stuffnads, local and safe classifieds market in the USA.

Pittsburgh Pirates 2014 Games - Major League Baseball Tickets Available in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania For Sale

Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

Pittsburgh Pirates Tickets
Mckechnie Field
Bradenton, Florida
We have the best prices and largest selection of tickets on the web!
Go to http://onlineticketwindow.com/ResultsGeneral.aspx?pcatid=1&ccatid=63&gcatid=16&kwds=Pittsburgh%20Pirates to see the large inventory of tickets.
Baltimore Ravens Buffalo Bills Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns Denver Broncos Houston Texans Indianapolis Colts Jacksonville Jaguars Kansas City Chiefs Miami Dolphins New England Patriots New York Jets Oakland Raiders Pittsburgh Steelers San Diego Chargers Tennessee Titans Arizona Cardinals Atlanta Falcons Carolina Panthers Chicago Bears Dallas_ Cowboys Detroit Lions Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings New Orleans Saints New York Giants Philadelphia Eagles San Francisco 49ers Seattle Seahawks St Louis Rams Tampa Bay Buccaneers Washington Redskins Atlanta Hawks Boston Celtics Brooklyn Nets Charlotte Bobcats Chicago Bulls Cleveland Cavaliers Detroit Pistons Indiana Pacers Miami Heat Milwaukee Bucks New York Knicks Orlando Magic Philadelphia 76ers Toronto Raptors Washington Wizards Dallas Mavericks Denver Nuggets Golden State Warriors Houston Rockets Los Angeles Clippers Lakers Memphis Grizzlies Minnesota Timberwolves New Orleans Pelicans Phoenix Suns Portland Trail Blazers Sacramento Kings San Antonio Spurs Oklahoma City Thunder Utah Jazz Boston Bruins Buffalo Sabres Carolina Hurricanes Florida Panthers Montreal Canadiens New Jersey Devils New York Islanders New York Rangers Ottawa Senators Philadelphia Flyers Pittsburgh Penguins Tampa Bay Lightning Toronto Maple Leafs Washington Capitals Winnipeg Jets Calgary Flames Chicago Blackhawks Colorado Avalanche Columbus Blue Jackets Dallas Stars Detroit Red Wings Edmonton Oilers Los Angeles Kings Anaheim Ducks Minnesota Wild Nashville Predators Phoenix Coyotes San Jose Sharks Blues Vancouver Canucks Alabama Crimson Tide Florida State Seminoles Ohio Buckeyes Baylor Bears Stanford Cardinals Oregon Ducks Auburn Clemson South Carolina Gamecocks Texas A&M Oklahoma State Michigan UCLA USC UCF Knights Wisconsin Badgers LSU Louisville Fresno State Arizona State Sun Devils Northern Illinoisice Cole Swindell The Book of Mormon Brazil Jason Aldean Florida Georgia Line Tyler Farr Disney On Ice Lets Celebrate Argentina Jeff Dunham Miley Cyrus Imagine Dragons The Lion King Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus Sting Paul Simon Colt Ford Elton John George Strait Martina Mcbride Jersey Boys Michael Buble Pink Elf Rockin Ever After Kings of Leon Gary Clark Jr Phantom of The Opera Matilda Billy Joel Mannheim Steamroller A Christmas Story Princesses and Heroes The Nutcracker Zac Brown Band Sheryl Crow Pearl Jam Lee Ann Womack Lady Antebellum Kip Moore Kacey Musgraves Jay Z Kanye West Kendrick Lamar Motown Cirque Du Soleil Dreams Holidaze Advanced Auto Parts Monster Jam Kinky Boots Keith Urban Little Big Town John Mayer Demi Lovato Lady Gaga Chris Young Passport To Adventure Drake Miguel 100 Years of Magic A Christmas Carol Andrea Bocelli WWE Raw Wrestlemania BCS Championship Game Finals All Star Game National Finals Rodeo Irving Berlins White Christmas The Harlem Globetrotters Justin Timberlake How The Grinch Stole Vince Gill Ben Folds Five Joel Osteen Selena Gomez Jerry Seinfeld Beauty Beast Betrayal Amaluna Donny Marie Theresa Caputo Alejandro Fernandez Fresh Beat Band Brad Paisley War Horse Joe Bonamassa Kiss Jingle Ball Macklemore Ryan Lewis Justin Moore The Lion King Uconn Huskies Straight No Chaser Billy Crystal Eric Church Evita Mamma Mia AMA American Music Awards MTV Video Country Longhorns Nitro Celine Dion UFC Hillsong United Blue Man Group Spider Man Turn Off The Dark Nascar Sprint Cup Jim Gaffigan Once Journey Supercross Van Morrison Robin Thicke Flo Rida Austin Mahone PBR Professional Bull Riders Smackdown super bowl barry Manilow cornhuskers ron white brian regan one direction ballet yo gabba gabba porgy bess jimmy buffett we will rock you celtic woman formula one racing usa united states grand prix korn rob zombie jayhawks The band perry easton corbin sister act oak ridge boys panic! at the disco panic bryan adams ghostdarius rucker eli young willie nelson chris cornell enrique iglesias john pinette rod stewart steve winwood maroon 5 train peter and the starcatcher rigoletto john legend tobymac annie britney spears bill cosby million dollar quartet american idiot artic monkeys west side story bill o'reilly dennis miller army black knights winter classic xxxx TLC tables ladders chairs acc football avett brothers marc anthony the wizard of oz shania twain hunter hayes ashley monroe rain sesame street jaheim big ten waiting for godot i love lucy avril lavigne ariana grande wildcats anderson silva bonnie raitt third eye blind janis joplinthe jacksonian so you think you can dance mgmt george lopez phish royal rumble summerslam pixies kenny rogers a prairie home companion garrison keillor san antonio stock show Rodeo tim mcgraw band perry bangerz kroq almost acoustic one direction 1d 1 crossroads classic david garrett nice inch nails neil young larry the cable guy amos lee latin grammy awards charlie wilson la nouba honduras trace adkins 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 georges st pierre jimmy fallon dolly parton stevie wonder gators pippin varekai tony bennett rihanna beyonce pitbull rock of ages pretty lights survivor series black crowes bassnectar pentatonix young the giant katt williams moody blues zz top max and ruby totem kmvq 99.7 REO Speedwagon megadeath spring training gabriel iglesias Richard III Rascals excision styx zab judah cyndi lauper amor a la musica b.b. king bb mike epps bill maher jim brickman stomp wrex the halls arcade fire alt-j alt j joan sebastian bruno mars alan jackson Il Divo yanni big fish dave koz nfl pro bowl backstreet boys jam romeo juliet diana krall michael jackson one jill scott amy grant armin van buuren rascal flatts T.I. Kathy Griffin dave chappelle stagecoach festival coachella daytona 500 pepe aguilar brian mcknight fleedwood mac ncaa mens womans finals round 1 2 3 4 5 krewella day pass bayou city and colour u2 black sabbath steve miller band jason aldean night train tour gavin degraw neon lights superfest paul anka electric cali faith hill aladdin widespread panicradiolab fitz tantrums bnp paribas open chris tucker 30 seconds to mars alice cooper kentucky derby harry connick jr gustavo dudamel daniel tosh julio natalie cole keith sweath wiz khalifa elvis costello zedd j cole nuclear cowboyz deadmau5 ringo starr lynyrd skynyrd XLVIII pink martini taylor swift seats vip backstage courtside front row vs versus cheap discounted last minute tix ticket courtside premier Monty Python rod stewart annie 700 sundays a time to kill after midnight betrayal big fish chicago cinderella first date macbeth no mans godot newsies romeo and juliet Glass Menagerie Snow Geese wicked broadway Twelfth Night Richard III winslow boy Baltimore Orioles Boston Red Sox Chicago White Sox Cleveland Indians Detroit Tigers Kansas City Royals Los Angeles of Anaheim Angels Minnesota Twins New York Yankees Oakland Athletics Seattle Mariners Tampa Bay Rays Texas Rangers Toronto Blue Jays Arizona Diamondbacks Atlanta Braves Chicago Cubs Cincinnati Reds Colorado Rockies Miami Marlins Houston Astros Los Angeles Dodgers Milwaukee Brewers New York Mets Philadelphia Phillies Pittsburgh Pirates San Diego Padres San Francisco Giants St Louis Cardinals Washington Nationals Bruno Mars Bryan Adams Casting Crowns, Steve Curtis Chapman & Natalie Grant Celtic Thunder Celtic Woman Cher Charlie Wilson Chicago - The Band Chicago - The Musical Chris Botti Chris Cornell Cirque Dreams: Holidaze Cirque Du Soleil - Varekai Darius Rucker Dark Star OrchestraDave Koz David Garrett Demi Lovato Diana Krall Disney's Beauty And The Beast Disney Junior Live: Pirate & Princess Adventure Disney Live! Three Classic Fairy Tales Disney On Ice: Let's Celebrate! Disney On Ice: 100 Years Of Magic Disney On Ice: Princesses And Heroes Disney On Ice: Rockin' Ever After Disney On Ice: Passport To Adventure Dixie Chicks Donny and Marie - Christmas Tour Drake & Miguel Eddie Izzard Elf Elton John Evita Flashdance Florida Georgia Line 50 Shades! The Musical A Christmas Carol A Christmas Story Advance Auto Parts Monster Jam Adventure Club Alejandro Fernandez Alton Brown Live American Idiot Amos Lee Andrea Bocelli Arcade Fire Arctic Monkeys Austin Mahone B.B. King Barry Manilow Beyonce Bill Cosby Billy Joel Black Crowes Black Sabbath Blue Man Group Bonnie Raitt Brad Paisley Brian Regan Brian Setzer Orchestra Freestyle Motocross: Nuclear Cowboyz Gabriel Iglesias Garth Brooks Gavin Degraw George Lopez George Strait Ghost - The Musical Hedley Hillsong United How The Grinch Stole Christmas Hunter Hayes & Ashley Monroe I Love Lucy - Live Onstage il Divo: A Musical Affair Imagine Dragons Irving Berlin's White Christmas J. Cole Jaheim & Chrisette Michele Jake Miller Jason Aldean Jay-Z Jeff Dunham Jerry Seinfeld Jersey Boys Jim Brickman Jim Gaffigan Jimmy Buffett Joe Bonamassa Joel Osteen John Legend John Mayer John Pinette John Prine Johnny Reid Journey & Steve Miller Band Justin Moore Justin Timberlake - The 20/20 Experience World Tour Kanye West & Kendrick Lamar Kathy Griffin Keith Urban Kenny Rogers Kings of Leon & Gary Clark Jr. Kip Moore Korn & Rob Zombie Lady Antebellum Larry The Cable Guy Lewis Black Luke Bryan Macklemore & Ryan Lewis Mamma Mia! Mannheim Steamroller Marc Anthon Martina McBride Max and Ruby - The Nutcracker Suite Merle Haggard MGMT Michael Buble Miley Cyrus -- Bangerz Tour Million Dollar Quarte Monster Energy AMA Supercross Moody Blues Moscow Ballet's Great Russian Nutcracker MythBusters: Behind the Myths Nine Inch Nail Nitro Circus Live Once Panic! At The Disco Paramore, Metric & HelloGoodbye Paul Simon & Sting PBR - Professional Bull Rider Pearl Jam Pentatonix Peter And The Starcatcher Phantom of the Opera Pink Porgy and Bess Pretty Lights PBR - Professional Bull Riders Radio City Christmas Spectacular Rain - A Tribute to The Beattles REO Speedwagon Ringling Brothers And Barnum & Bailey Circus Robert Earl Keen Robin Thicke & Jessie J Rod Stewart & Steve Winwood Ron White Selena Gomez Sesame Street Live: Can't Stop Singing Sesame Street Live: Make A New Friend Sesame Street Live: Elmo Makes Music Shen Yun Performing Arts Sister Act Skillet & Third Day Slayer & Gojira So You Think You Can Dance? - Live Tour Sting & Paul Simon Straight No Chaser Stuart McLean Styx The Addams Family The Avett Brothers The Band Perry The Book Of Mormon The Eagles The Fresh Beat Band The Harlem Globetrotters The Lion King The Nutcracker The Oak Ridge Boys The Piano Guys The Story Tour: Casting Crowns, Steve Curtis Chapman & Natalie Grant The Wizard Of Oz Theresa Caputo Third Eye Blind TobyMac Tony Bennett Trace Adkins Trans-Siberian Orchestra: The Lost Christmas Eve Twenty One Pilots UFC War Horse We Will Rock You West Side StoryWicked Willie Nelson WWE: Live WWE: SmackDown WWE: Raw Yo Gabba Gabba: Holiday Show Zac Brown Band ZZ Top Baltimore Ravens Buffalo Bills Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns Denver Broncos Houston Texans Indianapolis Colts Jacksonville Jaguars Kansas City Chiefs Miami Dolphins New England Patriots New York Jets Oakland Raiders Pittsburgh Steelers San Diego Chargers Tennessee Titans Arizona Cardinals Atlanta Falcons Carolina Panthers Chicago Bears Dallas_ Cowboys Detroit Lions Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings New Orleans Saints New York Giants Philadelphia Eagles San Francisco 49ers Seattle Seahawks St Louis Rams Tampa Bay Buccaneers Washington Redskins Atlanta Hawks Boston Celtics Brooklyn Nets Charlotte Bobcats Chicago Bulls Cleveland Cavaliers Detroit Pistons Indiana Pacers Miami Heat Milwaukee Bucks New York Knicks Orlando Magic Philadelphia 76ers Toronto Raptors Washington Wizards Dallas Mavericks Denver Nuggets Golden State Warriors Houston Rockets Los Angeles Clippers Lakers Memphis Grizzlies Minnesota Timberwolves New Orleans Pelicans Phoenix Suns Portland Trail Blazers Sacramento Kings San Antonio Spurs Oklahoma City Thunder Utah Jazz Boston Bruins Buffalo Sabres Carolina Hurricanes Florida Panthers Montreal Canadiens New Jersey Devils New York Islanders New York Rangers Ottawa Senators Philadelphia Flyers Pittsburgh Penguins Tampa Bay Lightning
I shall make a parcel of a few of Jules' things that he left in the wardrobe," she says, "and I will send them to you. I do not want anything to do with him when he comes back, and, according to the last words of the letter you showed me, his return may be soon. For a long time I have been very much hurt by the discoveries I made with regard to his conduct, and I could not feel anything else for him now but affectionate compassion. His pride, I hope, would refuse this. Make him clearly understand, if necessary, that there can never be anything more between us. If this hard task should not be necessary, that is, if Jules should himself understand that it could not be otherwise, spare him the sorrow of hearing that he has lost everything, even my respect. He must undoubtedly have lost his own self-esteem, so that he is punished enough."Thus ended this great passion. This was the first of George Sand's errors, and it certainly was an immense one. She had imagined that happiness reigns in students' rooms. She had counted on the passing fancy of a young man of good family, who had come to Paris to sow his wild oats, for giving her fresh zest and for carving out for herself a fresh future. It was a most commonplace adventure, utterly destitute of psychology, and by its very bitterness it contrasted strangely with her elevated sentimental romance with Aurelien de Seze. That was the quintessence of refinement. All that is interesting about this second adventure is the proof that it gives us of George Sand's wonderful illusions, of the intensity of the mirage of which she was a dupe, and of which we have so many instances in her life.Baronne Dudevant had tried conjugal life, and she had now tried free love. She had been unsuccessful in both instances. It is to these adventures though, to these trials, errors and disappointments that we owe the writer we are about to study. George Sand was now born to literature.When Baronne Dudevant arrived in Paris, in xxxx, her intention was to earn her living with her pen. She never really counted seriously on the income she might make by her talent for painting flowers on snuff-boxes and ornamenting cigar-cases with water-colours. She arrived from her province with the intention of becoming a writer. Like most authors who commence, she first tried journalism. On the 4th of March, she wrote as follows to the faithful Boucoiran: "In the meantime I must live, and for the sake of that, I have taken up the worst of trades: I am writing articles for the Figaro. If only you knew what that means! They are paid for, though, at the rate of seven francs a column."She evidently found it worth while to write for the Figaro, which at that time was quite a small newspaper, managed by Henri de Latouche, who also came from Berry. He was a very second-rate writer himself, and a poet with very little talent but, at any rate, he appreciated and discovered talent in others. He published Andre Chenier's first writings, and he introduced George Sand to the public. His new apprentice was placed at one of the little tables at which the various parts of the paper were manufactured. Unfortunately she had not the vocation for this work. The first principle with regard to newspaper articles is to make them short. When Aurore had come to the end of her paper, she had not yet commenced her subject. It was no use attempting to continue, so she gave up "the worst of trades," lucrative though it might be.She could not help knowing, though, that she had the gift of writing. She had inherited it from her ancestors, and this is the blest part of her atavism. No matter how far back we go, and in every branch of her genealogical tree, there is artistic heredity to be found. Maurice de Saxe wrote his Reveries. This was a fine book for a soldier to write, and for that alone he would deserve praise, even if he had not beaten the Enlish so gloriously. Mademoiselle Verrieres was an actress and Dupin de Francueil a dilettante. Aurore's grandmother, Marie-Aurore, was very musical, she sang operatic songs, and collected extracts from the philosophers. Maurice Dupin was devoted to music and to the theatre. Even Sophie-Victoire had an innate appreciation of beauty. She not only wept, like Margot, at melodrama, but she noticed the pink of a cloud, the mauve of a flower, and, what was more important, she called her little daughter's attention to such things. This illiterate mother had therefore had some influence on Aurore and on her taste for literature.It is not enough to say that George Sand was a born writer. She was a born novelist, and she belonged to a certain category of novelists. She had been created by a special decree of Providence to write her own romances, and not others. It is this which makes the history of the far-back origins of her literary vocation so interesting. It is extremely curious to see, from her earliest childhood, the promises of those faculties which were to become the very essence of her talent. When she was only three years old, her mother used to put her between four chairs in order to keep her still. By way of enlivening her captivity, she tells us what she did."I used to make up endless stories, which my mother styled my novels. . . . I told these stories aloud, and my mother declared that they were most tiresome on account of their length and of the development I gave to my digressions. . . . There were very few bad people in them, and never any serious troubles. Everything was always arranged satisfactorily, thanks to my lively, optimistic ideas. . . ."She had already commenced, then, at the age of three, and these early stories are the precursors of the novels of her maturity. They are optimistic, drawn out, and with long digressions. Something similar is told about Walter Scott. There is evidently a primordial instinct in those who are born story-tellers, and this urges them on to invent fine stories for amusing themselves.A little later on we have another phenomenon, almost as curious, with regard to Aurore. We are apt to wonder how certain descriptive writers proceed in order to give us pictures, the various features of which stand out in such intense relief that they appear absolutely real to us. George Sand tells us that when Berquin's stories were being read to her at Nohant, she used to sit in front of the fire, from which she was protected by an old green silk screen. She used gradually to lose the sense of the phrases, but pictures began to form themselves in front of her on the green screen."I saw woods, meadows, rivers, towns of strange and gigantic architecture. . . . One day these apparitions were so real that I was startled by them, and I asked my mother whether she could see them."With hallucinations like these a writer can be picturesque. He has in front of him, although it may be between four walls, a complete landscape. He has only to follow the lines of it and to reproduce the colours, so that in painting imaginary landscapes he can paint them from nature, from this model that appears to him, as though by enchantment. He can, if he likes, count the leaves of the trees and listen to the sound of the growing grass.Still later on, vague religious or philosophical conceptions began to mingle with the fiction that Aurore always had in her mind. To her poetical life, was added a moral life. She always had a romance going on, to which she was constantly adding another chapter, like so many links in a never-ending chain. She now gave a hero to her romance, a hero whose name was Corambe. He was her ideal, a man whom she had made her god. Whilst blood was flowing freely on the altars of barbarous gods, on Corambe's altar life and liberty were given to a whole crowd of captive creatures, to a swallow, to a robin-redbreast, and even to a sparrow. We see already in all this her tendency to put moral intentions into her romantic stories, to arrange her adventures in such a way that they should serve as examples for making mankind better. These were the novels, with a purpose, of her twelfth year.Let us now study a striking contrast, by way of observing the first signs of vocation in two totally different novelists. In the beginning of Facino Cane, Balzac tells us an incident of the time when, as an aspiring writer, he lived in his attic in the Rue Lesdiguieres. One evening, on coming out of the theatre, he amused himself with following a working-man and his wife from the Boulevard du Pontaux-Choux to the Boulevard Beaumarchais. He listened to them as they talked of the piece they had just seen. They then discussed their business matters, and afterwards house and family affairs. "While listening to this couple," says Balzac, "I entered into their life. I could feel their clothes on my back and, I was walking in their shabby boots."Instead of this exterior world, to which Balzac adapts himself, Aurore talks to us of an inner world, emanating from her own fancy, the reflection of her own imagination, the echo of her own heart, which is really herself. This explains the difference between Balzac's impersonal novel and George Sand's personal novel. It is just the difference between realistic art, which gives way to the object, and idealistic art, which transforms this according to its own will and pleasure.Up to this time George Sand's ideas had not been put on to paper. Both Corambe and the stories composed between four chairs were merely fancies of a child's mind. Aurore soon began to write, though. She had composed two novels while in the convent, one of which was religious and the other a pastoral story. She was wise enough to tear them both up. On leaving the convent she wrote another novel for Rene' de Villeneuve, and this shared the same fate. In xxxx, she wrote her Voyage en Auvergne, and in xxxx, another novel. In her Histoire de ma vie she says of this: "After reading it, I was convinced that it was of no value, but at the same time I was sure I could write a better one. . . . I saw that I could write quickly and easily, and without feeling any fatigue. The ideas that were lying dormant in my mind were quickened and became connected, by my deductions, as I wrote. With my meditative life, I had observed a great deal, and had understood the various characters which Fate had put in my way, so that I really knew enough of human nature to be able to depict it." She now had that facility, that abundance of matter and that nonchalance which were such characteristic features of her writing.When George Sand began to publish, she had already written a great deal. Her literary formation was complete. We notice this same thing whenever we study the early work of a writer. Genius is revealed to us, perhaps, with a sudden flash, but it has been making its way for a long time underground, so that what we take for a spontaneous burst of genius is nothing but the final effort of a sap which has been slowly accumulating and which from henceforth is all-powerful.George Sand had to go through the inevitable period of feeling her way. We are glad to think that the first book she published was not written by herself alone, so that the responsibility of that execrable novel does not lie solely with her.On the 9th of March, xxxx, George Sand wrote to Boucoiran as follows: "Monstrosities are in vogue, so we must invent monstrosities. I am bringing forth a very pleasant one just at present. . . ." This was the novel written in collaboration with Sandeau which appeared under the signature of Jules Sand towards the end of xxxx. It was entitled, Rose et Blanche, ou la Comedienne et la Religieuse.It begins by a scene in a coach, rather like certain novels by Balzac, but accompanied by insignificant details in the worst taste imaginable. Two girls are travelling in the same coach. Rose is a young comedian, and Sister Blanche is about to become a nun. They separate at Tarbes, and the scene of the story is laid in the region of the Pyrenees, in Tarbes Auch, Nerac, the Landes, and finishes with the return to Paris. Rose, after an entertainment which is a veritable orgy, is handed over by her mother to a licentious young man. He is ashamed of himself, and, instead of leading Rose astray, he takes her to the Convent of the Augustines, where she finds Sister Blanche once more. Sister Blanche has not yet pronounced her vows, and the proof of this is that she marries Horace. But what a wedding! As a matter of fact, Sister Blanche was formerly named Denise. She was the daughter of a seafaring man of Bordeaux, and was both pretty and foolish. She had been dishonoured by the young libertine whom she is now to marry. The memory of the past comes back to Blanche, and makes her live over again her life as Denise. In the mean time Rose had become a great singer. She now arrives, just in time to be present at her friend's deathbed. She enters the convent herself, and takes the place left vacant by Sister Blanche. The whole of this is absurd and frequently very disagreeable.It is quite easy to distinguish the parts due to the two collaborators, and to see that George Sand wrote nearly all the book. There are the landscapes, Tarbes Auch, Nerac, the Landes, and a number of recollections of the famous journey to the Pyrenees and of her stay at Guillery with the Dudevant family. The Convent of the Augustines in Paris, with its English nuns and its boarders belonging to the best families, is the one in which Aurore spent three years. The cloister can be recognized, the garden planted with chestnut trees, and the cell from which there was a view over the city. All her dreams seemed so near Heaven there, for the rich, cloudy sky was so near--"that most beautiful and ever-changing sky, perhaps the most beautiful in the world," of which we read in Rose et Blanche. But together with this romance of religious life is a libertine novel with stories of orgies, of a certain private house, and of very risky and unpleasant episodes. This is the collaborator's share in the work. The risky parts are Sandeau's.It had a certain success, but the person who was most severe in her judgment of it was Sophie-Victoire, George Sand's mother, who had very prudish tastes in literature. This woman is perfectly delightful, and every time we come across her it is a fresh joy. Her daughter was obliged to make some excuse for herself, and this she did by stating that the work was not entirely her own."I do not approve of a great deal of the nonsense," she writes, "and I only let certain things pass to please my publisher, who wanted something rather lively. . . . I do not like the risky parts myself. . . ." Later on in the same letter, she adds: "There is nothing of the kind in the book I am writing now, and I am using nothing of my collaborator's in this, except his name."[15]The unpublished correspondence with Emile Regnault, some fragments of which we have just read, contains a most interesting letter concerning the composition of Indiana. It is dated February 28, xxxx. George Sand first insists on the severity of the subject and on its resemblance to life. "It is as simple, as natural and as positive as you could wish," she says. "It is neither romantic, mosaic, nor frantic. It is just ordinary life of the most bourgeois kind, but unfortunately this is much more difficult than exaggerated literature. . . . There is not the least word put in for nothing, not a single description, not a vestige of poetry. There are no unexpected, extraordinary, or amazing situations, but merely four volumes on four characters. With only just these characters, that is, with hidden feelings, everyday thoughts, with friendship, love, selfishness, devotion, self-respect, persistency, melancholy, sorrow, ingratitude, disappointment, hope, and all the mixed-up medley of the human mind, is it possible to write four volumes which will not bore people? I am afraid of boring people, of boring them as life itself does. And yet what is more interesting than the history of the heart, when it is a true history? The main thing is to write true history, and it is just that which is so difficult. . . ."This declaration is rather surprising to any one who reads it to-day. We might ask whether what was natural in xxxx would be natural in xxxx? That is not the question which concerns us, though. The important fact to note is that George Sand was no longer attempting to manufacture monstrosities. She was endeavouring to be true, and she wanted above everything else to present a character of woman who would be the typical modern woman.This novel, intended to present to us the modern woman, ought to be styled a "feminist novel." It was also, as regards other points of view. Indiana appeared in May, xxxx, Valentine in xxxx, and Jacques in xxxx. In these three books I should like to show our present feminism, already armed, and introduced to us according to George Sand's early ideas."You have been misinformed about what took place at La Chatre. Duthell never quarrelled with the Baron of Nohant-Vic. This is the true story. The baron took it into his head to strike me. Dutheil objected. Fleury and Papet also objected. The baron went to search for his gun to kill every one. Every one did not want to be killed, and so the baron said: `Well, that's enough then,' and began to drink again. That was how it all happened. No one quarrelled with him. But I had had enough. As I do not care to earn my living and then leave my substance in the hands of the diable and be bowed out of the house every year, while the village hussies sleep in my beds and bring their fleas into my house, I just said: `I ain't going to have any more of that,' and I went and found the big judge of La Chatre, and I says, says I: `That's how it is. And then he says, says he: `All right. And so he unmarried us. And I am not sorry. They say that the baron will make an appeal. I ain't knowin'. We shall see. If he does, he'll lose everything. And that's the whole story."[24]v