<SPAN name="c11" id="c11"></SPAN>
<h3>Rosa Bonheur.</h3><SPAN href="images/c11bonheur.jpg"><br/>
<ANTIMG src="images/c11bonheur_t.jpg" alt="ROSA BONHEUR." /></SPAN>
<p>In a simple home in Paris could have been seen, in 1829,
Raymond Bonheur and his little family,--Rosa, seven years old,
August, Isadore, and Juliette. He was a man of fine talent in
painting, but obliged to spend his time in giving
drawing-lessons to support his children. His wife, Sophie, gave
lessons on the piano, going from house to house all day long,
and sometimes sewing half the night, to earn a little more for
the necessities of life.</p>
<p>Hard work and poverty soon bore its usual fruit, and the
tired young mother died in 1833. The three oldest children were
sent to board with a plain woman, "La mère
Cathérine," in the Champs Elysées, and the
youngest was placed with relatives. For two years this good
woman cared for the children, sending them to school, though
she was greatly troubled because Rosa persisted in playing in
the woods of the Bois de Boulogne, gathering her arms full of
daisies and marigolds, rather than to be shut up in a
schoolroom. "I never spent an hour of fine weather indoors
during the whole of the two years," she has often said since
those days.</p>
<p>Finally the father married again and brought the children
home. The two boys were placed in school, and M. Bonheur paid
their way by giving drawing lessons three times a week in the
institution. If Rosa did not love school, she must be taught
something useful, and she was accordingly placed in a sewing
establishment to become a seamstress.</p>
<p>The child hated sewing, ran the needle into her fingers at
every stitch, cried for the fresh air and sunshine, and
finally, becoming pale and sickly, was taken back to the
Bonheur home. The anxious painter would try his child once more
in school; so he arranged that she should attend, with
compensation met in the same way as for his boys. Rosa soon
became a favorite with the girls in the Fauborg St. Antoine
School, especially because she could draw such witty
caricatures of the teachers, which she pasted against the wall,
with bread chewed into the consistency of putty. The teachers
were not pleased, but so struck were they with the vigor and
originality of the drawings, that they carefully preserved the
sketches in an album.</p>
<p>The girl was far from happy. Naturally sensitive--as what
poet or painter was ever born otherwise?--she could not bear to
wear a calico dress and coarse shoes, and eat with an iron
spoon from a tin cup, when the other girls wore handsome
dresses, and had silver mugs and spoons. She grew melancholy,
neglected her books, and finally became so ill that she was
obliged to be taken home.</p>
<p>And now Raymond Bonheur very wisely decided not to make
plans for his child for a time, but see what was her natural
tendency. It was well that he made this decision in time,
before she had been spoiled by his well-meant but poor
intentions.</p>
<p>Left to herself, she constantly hung about her father's
studio, now drawing, now modeling, copying whatever she saw him
do. She seemed never to be tired, but sang at her work all the
day long.</p>
<p>Monsieur Bonheur suddenly awoke to the fact that his
daughter had great talent. He began to teach her carefully, to
make her accurate in drawing, and correct in perspective. Then
he sent her to the Louvre to copy the works of the old masters.
Here she worked with the greatest industry and enthusiasm, not
observing anything that was going on around her. Said the
director of the Louvre, "I have never seen an example of such
application and such ardor for work."</p>
<p>One day an elderly English gentleman stopped beside her
easel, and said: "Your copy, my child, is superb, faultless.
Persevere as you have begun, and I prophesy that you will be a
great artist." How glad those few words made her! She went home
thinking over to herself the determination she had made in the
school when she ate with her iron spoon, that sometime she
would be as famous as her schoolmates, and have some of the
comforts of life.</p>
<p>Her copies of the old masters were soon sold, and though
they brought small prices, she gladly gave the money to her
father, who needed it now more than ever. His second wife had
two sons when he married her, and now they had a third,
Germain, and every cent that Rosa could earn was needed to help
support seven children. "La mamiche," as they called the new
mother, was an excellent manager of the meagre finances, and
filled her place well.</p>
<p>Rosa was now seventeen, loving landscape, historical, and
genre painting, perhaps equally; but happening to paint a goat,
she was so pleased in the work, that she determined to make
animal painting a specialty. Having no money to procure models,
she must needs make long walks into the country on foot to the
farms. She would take a piece of bread in her pocket, and
generally forget to eat it. After working all day, she would
come home tired, often drenched with rain, and her shoes
covered with mud.</p>
<p>She took other means to study animals. In the outskirts of
Paris were great <i>abattoirs</i>, or slaughter-pens. Though
the girl tenderly loved animals, and shrank from the sight of
suffering, she forced herself to see the killing, that she
might know how to depict the death agony on canvas. Though
obliged to mingle more or less with drovers and butchers, no
indignity was ever offered her. As she sat on a bundle of hay,
with her colors about her, they would crowd around to look at
the pictures, and regard her with honest pride. The world soon
learns whether a girl is in earnest about her work, and treats
her accordingly.</p>
<p>The Bonheur family had moved to the sixth story of a
tenement house in the Rue Rumfort, now the Rue Malesherbes. The
sons, Auguste and Isadore, had both become artists; the former
a painter, the latter a sculptor. Even little Juliette was
learning to paint. Rosa was working hard all day at her easel,
and at night was illustrating books, or molding little groups
of animals for the figure-dealers. All the family were happy
despite their poverty, because they had congenial work.</p>
<p>On the roof, Rosa improvised a sort of garden, with
honeysuckles, sweet-peas, and nasturtiums, and here they kept a
sheep, with long, silky wool, for a model. Very often Isadore
would take him on his back and carry him down the six flights
of stairs,--the day of elevators had not dawned,--and after he
had enjoyed grazing, would bring him back to his garden home.
It was a docile creature, and much loved by the whole family.
For Rosa's birds, the brothers constructed a net, which they
hung outside the window, and then opened the cage into it.</p>
<p>At nineteen Rosa was to test the world, and see what the
critics would say. She sent to the Fine Arts Exhibition two
pictures, "Goats and Sheep" and "Two Rabbits." The public was
pleased, and the press gave kind notices. The next year
"Animals in a Pasture," a "Cow lying in a Meadow," and a "Horse
for sale," attracted still more attention. Two years later she
exhibited twelve pictures, some from her father and brother
being hung on either side of hers, the first time they had been
admitted. More and more the critics praised, and the pathway of
the Bonheur family grew less thorny.</p>
<p>Then, in 1849, when she was twenty-seven, came the triumph.
Her magnificent picture, "Cantal Oxen," took the gold medal,
and was purchased by England. Horace Vernet, the president of
the commission of awards, in the midst of a brilliant assembly,
proclaimed the new laureate, and gave her, in behalf of the
government, a superb Sèvres vase.</p>
<p>Raymond Bonheur seemed to become young again at this fame of
his child. It brought honors to him also, for he was at once
made director of the government school of design for girls. But
the release from poverty and anxiety came too late, and he died
the same year, greatly lamented by his family. "He had grand
ideas," said his daughter, "and had he not been obliged to give
lessons for our support, he would have been more known, and
to-day acknowledged with other masters."</p>
<p>Rosa was made director in his place, and Juliette became a
professor in the school. This same year appeared her "Plowing
Scene in the Nivernais," now in the Luxembourg Gallery, thought
to be her most important work after her "Horse Fair." Orders
now poured in upon her, so that she could not accede to half
the requests for work. A rich Hollander offered her one
thousand crowns for a painting which she could have wrought in
two hours; but she refused.</p>
<p>Four years later, after eighteen long months of preparatory
studies, her "Horse Fair" was painted. This created the
greatest enthusiasm both in England and America. It was sold to
a gentleman in England for eight thousand dollars, and was
finally purchased by A. T. Stewart, of New York, for his famous
collection. No one who has seen this picture will ever forget
the action and vigor of these Normandy horses. In painting it,
a petted horse, it is said, stepped back upon the canvas,
putting his hoof through it, thus spoiling the work of
months.</p>
<p>So greatly was this picture admired, that Napoleon III. was
urged to bestow upon her the Cross of the Legion of Honor,
entitled her from French usage. Though she was invited to the
state dinner at the Tuileries, always given to artists to whom
the Academy of Fine Arts has awarded its highest honors,
Napoleon had not the courage to give it to her, lest public
opinion might not agree with him in conferring it upon a woman.
Possibly he felt, more than the world knew, the insecurity of
his throne.</p>
<p>Henry Bacon, in the <i>Century</i>, thus describes the way
in which Rosa Bonheur finally received the badge of
distinction. "The Emperor, leaving Paris for a short summer
excursion in 1865, left the Empress as Regent. From the
imperial residence at Fontainebleau it was only a short drive
to By (the home of Mademoiselle Bonheur). The countersign at
the gate was forced, and unannounced, the Empress entered the
studio where Mademoiselle Rosa was at work. She rose to receive
the visitor, who threw her arms about her neck and kissed her.
It was only a short interview. The imperial vision had
departed, the rumble of the carriage and the crack of the
outriders' whips were lost in the distance. Then, and not till
then, did the artist discover that as the Empress had given the
kiss, she had pinned upon her blouse the Cross of the Legion of
Honor." Since then she has received the Leopold Cross of Honor
from the King of Belgium, said to be the first ever conferred
upon a woman; also a decoration from the King of Spain. Her
brother Auguste, now dead, received the Cross of the Legion of
Honor in 1867, two years after Rosa.</p>
<p>In preparing to paint the "Horse Fair" and other similar
pictures, which have brought her much into the company of men,
she has found it wise to dress in male costume. A laughable
incident is related of this mode of dress. One day when she
returned from the country, she found a messenger awaiting to
announce to her the sudden illness of one of her young friends.
Rosa did not wait to change her male attire, but hastened to
the bedside of the young lady. In a few minutes after her
arrival, the doctor, who had been sent for, entered, and seeing
a young man, as he supposed, seated on the side of the bed,
with his arm round the neck of the sick girl, thought he was an
intruder, and retreated with all possible speed. "Oh! run after
him! He thinks you are my lover, and has gone and left me to
die!" cried the sick girl. Rosa flew down stairs, and soon
returned with the modest doctor.</p>
<p>She also needs this mannish costume, for her long journeys
over the Pyrenees into Spain or in the Scottish Highlands. She
is always accompanied by her most intimate friend, Mademoiselle
Micas, herself an artist of repute, whose mother, a widow,
superintends the home for the two devoted friends.</p>
<p>Sometimes in the Pyrenees these two ladies see no one for
six weeks but muleteers with their mules. The people in these
lonely mountain passes live entirely upon the curdled milk of
sheep. Once Rosa Bonheur and her friend were nearly starving,
when Mademoiselle Micas obtained a quantity of frogs, and
covering the hind legs with leaves, roasted them over a fire.
On these they lived for two days.</p>
<p>In Scotland she painted her exquisite "Denizens of the
Mountains," "Morning in the Highlands," and "Crossing a Loch in
the Highlands." In England she was treated like a princess. Sir
Edwin Landseer, whom some persons thought she would marry, is
reported to have said, when he first looked upon her "Horse
Fair," "It surpasses me, though it's a little hard to be beaten
by a woman." On her return to France she brought a
skye-terrier, named "Wasp," of which she is very fond, and for
which she has learned several English phrases. When she speaks
to him in English, he wags his tail most appreciatively.</p>
<p>Rosa Bonheur stands at the head of her profession, an
acknowledged master. Her pictures bring enormous sums, and have
brought her wealth. A "View in the Pyrenees" has been sold for
ten thousand dollars, and some others for twice that sum.</p>
<p>She gives away much of her income. She has been known to
send to the <i>Mont de Pieté</i> her gold medals to
raise funds to assist poor artists. A woman artist, who had
been refused help by several wealthy painters, applied to Rosa
Bonheur, who at once took down from the wall a small but
valuable painting, and gave it to her, from which she received
a goodly sum. A young sculptor who greatly admired her work,
enclosed twenty dollars, asking her for a small drawing, and
saying that this was all the money he possessed. She
immediately sent him a sketch worth at least two hundred
dollars. She has always provided most generously for her
family, and for servants who have grown old in her employ.</p>
<p>She dresses very simply, always wearing black, brown, or
gray, with a close fitting jacket over a plain skirt. When she
accepts a social invitation, which is very rare, she adorns her
dress with a lace collar, but without other ornament. Her
working dress is usually a long gray linen or blue flannel
blouse, reaching nearly from head to foot. She has learned that
the conventional tight dress of women is not conducive to great
mental or physical power. She is small in stature, with dainty
hands and feet, blue eyes, and a noble and intelligent
face.</p>
<p>She is an indefatigable worker, rising usually at six in the
morning, and painting throughout the day.</p>
<p>So busy is she that she seldom permits herself any
amusements. On one occasion she had tickets sent her for the
theatre. She worked till the carriage was announced. "<i>Je
suis prête</i>," said Rosa, and went to the play in her
working dress. A daintily gloved man in the box next to hers
looked over in disdain, and finally went into the vestibule and
found the manager.</p>
<p>"Who is this woman in the box next to mine?" he said, in a
rage. "She's in an old calico dress, covered with paint and
oil. The odor is terrible. Turn her out. If you do not, I will
never enter your theatre again."</p>
<p>The manager went to the box, and returning, informed him
that it was the great painter.</p>
<p>"Rosa Bonheur!" he gasped. "Who'd have thought it? Make my
apology to her. I dare not enter her presence again."</p>
<p>She usually walks at the twilight, often thinking out new
subjects for her brush, at that quiet hour. She said to a
friend: "I have been a faithful student since I was ten years
old. I have copied no master. I have studied Nature, and
expressed to the best of my ability the ideas and feelings with
which she has inspired me. Art is an absorbent--a tyrant. It
demands heart, brain, soul, body, the entireness of the votary.
Nothing less will win its highest favor. I wed art. It is my
husband, my world, my life-dream, the air I breathe. I know
nothing else, feel nothing else, think nothing else, My soul
finds in it the most complete satisfaction.... I have no taste
for general society,--no interest in its frivolities. I only
seek to be known through my works. If the world feel and
understand them, I have succeeded.... If I had got up a
convention to debate the question of my ability to paint
'<i>Marché au Chevaux</i>' [The Horse Fair], for which
England paid me forty thousand francs, the decision would have
been against me. I felt the power within me to paint; I
cultivated it, and have produced works that have won the
favorable verdicts of the great judges. I have no patience with
women who ask <i>permission to think</i>!"</p>
<p>For years she lived in Rue d'Assas, a retired street half
made up of gardens. Here she had one of the most beautiful
studios of Paris, the room lighted from the ceiling, the walls
covered with paintings, with here and there old armor,
tapestry, hats, cloaks, sandals, and skins of tigers, leopards,
foxes, and oxen on the floor. One Friday, the day on which she
received guests, one of her friends, coming earlier than usual,
found her fast asleep on her favorite skin, that of a
magnificent ox, with stuffed head and spreading horns. She had
come in tired from the School of Design, and had thrown herself
down to rest. Usually after greeting her friends she would say,
"Allow me to resume my brush; we can talk just as well
together." For those who have any great work to do in this
worlds there is little time for visiting; interruptions cannot
be permitted. No wonder Carlyle groaned when some person had
taken two hours of his time. He could better have spared money
to the visitor.</p>
<p>For several years Rosa Bonheur has lived near Fontainebleau,
in the Chateau By. Henry Bacon says: "The chateau dates from
the time of Louis XV., and the garden is still laid out in the
style of Le Notre. Since it has been in the present
proprietor's possession, a quaint, picturesque brick building,
containing the carriage house and coachman's lodge on the first
floor, and the studio on the second, has been added; the roof
of the main building has been raised, and the chapel changed
into an orangery: beside the main carriage-entrance, which is
closed by iron gates and wooden blinds, is a postern gate, with
a small grated opening, like those found in convents. The
blinds to the gate and the slide to the grating are generally
closed, and the only communication with the outside world is by
the bell-wire, terminating in a ring beside the gate. Ring, and
the jingle of the bell is at once echoed by the barking of
numerous dogs,--the hounds and bassets in chorus, the grand
Saint Bernard in slow measure, like the bass-drum in an
orchestra. After the first excitement among the dogs has begun
to abate, a remarkably small house-pet that has been somewhere
in the interior arrives upon the scene, and with his sharp,
shrill voice again starts and leads the canine chorus. By this
time the eagle in his cage has awakened, and the parrot, whose
cage is built into the corner of the studio looking upon the
street, adds to the racket.</p>
<p>"Behind the house is a large park divided from the forest by
a high wall; a lawn and flower-beds are laid out near the
buildings; and on the lawn, in pleasant weather, graze a
magnificent bull and cow, which are kept as models. In a wire
enclosure are two chamois from the Pyrenees, and further
removed from the house, in the wooded part of the park, are
enclosures for sheep and deer, each of which knows its
mistress. Even the stag, bearing its six-branched antlers,
receives her caresses like a pet dog. At the end of one of the
linden avenues is a splendid bronze, by Isadore Bonheur, of a
Gaul attacking a lion.</p>
<p>"The studio is very large, with a huge chimney at one end,
the supports of which are life-size dogs, modeled by Isadore
Bonheur. Portraits of the father and mother in oval frames hang
at each side, and a pair of gigantic horns ornaments the
centre. The room is decorated with stuffed heads of animals of
various kinds,--boars, bears, wolves, and oxen; and birds perch
in every convenient place."</p>
<p>When Prussia conquered France, and swept through this town,
orders were given that Rosa Bonheur's home and paintings be
carefully preserved. Even her servants went unmolested. The
peasants idolized the great woman who lived in the chateau, and
were eager to serve her. She always talked to them pleasantly.
Rosa Bonheur died at her home at 11 P.M., Thursday, May 25,
1899.</p>
<hr />
<br/>
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />