. I felt as if tormented by the same pains. I had compassion upon him. I suffered in his body, with his limbs. I saw that the man who had done this was able, in a single figure, to represent all the good and evil of humanity. It was Michelangelo ! That explains all. I had already seen some bad engravings of his work at Cherbourg ; but here I touched the heart and heard the voice of him who has haunted me with such power during my whole life." The words of the young French artist are curiously similar to those in which Mr. Ruskin speaks of Michel angelo on his first visit to Florence, in 1840 : " I saw at once in him that there was emotion and human life more than in the Greeks, and a severity and meaning which were not in Rubens." E 50 J. F. MILLET " After that," Millet continues, " I went to the Luxembourg, but, with the exception of Delacroix's pictures, which struck me as great, alike in gesture, in invention and richness of colour, I saw nothing remarkable. The figures were like waxwork, the costumes conven tional, and both invention and expression dreary in the extreme. "There I saw the Elizabeth and Les Enfants dEdouard of Delaroche. I had been advised to go to Delaroche's studio ; but none of those pictures gave me the least wish to become his pupil. I could see nothing in them but cheap illustrations on a large scale, and theatrical effects. There was no genuine emotion ; no-' thing but posing and stage-scenes. The Luxembourg first gave me a strong dislike to the theatre ; and, although I was not insensible to the famous dramas which were to be seen in Paris, I must say that I have always retained an invincible feeling of repulsion for the exaggerations, falseness and grimaces' of actors and actresses. Since those days, I have seen something of people of this sort in private life, and I am convinced that by constantly trying to put themselves' into the place of others they lose the sense of their own personality, and can only speak in the character of the parts they play. So in the end they become deprived of truth and common sense, and lose the simple sentiment of plastic art. It seems to me, that if your art is to be true and natural, you must avoid the theatre. " There were moments when I had a great wish to leaye Paris and to return to my own village, so tired was I of the lonely life that I led. I saw no one ; I did not speak to a soul, and I hardly dared ask a question of any one, so great was my fear of ridicule, and yet people never troubled themselves about me. I had the awk wardness which I have never lost, and which still distresses me when I am obliged to speak to a stranger, or make the simplest inquiry. I had a great mind to walk my ninety leagues at a stretch, like my Uncle Jumelin, and say to my family, ' I have come home, and have given up painting.' But the Louvre had taken hold of me. 1 went back there and felt comforted. Fra Angelico filled my soul with heavenly visions, and when I was alone in my garret I thought of nothing but those gentle masters who painted human beings so full of fervour that they become beautiful, and so nobly beau tiful that we feel they must be good. People have said that I was very fond of the eighteenth century masters because at one time I painted pastiches a la Boucher, or Watteau. It is a mistake. My taste in this reepect has never changed. I have always had a HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 5 1 very strong dislike to Boucher. I saw all his skill and talent, but I could not understand his choice of subjects, or look at his miserable women without feeling what a poor kind of nature he chose to repre sent. Boucher did not paint naked' women, but little undressed creatures. It was not the lavish display of Titian's women, proud of their beauty and revealing their charms in the confidence of their power. There is nothing to say against that kind of art. It is not chaste, but it is strong and great by virtue of its womanly power of attraction. That is great and good art. But these poor ladies of Boucher, with their slim legs, their feet crushed in high-heeled shoes, their tight-laced waists, their useless hands and bloodless necks, repelled me. When I stood before Boucher's Diane, which was always being copied in the Louvre, I recalled the marquises of his day, whom he painted from no very worthy motive, and whom he undressed and placed in graceful poses in the studio, which he afterwards transformed into a landscape. From this Diane I turned back to the Diane Chasseresse of the Greeks, so beautiful and noble in her perfect form. Boucher, after all, was merely a seducer. "Nor was Watteau the man for me. He was not an artist of Boucher's stamp, but his theatrical little world distressed me. Of course, I saw all the charm of his palette, and the delicacy of his expression, even the melancholy of these little actors who are con demned to smile. But the idea of marionettes always came back to my mind when I looked at his pictures, and I used to say to myself that all this little troupe would go back to their box when the spectacle was over, and lament their cruel destiny. " I preferred Lesueur, Lebrun and Jouvenet, because they seemed to me very powerful. Lesueur made a deep impression upon me, and I think he is one of the great souls of our School, as Poussin is its prophet, sage, and philosopher, and at the same ¦time the most eloquent exponent. I could spend my life before Poussin's works, without ever getting tired of him. " So I lived in the Louvre, in the Spanish Museum, the Musee Standish, or among the drawings, and my attention was always fixed upon those canvases, where thought was expressed truthfully and forcibly. I liked Murillo's portraits, Ribera's Saint Barthtlemy and Centaurs ; I liked everything that was strong, and would have given all Boucher's works for one nude figure by Rubens. Rem brandt I only learned to know later. He did not repel me, but he blinded me. It seemed to me that it would be necessary to go 52 J. F. MILLET through a course of serious study before you could enter thoroughly into the genius of this man. I only knew Velasquez, who is held in such high repute to-day, through his Infanta in the Louvre. He is certainly a painter of high degree and of the purest race, but his compositions seem to me poor. Apollo and Vulcan is weak in point of invention, his Winders are not winding anything j but as a painter he is no doubt strong. " I never tried to copy any of these masters. It seemed to me that any copy of them would be a failure, and must want the spontaneous charm and fire of the original. But, on one occasion, I spent the whole day before Giorgiohe's Concert Ghampttre — I was never tired of that. It was already past three o'clock when I took up a small canvas belonging to a comrade, and began to make a sketch of the picture. Four o'clock struck, and the terrible on ferme of the keepers turned me out ; but I had succeeded in making a sketch sufficiently good to please me as much as a run into the country. Giorgione's landscape had given me the key of the fields, and I had found consolation in his company. After that I never tried to make copies, even of my own pictures. The fact is, I am incapable of doing that kind of. thing. " Next to Michelangelo and Poussin, I have always loved the early masters best, and have kept my first admiration for those sub jects as simple as childhood, for those unconscious expressions, for those beings who say nothing, but feel themselves overburdened with life, who suffer patiently without a cry or complaint, who endure the laws of humanity, and without even a thought of ask ing what it all means. These men never tried 'to set up a revolutionary art, as they do in our days." These reflections reveal the character of the man, and help us to understand his dislike of Paris, a feeling which lasted to the end of his life. His own passionate sincerity,. and habit of seeking after essential truth, made him hate all artificial conventions, and look with positive aversion on every form of theatrical display. But all great and serious art had for him an indescribable fascination. In the old Florentines he discovered at once kindred spirits, men of his own flesh and blood. These radiant saints with parted lips and upturned eyes, these visions of the flowery HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 53 meadows of Paradise, spoke to him in the language which he had learnt at his grandmother's knee; they were in spired by the same simple and ardent faith, the same lofty hopes. From the elegant trivialities of the eighteenth century he turned with relief to the perfect forms and noble purity of classic art, to the Diana of the Louvre and the Venus of Milo, and to the Achilles, which seemed to him the ideal of manly grace and beauty. Among French artists, Poussin and, curiously enough, Lesueur, whose long series of monotonous works have little interest for most of us, were his favourites. For Poussin's work especially he had the deepest admiration, and was never tired of dwelling on his lofty intention and grandeur of composition. Even Titian and Rubens appealed to him more than Watteau and Boucher. Among contemporary painters Delacroix alone impressed him. Rembrandt, he owned, took him by storm. He bowed to his greatness, although as yet he could hardly grasp all his meaning. But Giorgione charmed him with the poetry of his in vention, with his green pastures and running waters ; and in Michelangelo he found a consummate rendering of profound emotion and deep meaning beyond all that he had ever dreamt. In him he recognised at once the guide and master whom he sought, whose presence was to follow him to the end of his days — " Celui qui me hanta toute ma vie." He no longer tried to copy these masters, he lived with them. He spent his days in the Louvre, and his evenings reading Vasari in the library of Sainte Genevieve. He studied the drawings of Lionardo and Albert Durer, the ¦designs of Jean Cousin and Nicolas Poussin. Above all, he learnt all that he could discover about Michelangelo, and was never tired of studying the life of the great Florentine, whose work remained for him the highest expression of art. 54 J- F. MILLET II THE choice of a master now became a necessity if the young student was to learn his trade. For some time Millet wavered. The names of the leading Paris masters were unknown to him. He had not even seen a single work by Ingres. Delaroche was the only master whom he knew by reputation, and his pictures did not by any means attract him. At length, however, after spending some weeks in daily visits to the Louvre, and in reading Vasari in the library of Sainte Genevieve, he determined to take the final plunge. " I had," he writes, " a great fear of this unknown teacher, and. I put off the evil day as long as possible. But one morning I rose with my mind made up and determined to venture all. To put it briefly, I obtained admission to the atelier of Paul Delaroche, the painter who was generally recognised as foremost among living artists. I entered his studio with a shiver— this world was so new to me ; but by degrees I became used to it, and in the end I was not altogether unhappy there. I found some kindly souls, but a style of wit and manner of speech which in my ears sounded a tedious and incomprehensible jargon. The famous puns of Dela- roche's atelier were the rage of the student-world. Everything was discussed there— even politics; and I could not endure to hear them chatter about the ' phalanstery ' ! But at last I began to take root, and to feel a little less home-sick." If the young men of Delaroche's studio astonished Millet, he on his part puzzled his new comrades not a little. They knew not what to make of this strange, HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 55 silent, country lad, with his Herculean frame and his solemn face. They nicknamed him "Jupiter in Sa,bots," and " The Wild Man of the Woods." But he spoke seldom, and seemed to heed their gibes as little as he did his teacher's praise. Once, when the mockers went too far in their rough pleasantry, Millet clenched his fists— a threat which had the effect of quickly silencing the offenders, and after that he was left in peace. One or two of his comrades made friends with him, but for the most part they -looked upon him as an eccentric indi vidual, who dared to set up his opinion against the laws of academic art, and refused to Join in the universal worship of their master's style. Meanwhile, the originality of his studies, and his vigorous drawing, had already attracted Delaroche's notice. He looked for a long time at Millet's first drawing — a sketch of the statue of Germanicus, which was regularly copied once a fortnight by the students — and said: "You are a new comer? Well, all I can say is, you know too much already, and yet not enough." Another master, Couture, who directed studies from the undraped model, paused with a look of surprise before Millet's first drawing, and said : " Hold, nouveau ! Do you know that your figure is very good?" He had hardly touched a brush; but the first day that he painted a figure from a model Delaroche said to him ' " I can see that you have painted a good deal." " And yet," Millet observes, " I had only tried to ex press as strongly as possible the joints and the muscles, without troubling myself with the new medium of colou> to which I was so little accustomed." After that he was treated with more respect by his fellow-students, although there were still some among them who declared that Millet's figures were insolently 56 J. F. MILLET true to nature ; and one gay youth, .who prided himself on being a pet of the master, was never tired of teasing him about his country origin. "Are you going to give us some more of your famous figures — some more men and women after your fashion ? " he would say. " You know the patron does not care for your dishes d la mode de Caen}" To which Millet replied, "What do I care for that? I did not come here to please any one ; I came here to learn drawing from antiques and models, and for no other purpose. Do I trouble my head about your butter- and-honey dolls ? " Delaroche himself could not understand this strange pupil. Millet puzzled him, as he had puzzled both his earlier teachers. He would have liked to employ him as his assistant in the great works upon which he was engaged, but Millet was of too independent a nature to allow himself to be dragged at the chariot-wheels of a painter whom he despised. Sometimes the master held up his work as an example to the whole atelier ; at other times he criticised it severely. One day he said that he needed a rod of iron to train him in the right methods; another, he turned to him with the words : " Well, go your own way; you are so new that I have nothing to say to you." On one occasion " Prometheus Chained to the Rock " was the subject given for composition. Millet represented him as the victim of the wrath of Jupiter, hanging on the edge of an abyss, and uttering a cry of revolt against the heavenly powers. "I should like to make others feel that his sufferings are eternal," he said, as the students pressed around to gaze at this figure which took their breath away. "^Eolus Letting the Winds Loose" was the subject of another striking composition. " There goes Millet, as usual," cried a jeering comrade, "doing HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 57 what he thinks chic, and inventing muscles out of his own head ! " But Delaroche, who entered the atelier at that moment, interrupted him. "He is right," he said, pointing to Millet. "He paints from memory, and makes good use of his recollections. Do as he does, if you can." Besides his studies at Delaroche's atelier, Millet worked hard in the wretched garret where he lodged, on the Quai Malaquais. He painted portraits of his neighbours for a few francs each. Porters and maidservants, coal- carriers, and on one occasion a daughter of his old friend the concierge at Monsieur L , all sat to him in turn. But he was often at his wits' end for money, and at one time he had to give up going to Delaroche's atelier for want of means to pay the yearly fee of 100 francs. The master missed him from his accustomed place, and sent him word to come and see -him. Millet obeyed the sum mons, and found Delaroche at work on his great fresco of the Himicycle, in the hall of l'Ecole des Beaux Arts. "Why do you never come to the atelier now?" the painter asked in a friendly tone, offering him a cigarette as he spoke. "Because, sir, I am unable to pay the fees," replied Millet. " Never mind that ! " replied Delaroche. " I do not wish you to leave. Come all the same, and I will speak to Poisson (the porter of the studio). Only say nothing about it to the other fellows, and draw just what you like— big subjects, figures, studies, whatever you fancy. I like to see your work ; you are not like the rest of them ; and then I wish to speak to you about some work in which you can be of use to me." Millet was touched by this unexpected kindness on the painter's part, and went back to the atelier. But the historical compositions in academic style that were then 58 J. F. MILLET in fashion seemed to him every day more wearisome. An artist of his power could not fail to produce striking work; but in the conventional figures and heavy, sombre colouring of Millet's compositions at that period, it was difficult to discern the germ of his future greatness. Still he persevered, and in the summer of 1838, he entered the lists for the Prix de Rome. The originality of his composition attracted Delaroche's notice, and pricked the master's conscience, for he had already promised to use his interest on behalf of one of his favourite pupils — a student named Roux ; so he sent for Millet, and said to him: " You wish to win the Prix de Rome ? " " Certainly," replied Millet, " or I should not have entered my name." " Your composition is very good," said Delaroche ; "but I must tell you that I am anxious to see Roux nominated this time. Next year I will promise to use all my influence on your behalf." This frank declaration was enough for Millet. He left Delaroche's atelier for good, and determined never again to look to others for help or advancement, but to rely solely upon his own efforts. He always declared afterwards that he had learnt little or nothing from Delaroche. No doubt the instruc tion' which he received there, and the tendencies of the place, were alike contrary to the natural bent of his genius. "I came to Paris," he said in later years, "with my ideas upon art already formed, and I found nothing there to make me change my mind. I have been more or less attracted by different masters and methods, but I have never altered my idea of the fundamental principles of art as I learnt them first in my old home, without teacher or models." HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 59 None the less, he had found in Paris exactly the training which he required. Genius has a marvellous power of assimilation, and discovers the food needed for its develop ment in waste places and barren ground. Even the months that Millet spent in Delaroche's atelier, working on the academic designs which his soul abhorred, were not thrown away. He learnt that thorough mastery of means which was to stand him in good stead hereafter, and acquired that knowledge of the human frame which practice alone can give. He learnt, too, how to reject the evil and to choose the good, and went on his way with his hatred of convention and artifice and passionate love of sincerity more deeply rooted than ever. During the next two years he still worked diligently at the academies of models kept by Suisse and Boudin, and drew both from the antique and from living models. He had made" friends with one of the students in Delaroche's atelier, named Louis Marolle, the son of a polish manu facturer, whose parents were in easy circumstances, and who did not depend entirely upon painting for his bread. Marolle, himself a clever and cultivated youth, was early struck by Millet's powers of brain and independence of character. "It seems to me that with a little practice," Millet said to him one day, " you and I would soon know as much as any of our teachers." So they settled together in a little atelier of their own, No. 13, Rue de l'Est, at the corner of the Rue d'Enfer and the Rue Val-de-Grace. There they painted portraits, and quarrelled over the books they read, and led a free Bohemian life, and were neither dull nor yet unhappy. Millet's new friend was in many respects curiously un like himself. Marolle was a thorough Parisian, who admired the Romantic schools in poetry as well as in painting, declaimed Alfred de Musset's verses at all hours of the day, and tried to write poems of his own 60 J. F. MILLET in the same style. Millet, on the contrary, had little sympathy with Musset, and criticised the tendencies of his art severely; " He puts you into a fever, it is true," he said to Marolle ; " but he can do nothing more for you. He has undoubted charms, but his taste is capri cious and poisoned. All he can do is to disenchant and corrupt you, and at the end leave you in despair. The fever passes, and you are left without strength — like a convalescent who is in need of fresh air, of the sunshine, and of the stars." And he bade his friend go back to nature and to reason — to those great poets of old, who had fathomed the deep things of life — to Homer and Virgil; above all, to the Bible which still remained in his eyes the book of all books, where the artist will find the most pathetic of pictures, painted in the noblest words. Marolle listened with a smile, and shrugged his shoul ders. And yet at times a conviction would cross his mind that his peasant-friend „ might be right, and that this, after all, might be the more excellent way. He himself tried his hand in turn at water-colours and oils ; he en graved plates, and wrote verses, but seldom achieved any serious work ; and there were moments when he was half inclined to envy his companion, and would say to Millet: "You think that I am a lucky man because I need not earn my bread; but it is you who are really the fortunate one! You have kept your first impressions of nature, and the deep emotions of youth. I have never felt anything, or cared for anything, except the Faubourg Saint-Marceau ! " At the same time, Marolle's practical turn of mind made him of great use to Millet. He accompanied, him on his nightly visits to the library of Sainte Genevteve; he asked for the books which Millet wanted, helped him HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 6 1 in his researches, and became, in fact, the link between the shy, reserved student and the outer world. Through Marolle, Millet learnt to know other artists, to look more kindly upon the world in general, and to take a more cheerful and hopeful view of the future. Without the help of this true and loyal friend his courage might have failed him in the hard battle which he had to fight during these long and lonely years. In 1839, his Cherbourg pension had been withdrawn, and his mother and grandmother could ill afford to help him. Under these circumstances he consulted Marolle as to the best means of earning a livelihood, and proposed to paint a series of peasant-subjects. "Supposing I were to draw figures of men at work in the fields?" he said — "a man mowing or making hay, for instance? The action is fine." "Yes," replied Marolle, "but you will never sell them." "What do you say to pictures of fauns and nymphs — woodland scenes?" said Millet. "Who do you think has ever heard of a faun in Paris?" returned Marolle. " Well, then," said Millet gloomily, " what would you have me do? Tell me, for I am at my wits' end." "Boucher and Watteau are popular," said Marolle; " coloured illustrations of nude women, for instance. ^ Do some pastiches in that style." Millet shook his head. Such subjects were little to his. taste. As a last resource he painted a little picture of Charity Feeding her Children, and took it himself to the dealers. It was in vain. No one would offer him a single franc for his- picture. He brought it home sadly, and said to Marolle: "You were right. Tell me what subjects to choose, and I will paint them." 62 J. F. MILLET And so the future painter of the Sower was driven by sheer necessity to compose little pastels in the style of Watteau and Boucher, to which Marolle gave names of his own invention, such as A Music Lesson, The Old Man's Calendar, A Girl reading a Novel, A Soldier making Love to a Nurserymaid, A Day at Trianon. Now and then Millet would attempt a Bible subject — Ruth and Boaz in the Harvest Field, or Jacob in Labans Tents — but they seldom met with success. Marolle would himself take his friend's pastels to the shops, and do his best to sell them. When everything else failed, Millet painted por traits for five or ten francs, and as soon as the money was paid down hastened to get a meal at. the nearest restaurant. In those days he breakfasted on a roll and a glass of water, and as often as not had to go without his dinner; but he never complained, and never begged. And on the rare days when fortune smiled upon him, and he sold a pastel for 20 francs, he threw up his cap, and rejoiced to think the day was coming when he would be free to go back to the impressions of his youth, and to paint pictures of Greville and of peasant life. HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 63 III \ RT was at a low ebb when Millet came to Paris some ¦**¦ fifty years ago. The jury of the Salons was not elected by the artists themselves, but was an official body which held tyrannical sway over the progress of painters, and closed the doors upon all who ventured to depart from the most rigid academic rules. " In the Ecole des Beaux Arts," wrote Thackeray in 1838, " all is classical : Orestes pursued by every variety of Furies ; numbers of wolf-suck ing Romuluses ; Hectors and Andromaches in a complica tion of parting embraces." The gallant effort made by the men of 1830, with Rousseau, " the apostle of truth in land scape," at their head, had been apparently crushed. In 1835 the works of Delacroix, of Decamps and Corot, as well as two of Rousseau's finest paintings, were all rejected. For the next thirteen years the doors of the Salon were closed upon the last-named painter, and the systematic exclusion of his landscapes won for him the name of " le Grand Refuse." In the words of a well-known critic, M. Edmond About, " His' incontestable talent was contested by every body." The moment was an unfortunate one for an unknown artist to make his appearance, but Millet ventured to send two portraits to the Salon of 1840. One, a likeness of his friend Marolle, was rejected. The other, a portrait of a Cherbourg friend, Monsieur L. F , in the artist's own opinion the poorer of the two, was accepted. With this portrait, painted in the dull and heavy tones which the 64 J. F. MILLET young artist had acquired in Delaroche's studio, Jean Francois Millet made his first appearance in public. It was a proud day for the painter of five-and-twenty, and when he went home that summer, his mother and grand mother told him how they had read his name in the Cher bourg papers, and looked upon him as a hero. Ever since he had left home three years before, they had followed his steps anxiously, and watched eagerly for each post which brought news of their absent boy. His young brother, Pierre, remembers still the grief with which the whole family heard of Francois' illness, and the impatience with which each post was awaited. And now he was with them again, unchanged and unspoilt, the same Francois that he had been of old, wearing his old blouse and sabots, and with his long wavy hair falling on his shoulders. His mother, to tell the truth, would have liked to see him dressed "like a gentleman," in his Paris clothes, and com plained of his rustic appearance, but nothing gave him greater pleasure than to feel himself a peasant again. He liked to join the labourers at work, to reap the corn and bind the sheaves and share their brown bread and cider. He helped in building a wall, and said, as he handled the mortar and plaster, that if he had not become an artist he should certainly have been a mason. Above all, he loved to sit by the open hearth watching the wood fire crackle and blaze in the great chimney corner, and seeing its flames reflected in the brass jugs and pails on the shelves around the room, and the flower-painted china which was his mother's pride. The sight of these familiar scenes and the joy of set ting his foot once more on his native heath made Millet seriously think of settling in the neighbourhood, and, if possible, obtain work at Cherbourg. He spent several weeks at Gruchy, painting portraits of his friends and relatives, amongst others, of Monsieur and Madame Feu- HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 65 ardent and their brothers, of a Doctor Simon, at Vauville, and of an old maidservant who lived in the family of an Eculleville doctor called Asselin. The portrait of this old countrywoman, La Vieille Fanchon, excited great admira tion, and was the first revelation of Millet's power in bringing out the character and habits of the peasant race which he understood so well. But he bestowed even greater pains and thought on another portrait, that of his grandmother, which he painted about this time. " I want to show her soul," he said. This portrait is still in the possession of his younger brother, Jean Louis, who owns a farm near Greville. Another life-size drawing of his grandmother, the one which Sensier describes as show ing her strong character and austere religious spirit, has passed into the hands of a branch of the family re siding at Les Prieux, a village in the neighbourhood of Greville. At his mother's suggestion he also painted por traits, on oiled paper, of his seven brothers and sisters, which have unfortunately perished. Early in 184 1, Millet took up his abode at Cherbourg, where he spent several months studying in the Museum and painting portraits of his friends. The most remarkable work which he executed at this time was a Martyrdom of Sainte Barbe, a picture strongly marked by his reminiscences of the Primitives in the Louvre, and representing the corpse of the saint borne away by angels into heaven. This was purchased by Doctor Asselin, the old friend of Millet's family, for 300 francs. He also painted several small subjects which were suggested by the sight of the Cherbourg fishermen, such as a young fisherman rescuing his comrade from drowning, sailors mending their sails, fishermen at their boats. But these pictures did not sell, and Millet found himself reduced to paint sign-boards for shops, and he executed a life-size figure of a milkmaid for a milliner's . shop, a horse for a veterinary surgeon, a sailor for a sail- F 66 J. F. MILLET maker, and, finally, a battle-piece for the manager of a travelling circus, who paid him thirty francs in coppers. His old patrons, the Town Councillors of Cherbourg, commissioned him to paint a portrait of a former Mayor, M. Javain, and offered him the sum of 300 francs. But since Millet had never seen the Mayor, and had only a miniature of M. Javain as a young man to work from, the task was by no means easy. To add to his difficulties, he had to work in a public hall and to listen to all the advice and criticisms offered by the late Mayor's family ' and friends, who took great offence at his employing a former servant of M. Javain to sit to him as a model for the hands of the city magnate. When the portrait was finished, the Town Council declared that it was a very bad likeness of the late Mayor, that the face wore an expression of severity which by no means resembled him, and declined to pay the sum which had been agreed upon.. After much wrangling and many weeks of vexatious delays, the Council finally offered the painter the sum of 100 francs, a proposal which he rejected with scorn, telling them that since they had withdrawn their original offer, he would make them a present of the portrait. The portrait of the ex-Mayor was accordingly hung in the Town Hall of Cherbourg, and Millet was left without a penny for his pains and with his reputation seriously impaired. Even his old teacher, Langlois, is said to have turned against him and to have pronounced the pupil, whom he had once thought so full of promise, to be no better than a barbarian. It was now plain that there was no opening for him in his native Normandy. A prophet, he was con vinced, is without honour in his own country, and much as it grieved him to leave the mother and grandmother who clung to him so fondly, he determined to return to Paris and once more seek his fortune in the great city. But this time he felt he could not go alone. HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 61/ Among the portraits which he painted that summer at Cherbourg was one of a pretty young dressmaker, Made moiselle Pauline Virginie Ono, with whose parents he lodged. Millet himself was a tall, handsome young man of six-and-twenty, with a mass of dark wavy locks and deep blue eyes. He had made himself a name, and what was more in a woman's eyes, he was unfortunate and had been badly treated by the Cherbourg authorities. Made moiselle Pauline listened to his story and pitied him with all her heart. In November they were married at Cher bourg, and Millet took his young wife with him to Greville. Pierre Millet describes her as a charming little woman, gentle and affectionate, but very delicate. His mother and grandmother gave the young couple a warm welcome. They made a wedding feast, in true patriarchal fashion, and invited all their friends and relations in Greville and Cherbourg to do honour to the nuptials of the eldest son of the house. And as they sat at the festive board, the old grandmother made" this little speech : " Remember, my Francois, that you are a Christian before you are a painter, and never devote so fine a calling to the service of the enemies of religion. Never sacrifice on the altar of Baal. Remember the great saints who painted beautiful pictures, and follow their example!" The subjects of some of Millet's pictures were probably not altogether to the taste of the good old woman, who would have liked to see him paint nothing but pictures from sacred story and the lives of the saints. But her grandson hastened to calm her fears and assured her that, come what might, he would never sacrifice his conscience to his art. " Even if they cover the canvas with gold and ask me to paint a ' St. Francis possessed by the Devil,' " he added, -with a smile, " I will promise you never to consent ! " His grandmother laughed in her turn, and his fond 68 J. F. MILLET mother whispered, in her Norman dialect: " Fe don notre gas, Francois, comme y pre" chit bit!" — "Listen to our boy Francois, how well he talks ! " Early in 1842 the young couple returned to Paris. Before his departure Millet left his own portrait and that of his bride, and several other pictures which he had lately painted, in the hands of his wife's family. Unfortunately, these new relations were not congenial to him. From the first, they seem to have treated him badly, and he never spoke of his Cherbourg connections without evident pain. A pastel of his young wife which belongs to this period is now in England, and is one of the earliest works that he executed in this method. She is represented seated at a table reading. A black shawl is thrown over her shoulders, and a handkerchief tied round her head, as, resting her cheek upon one hand, she looks down on the open book. Her whole appearance is graceful and refined, but frail and delicate. The poor young woman was, it is plain, little fitted to share the hardships of a strug gling artist's life. She had never been strong, and from the time she moved to Paris, her health and spirits drooped, and she faded slowly away. The next two years were full of suffering for Millet, who had the bitter grief of seeing his wife's failing health, and of being unable to procure the comforts which she needed. They lived in a little lodging in the Rue Princesse, No. 5, and had no friends excepting the faithful Marolle, who paid them constant visits and did his best to help them. Fortune seemed to have turned her back upon Millet. The pictures which he sent to the Salon of 1842 were rejected, and the. following year he did not try to exhibit. In his dire need he accepted whatever orders he could get, and painted signs and portraits for the smallest sums. Even then he had great difficulty to get paid, and often met with harsh and cruel treatment. Life, he said himself to Sensier, was. HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 69 one daily fight for bread. As his poor young wife grew worse his position became more painful. In that dark little room of the Rue Princesse he went through days and nights of untold anguish. In after years he often experienced hard times, but he never again suffered the misery and desolation which he had known in those days. The years 1843 and 1844, he always said, were the hardest in his life, and he never spoke of them without a kind of horror, as if the recollec tion of this terrible time was too bitter to be endured. Yet he was never heard to utter a complaint or to speak angrily of the men who had treated him the worst. "There are bad people in the world," he would say, when he recalled these incidents, " but there are good ones too, and one good man consoles you for many who are bad. Here and there I found a helping hand and I have no right to complain." But all the while he worked at his art with untiring zeal. He made studies, and painted pictures, and when he found himself short of material, destroyed the work which he had done, and began another subject on the same canvas. And he paid frequent visits to the Louvre, and consoled himself with Fra Angelico's celestial visions and Michelangelo's sublime forms. Correggio was another master who attracted him at this period of his career. He studied his flesh-tints and modelling with great interest, and learnt new secrets of light and colour which were to prove of lasting value. The first Of these studies appeared in the pastels which he finished in the winter of 1843-1844, and exhibited in the following Salon. One was a Normandy peasant-girl carrying a pitcher, which Marolle insisted on calling The Milkmaid. The other was a group of children playing at horseback on the floor, called The Riding Lesson. The animation and luminous colouring of this little picture attracted considerable attention in the Salon, The critic 70 • J. F. MILLET Thore spoke of it with high praise, and the painter Diaz was filled with admiration for the work of this unknown artist, and declared it to be a work of undoubted genius. "At last we have a new master," he exclaimed, "who has a talent and a knowledge which I for one covet, and can give life and expression to his creations. That man is a true painter ! " Both Diaz and his friend, Eugene TJourneux, were bent on finding out this new genius. They made repeated in quiries after Millet, and at length, one morning in May, they knocked at the door of the humble lodging in the Rue Princesse and asked for the artist. The story they heard was a sad one : " There were two persons living here in a small lodging. The wife is dead ; and the husband is gone away, no one knows whither." That brilliant pastel, which delighted both critics and artists by its life and gaiety, had been painted during the sad hours spent by Millet in watching at the bedside of his dying wife. The poor young woman had breathed her last on the 21st of April, and her husband was gone to hide his tears in his old home. There he remained for the next eighteen months, finding consolation hi the presence of familiar faces and in the sight of his native fields. By degrees courage and hope revived, and he began to paint with fresh ardour. News of the success of his pastels in the Salon reached Cherbourg, and the despised artist received a cordial welcome from his old friends. During the following year he painted a variety of pictures and pastels in the bright and graceful style which he had lately adopted. His portrait of his friend's child, Mademoiselle Antoinette Feuardent — a curly-haired little girl with a pink silk scarf on her head, laughing at the sight of her own face in the glass-^was greatly admired. A Head of Christ wearing the Crown of Thorns, in chalks heightened with white, was also among HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 71 the works which he drew at Greville,' and was, no doubt, more to his grandmother's taste. Fresh orders reached him, and the prefect of Cherbourg offered Millet the post of Professor of Drawing at the town college. The proposal was a flattering one, and Millet's attachment to his native soil tempted him to accept it. But he valued his inde pendence still more, and in spite of all that he had suffered in Paris, he felt that he must go back there and once more try his fate in the great world of art. So he declined the post, and fearing that his decision would distress his mother and grandmother, did not even tell his family of the offer which had been made him. Millet's first marriage had proved unfortunate, and had left him a childless widower before he was thirty. The iron had entered into his soul ; but he was not the man to live alone. His serious air and romantic face captivated the affections of a good and gentle peasant maiden — ori ginally a native of Lorient, on the coast of Brittany — Catherine Lemaire by name. She listened pityingly to the tale of his sorrows, and shared his dreams of future work : he took pleasure in her company, and she looked up to him as one far above her. Pity and admiration soon deepened into love. Before long Millet learnt her secret, and the village maid became his wife. She was barely eighteen and had never left her village home; but she had a heart of gold and a courage beyond her years, and she gladly devoted her whole life to the man whom she loved. During the next thirty years this brave and loyal wife was Millet's faithful companion and helpmeet. She was intelligent enough to appreciate his genius and to share his deepest thoughts, and her devotion was his best comfort in the trials of his future life. Few but his most intimate friends knew how much he depended upon her sympathy and support, and the world is perhaps hardly yet aware how much it owes to Catherine Millet. 72 J. F. MILLET Her husband often made her sit to him as a model for his peasant-women, and has left us more than one excellent likeness of her. Perhaps the most familiar is the portrait of the head and bust engraved in Sensier's life, and at that time in the collection of M. George Petit. This drawing belongs to the early years of her married life, and, in its perfect simplicity and truthfulness, helps us to realize the charm Of her goodness and the strength of her character. In the drawing of a Young Woman Sewing, which he made at Barbizon in 1853, we see another portrait of his wife, taken when she was about five-and-twenty. Here Madame Millet is represented sitting in her chair, wearing the white cap of the Normandy peasant, engaged in mending her husband's coat, which lies across her knees. Her head is bent over her work with an intent expression, and the . light falls on her white linen collar and on the thread which she is in the act of drawing through her fingers. Nothing could be more true to life or more delicately rendered than, this little study, which has at once so rare a charm and so pathetic an interest. It bears the date 1853, together with an inscription from the pen of his friend Campredon — to whom it belonged at one time — stating this to be a portrait of the painter's wife. _ The marriage took place at Greville, late in the summer of 1845. In November, the newly-wedded pair set out for. Par is; but on the way they made a stay of several weeks at Havre. Millet's reputation had already preceded him here, and a Greville friend who was residing in the town introduced him to many of the chief residents. Sea- captains and sailors, harbour officials and consuls, all sat to him in turn for their portraits; and a picture of a Spanish lady whom he painted, robed in gay draperies of blue and pink silk, and reclining on a couch, created quite a sensation in the town. Before he left Havre, a public exhibition of his works was held in the Town Hall. Here, HIS LIFE AND LETTERS J$ besides these portraits, several of the pictures and pastels of pastoral and mythological subjects which he had lately painted at Greville and Cherbourg, were exhibited, and pleased the popular fancy by their graceful forms and harmonious colouring. Chief among these were two pictures, Daphnis and Chloe sporting on the banks of a running stream in a wood land landscape, and the Offering to Pan, a young girl plac ing a crown of flowers on a marble term, in the heart of the woods, which is now in the Museum of Montpellier, together with a number of smaller genre pictures, such as, A Child Bird-nesting, The Flute Lesson, A Girl Brushing away the Flies from the Face of her Sleeping Lover, A Workwoman Asleep, The Bacchantes, A Sacrifice to Priapus, The Temptation of St. Anthony. Many of these subjects were sketchily treated, and bore evident signs of haste; but the grace of the grouping, the transparency of the warm atmosphere, were undeniably attractive. The influence of Correggio was strongly marked, while the drawing and modelling of the figures revealed a thorough mastery of form. Millet's visit to Havre is described by Sensier as a bright and joyous moment in his life, which was soon to be eclipsed in gloom. Many years were to go by before he enjoyed another interval of comparative freedom from care, or tasted the sweets of popular applause even in this passing form. The next four years of his life were spent in Paris, and were one long tale of poverty and neglect. The growing cares of a young family made the struggle harder, and compelled him to sacrifice his natural inclina tions and paint for bread. At home his mother and grand mother waited anxiously for his letters, which came but rarely now, and treasured up the brief notices which were occasionally to be seen of his pictures in the newspapers. They urged him to come and see them, and he too longed 74 J- F. MILLET passionately for one sight of the old home. "I felt," he said to Sensier, "that I was nailed to a rock, and con demned to hard labour for the rest of my natural life. And yet I could have forgotten all, if only I might, now and then, have been able to see my native village again ! " But with a wife and increasing family, the journey was impossible, and seven long years passed away before Millet set foot again on Norman soil. When at length he came back to his native place, it was to find the hearth empty, and the faces that he had loved best there missing. He might well say, as he gazed "with breaking heart" on that "poor roof" where he was born and where his parents had died, " In Art you have to give everything — body and soul." HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 75 IV MILLET and his wife reached Paris in the last days of December, 1845. They took a lodging, consist ing of three small rooms, at No. 64, Rue Rochechouart, and Millet made himself a modest atelier, furnished with three chairs and an easel. Here he set to work at once on a Temptation of St. Jerome, which he destined for the next Salon. He had 900 francs in his pocket — the fruit of his success at Havre — and was in good spirits, full of hope and courage. His young wife made his home peaceful and happy. His old friends, Marolle, and Charles Jacque, the engraver, who lived opposite, gave him a cordial welcome, and before long other visitors arrived. Eugene Tourneux, true to his word, found Millet out soon after his return, and expressed his admiration for his work in glowing terms. Diaz was equally encouraging, and, finding that Millet was in want of employment, exerted himself strenuously on his behalf. This warm-hearted Spaniard, who, more fortunate than his brother-artists, knew, as he once said, " how to keep success tied to the leg of his easel with a pink ribbon," tried hard to give Millet a share of his prosperity. He went from shop to shop seeking orders for his friend, and told dealers and amateurs alike that they must be blind to shut their eyes to the man's talent, and that they would assuredly live to repent of their folly. Meanwhile Francois was not forgotten at Greville, and while he was at work on his St. Jerome he received the following characteristic letter from his grandmother: 76 J. F. MILLET "My dear Child, — "You tell us that you are going to work for the Exhibition. You have not told us if you received any benefit from the quantity of pictures which you exhibited at Havre. We cannot understand why you refused the post at the College of Cherbourg. Do you really see greater advantages in life at Paris than here in the midst of your friends and relations ? You tell us that you are about to paint a picture of St. Jerome groaning over the dangers to which he found himself exposed in his youth. Ah, my dear child ! follow his example. Make the same reflections, to your eternal profit ! Re member the words of that man of your profession who said, ' I paint for eternity.' Whatever may happen, never allow yourself to do bad- works ; above all, never lose sight of the presence of God. With St. Jerome, think continually that you hear the sound of the trumpet which will call us to judgment. How good a thought for a Christian ! " Your mother is very ailing; and spends much of her time in bed. As for me, I become worse and worse, and find myself almost unable to walk at all. . ., . " We wish you a good and happy new year, and the most abundant -blessings from heaven. Do not delay to give us your news. We are very anxious to know how you are getting on. That all may be well with you is our fondest wish, and we all embrace you with the tenderest affection. " Your Grandmother, "Greville, 10th January, 1846. "Louise Jumelin." This picture of St. Jerome, in which Millet's grand mother took so deep an interest, was unfortunately re jected by the jury of the Salon. Couture, Millet's old teacher in Delaroche's atelier, admired it extremely, and both execution and conception are said to have been very striking. But in the following year Millet find ing himself short of canvas painted a new subject— CEdipus Taken from the Tree — on the same picture, and nothing was left of his SL Jerome. There was little of Greek feeling in Millet's rendering of this classical subject. The infant ffidipus is seen released from the tree, to which he is bound, by a shepherd, while a young HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 77 woman standing below receives him in her arms, and a black dog is seen barking at her side. The picture was merely, as the artist himself said, an excuse for practis ing the flesh-painting and modelling in which he excelled. But it is at least a noble study of form and colour, and bears witness to the profound impression which Michel^ angelo's work had made upon the painter. It attracted considerable attention when it was exhibited in the Salon of 1847, and was noticed by two leading critics, Theophile Gautier and Thore, as a striking and original work by a painter who could not fail to make himself a name ere long. And in the old home at Greville, the black smith, who had long ago admired the boy's drawing of the three men on donkeys, read a flattering notice of the picture in a newspaper that was sent him from Paris,. and ran to take the good news to Millet's house. His mother and grandmother wept tears of joy at this mention of their, absent son, and there was great rejoicing among his family and. friends. At this period of his career Millet was chiefly famous. for his undraped nymphs and fauns: his brother-artists called him le maitre du nu. Women bathing or resting under the trees, children at play in flowery meadows,. groups of youths and maidens dancing on the grass, a young girl with a lamb in her arms — these were the subjects of the drawings or pastels which he made for Deforge or Durand-Ruel, and the other dealers who bought his works. One little picture of a nude girl asleep on a grassy bank, while a faun watches her slumbers through the boughs, so delighted Diaz that he bought it on the spot. But the finest example of his talent in this. direction is that famous little s picture of four children dragging a half-draped nymph through a forest glade, to which he gave the name of V Amour Vainqueur. The action of the laughing children and the form of the- 78 J. F. MILLET golden-haired nymph are rendered with masterly art, while the beauty of the colouring, the fine effect of the blue drapery against the warm flesh-tints, and the rich glow on the woodland background, recall the art of Titian and Giorgione. The original version of this truly classical .picture has been exhibited of late years both at Edinburgh and in London, and was long the property of the great collector Mr. J. S. Forbes. A replica may be seen in Mr. Quilter's collection, and a study for the upper part of the nymph's figure is repro duced by Sensier in his book, and was at the time in the writer's possession. These little idylls, painted in what critics have called the artist's flowery manner, are curiously unlike the work that we have learnt to associate with Millet's name ; but their power and charm are in disputable. Their subjects may not appeal to us, the sentiment may strike us as forced and artificial ; but there can be no doubt as to the mastery of form and of chiaroscuro which they reveal. A new stage, we feel, has been reached in the history of the Norman peasant-lad who came up to Paris to seek his fortune and learn his trade ten years before. The days of his apprenticeship are over. He stands before us a finished artist, complete in every sense of the word, who has mastered the secrets of his craft, and is able to tell the world all that he has to say. It was at this moment of Millet's career, early in 1847, that Alfred Sensier, his future biographer, first made his acquaintance. That year Sensier saw a life- size crayon portrait of the painter which he himself had drawn and given to his friend Charlier. The sight of this noble head, " as melancholy as that of Albert Dtirer, with its deep, earnest gaze, full of intellect and good ness," made a profound impression upon the young lawyer whose recent appointment to a post in the Musee du Louvre brought him into contact with many rising HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 79 painters. He sought eagerly for an opportunity of be coming personally acquainted with this man whose face haunted him day and night. At length, one day, the landscape-painter, Constant Troyon, who knew Millet through their mutual friend Diaz, took him to see the artist in his lodging of the Rue Rochechouart. " Millet," writes Sensier, " at that time wore a curious garb. A brown overcoat, in colour like a stone wall, a thick beard and long- locks, covered with a woollen cape like that of a coachman, gave him a singular appearance. The first time I saw him he reminded me of the painters of the Middle Ages. His reception was cordial, but almost silent. He took me for a philosopher, a philanthropist, or a politician — neither of whom he cared much to see. But I talked of art to him, and seeing his Daphnis and Chlo'e hanging on the wall, I told him what I thought of it. He looked hard at me, but still with a kind of shyness, and only said a few words in a reply. Then I caught sight of a sketch of a sower. ' That would be a fine thing,' I remarked, 'if you had a country model.' 'Then do you not belong to Paris?' he asked. 'Yes; but I was brought up in the country.' ' Ah ! that is a different story,' he said in his Norman patois; 'we must have a little talk.' Troyon left us alone, and Millet, looking at me some moments in silence, said : ' You will not care for my pictures.' 'You are wrong there,' I replied warmly; * it is because I like them that I have come to see you.' "From that moment Millet conversed freely with me, and his remarks on art were as manly as they were generous and large- hearted. "'Every subject is good,' he said. 'All we have to do is to render it with force and clearness. In art we should' have one leading thought, and see that we express it in eloquent language, that we keep it alive in ourselves, and impart it to others as clearly as we stamp a medal. Art is not a pleasure-trip ; it is a battle, a mill that grinds. I am no philosopher. I do not pretend to do away with pain, or to find a formula which will make me a Stoic, and indifferent to evil. Suffering is, perhaps, the one thing that gives an artist power to express himself clearly.' " He spoke in this manner for some time and then stopped, as if afraid of his own words. But we .parted, feeling that we 80 J. F. MILLET understood each other, and had laid the foundations of a lasting friendship." From that day the young official of the Musee du Louvre saw Millet frequently, and became one of the most frequent visitors to the humble dwelling of the Rue Rochechouart. He liked to watch the painter at his work, wholly absorbed in the task before him,. executing with rare dexterity those graceful little com positions of mothers and children, of sleeping nymphs or sportive cherubs, which he endowed with all the magic of his art. " It was always a joy," writes Sensier, " to see Millet paint. He. seemed to express his ideas and fancies in paint as naturally as the bird sings, or the flower opens in the sunshine. I never looked at his work as a critic, but merely enjoyed the pure and life-giving air which I breathed in his companionship. When life's cares op pressed me, I went to see Millet paint, and came away refreshed and consoled." Another link which drew the two men together was their mutual taste for country life. Sensier cherished happy recollections of the woods and meadows where his early days had been spent, and which all the years that he had lived in Paris could not make him forget. As he watched Millet work these old memories revived. The two friends talked of harvest and hay-making, of sowing and reaping, until, moved by the sense of mutual sympathy which knit them together, he would declare that in some former stage of existence they must surely have already been twin souls, sharing the same thoughts and living the same life. "Why not?" Millet would reply in his half-serious,. half-jesting manner. " Who knows if we were not shep herds, keeping flocks together in the age of Saturn ! " Millet's friend and neighbour, the clever engraver and HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 8 1 painter, Charles Jacque, shared his friendship for Sensier, and took part in their discussions. Often, after dark, the three would meet together at Millet's lodging, and with Diaz or Campredon, and a few other intimate friends, they would sit up talking over a pot of beer till the small hours. Then ancient and modern art, the early Florentines in the Louvre, and the Romanticists of the present day, to gether with a hundred other subjects relating to painting, to poetry, or to philosophy, would be brought up and dis cussed in turn. Millet, as a rule, seldom took any leading part in these interminable conversations. He listened silently to each speaker, and contented himself with an occasional remark ; but when he did intervene, it was with crushing force. His sentences were always brief and to the point, his arguments well thought out and lucidly expressed. Once thoroughly roused, he entered the fray with Herculean vigour, and dashed his opponents to pieces. On these rare occasions he would speak almost fiercely of the state of society. Politicians, romance-writers, dogma tists in art and letters were alike hateful to him. The whole atmosphere of Paris oppressed him, and the chatter of the great city, its literature and ambitions, its fashions and morals, remained for him to the end an incompre hensible world. The poorer class of the labouring popu lation were the only people who really interested him, and the sight of their squalor and misery gave him a sickening sensation. He painted the stone-masons at work in the quarries of Charenton, and the navvies employed on the fortifications of Montmartre ; he drew a mother and child begging in the street, and a working-man spend ing his Monday's rest in a drunken bout. Then in disgust at these repulsive subjects of city life, he turned back with fresh delight to his memories of Greville, and set to work on a large-sized figure of a peasant winnowing grain on the floor of a Norman barn. G 82 J. F. MILLET Meanwhile his own prospects did not improve, and it was often hard to keep the wolf from the door. His eldest child, a girl named Marie, was born on the 27th of July, 1846. Two others, a second girl and a boy, followed before the end of 1848. Millet himself was often to be seen rock ing his babies in his arms, and singing them to sleep to the tune of old Norman songs. Then, when they were safely asleep in their cradle, he would take up his brush and go back to work. His wife was the tenderest and best of 'mothers, and never complained of want and hardship herself as long as she had food for the children. Whatever happened, she met her husband's friends with a cheerful face, and did her best to hide the poverty of her small household. But do what she would, there were days when it became impossible to conceal the truth, and it was plain to Millet's friends that the whole family were reduced to the verge of starvation. The troubles of the year 1848 brought things to a crisis. Early in the spring Millet fell ill of rheumatic fever, which brought him to the point of death. For several weeks he lost consciousness, and was a prey to the wildest delirium. The doctors gave up all hope of recovery, and only awaited the moment of his death. But to their surprise Millet's vigorous constitution triumphed, and he recovered. The generous help of his friends supplied him with funds during his convalescence, for his long illness had left him too weak to work. One day, however, he sat up, shook himself, as he says, "like a wet dog," and painted: a pastel of a Little Girl sitting on a bank, with bare feet, and sorrowful eyes lifted heavenwards. A friend bought this pathetic little picture for thirty francs, and paid him the same sum for a similar pastel of a Little Traveller. But the Revolution had effectually stopped all demand for work of this kind, and, in common with other artists, Millet found himself reduced to sore straits. HIS LIFE AND LETTERS 83 The Salon of 1848 was a memorable one. The Revolu tion in February was followed by a revolt of the artists, who rose in a body against the tyranny of the Institute, and a free exhibition was held in the Louvre. Rousseau and "Dupre were on the hanging committee ; Delacroix sent as many as ten canvases. When the doors of the new Salon opened on the 15th of March, two of Millet's works were seen on the line. One, his fine figure of The Winnower, occupied a prominent place in the Salon Carre ; and the other, representing The Captivity of the Jews in Babylon, hung in the Great Gallery. The last-named picture was a classical composition in the style of Poussin ; but in this scene of the Jewish women refusing to play their harps in their captivity the painter has given utter ance to his own sorrow, and to the yearning of his heart after his own land: "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept, when we remembered thee, O Zion. As for our harps, we hanged them up upon the trees that are . therein. For they that led us away captive required of us then a song and melody in our heaviness : Sing us one of the songs of Zion. How shall we sing the Lord's song in a strange land ? " Unfortunately this picture, which Sensier describes as singularly impressive, was destroyed by the painter him self, who, many years afterwards, painted his beautiful landscape November on the same canvas. Both works attracted considerable notice at the time. The Winnower, that fine figure of the peasant, in his blue shirt and red handkerchief, winnowing grain in the barn, surrounded by a cloud of golden dust, commanded general admiration. The noble action of the figure and the rich tones of the colouring were widely recognised in artistic circles. Before the close of the Salon it was bought by M. Ledru Rollin. Since then it has often changed hands, and was at one time in the Secretan collection, while a 84 J. F. MILLET smaller and later version belonged to the Laurent-Richard collection, and was afterwards bought by M. Bellino. But while all Paris was talking of his pictures, the painter and his wife were actually without food or firewood in their lonely garret. They had not uttered a word of com plaint, they did not beg now ; but a neighbour discovered their pitiable plight, and sent word to some of their friends. One kind-hearted artist hastened to the office of M. Ledru Rollin, who, as Minister of the Inferior, was at the head of the Administration of Fine Arts, and obtained a grant of 100 francs; which he took at once to Millet's lodging. It was a cold evening towards the end of March. The painter was sitting on a box in his studio, shivering with cold ; there was no fire in the room and no bread in the house. He said, "Good-day," but did not move. When the money was put into his hand, he replied : " Thank you ! It has come in time. We have not eaten anything for two days. But the great thing is that the children should not suffer ; they at least have had food until now." Then he called his wife, and handing her part of the money, he said: "Take this, and I will go out and buy some wood ; I am very cold." He said no more, and never again alluded to the incident. But the cold a