Agoult, Marie Catherine
Sophie De Flavigny, Comtesse d’
(1805-1876), French author, whose nom de plume was “Daniel
Stern,” was born at Frankfort-on-Main on the 31st of December
1805. Her father was a French officer who had served in the army of the
emigrant princes, and her mother was the daughter of a Frankfort
banker. She was married in 1827 to the comte Charles d’Agoult. In
Paris she gathered round her a brilliant society which included Alfred
de Vigny, Sainte-Beuve, Ingres, Chopin, Meyerbeer, Heine and others.
She was separated from her husband, and became the mistress of Franz
Liszt. During her frequent travels in Switzerland, France and Italy she
made the acquaintance of George Sand, and figures in the Lettres d’un
voyageur as’‘Arabella.” By Liszt she had three children—a son who died
young; Blandine, who married M. Emile Ollivier; and Cosima, who married
first Hans von Bulow and later Richard Wagner. The story of her breach
with Liszt is told under a very slight disguise in her novel Nelida
(1845). On her return to Paris in 1841 she began to write art
criticisms for the Presse, and in 1844 she contributed to the Revue des
deux Mondes articles on Bettina von Arnim and on Heinrich Heine, but her
views were not acceptable to the editor, and Daniel Stern withdrew to
become a contributor to the Revue independante.
Mme. d’Agoult was an ardent apostle of the ideas of’ 48, and from
this date her salon, which had been literary and artistic, took on a
more political tone; revolutionists of various nationalities were
welcomed by her, and she had an especial friendship and sympathy for
Daniele Manin. In 1857 she produced a national drama, Jeanne Darc,
which was translated into Italian and presented with brilliant success
at Turin. The most important section of Daniel Stern’s work is her
political and historical essays: Lettres republicaines (1848), Esquisses
morales et politiques (1849), Histoire de la Revolution de 1848 (3
vols., 1850-1853), Histoire des commencements de la Republique aux
Pays-Bas (1872). Mme. d’Agoult died in Paris on the 5th of
March 1876. Her daughter Claire Christine (b. 1830), who married Guy
de Charnace, is known as a writer.
See Mme. d’Agoult, Mes Souvenirs (1806-1833), 1877; A. Cuvillier
Fleury, Portraits revolutionnaires, vol. i. (1889); J. Mazzini, Lettres
de Joseph Mazzini a Daniel Stern (1872): A. Pommier, Madame la comtesse
d’Agoult (Daniel Stern), 1876; A. Ungherini, “Daniel Stern” in the
Revista repubblicana (1880, No. 9); S. Rocheblave, Une Amitie
romanesque, George Sand et Madame d’Agoult (1895). |










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